The cobbled streets of Mermaidâs Cove glowed with the soft orange hue of the afternoon sun.
Mira walked at a leisurely pace, her wicker basket tucked against her hip, filled with herbs, linen, and a paper-wrapped packet of cinnamon buns still warm from the café.
Children darted past her with wooden swords, laughing and shrieking. A fruit vendor called out across the square. The scent of sea salt and fresh bread mingled in the breeze.
It should have been an ordinary afternoon.
Mira slowed. She took a moment to enjoy the peacefulness.
Itâs still a wonderful day, despite the morning incident, she thought.
That was when she suddenly felt it. A stir in the air.
She turned her head slightlyânot enough to draw attention, but just enough to listen.
There. The sound of metal.
Distant, faintâbut unmistakable.
Clash.
A blade meeting another.
Then again.
Clang.
Not practice. Not friendly. A real fight.
Miraâs fingers tightened around the handle of her basket.
A heartbeat later, she felt itâthrough the soles of her boots, in the pit of her stomach. The pulse of mana. Controlled, sharp, coiled like a trap ready to spring.
And then a surge of something elseâbloodlust.
Miraâs breath caught.
She glanced down the street. A pair of old men argued about oysters. A girl hummed a lullaby to her baby brother.
These innocent people remained unawareâthat something so dangerous was just around the corner.
Itâs close. Too close.
She didnât hesitate.
She turned, stepped off the main road, and began walkingâbrisklyâtoward the source.
Her senses sharpened with every stride. The cobbles gave way to cracked stones. The houses thinned. Shadows deepened.
Thenâthe scent hit her.
The scent of blood.
She reached the mouth of a narrow alleyâ
And saw him.
Cassian.
Breathing hard. Bleeding. Holding his ground against six cloaked figuresâbut barely.
Miraâs eyes narrowed.
She dropped the basket.
And the temperature dropped rapidly around her...
Back at the alley...
Cassian gritted his teeth, dragging in a breath that rattled through cracked ribs.
His blades were heavy now. Slower.
His arms screamed with each parry, and blood trickled down his side where one of them had landed a clean cut.
There were just too many of them.
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The Crimson Crow didnât fight like thugs. They didnât even fight like soldiers.
Every move was trained. Measured. Elegant and merciless.
They didnât waste steps. They didnât show off. They came to kill.
And they were doing it well.
âYouâre good,â came the voice of the branded oneâtheir leader, probably. He was circling now, eyes gleaming in the shadows. âBetter than most. I almost regret the order.â
Cassian coughed, spat blood to the side, and adjusted his stance.
âThen donât follow it.â
The man chuckled.
âOh, itâs not that kind of job.â
Another slash cameâCassian barely blocked it. The shock of it rattled down his spine.
He spun and kicked, catching one off-balance, but the next instant he felt a sting at his back.
A deep cut made one of his blades slip from his fingers, clattering to the stone.
No. He couldnât go down now. Not without warning the others. Not with the Crimson Crow this close to the prince.
A foot swept his legs.
He fell, hard. His vision swam.
A dagger glinted above him.
The branded assassin stood over him, mask half-pulled, revealing a face too calm for what came next.
âThis is the end, old timer,â the man murmured, voice low and almost pitying. âYou shouldn't stick your nose where it doesnât belong.â
Cassianâs breath came ragged. His back ached from the fall, his vision pulsed at the edges.
Old timer? he thought, teeth gritted. Guess this is who I am now, huh?
His eyes flicked to the blade above him.
So this is it. No grand last stand. No clever escape. Just a footnote in someone else's job.
He braced himself.
Itâs been a pleasure serving you, my prince.
He closed his eyes as the dagger arced downâ
But the pain never came.
Because the blade had stoppedâmid-air.
Frozen.
Literally.
Whatâ¦? Cassian blinked as a fine mist danced around the assassinâs arm. The air crackled. The temperature dropped sharply.
And then the frost came.
It started at the wristâthin, delicate. Then, in the span of a heartbeat, it raced along the limb, encasing it in a sheath of ice.
The assassin tried to pull back, but the cold was faster. The frost surged up his shoulder, across his chest, down his legs.
In seconds, he was encased in a block of jagged, white-blue crystal.
Cassian could see the assassinâs eyes still darting wildly beneath the ice, his mouth twitching faintly as if he were still trying to speak.
He was alive. Just locked in place. Like a specimen on display.
Cassianâs breath caught in his throat.
Then he felt itâthe shift in the air. Cold. Dense. Radiating power.
He turned his head, slowly.
And heard the soft crunch of footsteps over frost.
Mira stood there. Mana glowing in her eyes, hand raisedâand the air changed.
Like a winter wind had swept through the narrow alley.
Her voice came slow and steady. âStep away from him.â
7831734316863f70f9c2498.47869807-184430.png [https://static.penana.com/images/content/184430/7831734316863f70f9c2498.47869807-184430.png] She had no weapon at her side. No armor. Just her hem fluttering in the wind and her hair catching faint glimmers of sunlight.
Her hands were bare, her posture relaxedâalmost gentle.
But the magic thrumming around her was anything but.
One of the assassins snapped out of his shock and lunged toward her, blades flashing.
Mira didnât flinch.
She raised her right hand.
A thin ring of sigils spun into existenceâglowing white. And with a snap of her fingers, a column of shimmering force burst upward beneath the attacker, hurling him into the air and slamming him into the opposite wall.
He didnât get up.
Another charged her from the side, faster, smarter.
Mira didnât look at him.
She whispered something under her breath.
The air folded inwardâjust for an instantâand the attacker froze mid-swing, then exploded backward, as if struck by a gale.
His body tumbled across the alley, unconscious before he hit the ground.
Cassian could only watch, in awe.
Heâd seen mages cast. Heâd seen them chant, gesture, draw runes in long seconds of preparation.
But Mira didnât chant.
She didnât have to.
She raised her left handâand the alley bloomed with crystal spears, erupting from the ground in a rising arc, forcing the remaining two assassins to leap back.
But the ice chased them, branches curling like vines, jagged and beautiful.
One got his footing and tried to throw a daggerâonly for his arm to go stiff, then blue, then encased in rime up to his shoulder.
âWhat the hellââ His scream cut short as he froze solid, eyes wide in disbelief.
Only one remained now. The last assassin backed away, eyes wild behind his mask, breath fogging in the cold.
âItâs very hard for me to control my spells without my gloves on,â Mira said, gaze locked on the last man. âYield now, before you get yourself killed.â
The assassin turned to run.
He got two steps before the ground beneath him froze solid, his boots slippingâ
And a shockwave of force slammed down from above, pinning him to the cobblestones with a burst of wind and pressure.
Not enough to kill. But just enough to break.
Cassian stared at her from where he lay on the ground, blood in his mouth, heart still hammering.
Mira didnât speak. She just stepped forward and held out a hand.
A warm glow surrounded himâa soft healing spell, gentle and efficient.
âYou okay?â she asked softly, her voice cutting through the lingering stillness like sunlight after a storm.
Cassian swallowed. âI⦠am now.â
He looked around at the ruins of the alley. Frost clinging to every brick. Five assassins down. One still groaning.
And Mira dâArk, the girl Mermaidâs Cove called a saintess, standing over them like a goddess herself had taken her side.
ââ¦I think Iâm starting to understand why they call you the Saintess of the South,â he muttered.
Mira blinked. "Theyâre just flattering me."
Then offered the faintest smile. âWho are these people, Sir Cassian?â
âAssassins. From an old, evil guild.â He pushed himself up. âWe need to warn the prince.â