The moment Conri truly understood what had happened, the stars felt colder.
Not dimmer, not broken but cold.
Vanri returned first.
Not with triumph.
Not with the measured composure of a commander.
But with hesitation.
That alone told Conri everything was wrong.
They stood in the high balcony of Silver Fang Hall, Yggdrasil's branches glowing faintly overhead.
"My Lord," Vanri began carefully.
Conri didn't look at him.
"It's Hela."
Vanri's silence was confirmation.
"She was sealed," Vanri said quietly. "By the All-Father."
The wind stopped.
Even the distant hum of Valmythra's evolving magic quieted.
Conri's fingers tightened around the railing until star-metal groaned.
"…When?"
"After the Valkyries were slain."
Conri closed his eyes.
He had felt it the rupture, the binding.
The silence where a violent, living presence once burned.
But he hadn't wanted to believe it.
To the cosmos, she was Hela.
To Asgard, she was Odin's daughter.
To the Spiral Realms, she was inevitable extinction.
To Conri
She was family.
Not by blood.
But by bond.
She had once mocked his sword forms.
He had once teased her about her dramatic entrances.
She called him "White Ghost" with a smirk that was half challenge, half respect.
And beneath the armor, beneath the green aura, beneath the death
there had been someone shaped.
Someone trained.
Someone directed.
And that direction came from one man.
Odin.
Conri did not joke.
That was how Cassandra knew it was serious.
"She slaughtered the Valkyries," Cassandra said softly. "You know that."
"I know."
"She defied her father."
"I know."
"She was becoming unstable."
"I know."
His voice did not rise.
That made it worse.
"But this was not only her fault."
He turned then, eyes sharp but controlled.
"Odin raised her in war."
Silence.
"He praised conquest. Rewarded slaughter. Measured worth in victory."
His jaw clenched.
"You don't forge a blade and then curse it for being sharp."
Conri did not joke.
That was how Cassandra knew it was serious.
"She slaughtered the Valkyries," Cassandra said softly. "You know that."
"I know."
"She defied her father."
"I know."
"She was becoming unstable."
"I know."
His voice did not rise.
That made it worse.
"But this was not only her fault."
He turned then, eyes sharp but controlled.
"Odin raised her in war."
Silence.
"He praised conquest. Rewarded slaughter. Measured worth in victory."
His jaw clenched.
"You don't forge a blade and then curse it for being sharp."
Conri did not storm to Asgard.
He did not immediately draw Tyrfing.
He did not explode in rage.
He sent a message.
Short and simple.
"We need to talk."
The response came days later.
"I have done what was necessary."
That was it.
No explanation,no apology and invitation.
Conri read it once,then twice
Then he crushed the projection rune in his hand.
He went anyway.not with armies of threat,but alone.
Asgard's golden halls felt heavier than before.
Odin waited at the throne.
They stood facing each other not as ruler and ruler.
But as men who had once trusted each other.
"You sealed her," Conri said.
"Yes."
"You didn't ask for help."
"It was my responsibility."
"She was more than a responsibility!"
Odin's eye hardened.
"She slaughtered the Valkyries."
"And why do you think she believed that was the answer?" Conri shot back.
"Because you taught her that war solves defiance!"
Odin's aura flickered faintly.
"You speak as though I wanted this."
"I'm speaking as someone who warned you centuries ago."
A Heavy silence followed
"You turned her into a weapon," Conri continued. "Then punished her for acting like one."
"Then guide her!"
"I tried."
"You commanded her."
Odin's voice rose slightly.
"I am All-Father."
"And she was your daughter!"
The words echoed through the chamber.
For a moment—
Neither spoke.
Odin's voice lowered.
"You do not understand the burden of kingship."
Conri stepped closer.
"No. But I understand the burden of choice."
"You would have done differently?"
"Yes."
"How?"
Conri didn't hesitate.
"I would have stood beside her. Not above her."
Odin's silence was not agreement.
It was exhaustion.
"She would have destroyed realms."
"And now she sits alone in darkness, believing the only person she trusted betrayed her."
Odin closed his eye.
"That is the price."
Conri's voice went cold.
"No. That is the consequence."
They stood there a long time.
Two leaders.
Two fathers in different ways.
Two men who once laughed over victories and shared counsel.
"I will not undo it," Odin said finally.
"I know."
"She was too dangerous."
"She was too damaged."
Odin's eye opened sharply.
"What are you implying?"
"That this didn't start with her."
Silence.
Then Odin turned away.
"If you cannot accept my decision—"
"I don't."
The interruption was calm.
Firm.
"I don't accept it."
Another long pause.
"Then perhaps," Odin said quietly, "we should not speak for a time."
Conri gave a humorless half-smile.
"Yeah."
He turned.
Walked away.
No jokes.
No playful insult.
No promise of future drinks.
Just distance.
The alliance did not shatter.
Valmythra and Asgard remained connected diplomatically.
Vanri still respected Odin.
The clans still cooperated when necessary.
But the friendship—
Was gone.
No more private counsel.
No more personal invitations.
No more quiet conversations between two beings who understood power.
Conri returned home.
He stood beneath Yggdrasil and said nothing for a long time.
Finally—
"She was wrong."
The wind stirred.
"But he was wrong too."
His hand rested on Tyrfing.
"I won't let my people become weapons."
His voice softened.
"And if she ever breaks that seal…"
His eyes hardened.
"…I won't fight her alone."
Odin felt it.
The absence.
Conri's presence no longer brushed against Asgard's cosmic edge in familiar acknowledgment.
No subtle exchange of awareness.
No shared understanding.
Just distance.
For centuries, they had stood as allies.
Now they stood as separate guardians.
Bound by history.
Divided by one decision.
And somewhere beyond space—
Hela waited.
Not knowing that the man who laughed at her scowls…
Would have chosen differently.
Not knowing that the White Ghost no longer spoke to her father.
Because sometimes—
The loudest wars are not fought with blades.
They are fought with silence.
