Cherreads

Chapter 33 - Chapter 17 — The Army at the Forest's Edge

The marching never stopped.

Hour after hour.

The sound rolled through the earth like distant thunder.

Thousands of boots.

Hundreds of horses.

Metal against metal.

An army.

---

Elsa stood at the edge of the forest.

Watching.

---

Far beyond the trees—

Banners moved across the horizon.

The kingdom's crest.

Rows upon rows of soldiers.

Siege wagons.

Mage divisions.

Dragon hunters.

---

Too many.

Far too many.

---

"They're scared."

The words escaped quietly.

---

Rowan stood beside her.

Silent.

---

Because fear was the only explanation.

---

No kingdom gathered this much strength for one person.

Unless they truly believed that person could destroy them.

---

"How many?"

Elsa asked.

---

Rowan's expression darkened.

---

"Enough."

---

That wasn't reassuring.

---

The army continued arriving.

The line stretched beyond sight.

---

A force built to fight monsters.

---

And now it had come for her.

---

For several minutes neither spoke.

---

Then Elsa laughed softly.

Not bitterly.

Not angrily.

Just tired.

---

"My father would be furious."

---

Rowan smiled faintly.

---

"Probably."

---

"He'd spend three hours arguing with the commander."

---

"Then accidentally insult a noble."

---

"Then apologize."

---

"Then insult him again."

---

For a moment—

Both smiled.

---

The moment passed quickly.

---

Reality remained.

---

The army wasn't leaving.

---

And eventually—

Someone would give an order.

---

Behind them—

A familiar voice spoke.

---

"Then don't give them one."

---

Elsa turned.

---

Jack stood at the edge of the clearing.

Dust covering his cloak.

Travel-worn.

Exhausted.

---

But alive.

---

The air immediately became tense.

---

Neither moved.

---

Neither attacked.

---

The old wound remained between them.

---

Jack looked older than before.

Not physically.

Spiritually.

---

Like a man who had spent too many nights staring at truths he wished were lies.

---

"I found the records."

---

Elsa remained silent.

---

"The reports about your mother."

---

For the first time—

Her expression changed.

---

Only slightly.

---

But Jack saw it.

---

And continued.

---

"She never attacked anyone."

---

Silence.

---

"She spent months running."

---

The wind moved softly through the trees.

---

Jack's hands tightened.

---

"The kingdom knew."

---

Another silence.

---

"They knew she wasn't a threat."

---

Elsa lowered her gaze slightly.

---

Somehow—

That hurt more than ignorance.

---

Because they knew.

And chose fear anyway.

---

Just like Edward.

---

Jack looked directly at her.

---

"I was wrong."

---

The words came without excuse.

Without defense.

Without justification.

---

Just truth.

---

Rowan looked surprised.

---

Elsa didn't.

---

Because Jack had always been honest.

Even when honesty made him unbearable.

---

"You killed him."

---

The words came quietly.

---

Jack nodded.

---

"I know."

---

"I hate that you say it so easily."

---

Jack flinched.

---

Not physically.

Emotionally.

---

Good.

---

Because it wasn't easy.

It never had been.

---

"I think about it every day."

---

Silence.

---

Then Elsa asked something unexpected.

---

"Do you regret it?"

---

The question struck like a blade.

---

Because Jack didn't answer immediately.

---

He couldn't.

---

For years—

The answer would've been no.

---

Now—

---

"...I don't know."

---

Finally.

Truth.

---

Painful truth.

---

Because if Edward had been right...

Then everything Jack did became something terrible.

---

The forest remained silent.

---

Then a horn sounded.

---

From the distant army.

---

Long.

Deep.

---

A signal.

---

Everyone turned.

---

Movement began immediately.

---

The front ranks advanced.

---

Slowly.

Deliberately.

---

The kingdom had arrived.

---

And it wasn't waiting.

---

Far within the marching army—

A man watched from horseback.

---

The spear warrior.

---

The same man who killed Elsa's mother.

---

The same man who would eventually kill Elsa.

---

His eyes remained fixed on the forest.

---

Unreadable.

---

Yet deep inside—

Something felt wrong.

---

Because the closer he came—

The more Elsa reminded him of someone.

---

Black horns.

Quiet eyes.

Gentle smiles.

---

A woman from sixteen years ago.

---

A woman whose death had never left him.

---

The army marched onward.

---

The forest waited.

---

And Elsa finally understood something.

---

No matter how carefully she lived.

No matter how much kindness she chose.

No matter how hard Edward fought to give her a normal life.

---

The world had finally come to collect the future it feared.

---

And somewhere deep inside her—

For the first time—

She felt anger beginning to outweigh patience.

---

Not enough.

Not yet.

---

But the balance was changing.

More Chapters