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The Starlite Heart Part I Impossible to Love

There is an age old story - some call it a myth, some believe it to be history. Nevertheless, the fact is that there exist three different species who look alike. First are the underwater dwellers - the nymphs. The myth says that they are cursed never to find love. They are all females and mate with humans. The humans die immediately afterwards. Second are the starlites. They live among the highest mountain peaks unreachable for humans. They can fly, and their hearts are cold as snow. They are cursed never to feel love or get loved by anyone. The third is the human race. Humans can feel love, get love, cherish it and are hence considered worthy to rule them all. The story revolves around a starlite soldier Sophia Antofurota who leaves the army to join the Guardians. The Guardians are a team of starlites who work for the humans. Neal is a manipulative, scheming human prince who offered the job to Sophia only because he is in love with her. Sophia gradually finds out that the royalty is hiding many secrets but never suspects that she can have any part to play in their schemes.

Heena_Patwa · ファンタジー
レビュー数が足りません
30 Chs

Thr Sickbed

The next day, Sophie had an unexpected visitor. Sia had got the news, and had sent King Shrutketu with her regards and lots of gifts.

"The apothecary wouldn't allow her to travel in her condition," he said putting all the things on a table near her bed.

Sophie rolled her eyes. "One would think I'm dying." She could, but was not allowed to, leave her bed.

"Sia won't rely on letters. She needed first-hand information," the devoted husband explained.

Sophie and Shrutketu had not much to talk about but the usual courtesies. He asked about her health and she asked about Sia's. What she didn't know was that Sia was urged to send Shrutketu by her father and Neal. The queen was not in a habit to question Neal's judgement and decisions, no matter how irrational they looked. And since it was also a request from her father, there was no chance of refusal.

King Shrutketu had a lot more to talk about with King Suffle apart from the usual pleasantries.

"We need your help to catch the culprit," Suffle said to Shrutketu once they were in the white starlite castle. The room was at the lowest part of the castle and Shrutketu could see nothing of the sky outside.

"My help?"

"We have identified the poison that was mixed in the wine." King Suffle bit his lips. "It is not a poison. It's faklin. Faklin is—"

The king of Peshtim sighed. "I'm perfectly aware what it is and where it can be found." Faklin was a substance designed to induce symptoms of poison. It was only prepared in a specific human tribe in Peshtim. The ingredients didn't grow anywhere else and the recipe was not shared with strangers. "I know how this looks."

"Do you have any idea about the after-effects of Faklin?" Suffle asked rubbing his tired eyes.

"It is perfectly safe. We use it to scare people who won't talk. Or to get out of situations."

"Why would somebody use it on the prince?"

"There can be a couple of reasons for it," Shrutketu said. "Somebody wants to scare us, show us how weak we are. Or," he paused, "a poison from our land to your prince can shake the roots of our peace treaty."

"You have someone on your mind." Suffle peered into his grey eyes. They were flipping through the pages of the past.

"Yes." He nodded. "There is a human minister who had always openly objected to the peace treaty. He was banished from the court after he had become mentally unstable. His son had died in the battle of Xeo."

Suffle fidgeted. "We need to get a hold of him if we are to know his true intentions. What is his name?"

"Gaea."

"Do you have any idea where we can find him?" Suffle asked.

"No, he has no family left and his whereabouts have been unknown since he was banished from the court." Shrutketu shrugged. "But then we have not tried to locate him before."

"I'll send one of my shadows with you. If you can, get him inside your country and help him hunt for Gaea. Of course we'll need to inform the emperor about the shadow."

"Shadow!" King Shrutketu exclaimed. "I thought it was just a rumour." He had heard rumours that Suffle possessed an army of highly skilled and efficient starlites. It was believed that they were trained to go into enemy lines, kill their mark and return unnoticed.

Suffle knew what Shrutketu was thinking. "A shadow is not an assassination machine. It's a tracking device."

The young king did not comment on it. "I'll try to do what is required."

It had escaped Shrutketu's attention that they had not been alone in the room. A figure had been lurking in the shadows since their arrival. He had never tried to imagine what a shadow would look like, but even if he had, he would have been wrong. The shadow could've been either he or she. It wore a black skin-hugging uniform that covered every bit of its skin, including the eyes.

"I wonder how it can see, breathe or hear in this attire," Shrutketu thought.

"A shadow has to be free and silent. It won't talk, write or report to anybody. I advise you to use utmost secrecy. Even a hint of this could scare the culprit into hiding," Suffle said.

The shadow nodded.

Shrutketu decided that his entourage had no need to know about the shadow and hid it in the cargo among the gifts that they had received from the king.

As they flew away to Peshtim, Shrutketu wondered how many shadows Suffle actually had and what secret missions they might have performed under the very nose of his father and the generations before.

Once home, Shrutketu gathered all the information he could to help the shadow. The emperor was not happy to have a foreign assassin work in secret in his empire. But he understood the gravity of the situation. Faklin was their poison. The shadow was left to do its work.

Sia was surprised to know all that had transpired. "I had no idea this would happen, when father asked for your visit."

Shrutketu had assured Sia of Sophie's good health and narrated to her, the events that had taken place in the white castle.

He also told her all he knew about faklin. She too wondered what anyone could achieve by such a trick.

"And it is a very rare thing," Shrutketu said, "Not everyone knows how to make it."

"I'm sure the shadow will use it to our advantage." Sia said as she touched his shoulder.

It was a hobby of King Shrutketu to research different types of poisons. The ones that were a speciality to his homeland were obviously on the top of his list. He possessed all the knowledge on where to find the tribe that made faklin and he had shared the same with the shadow.

Another thing that had excited him was the existence of a potion that could cure any poison in the world. The king had never heard about such a thing. He wanted to meet the person who had made it but politeness and etiquette stopped him. Fortunately that did not stop him from researching on his own about it. He was disappointed when he could not find any clue about it after spending many days on research.

Days went by but the invalid was not allowed to go home. Sophie's pleas fell on deaf ears. The people who came by to visit her included- Dai, Mishty, Suffle, Natasha and her colleagues from the guardians. Then there were the medics who came by regularly to check on her recovery. Sophie felt extremely uncomfortable with all the servants going on and about in her room.

She was not used to having servants care for her. The starlite wished to get rid of the human castle and sleep in her own bed. Enand had told her that the poison she had taken was faklin, but he had his reasons for these extreme measures.

When he had first administered the dose to Sophie, he was disappointed. The precious liquid was wasted on a commoner. All his disappointment had vanished the next morning when the prince had come to him. Prince Neal had expressed gratitude that bordered on obscurity. That was just hours before they knew that the poison was fake.

Neal had explained to him that the death of a starlite in the human castle would have had far more disastrous effects than his own death. Especially since the said person was not only a high ranking official but also the personal favourite of the king.

"It could have put our nation in jeopardy and probably on the path of a civil war. We humans cannot survive without the help of starlites. You should know what a great favour you have done. You shall be rewarded splendidly," the prince had promised.

Little did Neal know that Enand would not remain with them much longer. The events that unfolded in the next couple of months were such that Enand found it hard to survive in the castle.