Robin Hood
Genre: Prince auĀ / enemies to lovers
Pairing: Jungkook x OCĀ
Chapter Word Count: 9k
Warnings: Wartime, OC is homeless, lots and lots of death.
Summary: War leaves nothing but destruction behind. Only the elite are able to withstand the cruelties. After losing both her parents to the war, Ivara Aldris is forced to fend for herself and her new makeshift family no matter the risk.Ā
Prince Jeon Jungkook is apart of the royal family of Windfell that is the reason for all of Ivaraās problems. She wants nothing to do with him and his wicked family, but soon she has no choice.
Part 1/?Ā
A/N: This is my first ever OC fic instead of reader insert. If youāve never tried it before, please give it a chance, and donāt let that drive you away.Ā
I wrote this a long time ago, but I can see the parallels to today. If you are affected by any of the wars going on in the world right now, I am so sorry. Please message me if you need to talk.
~Ā
By now, Iāve mastered steadying my hands. Even when the adrenaline is coursing through my veins and my heart beat is almost audible.Ā
I had spotted the white house tucked into the woods by itself one day when I was scouting, and from a single glance, I knew it was perfect.Ā
Inside, the sturdy oak table is spread with more types of meats, cheeses, and breads than I knew existed. The pitcher filled with clean drinking water is what appeals to me the most, but thereās no way to take it back with me, and I would feel guilty indulging myself. Jars of what looks like jams, jellies, and pickled vegetables line the shelves. The memory of my motherās blackberry jam almost tempts me to snag something. We would pick from the vine that grew behind our house and she would always let me eat a few before we stewed them. I havenāt tasted the sweetness in years. The need to make room for more filling and nutritious things takes precedence over my nostalgia.Ā
My bags fill quickly with the important food first, but the two bags slung around my shoulders hardly fit what the table does. Thereās not even the sound of a breeze, but I glance around just in case. The table is not the only fine furniture in the house.Ā
Sometimes, when I catch glimpses of evidence of a family, the guilt starts to eat its way in. I imagine a family just trying to survive the same as I. However, this time, the person is so wealthy that not only do I not feel guilt, but also a small sense of justice as well. There is no trace of kids, which aids my conscience.Ā
There is no room for hoarding wealth these days. How could one indulge themselves when all of their neighbors starve?Ā
I am in and out without any issues, the adrenaline melting into satisfaction once Iāve managed to escape back into the woods, getting lost behind the trees.Ā
Robbing is far from the life I imagined for myself, but I do what I have to. The war scared most of the wild life away, leaving hardly enough wild game to go around. I canāt live on just meat either. I need other things of nutritional value.Ā
Itās not that I hadnāt considered other options. I could steal peopleās jewels, or any other valuables, and sell them on the market for a profit; but thatās a risky game, even for me. The townspeople know about bandits like me and are on the hunt for stolen property in the markets. Bounties are given for criminals, and the more prisoners the kingdom gets, the more free slave labor. Food is much safer to take and the guilt is less heavy. Like I tell Taehyung, the people who can afford food can just get more.
The war with the Brecken had ravaged my town some odd years ago, leaving no family unbroken. Homes were looted and left to the burn. Families torn apart, children left to fend for themselves. The kingdom has had years to rebuild, and yet here I still am, living in the woods with my makeshift family. For us, itās as though the war has never ended.
I return back to them with my arms and bags full. Some of the kids of the camp rush to meet me, standing on their tiptoes to try and spy what Iāve got this time.Ā
āDonāt worry, Iāve got enough for everybody,ā I tell the greedy little hands that try to grab things.Ā
Thereās more kids than adults at the camp. Some of them are orphans, some abandoned in the chaos of the war, left not knowing if their parents are alive or not. Regardless, weāre all theyāve got now. Weāre their family now.Ā
Slowly, more people emerge from their makeshift tents, coming to see what Iāve brought. Unsurprisingly, I spot my best friend standing off to the side, his arms crossed with his disapproving stare, as always. I sit the things gathered in my arms onto the wooden palette and Sam helps me sort through it.Ā
āDid I get anything useful?ā I ask Sam, even though I am already grinning at his clear amazement.Ā
Heās a big, burly redhead and the evidence of war is marred all over his body. He stops to admire each item in disbelief. āDid you rob a whole village?āĀ
I laugh, emptying the final item. The blackberry jam. I had to see if it tastes like I remember.Ā
Sam was as unhappy as Taehyung when I first began robbing. Then, when his daughter almost died from not eating enough, he began to accept it. āYou better be careful. I can makedo with bare minimum, you know?ā
āI know Sam. Iāve been eating your famous walnut soup for years.ā
He laughs and shakes his head and I grin back. Iāve joked before that if I have to eat it again Iāll barf. In return, he reminds me of my cooking skills, or lack thereof.Ā
Sometimes when heās using the stolen utensils and cooking the food over a fire heās built here in the woods, itās easy to picture him back in his bakery. The way his wife, Mary, flits around him, usually with a baby on her hip, I get a glimpse of what the war had taken away from them. A true family business.Ā
Except, instead of feeding paying customers, now their business is feeding a pack of strays.Ā
Samās wife picks up the jar I coveted, eyeing it. Her ocean blue eyes stand out even more against her pale skin and jet black hair. āGetting cocky now, eh?ā She teases.Ā
