41. Chapter 40: Ashes Of Legacy (Interlude — Liliana)
Chapter 40:
Ashes Of Legacy Interlude — Liliana
The gates of Valewick Citadel opened in silence. The guards bowed low as the Duchess rode through at dawn. There were no trumpets, no declarations. She didn’t want them. She dismounted herself, handed the reins to a page, and walked the familiar halls alone. Her boots echoed softly against polished stone as she entered the oldest wing of the citadel, the heart of the duchy’s memory. Her private chambers waited at the far end, but she passed them without pause. She was drawn instead into the long, vaulted gallery that lined the inner court: the Gallery of Ashford’s Blood.
Portraits lined both walls, eyes of the dead watching her pass. Dukes, generals, mages, and kings stared from oil and canvas. Some wore armor, others wore silk. All wore the weight of legacy. She stopped only once. Before a tall, austere painting near the center. A woman in black velvet stood beside a marble column, one hand resting on a sword hilt, the other on a closed book. Her mother.
Liliana stared at the portrait; jaw tight. She remembered the way her mother’s voice had never raised, only lowered. Etiquette had been enforced like scripture. Disappointment came not in words, but in silence and long stares. Her greatest disappointointment had been Liliana’s birth. Her mother had wanted a son. A firstborn heir to reclaim what she had been denied. A child with a name that could not be passed over. Instead, she had Liliana. Too clever. Too serious. Too female.
No second son ever came. No heir to carry the line. So, her mother had turned her fury into ambition and carved it into her daughter’s bones. Liliana had not been raised. She had been forged. Every lesson was sharper than the last. History drilled into her until it became blood memory. Etiquette became reflex. Strategy, rhetoric, lineage, blade, every piece sharpened and stripped of softness. There was no praise, only expectation. And even when she exceeded it, the silence remained.
"You are the true line of Boran of Ashford," her mother had said once. "You will surpass every duke that has come before. You will reclaim what this fractured east has forgotten." Liliana had been nine, exhausted, her hands blistered from sword drills. She stood silent, aching, staring up at the woman who had given her everything, and withheld everything else. Now, decades later, she laughed. A dry, sharp sound that echoed in the stillness of the gallery. Her mother’s wish was unfolding. Not with elegance, but with blood and inevitability.
Liliana had taken the duchy. She had buried her rivals in silence. She had donned the Black Ashford not as ceremony, but as claim. And now, as the banners of the east stirred in anticipation, her own daughter stood behind her. Perhaps this time, she thought, they didn’t need a son at all. She turned from the portrait, her footsteps echoing again. But the memories clung to her like dust in the light.
She had formed her mana core at seven. Younger than most. Stronger than expected. The process had nearly broken her. But under her mother, breaking had never been an option. The training that followed was relentless. Tutors rotated weekly, not because they failed, but because they could not endure her mother’s standards. Liliana learned to silence pain. To smile through bloodied lips. To recite formations with trembling arms. But it wasn’t discipline that shaped her most. It was hatred.
Her mother taught her to hate. To hate the ruling line of Ashford, her uncle’s house, favored by law. To hate the kingdom that meddled and coiled its claws around the duchy. To hate softness. Doubt. Mercy. "You are not a daughter," her mother whispered once, brushing her hair with callused knuckles. "You are a weapon. Be sharp, or be discarded." Liliana killed her first man at nine. A traitor, she was told. Her mother stood beside her. No executioner came. A sword was placed in her hand. The man wept. Liliana didn’t.
She closed her eyes for a moment, standing alone at the end of the gallery. She didn’t mourn that child. But she pitied her. And she pitied anyone who believed she could be anything less than what she became. She descended the final stair into the quiet antechamber beneath the gallery. The air was cooler here, still touched with dawn. Her thoughts drifted forward, to her youth. To the years when pain dulled into routine, and her fire turned cold and precise.
