Chapter 172: A Different Cage
Elise’s head throbbed with each jolt of the cart, the rough wooden planks beneath her doing nothing to cushion the impact. Her wrists were bound tightly behind her back, the ropes chafing against her skin with every movement. Beside her, Seraphina lay in a similar state, her knight’s face bruised and bloodied but her eyes—those eyes still blazed with defiant fire.
“Seraphina.” Elise’s voice came out hoarse, barely above a whisper. “Are you alright?”
Seraphina turned her head slowly, wincing at the movement. “I am… functional, Your Highness. The ropes are tight, but my bonds are loose enough that I can—”
“Save your strength.” Elise cut her off gently. “We’ll need it later.”
Seraphina’s jaw tightened, but she nodded.
From the driver’s bench, a harsh laugh cut through the tense silence. One of their captors—a scarred soldier with dead eyes—glanced back at them with obvious contempt.
“Awfully optimistic for a pair of prisoners,” he sneered. “But it won’t matter. Your monster friends? The ones who got teleported?” He spat over the side of the cart. “They’re dead. Or wish they were.”
Elise’s blood ran cold. “What do you mean?”
The soldier’s grin widened, enjoying their discomfort. “That spell wasn’t just any teleportation. It was keyed to a specific location—the territory of the White Dragon Orion.” He let the name hang in the air, waiting for recognition.
Elise felt the world tilt.
“The White Dragon… Orion?” Her voice cracked. “That’s impossible. You can’t teleport someone into his territory—the barriers alone would—”
“And yet,” the soldier interrupted, “here we are, and there they aren’t.” He chuckled, a nasty sound. “Orion doesn’t tolerate trespassers. Doesn’t matter if you’re human, monster, or something in between. If you enter his lands uninvited, you leave as a corpse. If you’re lucky.”
Seraphina’s voice cut through, sharp despite her injuries. “You’re lying. Teleportation of that range requires anchors, precise coordinates—things your ritual couldn’t possibly have prepared for a territory no one can enter.”
The soldier shrugged. “Believe what you want, knight. But I know what I saw. And I know what happens to people who wander into that frozen hell.” He glanced back at Elise, his eyes gleaming with cruel satisfaction. “Your precious monsters are dragon food by now. Maybe Orion will leave their bones as a warning.”
Elise’s breath came faster, her heart pounding against her ribs. ’No. No, it can’t be. Adam is strong—stronger than anything I’ve ever seen. Ignis is a drgon herself. They wouldn’t just—’
But the soldier’s words echoed in her mind. The White Dragon Orion. A name spoken in whispers, even in Melium’s royal court. An ancient dragon of such power that kingdoms gave his territory a wide berth, that armies refused to march within a hundred miles of his borders. A living legend, older than most nations.
And Adam and Ignis had been thrown directly into his domain.
“Liar!” The word tore from Elise’s throat before she could stop it. “You’re lying! They’re not dead!”
The soldier laughed, a harsh, grating sound. “Oh, the princess has claws. Cute.” He leaned closer, his breath foul. “But denial won’t change facts. Your monsters are gone. And soon, you’ll be delivered to people who have very… specific plans for you.”
Seraphina strained against her bonds, her aura flickering weakly. “Touch her and I’ll—”
“You’ll what?” The soldier cut her off. “You’re tied up, beaten, and your precious oath is barely a spark. You’re in no position to threaten anyone, knight.”
“Don’t bother them, Arnold”
Derek approached the cart, his body wrapped in fresh bandages that already showed spots of blood seeping through. His face was pale beneath the grime, and he moved with the careful stiffness of someone whose injuries screamed with every step. But his eyes—those eyes still held the cold, relentless focus of a hunter.
Arnold straightened immediately, his mocking demeanor evaporating. “Commander. I was just—”
“I heard what you were doing.” Derek’s voice was rough, damaged by whatever had happened to his throat during the fight. “Leave them alone. They’re prisoners, not sport.”
Arnold’s jaw tightened, but he nodded and moved to the front of the cart, leaving Elise and Seraphina alone with their wounded commander.
Seraphina’s eyes narrowed as she studied Derek’s approach. Despite his injuries, despite the bandages and the pallor, he moved with the certainty of someone who had survived worse. Her voice, when she spoke, was cold and steady.
“Where are you taking us?”
Derek met her gaze without flinching. “The capital. Solaria’s capital.”
Elise’s bound hands clenched into fists behind her back. Her voice shook—not with fear, but with barely contained fury.