āI had to.ā I grin sheepishly at the woman who I consider to be my big sister.Ā
She glances around as if to see if anyoneās paying attention before handing it over to me. āTake it with you.āĀ
I shake my head. āI donāt mind sharing.āĀ
āI know, but you need some indulgence of your own sometimes.āĀ
As tempting as it was, I donāt keep anything for myself. Ever. āI do it for them.ā I nod towards the kids running around, hers in the mix. āTheyāve never gotten to experience the joy of jam before. I have.ā
I was only trying to bring light to a potential joy for the kids, but her face contorts in displeasure. Like everyone else, she tries to make the best of it, but there are times like now, when reality smacks you so hard in the face it takes you a minute to recover. I knew she was thinking what echoed in my head everyday. It shouldnāt have to be like this.Ā
She shakes her head, as if shaking off the bad thoughts. āIt wonāt be like this for much longer. Now that all the war is officially over,ā Or so weāve heard. āThings will have to go back to normal. Slowly, but they will.āĀ
Her blind optimism about the state of our world has never resonated with me, but I give her a smile anyway to placate her. I hate always being the negative nelly.Ā
Despite not sparing him a glance, I feel Taehyungās disapproving glare as I head for our shared tent. It was a mess of scrap material Iād sown together sloppily hanging over a frame of limbs that Taehyung built. We didnāt have enough material at the time to build one for both of us, so weād shared, and weāve been like that ever since. I grab my laundry off the line and head in to fold it. He, of course, follows me in. His presence behind me is tense. I should have known that taking too much would lead to his fussing. āWhen are you gonna give this up?āĀ
I sigh, falling into our same old routine. āAs soon as we donāt need to anymore.āĀ
āYou canāt steal forever. You know this isnāt right.āĀ
I start to unpack the bags, not bothering to look up at him to see his condescending look. āNo, I donāt know that.āĀ
āWe can hunt-ā
āAnd howād your last hunting trip go?ā I stand up after folding everything, looking him in the eye. I donāt fault him for trying a more ethical route, but it's a delusional one. Iāve watched this man spend his whole day looking for any sign of wildlife, only to come up empty. Day after day. The Brecken not only set fire to our crops, but also the forests. The forests were left filled with charred trees, leaving no trace of life behind. Except for us.Ā
āYou think me taking this stuff makes any difference to these people? They might feel shocked and a little pissed off, but theyāll just go and buy more stuff. Meanwhile, we have people literally dying, some from starvation, some from their poor health because of their malnutrition. Me taking this is like plucking a single strand of hair from your head. Itās merely a ripple in their pond. This food to us is saving lives. So come to me when you have a better solution, but for now, I will keep us alive.āĀ
The wealthy and elite stayed wealthy and elite after the war because their work did not have to do with manual labor, so it was waiting for them upon return from war. Their houses were built back with their gold, or they had second homes to fall back on.Ā
Those that had no savings were left homeless and jobless. Their farms, their resources, their livelihoods, are all gone. Those whose farms remained, marked the prices up so high that the average family couldnāt afford to feed themselves.Ā
āWe could try talking to the King-āĀ
āFor the millionth time, you wonāt make it past the gates after you tell the guards what youāre there for!āĀ
I felt a little bad for raising my voice once I took in his sunken expression.Ā
Of course people had tried to talk to the King, but you have to have a valid enough reason to plead to the King. No one that I know of has ever made it past the screening to talk to the King. To them, I am just another poor beggar asking for a handout. The king couldnāt give a ratās ass about anyone but himself, and that had never been more clear than at the current time.Ā
I hate having this fight with him over and over again. I heave a sigh, laying down on my assortment of cloths. Most of them have worn holes by now, but with the roof Taehyung fastened and his body heat next to me, itās usually enough to cut the cold.
āYouāre gonna get caught eventually, and I wonāt be able to live with myself when that happens.ā He leaves the tent before I can respond, you can be the one to feed us then.
~
Sam directs his wife how to prepare the vegetables for the stew. Even though she probably knows most things he tells her, she always listens. She knows that if she were to stop him, he would lose his sense of purpose for good. It was the only thing he had left.
The adults try to give the kids menial tasks that teach responsibility and make them feel like theyāre helping out. Sam instructs them to gather water or go and collect sticks to burn. I sit beside the fire, carving the skin off an apple with a kitchen knife I stole. Picking a few fruits from trees in backyards was much easier than breaking into houses, so I always have in-season fruits on hand.Ā
I tried not to pay attention to Taehyung who remained upset with me throughout the day. This is usually how it goes, and by the next morning heās over it. My silence gets to him earlier than usual, and inevitably, he ends up being the first to break the tension. āI went to the city today,ā he announces, taking a seat next to me, looking out at the fire.Ā
I hum, showing I am paying attention, but still upset.Ā
āI found a family whoās willing to let me help out on their farm.ā
A weary glance is cast his way. āFor money?āĀ
āThey said once they start profiting again theyāll pay me.ā The family, no doubt, found someone to loan them money to restart their business. They likely would be forever indebted.Ā
I roll my eyes. āAnd when will that be?āĀ
āItās better than nothing.ā Heās already getting defensive.