By sixteen, she had surpassed every expectation. She became the first mage in the kingdom’s history to reach the Fifth Circle at such a young age. Academies whispered her name. Courts feared it. Her mother called her acceptable. But that year brought something else. Someone else. Merick of Ashford. Her cousin. Her elder by four years. The heir to the ruling line. The one she had been trained to despise. He was twenty, already betrothed to a princess of the royal house. A match built on politics, not love.
And yet, Liliana could not hate him. She had tried. But every meeting with him felt like stepping into a softer world. Not safe. But bearable. He listened to her. Spoke to her as if she mattered. Smiled when no one else dared. In his presence, she forgot the silence of her mother’s halls. The endless drills. The hate. For the first time, she wanted something that wasn’t power. She wanted him.
By twenty, Liliana no longer stood in anyone’s shadow. She led her first campaigns. Against the southern empire’s scouts. Against the eastern Beastkin raiders. She crushed rebellion and scattered bandit clans. Her tactics were swift. Her spells, devastating. The battlefield gave her silence. Clarity. Purpose. The court noticed. Nobles whispered her name with reverence. Suitors lined up. She declined them all. She had no time.
By twenty-five, she reached the Sixth Circle. One step from legend. Few had ever passed it. Fewer still survived long enough to be remembered. But Liliana did not chase immortality. She chased perfection. And in doing so, became something more than her mother imagined. More than the child they had tried to shape. She became Liliana of Ashford. And no one doubted it again.If you stumble upon this narrative on Amazon, it's taken without the author's consent. Report it.
At thirty, two events reshaped her life. Merick’s wife died in childbirth. The child did not survive. The court whispered of curses and doomed blood. Liliana remained silent. Her heart burned with a truth she could not speak. She had never stopped loving him. Then came fire. Ashford was invaded again. This time, they brought a war-dragon. A creature from the old ages. Obsidian-scaled and flame-wreathed.
It burned Gatwick to ash. Her childhood home. Her mother with it. Liliana did not weep. She gathered her knight order. Rode without rest. Met the dragon in the blackened fields of Stonehold. The battle nearly killed her. But she passed through the fire. And rose. She reached the Seventh Circle. She killed the dragon. The bards claimed she did it alone. They were wrong. But she let them sing.
She married Merick one year later. The court recoiled. The King objected. The Crown whispered of scandal. She did not care. She was with child. With Grace. For one year, she was happy. She believed nothing could take it from her. She had no idea how wrong she was.
Liliana stepped back from the memory, the weight of it settling cold in her chest. She turned to the high arched window where the first light of morning touched the rooftops of Valewick. So much had been lost. Merick most of all. He was alive. Somewhere. Imprisoned. Forgotten. For him, it might be too late. But for Grace? Never.
She would not abandon her daughter. Not again. Grace would not be trained in hate. She would be shaped in will. In strength. In choice. Ashford would rise again. Not by royal favor. Not by marriage. But by power. Blood. Purpose. Liliana pressed her hand to the window’s cold stone.
The past had forged her.
But the future? That, she would build herself.
Liliana turned from the window, the light of dawn still brushing against the stone. Her hand lingered there a moment longer, then fell to her side. She crossed the room without hurry. Past the silent hearth. Past the untouched tea tray. Then she knelt at the far wall beside her writing desk, where the flagstones beneath the carpet met in an uneven seam. Her fingers found the familiar groove and pressed.
The floor shifted. A soft click. A pulse of old magic. And the stone slid inward. She descended the hidden stairs without lighting a lantern. She didn’t need one. The passage had been carved centuries ago, etched with runes so old they pulsed with faint light, not bright, but steady, like the heartbeat of something that had waited too long. The air grew colder. Drier. Thicker with silence.
At the bottom, she stepped into the chamber, and the light welcomed her.
Crystals lined the walls, each suspended in dark stone like stars frozen mid-fall. No two were the same. Some shimmered blue. Others gold. Crimson. Amethyst. Pale green. A constellation of memory. Liliana stepped forward, her boots echoing lightly on the black floor. She moved with reverence, not hesitation. Each crystal contained a fragment, a captured memory, an echo of a soul. Only those of the true line could hear them. Only the chosen heads could listen.
