Not long after, both the MĂ€rchen and Lewendiff carriages arrived at Princess Celestiaâs palace simultaneously. As if by agreement, the two baedong personally selected by the newly-changed princess stepped into the palace togetherâPrince Killian MĂ€rchen and Adelaide Lewendiff.
Despite concerns that the novelty would fade, Celestia continued to call them every other day, faithfully spending time together.
When the carriage doors opened, two seven-year-olds dismountedâbarely nodding to each other at first. Still, they greeted Princess Celestia with warm smiles.
âKillian, Adelaideâwelcome!â
Celestia, linking arms with both, chided lightly:
âI told you two to greet each other properly, okay?â
âHello⊠ahem⊠Adelaide.â
âAhem⊠hello, Killian.â
âThatâs betterâcome on!â
With excitement, she walked them out, beaming proudly.
âWould you two like to try something today? How about you, Adelaide?â
âIâd like that, Your Highness,â Adelaide replied shyly, twisting a strand of platinum hair decorated with a delicate corsage.
âGreat! Letâs change first. Lizâlet Sir Briven know today weâre learning swordsmanship too.â
âAre you sure, Lady Adelaide?â Liz asked, concerned. Understandably, as Adelaide was still recovering from malnutrition, and sword training might be physically demanding.
âIâm fineâas long as Princess Celestiaâs with me.â
Despite knowing the difficulty, I insisted on academy training: partly to relieve stress, partly to see Adelaideâs knightly sideâbut mostly to spend time with Killian.
There was still an awkward tension between the two. Weâve met over ten times, and they still only greet each other properly when promptedâeven though they chat easily with me. At seven, children usually bond quicklyâbut not them, even though theyâre the storyâs protagonists! So I decided to be their matchmaker.
Once dressed, Adelaide held my hand as we walked to the indoor training grounds. Her timid grip was endearingâshe had her own charm.
How will such a shy girl become a fearless warrior later?
I swallowed that thought and comforted her:
âAdelaide, you donât have to force anything. If it becomes tough, let me know.â
âYes, Your Highness. IâŠI think I can do it. Killianâs doing it too.â
âWhat determination. But you have that divine powerâyouâll be fine, right?â
I smiled and we entered the practice hall where Sir Briven prepared. Killian secured his wooden sword and joined us shortly.
âPrincess Celestia. Lady Adelaide.â
âSir Briven, good to see you. Liz told you we were coming?â
He nodded. Because of me, heâs kept fresh juice stocked and actively encourages my visits to the practice hall. I guess I really became their matchmaker.
Sir Briven looked concerned:
âAre you sure? Swordsmanship isnât easy and youâre still young.â
âI may not beat Killian, but Iâm athleticâand Adelaide wants to try. Right?â
âYes! Of course!â Adelaide replied.
Killian exhaled sharplyâmaybe realizing the rivalry?
We moved to center court. Sir Briven held up wooden swords:
âYou both seem confident. Shall we begin?â
Adelaide and Killian eyed each other, then stood next to me. I paused the lesson to give Killian instructions:
âKillian.â
âYes, Your Highness.â
âYou learned the basicsâgo show us what youâve got.â
Though hesitating, he nodded and started practicing solo. Adelaide and I lifted our swords next.
âLetâs start with stance,â Sir Briven instructed.
He moved patiently and kindlyâpointing out:
âExcellent posture, Your Highness!â
âThank you.â
âVery good too, Lady Adelaide. Try extending your armâeven more. Yes, just like that.â
âThis is⊠harder than I thought.â
Adelaide was visibly strugglingâunderstandableâbut I felt guilty for enjoying it so much.
I recognized echoes of my own past in martial arts training. I kept at it, following Sir Briven with dreams of becoming a sword expert someday.
And he lingered past anyoneâs expectations, excited by our progress.
âThatâs enough for today.â
âWoo! That was so funâthank you, Sir Briven!â
âI must say, Princess, you truly have a gift for swordsmanship.â
Liz offered fruit juice just at the right moment. Briven accepted my sword back, and I gathered Adelaide.
âYou did well too!â
âThank youâmy arms are a bit sore, but Iâll improve.â
âGreat job, Adelaide!â
She pouted slightlyâbut kept looking across at Killian with hope.
âWould you like to watch closer?â
âUmânot yet, Your Highness.â
Yet her eyes didnât leave him.
And who could blame herâhe was radiant in motion.
Killianâs form improved strikingly. His swing had become smooth, composedâmature beyond seven. His style was refined yet powerfulâutterly him.
I watched proudly with Adelaide until hunger hit.
âKillian! Letâs goâStrawberry tart?â
âYes, Princess.â
âThat sounds goodâthank you.â
Meek Adelaide smiled; shy Killian blushed. I exhaled a long sigh of relief.
At this rate⊠maybe I can reach a decent ending after all.
It happen again. Chapter 10 is the same with chapter 9
It is. And this is the last free chapter for awhile. So disappointing