Arc I — La Genèse Celeste

Chapter 2 - Fire & Blood

Arc I — La Genèse Celeste

Chapitre 2 – Le Feu et le Sang

Scene 1 – The Capture

The North wind struck the coast like a blade. The sea shattered into dark waves, and the hard sand trembled under the gusts. Naya moved slowly between the frozen rocks, her legs still weak, her breath short, forming a pale mist in the air.

That was when they appeared.

First shadows.
Then massive shapes.
Finally men … leather and thick furs on their shoulders, helmets pulled low over their brows, faces carved by cold and war. Their axes hung from their fists, heavy as boulders.

The first one let out a guttural cry.

The circle closed instantly.

Snow cracked beneath their boots. The torches lit their hard features, their clenched jaws, the suspicion etched in their eyes. Naya stepped back; her bare feet sank into the frozen mud, sending a shiver up her spine.

–  “A stranger…” one murmured.
– “A witch,” spat another.
– “An offering to the gods,” concluded the one who seemed to lead them.

She opened her mouth.
No sound came out.
Her throat, burned by salt, held only a broken breath.

The bracelet on her wrist pulsed with a faint, nearly imperceptible light. The men recoiled, startled by this glow that belonged to no world they knew.

The chief drove his axe into the frozen sand. The impact rang out like a signal. Two men stepped forward and tied her wrists with a rope. The knot bit into her skin until it bled.

They shoved her forward.

Her soaked hair lashed her face. The cold pierced her like a thousand needles. Through the mist, she made out a village: smoking rooftops, wooden palisades, silhouettes moving between the low houses.

Every step carried her farther from the shore where she had fallen.
Every step locked her deeper into this harsh, frozen world.

She no longer walked by her own strength.
She was dragged.
She was taken.

The North wind struck the coast like a blade. The sea shattered into dark waves, and the hard sand trembled under the gusts. Naya moved slowly between the frozen rocks, her legs still weak, her breath short, forming a pale mist in the air.

That was when they appeared.

First shadows.
Then massive shapes.
Finally men … leather and thick furs on their shoulders, helmets pulled low over their brows, faces carved by cold and war. Their axes hung from their fists, heavy as boulders.

The first one let out a guttural cry.

The circle closed instantly.

Snow cracked beneath their boots. The torches lit their hard features, their clenched jaws, the suspicion etched in their eyes. Naya stepped back; her bare feet sank into the frozen mud, sending a shiver up her spine.

–  “A stranger…” one murmured.
– “A witch,” spat another.
– “An offering to the gods,” concluded the one who seemed to lead them.

She opened her mouth.
No sound came out.
Her throat, burned by salt, held only a broken breath.

The bracelet on her wrist pulsed with a faint, nearly imperceptible light. The men recoiled, startled by this glow that belonged to no world they knew.

The chief drove his axe into the frozen sand. The impact rang out like a signal. Two men stepped forward and tied her wrists with a rope. The knot bit into her skin until it bled.

They shoved her forward.

Her soaked hair lashed her face. The cold pierced her like a thousand needles. Through the mist, she made out a village: smoking rooftops, wooden palisades, silhouettes moving between the low houses.

Every step carried her farther from the shore where she had fallen.
Every step locked her deeper into this harsh, frozen world.

She no longer walked by her own strength.
She was dragged.
She was taken.

Scene 2 – The Völva and the Prophecy

The great hall opened before Naya. Pillars carved with sea beasts rose beneath the torches, which cast an unsteady light across the blackened beams. The central hearth burned fiercely, and every crackle of the fire seemed to breathe with the gathered crowd.

When they pushed her inside, the songs stopped in a single breath.

No sound remained except the wood consuming itself.

She was led to the center of the hall, between tables cluttered with overturned drinking horns, half-torn loaves, and pieces of still-smoking meat. Every gaze turned toward her: pale, wary eyes, hungry to understand what this woman who had risen from the waves truly was.

On the raised platform, the Jarl stood.

His imposing frame dominated the room. His red beard fell over a tanned leather breastplate, and his blue eyes, cold as a frozen fjord, remained fixed on her. When he raised a hand, the silence became almost suffocating.

– “Who are you?”

Naya tried to speak, but nothing passed her dry throat. The ropes burning her wrists cut deeper, and the golden bracelet beneath her skin vibrated faintly, as if fighting against the darkness of the place.

