The city of Ilyrion simmered with unrest.
Beneath its gilded towers and enchanted lamplight, the backstreets ran dark with whispers and dissent. The zealot faction had their fingers in every crumbling corner of the kingdom now, fanning the flames of revolution with myth and blood. And at the heart of this quiet war walked Nox Drayven, one more ghost in a city teetering toward collapse.
Tonight, he waited in the ruins of a forgotten watchtower, high above the city’s sleeping face. A small, robed figure stood before him -- the latest in a long line of messengers sent by the Head of the zealots. Nox could tell nothing of their identity: their voice was muffled, their frame obscured, their magic heavy and slick with protection. But their scent was wrong -- too clean. Noble, perhaps. Or someone who wanted to pretend.
The messenger spoke first. "The Viscountess is dead?”
Nox didn’t answer immediately. He simply pulled a pendant from his cloak -- a delicate chain with a family crest crusted in crimson. He let it dangle in the dim light, swinging slightly like a metronome. His flat tone matched the sluggish swings as he finally said, "Her throat was slit, as was requested. Two guards had to be dispatched as well."
The messenger gave a slow nod, hands disappearing into the folds of their sleeves. “Then the pattern is intact. You have proven yourself thus far."
Nox’s eyes narrowed. “You have another name.”
"We do. But this one… was not meant to be difficult. An easier mark, a political message. Alas, our own people's attempts have all been unsuccessful."
The messenger raised a hand, and from their cloak they drew a sealed scroll pressed between two runes -- a warning charm, by the looks of it, and likely one that would ignite if tampered with.
“You’ll want to read this somewhere safer. The target is Princess Rosalie Harper.”
Silence thickened the air. Nox’s brow twitched slightly. “The heir?"
“Yes. Charismatic. Well-loved. And more importantly, she survived your predecessor.”
Nox’s gaze sharpened. So, they'd called him back for a cleanup. Rosalie was a loose thread, a missed mark, and a threat to the lunatic's grabs for power. However, as ditzy as the zealots seemed, they had undoubtedly killed the last assassin they'd hired after at least one failure. Nox had no qualms being the harbringer of Death, but he wasn't quite in the mood to fall into its embrace.
“I’ll make sure she doesn’t do it twice,” he said coldly, and vanished into the dark before the messenger could reply.
----
The scroll had contained a roughly drawn blueprint of the castle in which his next target resided. The princess’s chambers were guarded only lightly; the castle had grown lax, trusting in its walls, its wards, and its titles. Nox had scaled the eastern tower, bypassed the illusion traps, slipped between sentries like mist. He was inside the castle before midnight. By the third bell, he stood in what had been labeled as the princess’s private quarters.
The room smelled even cleaner than the messenger, though this place matched the scent. A small candle burned beside the window, illuminating a pile of books. Her boots were at the foot of the bed, carelessly tossed. The girl herself was sound asleep, curled on her side, one arm tucked beneath her head. Freckles dotted her face, and her brow furrowed slightly in her sleep, as if she were dreaming of a fight she couldn’t win.
Nox stepped forward, blade drawn. His breath was measured, his footsteps silent. All he needed was one thrust to the throat. One twist. No sound. But just as he raised his arm, she rolled sharply, knocking a half-filled mug of ink off the nightstand. It shattered. She jolted upright.
Their eyes locked. Whoever this was, she was not Rosalie Harper, and whoever had drawn the map, they were an idiot.
For a moment, neither the young woman nor the assassin moved. Her mouth parted to scream, but Nox was already lunging forward -- not to kill, but to silence. She twisted away. The knife caught her shoulder instead of her neck, and blood spattered the sheets. She cried out, her voice echoing down the halls with a frantic, "Rosalie, run!" The castle erupted into motion, wards flaring, bells ringing, and voices shouting in the halls.
Nox didn’t finish the job.
He turned and leapt through the window into the cold air of night, cloak billowing behind him. Arrows sang as they zipped past his ears, causing Nox to forfeit any safety measures in the name of getting down the wall faster. The fall was steep, and he landed hard -- too hard. Pain shot up his leg. Something was sprained, maybe fractured. He limped into the shadows, clutching his side where an arrow had grazed him during the escape.
The guardhouse nearby was an old stone building where the off-duty guards smoked, gambled, and occasionally slept. Nox slunk beneath the overhang, pressing his back to the wall just outside an open window.
Inside, two guards were mid-argument.
“We’re short again. We lost three in the last damned week.”
“Then start arming the kitchen boys. Hell, give the princess a maid with a halberd for all I care. They’ll start putting anyone close to her in armor soon.”
Nox’s ears perked. His expression shifted. That spark — the one that always preceded a shift in strategy — lit behind his eyes.
“Servants,” he whispered. No shadows. No rooftops. No blood on silk sheets. No wrong targets. Not this time. No, he would become one of them, a nameless face in the castle halls. An invisible hand serving wine, lighting candles, sweeping floors until the moment he could strike again.
The guards inside were called to arms as the alarm spread across the keep. They rose with curses and clattering steel, shouting to each other that the princess had been attacked. By the time they spilled out into the courtyard, Nox was already gone, swallowed into the veins of the slums, where beggars and firebrands slept and none asked questions.
He would need a new name, a new face, a wound stitched closed, and a forged letter of service. And time.
This hunt wasn’t over. It was just beginning.