“You’ll regret this. My father will not let this stand. When he learns that Solarian soldiers have imprisoned his daughter, he will march. Armies will cross the border. People will die.” She lifted her chin, meeting Derek’s eyes with the full weight of her royal heritage. “For what? A few monsters that you couldn’t even kill?”
From behind Derek, another figure emerged—Tia, the vice guild master, her face drawn with exhaustion but her eyes sharp and calculating. She moved to stand beside the commander, her voice calm and measured.
“Princess Elise.” Tia’s tone held no mockery, no cruelty—just cold, professional acknowledgment. “We are aware of the diplomatic consequences. In fact, that awareness is precisely why we chose not to execute you on the spot.”
She stepped closer, close enough that Elise could see the exhaustion etched into her features, the dark circles beneath her eyes. “Your crimes are considerable. Entering Solarian territory without authorization. Causing chaos and destruction in Duke Arkwright’s domain. Consorting with dangerous monsters entities that have already demonstrated their willingness to kill human beings.” She paused, letting the words sink in. “And those monsters you brought with you? The ones who fought alongside you? They are not just dangerous. They are an active threat to the world.”
Elise’s breath caught. “That’s not—”
“The serpent-man alone killed over a dozen of my people,” Tia continued, her voice hardening. “In the dungeon. He slaughtered them without mercy. And since then, he’s only grown stronger. More dangerous. More willing to kill.” She met Elise’s eyes. “You traveled with him. You accepted his protection. You made yourself complicit in everything he’s done.”
Seraphina strained against her bonds, her aura flickering weakly. “Her Highness had no choice! She was cursed, hunted—Adam saved her life!”
“Saved her?” Tia’s eyebrow rose. “Or simply traded one form of captivity for another?”
Elise’s voice cut through, sharp and clear despite her exhaustion. “Adam never held me captive. He protected me. He fought for me. He—”
“He is a monster,” Tia stated flatly. “And you are a princess who chose to ally herself with monsters. Those are the facts that will be presented to the Solarian court. Along with the fact that we captured you alive, despite every justification to kill you where you stood.”
She stepped back, her expression softening into something almost like pity. “Your father may be angry. He may even threaten war. But when presented with evidence of your collaboration with dungeon-spawned entities that have murdered citizens of two kingdoms? He will have no choice but to negotiate. You will become a bargaining chip, Princess. Not a cause for war.”
Elise’s mouth opened, then closed. No words came. What could she say? Tia had laid out the situation with brutal clarity—every argument, every justification, every appeal to justice or mercy had been preemptively dismantled.
Tia reached into her pocket and withdrew something that glinted dully in the fading light. A collar. Made of some pale metal that seemed to absorb rather than reflect the sun’s rays, its surface etched with intricate runes that pulsed faintly with inner light.
“What are you doing?” Elise’s voice sharpened as Tia approached, the collar held between her fingers like a piece of jewelry rather than what it clearly was.
Seraphina strained against her bonds, her aura flaring weakly. “Stay away from her! You have no right—!”
“I have every right,” Tia said calmly, not even glancing at the struggling knight. “Prisoners are secured. That’s standard procedure.”
She reached through the cart’s bars and fastened the collar around Elise’s neck.
The metal was cold. Uncomfortably cold, like ice against her skin. Elise felt it settle into place with a soft click, and for a moment, nothing happened. Then a subtle pressure—not painful, but unmistakable—pressed against her consciousness. Her magic, already depleted, seemed to retreat further, curling up somewhere deep inside where even she couldn’t reach it.
“What did you put on her?!” Seraphina’s voice cracked with fury. “Remove it immediately! That is a princess of Melium you’re treating like a common criminal!”
Derek’s voice came from behind, rough and tired but carrying the weight of command. “It’s a suppression collar. Artifact from the Holy Temple. Designed to contain cursed entities—and those affected by them.” He met Seraphina’s blazing eyes without flinching. “It will keep the Lich from reaching her. Consider it protection, not punishment.”
Elise touched the collar with her bound hands, her fingers tracing the cold metal. A bitter laugh escaped her—soft, hollow, utterly without humor.
“Protection.” She echoed the word as if tasting something foul. “You think this will protect me?” Her eyes, when they lifted to meet Tia’s, held an emptiness that was somehow more disturbing than rage. “It’s useless. This collar, your holy temple artifacts, your special chambers—none of it will stop him. You don’t understand what you’re dealing with.”
Tia straightened, adjusting her sleeves with practiced calm. “It’s a precaution. And when we reach the capital, you’ll be housed in a specially prepared suite—wards upon wards, designed specifically to repel the Lich’s influence. We’ve dealt with possession cases before, Princess. You’re not unique.”
