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The corridor’s silence was deceptive. Stone walls glistened faintly from torchlight, casting distorted silhouettes that stretched and shrank with every flicker. Ryon’s boots struck the cold floor with a asured rhythm, but underneath the echoing steps, another sound threaded itself into his senses—soft, deliberate, and too perfectly tid to be chance.

He didn’t turn imdiately. Whoever shadowed him had skill; they knew how to blend into the architecture’s rhythm. But Ryon had learned to read shadows, to taste the air for the tallic tang of intent.

At the far end of the hall, the moon’s pale light stread through a tall, narrow window. Dust motes hung suspended like shards of frozen breath, and in that half-light, the world sharpened. Ryon stopped. He didn’t speak. Instead, his right hand brushed against the hilt of his sword—a gesture that was both warning and invitation.

The following footsteps ceased. The quiet beca a taut string.

A voice slipped into the air, low and smooth. "You walk with the bearing of a man expecting knives, Ryon. That can be... exhausting."

From the shadows, a figure detached itself—tall, wrapped in layers of black and charcoal-grey, face half-concealed beneath a hood. The flicker of torchlight caught the faint curve of a smile and the gleam of eyes that watched too closely.

Ryon’s reply was a single asured breath before he spoke. "I’ve learned that expecting knives keeps them from finding your back."

The stranger stepped closer. "Wise. Yet here you are, just leaving the council chamber where the air stinks of oaths and treachery. Tell —did they promise you the war you crave, or the peace you fear?"

Ryon didn’t answer imdiately. His mind replayed the council’s final words—ash-scented promises layered with threats, the unspoken pact that bound his next steps tighter than any chain. "Neither," he said at last. "They promised a ga. And I don’t play gas I don’t intend to win."

The hooded figure’s smile deepened, though it never reached the eyes. "Good. Then we understand each other."

A silence settled between them, thicker than before, carrying the weight of decisions yet to be made. Then, abruptly, the figure turned and began walking toward a side passage. After a few steps, they glanced over their shoulder. "Follow , if you want answers the council will never give you."

Ryon hesitated only long enough to gauge the hum of magic in the air—there was no overt spellcraft, but the passage seed to drink in light. He followed.

The side corridor was narrower, its torches dimr. The air cooled as they descended a spiral stair, each step groaning with age. Faint echoes of water dripped sowhere far below.

At the base, the corridor opened into a chamber unlike any Ryon had seen within the stronghold. The walls were not stone but blackened glass, veined with threads of red fire that pulsed faintly like a heartbeat. In the center stood a round table carved from volcanic rock, its surface etched with runes that shimred faintly when the hooded figure approached.

"This is the Ember Hall," they said quietly. "Built before the war between North and South even began. Few know it exists. Fewer still have stood where you stand now."

Ryon stepped closer, his gaze sweeping over the runes. So were in languages he recognized—old dialects of the southern tribes—but others twisted into alien geotry, as if written by a hand that had never known the human world.

The hooded figure finally drew back their cowl, revealing a sharp-boned face, skin pale as frost, and hair the color of burnt copper. The eyes—gold-ringed and unblinking—were not human.

"You’re not council," Ryon said flatly.

"No," they replied. "And neither are you, though they dress you in the illusion of choice. My na is Kael. I am here because there is a tide coming—one the council cannot control and does not wish you to see. But you... you have already begun to feel it, haven’t you?"

Ryon thought of the dreams—the burning fields, the rivers running black, the faces of those he’d lost and those he hadn’t t yet, all staring through him. "If what you’re saying is true," he said slowly, "then the council’s plans are worse than I imagined."

Kael leaned on the table, their voice lowering. "They are not planning for victory. They are planning for survival—their own. If the South burns, they will retreat beyond the Ashline and seal the gates. And everyone outside those gates will die."

The words struck like iron. Ryon’s knuckles tightened against the edge of the table. He had known the council were political predators, but to abandon their people outright—

"What do you want from ?" Ryon asked.

Kael’s smile returned, sharper this ti. "Not obedience. Not allegiance. I want you to burn their plans before they ever take root. There is a weapon—older than this hall, forged when the skies themselves were split. It lies beneath the Valley of Hollow Cinders. With it, you could end the war, one way or another."

Ryon studied Kael’s expression, searching for deception. He found none—or perhaps they were simply too skilled to read. "And why tell this? Why not take it yourself?"

"Because the weapon chooses its bearer. It will not suffer the unworthy. And I..." Kael’s gaze flickered, just for a mont. "I am not what it seeks."

---

They spoke for another hour, their voices low and sharp, carving a map of possibility and ruin across the ember-lit room. When Ryon finally left the Ember Hall, his mind was a forge of new resolve.

The corridor above felt different now, every shadow heavier with aning. The council’s oaths echoed faintly in his ears, but so did Kael’s warning. The Valley of Hollow Cinders. A weapon that could change the war’s course.

And sowhere in the night beyond the stronghold walls, the first hints of smoke began to thread the wind.

Ryon knew then that the ga had shifted. The council might think him a piece on their board, but he had no intention of playing by their rules.

The next move would be his. And when it ca, it would co in fla.

You are reading HAREM: WARLOCK OF THE SOUTH Chapter 65: SHADOWS CAST IN FLAME on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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