A movement then.

A rustle of furs.

A silhouette emerging from the back of the hall.

A bent woman walked forward slowly. Her grey hair, braided with threads of bone, slid down her shoulders. Her milky, veiled eyes somehow seemed to see farther than all the others. A murmur rippled through the warriors: the Völva.

She approached Naya with the slow assurance of an ancient predator.

Her knotted fingers, stained with soot and dried blood, brushed the bracelet.

Light burst forth instantly.

A golden flash, brief but intense, cut across the hall. The warriors recoiled instinctively. The Jarl did not move, but his fingers tightened on the armrest of his seat.

The Völva slowly raised her arms, as if welcoming an invisible presence.

– “This sign…”

Her raspy voice grew stronger.

– “She bears the mark of passage.”

A murmur ran through the hall. The torches flickered.

The seer turned her face toward the Jarl, her clouded eyes glowing with an uncanny intensity.

– “She is no witch. Nor an enemy. She comes from the gods.”

The hall split into a hundred reactions:
shouts of astonishment, cries of fervor, men rising to their feet, women pulling back their hoods for a better look.

Naya remained motionless.

She had wanted to speak, to explain, but her words drowned in the uproar. In that instant, she felt something simple and brutal: they were not looking at her. They were looking at an omen.

The Jarl stepped forward on the edge of the platform.

The fire reflected in his eyes.

– “If the gods have sent her here, then she will remain under our protection.”

It was not an invitation.
Nor a question.
It was a decree.

The hall erupted in cheers.

Naya felt the bracelet’s vibration rush up her arm like a frantic heartbeat. She drew a strained breath, her chest tightening with a heavy realization: she was trapped within a destiny she had never chosen.

And in the midst of the cries, the torches, the hundreds of eyes fixed on her…

She had never felt so utterly alone.

Light burst forth instantly.

A golden flash, brief but intense, cut across the hall. The warriors recoiled instinctively. The Jarl did not move, but his fingers tightened on the armrest of his seat.

The Völva slowly raised her arms, as if welcoming an invisible presence.

– “This sign…”

Her raspy voice grew stronger.

– “She bears the mark of passage.”

A murmur ran through the hall. The torches flickered.

The seer turned her face toward the Jarl, her clouded eyes glowing with an uncanny intensity.

– “She is no witch. Nor an enemy. She comes from the gods.”

The hall split into a hundred reactions:
shouts of astonishment, cries of fervor, men rising to their feet, women pulling back their hoods for a better look.

Naya remained motionless.

She had wanted to speak, to explain, but her words drowned in the uproar. In that instant, she felt something simple and brutal: they were not looking at her. They were looking at an omen.

The Jarl stepped forward on the edge of the platform.

The fire reflected in his eyes.

– “If the gods have sent her here, then she will remain under our protection.”

It was not an invitation.
Nor a question.
It was a decree.

The hall erupted in cheers.

Naya felt the bracelet’s vibration rush up her arm like a frantic heartbeat. She drew a strained breath, her chest tightening with a heavy realization: she was trapped within a destiny she had never chosen.

And in the midst of the cries, the torches, the hundreds of eyes fixed on her…

She had never felt so utterly alone.

Scene 3 – The Jarl’s Feast

The roar of the hall returned all at once, like a wave breaking. The warriors resumed singing, pounding the tables, lifting their horns filled with mead. The smell of smoked meat, spilled ale, and soot rose from the floor and beams—heavy, almost suffocating.

Naya was led near the platform.

A dagger cut the ropes at her wrists.

She felt the sting of her freed skin, but kept her arms close to her body, as if to shield herself.

Around her, dozens of burning eyes followed her, an electric anticipation hanging in the air.

The Jarl rose.

His mere presence slowly silenced the hall, until only the crackling of the central fire remained. He lifted a carved horn and spoke in a deep voice that seemed to vibrate through the wooden walls.

– “Tonight, we drink for the one the gods have sent us.”

The hall erupted in shouts.

Horns collided, fists slammed against tables.

The celebration roared back to life-raw and absolute.

They placed a platter before Naya:
a loaf of warm bread,
a cup overflowing with mead,
and a piece of red meat, glistening with juices.

She hesitated.

