webnovel

Snow n' Starlight

First born princess of Goryeo is promised to Silla in marriage. What has begun as a promise between families becomes a pact sealed in blood when her betrothed is mysteriously killed. Now what binds Seol, the lady Ha In of Goryeo to Silla is a blood debt – to turn away from it would be to topple the country into irreparable chaos. Yet, her heart lies with another. Raised from obscurity of illegitimacy, fate of concubine - born last son of northern Kang clan rests on the emperor’s grace. However, being tasked with the guardianship of the imperial princess is the last of his worries. In the whirlwind of emotions that she brings along, it is not just his title that is at stake, but his heart and a secret that he had brought from a grave of a different time. Theirs is a fate from an age gone by, but a love impossible to attain. Theirs is a story written upon dying stars. *** From inside: The snow caressed him in a way she yearned to; fluttering against his lashes, tangled up in his hair. She has always felt home in north, in the valleys that filled themselves with her namesake and with this man beside he, arrows slung over his shoulder and laughter in his eyes. Silla and her betrothed would never take that place. Seol opens her mouth; it is now or never. “Don’t say it,” he cuts her off, a hand stretched out for a lonely snowflake to perch upon. It turns translucent against his roughed palm. “My hand isn’t made for snowflakes,” he sounds joyous, as he always does – when she is weeping within. His eyes remain resolutely elsewhere. “I’ve been summoned to the garrison,” he continues in that same flat tone. “My last duty here will be to deliver your highness to your betrothed.” She is unaware of the tear that has escaped, until an ice cold thumb brushes it off. “Don’t cry,” he says then and she sees the laughing spark in his eyes for what it truly is; longing. “It breaks my heart.” ***

Sakura_Charmash · Fantasy
Not enough ratings
141 Chs

Truth in pieces

Far away, that old emperor stands drenched in the blood of his sons. The skies are silent now, the wind no longer stirring. The earth that had hummed and thumped with a promise of power to come, a taste that he has almost forgotten, that earth has gone back to its slumber. 

Rivulets of blood ran the length of cold marble beneath his feet, seeped into the thick carpets that muffled feet on the aisle. The weapon clutched in his hand dripped with it. It was a peculiar weapon; a cross between a sword and a whip, long enough to cut the distance between him and any enemy in an instant and sharp enough to cut to the bone in a single thrash. 

Those princes with weak constitutions, cuddled and indulged into decadent practices, blunted with greed and false self worth; none of them would have stood a chance. And they had infuriated him. 

Failure always did.