Chapter 504 – Gliding Rescue.
byA long carriage moved through the early night, surrounded by nearly thirty soldiers. All of them were on high alert, their eyes scanning the dark forest edges as they moved steadily through the quiet roads. The moonlight cast long shadows over the trees, creating an eerie atmosphere. The soldiers guarding the convoy were hardened men, veterans who had seen countless battles and they would complete the mission their leader had tasked them with.
“Hey, stop this, let me out!”
“Please calm down, don’t make this difficult on us, we are just following the Lord Marshals orders.”
From inside the heavily reinforced carriage, Robert Arden’s voice carried outside. It was accompanied by the ringing of shackles as he struggled against his restraints. His frustration echoed within the confined space, though his captors remained unmoved. The soldiers were loyal to Wentworth Arden, their expressions impassive as they rode horses alongside the carriage, determined to carry out their duty without question.
“Let me out, I’ll never forget this! I’ll remember all of your faces and names!”
“Please calm down, you’ll just make things worse for yourself, young lord.”
The forest loomed around them, the only sounds being the steady clop of horse hooves and the occasional rustling of leaves. Despite Robert’s pleas and threats, none of the guards besides their commander dared to respond. They had their orders, and nothing would break their discipline – not even the protests of their lord’s son. The carriage was built like a fortress on wheels, reinforced with iron plating to withstand attacks, but the soldiers remained cautious. After the deal with the Count was made they were not expecting any direct assault, but in times of political unrest, they needed to stay vigilant.
“Shit…”
Robert pulled at the chains, his wrists raw and bruised from hours of futile effort. No matter how hard he tried, the chains wouldn’t budge. His hopes of reuniting with Lucille, his love, were slipping away, becoming nothing more than a distant dream. Deep down, he knew it was pointless to struggle. Even though he had won the duel and his father had intervened, the deal was made. He longed to see her again, but doubt gnawed at him. Was he doing the right thing? Could he even offer Lucille a better life?
Even if he managed to break free and escape the guards, what then? How could he possibly get to Lucille, let alone get her out of the mansion? The Grand Knight Commander would hunt him down, and that would be the end. His father’s deal wouldn’t protect him from the Count’s soldiers and their blades. They would likely kill him on sight, and his father would be powerless to stop it.
“… Is this it? Should I just give up?”
Robert mumbled to himself as he gazed through one of the tiny slits in the carriage. The slits, barely large enough to see through, were designed only to let air in. The interior was barren, purposefully built to contain Tier 3 class holders, for him a tier 2 this was more than enough. There was no escape. The metal restraining him felt familiar – similar to the alloy used in the power armor he recently wore and He wished he had it now.
Thinking of the armor brought his brother, Roland, to mind. Their father had knocked Robert out before the two of them began their conversation, leaving him in the dark about what had happened afterward. Asking the soldiers for information was out of the question as he couldn’t afford to blow Roland’s cover. His brother had always been secretive, a person who preferred to keep to himself. Yet, whenever it mattered, he had been there for Robert.
Memories of their childhood resurfaced – times when Robert used to pick on his younger brother, who only wanted to be left alone. A deep sense of shame settled over him as he recalled how he had treated Roland. He wondered if he was part of the reason his brother had fled the noble life. Robert couldn’t blame him. Now, he too found himself caught in the web of a noble’s deal, possibly facing a long imprisonment. Whatever deal his father had made with the Count, it likely ensured that Robert would never see Lucille again. That thought weighed heavily on him and it was something he might have to accept.
“I should have just asked for help sooner, but now I have no room to complain”
Slumping his shoulders, he began to wonder how different things might have been if he had turned to Roland for help from the start. His brother’s magic and runes had proven far more powerful than he ever expected. Roland had created something that allowed Robert to win against a Knight Commander – one who had even been enhanced by illicit substances. With that kind of magical power, smuggling Lucille out of the mansion might have been easy. But instead, Robert had ruined it all. His recklessness had gotten them caught and now he had to live with his choice.