Everyone waited for her to taste.

Every tiny gesture she made seemed to carry a meaning she did not understand.

At last, she took the bread.

The crust cracked under her fingers, and the warmth rising from it made her hands tremble. When she brought a piece to her lips, the rustic taste of wheat and salt filled her mouth. Her body-starved since her fall—reacted before she could think: a shiver ran up her arms.

Murmurs of approval swept through the hall.

Then she lifted the cup.

The mead slid down her throat like a soft burn. She coughed, her eyes wet from the fire of the fermented honey. Laughter burst around her-a surprisingly warm laughter, without mockery or scorn, almost as if she had been embraced by their revelry for just one night.

A broad-faced warrior raised his horn toward her.
A woman behind him struck the table with her fist in approval.

Their joy seemed overflowing, almost contagious.

But Naya remained still, her heart tight.

She watched the hall … the flickering torches, the shadows racing across faces, the songs rising louder than the wind. A warmth grew around her that of a living people, harsh, rooted in earth and noise.

Yet that warmth did not truly reach her.

The Jarl watched her from his throne, silent, his fingers gripping the armrest.

It was not tenderness.
Nor pure suspicion.
It was something else: calculation, perhaps. A reflection she could not decipher.

Naya pressed her hands against her chest.

She understood then that they were not celebrating her as a living being, but as a sign.

A symbol onto which they projected everything they feared or hoped for.

Nothing to do with who she truly was.

The feast went on, the chants rose, and the hall vibrated like a drum.

But behind all that uproar, Naya felt a loneliness heavier than the night outside.

At last, she took the bread.

The crust cracked under her fingers, and the warmth rising from it made her hands tremble. When she brought a piece to her lips, the rustic taste of wheat and salt filled her mouth. Her body-starved since her fall—reacted before she could think: a shiver ran up her arms.

Murmurs of approval swept through the hall.

Then she lifted the cup.

The mead slid down her throat like a soft burn. She coughed, her eyes wet from the fire of the fermented honey. Laughter burst around her-a surprisingly warm laughter, without mockery or scorn, almost as if she had been embraced by their revelry for just one night.

A broad-faced warrior raised his horn toward her.
A woman behind him struck the table with her fist in approval.

Their joy seemed overflowing, almost contagious.

But Naya remained still, her heart tight.

She watched the hall … the flickering torches, the shadows racing across faces, the songs rising louder than the wind. A warmth grew around her that of a living people, harsh, rooted in earth and noise.

Yet that warmth did not truly reach her.

The Jarl watched her from his throne, silent, his fingers gripping the armrest.

It was not tenderness.
Nor pure suspicion.
It was something else: calculation, perhaps. A reflection she could not decipher.

Naya pressed her hands against her chest.

She understood then that they were not celebrating her as a living being, but as a sign.

A symbol onto which they projected everything they feared or hoped for.

Nothing to do with who she truly was.

The feast went on, the chants rose, and the hall vibrated like a drum.

But behind all that uproar, Naya felt a loneliness heavier than the night outside.

Scene 4 – The Traditions

The hall had slowly emptied.
Only a few warriors slumped over the tables remained, overturned horns beside them, beer stains mixing with soot. At dawn, a grey light filtered through the gaps in the roof.

They pulled Naya outside.

The wind bit into her skin immediately.

The village was waking slowly: women moved between the houses with arms full of wood or buckets; others spun wool before their doors, unmoving despite the cold. Children, bundled up, ran between the enclosures, laughing.

Naya walked with difficulty, still weakened by the night she had spent fighting the sea and the cold.

They led her to a dark house whose door creaked open.

The air inside smelled of soot, freshly scraped hides, and dried herbs.
A gentle heat rose from a small hearth set on the floor.

Several women were waiting for her.

They did not speak.
They did not smile.
They simply looked at her with a quiet curiosity, neither contempt nor affection.

The gaze of a people used to measuring what comes from the outside.

One of them gently pulled at the linen tunic Naya still wore.

The damp cloth slid from her shoulders, and the cold seized her.

She tried to cover her chest with her arms, by reflex, but the women’s hands worked on, sure and swift.

They dressed her in a thick woolen tunic, dark and coarse.

The heavy material slid over her shoulders like a second skin, strangely reassuring despite its roughness.

