Font Size
15px

In Zura, the storm did not announce itself with thunder. It began in whispers—threads of malice spun in shadowed chambers. What Estalis heralded as triumph, Zura nad arrogance. And arrogance, the Zurans believed, demanded correction.

The Defense Minister moved with the patience of a spider, each word and gesture weaving an unseen web. Spies were dispatched into Estalis, not as soldiers but as rchants, pilgrims, even wandering minstrels. Their task was not to kill, but to listen, to map weaknesses and to sow seeds of doubt in taverns and marketplaces.

...

In the coastal towns of Estalis, spies and ssengers slipped through alleyways at night, bearing sealed scrolls hidden under their cloaks. Couriers changed hands at forgotten crossroads, vanishing into forests before dawn could reveal their faces.

And soon, the whispers took root. Rumors began to circulate in border villages. In taverns and marketplaces, voices spoke of the Phoenix Legion not as saviors but as tyrants whose victories drew vultures. To follow them, people said, was to invite war into one’s ho.

Fishern heard darker tales—that the sea itself would rise in vengeance for the slaughter of Surienste’s pirates, its "lords." Nets were left to rot on the docks as superstition hardened into fear.

And in the deepest chambers of the Obsidian Hall, darker plans were whispered.

"She is their heart," the Turik said, unrolling a crude sketch of Pala—drawn from rumor, no doubt, but recognizable even in its simplicity. "As long as she stands beside the Legion, the people will believe their cause is divine."

The king’s voice rumbled like distant thunder. "Then strike not at the Legion’s sword arm. Strike at its heart. And do not use soldiers. Soldiers are seen. Shadows are not."

Agents were chosen. The kind who had no nas, only tasks. They were given gold, forged docunts, and a single order: Find the child.

Outside the palace walls, the banners of Zura stirred in the night wind. No proclamation was made, no army mobilized. Yet already, the war had shifted. It would not begin with clashing steel, but with whispers slipping into the cracks of n’s hearts.

...

It began innocently enough. At first, the whispers were almost invisible—a market gossip, a tavern murmur, a passing word on the road. But when the Phoenix Legion reached the border town of Lavista, Lara saw the difference.

When the Phoenix Legion entered the border town of Lavista, the townsfolk greeted them with cheers, but Lara noticed how quickly so smiles faltered. A group of fishern at the pier avoided their eyes, muttering as the soldiers marched past. An old woman spat on the ground and crossed herself—not in reverence, but in warding, as if against a curse.

That night, as the Legion camped outside the town walls, a farr accompanied by a girl who looked like the sa age as Pala, approached their campfire with bread and ale. His hands shook as he offered them, and his eyes lingered on Pala.

"She’s the one, isn’t she?" he asked, voice rough with drink. "The child who walks with you."

Lara stiffened, her hand brushing her sword. "She is under my protection. Why do you ask?"

The farr swallowed, lowering his gaze. "They say the sea won’t rest. That the blood of pirates stains her shadow. That death follows where she treads." His words trembled, but they carried the weight of sothing rehearsed, repeated.

The girl who clung to his father’s hand looked back, and her large, innocent eyes looked at Pala with pleading eyes.

Pala pressed herself against Lara’s side, confused and afraid. Lara dismissed the man with a cold stare, but long after he stumbled back into the dark, his words clung to her like smoke.

The next morning, more whispers found them. A soldier reported that traders on the road had warned of Zura gathering strength. A tavern girl confided that so believed the Phoenix Legion’s victories would only draw more enemies, and that Estalis would suffer for sheltering them.

Lara stood outside her tent, jaw tight, eyes scanning the horizon. The cheers of the grateful were still there, but threaded through them now was sothing else—doubt.

Alaric noticed too. "The people love symbols," he said quietly, keeping his gaze forward. "But symbols can be twisted. They can inspire—or they can be poisoned."

Lara’s hand instinctively reached back to where Pala was, laughing with the girl from last night, the farr’s daughter. She found a playmate.

To the child, the world was still warm, still full of hope. But to Lara, the laughter was fragile. Too fragile. And she felt, with a certainty she could not explain, that soone far away was already working to break it.

"Sister, this is my new friend." Pala pulled the girl toward Lara and introduced her.

Lara nodded toward the girl, a sign of her acknowledgnt. "What is your na, girl?" She asked gently.

"Sister, she is a bit shy. But her na is Marina." Pala said excitedly. "They lived in a boat, and she has three brothers." Pala’s joy was raw, unguarded, the first true smile she had worn in weeks. Lara forced herself to nod.

Lara studied the girl. She looked no more than seven. Sweet-faced. Shy. And yet sothing about her set Lara’s instincts on edge. She shook her head and let the children play. Pala deserved, if only for one more day, to be a child. She shook her head and left, letting the children play together. They would only stay one more night in Lavista. She should give Pala the opportunity to act like a child.

Like a child.

Lara’s face darkened. She did not want Pala to be robbed of her childhood. Just like she was.

"Are you alright?" Alaric stepped beside her. He reached out and brushed her furrowed brows with his thumb. A very gentle gesture, and Lara had forgotten about the darkness that had seeped into her heart, bringing back mories of her childhood.

Then his words returned her to the truth. "Zura has begun to move. We must be vigilant."

And though the banners of Zura were far away, Lara could feel them already—stirring in the night wind.

You are reading Return of the General's Daughter Chapter 510: Whispers Before The Storm 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

Raised From The Wild cover
Same author

Raised From The Wild

AzaleaBelrose ·Romance

'AmIhallucinating?AmIdying?'Marxthought.Perhapshewasseeingvisionsbecausehewasfeverish,andhisheadachedfromthecontusionshesufferedduringthecrash.Hebl...

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