Primordial Heir: Nine Stars-Chapter 391: Growing Stronger

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Chapter 391: Growing Stronger

The frozen world stretched deeper than she had imagined.

Khione flew for a long moment almost two hours, her ice wings carrying her over ridges and valleys, through canyons carved by ancient glaciers, past mountains of blue-white crystal that rose like frozen waves against the pale sky. The cold intensified with each mile. The prana in the air grew thicker, richer, more demanding.

She found the next testing ground in a basin ringed by cliffs of black ice. The floor of the basin was a maze of frozen pillars and shattered boulders, perfect for cover, perfect for ambushes. And the creatures that lived here were stronger than the trolls.

Frost Wyrms.

They were not dragons. They were something older, something that had evolved in this frozen hell.

Long, serpentine bodies covered in overlapping plates of ice. Six limbs ending in claws that could shred steel easily. Eyes that glowed with a pale, hungry light. They moved through the frozen landscape like fish through water, their bodies flowing around obstacles, their tails lashing with terrible speed.

Khione counted seven of them in the basin. Each was easily thirty feet long. Each was a killing machine perfected by ages of brutal evolution.

She descended into the maze and began.

Chaaa!

The first wyrm found her within minutes. It erupted from behind a pillar of ice, its jaws opening wide, its body already coiling to strike. She released Frozen Time instinctively, the particles streaming from her hands, seeking the creature’s pores, its eyes, its open mouth.

The wyrm slowed. Its jaws closed around where she had been a moment before. Its coils tightened on empty air.

Fswoosh!

She was already moving, her wings carrying her to a higher ledge, her eyes tracking the creature’s movements. The spell was working, but not as effectively as against the trolls. The wyrms were adapted to this cold. Their bodies were denser, their systems slower to react to outside influence.

The wyrm turned, its glowing eyes finding her new position. It lunged again, faster this time, the spell’s hold weakening as the creature’s natural resilience fought against it.

Khione didn’t retreat. She released the second spell.

The particles inside the wyrm shifted, their purpose changing from slowing to killing. For a moment, the creature froze—not from her magic, but from confusion as it felt something wrong inside its own flesh.

Then its eyes widened. Its body began to crystallize.

But not fast enough.

The wyrm roared—a sound like grinding ice—and lunged one final time, its death throes giving it a burst of desperate speed. Khione twisted away, but not fast enough. A claw caught her shoulder, tearing through her training clothes, opening a gash that bled red against the white of her skin.

She landed hard, rolled, came up with blood running down her arm. The wyrm crashed into the pillar behind her, its body already shattering, but the damage was done.

She was hurt. The wound was not deep, but it was a reminder. Her new spells were powerful, but against truly resilient enemies, they were not instant. They took time. Time she might not have in a real fight.

She bound the wound with a strip torn from her sleeve and pressed deeper into the basin.

The next hour was brutal.

She faced wyrm after wyrm, each encounter teaching her something new. She learned to layer her spells, releasing Frozen Time in waves, maintaining the pressure while the killing particles did their work. She learned to move, to never stay in one place, to use the maze of ice pillars to her advantage.

But the wyrms learned too.

They began to hunt in pairs, flanking her, cutting off her escape routes. Their resilience meant the killing spell took longer to work, and in that time, they could strike. One caught her leg with its tail, the impact cracking bone. Another’s claw raked across her back, leaving furrows that burned with cold.

She fought through the pain.

Her ice wings became weapons as well as transportation, their razor edges slicing wyrm flesh when she passed close. Her spells evolved in real time, the particles becoming denser, more aggressive, penetrating deeper into the creatures’ systems.

A wyrm lunged. She dropped beneath it, her hand pressing against its belly, releasing a concentrated burst of the killing spell directly into its core. It froze solid in seconds, shattering before it could hit the ground.

Two more came at her from opposite directions. She released Frozen Time in a wide arc, slowing both, then used her wings to launch herself between them, her hands extended, her spells firing in both directions simultaneously.

They fell together, their bodies crystallizing as they crashed into the ice.

The last wyrm was the largest. It had been watching from the far end of the basin, letting its pack wear her down. Now it came, moving with a speed that belied its size, its jaws gaping, its claws extended.

Khione was exhausted. Blood soaked her clothes. Her left leg barely held her weight. Her wings were cracked, chipped, barely functional.

She did not retreat.

She met the wyrm head-on.

She released everything—every particle she could summon, every scrap of prana she had left. The air between them became a storm of invisible death, streaming into the wyrm’s mouth, its eyes, the cracks between its ice plates.

The creature slowed, its charge becoming a stagger, its jaws closing on nothing. It tried to roar, but the sound was strangled, choked off by the ice forming in its throat.

Khione leaped. Her wings carried her up, over the wyrm’s head, and she landed on its back, her hands pressed against its skull, pouring the last of her power directly into its brain.

The wyrm’s body convulsed. Its legs gave way. It crashed to the ice, sliding forward, its momentum carrying it twenty feet before it finally stopped.

For a long moment, Khione lay on its back, her chest heaving, her body screaming. Blood pooled beneath her, melting the ice, steaming in the cold.

Then, slowly, she pushed herself up.

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