A wide leather belt was tightened around her waist, straightening her posture, holding her upright.

Finally, a fur cloak fell onto her shoulders—heavy, warm, almost too warm.

 

Under the weight of all these layers, Naya felt steadier…
but also less herself.

An old woman approached.

Her narrowed eyes seemed capable of judging a soul in an instant.

Without a word, she took Naya’s red hair and braided it into long, tight plaits. Her fingers, though aged, were precise. She slid amber beads and polished bone threads into the braids.

Every gesture resembled an ancient ritual.

As if dressing Naya meant assigning her a place in this world.

When they were done, the women stepped back.

In a corner, a polished bronze mirror reflected a silhouette she barely recognized.

She stepped toward it.

The thick braids framed her pale face.
The wool tunic shaped a new posture.
The cloak cast shadows across her features.

Only the golden bracelet still pulsed faintly, like a silent reminder of who she had been before.

For a moment, Naya felt something stir in the room.

A kind of respect.

As if the women saw in her a stranger worthy of being prepared—
but not yet worthy of being accepted.

She placed a hand on the rough wool of her tunic.

The fabric felt like it was holding her together, keeping her from dissolving into the cold.

And yet, deep within, a heavy question crossed her mind:

Is this how humans welcomed others?
By covering what they feared, by reshaping what unsettled them?

She drew a slow breath.

The wool, the leather, the fur weighed on her like a role that had just been imposed upon her.

And in silence, she followed the women out of the house,
wrapped in an identity that was not her own.

 

Under the weight of all these layers, Naya felt steadier…
but also less herself.

An old woman approached.

Her narrowed eyes seemed capable of judging a soul in an instant.

Without a word, she took Naya’s red hair and braided it into long, tight plaits. Her fingers, though aged, were precise. She slid amber beads and polished bone threads into the braids.

Every gesture resembled an ancient ritual.

As if dressing Naya meant assigning her a place in this world.

When they were done, the women stepped back.

In a corner, a polished bronze mirror reflected a silhouette she barely recognized.

She stepped toward it.

The thick braids framed her pale face.
The wool tunic shaped a new posture.
The cloak cast shadows across her features.

Only the golden bracelet still pulsed faintly, like a silent reminder of who she had been before.

For a moment, Naya felt something stir in the room.

A kind of respect.

As if the women saw in her a stranger worthy of being prepared—
but not yet worthy of being accepted.

She placed a hand on the rough wool of her tunic.

The fabric felt like it was holding her together, keeping her from dissolving into the cold.

And yet, deep within, a heavy question crossed her mind:

Is this how humans welcomed others?
By covering what they feared, by reshaping what unsettled them?

She drew a slow breath.

The wool, the leather, the fur weighed on her like a role that had just been imposed upon her.

And in silence, she followed the women out of the house,
wrapped in an identity that was not her own.

Scene 5 – The Rite of Fire

Night fell all at once, thick and silent.
Only the great brazier in the center of the clearing pushed back the darkness. The stacked logs spat tall flames whose heat vibrated through the trees encircling the ritual ground.

They pushed Naya forward.

The burning air struck her face.
The fur on her shoulders grew heavy, almost suffocating.

In the silence around her, only the drums remained … deep and slow, like an ancient heart buried beneath the earth.

The men stood in a circle, pounding the ground with their fists at every beat.

Then the Völva stepped forward.

She emerged in the firelight like a living shadow. Her dark cloak slid across the ground, her staff lifted above her head, and her pale eyes gleamed with a light belonging neither to night nor to flame.

– “The fire reveals what men cannot see.”

Her harsh voice echoed between the trees.

She reached into a small pouch at her belt and threw a handful of black powder into the brazier.

The flames burst instantly, hurling golden sparks into the sky.

Naya’s bracelet ignited in answer.

Heat surged up her arm like a raw burn.

She cried out despite herself.

The world around her blurred, then twisted.
The silhouettes, the trees, the flames, everything dissolved.

Her breath caught.
Her heart hammered in her chest.

And suddenly, she saw.

The flames formed a bridge, immense, suspended over a black abyss.
Luminous figures fell into the void, their wings torn away by an invisible wind.
Stone doors opened inside mountains, guarded by unmoving creatures.
And everywhere, golden cracks like scars split the world.

