006 - Welcome to Agrekya
Fractureborn
The wind was gentle, almost playful. Birds chirped, leaves swayed like they were whispering old songs, and the sun painted everything golden. The village of Riverbend was alive.
Children laughed near the riverbanks, tossing stones and daring each other into the shallows. Fishermen tugged their lines and leaned back on old crates. The scent of baked bread and fresh earth lingered in the air. A woman laughed as she stirred a pot outside her home, a baby clinging to her side. A man passed by with baskets of herbs, greeting her.
Lysandros lay flat on his back in the tall grass, eyes closed, face tilted toward the warmth of the morning. His tunic was clean. His boots were dry. And he was youngerâmaybe thirteen, still lanky with the roundness of boyhood on his cheeks.
Thenâ
âHey! Son!â
His fatherâs voice cut across the field. Familiar. Strong. Worn.
âCome over here! I have something to tell you! Something Iâve been wanting to tell you for a very long time!â
But before Lysandros could sit upâ
CRACKK-THUUUM!
The sky turned dark. Wind howled. The grass flattened in panic. Rain crashed down in sheets. In a blink, Riverbend was gone, no laughter, no sun, no warm bread, only silence and the stench of rot.
Now Lysandros stood, soaked, trembling. In front of him: dozens of lifeless bodies sprawled across the mud, stacked like broken furniture. The plague, Lymesis, had left no time for grief.
His father crouched before him, shovel in one hand. Same white tunic, same green breeches, drenched and heavy from the rain. Black hair stuck to his face, his green eyes wild with urgency.
âSon! We have to burn them!â his voice cracked under the weight of it. âThe ones whoâve died, if we donât, the sickness will spread faster. The stormâs only getting worse. We have to gather them, rope them, and burn them inside the old kiln house. Come on, Lysandros!â
âNo!â Lysandros shouted, his young voice thin against the rain. âNo, Dad! We canât do that! These people, they were people! They had names! Lives! Families! You used to tell me, we bury the dead to give them rest. So they can sleep in the earth! Not be turned to ash like garbage!â
His father stared at him, breathing hard, face caught between fear and pain.
ââ¦Okay,â he finally said, shoulders lowering. âOkay⦠So letâs hurry. Before anyone sees.â
But someone did.
A voice, deep, sharp, called out from behind them. âOi! Whatâs taking you two so long?!â
The War Chief of Riverbend stepped forward, two men flanking him, clad in leather armor. Daggers on their belts. Rain dripping from their cloaks.
âYou want this plague to eat through the rest of us too?!â he snapped. âWe burn the corpses. Thatâs the only way. If we donât act now, weâll all be in those piles next week!â
Lysandros' father turned to him, defeated. âIâm sorry, Lysandros. We canât. Not this time.â
âNo!â Lysandros cried out, chest heaving, fists clenched. His voice wobbled but he stood firm, face red with fury. âThey were people! You donât just burn people! Thatâs not safetyâitâs fear! Thatâs not mercyâitâs giving up! What if it was Mom in that pile?! Or me?! Would you still say that?! Would you still toss us in with the rest and light the match?!â
His father flinched.
The War Chief stepped forward.
Thenâ
BOOOOOOM!!!
A lightning strike. A nearby house erupted into flames.
Then another.
And another.
Four homes now blazed like candles in the rain.
âWhat?!â the War Chief gasped, backing away. âLightning? Now?!â
His men panicked, shouting.
Another deafening thunderclap cracked the airâ
And Lysandros woke up.
He gasped.
His chest rising fast. Skin slick with sweat despite the chill. The world was quiet again, night air, faint moonlight through broken stone, the distant croak of frogs.
But now Alexia was no longer asleep. She sat quietly on a fallen log, one hand poking gently at the campfire with a stick, watching the embers pulse orange and gold. Her sword rested across her legs, unsheathed but calm, like her.
She glanced at him as he stirred.
âWoah,â she said, raising a brow. âYou okay? Looked like you had a nightmare there.â
Lysandros rubbed his face, still half-caught in the haze of what he saw. Or dreamed. Or remembered.
âWhâwhere are we?â he muttered.
Alexia pointed with the stick, casual and calm. âJust slightly away from the gates of the Northern District of Agrekya. Look, itâs just up there.â
Through the thinning trees, a stone wall stretched along the hill, quiet under the moonlight. Tall iron torches flickered against it. Ten knights stood guard, still, watchful, blades resting at their hips. Above them, simple banners hung down the wall. A pale stag against a gray field, a faded blue cross, and the sunburst of House Basileides.
