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Prince Erik, The Farmer
After the Ausa Vanti— the day when Prince Erik was accepted into the kingdom, he was taken from the palace and given to two simple farmers who lived on the very edge of the kingdom’s wilds. Leifr and Gunnhildr were not a noble line. Their hands were callused from the earth, their faces weather worn by endless seasons of wind and rain. They owned a modest homestead, a low thatched hall, and two children— Ragna, a bright eyed girl of three summers, and Steinn, a lanky boy who could already lift a sack of barley over his shoulder. When the royal carriage rolled into their yard, the children stared at…
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Prince Erik, El Campesino
Después de Ausa Vanti, el día en que el príncipe Erik fue aceptado en el reino, lo sacaron del palacio y lo entregaron a dos simples granjeros que vivían en el mismo límite de las tierras salvajes del reino. Leifr y Gunnhildr no pertenecían a la nobleza. Tenían las manos encallecidas por la tierra, los rostros curtidos por las interminables temporadas de viento y lluvia. Poseían una modesta casa, una pequeña cabaña con techo de paja y dos hijos: Ragna, una niña de ojos brillantes de tres veranos, y Steinn, un niño desgarbado que ya podía cargar un saco de cebada al hombro. Cuando el carruaje real llegó a su…
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The Kings Of Hrafnnes
The wind howled through the high cliffs of Hrafnnes, rattling the stone walls of the palace and carrying with it the bitter scent of frozen pine. Inside the great hall, King Akbar paced before the great fire, its orange tongues doing little to chase away the cold that had settled deep in his bones. Beside him, Queen Egrida stood, her silken robes a muted gray that mirrored the sky outside. For years they had stood together on the throne, their rule marked by prosperity and peace, but their joy was incomplete, hollowed by a single, aching absence. “Perhaps the world itself will remember us,” Egrida whispered, her voice barely louder…