āIs it? Working to feed other people for free?āĀ
āThey said theyāll feed me. Thatās a payment to me.ā I toss the apple peel, taking a bite of the juicy fruit. āI asked for a job for you too.āĀ
I shake my head. It would be too selfish to accept their free food while everyone here starves. If they do pay me, thereās no way I could make enough money to replace the amount of goods I steal for everyone. āYou go ahead. Iām good.ā
Sam has tried to get a job, but heās considered useless without his hands. No one here pays attention to the scarring all up his arms anymore, itās simply a part of him, but the real world is not so kind. They have no way of feeding their two young ones on their own. Mary was pregnant with their second when the war happened, and she gave birth only a few days after I met them. I have no siblings, so it was my first time experiencing labor, and safe to say it has scared me for life.Ā
The other kids are all different ages. Some tweens, some as young as five years old. Some of the older children at my camp took a few of the younger ones under their wing. All of them have been forced to grow up too soon. All of their lives are forever altered by the war.Ā
Done with the conversation with Taehyung, I grab the jar that has been tempting me all day. āAlright, who wants to try blackberry jam?ā
Hands shoot up in eagerness and I grin, meeting Maryās eyes over their hands. āSince she retrieved it, Ivara will be the first to try it.ā
A little spark of something ignites in me that I havenāt felt in a long time. Excitement not born out of nerves. I grab the small piece of bread from her hands smothered in dark jelly.
Small faces watch mine intently for my reaction. The taste is sweeter than I remember, and I let out a satisfied noise that erupts giggles around me. Although I could sit here and down the whole jar by myself, I look at Mary and say, āEverybodyās got to try it.āĀ
I watch with a fat grin on my face as Mary helps the little ones all try a bite. Their faces light up at the taste of the jam, and for a moment, I let myself feel joy.
āYou canāt support these people for the rest of your life,ā Taehyung says, low enough where no one can catch on, but without enough bite to get his point across.Ā
My smile is gone now. When I look back at him, I canāt help but notice how much older he looks now. Sure, he was fifteen when we met, but he's matured more than a few years. His face is still handsome, but it deserves that youthfulness that has been stolen from him. Now, his face is always contorted into hard shapes and lines. Always concerned. āSomeone has to.āĀ Ā
āItās not your responsibility.āĀ
I sigh like it will release the tension in his body for him. āYouāre right. But, since the responsible party is currently untouchable, Iāll be stepping in.āĀ
~
After everyoneās belly is full and the kids have finally hit their last energy spurt, everyone settles down around the fire. Mary had started her tale about the fire breathing dragon that āSubtlyā teaches kids to listen to their parents, and the kids let out a groan.Ā
āNot that one again!ā One of the children cries, her freckled face scrunching up.Ā
āWell, Iām afraid I donāt have any stories left that you havenāt heard yet.ā Mary looks at me over the fire. āIvara, do you have any stories?āĀ
Iāve always let the others handle storytelling. Itās always been too painful to remember the stories my mother used to tell me before bed. Thinking about them always brings tears to my eyes and a sharp stabbing pain of mourning. When Marry re-tells the same ones as my mother used to, I have to slip off before anyone can catch the tears in my eyes.Ā
Itās been a while since thatās happened, and for some reason I feel ready to relive something again, if only to see the kidās reactions.Ā
āI do have one story.āĀ
Squeals erupt, and Elena, Sam and Maryās youngest, snuggles closely to her motherās chest while Ingrid does the same to her father. The twins lean onto Sam, who has practically raised them, while Slade, whoās ten, sits by himself. He may try to say heās too old now for stories, but I catch him listening every night.Ā
āOnce upon a time,ā I begin the same way my mother used to. āThere was a little girl who always dreamed of marrying a prince.āĀ
I caught the adults' weariness considering their opinions on the monarch are not favorable, to say the least. This was a child's tale though, and I wasnāt going to let real life spoil it.Ā
āShe wasnāt anybody important. She lived in a small cottage with her two parents. However, one day she got invited to a ball. Her parents saved up money to buy her a beautiful dress. Her father also saved up enough money, secretly, to buy her mother a dress just as beautiful.āĀ
I watch as the childrenās eyes fill with stars at my story. One of a world that doesnāt exist anymore, and I wasnāt sure if it ever would again. But, something had to change. I refused to let their future turn into mine.Ā
~
I head to the tent and lay down long before Taehyung does, but I am still awake by the time he slides in behind me. When he lifts the blanket, the chill of the night hits my back until his body heat warms me up again.Ā
āI am going to get us out of here.ā
I lay still, not responding to him, thinking maybe heāll think Iām asleep.Ā
I remember the sounds the forest used to make before the war. It was peaceful, lullying. Now it was eerily silent. The sound of death.
Iām not sure if he knows that I'm awake or not, but he continues anyway. āIām going to build us a house one day. Itāll have a bathroom, and a bedroom with a soft bed. One of those fancy ones made of feathers. You can visit the market and buy food till your heartās content. We can eat until our stomachs hurt.āĀ
I let him daydream out loud without interrupting.
āThen, we can finally end the day without worrying about the next.āĀ
His words twist something in my chest. While he dreams about things like this, his words roll right through one ear to the next. I know thatās never going to happen. I donāt let myself get disappointed by made up things like he does.Ā
~
I never make repeat offenses. I am smart enough to know when the risks outweigh the rewards. Once someone is robbed, theyāre on guard the way they should have been in the first place. But, this time I just canāt help myself. This house is too stock piled to not make a trip back, and Iāve never been able to feed everyone for a week after a run like I had after this house.Ā
Unable to keep track of the days, we calculate birthdays based on the season. We make them a big deal, wanting the kids' lives to have as much joy as we can possibly bring to them. I usually try to find items birthday worthy, items like I know exist in the house I last visited.