At the center, something pulsed.

A light … intense and alive.
A key.
Her key.

The vision collapsed instantly.

Naya dropped to her knees, gasping, her fingers digging into her burned wrist.
The bracelet still vibrated, glowing red in the darkness.

The Völva placed a cold hand on her shoulder.

– “The fire has recognized you,” she said simply.
– “You are no longer a stranger. You are the one who opens the doors.”

Around them, the cries rose again.
Warriors struck their shields, the drums thundered louder, the flames climbed higher.

The entire clearing pulsed with fervor… fear and madness woven together.

Naya remained still.

Her eyes stayed fixed on the flames dancing before her.
They seemed to breathe with her, as if a part of the world had just torn open through her own heart.

The heat of the brazier blinded her.

And yet, she had never felt so cold.

The world around her blurred, then twisted.
The silhouettes, the trees, the flames, everything dissolved.

Her breath caught.
Her heart hammered in her chest.

And suddenly, she saw.

The flames formed a bridge, immense, suspended over a black abyss.
Luminous figures fell into the void, their wings torn away by an invisible wind.
Stone doors opened inside mountains, guarded by unmoving creatures.
And everywhere, golden cracks like scars split the world.

At the center, something pulsed.

A light … intense and alive.
A key.
Her key.

The vision collapsed instantly.

Naya dropped to her knees, gasping, her fingers digging into her burned wrist.
The bracelet still vibrated, glowing red in the darkness.

The Völva placed a cold hand on her shoulder.

– “The fire has recognized you,” she said simply.
– “You are no longer a stranger. You are the one who opens the doors.”

Around them, the cries rose again.
Warriors struck their shields, the drums thundered louder, the flames climbed higher.

The entire clearing pulsed with fervor… fear and madness woven together.

Naya remained still.

Her eyes stayed fixed on the flames dancing before her.
They seemed to breathe with her, as if a part of the world had just torn open through her own heart.

The heat of the brazier blinded her.

And yet, she had never felt so cold.

Scene 6 – The Call to Arms

Dawn had not yet broken when the drums were already echoing across the entire village.
The sound rolled between the wooden houses, heavy and steady, like a summons no one could ignore.

Naya was pulled from the house where she had slept only a few hours.

The cold seized her face.
The morning light was pale, almost blue.

Ahead of her, the warriors marched toward the shore, helmets lowered, shields striking against their legs.
Their steps made the frozen ground tremble.
Every breath rose as a white cloud.
Every exhale seemed to announce war.

The Völva was already waiting by the shoreline, leaning on her staff.
Her face looked graver than the day before, and her milky eyes fixed the horizon as if she could read an invisible threat there.

– “Today, you walk with them,” she said without even looking at Naya.
Her voice seemed carried by the wind.

The Jarl stepped forward.

His leather armor creaked with every movement.
His sword, raised toward the sky, caught the first hints of daylight.
His presence commanded silence from all around him.

– “They burned our fields, stole our herds, and shattered our graves,” he said.

The warriors halted, eyes locked on him.

– “Today, we return what they have done. And the gods have sent us their sign. She will march with us.”

A rumble of voices rose behind him.
Shields struck in rhythm, shaking the air.
Raised axes shone like fragments of dawn.

 Naya, swallowed by this tide of men, felt infinitely small.

She wanted to speak … to say she didn’t understand this war, that she wanted no part in what was coming… but no sound left her throat.

The Völva simply placed a hand on her arm—a hard, resolute hand.

– “The fire accepted you. Now it is your turn to accept the path before you.”

They guided her to the drakkar pulled onto the shore.

The ship looked like a sleeping beast:
its dragon-shaped prow opening a threatening maw,
its rune-carved flanks seeming to breathe in the grey light,
and the shields fixed along its sides forming an armor of wood and metal.

The warriors were already boarding, their boots clacking against the wet planks.

The sea, dark and restless—struck the hull as if testing its strength.

They pushed Naya aboard.
The cold wood beneath her feet felt like stepping onto a living creature.

The bracelet on her wrist vibrated faintly, as if it recognized the power of the ship, or the violence ahead.

Behind her, the villagers who had stayed behind shouted prayers and encouragements.
Women raised their arms to the sky, men struck their chests, and the wind carried away the last embers of the rite from the night before.

