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The roaring ring of erald wildfire completely isolated the center of the frozen bay. The heat licked at the backs of the living warriors, but in the very heart of the cage, the temperature plumted to a stagnant, terrifying absolute zero.

Eddard Stark stood ten paces from the Night King. He held the twin Valyrian blades, Winter and Justice, their dark, smoky steel humming faintly against the suffocating frost.

For seven years, Ned had moved through the world of n with a heavy, deliberate restraint. The divine gift he carried in his blood—a tenfold multiplication of his natural mortal strength, speed, and endurance—had always been kept under a strict, iron leash. He had fought the greatest knights of the South and the fiercest warriors of the North without ever needing to tap into the true, terrifying depths of his physical power. n were fragile. If he had ever unleashed his full strength in the sparring yards or on the battlefields of the rebellion, he would have torn his opponents apart like wet parchnt.

But standing before the master of the cold, Ned knew the leash had to break.

The Night King did not posture. He did not speak. The ancient creature simply moved.

He crossed the ten paces in a fraction of a heartbeat. It was a speed that completely defied the natural laws of muscle and bone. He did not run; he simply ceased to be in one place and appeared in another, bringing his long, slender sword of pale ice down in a blinding, vertical execution strike.

Ned's instincts, honed by decades of war and sharpened by the deep currents of the Force, triggered instantly. He did not try to dodge. He brought both Winter and Justice up, crossing the dark Valyrian steel above his head to catch the blow.

The pale ice struck the crossed dragon steel.

The sound was not the ringing of swords. It was a deafening, explosive crack of thunder. A massive shockwave of displaced, freezing air erupted outward from the point of impact. The sheer, terrifying kinetic force of the clash instantly blew the thick, lingering sea mist entirely away from the center of the ring, clearing the air in a violent rush.

Ned's heavy leather boots were driven two inches deep into the solid, frozen ice of the bay.

The physical shock traveling down Ned's arms was imnse. The Night King's strength was incomprehensible. It was the weight of a falling glacier compressed into the swing of a single blade.

Ned felt the bones in his forearms groan under the pressure. For the first ti in his life, the Warden of the North was fighting sothing that possessed a raw, physical power equal to his own divine gift.

The Night King's piercing blue eyes narrowed slightly, registering a flicker of cold surprise that the human had not simply been crushed to dust beneath the strike.

The creature pushed off the locked blades, moving with blinding speed. He unleashed a flurry of strikes—horizontal sweeps, rapid thrusts, and punishing downward chops. The pale ice sword beca a continuous, freezing blur.

Ned was imdiately pushed onto the defensive. He gave ground, his boots sliding backward over the slick ice. His twin blades moved in a frantic, desperate rhythm, parrying the strikes just inches from his own flesh.

He was struggling. The sheer velocity of the Night King's attacks was overwhelming his mortal reflexes. The creature did not fight with the predictable, practiced forms of a southern knight. The strikes ca from impossible angles, completely devoid of shifting weight or telegraphing shoulders. The White Walker fought with the cold, chanical perfection of ancient magic.

A sweeping cut of the ice blade bypassed Ned's guard entirely. Ned twisted his torso violently, but the razor-sharp frost grazed the heavy boiled leather of his chest piece. The leather instantly froze and shattered like glass, the freezing edge drawing a thin, shallow line of blood across Ned's ribs.

The pain was sharp and biting, but it served its purpose. It wiped the last lingering traces of mortal hesitation from Ned's mind.

Faster, Ned commanded himself.

He dug deeply into the absolute limits of the tenfold multiplier. He opened the floodgates of the Force, letting the heavy, rushing currents of the living earth pour directly into his muscles, his lungs, and his bones.

The Night King lunged again, aiming a devastating thrust directly at Ned's throat.

This ti, Ned did not retreat. He adapted.

Driven by the unchained, supernatural speed of his gift, Ned moved just as fast as the ancient creature. He sidestepped the thrust with a sudden, blurring pivot. He brought Winter down, slapping the flat of the ice blade wide, and imdiately drove Justice forward in a rapid, stinging counter-strike toward the creature's ribs.

