Primordial Heir: Nine Stars-Chapter 389: Desire to grow stronger 2
Khione stood at the edge of the frozen valley, her ice-blue eyes scanning the endless white expanse before her. She had walked for what felt like hours, searching for the right place to begin her training. But walking was slow. Inefficient, waste of time.
She needed to see more.
With a thought, she summoned her ice wings.
Prana flowed from her core, cold and precise, shaping itself into two magnificent wings behind her shoulder blades. They were thin, elegant, each feather a razor-sharp shard of crystalline ice that caught the pale light and scattered it into rainbows. They beat once, twice, and lifted her from the ground.
The world opened beneath her.
From the air, the frozen tundra revealed its true nature. The ice fields stretched to every horizon, broken only by the distant mountains and the occasional dark smudge of rock. Patterns emerged—cracks and ridges and valleys that were invisible from the ground. It was beautiful, in a cold and lonely way.
She flew higher, letting the wind carry her, her wings adjusting with each shift in current. The cold intensified as she rose, but she welcomed it. It was her element, her home.
And then she saw it.
Below her, nestled between two massive ice ridges like a jewel in a setting, was a small lake. Its surface was perfectly still, reflecting the pale sky above. But it was the color that drew her eye—a deep, shimmering blue, so pure it seemed to glow from within.
Even from this height, she could feel it. The temperature here was lower than anywhere else in this frozen world. Lower than should have been possible. And the prana—the ambient energy was thick here, swirling, gathering around that lake like moths to a flame.
The heart, she thought. This is the heart of this place.
She descended slowly, her wings folding as she approached the shore. The air grew colder with each passing meter, until even she—Khione Eleanor Undine, the Ice Queen, who had been born in winter and raised in frost—felt a faint chill. Not painful. Just... present. A reminder that even she had limits.
She landed at the water's edge and dismissed her wings. The lake stretched before her, impossibly clear, impossibly blue. Its surface was smooth as glass, untouched by wind or current. She knelt and touched it with one finger.
The cold that shot through her was staggering. Not damaging—her body adapted instantly, accepted it, welcomed it. But it was intense. Pure. This water held something special, something ancient and powerful.
Without hesitation, she stood and reached for the clasp of her training clothes.
They fell away, one piece at a time, until she stood in only her undergarments—a simple black ensemble that clung to her curves. Her pale skin gleamed in the diffuse light, untouched by the cold that would have killed an ordinary person. Her white hair spilled down her back, a waterfall of silk against her shoulders.
For a moment, she simply stood there, feeling the air against her skin, the cold seeping into every pore. Then she stepped forward and entered the lake.
The shock was immediate. Her body twitched, muscles contracting against the sudden intensity. It was like being stabbed with a thousand frozen needles, each one sending a jolt through her nervous system. She gasped, her breath misting in front of her face, and kept moving.
Deeper. Colder. The water rose past her waist, her chest, her shoulders. She took a final breath and dove.
The world became blue.
She swam downward, her eyes open, watching the light fade as she descended.
The cold intensified with each meter, pressing against her skin, her muscles, her bones. It was a test. A crucible. And she welcomed it.
Her lungs didn't burn. Her body, adapted to the law of ice, found ways to extract oxygen from the water itself—a secondary benefit of her mastery over the sub-law of water. She could breathe here, for a time. An hour, maybe two. It would have to be enough.
She swam deeper still, until the light from above was just a faint memory, until she floated in absolute blue silence at the heart of the lake.
And there, suspended in the frozen depths, she stopped.
She reached into her spatial ring and withdrew two small wooden boxes. Hers. And the one Nero had given her. The Heart Clearing Pills.
She opened them both and swallowed the pills together.
The sensation began immediately—a coolness that traveled down her throat, spreading through her chest, her stomach, her limbs. It wasn't unpleasant. It was like drinking ice water on a hot day, but multiplied a thousand times.
Then the real work began.
The cold of the lake pressed against her from outside. The abundant prana of this place flowed into her from everywhere. And the energy of the pills, potent and pure, ignited within her core.
She closed her eyes and focused.
The process was grueling. The pills worked through her body, finding impurities, flushing them out. She felt them—tiny blockages she hadn't known existed, old tensions, accumulated waste from years of training and battle. Each one dissolved, washed away, leaving her cleaner, purer.
Her core pulsed, expanded, absorbed the energy. It grew, not dramatically but noticeably, its capacity increasing as more and more prana was stored within. The ice-cold energy of the lake added to it, a steady stream of power that never seemed to end.
And through it all, the cold. The bitter, beautiful, crushing cold of the deepest water. It tested her, pushed her, forced her body to adapt or fail.
She did not fail.
Time lost meaning in the blue silence. Minutes or hours—she couldn't tell. But gradually, inexorably, she felt herself changing. Strengthening. Rising.
Her realm shifted. From Adept Mage to peak Adept Mage. Close now, so close, to the Master stage that had seemed so distant just days ago. Her talent was undeniable, if not for the appearance of the emperor of monsters (Nero), well, it wasn't all bad as it serve as motivation to grow stronger quickly not to fall too much behind.
But there was more.
Even as her body grew stronger, her core expanded, her power increased—she was aware of something else. The cold of this place, its unique, ancient quality, was seeping into her understanding. It was different from her ice. Her ice was sharp, precise, controlled. This cold was... patient. Timeless. It had existed here for eons, waiting, simply being.
Could she incorporate that into her spells? Into her very law?
She opened her eyes in the blue depths and began to study. To feel. To understand.
The cold of the lake was not just temperature. It was a presence, a consciousness, a memory of ages. It held the echoes of ancient winters, of ice ages long past, of the first snow that ever fell on this world. If she could learn from it, could absorb even a fraction of its essence— 𝙛𝒓𝓮𝒆𝔀𝒆𝙗𝓷𝒐𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝓶
Her spells would become stronger. Her control would deepen. She might even create something new, something no Ice mage had ever achieved.
She floated in the heart of the lake, her body purified, her core growing, her mind reaching toward mysteries older than her clan, older than the academy, older than anything she had ever known.
And in the silence, in the cold, in the blue—Khione Eleanor (A/N:Ellie courtesy to her man) Undine began to truly understand what it meant to be the Ice Queen.







