HAREM: WARLOCK OF THE SOUTH
Chapter 105: THE ASH WITHIN.
CHAPTER 105: THE ASH WITHIN.
The fever did not strike like a sword; it seeped like poison.
It came first as heat in my chest, a restless fire that no cold cloth could quench. Then it spread to my limbs, slow, insidious, until even the weight of the blanket felt like armor laid over an open flame. My breath turned shallow, ragged. My body, once the tool I had honed against countless battles, betrayed me—each joint trembling, each muscle twitching, as though my veins carried sparks instead of blood.
I could hear them outside.
The army never slept as one; there were always whispers in the dark, muttered stories shared by men who feared silence more than death. My name surfaced in those whispers, carried low, uncertain. It was different now. Not the tone of men praising a commander, nor the steady respect of soldiers speaking of a leader who had brought them through fire. No—this was sharper, wary, as though my name itself might burn their tongues.
Inside the tent, shadows stirred. The healers moved like shades, silent except for the grinding of herbs, the hiss of hot water poured into bowls, the faint crackle of resin thrown into the brazier. Their murmurs were not meant for me; they thought me too far gone to hear. Fever, they said. A natural course, after wounds and strain. Garron stood by the flap, immovable, his silhouette a pillar carved from iron. He spoke to no one. He watched everything.
I tried to anchor myself to these details, to keep the world tangible. But the fever had other designs.
The first whisper came like a breath against the ear.
"Ash does not die."
I clenched my eyes shut, willing it away. The sound of pestle against mortar, the crack of firewood—these were real. I repeated them in my mind, a litany against intrusion. But no matter how fiercely I clung to those sounds, the whisper pressed harder.
"You think you killed me. You think ash can be buried? Fool. Ash lingers. Ash breathes."
My hands fisted in the cot sheets. My body shook as if struck by winter’s wind, though sweat poured from me in torrents. My ribs throbbed with each breath, pain radiating outward, yet even pain could not shield me from the voice.
I forced my eyes open.
And the world had changed.
The tent was gone. The lamps, the healers, Garron’s silhouette—all had been consumed. What remained was ash. Endless, horizonless, choking ash. It carpeted the ground, soft and shifting beneath bare feet I did not remember uncovering. It hung in the air, falling endlessly from a sky that did not exist, as though the whole of creation had burned and I walked within its remains.
I was not alone.
The commander stood there, fractured but unbroken. His form was smoke and cinder, body flickering as though caught between being and memory. His face was half-shadow, half coal, yet his eyes burned molten and alive. Those eyes pinned me in place as surely as any blade.
"You thought me defeated," he said. His voice rang in every direction, seeping into my ears, my chest, my bones. "You thought death meant silence. But you—" His lip curled in jagged amusement. "You made me more."
I staggered back, feet sinking into the gray drift. "You’re nothing but a shadow," I spat, though my voice rasped, broken by smoke. "You’re gone."
"Gone?" He stepped forward, his shape breaking apart into swirling smoke, then reassembling with each stride. "If I am gone, why do you hear me? Why do you feel me?" He touched his chest, a hollow echo in the gesture. "I was flesh once. That cage is gone. Now I live where your heart should be."
A surge of panic tore through me. My hand reached for my sword, but it was not there. I looked, desperate, at my empty hands, at arms stripped bare. No steel, no shield.
The commander smiled, teeth jagged shards of ember.
"You do not need steel," he said softly. "Steel breaks. Flesh fails. Ash endures. And you are mine."
The ash storm rose, swirling faster, filling my lungs until I coughed, retched, clawed at the air. I dropped to my knees, each breath harder than the last. My body convulsed, trembling under the weight of smoke that was not real yet suffocated as surely as drowning.
"No," I rasped. "You—will—not—"
"Break," he whispered. The word struck like a hammer. "All vessels break."
I tried to rise. My hands pushed against the ash, but it shifted, endless, offering no purchase. My arms trembled, my strength useless. His eyes burned hotter, closer, searing into me.
I remembered the gorge. His roar as he came for me, his blade swinging with fury. The way his body broke under my strike, the way his blood spilled black into the earth. I remembered the weight of victory—the lie of it.
Because he was here. He was not gone. He was inside me.
My chest burned. Not with fever, not with effort—but with fire. Something twisted within, hot and violent, clawing to be free. I screamed, not in fear but in rage, though the sound was raw, shredded.
The commander’s laughter rolled like thunder. "Yes," he said. "Burn."
The ash exploded outward, swallowing everything.
I woke thrashing.
Air slammed into my lungs like water into a man dragged from drowning. My body arched, ribs straining against their bindings. The sheets beneath me were soaked, clinging as though I had been dragged from a river of sweat. My throat burned raw.
The tent swam back into focus. The brazier glowed faintly. The healers froze, their faces pale, herbs forgotten in their hands. Garron was at my side in an instant, his hand a weight on my shoulder, firm and grounding.
"Ryon." His voice cut through the haze, sharp and commanding. "Breathe. Now."
I obeyed. Gasp by gasp, ragged though it was, I pulled air into my lungs. My vision steadied, edges sharpening, though every nerve screamed exhaustion. Garron’s hand did not move until my breaths slowed.
The healers rushed then, cloths pressed to my brow, prayers muttered as though their words could banish what they did not understand. They spoke of fever. Natural, they said. Expected, given the wounds. But Garron’s eyes were harder, sharper.
"What happened?" he asked. His gaze cut like a blade, searching my face for lies.
The truth seared inside me, demanding release. I could still feel the commander’s laughter, still taste ash on my tongue. I could tell Garron, confess the fire clawing within me, the shadow of the enemy now wearing my skin.
But if I spoke it aloud—
The whispers outside would turn to shouts. The men would not follow a commander haunted by the very specter they feared most. They would see me not as leader but as curse, and curses are destroyed.
So I swallowed it.
"Fever," I said. The word was hoarse, thin, but I forced it steady. "Just fever."
Garron’s jaw tightened. His silence was long, deliberate. He did not believe me—not fully—but he said nothing more.
He stayed by my side after the healers withdrew, long after the brazier dimmed low. His shadow loomed across the tent wall, steady and unyielding. Yet even his presence could not silence the whispers outside, louder now, voices sharpening with doubt.
They wondered if I was still theirs.
I closed my eyes, but the ash did not leave me.
And in that silence, I understood: this battle had only begun, and it would not be fought with steel. It would be fought within, against the fire that was not mine. Against the ash that waited, patient, eager, inside me