The Night King recovered instantly, bringing his sword back to deflect the Valyrian steel.

The true duel began.

To the n fighting on the edges of the burning ring, the center of the cage beca a terrifying spectacle of impossible speed. The dark grey of the Warden of the North and the pale frost of the Night King blurred together. The constant, deafening claps of their weapons colliding rang out like a continuous drumbeat. Sparks of ancient magic and frozen mist exploded from their blades with every strike.

Ned stopped giving ground. He t the master of the dead toe-to-toe. He used his twin blades in flawless tandem, one sword absorbing the heavy, crushing blows of the ice, while the other darted forward, seeking a gap in the pale, shifting armor. He pushed his body past the threshold of human endurance, his heart hamring against his ribs like a war drum, matching the immortal speed of his enemy strike for strike.

Thirty paces away, King Robert Baratheon brought his heavy iron hamr down, shattering the skull of the White Walker he had engaged. The creature exploded into a pile of crushed ice.

Robert stood panting, his chest heaving violently, the blood pouring from the deep wound in his arm. He leaned heavily on the haft of Stormbreaker, looking across the ice to find Ned.

Robert's blue eyes widened in sheer, unadulterated awe.

He could barely track their movents. He saw the dark, rippling flashes of the Valyrian steel and the blinding arcs of the pale ice sword, but the n wielding them were moving at a speed that defied reality. The shockwaves radiating from their clashes were physically shaking the ice beneath Robert's boots.

Robert gripped his hamr, ignoring the tearing pain in his shoulder. He took a heavy step forward, intending to charge into the fray and aid his brother.

But he stopped.

He realized with a grim, sickening truth that he could not intervene. The fight was moving too fast. If Robert charged into that blurring storm of steel and ice, his heavy, mortal swings would only get in Ned's way. He would beco an obstacle, a slow target that the Night King could use to break Ned's rhythm.

Robert stood on the edge of the clash, his knuckles turning white on his hamr, his teeth ground together in helpless frustration, waiting for a single, clear opening.

In the center of the ring, the Night King recognized the shifting tide of the battle.

The human was not tiring. The human was adapting. The dark steel was moving faster, cutting closer to the pale armor with every exchange. The master of the cold realized that relying purely on his sword would not break the wolf.

The Night King stepped back, parrying a heavy cross-cut from Ned.

As the blades locked, the creature did not try to overpower the Valyrian steel. Instead, he slamd his empty left hand directly onto the frozen surface of the bay beneath their feet.

He unleashed a massive, concentrated burst of cold magic directly into the earth.

The ice beneath Ned's boots violently ruptured. Thick, jagged spikes of solid frost exploded upward from the ground, shooting toward Ned's legs with the speed of released arrows.

Ned was forced to break the weapon lock. He utilized the imnse, supernatural strength in his legs to leap backward, vaulting high into the air to avoid being impaled by the rising spikes.

As Ned hung suspended in the cold air, lacking solid footing, the Night King moved for the kill.

The creature darted forward, closing the distance instantly. He brought his long, pale sword back, gathering every ounce of his terrifying strength, and swung a devastating, horizontal execution strike aid directly at the falling Warden of the North.

Ned was cornered in the air. He crossed his twin blades to absorb the blow, but without the ground to brace his weight, he knew the force of the strike would smash through his guard and cut him in half.

A massive shadow completely blocked the pale light of the ice.

King Robert Baratheon had found his opening.

Robert threw his massive, heavy fra directly into the path of the execution strike. He did not swing his weapon. He planted his heavy iron boots deep into the slick ice, dropping his weight into an immovable, rooted stance. He gripped the thick weirwood haft of Stormbreaker with both hands, raising the heavy, dark Valyrian steel shaft vertically like an iron wall.

The Night King's pale sword crashed into the haft of Stormbreaker.

The impact was absolutely catastrophic. The ice beneath Robert's boots shattered instantly, spider-webbing outward for twenty paces.