This was Ashford.
Not in crowns or courts or armor.
But here, in the dark. In silence. In weight.
She reached for a crystal near the center. Deep silver, threaded with veins of pale violet.
The moment her fingers brushed its surface, a voice stirred in the air.
“So… you came back, child.”
Liliana closed her eyes.
“Boran,” she whispered.
“I thought you might.”
Liliana stood still, her hand resting lightly on the crystal, the voice of Boran curling around her like cold smoke. It wasn’t just sound, it was presence, thick with age and judgment, like steel honed long ago that still remembered how to cut.
“The Beastkin invasion proceeds as planned,” she said quietly. “The Ursin is moving exactly as expected. Prideful. Slow. A creature of instinct masquerading as a warlord. He believes his time has come.” Her lips curved into something too sharp to be called a smile. “He’s wrong.”
The crystal pulsed faintly beneath her fingers, as if amused.
“They’ll run straight into the Crown’s forces,” she continued. “I’ve ensured the King would send reinforcements. He believes he’s protecting Ashford, defending his cousin. But he’s marching his army into the Ursin’s jaws.”
A quiet hum echoed from the crystal.
“You intend to bleed them both.”
Liliana’s smile was faint. Cold. “I intend to remind the kingdom that Ashford stands alone. That no crown guards our borders. And no beast takes our land without a cost.” She stepped back slightly, her hand leaving the crystal surface. “When the dust settles, we’ll pick the bones clean, and both bear and wyrm will know who set the field.”
“Good,” Boran said. Then silence. Then: “And the other threads?”
Liliana’s eyes flicked toward the far end of the chamber, where the older, darker crystals lay. Duller in color. But heavier in weight.
“They’re moving,” she said. “Slowly. But the seeds have taken root. Velmire is watching closely. The Crown is nervous. And Grace…”
She hesitated. Just for a moment.
“Grace is… further than I expected.”
The crystal flickered, as if considering her.
“Too far?”
Liliana didn’t answer right away.
Then, voice calm and final: “Just far enough.”
A satisfied hum thrummed through the chamber. Then Boran’s voice returned, low and curious. “And there is no concern? That she is the first of the main line without a Light Core?”
Liliana smirked, not cold, but wry. “I felt it in her. Faint, but real. Light mana. Dormant, not absent. It’s there. Waiting. She could awaken it later.”
She turned, folding her arms. “But I won’t force it. She’s five. And I am not my mother.”
The crystal shimmered. A sound like old stone shifting echoed, it might have been amusement.
“Sentiment from you? Unthinkable.”
She rolled her eyes. “You’re a ghost trapped in a shiny rock. Don’t push your luck, old fart.”
His laugh echoed through the stones, low, genuine, pleased. The air in the chamber warmed, just slightly.
“You’ve grown sharper than I ever was.”
Liliana tilted her head. “I had worse teachers.”
“And better timing,” he added. Then his voice lowered, as if asking something sacred. “Is Ashford ready?”
She stepped back, turning slowly to take in the whole room, the glimmering legacy around her.
“Ashford,” she said, “has never been stronger. Not in your time. Not in mine. Not until now.”
The crystal pulsed. Boran laughed again, not cold, not bitter. The sound of a founder whose dream still lived.
And Liliana allowed herself a small smile.
The crystal pulsed once more, brighter now, as if Boran’s presence leaned forward, heavy with approval.
“Then we shall proceed with our plans,” he said, his voice like cracking stone and ancient flame. “Let’s burn these fuckers down.”
Liliana exhaled slowly through her nose, the corners of her mouth twitching upward. “Glad we’re in agreement.”
She turned from the crystal wall; her steps slow but certain. Behind her, the chamber of memories hummed, not like a tomb, but like a furnace stoking to life.
Ashford was awake.
And the world would learn what it meant to stand in its way.
