Chapter 208 208: Ashes, Regret, and Other Fine Accessories
She smiled slowly, deliberately the kind of smile that didn't reach her lips so much as it bloomed in her eyes like poison flowering in gold. The kind of smile that promised endings. "Soon," she said, voice laced with silk and malice, "you shall stand beside me willingly. You shall see the beauty in ruin."
The wind rose like it had heard her and taken offense. It caught the hem of her cloak, lifting it into a sudden flare, so that for one long moment, she resembled some forgotten god-beast shaking off dust and centuries. She didn't walk Azael never simply walked. She moved like the air deferred to her, like the world was only a stage and she the final act. Heat warped the space around her, curling it into bruised mirages. The scent of blood floated thick in the air metallic, inevitable.
Where she passed, the land retreated. Grass yellowed. Soil cracked. Even shadows hesitated, trailing behind her with reluctant loyalty, as though unsure if they would survive the next moment.
And I followed , because that's what I did now. Followed. Witnessed. Survived.
Behind us, Elmire smoldered in silence. Not even the fire crackled anymore it had eaten its fill. What remained was ruin. A village once filled with markets, laughter, and the smell of bread baking on stones had become a graveyard of memory. Roofs sagged inward, collapsed under the weight of fire and grief. Charred beams reached upward like skeletal arms in prayer, or protest, or surrender.
No gods answered.
Just smoke. Just silence. Just us.
The ground beneath my boots crunched like old bones, brittle and scorched. Healing was no longer an option. It had passed beyond pain into something hollow. Something final. I caught sight of a child's toy what had once been a doll, perhaps, its shape half-swallowed by soot. One glass eye remained intact, warped by heat into a lifeless marble. It stared upward, unblinking, as if asking why.
Azael inhaled. Deep. Intentional. As if savoring the aftermath.
"There's a crispness to it," she said, her tone bright with amusement, as if she were discussing the weather. "Like burnt sugar… and regret. I adore when the air smells like despair and charred morals."
I said nothing. I wasn't expected to.
She allowed me breath. Not voice.
We were on foot. Not for lack of options—she could have conjured beasts of burden from shadow and bone. But Azael wanted to walk. Wanted the world to feel her coming. Each step a declaration. Each footfall a knell. She was no longer conquering. She was performing. Her warpath to Enara's kingdom wasn't meant to be swift. It was meant to be seen.
And gods forgive me, she was magnificent.
The terrain shifted as we advanced. The trees grew taller here, their trunks silver-gray, bark etched with veins of light that pulsed like slow heartbeats. The canopy above whispered of old magic, its leaves whispering secrets in a language I no longer understood. I knew this place once—its name brushing the edges of my memory like a half-forgotten lullaby. The Silverfold Veil, perhaps. Something elven. Something lost.
Azael paused at its edge.
The forest held its breath.
She tilted her head and studied the trees, amusement playing across her mouth.
"How quaint," she murmured. "This land still thinks it can hide things from me."
With one delicate motion, she raised a claw-tipped finger and tore the air.
Not metaphorically. Reality split. A seam opened in the fabric of existence, jagged and raw, like she had reached through skin and pulled.
From the rift came light violet and violent spilling into the world like blood from a wound. The air vibrated, buzzing with unstable magic. It tasted like metal and teeth.
And then they came.
Not demons. Not men. Something worse. Things born entirely of her will stitched from nightmare and smoke. They moved like half-formed ideas, flickering in and out of existence, too unstable to be real but too deadly to be anything else.
They had no eyes. No mouths. No faces. Just motion. Hunger. Purpose.
Azael clapped her hands once, as if summoning guests to a feast.
"Go on," she said sweetly. "Prune the trees."
They obeyed.
The forest responded with a soundless scream.
Not a noise, exactly. More a sensation. The kind of cry you feel in your teeth and bones. The leaves curled inward. The trees trembled. Flowers withered where they stood, bowing in surrender before death arrived.
The soldiers didn't rush. They didn't need to. They relished. One brushed a clawed limb across a tree, and its bark bubbled, then peeled like dead skin. Another trailed along the ground, leaving nothing but ash in its wake.
And Azael walked behind them, serene as a bride.
She turned to me. "Do you know what I hate most about these ancient kingdoms?" Her voice lowered, silky with contempt. "They pretend they're eternal. That history is their shield. That memory is armor."
She smiled small, almost tender.