âWoah,â Lysandros murmured. âYouâre right. Wait, howâd we even end up here?â
âYou passed out,â she replied, not unkindly. âRight after we started walking from the gravesite. I think you overused your fracture. Pushed too far.â She turned her eyes back to the fire. âBut donât worry. You werenât out long. Just a little time.â
Enjoying the story? Show your support by reading it on the official site.
âI guess I didâ¦â He looked at his hands again, quietly, as if unsure whether they were still his.
âYou ready to walk again?â she asked. âYou can rest properly once we get inside.â
He nodded, but something still nagged at him. âWait, hold on. Why are you willing to pay? For my tunic, my shovel⦠the food?â
Alexia looked up at the sky before answering, as if the words had been there all along. âBecause in our kingdom, there are fractureborns too. But lately⦠fewer and fewer. People like us keep vanishing without a trace. No warning. No signs.â
She paused. Her fingers ran along the flat of her swordâs blade, though it remained at rest.
âSo I think itâs better that we find each other. Fractureborns. That we stick together, share what we know, protect each other. While the rest of the world⦠well, it still thinks weâre cursed. Like we caused the plague. Like weâre not quite human anymore.â
Lysandros frowned. âThatâs horrible.â
Alexiaâs expression shiftedâcalm, but heavy with something old. Something lived.
âYeah,â she said. âIt is. And you wanna know my biggest mistake?â
She didnât wait for his answer.
âI told someone. When I was younger. Just a few people, I thought. That I was a fractureborn. Thought it would help. Thought maybe theyâd understand. But they didnât. Word spread fast. Faster than I could stop it. And the moment they knewâ¦â Her voice quieted. âThey changed. Some were afraid of me. Others mocked me. They didnât throw me out of the kingdom, sure. But they stopped seeing me as one of them.â
There was a long silence between them, broken only by the soft popping of the fire.
âBut hey,â she added, voice lighter now, with a flicker of that old stubborn strength, âyou wonât be alone. Youâve got me now. And youâll meet my friends soon, too. Thereâs only three of them, but theyâre good. And theyâre enough. For me, at least.â
She smiled genuinely. Not out of politeness, but out of something rare and quiet.
Lysandros felt a flush creep up his neck. He coughed and looked away, rubbing his nose. âRight. Hehe!â
He stood, brushing the dirt from his borrowed cloak, swishing it dramatically. âLetâs go!â
Alexia stood too, strapping her sword back to her belt with a quiet click. She chuckled as she caught a glance at the cloak now thoroughly smudged with grave-soil and dried rain.
âI really need my cloak cleaned again,â she muttered.
Lysandros grinned. âCâmon! The extra soil makes the cloak way cooler! Gives it that tragic-hero-who-buries-his-past kind of vibe!â
She rolled her eyes and shook her head, already walking toward the gate. âYouâre insufferable.â
And so they began to move againâAlexia leading with calm steps, Lysandros a pace behind, cloak billowing in the night wind like he owned it.
The gates of Agrekya waited above them, flickering with light. But behind them, the fire still crackled gently, warmth in the darkness, briefly borrowed, now fading.
â ⢠â ⢠â
Two knights stood by the torch-lit gates, shifting in their armor, shoulders hunched against the chill. Their silver pauldrons gleamed dully under the flamelight, and their breath clouded the still night air.
"Hey," one muttered, rubbing his gloved hands together, "we better not be caught slacking off like this. If a noble sees us, gods forbid, the Princess herself, weâre as good as dead."
The other chuckled, half-hearted. "Dead, or reassigned to the filth pits near the South Sewers. Same thing."
A gust of wind stirred the banners above them, plain white cloth marked with the sigil of Agrekya. A single black sword piercing a crown, the blade cracked faintly in the middle.
"Always look sharp when they come," the first added, narrowing his eyes down the forested path ahead.
"But it's already midnight," the other yawned, leaning against his spear. "Everyoneâs probably asleep. Nobles snoring, merchants drunk, guards like us freezing our asses off. Only shadows walk at this hour."
"Yeah, yeah. Still, weâve got a job. Keep your eyes open. That's what we signed up for."
Above them, on the stone walkway lining the castle wall, a stern voice called out.
"Hey! You two down there!" It was the archer stationed on the wall. A serious one, known for writing reports even on his fellow guards. "You see anything odd?"
"None, boss!" the first guard called up.
"None!" echoed the second.
The archer didn't respond. Just kept pacing, his silhouette rigid against the torchlight, bow slung across his back like a threat.
