The forest didn't welcome her.
But it didn't reject her either.
That was better than people.
---
Elsa moved through it without sound.
Branches bent, not broken.
Footsteps light, controlled.
Edward had taught her that.
Always leave less trace than you take.
---
She found a stream near dusk.
Clear water.
Cold.
She knelt beside it.
Stared at her reflection.
The horns were unmistakable now.
Dark red.
Permanent.
Her eyes—
Still human.
For now.
---
"You don't belong anywhere."
The thought returned.
Uninvited.
Persistent.
She dipped her hand into the water.
Watched the reflection distort.
"…I didn't ask to."
---
A twig snapped behind her.
She didn't turn immediately.
She already knew.
Multiple footsteps.
Careful.
Coordinated.
Not villagers.
Not random.
---
Hunters.
---
"You're surrounded."
A voice called out.
Confident.
Too confident.
Elsa remained kneeling for a moment longer.
Then stood slowly.
Turned.
Five of them.
Light armor.
Guild marks.
Experienced.
Not knights.
Worse.
Men who chose this work.
---
Their eyes fixed on her horns.
On the red.
On the difference.
One of them smiled.
"Found you."
She said nothing.
---
Another stepped forward.
"You made this easy."
Elsa's voice was calm.
"I didn't hide."
"Yeah," he laughed lightly. "We noticed."
---
The leader studied her carefully.
"You killed kingdom knights."
"They attacked first."
He shrugged.
"Doesn't matter."
Of course it didn't.
---
"You're coming with us."
Elsa tilted her head slightly.
"No."
The word wasn't loud.
But it landed.
---
The men exchanged glances.
Not surprised.
Just adjusting.
"Then we'll bring you in pieces."
That was the first mistake.
---
The air warmed.
Slightly.
The ground beneath Elsa's feet tightened.
She didn't move.
Didn't raise her hand.
Didn't threaten.
---
"Don't."
Her voice was steady.
Not pleading.
Not warning.
Just… a boundary.
---
The youngest among them hesitated.
"Hey… maybe we—"
The leader cut him off.
"She's dangerous."
Then, louder—
"Monster like you doesn't get choices."
---
There it was.
The word.
Again.
---
Elsa's fingers curled slowly.
Her nails pressed into her palm.
Not enough to bleed.
Enough to feel.
---
"You can call me that."
Her voice remained calm.
Controlled.
"I don't care."
A pause.
Then—
"But don't speak about him."
---
The leader smirked.
"Oh? The traitor?"
Silence.
The air shifted.
Not violently.
But undeniably.
---
"He died like he deserved," another added.
"Protecting trash—"
---
That was it.
Not rage.
Not an explosion.
A line.
Crossed.
---
Elsa moved.
Not fast.
Not wild.
Precise.
---
The man who spoke last—
Dropped.
Before he understood what happened.
Not burned.
Not torn apart.
His body simply hit the ground.
Unmoving.
---
The others froze.
Too fast.
Too clean.
---
The leader's smile vanished.
"Kill—"
He didn't finish.
Elsa was already in front of him.
Her eyes—
Gold now.
Fully.
---
"You don't get to speak about him."
Her voice was quiet.
Dead quiet.
---
Heat surged.
The ground cracked.
Flames curled along her arms—
Not exploding.
Contained.
Focused.
---
The leader swung.
Desperate.
She caught his wrist.
Not with strength.
With certainty.
---
The heat climbed.
Metal screamed.
His weapon melted in his hand.
He screamed.
This time—
He had time to.
---
Elsa released him.
He collapsed.
Alive.
Burned.
Not dead.
---
The remaining three backed away.
Fear overtaking skill.
"Run!"
They didn't wait.
They fled.
---
Elsa didn't chase.
Didn't finish it.
She stood there.
Breathing slowly.
Forcing the heat down.
---
Her horns dimmed slightly.
Still red.
But less violent.
---
She looked at the man on the ground.
Burned.
Crying.
Alive.
---
"…I didn't kill you."
Her voice sounded distant.
Even to herself.
---
He didn't respond.
Couldn't.
---
She turned away.
Walked.
Again.
---
A few steps.
Then stopped.
Her hand trembled.
Slightly.
---
"You're getting used to it."
The thought came.
Cold.
Sharp.
---
She clenched her fist.
"No."
But the answer didn't feel solid.
---
Behind her—
The forest swallowed the scene.
Ahead—
Only more road.
More distance.
More silence.
---
Elsa walked.
But something had changed.
Not control.
Not yet.
But the weight of holding it…
was getting heavier.
