Soryn and her knights had spent days tracking Princess Daenya and her so-called captor, Rickon Karstark. In truth, Soryn doubted Daenya was being held against her will—but facts didn’t matter. Appearances did. And the reality was damning: Daenya had vanished alongside a Karstark, a boy whose entire family had declared for the Velaryons. By blood alone, he was a traitor to the crown.
Sorry, pal. Soryn thought dryly as they galloped through the dense woods, the road stretching endlessly before them.
Then—shouting. The unmistakable clash of steel.
An ambush. But who was fighting whom? There was no time to wonder. Soryn dug her heels into her horse’s sides, urging it into a full sprint. The Queensguard followed without hesitation, their armor gleaming in the flickering light between the trees. As they broke through the clearing, the chaos unfolded before her—Rickon and Daenya, locked in battle against a group of armed assailants.
"DAENY, MOVE!" Soryn roared. Her horse surged forward, leaping over one of the attackers, hooves kicking up dirt and debris. The Queensguard wasted no time, cutting through their foes with practiced efficiency, cutting half of them down in mere moments.
Soryn swung herself off her horse, boots hitting the ground hard as she moved between Daenya and the fray. "Get behind me," she ordered, sword already raised. Around them, her men were locked in their own battles, steel flashing and blood spraying into the dirt.
She barely spared Rickon a glance before smirking, pointing her blade toward the two men barreling toward them. "Hey, kidnapper," she quipped, "think you can handle that one?"
A sharp grin. "Better move quick, or you'll lose your head in record time."
Soryn chuckled as a six-foot-something brute charged toward her and Daenya, his sword raised like a reaper’s scythe. "Gods, your mother is definitely upping my pension for this," she quipped to the princess, a teasing lilt to her voice.
The man’s blade came down fast, but Soryn was faster. She caught the strike with her own sword, steel ringing against steel. "C’mon, big boy," she taunted, pushing back against his weight. "This is the most fun I’ve had this whole trip."
Then, without warning, she leapt—catching him off guard as she brought her sword crashing down onto his skull. He crumpled instantly, a dead weight hitting the forest floor with a dull thud.
As the battle around them quieted, Soryn surveyed the scene. Bodies littered the forest floor, the remnants of the ambush left bleeding in the dirt. She sheathed her sword with a satisfied nod, planting her hands on her hips. "Well, that was fun, right?" she asked, glancing around at her companions.
Then Soryn snapped her fingers, a look of mock realization flashing across her face. "I knew I was forgetting something!"
She turned to Rickon, grinning. "Hey, kidnapper, I kinda need your head," she said, tone almost apologetic. "You know… for my aunt. No hard feelings, right?"
With an easy chuckle, she drew her sword once more.