The decent sized white house is nestled into the small patch of woods I found to be surprisingly untouched by the massive fires. Though it is quite a trek, almost a day to go there and back, itās private from any neighbors, which makes my job easier. Since it is my second time coming back, I take the time to survey the perimeter. Much to my surprise and delight, there is no one around again. Idiots.Ā
My feet are practically silent as I slide myself right up to the backdoor. They at least have enough sense to lock the doors. The windows however, are still open. In fact, one is standing open completely, as if inviting me in.Ā
I am cautious at first. Could there possibly be people stupid enough to get robbed and then leave their window open?Ā
But, there are no noises to be heard, and no sign of life anywhere. I canāt just turn back now. Especially not as I glance through the window and see the kitchen is fully restocked again. I climb through the window with ease, making sure my footsteps are silent when I land on the wooden floors.Ā
I brought an extra bag this time, and I grab things without being sparing. Itās gonna be a lot of weight, but I think I can handle it.Ā
The fresh loaf of bread has my mouth already salivating at the sight, and I wrapped it in a towel before storing it away. Other baked goods call out to me even though I know theyāre not the most nutritional.Ā
Thereās a cut of meat that I havenāt seen in years, fatty and expensive. Itās gonna make my load extra heavy to haul, but my stomach takes over before logic.Ā
When my bags are full of all the goodies I can handle, I reluctantly decide itās time to go. Itās right before I approach the window that I hear it. The sound of horses galloping, mixed with voices.Ā
I scramble out of the window this time, not affording the luxury of being silent. The voices are still upfront, but if I run now, theyāll spot me when I try to go for the woods.
I just have to press myself up against the house and hope they donāt look back here first. My grip on my bag tightens at the sound of the front door opening. Itās only one man that enters through and the rest wait out front.Ā
I hear a swear followed by footsteps walking back outside.Ā
āAgain?ā another voice asks.Ā
āThey only raided the kitchen again.āĀ
āMaybe theyāre still close by, everyone spread out.āĀ
My heart beats loudly in my ears as I quickly decide a gameplan in my head.Ā
A few horses gallop past the back of the house towards the woods, and my fear impossibly worsens. I recognize those uniforms. Theyāre royal guards. Trained by the best to be fighters, seekers, and how to wield weapons.Ā
And what do I have? My worn-out bow and arrows.Ā
I consider myself blessed as they ride on towards the woods without looking back, assuming Iāve already ran off.
The only problem is, where to go from here?Ā
Once I am sure theyāve all dispersed into the woods, I head there myself. My full bags donāt make it as easy to be stealthy as I would like, but I canāt just drop them now. I still have a chance to make it.Ā
Iām not going to head in the direction of home, just in case. Instead, I tread carefully through the woods, eyes scanning to look for any sign of the guards.Ā
In my panicked state, I go the wrong direction and only realize once I don't notice any familiar marking. I try to remember little things to keep me on my track.Ā
I take the long way around to go home, and by this point, itāll be long after nightfall by the time I make it home. They will worry about me, and I just pray that none of them try to come find me. Especially after Iāve sicked a royal guard their way.Ā
I walk for what feels like an hour. Iām in the woods now that I know well, but Iām still far from home.Ā
I curse my foolishness. I should have never come back. This wasnāt a game to play around. For now, I can only be grateful I didnāt get caught. I promise myself Iāll never do it again.Ā
Iāve been walking for a couple of hours, and I assumed a while ago that I was in the clear when the sound of something stills my footfalls. Any sound here is usually a bad thing. Most creatures lurk back in the still-living part of the forest that I left an hour ago. Everything is still dead around me.
