Font Size
15px

The march east was not asured in miles, but in weight. Each step I took pressed deeper into than the earth beneath my boots. I was carrying more than my own body now—I carried the South, I carried their faith, their fear, their blood, and the shadows of those who had fallen to make room for in this cursed path. I no longer walked among them. I walked before them, my shadow stretched by the torchlight, long and jagged as a spear.

I could feel their eyes. So were reverent, so fearful, most unreadable. But not a single soul dared to look in the face when I turned my head. It was as if I had stepped out of their ranks and into sothing else entirely—an untouchable thing, half man, half storm. I was the one who had survived the circle, the one who had torn a victory from death’s throat. They had their triumph, but I had only the fracture it left behind.

The River of Silence awaited us at dawn. A silver vein cutting through black soil, glinting beneath the first pale fire of the sun. Its waters sang softly, though the song was muted, mournful, as if carrying the voices of the countless buried along its banks. To the South it was sacred: a threshold, a marker of those who went to war and did not return. To cross it was not just to pass into the North’s heartlands, but to step beyond the line of no return.

We ca to its edge. The n halted, their silence as heavy as their armor. Mist curled low over the surface, shrouding the water’s breadth in a veil that blurred where earth ended and current began. The air itself seed hushed, pressing down on us.

I moved first. My boots reached the soft mud of the bank, and I looked down into the water. My reflection stared back—scarred, hollow-eyed, unrecognizable. The current broke my face apart, twisting it into fragnts. The river knew as I was: fractured.

The System stirred inside , its voice quiet, almost tender.

"You are not the man you were. That skin is gone. What remains is harder, sharper. Stronger."

"Or emptier," I whispered.

"Strength is emptiness filled with purpose."

I did not answer. The river gave back another face, rippling my reflection into that of the commander I had slain, then into the faces of my father, of brothers-in-arms, of Southerners who had bled out in the mud. The river carried them all. The silence was not absence—it was inheritance.

Behind Kael stepped forward, his boots sinking into the mud. His voice was hoarse but unshaken.

"The n hesitate. They fear the crossing."

I did not turn. "So do you."

Kael’s pause was long. "Aye."

Honesty like that cut sharper than denial.

I drew a breath, the air cold, laced with iron. Then I stepped forward.

The river seized imdiately, icy fingers dragging at my legs. The cold bit into bone, a force as much alive as dead. The current pressed against my thighs, then my waist, clawing to pull under. I forced myself onward, eyes locked on the far bank.

Behind , hesitation trembled in the ranks. I heard it in the shuffle of boots, in the murmur of doubt. Then Kael’s voice cracked like thunder:

"Forward!"

The command tore through the air. Boots splashed in behind , a thousand n wading into the current, driven by the sight of in its grasp.

The river was furious now. The water surged, pulling harder, as if insulted by mortal flesh treading its spine. The current battered my chest, dragging against my ribs. My lungs burned with every breath.

The System’s voice slithered close. "You could let go. End it here. Let the water claim you. No crown. No burden. Only silence."

For a heartbeat, the thought was sweet. To release myself, to sink, to vanish into the river’s quiet. No more voices, no more eyes, no more weight.

But then I rembered. Fire. Faces. Those who followed into ruin because they believed I would walk out the other side. The South had given their faith. If I drowned, they drowned with .

"No." The word ripped out of , ragged but unyielding. "Not yet."

The current raged harder, as if it had heard . My legs scread. The weight of the water pressed lower, threatening to fold into its black mouth. But I refused. I kept moving, step after step, until finally, my boots struck earth. I fell to my knees on the far bank, gasping, mud swallowing my hands as if to claim .

The South poured out of the river behind . n stumbled, so fell, but most rose again. They had followed because I had not fallen. They had crossed because I had crossed.

And then ca the sound. Not wild cheers, not frantic shouts. But a chant. Low. Heavy. My na rolling from their throats in unison, in rhythm.

Ryon.

Ryon.

Ryon.

The chant struck harder than the current ever could. It was not just sound—it was surrender. They were not fearing . They were giving sothing. They were placing sothing on .

"You see?" the System purred. "They do not fear the crown. They give it freely. You are already wearing it."

I rose slowly, mud dripping like blood from my fingers. The chant swelled, the air trembling with the rhythm of my na. It struck the river too, until I swore the current itself whispered it back to .

But inside, silence remained. Heavy. Endless.

The crown had not touched my brow, yet its weight pressed harder than ever.

Kael ca to my side, his hand heavy on my shoulder. His eyes, storm-gray and scarred, were the only ones that t mine.

"They believe in you more than they fear the river," he said. "That is sothing no Southron has ever carried across this water."

"Belief is a fire that burns as easily as it warms," I said. My voice was flat, but he nodded, understanding.

We did not linger. The army set camp on the far bank, the n still chanting my na as they built fires and drove stakes into the ground. But I could not rest. My eyes kept drifting back to the river, to the mist curling above it, to the way the silence beneath its song still clung to .

When night fell, the river’s voice grew louder. Alone, I returned to its edge. The water shimred black beneath the stars. Reflections of torches flickered, distorted, until they looked like burning eyes watching from the depths.

The System stirred again. "The river tested you. And you prevailed."

"It nearly drowned ."

"It ant to. Drowning is not defeat—it is transformation. But you refused. You walked through. That is why the South chants your na. That is why the crown grows heavier. You did not just cross the river. You took it."

I stared down into the water. My reflection stared back. This ti, it wore a crown of shadow.

I did not sleep that night.

By morning, the South would march deeper into the North. But I knew sothing had shifted. The River of Silence had asured , and in surviving it, I had stepped further into the role I could no longer deny.

Not a commander. Not a warlock.

But a king born of ash and silence.

And the crown was already waiting.

You are reading HAREM: WARLOCK OF THE SOUTH Chapter 129: THE RIVER OF SILENCE on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Death Notice cover
Trending now

Death Notice

Gluttonous Monk ·Horror

Heisagiftedandintelligentyoungman.Heisamurdererthatenjoysthebloodshed.He...Readmore Heisagiftedandintelligentyoungman.Heisamurdererthatenjoystheblo...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.