10 Arrival
Sera
The sound changed first.
+25 Bonus
The open, biting wind of the trail died away, replaced by a deep, resonant echo. The wagon wheels stopped crunching over frozen dirt and began to strike something solid and smooth. Stone. Large, fitted blocks that sang under the horses’ hooves. We were passing under an archway so thick it felt like the mountain itself was leaning down to inspect us. I caught glimpses of carvings-deep, angular patterns in the rock-but we were moving too fast to read them.
This wasn’t a cave. It was a statement. Whoever built this wanted you to know, the second you crossed the threshold, that you were entering a place that didn’t just survive the elements-it owned them.
We emerged into a massive yard. I’d expected dark, cramped tunnels, but Ironmaw opened up like a cathedral. High above, fissures had been cut into the rock, letting in shafts of grey winter light that hit the dark stone walls. It wasn’t grim. The rock had been worked, planed down and finished with a precision that made the palace back home look flimsy.
The yard was a hive. Warriors dismounted, their breath hitching in the air. People moved with a quiet, lethal sort of efficiency. I saw women hauling crates of supplies and men leading horses toward stables built of heavy timber and iron. Children ran between the legs of the adults, their laughter echoing off the high ceilings. It was a territory that functioned like a well-oiled
machine.
I tried to stand. I grabbed the side of the wagon and swung my legs over the edge.
The moment my feet hit the stone, my knees folded. There was no pain, which was the problem. I couldn’t feel anything below my shins. My feet were just dead weights at the end of my legs. I staggered forward, the hard floor rushing up to meet me.
A hand clamped onto my upper arm, jerking me upright before I could eat the stone. It was a fast, heavy grip. For a split second, the smell of woodsmoke hit me and I thought it was Fenris. My heart did a panicked little dance in my ribs.
I looked up. It wasn’t him. It was one of the warriors from the trail. He looked at my face, then followed my gaze down to my useless legs. He didn’t look sorry for me; he just looked at a problem that needed fixing.
“Easy,” he said. His voice was blunt. “Don’t try to walk yet. The cold’s got into your joints.”
He hoisted me back onto the edge of the wagon with a grunt of effort. “Stay put. Don’t make it worse.”
He wasn’t even trying to be mean. He was just being practical.
I sat there, shivering, and watched the yard. Iron maw wasn’t exactly what I imagined. Cold yes. But I had imagined a more viking like lifestyle.
The people moved around, their furs were thick and expertly cured, some dyed deep crimson or forest green. The leather of their boots was supple and etched with detail. Even the iron brackets holding the torches were hand-forged with intricate twists. It was wealth, but not the kind I knew. In the South, wealth was delicate. Here, wealth was heavy. It was something you could lean
I found Fenris near the center of the yard. He was talking to a woman who looked like she was made of wire and shadow. She was tall, with a scar that ran along her jawline, and she was talking with her hands, pointing toward different sections of the fortress. Fenris just stood there, listening. He nodded once, twice. The woman didn’t wait for a goodbye; she just turned and strode off like she had ten other things to do and Fenris was just a box she’d checked off her list.
Fenris stood alone for a second. He took a long, slow breath, his chest expanding under his furs. It looked like he was finally letting the weight of the journey drop. Then he turned his head.
He looked straight at me.
I felt a wave of heat rool off from my chest down to my fingertips, making the scar on my neck pulse with a sudden, sharp rhythm. I looked away instantly, staring at my boots until the leather blurred.
1/2
When I looked back, he was gone.
+25 Bonus
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