"But nothing is eternal. Not even pain. That's why we must remind them."
She raised her hand again this time, the sky obeyed , It cracked.
Lines split across the heavens like fractures in a mirror, glowing red-hot, seething. Thunder bellowed, though no lightning followed. Clouds recoiled. The wind stopped. And from that wound in the sky fell fire.
Not ordinary fire , demonfire.
It spun as it descended, elegant as a dancer, cruel as a guillotine. It burned without smoke. Consumed without warmth. It didn't just destroy it erased. Where it touched, things ceased.
Her soldiers danced beneath it, immune. Exalted. This was their queen's blessing made manifest.
And I?
I stood at the edge, heart breaking beneath stillness, unable to flinch, to scream, to move. Her enchantment wound through my veins like a second heartbeat. Every burst of her power made my skin sing in reluctant pleasure. I wanted to vomit. I wanted to run.
But all I could do was stand.
[Liria,] came the familiar voice in my mind.[Just saying... I told you so. Loudly. Repeatedly. With jazz hands.]
Not now.
[Fine. Let me know when we're done being an accessory to the apocalypse so I can hand in my badge.]
I wanted to laugh. To cry. To do something. But the enchantment allowed only silence.
Time bled. Hours melted. The forest turned to bones.
Eventually, we reached a clearing. A broad space ringed by what once might've been a resting place for travelers. Now it was blackened, silent. The stars were gone. Even the wind dared not enter.
At its center stood a figure.
Alone.
A girl elven, maybe no more than twenty, though age meant little among their kind. She wore silver-blue armor, burnished and cracked. Her spear trembled in her hands, though her stance did not. Her white hair fell in tangles down her back. Her eyes pale green, too bright, too sad locked onto Azael.
She did not run.
Azael raised an eyebrow. "A brave little sprout."
No response.
"Do you plan to avenge your people?"
Silence.
"Do you plan to stop me?"
The girl stepped forward and slammed the butt of her spear into the earth. It rang like a bell—clear, bright, defiant.
A challenge.
Azael laughed. Not mockery. Delight. Pure, delighted glee. "Marvelous," she purred. "Let's make a mess, shall we?"
The girl charged.
Fast as a lightning strike. Her spear flashed in an arc aimed straight for Azael's heart.
It never made it.
The weapon exploded in midair, halted by invisible force. Magic crackled in the space between them, sharp and cold.
The girl stared, stunned.
Azael didn't flinch. "No."
She flicked her hand.
The girl flew. Her body crashed against a tree, hard enough to break the bark. She collapsed.
I tried to move. To help. My body refused.
Azael approached, knelt, and lifted the girl's chin.
"There's something exquisite about defiance," she said softly. "Especially when it fails."
The girl spat blood in her face.
Azael's laughter rang like bells.
"Oh, I like you."
And then she snapped her neck ,not in anger , gentl , lovingly.
And that made it worse.
The silence that followed was unbearable.
The trees. The wind. The ash. All still.
Azael stood, dusting off her gown like she'd brushed off a leaf. "Well," she said, bright as a sunrise. "That was invigorating."
She turned and walked past me, the scent of scorched roses trailing in her wake.
I looked down at the girl , her expression was calm now , peaceful , defiant even in death.
I wanted to whisper: I'm sorry , but the enchantment stole even that.
So I followed the queen of ruin deeper into the dark, ash clinging to my boots, regret festering like an old wound.
And far ahead, the gates of Enara's kingdom waited , waiting to burn.
The road narrowed as we moved on, swallowed by the creeping edges of the dying forest. What trees remained bowed away from her, their branches twisted unnaturally, as if trying to flee from their own roots. The sky hadn't healed. It still bled faint red from the wound she had left in it, pulsing slowly like a dying star.
I walked three paces behind her, always three. That was the rule. One step too close, and the enchantment would tighten. One step too far, and it would drag me forward like a leash. I'd tried both. Neither ended well.
Ahead, Enara's kingdom loomed beyond the horizon. I could feel it—alive and unaware. Still laughing, still dancing, still believing the world made sense.
Azael slowed.
She was listening.
Then, softly, to no one in particular: "They're lighting lanterns tonight."
A beat passed.
"Hope makes such a lovely fuel."
She didn't smile this time. She didn't have to. The air around her shivered with anticipation. Her army gathered in silence behind us, the portal still open, bleeding light into the clearing we had left.
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