In the Village of Ice βοΈ, where rooftops glittered like frozen crowns π and every breath drifted like a pale ghost π¨, a sacred ceremony stirred the frozen morning. Today was not an ordinary day.
Today, the god's blood would choose a hero. π©Έβ¨
A single drop, drawn once every century, would decide the protector of the North.
A hundred candidates circled the ritual grounds π΅. Voices rose like cracking firewood π₯, the entire village humming with cold excitement βοΈβ‘.
Among them stood King.
Only fifteen.
Seven feet tall.
Shoulders broad enough to block the wind itself π».
A walking glacier shaped by discipline and relentless training πͺβοΈ.
For years, whispers had followed him π. Everyone believed the blood would choose him. Destiny already felt carved in ice π§.
Thenβ
silence fell like snowfall π¨οΈ.
The priest entered. Hood low π§ββοΈ. Steps slow. He knelt, closed his eyes, and breathed in the frost βοΈ. His hands trembledβ¦ then steadied.
A single drop of crimson bloomed on his palm π©Έ.
It hovered β¨
It glowed π΄
Every soul held its breath πΆ.
King lifted his chin, utterly certain π.
But the drop drifted away.
Slowly.
Deliberately.
It floated toward a skinny fifteen-year-old boy no one had noticed before π. A boy with wrists thin as reeds πΎ, wrapped in ragged fur, standing as if the wind itself might tug him away π¨.
The drop sank into the boy's chest.
FLASH β‘
The air trembled π¬οΈ
Then the priest spoke, voice shaking.
"Bow to your hero. Your chosen saviour. π
All candidates⦠you are now his subordinates."
One by one, the candidates knelt π§ββοΈπ§ββοΈ. Even the strongest lowered their heads before the newly chosen boy.
Except King.
He did not move.
His breath steamed βοΈ.
His shadow stretched long across the snow π.
The priest turned.
"King," he said softly, "kneel before your hero."
King stepped forward.
In one motionβ
his hand wrapped around the priest's neck βπ«
and lifted him into the frozen air.
Gasps cracked through the crowd like shattering glass π±π₯.
"You told me since childhood the blood wanted me," King said, voice quiet but burning π₯.
"All of you believed it."
He threw the priest aside.
The man hit the snow with a dull thud π₯βοΈ.
King turned away.
A brave candidate shouted, trembling,
"How dare you walk away?!"
King paused.
Tilted his head π.
His gaze cut back like a blade of winter π‘οΈβοΈ.
Silence melted into fear π¨.
Every candidate knew a truth heavier than mountains ποΈ:
even if all of them attacked together, they would fall before the boy who was not chosen.
And the Ice Village felt it.
A storm had begunβ
inside a single boy's heart πͺοΈπ€.
King stormed through the village like a thunderclap wrapped in flesh β‘. The ceremony still buzzed behind him, but he heard none of it. His fists curled π. Every step cracked the snow beneath his boots βοΈπ₯.
He reached his house π .
Villagers followed at a distance, whispering π€«, sensing the danger inside him. None dared come close.
King threw the door open πͺπ₯.
Then the rage hit.
He tore his home apart with the violence of a collapsing mountain π»π₯. Shelves shattered. The table flew across the room. Pots burst against the walls. He punched the support beamβ
CRACK π₯
It snapped like dry bone.
Snow sifted down through the broken roof like ashes βοΈπ«§.
A crowd gathered outside, silent ποΈποΈ. They had admired him all their lives.
Today, they witnessed what it meant to disappoint a titan.
King grabbed the only untouched things left:
His massive war-axe πͺ, forged for his hands alone.
A broad shield marked with the northern crest π‘οΈ.
He strapped the shield on. The leather groaned π€.
He swung the axe once.
Even the wind flinched π¬οΈπ¨.
He planted the axe into the ground and tore apart the rest of his home with bare hands until nothing remained but wreckage and dust πͺ΅π¨.
His breath shook.
His eyes burned π₯.
Without a word, he kicked the broken wood into a pile, pulled a sparkstone from his pocket β¨, and struck it.
FLAMES ROARED π₯π₯π₯
Villagers stepped back as the fire painted King's silhouette in orange and red. He looked like a young war-god abandoned by fate βοΈπ₯.
He turned toward the cliff.
Everyone watched π.
No one dared speak.
King climbed the high ridge overlooking the village ποΈ. Smoke from his burning home rose behind him like a banner of rebellion π©π₯.
He glared down at the place that raised him.
The place that betrayed him π.
His voice cracked across the valley π’βοΈ:
"Let this fire remind you of your choice.
And may your chosen hero bear the burden meant for me."
The wind carried the words like a curse π¬οΈπ©Έ.
Then King hefted his axe πͺ, tightened his shield π‘οΈ, and walked into the endless white wilderness βοΈπ«οΈβ
Leaving behind fear π¨, fire π₯,
and a village too stunned to breathe.
