Written in 81 minutes.
She’d obeyed Jason’s command to run and hide, to duck for cover and let another fight the coming battle. She’d done the same more than a dozen years earlier, listening to her mother’s panicked commands, sending Elizabeth and her older sister into the woods as their home had been overrun—
Elizabeth’s fingers curled around one of the thin branches of the bush, her heart pounding, trying to hear the conversation from the road but it was impossible — Jason stood by the horses, talking to the angry leader who had stepped forward, the largest of the five men. Who were they? Valentin’s men? Highway men?
The man gestured at the horses, and Jason’s posture stiffened. Then the man pointed towards the trees—
Towards Elizabeth.
And Jason took a step towards the trees, and for a terrifying moment, Elizabeth thought she’d been sold out. That he’d sent word to someone else that he’d need help dragging her to the capital—
Her hand went inside her cloak, feeling for the hilt of a dagger. She’d not go without a fight. Not again.
But then Jason whirled around, his sword in hand, and in the gut of the brigand who was on the ground, curled up in a fetal position before Elizabeth even registered what had happened.
There were loud, angry yells—the four other men leaping forward to attack, two on foot, and the other two on horseback. Elizabeth lost sight of Jason in the fray—what if he were hurt or killed? What if they came looking for her?
And would she hide in the trees the way she had the night her mother had been murdered? When her home had been burned to the ground, her village plundered and destroyed—
No. Never again.
Elizabeth drew both daggers, clutching the jeweled hilts so tightly in her palms the stones dug grooves into her skins.
This time, she would fight back.
—
Jason ducked away from the one of the two men on horseback, rolling to avoid the hoofs, wondering if he could get to his horse and make a run for it—
He might have had a chance if not for the woman hiding in the trees. If he ran, they would stay and look for her—
He was slammed from the back and went sprawling. He rolled quickly to avoid another horse, then grunted when a black boot was planted in his chest, and the tip of a sword was placed just under his chin.
“You think to win against us all?” The man’s northern accent was harsh against Jason’s ears, a long, angry scar carved into the side of his cheek. Greasy, stringy hair hung down to his shoulders. “You are a fool—”
He lifted the sword, likely to bring down for the killing blow—
And then a dagger flew into his chest, a familiar set of emerald and ruby jewels decorating the hilt. The man gasped and fell backwards, Jason rolling out of the danger zone, stopping only long enough to grasp the dagger from his chest. He came to his feet, his sword in one hand, the dagger in the other.
And on the other side of the road, her cloak tossed aside, her hair tumbling down around her neck, Elizabeth stood wielding the second of her daggers, eying one of the three men left who was already advancing towards her.
Jason grimaced, took a few steps forward only to be waylaid by the two others. He parried and feinted, not looking to kill but only get to Elizabeth. Daggers were good only for up close and personal attacks, and she’d never be able to hold her own with just one—
—-
Elizabeth ducked beneath the hammy fist of her attacker, dancing out of his reach. She jabbed out with her weapon, slicing his hand open. He roared and rushed her — she feinted to the left and he went sprawling.
But there wasn’t a moment to celebrate her good fortune—both men had abandoned going after Jason, determining Elizabeth to be the weaker of the two—
One of them grabbed a chunk of her hair, and she screamed in pain, swinging out wildly with her dagger, finding nothing but air as the man swung her around and planted a fist in her stomach, knocking the wind from her. She went to the ground, her vision swirling, stars dotting her landscape.
Then her head was yanked back and her other arm jerked up. She cried out when her attacker tried to pry the dagger from her hand. But then she was released with a grunt of pain.
Jason had planted his own sword in the man’s middle, then kicked him aside to the ground. He tossed Elizabeth the second of her daggers, and with both her weapons firmly in hand, Elizabeth was back in control, back in her element.
She’d trained for this moment, first with Alan Quartermaine as a child in a dusty stableyard, then as a gawky teenager with nothing but sticks in her hand until her daggers had found her. And then every day, she’d practiced the magic that had sung in the blood of the ladies from Nevoie—
The daggers glinted as she whirled and twirled one of them in her hand, letting it fly into the sword hand of one of the remaining man, who dropped it with a grunt of pain, his pained expression morphing into disbelief when somehow—the dagger had found its way back to Elizabeth’s hand as if she’d never thrown it at all.
Without his weapon and only one good hand, he bellowed, charging for her, but Elizabeth was quicker and lighter. She danced back and out of the way, letting both daggers fly again, finding their home in the chest of her attacker. He went to the ground, falling on his back. The weapons were buried too deeply this time for her to retrieve them with only her command.
By the time Elizabeth had them back in hand, Jason had dispatched the final villain, and was wiping the blood from his sword, dragging it across the cloth tunic of the dead man. Her chest was rising rapidly, her breathing heavy, and her head and torso aching from the blows she’d absorbed—
While Jason looked none worse for the wear, save a new tear in his sleeve, and locks of his dark blonde hair showing some signs of sweat.
Jason strode towards her, his expression tense. “Are you hurt? Bleeding?”
“N-No—”
“Good. We need to get the bodies off the road, and scatter the horses.” Jason hauled the first man towards the side of the road that fell into a deep ditch. “Dark will fall soon enough, and we’re not where I wanted to be.”
