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The storm of battle pressed from all sides, a choking, crushing thing of steel and fire. The northern tide surged, the southern line groaned, and the air burned with the sound of a thousand clashes. Ryon waded through it like a man possessed, his blade an extension of his fury, every strike carving a path through soldiers who were not his true enemy. He fought not for numbers now, not for strategy or line, but for one single face—the scarred commander who had vanished into the sea of war.

Every heartbeat hamred with the echo of their unfinished duel. His ribs ached, his muscles scread, his tunic was soaked through with his own blood—but still he pressed forward, eyes hunting, teeth bared.

Then, like lightning in the storm, he saw him.

The scarred commander stood among his n, shouting orders, his sword dripping, his armor battered but unbroken. His scarred face turned, and for a breath their eyes t across the carnage. The air itself seed to still, the battlefield shrinking until there was only that gaze, that silent vow between predator and predator.

Ryon roared, cutting down two northern soldiers who dared to bar his path, and surged forward. The commander barked sothing to his guards, who ford a wall of steel around him. But the wall was no wall to Ryon—it was tinder before fla. He carved through them with desperate fury, each swing fueled not by skill alone but by a raw hunger that scread louder than his wounds. Blood splashed his face, painted his arms, and still he pressed until the last guard fell screaming into the mud.

Now it was only them again, the world narrowing, just as before.

The commander raised his sword, breathing hard, his lips curling into a twisted grin despite the weariness in his stance. "So you found again, southern whelp. Do you think this ti will be different? Do you think—"

"Stop talking," Ryon snarled, his voice shaking with rage. "Stop hiding behind words and fall."

Their blades t with a force that rattled teeth. The clash was brutal, rciless, stripped of finesse, reduced to raw survival. The commander swung heavy and wide, each strike ant to cleave bone; Ryon answered with speed and ferocity, every motion drawn from the edge of desperation.

Blades sparked, armor rang, blood splattered.

"You fight like a beast," the commander spat, slamming his shoulder into Ryon and nearly toppling him. "But beasts die in cages."

Ryon staggered, caught himself, then drove forward, his sword carving a line across the man's thigh. The commander hissed, but instead of faltering, he swung harder, his blade grazing Ryon's cheek, drawing a hot line of blood that stung his eye.

The world spun down to those wounds, to those breaths. They circled, swords dragging through the blood-soaked earth. Soldiers clashed around them, but none dared co close—they knew instinctively that this was sacred ground, where kings were made or unmade.

The commander lunged. Ryon barely caught it, steel screeching against steel. Their faces crashed close, sweat and blood mingling. The commander's voice was a growl. "Even if you kill , boy, the North will never bow. You'll only drown in the tide."

Ryon's teeth clenched, his chest burning, his voice raw as thunder. "Then I'll drown them with !"

With a surge born of every mory—his burned holand, the cries of the South, the promise of vengeance—he twisted, ripped free, and drove his blade forward. It sank deep into the commander's gut, the resistance of flesh yielding to cold steel.

The commander gasped, the fight leaving him in a rush of air, his sword slipping from his hand to the mud. His scarred face twisted, eyes wide, disbelief etched deep. He staggered, clutching at the blade buried in him, blood bubbling at his lips.

Ryon stepped close, forcing the steel deeper until their faces were inches apart. His voice ca low, steady, a promise made iron. "This is for every child your North burned. This is for every scream you silenced. This is for the South."

He ripped the blade upward, tearing through muscle and bone, until the commander's body convulsed, shuddered, and collapsed. The scarred man fell into the mud, lifeless, eyes staring at nothing, his blood pouring into the soil he had sworn to conquer.

For a heartbeat, silence claid Ryon. The world seed distant, muffled. He stared down at the corpse, chest heaving, every nerve trembling with the weight of what he had done.

Then the silence broke. A roar rose from the southern ranks—loud, unstoppable, a cry that rolled across the battlefield like thunder. They had seen. They had witnessed their warlord fell the iron scar of the North. And with that, the tide broke.

The North faltered, n staggering, eyes wide with horror as their commander lay dead in the mud. The South surged, fueled by the sight, crashing into them with renewed fury.

