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Now reading: Chapter 34: The Cost of Standing from The Heir Who Returned from the Ice, a Fantasy novel by ElevenLord.

Ryn had already seen the tracks by dawn.

He didn’t say anything when Kaelan and Darok ca to find him — just stood at the edge of the eastern courtyard with his arms crossed and his eyes moving across the evidence the night had left behind. Three sets of prints leading in from the tree line. Signs of a brief, contained struggle. The frost patterns that Kaelan left on the ground when he moved with intention, which Ryn had learned to read the way other n read weather.

And the inscription on the cliff face, which he’d found on his own before they arrived.

"You won," he said, without turning around. "And then you let the last one leave."

"Yes."

"On purpose."

"Yes."

Ryn finally turned. He studied Kaelan the way he always did when he was deciding how much to push — that quiet, asuring look that had nothing of warmth in it and everything of respect. "Tell why."

Kaelan told him. All of it — the way the third scout had moved differently, the recognition he’d seen in its eyes, the deliberate retreat, the inscription waiting for them when they ca back.

Ryn listened without interrupting.

When Kaelan finished, the old lord looked at the cliff for a long mont. His jaw worked like he was chewing sothing difficult. "You’re right," he said finally. "About what it ans. They weren’t sent to take anything. They were sent to confirm sothing."

"That I’m here," Kaelan said.

"That the covenant is stirring." Ryn’s eyes ca back to him. "You and Frosthael both. The bond is older than mory, Kaelan. Whatever these things serve — whatever sends them — it would feel the bond the way you’d feel a fire in a dark room. Even from far away."

"Then staying here makes the island a target."

Ryn didn’t disagree.

The morning passed in that particular kind of quiet that cos after a decision has been made but not yet spoken aloud. Darok ran the periter check without being asked. Frosthael drifted in and out of Kaelan’s awareness like a tide. Kaelan sat with the inscription in his mind and turned it over and over, looking for edges he hadn’t found yet.

By midday, he thought he’d found one.

He went to Ryn.

"They knew our patrol pattern," he said. "They’ve been watching long enough to know it."

Ryn set down the blade he was sharpening. "I know."

"Which ans they’ve been here before. When we couldn’t see them." Kaelan watched Ryn’s face. "How long?"

A silence that told him more than a direct answer would have.

"I’ve suspected sothing watching from the edges for the past month," Ryn said. "Nothing I could prove. Animals behaving strangely. Patrol dogs going quiet in sections they’d normally flag." He picked up the blade again but didn’t continue sharpening it. "I didn’t tell you because I didn’t want to pull you from your work before I was certain."

Kaelan absorbed this. "And now you’re certain."

"Now I’m certain."

Another silence — different from the last one. This one had weight.

"We leave," Kaelan said. It wasn’t a question.

Ryn set the blade down again. "We leave."

They began preparing that afternoon.

There wasn’t much to pack — years behind the Wall had stripped both Kaelan and Darok down to what was essential. Weapons. Supplies. The things that couldn’t be replaced. Frosthael’s presence, which required no physical space but occupied sothing larger.

Kaelan was sorting through the Frostheart’s storage when he heard it.

Not a sound. A change in pressure — the way the air tightened before a weight fell.

He was already moving when the door burst open.

Darok ca through it backward, catching himself against the fra, knife drawn. Behind him, the courtyard was no longer empty.

They’d co back in daylight.

Not three this ti.

Seven.

And these ones weren’t asuring anything.

What followed was not a duel.

It was containnt — the difference between a fight you choose and one you manage. Kaelan drove forward to pull attention from Darok, who was already bleeding from a cut above his elbow, and the first two scouts converged on him with a coordination that was getting less animal with each encounter.

He dealt with them the way Ryn had taught him to deal with anything faster than expected: don’t et the force, redirect it. The first one’s lunge he turned into a collision with the second. The third ca around his left side and he caught it with a frost burst from his free hand — not a killing strike, a halting one. Enough to slow. Enough to buy a second.

Darok was back on his feet, working the flank with the relentless efficiency that years behind the Wall had carved into him. He didn’t waste motion. Every step placed him where the next threat was before it knew it was a threat.

For a mont — just a mont — they had it contained.

Then Ryn ca through the eastern gate.

He shouldn’t have. Kaelan had been handling it. But Ryn had seen the numbers and made the calculation that Kaelan would have made in his position: two against seven, close quarters, one of them already injured.

He drove into the edge of the engagent like a man half his age.

And for three exchanges, he held.

Then the fourth scout — the one Kaelan had lost track of for half a second — ca from the blind side.

Ryn turned. He got his blade up.

But not quite in ti.

The strike took him across the upper left side — not the chest, not the neck, but deep enough in the shoulder that his sword arm dropped. He staggered. Kaelan was already closing the distance, cold fire erupting from the ground beneath the scout’s feet, encasing its legs in ice up to the knee.

It stopped.

Kaelan stopped.

The remaining scouts — there were four still standing — paused in that sa strange way the third one had paused last night. That unsettling collective stillness, like pieces of a single thing deciding at once.

Then they retreated.

Clean and quick and coordinated, back into the trees, carrying the one Kaelan had frozen sohow, though he hadn’t seen them free it.

The courtyard was silent.

