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The morning mist thickened into a living, breathing entity that swallowed the forest in a cold, unyielding embrace. Ryon moved through the dense fog with the silent surety of a stalking wolf, every sense heightened, every muscle tuned to the slightest sign of danger. The air was damp and earthy, heavy with the scent of wet moss and decaying leaves, the forest floor soft beneath his boots. Overhead, the canopy was a tangle of twisting limbs and mottled green leaves, catching what little light dared to fall from the dim, leaden sky.

This forest was a world apart—a labyrinth of shadows and secrets where the unseen eyes of creatures, both mortal and magical, watched every step. The silence was oppressive, thick like a smothering blanket, broken only by the occasional rustle of a hidden animal or the distant cry of a lone hawk. Even the wind seed cautious, whispering through the branches with quiet restraint, as if wary of disturbing the tension that clung to the woods.

Ryon’s breath ca steady and controlled, each exhale a ghostly mist in the cool morning air. His thoughts were sharp and restless—mories of the council’s deceit, the fractured loyalties, and the blood spilled in their na weighed heavily on his mind. The firestorm of betrayal that had consud so many allies had not yet passed. The hunt for him was relentless; the council had unleashed its shadowed assassins and rcenaries like a plague, intent on snuffing out his existence.

He ca to a sudden halt at the edge of a small clearing, the fog parting enough to let a weak beam of pale sunlight touch the earth. Beneath the scattered light lay the churned soil of recent passage—deep footprints pressed into the mud, the marks of horses and n entwined like a dark thread weaving through the forest. Ryon knelt, his gloved fingers tracing the impression, committing every detail to mory. They were close. Too close.

The silence shattered with the softest of movents—leaves shifting, a breath held too long. Ryon’s hand flew to the hilt of his sword, fingers tightening around the worn leather grip. From the shadows erged Elira, her form gliding like a shadow made flesh. Her dark eyes glead with sharp intelligence and unwavering determination, every inch the warrior forged by countless battles.

"Ryon," she breathed, voice low and steady despite the urgency. "I followed the council’s hunters from the southern edge of the Keep. They almost had you."

A rare flicker of relief crossed Ryon’s face before hardening into resolve. "They will co again. And next ti, it will not just be rcenaries. The council’s reach is far greater than we imagined."

Elira’s gaze scanned the dense woods, wary and calculating. "Then we stop running. We gather what strength remains. We find those still loyal to the cause—those who rember the South before the council’s iron grip."

Ryon’s thoughts flickered briefly to the sisters he had left behind—Elira, fierce and fiery; Kaelen, unyielding as steel; Aurelia, stoic and unwavering. Each was a pillar of his resolve, a piece of the fragile hope that still burned. Alone, they were vulnerable—but together, they could ignite a rebellion.

"We will find them," Ryon said quietly. "But we must be swift. The council’s shadow spreads like wildfire."

Elira’s hand gripped his arm, grounding him in the mont. "Then we have to move faster. We strike in a smarter way."

Together, they vanished deeper into the forest’s tangled embrace. Branches clawed at their faces and clothes, the earth beneath slick with moss and dampness. The ancient trees stood like silent sentinels, their bark etched with the scars of countless seasons, watching as two figures slipped through their realm. The forest was alive with magic—an invisible pulse beneath the surface, a heartbeat older than the kingdoms themselves.

Hours passed in tense silence, broken only by the soft sounds of footsteps and the occasional birdcall. Ryon’s mind raced, piecing together strategies, recalling faces of allies lost and new faces needed. He felt the weight of destiny pressing down—his every decision could an survival or ruin for the South.

At last, they erged into a hidden glade where a small camp had been hastily erected. Fires burned low, smoke curling into the fog like restless spirits. Faces turned toward them, weary but watchful—warriors and spies, those disillusioned by the council’s rule, their eyes alight with cautious hope.

Kaelen stepped forward from the circle of n and won, his stance commanding even in the dim light. "Ryon," he said, voice grim, "the council has doubled its patrols. They expect us to scatter, to weaken. We will not give them that satisfaction."

Ryon nodded, the fire within his chest flaring. "We will not make a run for it. We will stand united. The South will rember what it ans to fight for freedom."

The gathering leaned in as Ryon laid out his plan—a rebellion born from truth, forged in unity. They would strike the council’s forces where they were weakest, rally the discontented, and ignite a spark that could not be quenched.

But beneath the murmurs of hope, shadows lurked. So faces bore secret hesitation. Whispers of betrayal flickered in eyes darting away, a poison that threatened to unravel their fragile alliance.

Ryon’s gaze hardened. "Any who seek to betray us will find no quarter. We stand together or fall apart."

The night deepened around them, the stars winking through breaks in the fog. Fires crackled, stories of past glories and future battles weaving through the smoke. Outside the veil of the forest, unseen blades glinted in the dark, and the council’s hunt pressed on.

Ryon’s heart beat steady as steel, filled with the weight of ancient promises and the fla of new beginnings. He would walk the path of shadows and steel, not as a hunted exile, but as a leader destined to carve a future from the ashes of the past.

The night was long. The forest whispered its secrets. And the Veil of Silent Blades awaited.

You are reading HAREM: WARLOCK OF THE SOUTH Chapter 69: THE VEIL OF SILENT BLADES on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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