I gaze around the hillās horizon, hoping I imagined it. After a few moments, all seems clear until the sound of hooves comes from behind me, fast. I run as quickly as I can manage, but they creep up on me. I decide hiding is my best bet. I duck behind a tree, hoping to evade their sight.Ā
āHey!ā The guard yells out, alerting anyone nearby of my presence. āYou are ordered to stop!āĀ
It only takes a blink of the eye for me to have my bow gripped tight. I aim the arrow for his leg not wanting to kill. The man lands on the ground with a groan and thud, and I donāt stick around to see what else.Ā
I run as fast as I can in the opposite direction, away from home. Vines and limbs stand in my way, but I brush past them without a second thought, accepting whatever bruises and cuts I get as a result. Everything is on the line for me.Ā
Two men round from the left, and I fire off my arrows without a second thought. My only goal is getting back home to my people. If that comes with harming people, Iāll have to do it.Ā
Another man jumps out at me from behind a tree and my aim is a little off. The arrow that should have hit his head is only missed by his ducking, which subsequently throws him off his horse, but it wards him off nonetheless.Ā
Looking back, thankfully I seem to have lost them. As soon as I turn my head back forward, my feet skid to a stop when a horse waltzes in front me. I am not sure how I didnāt see, or hear it coming. On instinct, my bow is already drawn and aimed, but once I recognize the man on the horse, my hands freeze seconds before letting go.Ā
āWhat do we have here?ā The man saunters down from his horse with the elegance only royalty are taught. Still behind the drawn bow, I take in his spotless clothing sporting the royal blue and gold, and his clean dark hair combed into place. His face has a healthy glow and is freshly shaven. Everything his people canāt be. Coming to stand in front of me, the Prince, Jungkook, eyes the bags that I am wearing, and I curse myself for not storing them away somewhere first.Ā
āAre you my little thief?āĀ
The barrage of men on horses start to form a circle around me and I curse my life.Ā
~
The large castle settled into the edge of the coast is just how I remember it. Iāve been a few times before, but never as a prisoner. If younger me could see how I turned out, how the world has turned out, I am not sure I would want to keep going.Ā
I used to dream of being able to marry someone in the palace, catching their eye at the balls I would attend. He would ask me to dance and fall for me then and there. Much like the story I told the children last night. Itās been a long time since Iāve thought of anything romantic, I wasnāt sure what made me think of it.Ā
After being restrained and forced on a horse with a guard, Iāve been silently stewing. If looks could kill, the Prince would have a hole in the back of his head by now. Iāve never despised anyone more. Iād spent sleepless nights cursing his bloodline and thinking over everything Iād say to him if Iād ever see him.Ā
He and his guards eat the stolen food shamelessly in front of me while I do without. Iām used to being hungry, but this hunger hurts more than ever. This hunger was so purposeful, there was no mistaking. He didnāt care about my well-being.Ā
Itās not until I reach the castle and I am being directed away from the Prince as he heads towards his palace and I head for the prison that I start to boil over. āYour people that youāve sworn to protect, theyāre gonna die without me!ā
He watches me from his horse as I am being dragged away, struggling to face him. I figure this is the only time the Prince will be able to hear what I have to say. Might as well get it all out now. āTheyāre starving, they have no ways to provide for themselves. The war left them with nothing.ā His face remains passive, but he doesnāt look away.Ā
The guard behind me grabs the matted hair on the back of my head, forcing me to face forward and walk so I canāt see him anymore, but I continue. āYouāve done nothing for your people! They needed help, and you abandoned them!āĀ
A strong hand pushes against my back, pushing me toward the prison that resides under the castle.Ā
This is it. I am gonna get my hands chopped off. The thought makes me sick, but unlike Taehyung said, I donāt regret it. I donāt regret keeping my people alive. They didnāt do anything to deserve such a shitty hand in life.Ā
And what did these people do to deserve a palace? What do they do for others? Theyāre nothing but cowards hiding behind the lives of other people. They never have to face the repercussions of their actions, theyāre always safe.Ā
The guard unlocks the dungeon from the outside door and shoves me in. The room is dark and damp, the must invading my senses. The only light comes from the small barred windows above each cell, casting slants of light as well as the hung candles for the guards to see their tread.Ā
Thereās enough light to just make out the first figure. A man with a graying beard down to his stomach. Heās skinny enough you can see most of his bones. The eyes I meet hold nothing behind them. No heartache or sadness, just emptiness.Ā
The rest of the prisoners arenāt much better, and I decide to stop looking. They ceased hangings right before the war, though looking at these men now, I wonder if itās a more promising fate.Ā
My offense wouldnāt qualify for the cutting of my head anyway, just my hands. I had heard of it, when I was younger, seen men as proof. Itās a dreary way to live life, deprived of arguably your most useful body parts. Iāve seen how Sam struggles.Ā
The guard undoes my shackles before pushing me into an open cell. Itās no bigger than the tent that me and Taehyung share, only the ground is a lot harder and I donāt have a blanket to bite the cold. Iāll never complain about my makeshift sleeping quarters again. If I return.Ā
~
The night passes impossibly long. I canāt stop thinking about the people I left behind. What will they think when I return, handless? Should I even return? Iād be a shame to them without my hands.Ā
No, I have to. They wonāt survive without me. To feed her children, Mary will try to take up the only job offered to women. Selling her body to wealthy men that were willing. Sheād tried it once, and I had never seen Sam rage the way he had that night. Iād never let that happen again.
I burrow my nose into a few, seemingly clean, straws of haw, trying to drown out whatever wretched smells that make their way towards me. Some people moan nonstop, some hum, some sing. Some mindlessly talk to themselves, but all are quieted by the guards when they get too loud.Ā
I canāt sleep. Not in a trap in the ground with a bunch of strange men surrounding me. I welcome daylight, even if I know what it brings. At least Iāll be free from this place.
The light seeping through the small windows wakes me long before I feel rested. I feel as though I just blinked and was awake.Ā
A guard stops at my cell and orders me to follow him. This is it. I block out my thoughts as he guides me with my hands and legs still shackled. Just donāt think about it, I tell myself. Pain is temporary. Iāll live, thatās whatās important. Iāll figure out how to go on. Iāve done it before.Ā
I know every criminal is brought before the King who ultimately gets to decide their fate. Thatās why, when I am led outside and around the castle, I am confused.Ā
The Prince is standing in the clearing of the green expanse I know to be for weapon practice. Targets are lined up along the fence line. On his back rests a bow and a bag of quivers. He smiles when he sees me, the sight turning my stomach. What a sick bastard.Ā
With his spotless clothing he probably never wears twice, and his full stomach. Thinking of the clothes Iāve been wearing for years, and the ones that fell apart before I stole these.Ā
That first time I robbed him, I wish I would have taken everything he had. And then set the house on fire. The guard stops me a few feet before him and shocks me even more by removing my hand shackles before walking away.Ā
I hate the way the Prince stalks towards me, as if he owns the earth. He may claim to own this kingdom, but it doesnāt belong to him or his family.Ā āHow did you learn archery?āĀ
I contemplate his question. Itās hard for me to talk about, but I guess Iāll never get a chance to talk to royalty again, something most people never get the advantage to. I canāt afford to ignore this opportunity. āMy father was a royal guard. He was an archer.āĀ
He looks intrigued like I knew he would, prompting the next question. āName?āĀ
āAldris.ā I say the name proudly. I see the recognition flit across his face, and he studies me for a moment, as if trying to see my father in me.Ā
āAnd your mother?āĀ
āDied in one of the medical tents. They were ambushed.ā It feels satisfying in some odd way, to be able to finally tell them what they had taken away from me. To show them the face of someone whose life is forever broken because of the sacrifices that were made for them.
