The evening sun hung low in the sky, casting a warm, golden glow over the sprawling gardens of the castle. The horizon, ablaze with hues of orange, pink, and violet, reflected the bittersweet emotions shared between two siblings who sat quietly on the grass. Despite the tranquility of their surroundings, a weighty silence hung between Adrian and Emily, one that neither seemed eager to break.
Adrian lay back, hands resting behind his head, his gaze fixed on the sky. "Mother always loved sunsets," he murmured, his voice soft, almost as if he were speaking to the past.
Emily, seated beside him, clasped her knees to her chest, watching the fiery colors in the sky shift and blend. "Yes," she replied, her tone tender and nostalgic, "we used to rest our heads on her lap as she told us stories—tales of distant lands, magical creatures, and legends of our ancestors." A wistful smile played on her lips, though her eyes betrayed the sorrow that lingered beneath the surface.
Adrian sighed, turning his head to glance at his sister. "Everything would've been so different... better, if she were still alive," he said quietly, the ache in his words unmistakable.
Emily's smile faltered, but she nodded in agreement. "She was everything," she whispered. "The best mother we could have asked for."
A heavy pause settled between them, thick with memories and unspoken grief. The sky deepened into a richer shade of orange as the sun began to sink lower, casting long shadows over the garden. For a moment, they allowed themselves to exist in that shared melancholy, a fleeting connection to the woman they had both lost.
After a while, Adrian broke the silence. "Don't worry, Em. Only two more years left," he said, his voice filled with forced optimism as he tried to console her.
Emily turned to him, her eyes sharp with resignation. "You've forgotten, haven't you? Our birthday is next month," she said bitterly. "That means I only have a year and a month left... before it's over."
Adrian's brow furrowed, his face clouded with guilt. "I swear, Emily, there must be a way. A solution—something we haven't found yet. You can't just—"
"Die?" Emily interrupted, her voice edged with a grim acceptance. "Yes, Adrian. That's exactly what I'm meant to do. My powers are already slipping out of control. It's happening faster than we thought." Her words were a mixture of bitterness and sorrow, each one hanging in the air like a dark cloud.
He clenched his fists. "No. You aren't meant to die," he said, his voice firm, though it trembled slightly with desperation. "I promise you, Em, I will find a way to stop this. You aren't supposed to leave us like this."
But Emily shook her head, her expression turning distant. "There's no use in false hope. You should accept it," she said softly. "Find someone, Adrian. Find a beautiful princess, marry her, and enjoy your life. Don't let royal politics or this curse drag you down. Live your life... before I—"
"You will not die," came a strong, authoritative voice that cut through the air like a blade. Both Adrian and Emily turned their heads, startled, to see their father, King Albert, standing a few feet away. The king's face was a mask of determination, yet his eyes reflected the deep pain he had tried to conceal for years.
Instantly, both siblings stood, bowing respectfully to their father. He approached them, his royal mantle flowing behind him as he walked with the measured grace of a king. However, instead of maintaining his usual formal demeanor, Albert surprised them by sitting down on the grass beside them, his posture relaxed yet dignified.
"This garden was your mother's favorite place in the entire kingdom," the king said quietly, his gaze fixed on the sky, now glowing with the final embers of the setting sun. "She always found peace here, among the flowers and under the twilight sky. She believed there was something magical about sunsets."
The three of them sat in silence for a moment, the king's presence unexpectedly comforting. Emily, though filled with sorrow, found herself soothed by her father's closeness. But the weight of her impending fate lingered like a shadow, never far from her thoughts.
The gentle rustle of the garden leaves filled the silence, casting a soft, serene atmosphere over the gathering twilight. King Albert's words, however, shattered the quiet like a stone dropped into still water, sending ripples of shock through Emily and Adrian. Neither of them moved, their minds struggling to process the bombshell their father had just dropped.
"You both thought you were alone in this world," Albert began, his voice quiet but edged with the weight of years gone by. "Confiding only in each other, thinking no one else knew. But the truth is, I didn't learn about the curse until you turned fifteen, Emily. Your mother… on her deathbed… she told me everything."
His words hung heavy in the air, echoing with the pain of a long-buried secret. Emily's heart skipped a beat, her eyes widening in disbelief. All these years she had believed the curse was hers to bear in silence, that no one outside her and Adrian had known. And now, hearing that her father had been aware all along, the foundations of her world seemed to shift.
"I've kept it hidden," King Albert continued, his voice rougher now, burdened with memories. "From the moment she told me, I've searched relentlessly for a way to break the curse. I've scoured every text, consulted every scholar, reached out to every distant kingdom. There is a solution—there has to be."
Tears welled up in Emily's eyes, but she blinked them back, swallowing the lump in her throat. She had never seen her father like this, so open, so vulnerable. The king who had always seemed distant, so consumed by the affairs of the kingdom, was suddenly speaking to her like a father—a man desperate to save his daughter.
"You will not die like this," Albert said, his voice taking on a firm, almost defiant edge. "Yes, you will grow old, you will have gray hair, and one day, yes, you will leave this world. But not now, not before your time. Not because of this curse. I won't let that happen."
Emily could feel her resolve crumbling under the weight of his words. She had prepared herself for the worst, resigned to her fate, but now—now there was a flicker of hope she hadn't allowed herself to feel in years. Adrian, sitting beside her, looked just as stunned. His usual sharp wit and easy charm were nowhere to be found as he stared at their father, searching for the right words but finding none.
King Albert shifted closer to them, and for the first time in years, he wasn't the distant, commanding figure of the mighty Kingdom of Aquorion. He was just their father—tired, worried, and determined to save the daughter he loved.
"I know I haven't been the father you needed," he admitted, his voice raw. "I've made mistakes, been consumed by my duties as king, but never doubt this: I love you, both of you. And I will not stop until I find a way to break this curse. You have my word."
Tears finally escaped Emily's eyes, slipping down her cheeks as she met her father's gaze. His expression held a tenderness she had almost forgotten existed. For so long, she had seen him only as the ruler of the kingdom, not as the man who had once doted on her and Adrian, telling them bedtime stories and teaching them the values of honor and strength.
Adrian reached over and squeezed her hand, his grip strong and steady. "We're going to get through this, Em," he whispered, his voice thick with emotion. "We're not giving up on you. Not now, not ever."
Emily looked at her father, the man who had just promised her the one thing she thought was impossible—a future. For the first time in a long while, the weight of her impending doom didn't feel so crushing.
"Thank you," she whispered, her voice trembling with the flood of emotions she could no longer hold back. "Thank you for not giving up on me."
Albert reached over, pulling both his children into a rare, unguarded embrace. The three of them sat together in the fading light, no longer just a king and his heirs, but a father and his children, united in their fight against the curse that had shadowed their lives.
In that moment, amidst the soft hum of the evening breeze, Emily allowed herself to believe in something she hadn't dared to hope for in years—salvation.