Is that all he wanted to say? After such an event? He had nothing to say? No gratitude for her help? Tears pricked the corners of her eyes, but Elizabeth lifted her chin. “All right. Tell me how I can help.”
Already dragging the second man, Jason jerked his head towards the men’s horses. “Search the saddlebags. Take anything valuable.”
“We’d be no better than they—” Elizabeth began, but he threw her a dark look. “All right, I’ll do it, but I’ll not keep a single cent.”
She stalked over to the first of the saddle bags and began to her search.
—
Unsurprisingly there wasn’t much to plunder from the purses of the highway men, but Elizabeth had recovered some coins and a few pieces of jewelry that reassured Jason these were nothing more than highway men looking for another victim to rob.
Elizabeth had dumped her finds into the dirt in front of him, her eyes dark and her expression glacial, then flounced off to clean her daggers and return them to her cloak, now fastened around her shoulders again.
He would be amused by her anger, likely rooted in never having to wonder where her next meal would be found, but he was more irritated with her interference. She ought to have stayed in the woods, safe. He’d have handled the situation and not had the dual worry of watching for her safety in battle.
She watched with sad eyes as Jason scattered the horses, watching them disappear down the road. “Will they be all right? Could we not have taken them with us?”
“I carry enough to look after my horse and yours,” Jason said flatly, and she looked at him. “Or do you think to starve yourself and feed animals instead?”
“Do you intend for us to be on the road for longer than this night?” Elizabeth asked. “I could have gone without a meal if that option had been offered.”
“I didn’t know you waited to be asked,” Jason replied. He came to her side, intending to boost her up into the saddle. “Don’t you just take what you want and do what you like? It’s easy to believe you were a pampered noble—”
The sting of her hand against his cheek was more surprising than painful, but Jason made a show of rubbing his jaw and meeting her eyes. “Does the truth hurt?”
“The truth? I save your worthless life, you miserable wretch, and all you can do is fling insults?” She planted both hands against his chest and shoved. Already slightly off balance, Jason fell back a step. “You think me some spoiled lady of the manor?”
“I think you’ve never worried where you’ll lay your head at night,” Jason said, and she glowered. “Tragedy might have befallen you, but—”
“But what? I tell you that I’ve been held captive for the majority of my life, bound to the walls of some dower house on a Cassadine estate, and then confined to that horrible village—”
“With a home and land to look after,” Jason cut in, and she closed her mouth. “Have you ever starved? Ever slept outside in the rain for days? Felt the cold seep inside your bones until you felt sure you’d never know warmth again?”
Tears pricked the corners of her eyes, but they did not fall, only clinging to her lashes, and he felt the first trickle of shame dancing up his spin.
“No. I suppose I must be grateful that I’ve always had four walls around me. That Valentin Cassadine found me wandering in those woods that night, crying while I listened to the crackling of flames roaring through my home, and the screams of my people as they were butchered by the man whose coin you took. I am so fortunate that my captor took care of me, kept me clothed and fed while he controlled my every waking movement for fourteen years.”
Jason exhaled slowly. “I simply meant—”
“You simply meant that because my experience had more creature comforts than your own that I cannot know what it is to want, to have to do resort to desperation. What do you think I am doing here on this road with you? I could have remained in Shadwell, bound there for the rest of my life. But I took a risk and I left, and now I stand here in the middle of a road, darkness falling, with a man whom I do not know and scarcely trust, desperately hoping that you are not leading me to my doom. Desperately hoping that you do not lie about this woman who might be the sister I’ve thought lost a lifetime ago. Do not think that because my desperation looks different from yours, Master Morgan, that I do not know its taste.”
—
The audacity of that man, Elizabeth fumed, turning away when he’d had nothing to say in his own defense. She’d only thought to look after a simple horse, and yet somehow, he’d managed to make her feel like a stupid girl putting her trust in a stranger who had done nothing to earn it.
“If you’ll simply tell me the direction of this person you claim will be able to help me find the woman, you and I will go our separate ways. We clearly cannot keep moving forward when you think so ill of me—”
“If I send you to Mary Mae without explaining myself in person, I’ll pay for it the rest of my life,” Jason said finally. He bent down, cupped his hands. “Let’s be on our way.”
She nearly kicked him, but instead put her foot in the cradle of his hands, and when he boosted her, mounted her horse. “Mary Mae?” she echoed.
“Mary Mae Ward runs the Hare and the Hound.” Jason mounted his own horse, then brought the stallion towards her so that the horses were abreast of each other. “On Berry Lane in Wymoor, a few steps from the harbor.”
“Wymoor,” Elizabeth repeated, sifting through the maps she’d studied. “On the sea of Varra. That’s—”
“On the other side of the island, far from Tonderah,” Jason finished. “If I were leading you to Valentin, you’d know it by now.” He hesitated. “You think you saved my life, and maybe there’s some truth in that—”
“He was about to plunge a sword into your chest,” Elizabeth cut in. “Perhaps you were planning a miracle?”
“I had it under control—”
“Maybe you did.” Elizabeth stared at the road ahead. “I hid when my mother was killed, when my sister was lost. It wasn’t you that I came to help today, but the ghosts that I abandoned long ago. If you want an apology, you’ll be disappointed.”
“What about a promise to listen when I tell you to hide?”
“You can be rest assured, Master Morgan, that the next opportunity I have to save your life, I will definitely think twice.”