His face doesnāt change as he says, āIām sorry for your loss.āĀ
Iām about to deny his statementās truth when something is shoved in my hands. I hold the bow, sunsure of why itās there in the first place. All I can do is stare at it in astonishment. āYouāre not gonna cut off my hands?āĀ
āWeāll see.ā He hands me an arrow and I reluctantly load the bow. Itās like I am taking a test that I havenāt studied for and the wrong answer could kill me.Ā
The target is about a hundred feet away. Itās been years since Iāve aimed at one. My dad built one for my yard, and my mother didnāt approve, saying it was a safety hazard. He didnāt listen though, and I spent hours practicing with my dad.Ā
It wasnāt necessarily that I loved archery, but I loved that he loved it. I loved seeing his eyes light up when I would succeed. I wanted him to be proud of me.Ā
The bow in my hands is much heavier and tighter than Iām used to with my childhood bow. I try my best to accommodate to the slack, resting the pulled string against my face.Ā
The arrow hits just above the middle circle. If my dad was here, heād tell me I can do better than that. Glancing at the Prince, I expect him to look disappointed. Instead, he remains unpassive.Ā
āStep back.āĀ
I stare at him for a moment and he gestures behind me impatiently. I obey, drawing the bow once more. I have a better sense of how itās going to shoot now, adjusting my aim for the new distance. This time, the arrow lands in the dead center.Ā
āFurther.ā He keeps repeating that phrase until Iām nearer to the castle than I am the targets. Iām a show pony forced to do tricks for him. Like a cat playing with a mouse right before taking a bite out of it.Ā
āYouāre pretty brave to give me a weapon,ā I finally speak after a while, not bothering to hide my annoyance.Ā
āWhat are you going to do, shoot me?ā He sports a full grin, but once he takes in the rage in my eyes, it fades. āIf you shoot me, youāll be shot the first step you take.āĀ
I glance around the perimeter, eyeing the many men with weapons at the ready. āWhat makes you think I value my life that much?ā Do I enjoy my life more than I would enjoy his death? It isnāt an easy answer.
In a twisted way, I enjoy that he looks taken aback, clearly not expecting me to say something so dark.Ā
āYou have people relying on you, do you not?āĀ
Instantly, fear strikes me hard in the gut. I shouldnāt have told him that. He can leverage their lives at his will. He doesnāt know who they are yet, but it wonāt take long digging around in the woods to find them. If they havenāt already. Thereās no telling what they would do to them. A camp full of stolen food on kingdom property.Ā
I reload my bow, and draw it back, all while keeping eye contact with him. Without glancing at the target, I release my grip. He looks away first. The arrow landed near the center, not on the red, but close enough.Ā
When doesnāt immediately request I shoot again I begin to relax until he says, āHow would you feel about becoming a royal guard?āĀ
The shock of the offer hits me like a brick. I might be honored if it were anyone else thinking Iām talented. āIād rather have my hands chopped off.ā Than to be at the mercy of someone who doesnāt care about my well being or those around me. Someone who would use me as a weapon, and completely disregard that Iām a person with a life worth something.