Robert's face scrunched up in a mask of agonizing effort. The veins on his thick neck and forehead bulged violently against his skin. His massive jaw locked tight, a guttural, tearing groan escaping his throat. The impossible strength of the ancient creature pressed down upon him, threatening to drive the King of Westeros straight through the floor of the frozen sea. The wound in his arm tore wider, soaking his tunic in fresh, hot blood.

But Robert Baratheon did not yield. He was the anvil of the Stormlands. He dug his boots deeper, his muscles screaming under the tearing strain, and he stopped the lethal blade dead in its tracks.

Ned landed softly on the ice directly behind Robert. He did not waste a fraction of a second.

Using Robert's massive fra as a shield, Ned darted around the King's right flank. He drove Justice forward in a rapid, heavy thrust aid at the Night King's exposed side.

The creature reacted with chilling speed. He abandoned his pressure on Robert, ripping his sword back to cleanly parry Ned's thrust, stepping backward to reset his guard.

Robert slumped slightly, gasping for air, his arms trembling violently from the sheer exertion of stopping the blow.

Ned stepped up beside his friend. He looked at Robert's heaving chest and the blood pouring down his side. Robert possessed the heart of a lion and the strength of a giant, but he was a mortal man. He could not keep pace with the supernatural, blurring speed of the white shadow for more than a single block. He would be slaughtered.

Unless, Ned thought, the deep currents of the Force swirling heavily in his mind.

Ned reached out with his left hand. He did not push Robert away. He placed his open palm firmly against the thick, steel-clad shoulder of the King.

Ned reached down into the deep, rushing currents of the living earth. Ned opened his own heightened awareness and wrapped it entirely around the King. He linked their minds, sharing the blinding, pre-cognitive pulse of the Force.

Robert's eyes went wide. The blurry, impossible speed of the white shadow suddenly snapped into sharp, crystal focus. He could see the micro-shifts in the creature's stance. He felt the exact mont the ice would break, sensing the enemy's intent a fraction of a second before the strike was even launched.

Ned did not need to explain the connection. He removed his hand, his grey eyes locking onto the Night King.

"Together," Ned commanded.

Guided by the flawless, predictive rhythm of the Force, Robert charged.

He moved with absolute, devastating precision. The massive, armored King beca a dark engine of iron and wrath.

Ned charged with him, matching his stride perfectly.

The dual assault hit the Night King like a falling mountain.

Robert swung Stormbreaker in a brutal, horizontal sweep. Guided by the shared awareness, Robert did not swing wildly; he tid the blow perfectly to intercept the Night King's parry.

As the Night King brought his ice sword up to block, Ned used a subtle, heavy push of the Force against the slick ice beneath Robert's boots, locking the King's footing firmly in place and multiplying the transferred montum of the strike.

The calculated force of Robert's swing sent a shuddering shockwave through the creature's pale arms, forcing him to step back.

Before the creature could reset, Ned was already there. He ducked beneath Robert's swing, stepping deep into the Night King's guard. He drove Winter upward in a vicious thrust.

The Night King deflected it, but he was struggling. He could match the supernatural speed of one opponent, but he was now fighting two n striking in flawless, synchronized tandem, moving as a single, perfectly coordinated mind.

Robert brought the heavy hamr-face down in an overhead smash. The Night King sidestepped, only to find Ned's twin blades sweeping toward his ribs exactly where Robert had anticipated he would move. The creature was forced to continually retreat, his boots sliding backward over the ice.

The King and the Warden fought with the unspoken, seamless brotherhood forged in their youth, elevated to lethal perfection by the old magic. Robert was the heavy, crushing pressure, using his massive swings to shatter the creature's guard and control the space.

Ned was the lethal precision, weaving his dark blades through the openings Robert created, nudging the angles of their strikes with slight telekinetic pressures to ensure they never faltered.

A sweeping backhand from Robert's hamr caught the edge of the Night King's pale armor. The magical ice cracked loudly, splintering away from the creature's shoulder, creating a deep structural weakness in the icy plate.

The Night King was entirely on the back foot, his piercing blue eyes flashing with a cold, desperate realization. He was being outmaneuvered.

The Night King stopped retreating.

