Chapter 15 – The Calm Before
A few months had passed since Luceris and his men fell.
The elf sat upon a hill at the edge of the village, silver hair caught in the breeze. Below him lay what once was a ruin — a mire of filth, rats, and broken timber. But it did not look that way anymore. Wood had given way to stone.
Walls rose where chaos once reigned. Roads were being laid. Homes were repaired, some newly built. Smoke curled from proper chimneys. The scent of fresh bread and burning oak replaced rot and mildew.
All of it — under Lilith's ever-watchful gaze.
Some of her kin now lived among them. Others whispered in distant cities, eyes and ears for the throne that had not yet been claimed.
Men trained under Valtor's brutal discipline. The clang of wooden blades and barked commands echoed each morning like a hymn to fire and strength. Children laughed in streets once stained with blood. Women wove and stitched without fear. Coin flowed freely — not because the villagers earned it, but because Lilith and Valtor brought wealth like gods gifting tribute.
They've built more in two months than most lords manage in ten.
And they call me their leader. But what is a leader without a past? Without certainty? They see in me power — a symbol, a savior. But I… I see only questions. The fragments of who I was still swim in shadows. And every time they look at me, bow before me, it feels like I'm stealing someone else's destiny. Even now, I wonder — is this who I am meant to be? Or just who they need me to be?
He lowered his gaze.
They look to me for protection. For answers. But I am still a being built from fragments. A elf born from silence.
He rose.
And yet… They smile. They believe peace has arrived. But war always waits.
And he knew the Duke had not forgotten. Luceris was still their prisoner. And not once had the Duke sent a messenger.
What does the noble think now? he wondered. The proud lion turned captive. Perhaps it's time I found out.
He turned.
"Let's go down there."
Luceris no longer counted the days.
He had once tried. Had marked the wall with charcoal, with broken nails, anything. But time mocked him now. The stone remained unmarked — as if to say he had never mattered.
It wasn't a cell — not truly. It had light, warmth, air. But the silence pressed against him like a second skin.
Most of his men were broken. Their minds bent by what they had seen. Lilith's magic — vile, beautiful, and terrifying — had turned comrades into things.
Valtor had burned others to ash without hesitation.
Only he and Vaerion remained lucid. Barely. The others murmured to walls, screamed at dreams. One had tried to eat stones, believing them to be bread. Vaerion held on only because Luceris did. And Luceris… held on because something inside him refused to break.
"My lord," Vaerion whispered, voice raw, "how long has it been? Why hasn't your father sent his armies?"
Luceris's voice held no fire, no edge. Just dust.
"We lost to three," he said. "We have no right to be saved."
Vaerion's eyes flickered toward the door.
"But… what that woman does to you. It's blasphemy. It's… not human."
Luceris didn't respond. In the silence, his thoughts returned to her:
At night, she visits.
Not with chains. Not with blades. But with words.
She speaks to me like a friend, like a lover, like a god. Her voice wraps around my thoughts, soft and slow, laced with something I cannot name. She asks questions — not cruel, but endless. About my past. My failures. My father.
And when I don't answer, she doesn't grow angry. She smiles. She waits. She returns the next night. And the one after that.
Each time, she peels away something else — not skin, but pride. Not muscle, but memory. I don't know when it began, but I stopped sleeping.
I fear closing my eyes, because her voice is always there, waiting in the dark.
She doesn't torture. She unravels.
And I am beginning to forget the sound of my own thoughts.
And then came the sound — distant, rhythmic. Wood striking wood. Grit and bark. Clashing blades.
Valtor.
Every morning.
Luceris shifted toward the slit in the wall. From here, he could just see the training yard. Valtor barked orders, tail cutting through dust.
"Again!" he roared. "If you can't hold your stance, you'll die before you strike!"
He had said the same yesterday. And the day before. Valtor believed in repetition, in force, in scars earned through fire.
"They're soft," he'd growled, "but fire makes iron. And I'll make blades of them yet.''
Sweat poured, but no one dared complain. The smell of scorched earth lingered — a reminder of failure.
Outside, the elf walked past the field. He paused briefly, watching.
We need strong men, he thought. And Valtor will forge them — or burn the weakness out.
His gaze moved across the field to the longhouse near the village's center.
Lilith stood there — robed in midnight, hunched over a map etched with runes and pins. Her kin stood behind her like shadows given form.
She does not lead with strength, She commands with poison and patience. And somehow… it's more frightening. Lilith did not conquer with swords. She conquered with secrets. With networks so old they had roots in forgotten wars. Rumors said she once brought down a noble house with a single sentence, whispered in the wrong ear.
She smiles like a lover, but every glance is a calculation. And every kindness… a trap.
He approached her without ceremony.
"Any word from the spies?"
Lilith lookt up.
"The Duke grows anxious," She said calm as still water. "But he waits. The silence of his son shakes him more than any army would. "One of my kin has infiltrated the merchant routes from Greynor," she added, her fingertip gliding across the map. "There are whispers of troop movements gathering near the eastern ridge. Quiet. Precise. Like a blade waiting behind silk."
"And our prisoner?" he asked.
"Silent. Mostly." She allowed a thin smile. "He doesn't speak of his father. He speaks barely at all."
"You've spent time near him."
"Enough," she said, meeting his eyes. "He holds himself together in the daylight. But at night… he watches the wall as if it whispers things he can't answer."
Lysanthir's tone turned sharp.
"Don't break him."
"Sentiment, Master?"
"No," he said. "Information."
Lilith's smirk faded, replaced by curiosity.
"As you wish. I'll leave enough of him to talk."
From the weaving station, Angela glanced up.
Children laughed nearby — a fragile joy. One that didn't quite belong. She watched Lysanthir, still on that hill, motionless as stone.
"He walks with us. But still… he's apart," she whispered.
Sometimes she caught his gaze lingering, not on buildings, but on faces — hers included. And in those moments, she wondered if he remembered her voice from that first day in the forest... or if he had already forgotten everything but the silence inside him.
Her gaze drifted to Luceris's prison.
Does he still dream of freedom? Or has he realized there's no going back?
She had looked into the eyes of that man once — a noble who had called her people filth. Now he barely looked up at all. Perhaps that was worse than chains.
She didn't know. But something in the wind warned her
She remembered the way her mother once told her stories of peace — how it never stayed, how it was always borrowed from something darker.
Angela had lived through the fire, through the silence, and now… through this strange calm. And she feared it most of all. Because she knew what came after calm. Storms didn't warn. They arrived.
The birds had stopped singing that morning. The sky held too still. And the breeze carried not peace, but pause — the kind before the scream.
.