Only Bones Remain at the Sealed Ground
The trumpet call tore through the morning.
Three hundred royal guards ground over the mountain road, a sea of silver armor and snapping banners.
Behind them floated the King’s mage corps, gemstones atop their staves burning in unison, turning the trail to the Sealed Ground into something like a boulevard for a triumphal return.
I wasn’t there.
But in the crystal orb, every face was sharp as if I could reach out and touch it.
At the head rode Elena on a white horse, a scarlet royal cloak streaming behind her. She lifted a hand, cutting down the noise of the procession, lips curled in a satisfied smile.
“Faster,” she said. “Ludwig will be happy to see me.”
She sounded so certain.
As though I had come here to recover—rather than being left here by her own hand to serve out the seal’s full three-year term.
Her attendant hurried to flatter her. “The three-year covenant is complete. Once the seal is fulfilled, the Hero can return. When Your Highness weds Lord Ludwig, the kingdom will enter its greatest age.”
“The capital is waiting for this day.”
“The two of you were made for each other.”
Elena took it in as her due. Her chin tipped up; the smugness in her eyes was barely contained.
“Of course,” she said coolly. “He’s given so much for the realm. I’ve come in person to bring him home. That alone is surprise enough.”
A surprise?
In the Demon King’s castle, I leaned back on the high-backed throne, tapping a finger against the armrest, and let out a soft laugh.
In the orb, the procession crested the last ridge and arrived.
And then—every last one of them stopped.
Wind swept across the barren ground, lifting ash-gray dust.
No holy radiance.
No barrier.
No hero standing guard, no miracle waiting to be welcomed.
Only a shattered sealing array, a cracked altar, and a holy sword driven half its length into the earth—rusted like scrap iron.
Beside it lay scattered bones, bleached and weathered. The breastbone split, the ribs darkened, as if some unseen power had torn at them again and again until nothing human remained.
The valley was silent in a way that felt obscene.
The smile on Elena’s face froze.
Her grip tightened on the reins, voice rising sharp. “What is this?”
No one answered.
Because the answer lay there in plain sight, brutal and undeniable.
One of the mages swung down from his mount and hurried to the altar, tracing the residue of the broken array. A moment later his face drained of color. He lowered his voice.
“Your Highness…the seal has only just fractured. The cracks are fresh. But these remains…” He swallowed. “They’ve been exposed and weathering for at least a years.”
A years.
The number drove itself into the crowd like an ice spike.
“A year—” Elena blurted instinctively, then caught herself, as if the slip had exposed her. Heat flared into her tone. “No. Impossible. The seal has only now reached its end. How could he—”
She dismounted at once, boots crunching over stone as she strode straight to the bones and the rusted blade.
It was my sword.
She knew it.
And still she refused to see.
“It isn’t him,” Elena said through clenched teeth, as though forcing the words might make them true. “That cannot be Ludwig. He wouldn’t die here. He must have left. He must have gone somewhere else.”
Villagers were gathering on the slopes, drawn by the commotion. They watched the princess unravel, their whispers swelling into open talk.
“So she comes now?”
“The Hero’s been gone for one years, and she never even knew?”
“Of course she didn’t. When has she ever cared about this place?”
“If not for the Hero, who would spare a glance for a spoiled princess?”
That line carried—far enough for everyone to hear.
The guards’ faces hardened. “Silence! Who gave you leave to speak of Her Highness that way?”
But the murmurs didn’t die; they thickened.
“We honor her because she’s the Hero’s fiancée.”
“The Hero was meant to hold the seal three full years. He only lasted two before something happened, and the capital never sent proper supplies—not once.”
“And now, the moment the seal breaks, she shows up acting as if she loved him.”
Elena’s face blanched by degrees.
She had always been adored.
She had always believed the cheers belonged to her—because she was a princess, because she was the kingdom’s brightest jewel.
Only now did she realize they did not.
The praise, the devotion, the crowds—their love had been tied to someone else all along.
