Astron stood, the faint blue glow of his mana tendrils retracting into his palm as Rovan slumped against the wall, trembling. His confession hung in the air like a crack of thunder.
"Hawkins!" Irina's voice cut through the oppressive tension, a sharp, fiery eruption of anger. She pushed off the wall, her fists clenched at her sides, flames flickering faintly along her fingertips. "Those bastards dare!"
Rovan flinched, his face pale and sweat-slicked as Irina's fiery presence bore down on him. She stepped forward, her amber eyes blazing with fury, her breath quickening as the weight of the revelation settled on her. Images flashed through her mind-Jeremy's mocking smirk, his venomous threats, and the inferno she had left in her wake when she had branded him.
Her voice dropped to a low growl, more dangerous than her earlier shout. "First Jeremy, now this? They've grown bold, thinking they can send their dogs after me."
Astron said nothing, his sharp purple eyes observing her closely. He crossed his arms, his calm demeanor a stark contrast to Irina's simmering rage. He was assessing her reaction, though she barely noticed his presence. Her thoughts were consumed by one single conclusion.
"They're declaring war,' she realized, her anger coiling tighter, a smoldering inferno within her chest. "The audacity to strike against the Emberheart family, against me- do they think we'll stand for this?'
She turned her gaze back to Rovan, who was shaking, his earlier defiance completely obliterated. Irina's voice was cold, a blade sharpened by fury. "You made a mistake, aligning yourself with Hawkins. Do you even realize the kind of wrath you've invited?"
"P-please..." Rovan stammered, his breath hitching as Irina's flames flared brighter, casting menacing shadows along the walls. "I-I didn't have a choice! They-they forced us into this!"
"Spare me your excuses," she snapped, the heat in her voice matching the fire curling along her hands. "You knew what you were doing when you agreed to this. You thought you could walk away unscathed."
Irina's mind raced as her flames flickered and danced, her thoughts turning to the Hawkins family. Jeremy had been a means to an end for them, nothing more than a tool in their endless pursuit of power. But now, with this bold attack, they had shown their hand-and it wasn't just a message to her. It was a challenge to her family, to everything the Emberheart name represented.
"They dared to send assassins for me?" she muttered under her breath, her voice trembling with barely contained rage. "They dare think they can touch an Emberheart
and get away with it?"
Irina's flames surged, licking along her arms and crackling with raw, untamed power, Her amber eyes gleamed with fury, the reflection of her own fire burning in their depths. She raised her hand slowly, the air around her shimmering with heat. The captives recoiled instinctively, their terror palpable.
"You dared to come after me," she hissed, her voice low and dangerous, carrying the weight of her wrath. "And now, you'll learn what it means to provoke an Emberheart."
The fire swirled in her palm, a blazing orb of destruction that cast flickering shadows across the warehouse walls. For a moment, the room seemed frozen in time, the only movement the hypnotic dance of her flames.
"W-wait!" Rovan choked out, his voice cracking as he scrambled backward. "P-please, I told you everything! I—"
His plea was cut off by a sudden rush of heat as Irina's flames erupted, engulfing him in an instant. The inferno roared, consuming his cries and filling the room with the acrid scent of burning flesh. The other captives screamed, their voices rising in a desperate cacophony as they tried to claw away from the firestorm.
But Irina's fury was unrelenting.
She turned her burning gaze to the rest of them, her flames growing brighter, hotter. With a flick of her wrist, tendrils of fire shot forward, coiling around the remaining captives like serpents. They thrashed and wailed, but the flames held fast, tightening their grip as they seared away flesh and hope alike.
Astron stood silently, his sharp purple eyes fixed on Irina. He didn't move to stop her, didn't utter a word. There was no judgment in his gaze, no pity for the burning men, only a cold understanding of the resolve that drove her.
Irina's heart pounded as she watched the captives writhe, their figures silhouetted against the blinding inferno. There was no remorse in her expression, no hesitation. To her, this was justice-not just for the insult to her family, but for the audacity of the Hawkins to think they could strike without consequence.
As the flames consumed the last of their screams, the warehouse fell silent, save for the crackling of embers and the faint groaning of the structure around them. Irina lowered her hand, the fire receding into faint flickers that danced along her fingertips before vanishing entirely. The once-imposing figures of Rovan and his subordinates were now little more than charred remains, their forms unrecognizable.
The oppressive silence of the warehouse settled like ash, the faint crackle of embers the only sound breaking the void. Irina stood amidst the destruction, her amber eyes dimming as the rush of fury ebbed away, leaving a hollow ache in its place. Her flames, once wild and consuming, now flickered faintly along her fingertips before extinguishing entirely.
The charred remains of Rovan and his subordinates lay crumpled and unrecognizable, their earlier defiance erased by the unforgiving wrath of her fire. Irina stared at the scene for a moment longer, her expression unreadable.
"They deserved worse,' she thought, but the conviction that had fueled her moments ago felt distant now, replaced by a creeping emptiness. 'But... it still doesn't feel good. Astron's quiet voice broke through her thoughts, steady and calm. "No hesitation." Irina didn't respond immediately. She closed her eyes, exhaling slowly as she turned her back on the charred bodies. "None," she said finally, her voice flat. Astron stepped closer, his sharp purple eyes studying her with that unnervingly calm intensity. "When did you first do it?" he asked, his tone more curious than prying. Irina glanced at him, her expression distant, as if recalling something from another lifetime. "Ten," she said quietly. "I was ten."
Astron nodded slightly, as though the answer confirmed something he already suspected. "You were quite young"
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