З життя
The moment my skin met the cold, dark stone, High-King Alistair didn’t roar for the executioner
The moment my skin met the cold, dark stone, High-King Alistair didn’t roar for the executioner. Instead, his goblet of spiced mead slipped from his paralyzed fingers, shattering loudly against the marble steps of the dais as the dark liquid ran like blood across the floor.
Because the second my trembling hand touched the left armrest, the ancient raven crest deeply carved into the obsidian gave a heavy, mechanical click. The stone didn’t just glow; it awakened, pulsing with a deep, radiant violet light that illuminated my dirt-streaked face and torn wool apron.
“”Treason! She has bewitched the sacred seat!”” Rosalind screamed, her face contorting into an ugly mask of panic. But her voice was utterly ignored.
Master Gideon, the kingdom’s eldest archivist, stepped forward from the shadows of the pillars, his knees shaking as he dropped to the floor. “”Your Majesty… the ancient binding of the bloodline. The obsidian only awakens when the true, direct flesh of the First King claims it.””
Queen Eleanor stood up so quickly her diamond tiara tilted, her chest heaving as she stared at my exposed collarbone. In the struggle with the guards, the rough twine of my shifts had torn away, revealing a heavy, ancient silver-and-iron key-ring that my mother had made me swear never to show a living soul. The King descended the steps of the dais, his powerful frame trembling. He reached out with a scarred hand, lifting the heavy iron ring. He flipped it over, exposing the private, micro-engraved coat of arms of the lost princess—a mark known only to the royal parents and the vault-keepers.
“”Eleanor…”” the King’s voice cracked, the hardened monarch weeping openly before his entire court. “”It’s her. It’s our little raven.””
The vast hall remained locked in an absolute, breathless paralysis. Old Master Gideon raised his voice, his eyes bright with tears as he addressed the stunned assembly: “”We searched the eastern empires and across the seas for Oakhaven’s salvation, yet her blood was washing our floors, hidden in the darkest corner of our own kitchens.””
The Queen threw all royal decorum to the wind. She rushed up the steps, pulling me from the stone seat and burying her face into my neck, weeping so violently that the scent of her lavender oils completely washed away the smell of the kitchen smoke from my clothes. The King wrapped his massive arms around us both, kissing my sweat-dampened forehead over and over again.
“”You are safe, Maeve. The night is over,”” my father whispered against my cheek.
I looked over my mother’s trembling shoulder, my eyes finding the center of the hall. Lady Rosalind stood entirely isolated. The very nobles who had been snickering at her cruel jokes only moments ago were now backing away from her in disgust, leaving a wide, empty circle of shame around her. The same two guards who had brutally forced me onto the throne now stood at absolute attention at the base of the dais, their halberds lowered in defiance against her, awaiting the first command of their true Crown Princess.
I looked down at my cut, calloused hands, and then at the obsidian raven that still glowed with fierce warmth beneath the light. The kitchen maid was gone. The stone had chosen, and the laws of the realm could never be undone.”
