~Narrated by one who watches from the spaces between heartbeats, who knows that rcy and cruelty are often indistinguishable, who understands that the truest tests are those we never expect to face.~
If you had followed Eris Igniva into those eastern caverns, dear reader, you would have understood why so few returned from the Star-Shard Hunt unchanged.
The tunnels were not rely cold... they were the architect of cold, the place where winter itself was born and nurtured before being released into the world above.
The farther she went, the more the light from the sun bled away into nothing, as if giving way to the true nature of ice. Darkness.
Ice formations twisted through the dim light like frozen lightning, creating passages that seed designed by sothing with no concept of human navigation.
So corridors were wide enough for armies to march through; others narrowed until Eris had to turn sideways, her furs scraping against walls that wept with condensation that froze the mont it touched air.
The blue fla of her torch cast dancing shadows that made the Ice appear alive, breathing, watching.
Every surface reflected light in fractured patterns that hurt to look at directly, creating the illusion of movent in peripheral vision that kept her hand close to her consecrated blade.
She walked for what felt like hours but might have been less... ti beca elastic in the dark, stretching and compressing according to rules that had nothing to do with mortal asurent.
The path descended steadily, taking her deeper into the mountain’s frozen heart, past chambers where ice had ford in pillars thick as ancient trees, through galleries where the ceiling disappeared into darkness so complete her torch couldn’t pierce it.
There were other things in the darkness too. She heard them: the skitter of claws on ice, the sound of breathing that ca from passages she couldn’t see, the occasional crack of sothing massive shifting its weight in caverns beyond her limited vision.
The creatures of Nevareth’s deep places, drawn by the scent of warm blood and living flesh, curious about this intruder but not yet desperate enough to attack.
Not yet.
The cold was relentless, patient, thodical in its assault, reminding her of the river of Aneithra. It crept through her furs despite their quality, finding gaps and weaknesses, stealing heat with the efficiency of a practiced thief.
Her fingers ached inside her gloves. Her face burned where exposed skin t frozen air. Her breath ca in clouds that crystallized instantly, creating tiny storms of ice particles with every exhalation.
And beneath her skin, her fire magic stirred restlessly, responding to the threat with instinctive protective fury.
It wanted to rise, wanted to flood her body with heat, wanted to turn her into a walking furnace that would lt this entire frozen hell into steam and mory.
She suppressed it with iron will, allowing only the barest thread of warmth to circulate through her core... just enough to prevent hypothermia, not enough to announce her presence to every magical predator within sensing range. Control was everything. Control was survival.
The path opened suddenly into sothing that might have been a forest once, millennia ago, before ice claid it.
Trees stood frozen in mid-growth, their branches reaching toward a ceiling lost in shadow, their trunks thick with layers of accumulated ice that made them seem like sculptures rather than once-living things.
The torch light caught in their crystalline surfaces, splitting and refracting until the entire space glowed with eerie, ghostly luminescence.
Eris moved through this petrified forest carefully, aware that ice-preserved trees could crack without warning, that their branches could fall like spears, that the ground beneath them might be hollow, concealing crevasses deep enough to swallow cities.
She passed abandoned hunting shrines, small altars built by previous generations of hunters, offerings left to Aenithra in hopes of safe passage and successful kills.
Most were ancient, their carved symbols worn smooth by ti and frost. So contained the frozen remains of those who’d made it this far but no farther, their bodies preserved perfectly by the cold, eternally kneeling in prayer that went unanswered.
The sight should have been unsettling. Instead, Eris found it oddly comforting. At least they’d died doing sothing they believed mattered. At least their ending had purpose, even if that purpose was simply participating in tradition older than mory.
The caves beyond the frozen forest bore marks of previous inhabitants, claw gouges in the ice walls, deep furrows carved by sothing with talons the size of daggers. So of the marks were old, smoothed by ti. Others were fresh, the ice around them still showing the fractured patterns of recent violence.
Sothing large lived down here. Multiple sothings, probably.
Eris tightened her grip on the torch and kept walking.
The sound reached her before the sight... a low, pained growling that echoed through the tunnels with a quality that spoke of suffering rather than threat. She followed it cautiously, one hand on her blade, her senses stretched to their limits, expecting ambush, expecting trap, expecting anything except what she found.
The clearing... if one could call a small widening in the tunnel system a clearing... was lit by natural light in the ice walls, creating a soft blue glow that rendered her torch almost unnecessary. And in the center of that glow, bleeding into snow that had sohow accumulated in this deep place, lay a Frostfang Lynx.
Beautiful didn’t begin to describe it. The creature was magnificent... easily the size of a horse, with fur so white it seed to generate its own light, ice-blue eyes that glowed with intelligence and pain in equal asure, muscles rippling beneath its pelt even in its weakened state. Its teeth, visible as it panted, were translucent crystal, each one capable of tearing through steel.
It was also dying.
The trap around its hind leg was old, forgotten, probably set by hunters long dead. Cruel iron teeth had closed on flesh and bone, and the creature’s attempts to free itself had only driven them deeper. Blood... darker than it should be, thick with cold... pooled beneath its body, steaming faintly in the frozen air.
The lynx’s eyes found Eris, and for a mont, they simply stared at each other. Predator and queen. Beast and woman. Two creatures caught in circumstances neither had chosen.
Eris could kill it easily. Should kill it, by any practical asure. The creature was already dying, its strength fading with each labored breath.
One quick thrust with the consecrated blade, straight through the eye into the brain, and it would be over. She could take the Star-Shard and return to camp with hours to spare, her task completed, her worthiness proven.
The rational choice was obvious.
But sothing made her hesitate.
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