
The Rise Of Queen Arwen
Chapter 2
The road to Valoria wound through the black heart of Ravendale’s forests, where the fog clung low and the trees leaned close, whispering secrets to the night. The carriage wheels creaked over frozen mud, and inside, Arwen sat cloaked in silence, her hands clasped tightly around the hilt of her mother’s dagger.
No one spoke. Not since the convent.
Mira rode beside the carriage, her bow strung and ready. Faye sat across from Arwen, her eyes hollow but alert, a faint bruise darkening her temple from where falling debris had struck her during their escape. Liora, ever the quiet watcher, pressed her face to the window slit, scanning the shadows.
“Still nothing,” she murmured. “Not even an owl.”
“Too quiet,” Mira called softly from outside. “The woods sleep when danger stirs.”
Arwen met her gaze through the glass and nodded once. Her chest felt tight, not with fear but with the strange, fierce calm that had settled over her since Isla’s death. She had not cried again — she doubted she would. Queens did not have that luxury.
They rode until the moon hung high. Every sound seemed sharper — the snort of a horse, the whisper of branches, the soft rattle of chainmail beneath the guards’ cloaks. The air tasted of iron.
Then came the smell of smoke.
At first, faint. Then stronger.
Liora’s eyes widened. “Fire.”
Before anyone could speak, a whistle cut through the night — high, shrill, unmistakable.
An arrow smashed through the carriage window, splintering the frame. Another followed, lodging deep into the wood inches from Faye’s face. The horses shrieked and reared.
“Ambush!” cried one of the guards.
The forest erupted into chaos. Torches flared between the trees — red, gold, and deadly bright. The emblem on the soldiers’ tunics caught the light: three lions, gleaming like blood.
The British had come.
Arwen threw open the carriage door just as it lurched violently to the side. The driver was already down, his body limp, arrows jutting from his back. Mira’s voice rang out, fierce and unyielding: “Protect the Queen!”
She loosed an arrow that found its mark, then another. Faye dragged Arwen from the tilting carriage, ducking low as arrows rained down. The handmaidens moved like warriors, each one fighting not just for their queen but for their own survival.
Mira drove her dagger into the thigh of a soldier who charged too close, twisting until he fell with a roar. Liora, quick and precise, used her cloak as a decoy to draw another man off course before slashing his arm open.
“Stay behind me!” Faye shouted, parrying a strike with the edge of her blade.
But Arwen did not stay behind.
When a soldier seized Faye by the arm, dragging her toward the trees, Arwen’s instincts took hold. She lunged forward, unsheathing her mother’s dagger, and drove it into his side. The soldier staggered, stunned, as she tore the blade free. His blood spattered her hands, hot and shocking.
Faye turned, gasping. “Arwen—”
“I’m not helpless,” Arwen said, her voice trembling but sure. “Not anymore.”
The words hung between them for only a heartbeat before another explosion split the air. One of the carts, struck by a torch, went up in flames — horses screaming, harnesses snapping. Heat seared across Arwen’s face. The carriage that carried her crown jewels toppled, splintering into embers.
“Retreat!” shouted one of the guards. “To the ravine — move!”
They were outnumbered five to one. Even Mira, relentless as she was, could see it. She seized Arwen’s arm, dragging her toward the slope of the forest.
“Down!” she hissed.
Arwen turned once, just long enough to see two of her men cut down by British steel. Their cries would echo in her dreams for the rest of her life. Then she followed Mira, plunging through the undergrowth as arrows hissed past.
Branches whipped against her face. Her lungs burned. The roar of battle faded behind them, replaced by the steady pound of their boots and the crackle of fire consuming the road.
They stumbled into the ravine — a narrow gash in the earth, half-hidden by frost and stone. The air there was colder, the silence heavier. They collapsed behind a fallen log, gasping for breath.
Faye clutched her side, blood seeping through her sleeve. Mira pressed a hand over the wound. “It’s shallow,” she said quickly. “You’ll live.”
Liora peered back toward the ridge. “They’re searching the treeline. But they won’t find us here. Not yet.”
Arwen wiped blood — hers or another’s, she couldn’t tell — from her cheek. Her whole body shook, but she refused to let it show.
“Count the survivors,” she said, her voice hoarse but steady. “We bury our dead, then we move.”
They waited until the torches above dimmed into the distance. Then, in silence, they climbed deeper into the ravine and buried their fallen beneath frost and stone. Arwen pressed her dagger into the soil beside one grave — a nameless guard who had died shielding her — and whispered, “Your queen will not forget you.”
By dawn, they reached the edge of a small fishing village nestled against the border. Smoke curled gently from the chimneys, the scent of salt and woodsmoke hanging in the air.
A fisherman spotted them first — a grey-bearded man with wary eyes. His gaze fell to the signet ring on Arwen’s finger, gleaming faintly in the dawn light. Recognition flickered across his face.
“By the stars,” he breathed. “The lost Queen.”
Before Arwen could speak, he ushered them quickly toward his home. “This way. They’ll be sweeping the roads by midday.”
He hid them in a root cellar beneath his cottage — a cramped space that smelled of earth and brine. For three nights, they stayed there, the sound of boots and shouts echoing faintly overhead as British patrols scoured the village.
Faye tended to the wounded. Mira sharpened blades in silence. Liora took turns watching through the cracks in the hatch.
Arwen did not sleep.
She sat in the dark with parchment spread across her knees, the seal of Ravendale pressed into hot wax. Her message was short — a plea for sanctuary, for honour, for the alliance that once promised peace. She sealed it with shaking hands.
“To King Renard,” she whispered. “If he still remembers.”
When the third night broke, the sound of hooves thundered through the village. For a moment, they feared the worst — another attack. But when Liora peered through the hatch, her breath caught.
“Valorian scouts,” she whispered. “Silver and blue.”
Arwen climbed from the cellar, blinking against the morning light. The scouts dismounted, their armour glinting in soft hues of dawn. They bowed low — not in mockery, but in respect.
“Your Majesty,” said the lead scout, his accent pure Valorian. “We’ve been sent by order of the King. You’re safe now.”
Safe.
The word sounded strange on her tongue. She wanted to believe it, to let herself breathe. But as they rode toward Valoria, the smoke of her homeland still streaked the horizon — dark and rising.
She looked back once, her fingers brushing the window’s edge. “I’ll return,” she whispered. “Even if it kills me.”
The scout beside her leaned toward his commander, unaware that Arwen could hear him.
“If she is truly the Queen of Ravendale,” he murmured, “then the British will not stop until her crown is drenched in blood.”
Arwen’s hand tightened around her dagger. She said nothing. But inside, a storm had begun to rise.
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