"Tsk," the first knight muttered under his breath. "He doesnât have to bark orders like that. We know our damn job."
The second knight, tone quieter now, gaze focused on the road, spoke again. "Say... you heard about that boy from the Southern District?"
The other turned. "The boy from Southern District? Seventeen? Eighteen? Fractureborn, wasnât he?"
"Yeah. Thatâs the one. They said he was kidnapped. Broad daylight. By people dressed as wanderers. Cloaked figures. Blue cloaks, I think. Covered faces. No insignia."
A silence fell.
"Thatâs the third this month," the second said eventually. "Thirteenth this year. Theyâre picking off Fractureborn like wolves in the woods."
"Gods, itâs awful."
"And no oneâs doing anything about it. Not the nobles. Not even Princess Ismene herself."
"Youâd think she'd care. What with the plague, and the fractures... but no. Fractureborn go missing and all we get are rumors and shrugged shoulders."
The first knight glanced upward toward the keep, where faint torchlight burned behind the tall windows. "Even the priests wonât speak on it. Brother Nikandros acts like itâs none of his concern. And that higher one, Brother Pyros, older brother of Brother Nikandros, he just spits at the ground whenever someone brings it up."
"Yikes," the other winced. "What a cursed life it must be. How do they even walk around, knowing theyâre hunted like that?"
"Alone," came the reply. "Thatâs how."
A long pause.
"Wanna switch? Iâm getting sleepy. Just wake me when your eyes start drooping, Iâll take over."
"Deal. Donât snore."
Just as the guard leaned against the stone for rest, a third knight, older, silent, arms crossed and leaned against the wall all this time, suddenly straightened. His eyes narrowed.
âEnough chatter,â he said.
The other two blinked. âWhat?â
He raised a hand, still watching the woods. âSomeoneâs coming.â
Then came the footsteps.
At first, faint, barely louder than the crackle of fire, but then growing. Measured. Purposeful. From the treeline, beyond the cobbled path that snaked out toward the north woods.
All ten guards tensed. Even the archers on the wall froze, bows quietly lifted, watching.
Thenâfigures. Emerging from shadow and underbrush.
Alexia stepped forward, her cloak brushing past low brambles, her stride slow but confident. A fire-worn travelerâs gait, the kind that didnât falter even in strange lands. Her sword was sheathed at her side, a steady hand resting atop it.
Beside her, a younger manâLysandrosâcloaked in brown, boots dusty, a bit of soil still crusted near the hem. Wide-eyed, though trying not to show it.
A few guards murmured quietly as they drew closer.
"Thatâs her... Alexia Lethiane."
"The fractureborn warrior?"
"She looks... cool, doesnât she? I mean, beautiful, tooâ"
"Too bad. Still a fractureborn."
Alexia stopped a few paces from the gate, raising her hand calmly in greeting.
One of the gate knights stepped forward, voice brisk. âState your names.â
Alexia, composed, spoke first. âAlexia Lethiane. Resident of Agrekya. Returning from a scouting trip east, under Princess Ismeneâs charter.â
The guard squinted at her. âWe know you. Youâre cleared.â
He turned his attention to the boy beside her.
âYou. Speak. You donât look like youâre from here.â
Lysandros stepped forward, trying not to sound nervous. âLysandros Damarchos. From the village of Riverbend.â
The guard raised a brow. âAre you two acquainted?â
Alexia nodded smoothly. âYes. A fellow adventuring acquaintance. He accompanies me on royal assignments.â
âHmph.â The guardâs eyes lingered on Lysandros, but he nodded. âVery well. Enter.â
Behind him, another guard began rotating the heavy wooden mechanism beside the wall. With a clatter of chains and groan of wood, the massive gate began to riseâslowly, its beams creaking as torchlight leaked out between the opening slats.
The gate yawned wide enough to admit two figures.
Alexia stepped through first. Lysandros followed, wide-eyed.
The gates rumbled closed behind them.
Alexia, not looking back, murmured, âWelcome to the kingdom of Agrekya.â
Lysandros turned in a slow circle, muttering beneath his breath. âWoah...â
Every building lining the cobbled streets was lit with warm lanterns and oil torches, some hanging beside doors, others perched atop carved posts. The air smelled of old wood, wet stone, and distant forge-smoke. Blacksmithsâ chimneys still trickled embers into the sky. A chapel tower loomed at the hillâs crest, its bell silent in the night.
And beyond it all, rising higher than the rest, the royal keep. Pale stone. Sloped spires. Draped banners catching the wind.
Even the trees whispered here.
The kind of place where stories lived in every shadow.