41. Chapter 40: Ashes Of Legacy (Interlude — Liliana)
Chapter 40:
Ashes Of Legacy Interlude — Liliana
The gates of Valewick Citadel opened in silence. The guards bowed low as the Duchess rode through at dawn. There were no trumpets, no declarations. She didn’t want them. She dismounted herself, handed the reins to a page, and walked the familiar halls alone. Her boots echoed softly against polished stone as she entered the oldest wing of the citadel, the heart of the duchy’s memory. Her private chambers waited at the far end, but she passed them without pause. She was drawn instead into the long, vaulted gallery that lined the inner court: the Gallery of Ashford’s Blood.
Portraits lined both walls, eyes of the dead watching her pass. Dukes, generals, mages, and kings stared from oil and canvas. Some wore armor, others wore silk. All wore the weight of legacy. She stopped only once. Before a tall, austere painting near the center. A woman in black velvet stood beside a marble column, one hand resting on a sword hilt, the other on a closed book. Her mother.
Liliana stared at the portrait; jaw tight. She remembered the way her mother’s voice had never raised, only lowered. Etiquette had been enforced like scripture. Disappointment came not in words, but in silence and long stares. Her greatest disappointointment had been Liliana’s birth. Her mother had wanted a son. A firstborn heir to reclaim what she had been denied. A child with a name that could not be passed over. Instead, she had Liliana. Too clever. Too serious. Too female.
No second son ever came. No heir to carry the line. So, her mother had turned her fury into ambition and carved it into her daughter’s bones. Liliana had not been raised. She had been forged. Every lesson was sharper than the last. History drilled into her until it became blood memory. Etiquette became reflex. Strategy, rhetoric, lineage, blade, every piece sharpened and stripped of softness. There was no praise, only expectation. And even when she exceeded it, the silence remained.
"You are the true line of Boran of Ashford," her mother had said once. "You will surpass every duke that has come before. You will reclaim what this fractured east has forgotten." Liliana had been nine, exhausted, her hands blistered from sword drills. She stood silent, aching, staring up at the woman who had given her everything, and withheld everything else. Now, decades later, she laughed. A dry, sharp sound that echoed in the stillness of the gallery. Her mother’s wish was unfolding. Not with elegance, but with blood and inevitability.
Liliana had taken the duchy. She had buried her rivals in silence. She had donned the Black Ashford not as ceremony, but as claim. And now, as the banners of the east stirred in anticipation, her own daughter stood behind her. Perhaps this time, she thought, they didn’t need a son at all. She turned from the portrait, her footsteps echoing again. But the memories clung to her like dust in the light.
She had formed her mana core at seven. Younger than most. Stronger than expected. The process had nearly broken her. But under her mother, breaking had never been an option. The training that followed was relentless. Tutors rotated weekly, not because they failed, but because they could not endure her mother’s standards. Liliana learned to silence pain. To smile through bloodied lips. To recite formations with trembling arms. But it wasn’t discipline that shaped her most. It was hatred.
Her mother taught her to hate. To hate the ruling line of Ashford, her uncle’s house, favored by law. To hate the kingdom that meddled and coiled its claws around the duchy. To hate softness. Doubt. Mercy. "You are not a daughter," her mother whispered once, brushing her hair with callused knuckles. "You are a weapon. Be sharp, or be discarded." Liliana killed her first man at nine. A traitor, she was told. Her mother stood beside her. No executioner came. A sword was placed in her hand. The man wept. Liliana didn’t.
She closed her eyes for a moment, standing alone at the end of the gallery. She didn’t mourn that child. But she pitied her. And she pitied anyone who believed she could be anything less than what she became. She descended the final stair into the quiet antechamber beneath the gallery. The air was cooler here, still touched with dawn. Her thoughts drifted forward, to her youth. To the years when pain dulled into routine, and her fire turned cold and precise.
