ISOLDE The forest welcomed us with its evening breath; it was cool, damp, and carried the smell of wet leaves. It wrapped around me, seeping into my bones like freedom itself. My chest loosened for the first time in days. The weight I carried seemed lighter, replaced by a kind of wild relief. I could almost hear laughter that wasn’t mine; it was my sister’s, and it made me smile before the sound even reached my ears. Elsa’s laugh was bright and careless, bouncing against the trees as though the forest belonged to her. Then she stopped so suddenly that the guards halted behind us too, boots grinding against fallen leaves. She spun around, her eyes glinting with mischief, and flashed them a grin that made her look like a child caught stealing honey. “Thank you for escorting us here,” sh

