The forest thinned by morning.
Trees gave way to open land.
Not a road.
Not quite wilderness either.
A place in between.
Like her.
---
Elsa walked without direction.
Not searching.
Not avoiding.
Just moving.
That was enough.
---
By midday—
She saw smoke.
Thin.
Rising.
Not a village.
Too small.
---
She slowed.
Watched.
No movement.
No voices.
No signs of fear.
That alone was strange.
---
She stepped closer.
Carefully.
---
A small hut stood alone.
Old wood.
Half-repaired roof.
A few herbs hanging to dry near the entrance.
No guards.
No barriers.
No attempt to hide.
---
"…Why here?"
The question came naturally.
Who lives like this?
Alone.
Unprotected.
---
"You're loud, you know."
The voice came from the side.
Calm.
Unbothered.
---
Elsa turned instantly.
Ready.
---
An old man sat on a fallen log.
Plain clothes.
No weapon in sight.
Watching her like she was… normal.
---
"You've been circling for five minutes," he added.
"I was deciding."
"On whether to kill me?"
"No."
A pause.
"…On whether to leave."
---
He nodded.
"That's fair."
---
Silence.
He didn't move.
Didn't reach for anything.
Didn't call for help.
Didn't even look at her horns.
---
That was wrong.
---
"You're not afraid."
It wasn't a question.
---
He shrugged slightly.
"Should I be?"
"Yes."
"Why?"
---
She stared at him.
Trying to understand.
"Because I can kill you."
---
He tilted his head.
"So can a falling tree."
That wasn't an answer.
---
"I killed people," she said.
Direct.
Clear.
No hiding.
---
"I figured."
Still calm.
Still steady.
---
"And you're still sitting there."
"Yes."
---
Silence stretched.
Uncomfortable.
Not for him.
For her.
---
"…Why?"
The word slipped out.
---
He looked at her properly now.
Not her horns.
Not her hands.
Her.
---
"Because you didn't kill me."
---
That answer hit differently.
---
"I just met you."
"Yes."
---
"That doesn't mean anything."
"It means everything."
---
She frowned slightly.
"That doesn't make sense."
---
He smiled faintly.
"Exactly."
---
She didn't like that.
Didn't understand it.
Didn't trust it.
---
"You should leave," she said.
"Why?"
"Because others won't act like me."
---
He nodded slowly.
"That's true."
He didn't move.
---
"…Then go."
"No."
---
The word landed heavier than it should have.
---
Elsa's eyes narrowed slightly.
"Why?"
---
"Because you're trying not to hurt anyone."
---
Silence.
Immediate.
Sharp.
---
"I already have."
"Yes."
---
"I will again."
"Maybe."
---
Her voice hardened.
"Then why stay?"
---
He leaned back slightly against the log.
"Because you're still asking that question."
---
That—
That was dangerous.
---
Elsa looked away.
For the first time since she left the capital.
Not out of fear.
Out of something else.
---
"…You don't know anything."
---
"Then tell me."
---
"I don't want to."
"Then don't."
---
He didn't push.
Didn't pry.
Didn't demand.
---
That made it worse.
---
She stepped back slightly.
Distance.
Safer.
---
"You're strange."
"So I've been told."
---
"You're not normal."
He laughed quietly.
"Neither are you."
---
That should have offended her.
It didn't.
---
Silence settled again.
But this time—
It wasn't empty.
---
"…I'm leaving," she said.
---
"Alright."
---
She didn't move immediately.
That bothered her.
---
"You're not going to stop me?"
"No."
---
"You're not going to ask where I'm going?"
"No."
---
"…Why?"
---
He looked at her again.
Same calm gaze.
Same lack of fear.
---
"Because you'll go anyway."
---
That was true.
---
She turned.
Walked.
---
Ten steps.
Twenty.
---
She stopped.
---
"…You should still leave."
---
"I won't."
---
She didn't turn this time.
---
"…Then don't die."
---
A small pause.
---
"I'll try."
---
She walked again.
Didn't stop.
Didn't look back.
---
But something had changed.
Not her control.
Not her anger.
---
Her certainty.
---
For the first time—
Someone had looked at her…
…and didn't decide what she was.
---
And that was far more dangerous than fear.
