Chapter 14: Ash Against Ash

Chronicles of The Phoenix KingWords: 9670

The Storm Ascends

The masked traitor stumbled back—arm raised, off balance, gasping for air.

Too late.

Hiro surged forward.

The ground cracked beneath his boots.

The storm followed him like a shadow.

He struck.

Lightning kissed flame—blazing across the traitor’s blade. Sparks burst in a violent bloom as steel met divine fury.

One blow shattered the man’s guard.

Another sent him staggering, mask fractured, hair scorched, breath lost in the rain.

Above—

Phinx shrieked.

A comet of fire hurtled downward.

Talons slammed into the mud—igniting a geyser of steam and light. It launched the traitor skyward like a broken doll.

And Hiro rose to meet him.

Midair. Mid-thunder. Mid-war.

A fist of lightning crashed into the man’s jaw.

His head snapped back—body limp in the storm’s grip.

Hiro didn’t stop.

He twisted, grabbed the traitor’s cloak mid-flight—

—and drove him down.

Hard.

Thunder met earth.

Stone cracked beneath the impact.

The mask shattered. Shards flew.

And Hiro saw his eyes.

Wide. Terrified.

Cainos.

One of the Ash Sentinels.

One of his own.

They had stood shoulder to shoulder beneath Athen’s sigil—

Sworn to protect Elysia together.

Now he lay broken at Hiro’s feet.

The blade rose.

"You will never see the light of day," Hiro whispered.

His eyes lifted to the sky.

The clouds swirled—answering a command deeper than rage.

The rain held its breath.

The air thickened.

And then—

A single bolt fell.

Black lightning.

Darker than night. Colder than death.

It struck Cainos square in the chest and swallowed him whole.

No scream. No cry. Just steam rising from the crater.

Cainos was gone.

A brother.

A Sentinel.

A warning.

The storm didn’t ask for forgiveness. And Hiro didn’t offer any.

He turned—his blade still humming with quiet, flickering grief.

---

Mud splashed beneath heavy boots.

Lyessa charged—blade raised high, voice raw with fury.

"Fancy tricks won’t save you!" she roared.

"For the King—for Olympus—you’ll fall like the rest!"

Hiro turned to meet her.

Not with fear.

Not with mercy.

With fire.

He didn’t speak.

He set the ground on fire.

A blast of flame erupted at her feet—blinding, searing, golden as dawn. She staggered back instinctively, eyes shielded, blade drawn high.

But Hiro never followed through the flame.

He went around it.

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He moved like the storm—quiet, circling, inevitable. And by the time she realized—

He was already behind her.

She turned. Too slow.

"You fought beside us," Hiro said, voice quiet but heavy.

"Stood beneath Athen’s sigil. Swore to protect her."

Her eyes widened.

Not with fear.

With memory.

"And you tried to take her life."

His words weren’t loud.

They didn’t need to be.

They burned.

Phinx dropped from the clouds like a falling comet—wings stretched, fire trailing behind him like a divine scar.

Together, they struck.

Phinx’s talons slammed down, catching her blade, fire rippling across the steel.

Hiro drove his foot into her spine.

She screamed—spun—stumbled through flame.

Blood smeared her face. Her voice cracked as she turned, desperate.

"You think this is over?! The King will—"

Hiro raised his blade.

"Tell him yourself."

He struck.

Not to kill.

To end.

Flame didn’t finish her.

Lightning didn’t either.

But the storm—

the storm took her.

When it passed, Lyessa lay in the mud.

Unconscious.

Her weapon split in two beside her—molten and silent.

---

Rain whispered again.

The scent of ozone lingered.

The clearing breathed stillness.

Hiro stood alone.

Shoulders heaving. Lightning crawling down his arms like regret.

Phinx landed beside him, wings folding with slow finality.

And behind them—

Elysia groaned.

Hiro dropped his sword and rushed to her, kneeling in the mud. She was conscious, barely—her face bruised, but her eyes still sharp.

She smiled, blood on her lips.

"See? I told you I’d be fine," she whispered, voice cracked but soft with relief.

Hiro exhaled, finally.

He let the weight drop from his shoulders—not all of it, but enough.

Phinx circled once overhead, then landed close. He didn’t cry out. Didn’t press forward. He simply stood near, wings half-open, heat pulsing gently off his feathers like a silent warning.

For a breath, the battlefield felt distant. The wind passed gently now. The rain had thinned to a whisper.

They didn’t speak.

They didn’t need to.

For just a moment, they believed they were safe again.

But even silence can lie.

The Ash That Follows

The forest exhaled. Wet leaves shifted. Something moved in the smoke—steady, deliberate.

The rain thickened—slow at first, then harder.As if the sky remembered something it wanted to forget.

