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The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 513: The Frost mother’s Blood
Eris stood in the wreckage of her own destruction, her lungs burning with the sharp, metallic scent of ozone and cooling blood.
She held herself with a rigid, artificial precision, every muscle locked into a performance of stability.
The reality was far messier. Three of her ribs were definitely cracked, grinding against one another with every shallow breath.
The shoulder wound from the ice-spear hadn’t closed; it wept a slow, hot trail of crimson down her arm, staining the white-gold light she radiated. But the most terrifying thing was the seal.
Across her collarbone and down her sternum, the fracture lines had begun to spread. They weren’t just internal anymore.
They were visible on her skin, glowing with a faint, sickly orange light, hairline cracks in a porcelain doll that had been dropped one too many times.
Pyronox’s power was no longer a river she could direct; it was a leak. It seeped through those cracks, unstable and jagged, and with every flicker of her magic, she felt the fissures widen by fractions of a millimeter.
Her consciousness was swimming, the edges of her vision fraying into a dark, static-filled vignette.
She breathed through the nausea, forcing her spine into a straight line. She kept her expression neutral, a mask of cold, imperial indifference.
She knew Soren was watching. She knew that if he saw the cracks, if he realized she was a vessel about to shatter, he would abandon his hunt for Vetra.
He would come to her, and in that moment of fracture, Vetra would strike. She knew his heart too well; his love was his greatest strength, but here, it was the only leverage Vetra had left.
The two remaining Elder Syvrak, ancient behemoths that had lived through eras of fire and frost, slowly turned their massive, wedge-shaped heads away from Vetra.
Their loyalty to her contract was a shallow thing compared to the primordial instinct currently screaming in their blood.
They didn’t see a human girl anymore. They saw the vessel of the Flameborn. They saw Pyronox, their ancient enemy, leaking through a cracked shell. To kill the vessel was to silence the dragon forever.
They began to move, reorienting their massive bulks with a slow, deliberate lethality.
They spread apart, carving a flanking angle through the rubble, their tails leaving deep furrows in the frost-covered stone. Vetra watched them go, her scorched face twisting into a small, serrated smile.
She didn’t call them back. If the elders tore Eris apart, Soren would fracture. And a fractured god, no matter how much divine light he bled, was a god she could manipulate.
Soren’s awareness, however, was no longer human. He didn’t just see the battlefield; he felt it. Every shift in weight, every spike in blood pressure, every malicious thought was a ripple in the stillness he now commanded. He felt the elders shift their intent toward Eris before they had taken two steps.
"I wouldn’t," he said.
The voice was low, vibrating with the weight of a falling glacier. It wasn’t a threat. It wasn’t a scream of defiance. It was a simple statement of fact, delivered with the terrifying certainty of a man telling a child that the floor is wet.
The first Elder, driven by an ancient pride that predated the written word, ignored him. It lunged, a seventy-foot blur of scales and hatred, aiming its serrated jaws directly at Eris.
Soren didn’t dodge. He took one step, placing himself between the monster and his wife, and simply reached out.
The impact should have leveled the courtyard. Instead, there was a sickening, muffled thud. Soren’s hand, pale, human, and glowing with shifting runes, caught the Elder by the lower jaw mid-lunge.
He didn’t just stop it; he anchored it. The momentum of a multi-ton creature, traveling at the speed of a strike, was halted instantly. Soren didn’t even slide back an inch.
Eris watched, her heart hammering against her cracked ribs. A mage can’t do that, she thought. No amount of physical enhancement, no bloodline magic she had ever studied in this life or the last, could explain the image before her: a man holding a primordial god of the deep by its face with a single hand.
She remembered Ellyn’s secret drawings, the anatomical precision of the ancient murals, the specific curve of the horns, the way the eyes looked like shattered diamonds.
She looked at Soren’s eyes, the vertical slits of black amidst the blue-white radiance, and the conclusion settled into her bones like lead. He wasn’t just blessed by Aenithra. He wasn’t just her champion.
He’s her, she realized, a cold shiver of awe running through her. He’s the dragon made flesh.
"The Frostmother’s blood," the Elder rumbled, its voice a dissonant harmony of grinding ice. "Wasted in human meat. Give us the vessel, and we will grant you a clean death."
Soren tilted his head, the movement eerily graceful. "No."
"You cannot hold us all," the Elder hissed, its tail lashing the ground. "You are one. We are ancient."
"You’re right," Soren replied softly. "I can’t hold you all. Fortunately..." He looked the beast directly in its iridescent eye. "I don’t need to."
He didn’t use a quick strike. He didn’t use a blast of frost. He concentrated his power into the grip he held on the creature’s jaw.
He began to thread ice into its very being, not around the scales, but into every nerve channel, every primordial memory, every instinct the beast possessed. He found the creature’s oldest fear and gave it form.
The Elder began to scream, a sound that shook the very foundations of the palace. Ice didn’t form on it; it grew from it. From the inside out, every scale, every ridge, and every tooth began to crystallize, turning into a translucent, frozen monument.
Soren released his grip and stepped back one casual pace. For a second, the Elder stood there, a perfect, sixty-foot statue of a dying god. Then, it shattered. It didn’t break into pieces; it unmade itself, every fragment of its being exploding into a fine, crystalline dust that coated the ruined courtyard.







