Return of the General's Daughter-Chapter 361: The Escape
Chapter 361: The Escape
Meanwhile, deep in the wilds of Alta-Sierra, the group led by Alaric, General Odin, and the surviving escapees pressed onward along a hidden trail known only to a few old warriors and even fewer maps. The forest swallowed them, its ancient canopy casting flickering shadows across the narrow path. They moved cautiously, a caravan of forty horses—some their own, others captured during the pursuit of Luki—treading quietly beneath towering trees and whispering winds.
The terrain grew more unforgiving as they climbed. Roots coiled like serpents across the trail, and the earth turned slick with moss and fallen leaves. Eventually, Lara made a difficult choice—abandoning the sidecar she had once relied on. With a silent farewell, she detached it and continued, pushing her bicycle by hand, determined to keep pace despite the growing strain.
Athalia, still pale and fragile from childbirth, rode on horseback, her newborn swaddled against her chest. Amnon walked beside her, guiding the reins gently, his eyes scanning the trees for signs of movement. He hadn’t spoken much, but his vigilance was as steady as the mountain air.
They traveled relentlessly, stopping only for short rests—barely enough time to ease aching limbs before the journey resumed. When night fell and the woods became a maze of shadows, they made camp beneath thick branches, far from any trail where torchlight might betray their presence.
Among them were two masters—Jethru and Orion—who gathered strange, sharp-scented plants as they moved. They crushed the leaves and passed them to the women and children, urging them to tuck the greens into their collars and sleeves. "To keep the blood-hungry bugs away," Jethru would say with a soft chuckle. Only after the mothers and little ones were protected did the men take what remained.
Scouts—Aramis, Redon, Asael, and Bener—moved ahead like shadows, slipping between trees and ridge lines to clear the way or spot danger before it reached them. Behind them, General Odin, Galahad, and the remaining commanders took on the task of hunting, returning with whatever game the woods offered: wild fowl, rabbit, sometimes even deer if fortune smiled.
In the heart of the camp, Lara and Zeeta took turns caring for the newborn child, whispering lullabies as the baby slept in a makeshift collapsible cradle made from bamboo. Percival, who was scarred psychologically, had found a new purpose among the children. He watched over them tirelessly—shielding them from danger, playing simple games to keep their spirits lifted..
"Uncle Perci, that fruit looks delicious! Can you pick it for us?" they would often call out, their laughter ringing like bells through the stillness. Without hesitation, Percival would grin, climb the tree, and return with armfuls of ripe fruit, presenting them like treasures to his small companions.
When they paused by a stream for a brief midday meal, he would escort the children and their mothers to bathe, shielding the edges of their camp with watchful eyes and a drawn blade resting lightly in his hand. The older women began to trust him, and the younger children clung to him. And slowly, the cloud of guilt that once hung over him began to lift.
As the days passed, he began to craft wooden swords from fallen branches, handing them to the children with playful seriousness. "First lesson," he’d declare. "Never strike unless you mean it—and never let your guard down." Swordsmanship, once a duty, became a bond.
But even in the growing warmth of the group, the threat outside never relented.
The scouts returned regularly, slipping into camp like shadows with reports of increasing activity—Northem soldiers spotted riding along the provincial roads, some patrolling the riverbanks, others pausing too long at the edge of the forest, scanning the tree line as though sensing hidden footsteps.
"They’re getting closer," Redon reported grimly one evening. "They’re not just marching—they’re watching."
General Odin’s jaw tightened. The Alta-Sierra had always been a refuge, but now... it might become a battlefield.
The camp was unusually quiet that night.
Even the children, who usually whispered and giggled beneath their wrap-around fabric that doubled as thin blankets, sensed the shift in the air. The fire burned low, and only one flame flickered at a time—carefully managed, shielded with stones, and kept to a whisper of heat. The scent of pine smoke curled upward like a fragile thread, vanishing into the canopy above.
General Odin sat near the campfire with Alaric, Asael, Galahad, and the two masters, their faces drawn in the dim glow. Redon’s report had unsettled them all. Northem troops weren’t just passing through—they were hunting. The question was no longer if they’d be found, but when.
"They’re narrowing the path," Galahad murmured. "Sweeping both riverbanks and ridgelines. They’re herding us."
Jethru approached, silent as ever, and crouched beside them. "We must change direction by dawn," he said. "There’s a cave system south of here. A place called The Galeya’s Secret Chamber. Forgotten even by the locals. We can hide there for a time."
Odin glanced toward the sleeping forms of the children, the women, and the wounded. "Can we reach it without losing someone?"
"If we move fast," Jethru said. "And if the scouts lead the way."
He turned and vanished into the darkness to prepare.
Lara was awake too, gently rocking the newborn, who had begun to stir. She volunteered to babysit so that Athalia could rest properly and recover fast.
She caught sight of Percival walking the perimeter, his sword resting across his shoulders. His eyes swept the trees constantly—always scanning, always calculating.
"Percival," she called softly.
He approached, pausing beside her. "Still not sleeping?"
"I don’t think anyone is," she said. "They’re afraid."
He looked at the baby in her arms. "And you?"
"I’m fine," she admitted. "This is nothing compared to what I’ve been through."
He nodded once. "Father said we leave at dawn. The forest won’t protect us forever."
Just then, a sharp whistle split the silence. One long, then two quick ones, the signal for incoming danger. Percival was already in motion, sprinting to where the children were.
Odin and the others had stood. Aramis came crashing through the underbrush seconds later, his cloak torn and one side of his face bloodied from a fall.
"They’re less than a mile out," he panted. "A scouting party. Maybe ten riders—fast, and spread thin. But behind them? There are dozens, maybe a full battalion."
Odin’s eyes narrowed. "They’ve found the old trail. Damn it."
"We can’t outrun them if they’re this close," Alaric said, already reaching for his sword.
"No," Odin agreed. "But we can make them think we’re still here."
A plan began to take shape—quickly and with no room for error. The children and noncombatants would leave immediately, veering off the trail to the west under the guidance of Jethru, Orion, Alaric, and Lara. They needed to enter a town and merge with the common people.
Meanwhile, Odin, his sons, and the rest would remain behind to stage a decoy skirmish—deliberately leaving behind signs of struggle, false blood trails, even burning a small cache of discarded supplies to create the illusion of a panicked retreat.
A new phase of the escape had begun—this time under the shadow of open pursuit.
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