Surely, he reads the disgust in my face and tone, but he almost looks amused. āVery well then. Follow me.āĀ
Iām dumbstruck in place, causing him to turn and look for me. āCome on, then.āĀ
I follow after him, if only out of curiosity. āYouāre actually going to cut my hands off?āĀ
He hums, heading into the castle with a purpose. My steps falter before I skid to a stop. I thought I was in the clear, but now the fear resurfaces.Ā
āDo I need to get a guard to escort you?āĀ
Numbly, I follow behind him. The room he walks into is just off of the prison. Inside, all kinds of sharp devices lay. The one that stands out to me, the one that he walks over to, is a tall wooden structure with a thin, shiny piece of metal waiting at the top to meet at the bottom with another metal piece. I guess thatās the hand-chopper.Ā Ā
The prince glances at me stuck in the doorway. He seems to be enjoying my fear. I knew the royals were lowlifes, but I had no idea what a truly heartless man he is. He is eating up any fear I give off. He thrives off of making me uncomfortable. Gesturing towards the contraption he says, āSit there, and place your hands here.āĀ
Reluctantly, I do as he says, my body feeling like it weighs double. Glancing briefly up at the sharp blade, my stomach turns so bad I have to close my eyes. Maybe I should take back what I said, and beg for my life, but I donāt. Iād rather have my hands chopped off then admit Iām sorry to the Prince and vow service to him.Ā
He adjusts my hands on the wooden board, and I let him, sitting there like a fool. A fool that gave up the option of not getting her hands cut off.Ā āReady?āĀ
The question is taunting, and my anger towards him distracts me momentarily from my fear.Ā
My heart feels as though it might beat out of my chest, my whole body starting to tremble. He releases the lever, and as the blade flies down towards my hands, I call him every bad name I've ever learned. A loud smack sound of metal hitting metal causes me to almost jump out of my seat. I open my eyes and find my hands still intact, the blade resting near the tip of my fingers.Ā
I was so nervous I didnāt even realize my hands werenāt resting on the metal.Ā
āYour highness, what are you doing here?ā a deep voice asks from the doorway. An older man waits there. I can tell this is his space, and heās not too happy the Prince is here without permission, but he rides the line of formality.Ā
The prince turns to the man and smiles. āI was just showing Miss Aldris around. She is going to be a guard soon.āĀ
I have a hard time registering what he just said, the adrenaline still coursing through my body. I pull my hands back from the wooden slab, marveling that I still have them, and hide their shaking between my legs.Ā
The man bows to me. āMuch respect, Miss y/ln.āĀ
āWeāll be heading out now.āĀ
The prince glances at me with the expectation that I will follow him. I know heās used to people trailing him like puppies, but how can he expect me to stand when my legs feel like mush?Ā
Somehow I manage to stand without collapsing. I hide my trembling hands behind my back and force my legs to move.Ā
Satisfied that I got up, the Prince leaves without glancing back at me. I look at the older man, trying to plead with him with my eyes while I follow the Prince out. āYouāre really going to make me a guard?ā I ask once weāre out in the hallway.Ā
He turns to me, intrigued. āWhy do you hate the prospect so much that youāre willing to trade your hands in exchange?ā
I donāt back down from his intense gaze. āI donāt have a problem risking my life for people who deserve it.āĀ
His head tilted to the side, as if merely intrigued and not insulted. āThe royal family is not worth it?āĀ
My silence is all the answer he needs. āI should have you beheaded.ā Somehow after what just happened, his words mean nothing to me.Ā āInstead, I guess Iāll just have to torture you. Come.āĀ
Iām not as nervous as I probably should be. Maybe I underestimate him because of his inability to chop my hands off, or maybe itās my lack of care for my own life. I only worry about the people Iāve left behind and how theyāre going to fare with me gone.Ā
āYou will be provided with a place to stay, a wardrobe, and there is free food in the canteen. And of course, you will be paid a monthly salary.āĀ
Itās laughable if he thinks that's worth risking my life for his familyās. Nothing is worth it to me. He could throw in all the goods or diamonds in the world and I still wouldnāt agree.Ā
For a second, the thought that maybe I can start sending my salary back home for them crosses my mind before I quickly dismiss it. Itās dirty money. I need to find another way of making money instead of being the royalās lap dog. They profit off of the same people who I left back home.Ā
The main halls of the castle are pristine. I am not in awe of the opulence. It is in utter disgust I take in the richness around me. I want to smear the perfectly white marble with the blood of those theyād failed, staining it forever like the lives of their loved ones were tainted with their losses.Ā
The prince stops in front of a door, surprising me when he knocks. I didnāt know royalty had to knock.Ā
āCome in!ā an older ladyās voice rings through.Ā
āMiss Moira.ā The woman has fully gray, curly hair, tucked up onto her head with various pins. Her face and hands are wrinkled, but her dress is neatly in place.Ā
āShe needs to be fitted for a guard uniform.āĀ Ā
The woman appears shocked by the requests, but says a quick, āYes, your highnessā and bows to the Prince. I glare at him even after he walks away.Ā
I canāt believe he just left me here. I could run now, but has he alerted the guards to be on the look for me running? They donāt know my faceā¦.
āStand over here, child.ā The older woman gestures to the small round platform in front of her, drawing me out of my thoughts of escape.Ā Ā
Thereās no way in hell Iām becoming a royal guard. The prince can stomp his feet and cross his arms and throw whatever fit he wants. I will not fight for this family.Ā
But, I decide the smartest thing to do is to go along with it for now. If I throw a fit now, they will lock me up on watch. My disappearance should be more mysterious. No one should know when I leave.Ā
Glancing at the mirror, itās the first time in years Iāve seen myself not in a water reflection. I donāt look like Iād always imagined I would. I never gained a womanly figure, but that could be due to lack of nutrition. My face is almost intimidating to look at, and I can only manage small glances up at it, like Iām scaring myself. Itās not soft and feminine like my motherās was. My father always said it was her kind face and shy smile that drew him in. Thereās no trace of that in my reflection and the revelation saddens me.Ā
I canāt help but wonder if my parents could see me now, what would they think? Would they be disappointed? Would they not even recognize me the way I canāt even recognize my own face?
