Chapter 8: The Frozen Frontier
The road north did not welcome travelers.
It endured them.
Days passed without comfort. The air grew colder with every mile, not gradually but persistently, like something tightening its grip around the land. The ground hardened, grass vanished, and even the sky felt distant.
Lucien rode at the front. Not by command, but because no one contested it. Behind him, the remaining knights followed in silence. They had seen too much already to question direction.
Malen walked. Each step measured. Each movement controlled.
Gandalf moved without leaving marks, his long beard trailing just above the snow, untouched by frost his mount walking with him.
By the seventh day, the wind began. Not howlingâpressing. Constant. Heavy.
Then the fortress appeared.
Stone walls. Thick. Functional. Runes faintly glowing along the outer structure. And beneath itâa compact city, buried under layers of snow, built not to grow but to survive.
"This is it," a knight muttered. "Northern frontier."
Lucien didnât answer.
Because he could feel it.
Something in the air.
Distorted.
Gandalf spoke quietly. "Miasma."
Lucienâs gaze sharpened. "From the tear?"
"Leaking," Gandalf replied. "Not sealed. Not open. Just... bleeding into the world."
Malen added, "It changes things."
Lucien understood.
Corruption.
Then came the sound.
Low. Distant. Carried by wind.
A growl.
The knights stiffened instantly.
"Too early," one said.
Lucien looked ahead.
Shapes moved across the white horizon.
Fast.
Wrong.
"Theyâre coming," another knight said.
The fortress gates began opening. Guards shouted from above.
"Incoming group! Move!"
But the beasts were faster.
They broke through the snowline like shadows tearing across the ground.
Ten.
Noâmore.
Large wolf-like forms, but distorted. Uneven fur, elongated limbs, glowing eyes dim with something unnatural. Their movement was uncoordinated,messy with no particular rhythm.
"Hold formation!" a knight shouted.
Malen stepped forward.
"Stay behind," he said.
Lucien didnât move back.
The beasts accelerated.
Charging now.
No hesitation.
No fear.
Only hunger.
The first impact came like a storm breaking.
A beast lunged.
Malen moved.
One step.
And That was all.
His blade rose and fell in a single motion.
The creature split mid-air, its body collapsing before it even hit the ground.
No resistance.
No struggle.
Just... gone.
The others didnât stop.
They surged forward.
Three broke left toward the knights.
Two circled wide.
The rest came straight.
"Engage!" the captain shouted.
The knights met them.
Steel clashed against claws.
A beast slammed into a shield, sending the knight sliding back across the snow. Another leapt, jaws snapping, only to be intercepted mid-air by a spear thrust.
Blood hit the snow.
Dark.
And wrong,too wrong .
Lucien moved.
Not forward.
But sideways.
He wasnât ready for direct combat.
But he wasnât going to stand still either.
A smaller beast broke through the flank.
Faster than the others.
It rushed to him.
Lucien reacted.
He stepped back, pulling the short blade he had taken earlier.
The beast lunged.
He shifted barely surviving.
The claws grazed his side instead of tearing through him.
Pain flared.
But he didnât stop,here stopping meant death.
He turned.
Slashed.
The blade cut shallow.
Not enough.
The beast snarled, turning again.
Faster now.
Angrier.
Lucienâs grip tightened.
This was the difference.
Between himâ
And everything else here.
Thenâ
The air changed.
Gandalf raised his hand.
Mana gathered.
Not violently.
But completely.
The snow around them lifted slightly, swirling upward in controlled motion.
A formation formed instantly.
Large-scale.
And Perfect.
"Step back," Gandalf said calmly.
Malen didnât move.
The beasts didnât understand.
That was their mistake.
The spell activated.
Flame.
Not wild,Not spreading.
But Controlled.
Lines of fire erupted across the battlefield, forming a precise grid. Every movement of the beasts was tracked, predicted, and intercepted.
One leaptâ
And was engulfed mid-air.
Another tried to retreatâ
The flames closed around it, compressing inward.
A third charged throughâ
Only to be struck by a concentrated burst that erased it completely.
The battlefield turned red-orange.
Heat against cold.
Fire against snow.
The knights staggered back, giving space.
Even they couldnât operate within that precision.
Malen moved again.
Through the flames.
Untouched.
A beast broke through the edge of Gandalfâs spell.
Stronger than the others.
Larger.
Malen met it head-on.
It struck first.
Claws crashing down.
Malen blocked.
Not with his blade.
With his arm.
The impact cracked the ground beneath him.
He didnât move not even an inch.
His other hand came up.
Grabbed the beast by the throat.
Squeezed.
The creature struggled.
Thrashed.
Clawed.
But none of it mattered
Malen lifted it.
Then slammed it into the ground.
Once.
Then again.
And again the third impact ended it.
Silence began to fall.
The remaining beasts tried to retreat.
Gandalf didnât allow it.
The flames shifted and erased the beast and their corpses both.
And thenâ
Nothing.
The battlefield stilled.
Snow fell again.
Light.
Quiet.
As if nothing had happened.
Bodies of corrupted beasts lay scattered across the ground.
Some burned.
Some broken.
All dead.
The gates of the fortress fully opened now.
Soldiers rushed out, but slowed as they saw the scene.
One of them spoke.
"...What happened here?"
No one answered immediately.
Lucien stood still.
Breathing steady.
But his mindâ
Was not.
This was the frontier.
Not theory.
Not training.
Reality.
And heâ
Was still far behind it.
Malen wiped his blade once.
"Sheath your weapons," he said calmly.
Gandalf lowered his hand.
The mana dispersed instantly.
"They will come again," he said.
Not a warning.
A fact.
Lucien looked toward the white horizon.
Endless.
Cold.
Unforgiving.
And alive with things that did not belong.
For the first timeâ
He understood what exile truly meant.
Not removal.
But placement into something that would either break himâ
Or force him to become something else.
The system flickered faintly.
[COMBAT ENVIRONMENT DETECTED]
[REWARD UPDATED]
Lucien exhaled slowly.
Good.
Let it come.
End of Chapter 8