The longest night of the year ca with teeth.
Wind howled like a starving beast. Snow fell in knives. Even Frosthael coiled tighter around Kaelan’s shoulders, his usual calm replaced by unease.
"It’s the Solstice," Ryn said, voice low as he led them to the Hall of Echoes. "The night the Heart of Frost tests its heir."
Kaelan said nothing. His crimson eyes fixed on the black ice ahead.
He hadn’t slept in three nights. Not since the Wall. Not since the Heart had awakened sothing in him—sothing cold, sharp, and hungry.
Darok walked beside him, silent for once. He’d seen it too—the way frost spread from Kaelan’s fingertips when he was angry, the way snow stilled when he passed.
Ryn placed the ceremonial dagger on the obsidian altar. "Drink."
The tea was bitter, laced with powdered glacial moss and a single scale from Frosthael’s spirit-form.
Kaelan drank.
Then pricked his palm. Let three drops fall.
The world didn’t dissolve.
It shattered.
Not a vision. A hunger.
Kaelan stood in the center of the training yard—but the snow wasn’t white. It was black. The air reeked of rot.
Before him, the corrupted wolves returned—eyes violet, veins pulsing tar. They didn’t attack. They bowed.
"Master," they hissed in unison.
Power surged through him—cold, intoxicating, endless.
He raised a hand.
The ground froze outward in a perfect circle. Trees shattered. Stone cracked.
And he liked it.
"No!" Frosthael’s voice tore through the dream. "This is not strength—it’s surrender!"
But Kaelan didn’t listen.
He stepped forward. The wolves followed.
Ahead, the Ice Wall lood—but it was crumbling, lting into black sludge.
Behind it... his father’s face. Smiling. With her. With the twins.
Rage burned colder than ice.
He reached for the power—deeper, darker—ready to freeze the world until nothing moved but him.
"Kaelan! Stop!"
Ryn’s voice ripped him back.
Kaelan gasped, collapsing to his knees in the Hall of Echoes.
But the damage was done.
Frost coated the walls. The obsidian altar had split in two. Darok stood frozen—not by choice, but by a layer of ice creeping up his boots.
Ryn knelt, breath ragged. "What did you see?"
Kaelan’s voice was flat. "I saw what I can do."
"You nearly killed him," Ryn said, nodding to Darok, who shivered as the ice lted.
Kaelan didn’t look at his friend. "He’s fine."
"That’s not the point." Ryn gripped his chin, forced him to et his eyes. "Power like this... it doesn’t just protect. It consus. And if you’re not careful, it will eat you alive."
Kaelan pulled away. "I need it."
"Why?"
"To be strong enough that no one ever breaks what’s mine again."
Silence.
Then Frosthael landed on his shoulder, voice grave. > "You walk a razor’s edge, little heir. Fall one way, and you save the North. Fall the other... and you beco the storm they fear."
That night, Darok didn’t sit by the fire.
He sharpened his knife in the shadows, eyes flicking to Kaelan every few seconds.
Kaelan noticed. Said nothing.
But for the first ti, he felt it—distance.
Not betrayal. Not yet.
But fear.
And part of him... liked that too.
Ryn called him at dawn.
"You lost control," he said, standing at the cliff’s edge. "That power isn’t yours to command. It’s a loan—from the Heart, from your blood, from Frosthael. And loans must be repaid with discipline."
"I controlled it," Kaelan said.
"No. You fed it. There’s a difference." Ryn turned. "From now on, you train blindfolded. No sight. Only instinct. If you can’t master the power without seeing destruction... you don’t deserve to wield it."
Kaelan accepted the blindfold without protest.
But as he tied it, he thought of the wolves bowing. Of the ice obeying his will. Of his father’s smile crumbling to frost.
He wasn’t afraid of the hunger.
He was learning to feed it.
By midday, the training began.
Blindfolded, Kaelan dueled Darok in the snow.
He couldn’t see the strikes—but he felt them. The shift in air. The tremor in the ground. The heat of Darok’s breath.
He blocked. Countered. Pressed forward.
On the seventh exchange, he disard Darok—and kept going.
His wooden sword slamd into Darok’s chest, hard enough to knock him down.
Darok gasped, clutching his ribs.
Kaelan stood over him, blindfold askew, chest heaving.
For a heartbeat, he wanted to strike again.
Just to feel the power rise.
Just to hear the ice answer.
But Frosthael’s voice cut through the urge: > "rcy is harder than vengeance. But only rcy makes you human."
Kaelan stepped back. Offered a hand.
Darok took it—but his grip was tight. Guarded.
Kaelan didn’t bla him.
He scared himself too.
That evening, Ryn watched him from the porch as he practiced forms alone in the snow.
Each movent precise. Each breath controlled.
But beneath the discipline, Ryn saw it—the hunger. The cold fire in his eyes that had nothing to do with Frostveil blood.
He turned to Frosthael, perched on the railing. "Is he still our heir... or sothing else?"
The dragon’s form shimred. > "He is what we made him. Now we must teach him what to beco."
Kaelan didn’t sleep that night.
He stood on the eastern cliffs, staring south—toward the empire, toward the man who broke his mother’s heart.
He touched the frostwolf locket.
He didn’t dream of forgiveness.
He didn’t dream of family.
He dread of power so absolute, no one would dare question his right to stand.
And deep in the ice beneath his feet, the Heart of Frost pulsed in ti with his hunger.
Not as a guardian.
But as a mirror.
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