003 - Step without evidence
Fractureborn
Alexia took one step closer to the body again, eyes narrowing slightly. "So why is there a dead woman lying on the floor, blood still warm?"
Lysandros raised both hands, shovel tucked in the crook of his elbow like he was surrendering. "That's not my doing! And for the record, I found her before you even got here."
He pointed toward a stairway behind them. "I went downstairs to grab my shovel. Y'know, the whole 'bury the dead and honor the fallen' routine. I didn't think anyone else would be climbing up here tonight â let alone a sword-dragging, armor-clanking knight-lady-who's-not-a-knight."
Alexia tilted her head. "You went down just to get a shovel?"
"Well, I wasn't gonna scoop her up with my hands! That's disrespectful and very unhygienic. And also I only have two shirts."
She raised an eyebrow.
"I swear," he added, getting dramatic now, "whoever did that to this woman, may the gods strike them down, may their kneecaps be reversed, may their socks always be wetâ"
"Alright," she cut in. "You made your point."
Lysandros huffed, muttering, "I'll erase their existence from this world with my fracture, that's what I'll do!"
That word stopped her cold.
Alexia blinked.
She kept her expression even, tried to look disinterested, casual. Too casual.
"Fracture?" she asked. "You're a fractureborn?"
He grinned proudly. "Why yes, I am. Thank you for noticing."
She folded her arms. "You don't exactly look like one."
He gasped, hand to his chest. "I'll have you know, my fracture is extremely powerful. So powerful, I once accidentally caused every bird in a tree to poop at the same time. It was horrifying. But majestic."
"...Right."
"Also, nice to meet you, fellow fractureborn."
She blinked again. "What?"
He winked. "C'mon, you think I wouldn't notice? Fractureborns are most of the time, or let's just say, all the time, lo"
"I don't know what you're talking about."
"Of course you don't," he said with a knowing grin, twirling the shovel like a baton. "But hey, good to know I'm not the only one cursedâsorry, blessedâwith a mystery power and identity issues."
Alexia turned away before he could see the corner of her mouth twitch.
"I'm not here to talk about fractures," she said stiffly. "I'm here for something else."
"Right. Of course. Just like I wear this tunic and carry a shovel for fashion."
He leaned on the shovel, one eye squinting at her. "You're a terrible liar, you know."
"And you're an annoying man-child with a shovel."
"Which makes me uniquely dangerous," he replied, grinning. "Now. Are we gonna work together to figure out who murdered this poor woman, or are we gonna keep trading insults until the plague takes us both?"
She looked at the body again.
Fresh blood.
A clean kill.
And no visible signs of plague.
This wasn't random.
Something â or someone â had been waiting.
Alexia exhaled slowly.
Then muttered under her breath, "Fine. Just don't slow me down."
"I'll try not to trip over my own masculinity."
"Unbelievable."
"Thank you!"
Taken from Royal Road, this narrative should be reported if found on Amazon.
They stood there, the knight-who-wasn't-a-knight and the boy-who-wasn't-a-boy, on a mossy castle wall where ivy had eaten stone, dusk curling into night.
They walked along the upper wall of the castle, boots thudding against the slick stone, still damp from the rain that had only recently stopped. The sky was a pale, dusky orange now, with streaks of purple crawling in from the edge of the horizon. Below them, the courtyard and surrounding ruins of the keep stretched out in stillness, overgrown and half-swallowed by ivy and years of silence.
Alexia led the way, her steps steady, eyes scanning the layout from above. Behind her, Lysandros walked with a slightly quicker pace just to keep up, his shovel bouncing slightly over his shoulder.
Then came his voice, light and casual, but obviously a setup for something.
"By the way," he said, "thereâs one thing Iâve been meaning to ask. How exactly is the plague transmitted? I mean just wondering for a friend."
Alexia didnât even glance back. âThanks for giving me a clue that youâre not from our kingdom,â she replied flatly. âYouâre a villager, arenât you?â
âWhat?!â Lysandros nearly tripped on a loose stone. âWhoa whoa whoaâhold on now. What gave that away?! Was it the shovel? I swear itâs not a fashion choice. Or maybe the hair? Is it the hair? Iâve been told I look rustic before, but rustic is charming, isnât it? Right? Like, âOh look at that guy, he probably knows how to gut a fish or build a barn with his eyes closed.â That kind of thing. Not âLook at that guy, he probably doesnât even know what soap is!â Thatâs a whole different category, and frankly, I bathe regularly, soââ
Alexia raised an eyebrow, still not looking at him. âOnly the kingdoms have wide knowledge about how the plague works. Villages? Most of them still think itâs a curse passed on from sneezing or bad dreams. What village are you from?â
Lysandros paused. â...Do I have to answer that?â
She finally turned to glance back at him. âDonât try avoiding me now.â
âAhhhh dammit,â he groaned, throwing his head back. âFine, but just so you knowâIâm only answering because youâre asking, not because Iâm, like, secretly admiring your strong warrior energy or anything, alright? Letâs get that straight. I mean, yeah, you look like you could cut a boulder in half with a glare, and sure, your armorâs all shiny and intimidating in a cool way, and maybe the way you hold your sword makes me feel like I should be standing ten feet to the left at all times, but thatâs not admiration, thatâs just basic survival instincts. Totally different.â
âVillage from the east?â she interrupted, unimpressed.
