By the time the border post came into view, a weathered stone structure standing at the junction of three worn roads, the sun had cleared the horizon. Its light fell harsh and unfiltered across a landscape caught between desolation and recovery.
Trees here grew stunted and twisted, but they grew. Grass pushed through rocky soil in stubborn clumps. Life persisted, however reluctantly.
The post itself showed signs of recent occupation. Smoke rose from a chimney at its eastern end. Two horses stood tethered to a rail outside, their breath fogging in the morning chill.
Most telling was the carriage waiting in the yard, well-maintained but deliberately understated, its dark wood polished but not ornate, its crest small enough to be overlooked by casual observation.
Soren paused at the edge of the clearing, assessing approaches and exits with automatic precision. Three guards stood at various points around the carriage, professional rather than decorative, their posture and positioning suggesting actual combat experience.
The driver sat hunched on his bench, hands tucked into armpits for warmth, eyes constantly scanning the surroundings.
Taking a deep breath, Soren stepped forward, crossing the invisible boundary between observer and participant. The nearest guard spotted him immediately, hand dropping to his sword hilt as he moved to intercept.
"State your business," the man demanded, his voice carrying the clipped accent of Velrane's northern provinces.
"I'm expected," Soren replied, keeping his hands visible, his posture non-threatening despite every instinct urging otherwise. "The Veiled Hand sends its compliments to Lady Kareth."
The guard's eyes narrowed, but he nodded once and gestured toward the post's main entrance. "Inside. She's waiting."
The interior smelled of woodsmoke and old stone, warmer than outside but not comfortable. A fire burned in a grate along one wall, casting flickering light across a space that might once have served as common room or meeting hall.
Now it stood mostly empty save for a single table where a woman sat examining papers spread before her.
Lady Aveline Kareth looked up as Soren entered, her gaze sharp with assessment. She appeared to be in her late twenties, with the poised confidence of someone accustomed to both court intrigue and harsher realities.
Her traveling clothes were well-made but practical, dark fabric cut for movement rather than display. At her throat, an iridescent brooch caught the firelight, dragon-scale, if Soren wasn't mistaken, a rare and valuable adornment that spoke of connections beyond mere nobility.
Her eyes, a deep amber that bordered on gold, studied him with undisguised interest as he approached. "You're younger than I expected," she said, her voice carrying the refined accent of extensive education.
"You'll find that youth doesn't slow a blade," he replied evenly.
Something flickered across her face, not surprise or offense, but a kind of pleased calculation, as if he'd confirmed a theory she'd been developing. She gathered her papers with elegant efficiency, sliding them into a leather folio.
"So it seems," she said, rising from her seat. She stood taller than he'd initially estimated, her posture perfect without appearing rigid. "I assume our mutual acquaintance briefed you on the journey ahead?"
"Enough to ensure your safety," Soren answered, keeping his responses measured, professional. The language of court and commerce felt strange in his mouth after months of assassin's brevity, yet not entirely forgotten.
Lady Aveline nodded, apparently satisfied with his answer. She gestured toward the door. "Then we should depart. Daylight is valuable in these territories."
As they exited the post, Soren became aware of others watching, a slender man with a steward's chain partially hidden beneath his traveling cloak, and two servants who stood near the carriage, their expressions carefully neutral though their eyes tracked his movement with undisguised wariness.
The steward approached Lady Aveline, leaning close to murmur something in her ear. She listened without changing expression, then nodded once. "We'll discuss it en route," she said, dismissing whatever concern he'd raised.
Moments later, the small caravan was underway, Lady Aveline and her steward inside the carriage, the servants mounted on sturdy ponies, the three guards positioned at front and rear. Soren rode alongside the carriage, his position allowing him to scan the road ahead while maintaining proximity to his charge.
The road wound through increasingly dense woodland, ancient trees pressing close on either side. Shadows dappled the rutted path, creating patterns that Soren's trained eyes constantly evaluated for hidden threats.
Each birdsong, each rustle of leaves, each distant crack of breaking branches registered in his awareness, catalogued and assessed without conscious thought.
Inside the carriage, he could hear the murmur of voices, Lady Aveline and her steward in quiet discussion, theirvoices growing occasionally louder before subsiding again.
The steward seemed agitated about something, perhaps Soren's presence, or some other arrangement that had changed without his consultation. Lady Aveline's responses remained measured, authoritative without being harsh.
The woodland thickened as they traveled, ancient trees giving way to younger growth that pressed closer to the road.
Morning light filtered through branches in dappled patterns, creating a constantly shifting landscape of shadow and illumination that kept Soren's senses heightened. His eyes swept the tree line methodically, counting seconds between scans, maintaining a rhythm that allowed nothing to escape his notice.
By midday, they passed the first abandoned village, a cluster of stone cottages with collapsed roofs and empty doorways like eye sockets in weathered skulls. Vegetation had begun reclaiming the structures, ivy crawling up walls and saplings pushing through what had once been a village square.
No signs of recent habitation, though Soren noted the absence of valuable materials, metals, good timber, usable stone, that suggested scavengers had been through at some point.
His mount maintained an easy pace alongside the carriage, hooves striking packed earth in a steady rhythm that Soren counted unconsciously, marking time and distance with the precision that had been trained into him.
Through the carriage's small window, he caught glimpses of Lady Aveline, her profile as she gazed outward, the slight adjustments of her posture as the carriage negotiated rough patches in the road, the occasional gesture as she emphasized a point to her steward.
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