August, 1939.
15-year-old Princess Elizabeth had grown into a slender young lady.
She donned a peculiar military uniform, her face smeared with a special coating to conceal her lovely features.
With the help of her tutor, she secretly slipped away from her family, arriving at a small country in Europe for some sort of training.
Throughout three years of study, her skills in horsemanship, swordsmanship, and even marksmanship had reached considerable heights at a young age, and her academic courses were at a level that even her father praised highly.
Undoubtedly, the young princess possessed the qualities to become an extraordinary woman.
She was onboard a train.
In the rear half of the train carriage, the princess, soaked with sweat, held a standard longsword in one hand and a Soviet-made short pistol in the other.
Here, seven men lay motionless, dressed in uniforms called the Schutzstaffel—identical to the princess's attire.