He blinked. âHow in the name of the old goats did you guess that right?â
âPeople there usually have a loud mouth that talks nonstop,â she said dryly. âJust like how a goat chews nonstop.â
Lysandros burst out laughing. âOh wow. Thatâs terrible. Youâve got the intimidation thing nailed, but your jokes? Yeesh. That one was moldy.â
He swung his shovel forward like a walking stick and grinned. âBut yes, Iâm from the east. Village of Riverbend. Youâve heard of it?â
âI have,â Alexia replied. âBeen there once before the plague. Quiet place, had good fishing spots. Decent food, too.â
âIt is a pretty good place,â he nodded. âYou know, for a forgotten corner of the world.â
He scratched the back of his head. âWhat about you? Whatâs your name? Whereâre you from?â
âHaldaerk Kingdom. Nameâs Alexia.â
âOoohhh, fancy,â he said, pretending to be impressed. âI have no idea where that is, but it sounds official. Living in a secured kingdom, huh? Must be nice. Do you get, like, free bread and proper shoes and everything?â
Alexia rolled her eyes.
âSo,â he said again, this time eyeing her gear, âwhat got you lost out here, then? You an adventurer?â
âA warrior,â she answered. âI live through quests.â
He raised his brows. âA warrior, huh? I like it. A warrior who wears knight armor. Kind of like a wolf in wolfâs clothing.â
They walked a bit further in silence as the shadow of the Red Keep rose ahead, its towers jagged and half-eaten by moss and time. From here, the castle looked even older than it was â like it was sagging beneath the weight of memory.
Lysandros looked at it, then glanced at her.
âSo⦠why are you really here?â
Alexiaâs steps slowed. She didnât look at him, but her tone changed, quieter now. âIâm looking for a Fractureborn.â
He blinked. âWait, what? Thatâs me.â
âI know. But since youâve forced meââ
âHey hey hey! I didnât force you into anything!â he protested. âI barely had time to blink before you unsheathed your sword like you were gonna chop my head off!â
She continued without reacting. âI figured itâd be fine to waste a bit of time before heading back to the kingdom.â
Lysandros was quiet for a second. Then his tone changed, less playful now. âHmm. Youâre looking for a Fractureborn like me, arenât you?â
Alexia turned to glance back at him, her voice half-serious, half-teasing. âYouâre kind of freaking me out, do you know that? Is your fracture about reading peopleâs minds like mine?â
He looked horrified. âNoooo! Gods, no! Thatâd be horrible. Can you imagine? Every time someone passes by, you accidentally hear what they think about your haircut? Or worse, your breath? Nah, I donât want that kind of pressure. My mindâs already a crowded place, thank you very much. Iâd rather carry a bucket of worms on my head than hear what everyoneâs thinking.â
Alexia let out a small, reluctant laugh.
âBut youâre right, though,â Lysandros added, quieter. âFractureborns⦠weâre always alone. People donât get us. Sometimes I wonder if we even get each other. But even if weâre weird and a little cracked, doesnât mean we donât need company sometimes.â
Alexia looked over her shoulder again, this time for longer. Her eyes softened just a touch.
âCompany, huh. Well, about that, I'm actually not aloââ
And then, just ahead, movement caught her eye.
A figure, cloaked in brown, was slipping through the tall wooden doors of the Red Keep. The person moved quickly, almost too quietly for someone just walking. The fabric of their cloak fluttered like torn leaves in the breeze, and their face was hidden in shadow.
Alexia stopped.
Lysandros stopped too, following her gaze. âYou see that?â
âYeah,â she muttered. âSomeone else is here.â
She reached down toward her sword again.
Lysandros squinted at the figure slipping through the Red Keepâs gate. His voice dropped a note.
"That person might have something to do with the woman who was killed."
Alexia didnât even look at him right away. Her eyes stayed forward.
"As a warrior, you already failed the first step of becoming one," she said flatly. "Donât assume without evidence."
Lysandros didnât smile this time. His grip on the shovel tightened.
"Letâs go," he said, tone sharper now.
"Just in case Iâm not wrong."
Lysandrosâs fingers curled around his shovel. The humor in his voice was gone.
The wind picked up.