She turned to leave, then paused, glancing back over her shoulder. “Until then, I suggest you remain calm and avoid causing further trouble. The diplomatic situation between our kingdoms now rests largely on your behavior. Make good choices.”
Derek followed without another word, leaving Elise and Seraphina alone in the rattling cart.
The silence stretched between them, broken only by the creak of wheels and the distant calls of soldiers marching alongside. Seraphina’s breathing was ragged—whether from pain or fury, Elise couldn’t tell.
Finally, Seraphina’s voice emerged, rough with shame and helplessness.
“Your Highness… I’m so sorry. You’re being treated like this because I failed. I couldn’t protect you.”
Elise turned to look at her knight—really look at her. Seraphina’s face was bruised, bloodied, her armor dented and torn. But her eyes held nothing but anguish, and it was that anguish, more than anything, that broke through Elise’s numbness.
“Sera.” Elise’s voice was soft, gentler than it had been since the capture. “It’s alright. I’m used to this.”
Seraphina’s eyes widened. “Your Highness—”
“Since the day I was born, I’ve been treated like this.” Elise’s gaze drifted to the collar around her neck, her fingers still tracing its cold surface. “The cursed princess. The one who brings misfortune wherever she goes. People crossed the street to avoid me as a child. Nobles whispered behind my back at every gathering. My own father…” She trailed off, then shook her head slowly. “This is nothing new. Just a different cage. Different captors.”
Tears welled in Seraphina’s eyes—the first Elise had ever seen from her stoic knight. “You deserve so much more than this. You deserve—”
“I deserve to survive,” Elise interrupted gently. “That’s all I’ve ever wanted, Sera. To survive long enough to break this curse. To live a life that isn’t defined by fear.” She met Seraphina’s gaze, and despite everything, a small, tired smile touched her lips. “And I will. I haven’t given up yet. Neither should you.”
Seraphina’s jaw tightened. She nodded, once, fiercely. “I won’t. I swear it—I’ll get us out of this. I’ll find a way.”
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 238: Give me a break
- Chapter 237: Return of the Hunted
- Chapter 236: Wipe Them All Out
- Chapter 235: Assassin Guild
- Chapter 234: The Broken Compass
- Chapter 233: Greedy Merchant
- Chapter 232: Treasure Room
- Chapter 231: Pay with your blood
- Chapter 230: The Hand That Touched
- Chapter 229: The Blind Leading the Blind
- Chapter 228: Three Lost Souls
- Chapter 227: I’m Full
- Chapter 226: Sweet Poison
- Chapter 225: Shadows Over Kaelthar
- Chapter 224: Isolde’s Impatience
- Chapter 223: Skill Conversion
- Chapter 222: Ouroboros Progenitor
- Chapter 221: Evolution’s Threshold
- Chapter 220: Primal Sky
- Chapter 219: Predator of the Skies
- Chapter 218: Lilith’s Teasing
- Chapter 217: Husband and Wife
- Chapter 216: The Walk to the Village
- Chapter 215: The Massacre Report
- Chapter 214: First Time on the Soft Thread
- Chapter 213: Inside the Cocoon
- Chapter 212: Adam’s Dominant Shift
- Chapter 211: MIDNIGHT APPROACH
- Chapter 210: More Than Instinct
- Chapter 209: Knowledge of Kaelthar
- Chapter 208: Compass of Desire
- Chapter 207: Adam’s Dominance
- Chapter 206: The Blood Offering
- Chapter 205: Blood and Ashes
- Chapter 204: Fear of the Prey
- Chapter 203: Thorned Execution
- Chapter 202: Crimson Cataclysm
- Chapter 201: A Taste of Pureblood
- Chapter 200: Threads of Control
- Chapter 199: A Gift from My Beloved
- Chapter 198: The Captain’s Order
- Chapter 197: The Hunter and the Spider
- Chapter 196: The Caged Vampire
- Chapter 195: Eyes in the Crowd
- Chapter 194: A Kiss to Remember