Iām nervous standing on the platform as the woman flits around me, pinning the uniform material around my body. I flinch when she gets close to me with the sharp objects, but somehow she never sticks me with the pins.Ā
āI have to say this is a first for me. But, we have smaller men that Iāve made uniforms for. This is quite similar, only Iāll have to adjust for the bust.āĀ
It takes a minute for the realization of her words to sink in.āThere are no female guards?āĀ
āNot in my lifetime, dear.ā
Surely the Prince is making a spectacle of me, trying to humiliate me. Iām going to get eaten up and swallowed alive if I try to be the first female royal guard. Maybe thatās his version of torture for me. Heās gonna throw me to the wolves that are sexually deprived and socially repressed soldiers whoād only see me as useful for them in one way. Just when I thought my opinion of him couldnāt get any lower.Ā
After about an hour, there's another knock on the door. āCome in,ā Moira calls.Ā
A man creaks the door open slowly, nervously glancing around, as if expecting to accidentally invade someoneās privacy. Once he sees Iām fully dressed, he fully opens the door. āIām to show you to your room.ā He clears his throat after, standing up straighter. The man is a little lanky for a royal guard in my opinion, like a sword would topple him over. His face is young, so I assume he must be new.Ā
After saying goodbye to Moira, I follow after him, confused as to what āmy roomā is. My father lived in the guard quarters before he met my mother and decided to start a family so I never got to see them. I was raised in a small cottage on the royal grounds that are made for the help. I lived there until the war struck, turning everything upside down.Ā
āIām Namjoon, by the way,ā he introduces himself once we begin walking down the hall.
āIvara,ā it didnāt feel right not to introduce myself to him. Heās not the reason why Iām here.Ā Ā
Noise grows from somewhere to the right. Sounds of people talking and dishes rattling. āThatās the canteen. Itās open for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. The foodās not great, but itās free.ā
He leads me round a few hallways and down the stairs. I pass by halls lined with dozens of rooms. I remember my father told me that the dormitories are separated by job. Maids with maids, cooks with cooks, and guards with guards.Ā
āThis is your quarters.ā He stands in the doorway while I walk in to examine the room. It's a decent size, about the same as the room I grew up in. A small bed sits in the corner and a wooden armoire on the other side with a measly chair to sit on.Ā
āYour tailored clothes will be sent to your room as soon as theyāre done. For now, there should be clothes in your wardrobe.ā
āI was told to inform you, you will be joining the training tomorrow morning. I will come and get you at sunrise. Do you, uh- have any questions?ā He nervously rubs the back of his neck. Clearly, this is his first time showing someone around.
Yes, I do have questions. Starting with, why the fuck am I here? Since Iām sure he cannot answer the real questions I have I shake my head. He bows before shutting the door behind him, leaving me all alone.
I canāt believe the Prince actually made me a guard, or at least is trying to. Why? Why didnāt he just punish me the traditional way? Is he this sadistic that he has some elaborate plan of ruining my life? All because I stole some of his food? From his second home?Ā
The sheets smell fresh and the furniture is dusted. They must have expected my arrival. Thereās a small window towards the ceiling above my bed. I climb onto the small bed, trying to peer outside. The door locks from the inside, but I half expect it to be locked. Iām still shocked when it opens.Ā
I decide to head out when the sun disappears. Thereās women chatting in the hallway when I emerge. Some of them have their doors open and I can see the gaggles of women in them. All of them are dressed in maids outfits. They stuck me in the maidsā quarters. Itās a small relief.
All eyes turn to me once I step out and the chatter stops. Iām just as confused as they are about my own presence here.Ā
Instead of going in the direction I came from, I head the opposite way. Thereās a few more halls of residence until it finally comes to an end, and Iām granted with a side door. It leads directly outside, the left side of the courtyard.Ā
A blur flashes from the corner of my eye before my feet are being swept out from under me by a strong force. My ass thuds on the ground, and the perpetrator sniffs at me a second before retrieving his ball that had rolled to the side and taking off. Looking up, I find a prince with an apologetic, but amused look on his face. I wonder if itās the same dog he had when we were kids.Ā
Heās almost to the Princeās waist, his brown and black body is lean, but sturdy as I experienced first hand. His coat shines like a pearl, indicative of how well taken care of he is. The dog returns the ball to his owner, squatting in anticipation for the next throw.Ā
I quickly look away from the Prince, anger brewing inside of me at the sight of him. I wonder what sort of twisted plan heās brewing up by making me a guard. He may think he has the upperhand now, but Iām not trapped here. I refuse to be.Ā
My obvious lack of threat to him pisses me off, but I have to use it to my advantage. He may think heās slick by giving me free reign of the place, dangling freedom in front of me. But, I will make him regret it. I will make him regret underestimating me.Ā
I walk the premise of the castle, noting where each guard is stationed. The greenery runs into the woods not far from where Iām at. It should be easy to slip into the trees at night. No one the wiser.Ā
Itās dark when I make it back inside. Thankfully, the halls are clear and I peacefully make it back to my room. The soft cushion of a mattress is something I havenāt felt in years. The fact that I actually have covers to sleep in feels unreal.Ā
My mind drifts to the camp. What are they thinking happened to me? Hopefully they can get by with what I stole before I can return.Ā
Taehyungās gonna be pissed when I get back, and I can already hear his āI told you soāsā. I wonāt even mind hearing them. In fact, I canāt wait to hear them.Ā
Even though Iām forced to be here, I feel guilty for sleeping in a real bed when I know back at camp there are three kids sharing one blanket on the ground under a quilt I nabbed.Ā
Itās the first time Iāve slept without Taehyung in years. Last night didnāt count, only if you count passing in and out as sleeping. I keep reaching out for him, only to realize where I am. I donāt want to sleep, but it finds me anyway.Ā
PBANDJKĀ©

















