![]() ![]() She must travel by horseback to the Erlking’s castle, which is on the opposite side of the veil dividing the living from the dead and the magical wood. ![]() However, a ghost in a carriage shows up at her door during the next full moon. Serilda exhales with relief as the satisfied but slightly perplexed Erlking departs. She explains to him that she is out gathering straw because only under the light of a full moon can she turn straw into gold. She has seen the moss maidens, right? And why is she awake in the dead of night? Despite her fear, Serilda dares to tell him one of her stories. After hiding the Erlking’s moss maiden quarry in her cellar, Serilda is discovered by him and his fellow undead. ![]() ![]() She is so professional that she uses her tongue alone to save the lives of two moss maidens from the magical wood when the terrible undead Erlking pays a visit to one full moon with his Wild Hunt. Serilda is skilled at falsehoods and storytelling, as her father believes, and she has been blessed by the goddess Wyrdith. Serilda, a miller’s daughter in GILDED, is shunned by her rural town due to her peculiar golden-spoked irises. Serilda soon discovers that the castle walls conceal several secrets, including an old curse that must be broken if she wants to stop the king’s oppression and his frantic search. Serilda unintentionally conjures a fascinating boy to help her out of desperation. ![]()
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