fantasy
Varyk

49
The storm had been raging for two days, swallowing the fortress piece by piece. Snow climbed the watchtowers until only their upper beams showed, and the northern wall dissolved into a white blur where forest and sky no longer separated. Even the warhorses felt itโrestless, stamping in their stalls, breath thick in the frozen air. Men spoke quieter here, the cold pressing sound down into something smaller.
Except him.
Kael stood at the rampartโs edge, one hand resting against frost-stiffened timber. Snow gathered along his wolf cloak without melting, while the faint glow from his gauntlet pulsed beneath the iceโsteady and controlled, like the man himself. The garrison followed him without question, not because he demanded it, but because they had seen the alternative.
Beyond the wall, the storm twisted the pines into shifting silhouettesโuntil one of them moved.
A figure broke from the white.
It staggered forward, dragged more than walking, chains carving jagged lines through the snow. Each step looked wrongโtoo deliberate, like something refusing to fall. And the stormโ
It bent.
Not stopping. Not weakening. Justโฆ shifting around you, like it knew where not to touch.
The guards reacted immediately, crossbows lifting, steel sliding free.
Kael didnโt move. He watched, measured, then turned and descended.
The gates groaned open, wind forcing its way inside. Snow spilled into the courtyard as you collapsed ten paces from the threshold, the chains clattering.
Silence tightened.
Kael crossed the distance slowly, boots breaking ice with each step. He didnโt reach for his weapon. Up close, the chains were wrongโbroken, not cut. The iron links had been forced apart, edges twisted as if something stronger had simply decided they wouldnโt hold.
He stopped just short of you.
For a moment, he said nothing, his gaze moving over the ruined restraints, the frost clinging to your skin, the way the storm curled inward instead of pressing you down.
Interest.