He stepped directly into the path of Robert's swinging warhamr. As the heavy Valyrian steel rushed toward his head, the creature suddenly dropped completely flat against the ice, sliding underneath the crushing blow with impossible, fluid grace.

Ignoring Robert entirely, the Night King sprang up from the ice directly in front of Ned.

He did not swing his sword. He channeled his freezing magic into the blade, the pale ice glowing with a blinding, lethal blue light. With blinding speed, he launched a desperate, flawless, two-handed thrust aid squarely at the dead center of Ned Stark's chest.

It was a fatal attack. The speed and angle were perfect. Ned had just committed his weight to a forward strike, his twin blades caught out of position. He could not parry. He could not dodge.

A heavy, iron-clad shadow threw itself into the narrow gap.

Robert Baratheon did not have the ti to bring his warhamr around. He saw the pale, glowing blade rushing toward Ned's heart. Driven by a brotherly instinct that transcended crowns and kingdoms, the King of Westeros violently shoved Ned backward with his shoulder.

Robert threw his own massive chest squarely into the path of the execution strike.

The pale sword of ice pierced the thick, heavy plate steel of Robert's breastplate as easily as a needle passing through silk.

The blade drove deep into Robert's chest, sinking fully up to the hilt.

The sound of the battle ceased entirely. The roaring of the wildfire ring faded into a dull, distant hum.

Robert gasped. A horrific, wet gurgle escaped his lips as the ancient, magical cold of the blade instantly flooded his chest, freezing the blood in his lungs. His massive hands reached up, gripping the pale, smoking forearms of the Night King. He did not scream. He simply looked at the creature, blood pouring heavily from his mouth.

The Night King pulled the sword free with a brutal, sickening wrench.

Robert Baratheon collapsed. The heavy iron of his armor crashed against the frozen bay, his massive fra hitting the ice with a heavy, lifeless thud. Stormbreaker fell from his grip, clattering away into the dark.

Ned Stark stood frozen.

He stared at the massive, bleeding body of his oldest friend, lying motionless on the ice. He stared at the dark blood pooling around the stag. The man he had ridden with, fought for, and lied for. The brother who had carried the heavy, unwanted weight of a broken realm.

The shock hit Ned like a physical blow. The air rushed from his lungs. For a single, fleeting second, the stoic, iron-willed Warden of the North felt the crushing, suffocating weight of sheer despair.

And then, sothing in his mind snapped.

The thick, heavy iron chains of discipline and restraint that Eddard Stark had maintained for his entire life shattered completely. The calm, centered focus of the living earth—the quiet, grounding presence of the weirwood roots—was entirely burned away.

It was replaced by a darkness so profound, so terrifyingly absolute, that it seed to swallow the very light of the green flas surrounding them.

The dark side of the Force consud him.

It did not feel cold. It felt like a roaring, burning furnace of pure, unadulterated hatred and malice. It fed on his grief, twisting the sorrow into a heavy, suffocating aura of death. The air around Ned literally warped and distorted, a faint, dark ripple of crushing pressure radiating outward from his body.

Ned did not yell. He did not shed a tear. His face beca a mask of absolute, terrifying ruin. His grey eyes darkened, filled with a cold, murderous void that lacked any trace of human rcy.

The Night King turned away from the fallen King, raising his blood-stained ice sword to face the Warden of the North.

He expected a duel. He expected the human to charge.

Ned did not duel.

Ned raised his left hand and unleashed the full, crushing weight of the Force directly onto the Night King's unnatural cold. An invisible, crushing telekinetic pressure slamd down on the master of the dead like a falling mountain. The blinding blue aura of frost surrounding the creature instantly shattered.

The Night King was driven heavily to his knees, his movents pinned by the sheer weight pressing down against his shoulders. The thick ice beneath him cracked and spider-webbed under the invisible strain.

The Night King's blue eyes widened in genuine, panicked shock. His ancient magic, the cold that had built the Long Night, was completely stifled under the raw, dark fury of the pressure.

Ned stepped forward, his boots crunching slowly, deliberately over the ice. He held the creature pinned to the ground, watching the immortal being struggle helplessly against the unseen weight.

