Alexandra Reid didn't draw a weapon.
She didn't need to.
She stood in the center of the ruined chamber like a queen surveying a mildly inconvenient mess—Reinhardt's body, the scorched walls, the blood pooling near the shattered desk. Her expression was one of weary disappointment, as if Ariadne had spilled tea on an antique rug rather than slaughtered her entire European command.
"You've made quite a mess tonight, Miss Anderson," Alexandra said, voice smooth as aged whiskey. "New leadership to appoint. New security protocols to design. All because you couldn't let the past rest."
Ariadne didn't lower her stance. "There won't be a 'new leadership.' After tonight, there won't be a Hand on this continent at all."
Alexandra's lips curved, not quite a smile. "Still delusional. You think one little girl can erase an organization that has survived empires? That has outlasted kings and revolutions?"
"I don't think," Ariadne said, voice low and steady. "I know."
Alexandra tilted her head, studying her like a rare insect pinned to velvet. "What gave you this confidence? Your new training? Your… chi?" She paused, eyes narrowing. "I'll admit, I was curious. For months, my network heard nothing from you. No ambushes. No assassinations. I began to wonder - had you given up? Or simply died like your father before you?"
Ariadne's jaw tightened, but she said nothing.
"Now I see," Alexandra continued, stepping forward with effortless grace. "You went to K'un-Lun. That explains the new skills. The lethality." Her gaze sharpened. "But the gate doesn't open for another couple of years. How did you get in?"
Ariadne's answer was silence.
Alexandra sighed. "No matter. You'll tell me eventually. But must we do this the hard way? You've trained in K'un-Lun—you know what I am. You've heard the legends. I've walked this earth for centuries. I've broken armies with a whisper and toppled dynasties with a single strike." She spread her hands, almost benevolent. "You stand no chance. Let us avoid the bloodshed. Join me. Lead the European branch yourself. Reform it as you see fit, so long as the quotas are met and my instructions are obeyed."
Ariadne's laugh was sharp, bitter. "You think I want to join you? I want you gone. Every last one of you. Burned from the earth like the rot you are."
Alexandra's eyes flickered with something colder. "All this… for a dead man? A Chaste operative who died in some skirmish no one remembers?" She shook her head. "I only learned of your father recently. Frankly, I didn't pay attention to ants. But your persistence forced my hand. And your connections…" She smiled thinly. "Ah, yes. The wizard. Arthur Hayes. That's why you're still breathing. Without him, you'd have been erased years ago—quietly, cleanly, like all the others."
Ariadne's knuckles whitened.
"Don't look so shocked," Alexandra said, almost amused. "Did you think your little actions went unnoticed? That your survival was luck? No. It was mercy. Extended only because someone powerful watches over you." Her voice dropped, mocking. "Where is he now, I wonder? Will he come crashing through the ceiling to save you from me?"
"He's not coming," Ariadne said, voice like steel. "This is my fight. Just you and me."
Alexandra's smile faltered for half a second—then returned, sharper. "And his elf who vanished a moment ago? Was she not part of your little rescue squad?"
"She's gone," Ariadne said flatly. "No wizards. No magic. No tricks. Just us."
Alexandra exhaled, as if bored. "Then I suppose it's time to crush an ant—for good."
She moved.
One moment she stood by the hidden panel, the next she was inside Ariadne's guard—faster than anyone with a human body had any right to move. Her palm strike came straight for Ariadne's sternum with enough force to shatter bone.
Ariadne barely got her forearm up in time. The impact sent shocking pain through her entire arm and drove her back three steps, her boots skidding across blood-slick stone.
Centuries, her mind screamed. She's had centuries to perfect every movement.
Alexandra settled into a stance Ariadne recognized instantly—K'un-Lun forms, but ancient. Refined. Perfected through lifetimes of practice.
"You trained with Lei Kung," Alexandra observed, circling slowly. "I can see it in your stance. Good teacher."
Ariadne said nothing. She couldn't afford distraction. She circled opposite, keeping her center low, watching for openings that she suspected wouldn't come.
They engaged.
Ariadne led with a probing jab, followed with the combination Lei Kung had drilled into her ten thousand times. Fast. Precise. Each strike flowing into the next like water.
Alexandra deflected them all with minimal movement. Her counters came with surgical precision—a palm strike that Ariadne barely slipped, a leg sweep she had to vault over, a nerve strike she redirected at the last instant.
They separated. Circled. Attacked again.
This time Ariadne mixed her approach, blending K'un-Lun technique with the brutal street-fighting her father had taught her. Less elegant. More aggressive. Unpredictable.
It worked—slightly.
Alexandra actually had to move more than an inch to avoid some strikes. But she adapted within seconds, reading Ariadne's less refined techniques and exploiting every opening they created.
A fist got through Ariadne's defense. Caught her ribs. She gasped, converting the backward momentum into a spinning kick.
Alexandra leaned away from it with minimal effort, then closed again with a brutal knee strike. Ariadne blocked but the impact numbed her thigh.
She's playing with me, Ariadne realized with cold clarity. Testing. Learning. She's not even trying yet.
They broke apart. Alexandra wasn't breathing hard. Ariadne was already feeling the accumulated damage—the graze on her arm from earlier, her bruised ribs, her numb leg.
"You're good," Alexandra said, genuine approval in her voice. "Surprisingly good for someone who's trained less than two years at K'un-Lun. Lei Kung must have pushed you harder than most."
She took a step forward. "But you're still just a girl who learned to fight. I've been perfecting combat for hundreds of years."
Ariadne didn't waste breath responding.