Ryon stood in the center of it all, his blade dripping red, his breath ragged. His body was broken, yet his spirit burned brighter than ever. Around him, war raged on, but within him, a single truth echoed—he had killed the scar, and now the South had a chance to live.

The scarred commander lay motionless, his lifeblood spilling into the soil, and for the briefest instant the chaos of the battlefield seed to still. n on both sides had seen it—the northern warlord's death, his fall at the hands of a southern blade. It was as though the storm itself had drawn a sharp breath.

Then the air erupted.

A roar burst from the southern ranks, rising and swelling, a living wave of sound that shook the ground beneath their boots. It was not rely triumph—it was hunger, vengeance, the breaking of chains all given voice at once. The cry surged through the n like fire through dry grass, rekindling spirits battered and bent beneath hours of slaughter.

"FOR THE SOUTH!" they thundered, shields hamring, spears thrusting forward with new ferocity.

The northern line wavered. Their eyes fell upon the corpse of their commander, his scarred visage caked in mud, the banner beside him sagging into the blood. Fear cracked the steel of their resolve. Orders faltered, shouted commands lost in the roar of southern fury. So northern n fought harder in blind desperation, others broke rank entirely, their discipline crumbling as panic clawed at them.

Ryon staggered back a step from the body, his breath ragged, his sword slick and trembling in his grip. He could scarcely hear the roars of his n, though they thundered around him. His vision swam in and out of focus, his chest rising in sharp, uneven bursts. Every cut, every bruise, every ounce of exhaustion crashed down at once, like a mountain falling onto weary shoulders.

But he forced himself forward, lifting his blade with what strength remained. He raised it high above the scarred commander's body, and the southern cry swelled again, a living storm that shook the battlefield. n pressed harder, cutting into the northern ranks with teeth bared and blades flashing.

It was working. The tide was turning.

He saw it in flashes—northern shields splitting under relentless southern spears, horsen being dragged from saddles, flas devouring war banners. The North was faltering, their ranks breaking apart. The South, bloodied but unbowed, surged into the cracks with all the fury of a people starved for victory.

But even as the tide shifted, Ryon's body betrayed him. His knees buckled, the weight of his wounds finally dragging him down. He stumbled, dropping to one knee in the mud beside the scarred commander's corpse. His sword slipped from his grip, clattering uselessly into the dirt. His hands pressed against the ground to steady himself, but even that simple effort sent pain searing through his ribs.

The roar of his n thundered around him, but inside his head, the world dimd, narrowing to a tunnel of sound and light. His breath rasped, shallow and strained, his vision flickering. He had slain the beast that haunted him, slain the face that carried the North's cruelty—but the price of it was written across his battered body.

A shadow fell across him. He half-lifted his head to see southern soldiers standing guard, forming a shield wall around their fallen champion. Their faces were grim, eyes burning with devotion as they fought to protect him.

"Protect the warlord!" one cried.

"Hold the line! The South rises here!" another bellowed, driving his spear into a northern chest and kicking the body back into the mud.

Ryon tried to rise again, but his body refused. His arms trembled and gave way, sending him sprawling onto his side. His cheek pressed into the blood-soaked earth, the world spinning, distant. He could hear the clash of steel and the cries of n, but they seed far away, as though he were already slipping into another world.

Yet even in that haze, he smiled faintly. He had done it. The scarred commander was dead. The South had a chance.

The din of the battle surged above him—southern voices thundering, northern cries breaking, the clash of victory and retreat. He wanted to rise, to see it, to be there in the heart of the turning tide, but the weight was too great. His eyes fluttered, heavy with exhaustion, his breath shallow.

The last thing he saw before darkness tugged at him was the banner of the South—torn, bloodied, but rising high in the hands of his n, carried forward over the scarred commander's corpse.

Then the world dimd, and Ryon slipped into unconsciousness, his fate balanced on the knife's edge of battle's aftermath.

You are reading HAREM: WARLOCK OF THE SOUTH Chapter 88 88: ASH AGAINST THE IRON SCAR on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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