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The circle was already marked when Astrid found Erik.

The stones had been set earlier, pressed into the frozen earth by dozens of hands. Frost clung to their edges like pale teeth. The yard beyond them had gone quiet in the way only a crowd on the edge of sothing irreversible could be quiet—voices lowered, movents careful, eyes fixed.

Astrid seized Erik’s arm before he could step away.

"Stop this," she whispered, the words tearing out of her. "Erik, please. He is still our son."

Erik did not pull free, but his body was rigid, as if he were holding himself together by force of will alone. His eyes never left the circle.

"I cannot," he said quietly.

Astrid shook her head. "You can. You’re his father. You’re their father. Call it off."

Erik’s jaw tightened. "It is past calling off."

She turned her face toward him, tears burning. "This will destroy one of them."

Erik finally looked at her. The pain in his eyes was naked, old, and sharp. "What would destroy Anders," he said slowly, "is if I break the law he has built in front of everyone who follows him."

Astrid’s breath hitched.

"The circle was invoked," Erik continued. "Publicly. Honor was claid. A challenge was answered. If I step in now, I teach the Jarls that Anders’ rule bends when blood cries loud enough."

Astrid’s hands trembled on his arm. "Then what do you hope for?"

Erik’s voice was rough. "That Thosalv yields. And that Anders chooses rcy."

Astrid closed her eyes, knowing even as she did that rcy was no longer sothing she could ask for. It was sothing Anders would have to decide.

She turned just in ti to see him step forward.

Anders did not look like a boy.

He stood at the edge of the circle with his shoulders squared and his spine straight, his breath slow and controlled. His face was hard—harder than she had ever seen it. The calm he usually wore like armor was gone, replaced by sothing colder, tighter, and far more dangerous.

Rage.

Not the wild kind.

The disciplined kind.

He lifted one hand and gestured once.

Magnus limped forward from the line of blood oath brothers. His injury was still fresh, his movent careful, but his grip was steady as he carried the weapons.

Two hand axes.

They were unlike any axe the yard had ever seen.

Their heads were darker than iron, not black but deep and lustrous, with a strange sheen that caught the winter light. The edges were impossibly clean, honed to a fine, hungry line. The shapes were compact, brutal, designed for close work rather than sweeping blows.

Whispers rippled through the crowd.

Magnus held them out, reverently.

Anders took them without ceremony, testing the weight in his hands. The axes felt alive—dense, balanced, eager. He had forged them himself from three strange stones he had found years ago in a forest clearing, stones that had fallen from the sky long before n learned to na such things. Chromium. Nickel. Cobalt. A tal tougher than steel, a tal that only grew more stubborn as the cold bit into it.

Luck had led him to them.

Rage had shaped them.

Anders turned, lifting the axes so all could see.

His voice cracked across the yard like a breaking shield.

"This match," he shouted, "is for honor."

The word struck the crowd and held.

"It is for blood," he continued, eyes locked on Thosalv.

"And it is for everything I have built."

Sothing in his voice made n shift their feet. This was not a challenge. It was a declaration.

Thosalv stepped into the circle with a crooked smile.

He carried himself like a man who had survived chains and believed that survival alone made him superior. His armor was worn but well kept. His blade was familiar to him. His eyes flicked over Anders, calculating, contemptuous, wary all at once.

"So," Thosalv said, spreading his arms slightly. "This is the great king."

His gaze slid over the axes. "Pretty toys."

Anders said nothing.

Thosalv’s smile widened. "You think cutting a few n and building walls makes you sothing special," he went on. "You’ve never known hunger. Never known what it is to wake every day owned by another man."

He took a step closer. "I’ve suffered more than you ever could."

Anders’ knuckles whitened around the axe hafts.

Sowhere deep inside him, sothing stirred—an echo of conquest, of certainty, of righteous fury. The system did not speak. It did not command.

It nudged.

Thosalv raised his weapon. "Let’s see how far your rage takes you, little brother."

Erik’s voice rang out, formal and heavy. "Begin."

Thosalv attacked imdiately.

He ca fast, blade slashing in a wide arc ant to test distance and reaction. Anders moved like he had been waiting for it his entire life.

He did not retreat.

He stepped inside the strike.

The first axe flashed low and bit into Thosalv’s heel.

Not deep.

Precise.

Thosalv howled and stumbled, surprise shattering his smugness in an instant. He swung wildly, trying to regain space, but Anders was already moving again.

The second axe ca around and cut into the wrist—clean, exact, severing tendons with surgical cruelty. Thosalv’s sword clattered to the frozen ground.

Gasps ripped through the crowd.

Thosalv tried to back away, panic flickering now behind his eyes, but Anders advanced relentlessly, boots crunching on frost, breath steady.

Another strike—behind the knee.

Thosalv collapsed with a scream, one leg folding uselessly beneath him.

Anders did not pause.

He moved around Thosalv like a craftsman circling a workbench, choosing angles, choosing joints. The axes rose and fell in brutal rhythm.

A cut behind the other knee.

A slice across the remaining wrist.

Blood sprayed dark against the pale ground.

Thosalv scread again, the sound raw and animal, his body betraying him piece by piece. He tried to crawl, to lash out with his free arm, to spit curses—but Anders stepped on his forearm and pressed down.

The yard had gone deathly silent.

This was not a duel.

It was a dismantling.

n watched with widening eyes as Anders reduced Thosalv from a challenger to a broken thing in monts. Every strike had purpose. Every wound stole function. There was no wasted motion, no flourish.

Just efficiency.

Just rage given structure.

Even the blood oath brothers stared in stunned stillness. They had trained under Anders. They had bled with him.

They had never seen this.

Anders stood over Thosalv, axes dripping red, chest rising and falling. His eyes were bright—too bright—with fury and sothing else layered beneath it, sothing colder and sharper.

Thosalv lay on his back, limbs useless, face twisted in pain and disbelief.

"You... monster," he rasped.

Anders leaned down until they were eye to eye.

"You thought suffering made you owed," Anders said, voice low and shaking with barely contained fury. "It doesn’t."

Thosalv coughed, blood bubbling at his lips. His smugness was gone, replaced by terror and rage. "You’re not human."

Anders straightened.

The words spread through the crowd like fire through dry grass.

Soone shouted from the edge of the yard, voice breaking with awe and fear.

"God of victory!"

For a heartbeat there was only silence.

Then another voice took it up.

And another.

"God of victory!"

"God of victory!"

The chant began to rise, shields pounding, fists slamming against armor. The na rolled through the yard, uncontrolled, unstoppable.

Anders stood unmoving in the center of the circle, axes hanging at his sides, blood dripping into the frost.

He did not smile.

He did not acknowledge the chant.

He looked down at Thosalv, and the question that would define kings and monsters alike hung in the air between them—unspoken, heavy, unavoidable.

rcy.

Or mory.

And sowhere beyond mortal sight, sothing watched with keen interest, satisfied not with the blood spilled—but with the path Anders was choosing to walk.

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