and heirloom they ever owned.
She didn’t dare cry. She didn’t dare feel any of the awful things which were swirling around her waiting to be felt. Her eyes were dry not because she wasn’t sad, but because her sadness was too immense to fit inside her.
Slumping down inside the hollow of an old oak tree, she tucked her feet up tight against her body and wrapped her arms round her knees. She was almost completely obscured from sight, which allowed her to relax just a little. She was certain she had been followed, or soon would be followed. They would not let her get away with stabbing the king, of that much she was certain.
It hadn’t been a killing blow. It had been an incapacitating one. If she’d wanted to kill him, she could have sliced his throat. She found herself wondering why she hadn’t.
When she closed her eyes, she saw the village on fire, and the king’s face superimposed over it. She saw those eyes, piercing blue and brimming with the promise of even more cruelty.
Iris had to think. She had never imagined she would find herself so completely alone. Her entire life had taken place in the village. Every single event, every moment, it was all gone. Every person. Every object.
Whatever she could not remember from her grandmother’s tomes on healing and herbs, magic and mushrooms was now lost forever. And that was only one small part of her heritage which had been destroyed by a thoughtless and brutal monarch.
Iris had been taught that the loss of people was inevitable, but the loss of their knowledge was a tragedy beyond all others. In one dragon’s breath, she had become the sole holder of her people’s knowledge.
She knew what was expected of her. She needed to get pregnant as soon as possible have a baby, and tell that baby everything she knew as soon as the baby was old enough to process information.
Being a virgin was going to make that difficult, but there were men all over the country. One of them could inseminate her.
It didn’t seem like a good plan, but it did seem like a plan, and some plan was better than none. A plan might be able to take the place of crushing misery long enough for her to survive.
After some time, it might have been minutes, but was probably hours, she emerged from her tree hiding place. She could not hear anybody giving chase. No hunters had come rushing past on steeds, though for all she knew a hunter of the king’s might very well come from the air and destroy her that way.
She could not stop thinking about the dragon, how strangely obedient it was to the king. She wondered how the monarch had managed to break the will of such a beast, and she wondered if he might have already broken her will with the destruction of her family.
Walking was her salvation, every step taking her further away from the site of the tragedy and possibly closer to help - though what aid could be offered to her she did not know. Everything that could be taken from her had been taken, besides her virginity and her life, she was without possession in the world.
The forest was full of dangerous creatures, but they were kind enough to leave her alone, perhaps sensing that she was an animal so far gone it was barely worth attacking. Iris knew she was inherently easy prey, but whatever guardian force had seen her spared the fate of the villagers also seemed intent on sparing her from becoming dinner for an opportunistic predator.
In time, Iris passed through the forest unharmed, and past the next village. She did not stop there, having little trust for the people who inhabited it. The closest villages were traditionally the greatest enemies, and the villagers of Streambend were no exception. Her little village of Forestcrag had been at war with Streambend for as long as she could remember. It was the benders who had brought the disease which slew more than three quarters of Forestcrag, and though Iris had immunity created by having experienced the disease, she had no desire to test fate yet again by coming into contact with them.
For days she travelled, and for days the screams of the villagers rung in her ears. She fancied that she could make out individuals among them. Her father. Her cousin. Her brothers. All terrified of the wrath of a king who had no