126. Hope For The Unredeemable
Raymond's patience wore thin as they trudged through the endless dungeon corridors, the only sounds being the rhythmic clank of his chains and the heavy footfalls of armored boots. The oppressive silence gnawed at him - if he was being summoned, he deserved at least some information.
"Well," he drawled, affecting a tone of casual curiosity, "you can at least tell me about this murder case my cellmate was involved in? Consider it... passing the time."
To his surprise, the knights exchanged glances. Even jailers grew weary of silence during these long dungeon rounds. After a moment, the first knight relented.
"That man tried helping a murderer escape justice," the knight said, his voice echoing slightly in the stone passageway. His companion picked up the thread, their boots splashing through a shallow puddle where water seeped through the ancient masonry.
"Was quite the scandal. The killer was a Solious follower - you know how fanatical they can be about their purity doctrines."
Raymond smirked, recognizing the familiar pattern. "Ah, let me guess," he interjected, chains rattling as he gestured. "He was courting some local Jola girl, a devout Herptian worshipper?"
"Exactly," the first knight nodded. "The two faiths never did mix well. Solious condemns what Herptian celebrates."
The second knight snorted in amusement. "The funny part? It wasn't even one of the usual offenses that set Solious zealots off. No actual infidelity, just some harmless flirting at the market square. But the man saw red regardless."
Raymond's mocking laughter bounced off the damp dungeon walls. "Of course! Those Solious fanatics would stone a woman for showing ankle," he sneered, chains clinking as he gestured. "Meanwhile Herptian's priestesses practically worship at the altar of desire. Their temples make brothels look like monasteries!"
The first knight cleared his throat. "Regardless," he said sternly, "the man stabbed her suitor in broad daylight. Your cellmate tried smuggling him out disguised as a fishmonger's apprentice."
"And failed spectacularly, it seems," Raymond mused, filing away this information about the island's current tensions. If Ravenna was importing foreign slaves to address labor shortages, she was playing with fire. The Jola people had endured starvation rather than abandon their Herptian beliefs for mainland Solious dogma - their goddess of indulgence and lust stood diametrically opposed to Solious's puritanical worship.
Where Solious saw education as luxurious dangerous indulgence if widespread, Herptian temples doubled as centers of learning. Where Solious demanded absolute marital fidelity, Herptian teachings celebrated sensual exploration. These weren't just religious differences - they were fundamentally incompatible worldviews.
As they ascended the narrow staircase, Raymond braced himself against the sudden assault of sunlight. When his vision cleared, his chains nearly slipped from his numb fingers.
Before him stretched a city reborn.
If you spot this narrative on Amazon, know that it has been stolen. Report the violation.
Where crumbling hovels once stood, sturdy stone-made like apartments rose three stories tall, their whitewashed walls gleaming in the noon sun. The old dirt tracks had been replaced by proper paved roads where citizens in brightly dyed linens moved with purpose. Most shocking were the trees - impossible, vibrant things lining the streets, their leaves whispering in a breeze that carried the salt of the sea and the rich aroma of baking bread.
"This... this can't be Jola," Raymond breathed. The transformation was inconceivable. Eight months ago this had been a lawless backwater, its people abandoned by the nobility. Now it stood as a testament to Ravenna's terrifying competence.
A sharp blow between his shoulder blades sent him stumbling forward. "Move, worm," snarled a new knight waiting at the top. "Her Highness's patience wears thin."
Raymond's blood turned to ice.
Her Highness? Not some bureaucrat or even the captain of the guard? Ravenna herself had summoned him? The carefully constructed fantasy of his cousin's intervention crumbled. As he was marched through streets that shouldn't exist, past orchards that couldn't grow in this climate.
Meanwhile at Audience Chamber, Herptian Church, Jola City
The chamber smelled of incense and old stone—a heady mix of sandalwood and sea salt that clung to the tapestries depicting Herptian's divine indulgences. Ravenna sat upon a gilded chair that was too ornate to be comfortable, her fingers drumming against the armrest as she regarded High Priest James across from her. The aging priest's ceremonial robes pooled around him like liquid gold, his sharp eyes never leaving hers.
"Must we really hold the Festival of Lust this year?" Ravenna asked, her voice carefully neutral.
James didn't blink. "You may have been raised in the Imperial Palace among Solious zealots, Your Highness, but you are an Apostle of Herptian. You swore to uphold our traditions." His tone was polite, but the challenge beneath was unmistakable.
He leaned forward slightly, the candlelight catching the silver threads in his stole. "This festival has been celebrated on Jola for six centuries and far longer in the western continent, every winter. Will you now deny your own people their rites because the mainland sensibilities are clouding your mind?"
Ravenna exhaled through her nose. She'd known this confrontation was coming. The moment she'd rewritten Jola's laws, she'd inherited its... complications.
'The Festival of Lust.'
Even thinking the name made her modern sensibilities recoil. A ceremonial deflowering of virgins by priests and priestesses? It sounded like something out of a particularly lurid fantasy novel. Yet, the memories of the original Ravenna made her remain frustratingly indifferent.
Ravenna had participated in it when she was nineteen. The Solious Church, despite its rigid doctrines, had insisted—as an Apostle, she was expected to honor the primary rites of the Herptian faith, even if her bloodline was Solious.
"Herptian, you absolute degenerate," she thought, equal parts exasperation and reluctant amusement. At least this world had one mercy—women's cycles lasted three months, making accidental pregnancies rare.
The heavy doors groaned open."Your Highness! Your Holiness!" A knight announced, bowing deeply. "The prisoners have arrived."
Three men were ushered in, their chains scraping against the mosaic floor. Raymond Heathcliff, ever the opportunist, dropped into a flawless noble's kneel before Ravenna had even turned her head.
"This humble subject greets Her Radiant Highness," he murmured, oozing false contrition.
Ravenna's lips curled. She rose in a whisper of silk, the high slit of her sheer black gown parting to reveal the Apostle's mark coiled around her thigh—a twisting raven inked in sacred silver.
"Raymond Heathcliff," she mused, stopping just close enough that he had to crane his neck to meet her gaze. "How... dutiful of you." Her heel tapped once against the stone. "Tell me, do you know why you're here?"
Raymond's eyes flickered—calculating, reassessing. "I had hoped my cousin might have—"
"Your cousin isn't here," Ravenna cut in, sweet as poisoned wine. "But you? You have a unique opportunity. Redemption, if you will."
She turned her palm upward. In it lay a single silver key. "I have a task for you."