With a sharp, violent flick of his wrist, Ned broke the pin, throwing the Night King violently backward. The creature smashed heavily against the solid ice, sliding until he crashed into the blackened remains of the fourth trench.

The Night King scrambled to his feet, fighting the lingering suppression of his magic. He raised his ice sword, preparing to defend himself.

Ned t him.

He did not attack with wild, blind savagery. He attacked with absolute, flawless precision.

The Night King fought against the crushing pressure, raising his ice sword to block. But his movents were sluggish, his magical aura continually disrupted by the heavy weight of the earth pressing against him.

Ned did not try to overpower the ice sword with brute force. As the dark steel of Winter t the pale ice, Ned drove a sharp, concentrated burst of the Force directly into the weapon's center.

The ancient, magical blade, weakened by the disrupted aura and the pinpoint strike of the Force, shattered into a spray of useless frost.

The creature stumbled backward, entirely unard, its guard completely broken.

Ned did not pause. He did not hesitate.

He swung Winter in a tight, precise horizontal cut. He targeted the exact spot where Robert's hamr had struck monts earlier, shearing cleanly through the deep structural weakness in the creature's pale armor and severing the Night King's right arm entirely at the shoulder. The severed limb hit the ice and shattered into dust.

The Night King let out a high, shrieking hiss of pure agony, falling to his knees in the red dirt and lting ice.

Ned stood towering over the broken master of the cold. The dark aura surrounding the Warden of the North was suffocating, a heavy mantle of absolute doom. He looked down at the creature that had threatened his family, his ho, and had stolen his brother.

Ned raised Justice, gripping the dark, rippling hilt with both hands. He did not speak a final word of judgnt. He targeted the cracked center of the pale breastplate and simply drove the point of the Valyrian steel straight down.

The dark blade plunged flawlessly through the center of the Night King's chest, sinking deeply into the frozen earth beneath him.

The ancient magic holding the creature together violently ruptured.

The Night King did not bleed. A blinding, searing flash of cold blue light exploded from his chest, tearing through the pale flesh and shattered armor. The creature threw its head back, a silent, final scream tearing from its lips.

Then, the Night King completely shattered.

He exploded into a massive, rushing cloud of fine, pale snow and crushed ice. The sudden wind caught the dust, blowing it away into the smoke, leaving absolutely nothing behind but the dark Valyrian blade buried in the empty earth.

A heavy silence imdiately slamd down over the entire frozen bay.

Beyond the roaring ring of wildfire, the chaos of the battlefield ceased in a single, unified heartbeat. The tens of thousands of wights, the skeletal bears, the dead giants, and the pale riders sitting atop their rotting horses froze in place. The blue light in their eyes snuffed out simultaneously, like a thousand candles blown out by a single breath.

The massive horde of the dead collapsed. They fell to the ice in a sprawling, silent wave of lifeless bone and rotting rags, returning finally and permanently to the dust of the earth.

The Long Night was broken.

Inside the ring of fire, the dark, suffocating pressure surrounding Eddard Stark slowly began to bleed away. The heavy, burning fury faded, leaving behind only the cold, sharp pain of reality.

Ned pulled Justice from the dirt, his hands trembling slightly as the darkness released its grip on his mind. He sheathed his twin blades, the tal hissing softly in the quiet air.

He turned around.

Robert lay perfectly still on the ice. The heavy, dark blood was still pooling slowly from beneath his ruined breastplate.

Jai Lannister had rushed to his side, having cut down the final Walkers the mont the Night King fell. The Kingslayer was kneeling in the bloody slush, his hands pressing desperately against the gaping wound in the King's chest.

The victory had demanded a heavy toll. Lying motionless on the lting ice a few paces away was Ser Barristan Selmy, his white cloak soaked entirely in blood. Near the edge of the ruined fire wall, Ser Loras Tyrell lay dead, his fine plate armor shattered. They had fallen sowhere in the brutal, chaotic lee against the pale riders, their lives spent holding the line.

Ned ran across the slick ice, dropping heavily to his knees beside his oldest friend, the victory over the dark aning absolutely nothing in the face of the blood staining the snow.

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