They say when you know youâre about to die, your life flashes before your eyes. For me? It wasnât flashes. It was a slow, dragging ache. A list of all the things I didnât do. The names I didnât learn. The letters I never wrote. The graves I never got to mark. Regret doesnât come screaming at the end. It just sits with youâquiet, heavy, like a last drink you know you shouldnât take. But hereâs the thing: I never expected to grow old. Not with the work I do. Not with the things Iâve seen. I was made for blood and ash, for rage and silence. Some people are born under stars. Me? I think I was born under smoke.
And now thereâs nothing left between me and the frost-bitch but breath and rage. She stands thereâten feet tall, carved from glacier and fury, a cathedral of death in the shape of a woman. Her body is stone and ice, her skin a lattice of runes glowing white-blue with leyline fire. Her eyes burn like the world before it ends. But she bled once. Which means she can bleed again.
So I tighten the grip on my axes, roll my shoulders, and smile through a mouth full of blood. Because this? This is the kind of fight I was born to lose. The monstrosity moved first. She surged across the floor like an avalanche had learned to walk, her limbs trailing frost and splintering ice as she closed the distance. I dove left, rolled through the impact radius of her first strikeâher arm coming down like a siege towerâand felt the ground shudder as it missed me by inches.
My back hit the ice wall. Hard. I pushed off and came at her low, my left axe arcing for her exposed flank. Steel met stone with a crack like thunder. My axe bit deepâdeeper than it shouldâveâand tore a chunk of glacial armor free. Beneath the plating, flesh glowed with swirling blue veins, like leyline fire had been tattooed into muscle. She hissedâan awful, hollow sound that echoed across the chamber like the wind howling through a tomb.
She backhanded me with her other arm. I blocked with the right axe, but the force carried me off my feet and slammed me into the frozen ground. Something cracked in my ribs. Maybe two somethings. Breathing started to feel like I owed someone money for it. Didnât matter. I rolled, shoved off the floor, and charged again.
This time, I feinted left and caught her in the side of the knee with a tight, brutal swing. Another shard of armor went flying. The giant-witch staggered. I followed throughâan uppercut with the right axe that cleaved a vertical line up her side, the blade catching on stone and screaming sparks as it dragged free. Her response was a roar, deep and ancient, and her fist came down like a mountain collapsing. I dodged late. Not late enough.
The blow glanced off my shoulder, and something went numb immediately. The left axe flew from my hand, skittering across the chamber and vanishing into shadows.
That was when she kicked me. I flew. Hit the far wall. The air left my lungs. For a moment, the world spun into black and ringing. But Iâd taken worse. I always took worse. I staggered up, blood slick in my mouth, my right axe still in hand. The giant-witch came at me again, stepping over the remains of her fallen and the ruins of the ritual site sheâd tried so hard to protect. Her footfalls were earthquakes. Her breath froze the air.
I met her charge head-on. I ducked her first swing, slid low under her reach, and slammed my axe into her ribs. The handle cracked. The blade shattered. Damn thing had been with me for years. Hell of a way to go. But I didnât stop. I dropped the haft, balled up my fist, and hit her in the stomach with everything I had. It was like punching the side of a mountainâbut I saw it.
A flicker. A stumble.
And when she recoiled, I followedâblow after blow, fist and elbow, boot and knee, hammering into her like a battering ram made of spite. Every hit tore more armor loose. Every strike burned through the last of my strength. We ended locked in a breathless stare, blood and frost slick on the floor between us, her body missing chunks of ice and rune-light flickering erratic across her chest.
I could barely stand. Every part of me hurt. My knuckles bled. My lungs screamed. But I was still up. And she was slowing. She tilted her headâlike a beast curious about the knife in its ribsâand spoke. Her voice was a hollow echo, like wind through a graveyard.
âYou are kin to giants. I feel the blood. You were meant to rule beside me, not die beneath me.â
I spat blood. Wiped my mouth with the back of my hand.