Naya fixed her gaze on the horizon stretched out before her…
a grey, cold line that seemed to swallow the light.

And above it, ravens were already circling the sky, as if they knew what awaited those who departed.

The drakkar slid into the water.

The oars dipped in unison, and the whole world seemed to move with them.

Naya felt her heart tighten.

She had never been so far from the sky.

And yet, the earth had never felt so dangerous.

 Naya, swallowed by this tide of men, felt infinitely small.

She wanted to speak … to say she didn’t understand this war, that she wanted no part in what was coming… but no sound left her throat.

The Völva simply placed a hand on her arm—a hard, resolute hand.

– “The fire accepted you. Now it is your turn to accept the path before you.”

They guided her to the drakkar pulled onto the shore.

The ship looked like a sleeping beast:
its dragon-shaped prow opening a threatening maw,
its rune-carved flanks seeming to breathe in the grey light,
and the shields fixed along its sides forming an armor of wood and metal.

The warriors were already boarding, their boots clacking against the wet planks.

The sea, dark and restless—struck the hull as if testing its strength.

They pushed Naya aboard.
The cold wood beneath her feet felt like stepping onto a living creature.

The bracelet on her wrist vibrated faintly, as if it recognized the power of the ship, or the violence ahead.

Behind her, the villagers who had stayed behind shouted prayers and encouragements.
Women raised their arms to the sky, men struck their chests, and the wind carried away the last embers of the rite from the night before.

Naya fixed her gaze on the horizon stretched out before her…
a grey, cold line that seemed to swallow the light.

And above it, ravens were already circling the sky, as if they knew what awaited those who departed.

The drakkar slid into the water.

The oars dipped in unison, and the whole world seemed to move with them.

Naya felt her heart tighten.

She had never been so far from the sky.

And yet, the earth had never felt so dangerous.

Scene 7 – The Massacre and the Escape

The drakkar struck the coast in a crash of foam.
The moment the prow touched the sand, the warriors leapt from the ship, their heavy steps sending snow flying. Their screams filled the night… brutal, carried by rage and by the wind.

Naya remained still for an instant.
The cold clung to her bare legs, but it was nothing compared to the icy tension tightening around her chest.

Then war broke loose.

The Vikings stormed the village like a living tempest.
Doors shattered under shoulder blows, rooftops ignited as soon as a torch touched them. Fire raced from house to house like a starving beast.

Shapes fled through the snow, crying for their children, for their gods, or for no one at all.
Shadows thrashed in the glow of the flames.

Naya moved forward despite herself, eyes wide.

A child was knocked to the ground by a shield. He slid across the snow, a single cry leaving his throat, then nothing.
A warrior stepped over his body without even looking.

Farther ahead, a woman was dragged from her home by her hair. She stretched a hand toward a small overturned cradle. The axe fell before she could reach the child.

Naya pressed a hand to her mouth, stifling a sob.

The heat of the flames melted the snow around her, but she trembled as if she were back in the icy waters where she had almost died.

Everywhere she looked, violence repeated itself.

An old man, held up by two others, fell to his knees before a spear struck him down.
A dog howled in front of a burning house until a swift blow silenced it.
Screams mixed with the laughter of warriors and the hiss of the fire.

The world was collapsing around her.

Her heart pounded so violently she felt pain shoot up her arm.
The bracelet vibrated against her skin, as if trying to protect her… or warn her.

Each pulse felt like the breath of dozens of lives being extinguished.

She wanted to close her eyes.
But she couldn’t.

She saw a warrior fall beside her, his throat split open. His blood splattered across the snow, staining it a vivid red.

She stumbled back, breathless.

And in that moment, she understood something she was not ready to accept:

Men could love, celebrate, laugh… and become monsters in a single heartbeat.

A howl rose to the sky.
The flames climbed higher still.

Naya felt her legs give way.

She could not stay here.
She could not watch any longer.

Without thinking, she turned and ran into the snow.
Branches clawed at her arms, her legs, her face, but she kept running.
Her breath escaped in uneven clouds that scattered in the wind like prayers.

The sounds of the massacre faded, swallowed by the forest.

Silence gradually took its place again…
a heavy, almost hostile silence.

Only after a long time did Naya collapse at the foot of a tree.

Her hands trembled.
Her cheeks were wet with tears she no longer even felt.

