Page 62 of Knot My Wonderland

Varik's wild green eyes flickered to the pendant, narrowing with instant recognition. "A Heart Stone. You've been busy." There was no judgment in his voice, only calculation as he assessed this new development. "The connection will serve you well in the coming chaos."

Chi materialized more fully beside me, his form solid with protective tension. "How long do we have before they reach the outer ward?"

"Four hours, perhaps six if my defenses hold," Varik replied, gesturing toward the silver dome overhead. "But the Red Queen brings Blood Knights—they specialize in breaking magical barriers." His expression darkened. "Your ward is impressive, Alice, but it wasn't designed to withstand an assault like this."

The house continued its impossible packing around us, walls shifting and rooms rearranging themselves with mechanical precision. I watched a grandfather clock fold itself into a pocket-sized cube before hopping into an already overflowing trunk.

"Where will you go?" I asked, guilt gnawing at my chest as I watched centuries of careful collection being hastily packed.

“You mean where willwego.” Varik told me, his eyes softening when he looked at me.

"We?" I blinked at him, confusion mixing with the guilt churning in my stomach. "Varik, I can't ask you to—"

"You're not asking," Varik interrupted, his wild green eyes holding mine with stubborn determination. "I'm choosing. The Red Queen has made it clear that anyone who shelters you is marked for death. Running separately won't change that fact." He gestured to the frantic packing around us. "Besides, someone needs to teach you how to properly use those abilities before you accidentally level half of Wonderland."

Chi's tail curled with what might have been approval. "The Hatter speaks sense, for once. Your magical education has been rather... improvised thus far."

A crash echoed from the direction of the outer ward, followed by the sound of crystalline chimes—my barrier responding to direct assault. Through the Heart Stone, I felt a wave of worry.

Heart's alarm spiked through the crystal connection, his mental voice sharp with urgency.They're testing your ward with blood magic. The assault will begin within the hour.

"Heart says they're already probing the barrier," I said aloud, pressing my hand to the pendant as another distant crash shook the air. "We need to leave now."

Varik nodded grimly, pulling out one of the silver keys the Tweedles had given me. "The hidden paths are our best option—they can't follow us through the between-spaces." He paused, studying my face with those penetrating green eyes. "Unless you're having second thoughts about accepting princely alliances?"

I felt my cheeks warm but kept my voice steady. "The connection gives us tactical advantages. Heart has intelligence networks throughout all four kingdoms."

"And personal interest in keeping you alive," Chi added dryly, though his form flickered with what might have been jealousy. "Though I question the wisdom of forming magical bonds with someone you've just met."

"Says the magical cat who taught me to create a consciousness ward on our second day of acquaintance," I countered, earning a flicker of amusement from Varik despite our dire situation.

Another crash shook the barrier, this one closer and more powerful. The silver dome overhead rippled like water struck by a stone, patterns of light spreading outward from the point of impact.

"They're bringing in the heavy artillery," Varik muttered, glancing skyward with professional assessment. "Blood-crystal cannons, if I'm not mistaken."

"Charming," Chi remarked, his form solidifying further as the danger increased. "Nothing says 'welcome to the family' quite like artillery designed to liquefy one's internal organs."

I winced at the jab, trying to push down the guilt that threatened to overwhelm me. Through the Heart Stone, I felt another pulse of urgency—Heart was closer now, moving through the forest toward us with a small group of allies.

"Heart's coming," I said, the information flowing through our connection like water finding its level. "He has people with him—resistance fighters from the neutral territories."

Varik's eyebrows rose slightly. "How many people?"

I concentrated on the crystal's warmth, feeling the distant echoes of other heartbeats moving in formation through the darkness. "Maybe a dozen? They're armed and moving fast."

Chi's tail lashed with obvious displeasure. "Wonderful. A royal rescue party. Because our situation wasn't complicated enough."

Another thunderous impact against my ward sent visible cracks spreading across the silver dome. This time, the reverberations reached us even at ground level, making the packed magical items rattle in their containers. The house itself groaned as the protective barrier above us weakened, its impossible architecture shuddering under the strain.

"No time for banter," Varik said sharply, grabbing a final leather satchel as the last of his belongings compressed themselves into portable form. "Alice,can you collapse the ward gradually? If it falls all at once, the magical backlash could level everything within a mile radius."

I stared up at the cracking dome, feeling the consciousness I'd woven into it crying out in distress. The ward wasn't just a barrier anymore—it was alive, aware, and in pain. "I don't know how," I admitted, panic creeping into my voice. "It's not just magic anymore, it's...thinking."

Chi materialized beside me, his solid form radiating calm despite the chaos around us. "Feel the connections, Alice," he said, placing his hand over mine. "You created it—you can guide it. Think of it like a living being that needs direction, not a structure to be dismantled."

I closed my eyes, focusing on the silver light pulsing beneath my skin. Through that connection, I could feel the ward's consciousness—confused, frightened, determined to protect despite the pain of each assault. It recognized me as its creator, reaching toward my mind with wordless questions.

"It's okay," I whispered, directing my thoughts upward. "You can let go now. You've done your job perfectly."