Alexandra attacked again, and this time there was less testing, more intent. Her strikes came faster, harder, each one meant to disable or kill. Ariadne defended desperately, blocking, dodging, barely staying ahead of the attacks.
Eventually, a spinning backfist caught Ariadne across the jaw. Stars exploded in her vision. She rolled with the impact, creating distance, but Alexandra pursued relentlessly.
No reprieve. No pause. Just constant pressure from someone who'd spent lifetimes learning how to break human bodies.
The fight shifted around the operations room. Ariadne crashed into a computer bank. Alexandra drove her through it, metal and glass shattering. She rolled away, bleeding from a dozen small cuts now, and came up with her dagger.
Alexandra smiled. "Weapons now? Good. Let's see if you're any better with steel."
She produced a knife of her own—slender, ancient-looking, the blade dark with age and old blood.
They clashed again. Blade against blade, technique against experience. Ariadne's knife work was good. But Alexandra's was masterful. Every cut, every feint spoke of countless duels won, countless opponents who'd thought they could match her.
Ariadne's dagger opened a line across Alexandra's shoulder. First blood.
Alexandra's blade opened Ariadne's side in response. Much deeper. Much worse.
Ariadne stumbled back, pressing her free hand to the wound. Blood seeped between her fingers.
"You're slowing," Alexandra observed. "Blood loss. Exhaustion. Pain. The human body has limits, Miss Anderson. No matter how well trained."
She advanced slowly, savoring the moment. "I could make this quick. A mercy, really. You've fought better than most."
Ariadne's vision swam. Her side screamed with every breath. Her arms felt like lead.
No backup. No safety net. Do or die.
Ariadne decided to go all out.
Chi flared in her veins. Her next strike carried weight beyond muscle—beyond bone. Her fist slammed into Alexandra's forearm, and for the first time, the elder woman staggered.
Alexandra's eyes widened slightly. "Ah. So you've learned to channel it. Impressive… for a beginner."
Ariadne didn't speak. She pressed the advantage.
Punch. Kick. Elbow. Every blow infused with chi, each one cracking the air, leaving afterimages of warm light. Alexandra blocked, parried, redirected—but the ease was gone. Her movements grew sharper, more focused.
"You're wasting your life," Alexandra said, dodging a spinning backfist that cratered the floor. "Chi isn't infinite. And you're burning through yours like kindling."
Ariadne didn't care.
She fought like a storm given flesh—relentless, furious, desperate. Blood dripped from her lip, her arm, her side. Her breath came in ragged gasps. But her eyes never wavered.
Finally, she landed a solid hit to Alexandra's ribs. The ancient warrior actually grunted—the first real sound of pain she'd made.
Alexandra had enough and retaliated with a palm strike that sent Ariadne flying backward through a bank of monitors. Sparks rained down. Ariadne crashed to the floor in a tangle of cables and broken electronics.
She dragged herself up. Her chi was guttering like a candle in a hurricane. Maybe three more enhanced strikes. Four if she was lucky.
Not enough. Not nearly enough.
Alexandra walked toward her through the wreckage. "I'll admit, you exceeded my expectations. But this ends now."
Her next attack came faster than thought. Ariadne barely got her arms up before the strike caught her shoulder. Something dislocated with an audible pop. Her vision whited out from the pain.
Through the haze, she saw Alexandra's follow-up coming—a strike aimed at her temple. Precise. Final. The blow that would end the fight.
No chi left to enhance defense. No energy left to dodge. Her body was broken, bleeding, failing.
This was it.
Ariadne made a choice.
If she was dying anyway, she'd take this immortal bitch with her.
She gathered every remaining scrap of strength, every last ember of chi, and threw it all into one desperate strike. Not at defense. Not at evasion. Just pure offense—her blade driving toward Alexandra's heart with everything she had left.
She knew the ancient warrior would dodge. Knew she'd shift that fraction of an inch with six-hundred-year-old reflexes. Knew her own attack would miss while Alexandra's would land clean.
She didn't care. She committed anyway.
Her blade struck forward.
Alexandra shifted to dodge—the same fluid, effortless movement Ariadne had seen a dozen times in this fight—
And froze.
For a fraction of a second—barely a heartbeat—Alexandra Reid simply stopped moving. Her body locked mid-dodge, muscles rigid, like time itself had stuttered.
Ariadne's blade, carrying all her remaining chi, momentum and desperation, drove into Alexandra's chest. Through expensive fabric. Through skin. Between ribs.
Into the heart.
Alexandra's eyes went wide with absolute shock. She looked down at the blade, then up at Ariadne.
"Impossible," she whispered, blood on her lips. "You couldn't... I never..."
The spell—whatever had held her—broke. But too late.
She stumbled backward, one hand clutching uselessly at the wound. Blood pumped between her fingers in rhythm with her failing heart.
"The elf…" Alexandra gasped. Then her eyes dimmed. Her legs gave out.
She fell, and didn't rise.
Ariadne stood over the body, swaying. Her vision tunneled. She couldn't feel her left arm anymore or her legs.
But she'd won.
Somehow, impossibly, she'd won.
POP.
Winky appeared beside her, eyes wide with concern.
"Ari needs healing—" the house-elf began.
"You interfered," she whispered, voice raw. "I told you—this was mine."
But the words died in her throat.
Her vision blurred. Her legs gave out.
She felt Winky catch her before she hit the ground. Heard the house-elf's panicked voice saying something about Master Arthur, about healing, about staying awake.
But darkness was already pulling her down. Warm. Heavy. Irresistible.
Her last conscious thought was of New Year's Eve. Of midnight approaching. Of the new century about to begin.
And then there was nothing but black.
