Chapter 149: The Promise We Refused
By Gideon Vale · 146 words
Nothing is more seductive than an answer that arrives too easily.
the journal was written by Lucan's supposedly illiterate mother. The revelation changes the meaning of every earlier victory.
The apparent victory reveals a second design hidden underneath the first.
Prince Lucan Grey keeps the larger goal in view: turn farmers, smugglers, and defeated soldiers into a defense no empire expects. The immediate problem is smaller, sharper, and impossible to postpone.
A small act of care unsettles them more than danger. It asks for no payment and therefore cannot be dismissed as strategy.
Prince Lucan Grey must choose between the safe version of the truth and the costly one that can still save others.
The recurring signs of battle maps, iron, ravens return with a different meaning, linking this choice to what came before.
A betrayal closes the obvious escape and leaves only the forbidden route.