She didn’t know how long she remained there, curled against her knees.
Her body shaking with sobs, her mind shattered between two impossible truths:

the sky had rejected her,
the earth refused to accept her.

And in that void, fear and loneliness intertwined like two shadows refusing to leave her.

Her heart pounded so violently she felt pain shoot up her arm.
The bracelet vibrated against her skin, as if trying to protect her… or warn her.

Each pulse felt like the breath of dozens of lives being extinguished.

She wanted to close her eyes.
But she couldn’t.

She saw a warrior fall beside her, his throat split open. His blood splattered across the snow, staining it a vivid red.

She stumbled back, breathless.

And in that moment, she understood something she was not ready to accept:

Men could love, celebrate, laugh… and become monsters in a single heartbeat.

A howl rose to the sky.
The flames climbed higher still.

Naya felt her legs give way.

She could not stay here.
She could not watch any longer.

Without thinking, she turned and ran into the snow.
Branches clawed at her arms, her legs, her face, but she kept running.
Her breath escaped in uneven clouds that scattered in the wind like prayers.

The sounds of the massacre faded, swallowed by the forest.

Silence gradually took its place again…
a heavy, almost hostile silence.

Only after a long time did Naya collapse at the foot of a tree.

Her hands trembled.
Her cheeks were wet with tears she no longer even felt.

She didn’t know how long she remained there, curled against her knees.
Her body shaking with sobs, her mind shattered between two impossible truths:

the sky had rejected her,
the earth refused to accept her.

And in that void, fear and loneliness intertwined like two shadows refusing to leave her.

Scene 8 – The Second Fracture

Naya resumed her run.
Snow collapsed beneath her feet, branches lashed her arms, and the cold bit into her skin as if the night itself were trying to hold her back. Her breath tore out in uneven clouds, too quick, too short. She no longer knew whether she was fleeing the men, the fire… or what she had just discovered within them.

She stopped only when her legs gave out.

The forest opened before her into a silent clearing.
The wind turned slowly there, lifting the powdery snow in fragile spirals.

At its center lay a frozen lake, smooth as a steel mirror, locked beneath the pale moonlight.

Naya fell to her knees at the lake’s edge.

Her reflection appeared on the icy surface:
a broken face, cheeks streaked with dried tears, braids half undone,
and that look… that hollow look, where only shock and exhaustion remained.

She brushed the ice with her fingertips.
The cold cut through her entirely, as if the earth itself were reminding her that she was nothing in this world.

– “Why?”

A breath more than a word.

Why had the sky rejected her?
Why did the earth want her only to carry a role she did not understand?
Why did every step lead her toward more pain than answers?

On her wrist, the bracelet vibrated.

One pulse.
Then another.
Stronger.

As if it beat with its own life.

The air above the lake suddenly tensed.
A shiver swept across the clearing.

A thin golden line appeared in the empty space…
a glowing tear suspended above the water.
It throbbed, fragile, but undeniably real.

Then it widened slowly, splitting the night in two.

The wind froze.
The trees stopped moving.
The snow itself seemed to hold its breath.

Naya stepped back, eyes wide.

The fissure grew.

Through it, another world took shape—

A raging ocean.
Enormous black waves crashing against ships with dark sails.
The thunder of cannons.
The snap of wind in the rigging.
Silhouettes running across the decks, blades in hand, shouting orders swallowed by the storm.

The salty scent of the sea and gunpowder seemed to seep through the tear toward her.

The bracelet ignited against her skin.
The burn shot up her arm, sharper than anything she had felt before.

It was pulling.
Literally pulling.

As if it wanted to tear her away from this land that had just shown its true face.
As if that world, beyond the golden light was already calling her.

Naya tried to resist for a moment.
Fear seized her.
She no longer wanted to fall into the hands of men who did not understand her.
She was afraid this new world would be just another trap.

But the light grew brighter still.

A gust tore through the clearing, whipping the snow into spirals.
The air vibrated.
The ice beneath her knees cracked with a sharp snap.

The fissure opened wide in an instant, swallowing the night around her.

Naya closed her eyes.
She felt her body tilt, drawn by a force she could not fight.

The forest vanished.
The cold vanished.
The snow vanished.

Only the light remained…
and the roar of the sea.