Phinx’s head turned sharply. His feathers bristled.He stepped in front of Elysia without a sound.

And then—

“You made a mess.”

The voice came from the tree line.Low. Familiar. Unhurried.

Hiro rose slowly—silent, steady. But inside, the storm hadn’t settled. It was shifting. Sharpening.

From the mist, a lone figure limped forward—cloaked, soaked, dragging a blood-streaked glaive through the mud.

Damaric.

The Ash Sentinel who had once stood beside him in the tomb. The one who had said nothing… and done everything.

Burned. Bleeding. But his eyes were clear. Too clear.

“Where are the others?” Hiro asked.

Damaric didn’t answer right away. He stopped several paces from the edge of the crater.

“Dead,” he said at last, with no remorse. “They faltered at the edge of loyalty. Took too long to remember where their vows were sworn—and chose you instead of Olympus.”

His gaze drifted—over Cainos’s crater, over Lyessa’s melted blade—until it landed on Elysia, still crouched beside Phinx.

“A queen wallowing in mud beside a traitor—this is what you’ve reduced her to?”

Hiro’s voice darkened.

Hiro’s fingers twitched once, as if deciding whether to draw breath—or draw lightning.

“So that’s it. You think loyalty means silence? That Olympus would rather have corpses than questions?”

Damaric tilted his head, the glaive dragging behind him like a blade used to cut roads through graves.

“The vow we made to Olympus. The legacy she was born to uphold. But you…”

He stepped forward, boots sinking into blackened earth.

“You’ve turned her from it.”

Elysia slowly sat up. Her fingers curled tight around Phinx’s feathers.

“You executed the others,” she said, her voice trembling. “The ones who fought beside you.”

Damaric didn’t flinch.

“Their folly,” he said coldly. “They didn’t deserve to live.”

And the storm, so recently silent, began to whisper again.

Elysia’s grip tightened. Her voice steadied.

“If that’s what Olympus wants… maybe Olympus is what needs to change.”

Hiro didn’t respond.

He didn’t need to.

The lightning had already returned to his eyes.

Somewhere in the mud, Hiro’s sword still hissed from the storm.

And Damaric’s glaive hadn’t stopped dragging.

Ash Against Ash

Damaric struck first.

The glaive swung low, wide, dragging a streak of flame through the mud. Hiro moved on instinct—gripping his blade and stepping in front of Elysia just before impact.

Steel met steel.

The impact cracked through the clearing. Hiro slid back, boots tearing trenches into the wet earth. Lightning surged through his limbs, but it was different now—slower, scattered, tired.

Damaric didn’t stop. He moved like a soldier—not like Lyessa’s brute force or Cainos’s hesitation. Every blow had form. Every strike had meaning.

And Hiro was falling behind.

Phinx shrieked overhead, flame trailing in wide arcs, trying to box Damaric in. It worked for a moment—until the glaive spun through the fire like it wasn’t even there. A single swing forced Phinx to veer off.

Damaric stepped forward. Unrelenting. Unshaken.

“You let your feelings cloud the mission,” he said, parrying a desperate slash from Hiro.

Hiro grimaced. “You slaughtered your own.”

Damaric twisted his blade, knocking Hiro’s aside. “And I’d do it again.”

The glaive came down.

Hiro blocked—but barely. The force sent him to a knee.

“Because Olympus is order,” Damaric growled, “and you are chaos.”

Lightning crackled across Hiro’s blade. “Olympus never raised a hand when we bled.”

Damaric’s glare sharpened. “Then you were born to bring fire to the rot they left behind.”

Damaric’s boot slammed into Hiro’s chest, sending him crashing through a tree.

Phinx dove with a scream—but the glaive caught him mid-arc, clipping his wing. The phoenix spiraled off, crashing behind the treeline in a burst of flame and ash.

“Phinx!” Elysia shouted, starting to rise—

“STAY DOWN!” Hiro’s voice cracked like thunder.

But she didn’t listen.

She ran.

Toward Hiro.

Toward Damaric.

And Damaric moved like he’d been waiting.

His hand reached—not for the glaive, but for a small dart at his side.

He threw it.

The dart struck Elysia in the side of the neck.

Her steps faltered.

She gasped, blinking, stumbling into Hiro’s arms.

“No—no, stay with me—”

But her eyes were already fluttering.

“Don’t worry,” Damaric said. “She’s alive.”

Hiro’s eyes turned black.

Lightning howled from the heavens—but before Hiro could stand, before he could rise and finish what was started—

Damaric slammed the butt of his glaive into Hiro’s wounded ribs.

Hiro’s cry echoed through the trees.

And then came the strike.

The glaive cracked against his temple—

—and the world went dark.

---

When the light returned, Elysia was gone.

And so was Damaric.

Only the rain remained.