“No,” she said softly. “Not hopeless. Just… untested.”

    As she departed, her cloak fluttering behind her, Lucien’s expression hardened.

    Sword training under her would be nothing like the easygoing orchard planning. 

    Find the other maids. 

    Inside the calm of her guest room, Vaelira methodically shed the layers of her formal gown, her movements smooth and practiced.

    She folded the elegant cloth carefully onto the nearby chair before reaching for the simpler garments laid out on her bed.

    A fitted leather tunic, dark brown and well-worn at the seams.

    Sturdy black trousers and boots built for movement, not courtly appearances.

    For a moment, her hand hovered over it.

    Each swing looked less like a warrior’s form and more like a man swatting flies he couldn’t quite see.

    There was no precision, no rhythm — just the loose, lazy movements of a man stalling for time.

    Gone were the flowing silks and intricate jewelry — and yet somehow, stripped down to a fighter’s form, she looked no less regal.

    ‘First she looks like she’s about to attend a royal ball. Now she looks like she’s about to kill a dragon.’

    “Y-Yeah! Born ready!”

    She started explaining the day’s plan in a calm, measured tone, but unfortunately, Lucien’s brain had decided to take an unscheduled vacation.

    Even dressed like a mercenary, she moved like a noblewoman — every step deliberate, every glance cutting.

    Several agonizing minutes later…

    Or rather — Vaelira was running and Lucien was suffering.

    He wheezed.

    Another few laps and his legs finally gave out from under him.

    “At least tell me… why we’re running… instead of sword swings…?”

    “Now move, Crowley.”

    “She’s working him like a farm horse! Such passion!”


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