- Chapter 193: Parting Ways
- Chapter 192: The Seven Awaken
- Chapter 191: The Light That Remains
- Chapter 190: Legal Consequences
- Chapter 189: When Light Fails, Darkness Devours
- Chapter 188: Eternal Radiance
- Chapter 187: Running Toward Chaos
- Chapter 186: To the Brink of Death
- Chapter 185: A Vessel of Despair
- Chapter 184: The Dead Rise
- Chapter 183: Crimson Magic
- Chapter 182: A Feast of Fear
- Chapter 181: The Proposal
- Chapter 180: When Hope Is All You Have
- Chapter 179: The Death Cells
- Chapter 178: A Choice in the Dark
- Chapter 177: The Empty Clearing
- Chapter 176: Oath of the Dragon
- Chapter 175: The Truth of the Void
- Chapter 174: What Sleeps in the Soul
- Chapter 173: The Ancient’s Verdict
- Chapter 172: A Different Cage
- Chapter 171: The Will to Protect
- Chapter 170: Outmatched
- Chapter 169: The Price of Victory
- Chapter 168: Crimson Requiem
- Chapter 167: Blood on the Frozen Ground
- Chapter 166: What’s Mine
- Chapter 165: Old Scores, New Blood
- Chapter 164: The Serpent’s Trail
- Chapter 163: Starlight for a Sleeping Soul
- Chapter 162: Learning to Tell Them Apart
- Chapter 161: Monarch’s Mercy
- Chapter 160: Where Hope Remained
- Chapter 159: What We Take, What We Leave
- Chapter 158: Silvie’s Gratitude
- Chapter 157: Consumption and Consequence
- Chapter 156: Symphony of Silk
- Chapter 155: Into the Bandit’s Den
- Chapter 154: The Crown’s Hunger
- Chapter 153: The Road Through Ghostwind Gorge
- Chapter 152: A Foolish Thing to Do
- Chapter 151: A Chill in the Dark
- Chapter 150: Warmth in the Dark
- Chapter 149: The Space Between
- Chapter 148: Steel and Starlight
- Chapter 147: No Mercy on This Road
- Chapter 146: First Blood on the Trail
- Chapter 145: Eyes on the Horizon, Blades at Our Backs
- Chapter 144: Terms of Transit
- Chapter 143: Claimed by Tooth and Thread
- Chapter 142: A Spider’s Feast
- Chapter 141: The Price of Mercy
- Chapter 140: Price of a Secret
- Chapter 139: Calm After the Storm
- Chapter 138: Abyssal Piercer
- Chapter 137: Clearing the Air
- Chapter 136: Where Trust is Forged
- Chapter 135: The Wind’s Challenge
- Chapter 134: Angry Grapes
- Chapter 133: Gilded Captivity
- Chapter 132: Crown and Curse
- Chapter 131: No Quarter, No Mercy
- Chapter 130: Scorched Vows and Stolen Flesh
- Chapter 129: Playing Dead
- Chapter 128: Assassin Confidence and Teleportation Scroll
- Chapter 127: Fight against Assassins
- Chapter 126: Night Ambush
- Chapter 125: Eyes on the Road
- Chapter 124: Mission and Duty
- Chapter 123: Share a Bed with a Beautiful Woman
- Chapter 122: Splitting Up in Oakrest
- Chapter 121: The Border Gate
- Chapter 120: Shadows of the Throne
- Chapter 119: Curiosity on the Road
- Chapter 118: First Light on the Road
- Chapter 117: Quiet Doubts in the Hallway
- Chapter 116: A Dangerous Bargain
- Chapter 115: Archivist of Lost Tomes
- Chapter 114: Echoes of the Crown
- Chapter 113: The Lich’s Gambit
- Chapter 112: Shadows at the Gate
- Chapter 111: A Spark of Hope
- Chapter 110: Road to Elden Hollow
- Chapter 109: Guests In The Dark Night Forest
- Chapter 108: Glow in the Twilight
- Chapter 107: New Skins for a New World
- Chapter 106: The Sovereign Awakens
- Chapter 105: Humanity And Evolution
- Chapter 104: Journey to the Surface
- Chapter 103: Fly To Freedom
- Chapter 102: Despair In The Midst Of Siege
- Chapter 101: A Tense Confrontation Between Monsters And Humans
- Chapter 100: Projectiles And Living Shields
- Chapter 99: Mission To Chase And Eradicate Anomaly
- Chapter 98: Calm And Alert
- Chapter 97: Recovery And Preparation For Evolution
- Chapter 96: Large-Scale Expeditions Exploring The Darkness Of Dungeon
- Chapter 95: Fatigue That Comes In The Darkness