By sixteen, she had surpassed every expectation. She became the first mage in the kingdom’s history to reach the Fifth Circle at such a young age. Academies whispered her name. Courts feared it. Her mother called her acceptable. But that year brought something else. Someone else. Merick of Ashford. Her cousin. Her elder by four years. The heir to the ruling line. The one she had been trained to despise. He was twenty, already betrothed to a princess of the royal house. A match built on politics, not love.
And yet, Liliana could not hate him. She had tried. But every meeting with him felt like stepping into a softer world. Not safe. But bearable. He listened to her. Spoke to her as if she mattered. Smiled when no one else dared. In his presence, she forgot the silence of her mother’s halls. The endless drills. The hate. For the first time, she wanted something that wasn’t power. She wanted him.
By twenty, Liliana no longer stood in anyone’s shadow. She led her first campaigns. Against the southern empire’s scouts. Against the eastern Beastkin raiders. She crushed rebellion and scattered bandit clans. Her tactics were swift. Her spells, devastating. The battlefield gave her silence. Clarity. Purpose. The court noticed. Nobles whispered her name with reverence. Suitors lined up. She declined them all. She had no time.
By twenty-five, she reached the Sixth Circle. One step from legend. Few had ever passed it. Fewer still survived long enough to be remembered. But Liliana did not chase immortality. She chased perfection. And in doing so, became something more than her mother imagined. More than the child they had tried to shape. She became Liliana of Ashford. And no one doubted it again.If you stumble upon this narrative on Amazon, it's taken without the author's consent. Report it.
At thirty, two events reshaped her life. Merick’s wife died in childbirth. The child did not survive. The court whispered of curses and doomed blood. Liliana remained silent. Her heart burned with a truth she could not speak. She had never stopped loving him. Then came fire. Ashford was invaded again. This time, they brought a war-dragon. A creature from the old ages. Obsidian-scaled and flame-wreathed.
It burned Gatwick to ash. Her childhood home. Her mother with it. Liliana did not weep. She gathered her knight order. Rode without rest. Met the dragon in the blackened fields of Stonehold. The battle nearly killed her. But she passed through the fire. And rose. She reached the Seventh Circle. She killed the dragon. The bards claimed she did it alone. They were wrong. But she let them sing.
She married Merick one year later. The court recoiled. The King objected. The Crown whispered of scandal. She did not care. She was with child. With Grace. For one year, she was happy. She believed nothing could take it from her. She had no idea how wrong she was.
Liliana stepped back from the memory, the weight of it settling cold in her chest. She turned to the high arched window where the first light of morning touched the rooftops of Valewick. So much had been lost. Merick most of all. He was alive. Somewhere. Imprisoned. Forgotten. For him, it might be too late. But for Grace? Never.
She would not abandon her daughter. Not again. Grace would not be trained in hate. She would be shaped in will. In strength. In choice. Ashford would rise again. Not by royal favor. Not by marriage. But by power. Blood. Purpose. Liliana pressed her hand to the window’s cold stone.
The past had forged her.
But the future? That, she would build herself.
Liliana turned from the window, the light of dawn still brushing against the stone. Her hand lingered there a moment longer, then fell to her side. She crossed the room without hurry. Past the silent hearth. Past the untouched tea tray. Then she knelt at the far wall beside her writing desk, where the flagstones beneath the carpet met in an uneven seam. Her fingers found the familiar groove and pressed.
The floor shifted. A soft click. A pulse of old magic. And the stone slid inward. She descended the hidden stairs without lighting a lantern. She didn’t need one. The passage had been carved centuries ago, etched with runes so old they pulsed with faint light, not bright, but steady, like the heartbeat of something that had waited too long. The air grew colder. Drier. Thicker with silence.
At the bottom, she stepped into the chamber, and the light welcomed her.
Crystals lined the walls, each suspended in dark stone like stars frozen mid-fall. No two were the same. Some shimmered blue. Others gold. Crimson. Amethyst. Pale green. A constellation of memory. Liliana stepped forward, her boots echoing lightly on the black floor. She moved with reverence, not hesitation. Each crystal contained a fragment, a captured memory, an echo of a soul. Only those of the true line could hear them. Only the chosen heads could listen.