âYouâre not a queen,â I said. âYouâre a corpse in a frost suit playing at power.â
Her eyes narrowed. I took a step forward.
âIâm not your kin. Iâm your end.â
And with that, I picked up the broken half of my axe, gripped it like a dagger, and got ready to finish what weâd started. There was no sound. No cry. No scream or warhorn. Just something deeper. Something that hummed through bone and marrow like the slow tightening of a noose. We both felt it. Me and the frost-witch. A wordless signal passed between usâa promise, maybe. Or a curse. Either way, we moved. Not out of rage. Not even duty. It was just time.
I rose to meet her. And then my foot slipped. Maybe it was the frost. Maybe a patch of half-frozen blood. Couldâve been hers. Couldâve been mine. Hell, at that point, it couldâve belonged to the gods. Didnât matter. My boot slid, and my weight went wrong, and just like thatâI faltered. That was all she needed. She hit me like a runaway freight wagon, all jagged ice and ancient hate wrapped in stone. I tried to roll with the punch, twist with it, bleed off the force. But it wasnât enough. Not by a mile.
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The world spun sideways. I flewâarms flailing, ribs cracking, back screamingâuntil the cavern wall caught me like an iron embrace. I slid down onto the ice, trailing blood behind me like a broken banner. I came to rest beside what was left of Tavor. The spear that took him was still embedded, pinning him to the wall like a warning. His eyes stared outâglass-hard and unmoving. Empty.
Accusing. He didnât say anything. He didnât have to. But I muttered back anyway.
âI know. I know.â
I wasnât gonna live long enough for his ghost to haunt me. That was the only mercy left. I coughedâpain lancing through my ribs like glassâand checked the rest of me. One arm still worked. Barely. My breath wheezed out in ragged pulls. My vision kept trying to collapse in on itself. My heart sounded like it was remembering a slower rhythm.
But the worst part? I was alone. Or at least, thatâs what I thought. The frost-witch knew it too. She moved toward me slow, like death out for a stroll. Her shape shifted as she walkedâice cracking and refreezing with every step, stone flexing with unnatural grace. She didnât run. She didnât need to. She knew I was finished.
She started to talkâbecause of course she did. They always talk.
âYour strength was impressive,â she said, voice echoing off the cavern walls, hollow and cold and too large for the body that carried it. âBut it will serve me now. My form is only the beginning. I will bind the glacier to my will. Your blood will feed the leyline, and I will rise stronger still.â
I didnât answer. My tongue felt like leather. My jaw wouldnât unclench. She kept walking. Taunting. And then, from a patch of dark near the far wall, came a voice I knew better than my own shadow.
âSargeâ¦â
I turned, neck screaming as I moved. Maren. Gods. Maren. She was crawling toward me, leaving a trail of blood, her face pale and lips cracked. One eye swollen shut, armor broken in two places, but her handâher hand still held tight to something.
A vial. She pressed it into my palm, weak but determined. It was small. Smooth. Cold as the ice around us. Not army-issue. This was the kind of potion you had to earn⦠or steal. Maren looked up at me, just long enough to smile.
âNot stolen,â she whispered. âAcquired.â
And then her head lolled. I didnât know if she was dead or just gone to the black for a while. Didnât matter. There wasnât time for grief. Not yet. I looked at the vial. Officerâs seal. Crystal, not glass. Concentrated magic swirling inside like bottled lightning. I didnât have the strength to uncork it. I barely had the strength to stay conscious. But I had teeth. So I shoved the whole thing in my mouth and bit down.
It shattered.
The taste hit me like fire and metalâblood and magic, rage and light. The healing potion poured down my throat in a flood of glass and grit. My body screamed. My veins lit up. Pain tore through me as bones knit wrong and right again, as lungs cleared and strength came roaring back like a wild dog finally let off its chain.
I spat shards of glass and laughed through the blood.