- Chapter 94: The Aura That Died Out In The Depths Of The Dungeon
- Chapter 93: A Void Swallowed by Greed
- Chapter 92: Serpent Against Serpent
- Chapter 91: Fight And Protection
- Chapter 90: Fight Against The Snake Domain
- Chapter 89: The Bone-White Canyons
- Chapter 88: Looking for Hidden Monsters
- Chapter 87: Don’t Underestimate Your Opponent
- Chapter 86: S-Rank Cataclysm-level Threat
- Chapter 85: A Creature that Controls Corpses
- Chapter 84: Parasites Waiting for an Opportunity
- Chapter 83: Despair in the Darkness of the Dungeon
- Chapter 82: Demon in the Darkness of the Dungeon
- Chapter 81: Increasing Difficulty Levels and Human Coordination
- Chapter 80: A Gripping Presence
- Chapter 79: Unpleasant Hunt
- Chapter 78: The Knight Who Lost His Heart
- Chapter 77: Let’s Exterminate That Annoying Monster
- Chapter 76: The Legendary Treasure of Fear
- Chapter 75: Decent Food After a Long Time
- Chapter 74: An Octopus That Uses 100% of its Brain Capacity
- Chapter 73: The Many-Armed Darkness
- Chapter 72: Let’s Stir up Trouble
- Chapter 71: Treasure Hunt
- Chapter 70: Troublesome Creature
- Chapter 69: Monsters That Creep in the Dark
- Chapter 68: The Joy After the Upgrade
- Chapter 67: The Legendary Evolution of The Snake
- Chapter 66: The Fall of the Devourer
- Chapter 65: A Persistent and Vengeful Monster
- Chapter 64: Queen has been Reborn
- Chapter 63: The Arachnowyrm
- Chapter 62: The Revenge Begins
- Chapter 61: You Can Only Think About Me
- Chapter 60: Playing with Humans
- Chapter 59: Grow Strong or be Eradicated
- Chapter 58: Another Dungeon Lord?
- Chapter 57: Endless Arguments
- Chapter 56: A Monster That Sees in the Dark
- Chapter 55: Three Evolutions
- Chapter 54: Corrosive Deluge
- Chapter 53: Alice & Lilith’s Distraction
- Chapter 52: Alice Brilliant Plan
- Chapter 51: Monarch’s Aegis
- Chapter 50: A royal feast!
- Chapter 49: The Void and The Sun
- Chapter 48: The Pale Weaver
- Chapter 47: A New Bond
- Chapter 46: Creeper Queen
- Chapter 45: Crystal-Hide Marsh Lurker
- Chapter 44: Hunter’s Tri-Sense
- Chapter 43: The Violet Abyss
- Chapter 42: Cavern Creeper Swarm
- Chapter 41: Stonewarden Golem Treasure
- Chapter 40: Solar Drake Hatchling
- Chapter 39: Another wolf and Evolve
- Chapter 38: Twin-Head Hunt
- Chapter 37: Ashes and a Lesson
- Chapter 36: The Obsidian Coil
- Chapter 35: The Spark’s Potential
- Chapter 34: A Spark and a Storm
- Chapter 33: The Sun-Scale Lizard
- Chapter 32: Crossroads of Evolution
- Chapter 31: A Lord’s True Fury
- Chapter 30: The Molten Deeps
- Chapter 29: A Murder of Rocs
- Chapter 28: The Call of the Depths and a Familiar Shadow
- Chapter 27: A Voice in the Silence
- Chapter 26: The Monster’s Resolve
- Chapter 25: The Price of a Soul
- Chapter 24: The Ghost of the Glowing Woods
- Chapter 23: A Symphony of Predators
- Chapter 22: The Abyssal Serpent
- Chapter 21: The Marsh of Whispers and a Fallen Knight
- Chapter 20: The Prize of Regeneration
- Chapter 19: The Bond of Blood and Gratitude
- Chapter 18: The Price of Escape
- Chapter 17: The Calm Before the Silk
- Chapter 16: A Partner’s Potential
- Chapter 15: A Frenzy of Claws and Progress
- Chapter 14: A Cautious Shadow in the Deep Dark
- Chapter 13: The Sky-Soaked Fragment
- Chapter 12: Level Gap
- Chapter 11: The Rime-Tail Scorpion
- Chapter 10: The Path of the Shadowscale
- Chapter 9: Nest Raiders and Completed Fragment
- Chapter 8: The Grind and the Bloom
- Chapter 7: The Hunter’s Dance
- Chapter 6: The Crossroads of Serpentine Evolution
- Chapter 5: The Prey That Fights Back
- Chapter 4: A Glimmer Beyond the Stone
- Chapter 3: A Buffet of Problems and a Pinch of Progress
- Chapter 2: Beetle Blues and a Dash of Misfortune
- Chapter 1: A Very Unfortunate Day