To the title the Hero’s fiancée.
Not to Elena herself.
Her eyes trembled. She snapped her head up, her voice shrill with fury. “Enough!”
The valley stilled for a breath.
She stared down at the villagers, breathing hard. “Ludwig isn’t dead. He promised me he would return alive. He’s only gone for a time. Dig. Dig it all up—turn this ground inside out!”
The guards hesitated.
The mages did not move.
Because even a fool could see there was nothing to find but bones.
And yet she kept commanding.
“I said dig!” Elena barked. “Turn over everything beneath this soil!”
A few guards stepped forward, forced into obedience.
That was when an old man with a wooden staff pushed through the crowd.
The village chief.
He didn’t bow. He only looked at Elena—without reverence, with the cold of resentment held too long.
“Don’t dig, Your Highness,” he said.
Elena’s eyes cut to him. “You know something?”
“I know more than you do,” the old man said evenly. “Because for these three years, we watched what happened to the Hero—two years he was here. Before the third year even began, he was already gone.”
Elena’s pupils tightened.
The chief walked to the rusted sword, lowered his gaze to it, as if it were a gravestone.
“The day the seal was meant to break,” he said, “was today. But the curse began the moment you sent him here three years ago. By day it scorched his bones. By night it ate at his soul. No dawn, no dusk—no mercy, not for a single breath.”
“He endured it here, alone, for two full years.”
“You never came.”
“No one from the capital came.”
Elena’s lips parted. “No…that can’t be…”
The chief spoke on as if he hadn’t heard.
“The first year, he could still stand.”
“The second year, he could barely keep hold of his sword.”
“He coughed blood. He passed out from pain and woke again, over and over. We tried to help him—there was nothing we could do. That last winter, he could barely speak.”
The chief lifted his head. His stare struck Elena like a blade.
“And then he vanished.”
“Not a triumphant return. Not a withdrawal. Not your fantasy of ‘resting somewhere.’”
“Gone from the altar—like mist.”
“Only this sword remained. And what you see now.”
All color drained from Elena’s face. She stumbled back half a step, unsteady.
“You’re lying!” she shouted. “If that’s true, why wasn’t I told?”
The chief looked at her with hard, quiet contempt.
“You were told.”
“Letters were sent.”
“Not one came back.”
Elena froze.
Beside her, the attendant lowered his head, unable to meet her eyes.
In that instant, she understood.
It wasn’t that no one had informed her.
It was that she had never cared enough to listen.
The pleas from the borderlands, the reports, the warnings—had never mattered as much to her as a ball, a hunt, a new gown.
She called me her fiancé.
Yet when I was ground down here until even my bones turned to dust, she didn’t even know—
I had disappeared from this sealed land one year ago.
The wind swept through again. Ash drifted from the altar and settled on the hem of her dress—
like a funeral that had arrived one year late.
Elena stared at the bones, lips shaking. And still, at last, she forced out the same denial, as if saying it might make it real.
“No…Ludwig wouldn’t vanish like this. He has to be alive…”
Still refusing.
How pathetic.
From the Demon King’s castle, I watched her through the crystal orb and leaned back, my gaze cooling.
The great hall was vast and dim, braziers burning with black flame. Her wails, her arguments, her unraveling—reflected in a blood-red glow, and it all looked like farce.
One year ago, I did disappear from the Sealed Ground.
And now, I sat upon the Demon King’s throne, watching them stumble upon the truth at last.
Too late.
I raised my hand. The image in the orb froze on Elena’s ashen, shattered face.
Then I let out a cold laugh.
“Enough.”
The hall doors opened without a sound.
Heavy footsteps echoed. A towering figure in black armor dropped to one knee, head bowed.
My legion commander.
I looked down at him. My voice was calm—utterly without emotion.
“The human kingdom is overdue on its debts.”
The commander snapped his head up, murder lighting his eyes. “As you command, Your Majesty.”