This was Ashford.
Not in crowns or courts or armor.
But here, in the dark. In silence. In weight.
She reached for a crystal near the center. Deep silver, threaded with veins of pale violet.
The moment her fingers brushed its surface, a voice stirred in the air.
“So… you came back, child.”
Liliana closed her eyes.
“Boran,” she whispered.
“I thought you might.”
Liliana stood still, her hand resting lightly on the crystal, the voice of Boran curling around her like cold smoke. It wasn’t just sound, it was presence, thick with age and judgment, like steel honed long ago that still remembered how to cut.
“The Beastkin invasion proceeds as planned,” she said quietly. “The Ursin is moving exactly as expected. Prideful. Slow. A creature of instinct masquerading as a warlord. He believes his time has come.” Her lips curved into something too sharp to be called a smile. “He’s wrong.”
The crystal pulsed faintly beneath her fingers, as if amused.
“They’ll run straight into the Crown’s forces,” she continued. “I’ve ensured the King would send reinforcements. He believes he’s protecting Ashford, defending his cousin. But he’s marching his army into the Ursin’s jaws.”
A quiet hum echoed from the crystal.
“You intend to bleed them both.”
Liliana’s smile was faint. Cold. “I intend to remind the kingdom that Ashford stands alone. That no crown guards our borders. And no beast takes our land without a cost.” She stepped back slightly, her hand leaving the crystal surface. “When the dust settles, we’ll pick the bones clean, and both bear and wyrm will know who set the field.”
“Good,” Boran said. Then silence. Then: “And the other threads?”
Liliana’s eyes flicked toward the far end of the chamber, where the older, darker crystals lay. Duller in color. But heavier in weight.
“They’re moving,” she said. “Slowly. But the seeds have taken root. Velmire is watching closely. The Crown is nervous. And Grace…”
She hesitated. Just for a moment.
“Grace is… further than I expected.”
The crystal flickered, as if considering her.
“Too far?”
Liliana didn’t answer right away.
Then, voice calm and final: “Just far enough.”
A satisfied hum thrummed through the chamber. Then Boran’s voice returned, low and curious. “And there is no concern? That she is the first of the main line without a Light Core?”
Liliana smirked, not cold, but wry. “I felt it in her. Faint, but real. Light mana. Dormant, not absent. It’s there. Waiting. She could awaken it later.”
She turned, folding her arms. “But I won’t force it. She’s five. And I am not my mother.”
The crystal shimmered. A sound like old stone shifting echoed, it might have been amusement.
“Sentiment from you? Unthinkable.”
She rolled her eyes. “You’re a ghost trapped in a shiny rock. Don’t push your luck, old fart.”
His laugh echoed through the stones, low, genuine, pleased. The air in the chamber warmed, just slightly.
“You’ve grown sharper than I ever was.”
Liliana tilted her head. “I had worse teachers.”
“And better timing,” he added. Then his voice lowered, as if asking something sacred. “Is Ashford ready?”
She stepped back, turning slowly to take in the whole room, the glimmering legacy around her.
“Ashford,” she said, “has never been stronger. Not in your time. Not in mine. Not until now.”
The crystal pulsed. Boran laughed again, not cold, not bitter. The sound of a founder whose dream still lived.
And Liliana allowed herself a small smile.
The crystal pulsed once more, brighter now, as if Boran’s presence leaned forward, heavy with approval.
“Then we shall proceed with our plans,” he said, his voice like cracking stone and ancient flame. “Let’s burn these fuckers down.”
Liliana exhaled slowly through her nose, the corners of her mouth twitching upward. “Glad we’re in agreement.”
She turned from the crystal wall; her steps slow but certain. Behind her, the chamber of memories hummed, not like a tomb, but like a furnace stoking to life.
Ashford was awake.
And the world would learn what it meant to stand in its way.