As the carriage trundled on, Robert sat in grim silence, his mind awash with regrets and self-pity. The rhythmic clattering of hooves became almost hypnotic, soothing him into a restless, half-conscious state. He had been so close – closer than he ever imagined to living a life with Lucille, but now, it all seemed distant, slipping through his fingers like grains of sand.
At first, his only goal had been to impress his father, to rise above his brothers, and to prove his worth. He tossed himself into many battles against enemy soldiers and monsters alike. But now, as he sat in chains, he realized how meaningless that ambition seemed compared to what he had lost. What would becoming a Knight Commander even matter if he was never to see Lucille again?
However, just when Robert felt he had hit rock bottom, something unexpected happened. Suddenly, the horses faltered. He sensed the change immediately as the carriage began to slow down. Sitting up straighter, his instincts screamed that something was afoot. Peering through the familiar slit, he noticed a thick, smoky fog creeping in and enveloping the entire carriage.
“Hold! Hold!”
The commander’s voice rang out sharply, and the carriage came to a grinding halt. Robert tried to peer through the narrow slits in the walls, but he couldn’t make out what was happening. The chains holding him to the center of the prison carriage clinked as he shifted, and he could sense something was wrong.
“Ambush!”
One of the soldiers outside shouted before abruptly falling silent, leaving the outside world eerily muffled.
“A monster attack? Or did that bastard Graham decide to tie up loose ends?”
He muttered under his breath as the carriage shook violently. Something struck it hard, but he had no way of seeing what was happening. Robert knew Count Graham despised him, but he wasn’t sure if the man had the nerve to break the deal he’d made with Robert’s father. There were always ways to twist a written contract, though, and it was possible the Count had arranged this – an assassination disguised as an ambush. But the soldiers guarding him were some of his father’s elite troops. They wouldn’t go down easily.
“A silencing spell? Are they really here to kill me?”
It was a common trick used by skilled killers – removing all sound from the vicinity. Most fighters relied on their ears just as much as their eyes, and sudden silence left them disoriented. Robert, however, could still sense the vibrations through the tight chains binding him. He felt the tremors from outside. It seemed that one by one, the soldiers and their horses were collapsing to the ground. Even the heavy carriage quivered from time to time. Then, suddenly, everything stopped. Silence engulfed him and it seemed the battle was over.
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“Is it over?”
His voice, previously muted by some kind of spell or ability, returned. But now, he could hear something else – a strange, faint humming sound growing closer. The carriage he was trapped in was no ordinary vehicle. It had been specially designed, with a mechanism that prevented it from being opened until it reached its destination.
The soldiers outside didn’t have any keys, and the door could only be unlocked under very specific conditions. It was built to ensure that no one could escape – and more importantly, no one could get inside. Even if someone managed to steal the carriage, freeing its prisoner would be a tedious and difficult task. A magical pulse had likely already been triggered, alerting nearby troops to the disturbance. Reinforcements were probably on their way, but whether they’d arrived in time was uncertain.
*Tzzzzz*
Out of nowhere, a red dot appeared above him, quickly growing in size. Suddenly, a searing ray of heat erupted at his side. Something had melted through the thick outer shell of the carriage’s ceiling and was now moving in a slow, deliberate circle. It continued its motion, steadily burning through the reinforced plating while Robert was forced to sit and wait, helpless.
At first, he assumed it was the work of a powerful mage, using advanced fire or heat magic to breach the armored carriage. But as he watched, he realized this wasn’t raw, chaotic magic. There was a precision to it, as if someone were carving a perfect circle with a tool rather than using a wild spell meant to kill. This wasn’t the work of an assassin intent on destruction. Whoever was behind this wasn’t trying to harm the prisoner inside – they were being careful not to.
Soon, the metal overhead groaned as a circular section of the roof came loose. But instead of crashing down into the carriage, it floated upward, then was tossed aside by whoever had cut it. Robert looked up to see a strange hooded figure, their face hidden behind a mask that resembled a goblin.




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