NOVEL The Heir Who Returned from the Ice Chapter 32: The Final Barrier

The Heir Who Returned from the Ice

Chapter 32: The Final Barrier
  • Prev Chapter
  • Background
    Font family
    Font size
    Line hieght
    Full frame
    No line breaks
    Text to Speech
  • Next Chapter

Chapter 32: The Final Barrier

Dawn came with a whisper.

Not wind. Not snow.

But the sound of footsteps—three sets, moving in perfect sync, crunching through the frost on the eastern ridge.

Kaelan stood at the edge of the inner sanctum, hourglass glowing in his palm, ancestral armor gleaming under pale dawn.

He closed his eyes.

Felt them.

The three scouts.

Closer than he thought.

Closer than Ryn predicted.

"They’re here," Frosthael whispered in his mind. "And they’re not alone."

Kaelan’s blood ran cold. "How many more?"

"I can’t tell. But something... something is with them. Something ancient."

Kaelan opened his eyes.

And began.

He placed his hands on the ground.

Cold fire surged through him—not pain, not hunger, but purpose.

He reached for the Heart of Frost beneath the island.

Felt it respond.

Felt it recognize him.

And he pulled.

Frost erupted from the ground—not wild, not chaotic, but precise. Deliberate.

A wall of ice rose around the inner sanctum—ten feet high, seamless, glowing with faint blue light.

Rune after rune appeared on its surface—ancient Frostveil sigils, glowing brighter with each passing second.

The barrier was complete.

But Kaelan didn’t stop.

He reached deeper.

Deeper into the island.

Deeper into the gate.

Deeper into himself.

And he wove.

Not just ice.

But memory.

Not just frost.

But legacy.

The barrier shimmered—now not just a wall of ice, but a tapestry of light and shadow, showing glimpses of the past:

—Queen Vaelira swearing the pact.

—The last dragon rider leaping from the Ice Wall.

—His mother placing the locket around his neck.

The barrier was no longer just protection.

It was a story.

A warning.

A promise.

Darok watched from the western woods, knife in hand, eyes sharp.

He saw the scouts approach the barrier.

He saw them stop.

He saw them reach for it.

And he saw the barrier respond.

Frost shot out—not to harm, but to repel.

The scouts stumbled back, hissing in pain.

One of them turned—violet eyes glowing, black veins pulsing—and looked directly at Darok’s hiding place.

Darok froze.

Not from fear.

But from recognition. ƒree𝑤ebnσvel.com

He knew those eyes.

Not from this life.

But from another.

A life before the desert. Before the chains. Before the sea.

A life he had forgotten.

Until now.

"What is it?" Frosthael’s voice echoed in Kaelan’s mind.

Darok didn’t answer.

He couldn’t.

Because in that moment, he remembered.

He remembered who he was.

And why he was here.

Ryn appeared on the ridge, sword in hand, face grim.

"They’re testing it," he said. "But they won’t breach it. Not today."

Kaelan didn’t look at him. "They’re not alone."

Ryn’s eyes widened. "What do you mean?"

"I can feel it," Kaelan said. "Something... ancient. Watching from the shadows."

Ryn’s grip tightened on his sword. "The First Watchers?"

"I don’t know," Kaelan said. "But it’s not Karthian. It’s... older."

Silence.

Then Ryn spoke. "Whatever it is... it’s waiting. Watching. Learning."

Kaelan nodded. "And so are we."

That afternoon, Darok found Kaelan sitting by the barrier, hourglass in hand, eyes closed.

"You saw something," Darok said. Not a question.

Kaelan opened his eyes. "You felt something."

Darok sat beside him. "Those eyes... I’ve seen them before. In another life. In dreams I thought were nightmares."

Kaelan studied him. "What do you remember?"

Darok’s voice was raw. "A city of ice. A throne of frost. A war that ended everything."

Kaelan’s breath hitched. "The First Watchers."

Darok nodded. "I think... I was one of them."

Silence.

Then Kaelan spoke. "That’s why you were drawn to this island. Why you survived the sea. Why you found me."

Darok looked at him. "Yes."

"And now?"

Darok’s grip tightened on his knife. "Now... I remember my purpose."

Later, Ryn called them to the ruins.

His face was darker than Kaelan had ever seen it.

"The scouts are not leaving," Ryn began, voice low. "They’re camped on the eastern ridge. Waiting."

Kaelan frowned. "For what?"

"For nightfall," Ryn said. "When the barrier is weakest."

Darok crossed his arms. "We should attack now. While we have the advantage."

"No," Ryn said. "If we attack, we reveal our strength. We show them what we can do. And they will adapt."

"Then what do we do?" Darok asked.

"We wait," Ryn said. "And we prepare."

He looked at Kaelan. "The barrier will hold until dawn. But after that... it will weaken. And they will attack."

Kaelan’s jaw tightened. "I can strengthen it."

"At what cost?" Ryn asked. "Every time you use the gate’s power, it changes you. Your mother... she became colder after each use. More distant. More... empty."

Kaelan’s grip tightened on the hourglass. "I won’t let it consume me."

"You can’t promise that," Ryn said. "Because power doesn’t ask for permission. It takes."

Silence.

Then Darok spoke. "He won’t be alone. I’ll be with him. We’ll face it together."

Ryn studied them both. Then nodded. "Good. Because tomorrow... will decide everything."

That night, Kaelan stood on the eastern cliffs, hourglass in hand.

Frosthael coiled around his shoulders—unseen, unfelt by any but him.

"The night is coming," the dragon warned. "And with it... the choice."

Kaelan’s grip tightened on the hourglass. "I know."

"Will you be ready?"

Kaelan looked south—toward the empire, toward the man who broke his mother’s heart.

"I am ready."

"Are you?"

Kaelan closed his eyes.

And for the first time, he didn’t dream of revenge.

He dreamed of standing so tall, so unbreakable, that no shadow—his or anyone else’s—could ever touch him again.

And deep beneath the island, the Heart of Frost pulsed in time with his resolve.

Use arrow keys (or A / D) to PREV/NEXT chapter