Darok reached Ryn first, catching his arm before he could go down on one knee and turning it into sothing more controlled. Ryn let himself be caught, which told Kaelan more about the injury than any visible wound would have.

"I’m standing," Ryn said.

"You’re bleeding," Darok replied.

"Both things can be true."

Kaelan ca to Ryn’s other side and got his shoulder under the older man’s arm. Up close, the wound was worse than he’d hoped — the scout’s claw had opened the shoulder deeply, and the edges of the wound had that faint darkness to them that Kaelan had learned to recognize.

"We need to clean this," he said. His voice ca out steadier than he felt.

"I know what I need," Ryn said. But he leaned into the support without argunt.

They got him inside.

Darok knew field dicine the way he knew everything practical — thoroughly and without sentint. He worked on Ryn’s shoulder with the clean competence of soone who’d treated worse in worse conditions, while Kaelan held the lamp and kept his thoughts from showing on his face.

Ryn, for his part, was a model patient in the specific way that difficult people are model patients: completely silent, cooperating without acknowledging that he was cooperating, eyes fixed on the middle distance with an expression that permitted no pity.

"The darkness in the wound," Kaelan said quietly. "Is it—"

"No," Ryn said. Before the sentence was finished. "I’ve seen true corruption. This is residue. It will flush." He paused. "Make sure it flushes."

Darok nodded and kept working.

Kaelan set the lamp down and stood back. Around them the Frostheart was warm and ordinary, firelight catching the familiar shapes of years of habitation — the marks on the doorfra where Ryn tracked the seasons, the three practice swords they still kept out of habit, the map on the table with its careful notations in Ryn’s precise hand.

He looked at it for a long ti.

We leave, he’d said. We leave, Ryn had confird.

But the plan had assud Ryn was whole.

"You’re thinking about the tiline," Ryn said, without looking at him.

"I’m thinking about a lot of things."

"Say the one that’s actually bothering you."

Kaelan looked at him. "You can’t travel like this."

"Not today. Probably not tomorrow." Ryn t his eyes. "But the wound will close. The corruption — residue, as I said — will clear with treatnt. Give five days."

"We may not have five days."

"Then we use four." Ryn’s voice carried that quality it sotis had — not warmth exactly, but sothing that functioned as warmth in the space warmth would have occupied. "I’ve had worse behind the Wall, Kaelan. You’ve seen worse. Don’t let tonight change the plan."

Darok tied off the last bandage and sat back on his heels. "Done. It’s clean. He’s right about the residue — it’s already fading."

Kaelan looked at the wound. At Ryn. At the map on the table.

"Five days," he said.

"Four," Ryn replied. "I’m motivated."

From sowhere in the middle of his chest, Frosthael said sothing that wasn’t quite words — more like the feeling of ice settling into a configuration it was always going to find. Stable. Inevitable.

He will be fine.

"I know," Kaelan said softly.

Darok looked up at him. "Talking to the dragon?"

"Yes."

"What did it say?"

"That he’ll be fine."

Darok looked at Ryn. "Good. Because I’m not carrying him to the ship."

Ryn, eyes closed now, said: "You’d carry and be grateful for the opportunity."

Darok opened his mouth to object.

Closed it again.

"...possibly," he admitted.

That night, Kaelan sat outside on the steps of the Frostheart and looked at the eastern tree line for a long ti.

The scouts hadn’t co to win tonight. They’d co to confirm sothing else — that Ryn was a variable, perhaps. That separating the heir from his protector was possible. That the island wasn’t the fortress it appeared to be from the outside.

They’re learning, Frosthael said.

"Faster than I’d like."

Things that hunt have always learned. It’s only humans who pretend otherwise.

Kaelan pulled his coat tighter. The temperature had dropped after the fight — not naturally. His own doing, the ambient cold his body pushed out when his heart rate had been elevated.

"I need to know more about what sends them," he said. "Not what they are. What directs them."

You will. In ti.

"Ti is the problem."

Ti is always the problem. A pause, long and considering. But you are further along than you know, little heir. The inscription they left — they don’t mark what they don’t recognize. They don’t recognize things that don’t matter.

Kaelan thought about the third scout’s eyes. The way they’d held his gaze. That strange flicker.

"It saw the locket," he said.

It felt the covenant. The locket is rely where your blood rembers the oath. Another pause. Whatever sends these things — it wants to know if the covenant is truly waking, or rely dreaming. Tonight, I suspect, they have their answer.

"And that answer being yes — that’s worse for us."

Yes. Frosthael’s presence shifted in that way it had when sothing was being weighed carefully before being said. And better.

Kaelan waited.

They will co in greater numbers now. But they will also co with purpose rather than patience. And a purposeful enemy, little heir — that is an enemy you can read. An enemy you can et.

Kaelan sat with that for a while.

The snow kept falling. The tree line stayed still. Sowhere inside, Ryn was sleeping the shallow sleep of the injured, and Darok was probably sharpening sothing he didn’t need to sharpen, which was what Darok did when he was unsettled and wouldn’t say so.

After a while, Kaelan reached up and touched the frostwolf locket at his throat.

The tal was warm.

It was always warm, but tonight it felt like it was answering sothing.

He let his hand fall.

Four days.

Then the world.

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