âDamn,â I muttered. âThe officers really do get the good stuff.â
I rose. One hand tight. One arm steady. A fire burning in my chest that didnât come from potions or magic. The frost-witch saw me stand. She stopped. Her expression twistedânot with fear, but something close enough to kiss it. I didnât speak. Not yet. But I was coming. And I was going to end her.
The potion worked fast. Too fast, maybe. All the cuts, the bruises, the ragged breaths and crooked jointsâthey vanished like bad memories. My shattered shoulder knit itself back together with a pull and a pop, the pain receding behind a wall of magic and heat. My heartbeat evened out. The dizziness cleared. There was energy in my veins againâhot, clean, alive. I spit the last shards of glass onto the floor and watched the frost-witch hesitate.Her steps slowed.
Good. I grinned.
And then I crouched, low and ready, fingers curling around something heavy at my feet. Tavorâs axe. Heâd never been one for hand-to-hand. Carried it more like a walking stick, really. But the damn thing was forged solid, dwarven steel, wrapped in runes, the head broad and brutal. For a normal soldier, it was a two-handed beast meant for cleaving through armor. But in my hands?
It was a throwing axe. A fine one. And it sang. I felt the enchantment coiled insideâsomething simple and old, stitched by Tavorâs own hands. Fire. Not flashy, not some nobleâs pyrotechnic display. Just enough heat to remind you that frost can burn too.
âThanks, Tavor,â I muttered.
Then I ran. The frost-witch raised her arms, leyline fire swirling in the air around her like a blizzard learning how to scream. Runes flared across her body. Ice cracked. Stone flexed. She was afraid. I could feel itâradiating off her in waves.
Not fear of death. Fear of me.
I hit her low, driving Tavorâs axe into her thigh just above the knee. Bone cracked beneath the swing. The enchantment kicked, flames licking across the ice plating. She shrieked, a sharp, hollow sound that echoed like a glacier splitting in half. I didnât give her time to recover.
I wrenched the axe free and pivoted, slamming the haft into her jaw. She staggered. I drove my boot into her chest, using her weight to push off and spin behind her. Another blowâthis time to her spineâshattered the runes carved there. The glow dimmed. She whirled, clawed hand raised, but I ducked under the arc and drove my elbow into her ribs. Ice shattered. Frost sprayed.
Her arm lashed out, caught my side. Pain bloomed, but I rolled with it. Tavorâs axe came up again and I brought it down on her shoulder, the fire runes sparking to life, carving through the glacier-grown armor and deep into the joint. She screamed again. Louder.
Good.
She tried to run. A shuffle. A limp. A desperate move that might have worked if I hadnât been born for this exact kind of moment. I followed. Step by step, blow by blow, I chopped her down to size. The fire in the axe bit deeper each time. Chunks of ice and enchanted stone sloughed off her body like shattered glass. Every time she reached for magic, I broke the focus. Every time she tried to speak a spell, I drove the breath out of her lungs.
It was a brawl now. No finesse. No form. Just hate and steel. She dropped to one knee, breath ragged, face half-melted from the fire, the leyline glow sputtering in her veins. The chamber flickered, the storm dying with her. I walked up slow, axe dragging behind me like a reaperâs scythe.
Her head lifted, barely.
âYou couldâve ruled,â she rasped, voice broken, echoing. âYou are of the blood. You carry the strength of the old ones. Youââ
I didnât let her finish.
âYou talk too much.â I raised the axe high over my head. âAnd your endâs long overdue.â
Then I brought it down. Straight through her skull. The blade bit through bone and ice and stone, and Tavorâs fire exploded in a final blaze of angry light. The glow in her eyes died. Her body froze in place for a heartbeat.
Then cracked. And crumbled. The frost-witchâthis ancient, arrogant, glacier-fed monsterâcollapsed in a pile of stone and steam, the last breath of her magic hissing into the air like a dying curse. I dropped the axe beside her remains, leaned on one knee, and let myself breathe. It was over. For now. Sort ofâ¦