Chapter 89: ASHES OF VICTORY.
The cries of men and steel still rang in Ryon's ears, though the duel had already ended. He could barely feel the ground beneath him as his knees sank into the churned mud, slick with blood and rain. The scarred commander's body lay a few paces away, his one good eye glazed in permanent fury, the lines of his life etched into the ruined skin of his face. For a long moment, Ryon simply stared at the corpse, the weight of the man's death pressing on him more than the cuts, bruises, and searing pain across his body.
The Wrath-Knight of the North was no more.
But the battle had not ended with him.
Around them, chaos still thundered. Northern and Southern soldiers clashed with brutal desperation, the Hollow Pass itself trembling with the weight of their fury. Ryon tried to stand, to lift his sword once more, but his body betrayed him—too many wounds, too much blood lost. His vision swam, but through the haze he caught sight of the southern banner, sagging under the assault, then rising again as Alric's voice cut through the storm.
"Hold fast, men of the South! He is fallen! Their wrath is broken!"
It was not clear if Alric meant the commander, or the spirit of the northern army itself, but the words carried. A ripple coursed through the southern ranks. Where despair had moments before threatened to claim them, hope now surged. They saw Ryon, bloodied and kneeling, but alive; they saw the scarred warlord broken at his feet. It was enough to tip the scales.
The northern host wavered.
Without their commander's grim presence to bind them, the cohesion of their assault began to fray. Officers shouted themselves hoarse, trying to hold lines together, but whispers of fear spread faster than their commands. Some men dropped their weapons outright. Others fought on in blind desperation, but the unity was gone.
Ryon forced himself upright, each motion agony, and raised his sword high, though it shook in his hand. His voice cracked as he shouted, but the words flew like fire over the battlefield:
"Southron blood does not bow! Press them back! The Pass is ours!"
A roar followed—a ragged, half-mad cry from throats hoarse with pain but fierce with sudden strength. The southern host surged forward, shields locking, spears thrusting. Step by step, they drove into the collapsing northern line.
The mountains themselves seemed to shudder at the sound.
Ryon staggered forward, too weak to swing his blade but unwilling to collapse yet. He moved as if drawn by sheer will alone, his legs little more than broken reeds beneath him. Around him, southern warriors closed ranks, rallying to his presence. He was their banner now, their talisman of victory.
Alric appeared at his side, his armor battered, his hair matted with gore. He caught Ryon before he fell again, his face taut with both relief and grief.
"You mad bastard," Alric growled, half a laugh, half a sob. "You've done it. By every god's hand, you've done it."
Ryon's lips barely moved. "Not… yet. End it. End… this."
Alric bared his teeth and roared to the men. "Drive them from the Hollow! No mercy for those who still resist!"
The southern tide crashed fully now. Shields smashed against shields, swords cut through flesh, and the northern host broke. Men fled into the mountain shadows, their discipline shattered, their cause undone. The scarred commander had been more than a general—he had been their iron spine. Without him, they were only men.
The rout was brutal.
By sunset, the Hollow Pass was choked with corpses. Broken banners fluttered in the cold wind, their colors trampled into mud. Fires burned in patches where wagons had been overturned and torched. The screams of the dying still echoed in the ravines, but the battle was over.
The South had held.
And yet, it felt less like victory than survival.
Ryon lay half-conscious on a cart hastily converted into a stretcher. His armor had been stripped away, his wounds hastily bound, though blood seeped through every bandage. His chest rose and fell shallowly, each breath a battle of its own. Around him, the southern soldiers moved with weary triumph, dragging the last of the northern stragglers into chains, gathering the fallen, burning the dead.
He heard fragments of voices.
"…we lost too many…"
"…a pyre for the brothers…"
"…but the North will remember this blow. They will come again…"
Through it all, Ryon drifted, his mind slipping between pain and shadow. He thought of the scarred commander's eye, still burning in his last breath. He thought of the faces of the southern men who had followed him into hell and had not come back. He thought of the quiet after war—did such a thing exist?
When he finally stirred again, the sky above was dark velvet, scattered with stars. The Hollow Pass lay silent now, save for the low crackle of flames. Alric sat nearby, sharpening a broken blade, though his eyes were far away. When he noticed Ryon's gaze, he set the steel aside and leaned forward.
"You're alive," Alric said simply, as if daring him to contradict it.
"Barely," Ryon whispered, his throat raw.
Alric gave a bitter smile. "Barely is enough. You've ended the wrath of the North, Ryon. Whatever comes after… this battle will be remembered."
Ryon closed his eyes. The weight of those words pressed heavier than any wound. Remembered—but at what cost?
He dreamed, then. Strange, fevered visions. Not of war, but of warmth—faces that lingered at the edges of his heart. A woman's laugh, the touch of a hand on his cheek, a promise whispered in the quiet before dawn. Perhaps it was only memory, perhaps only longing. But even in the haze of blood and exhaustion, the thought of love still reached him.
When morning came, the Hollow Pass smelled of ash and rain. The South had won, but the price was carved into every scar, every grave dug in rocky soil.
The war was not ended, but the battle was.