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Now reading: Chapter 4: Shadows of Loyalty from The Flower Is Finished, a Drama novel by Saputra Nugroho.

The wind carried the scent of smoke and iron.

Days had passed since the battle at the northern wall, yet the city still whispered my na like a curse. The Golden Fla. The King's Weapon. The Boy Who Burned the Demons.

None of it felt real.

I stood alone on the fortress balcony, gazing down at the ruined streets. The townsfolk had begun rebuilding, stone by stone, pretending the war had left no scars. But I could feel it — sothing dark still lingered beneath this city.

"Can't sleep again?"

I turned. Farel leaned against the railing, his usual grin softened by concern.

"Didn't know you cared," I muttered.

He shrugged. "Hard not to, when you glow like a campfire in the middle of the night."

I gave a faint smile, then looked down again. "I keep seeing their faces, Farel. The ones who didn't make it."

"You saved hundreds," he said. "Don't torture yourself for those you couldn't."

I sighed. "That's not how it works."

He was silent for a mont, then patted my shoulder. "Co on. Arven's called a eting."

### The War Council

The eting took place in the fortress's central chamber. The walls were covered in maps — borders, camps, and red marks spreading north.

General Arven stood at the end of the table, his expression unreadable. "The demons are getting bolder," he said. "Last night, a scouting unit vanished near the Frost Plains."

The king wasn't present. He rarely was these days.

One of the captains spoke up, "They say the demons are changing — becoming stronger."

Arven nodded. "Which ans our ti is running out."

Then his gaze shifted to . "Xanders. The king wants you to accompany to the front."

I froze. "Why ?"

"You've proven you can control your fla," he said. "And the soldiers need a symbol. You are that symbol."

I swallowed hard. "And if I refuse?"

"Then you'll prove the rumors true — that the fla controls you, not the other way around."

The room went silent.

I clenched my fists. "Fine. When do we leave?"

"Dawn."

### Farewell

That night, I visited Grandmother Wilona's old cottage on the city's edge. The door creaked open, and the familiar scent of herbs greeted — sweet, gentle, full of mories.

Shasha looked up from near the fireplace, startled. "Xanders! You shouldn't be here. The soldiers—"

"I have to see her."

Wilona lay weak on her bed, but her eyes still shone with the sa warmth.

"My child," she whispered, her voice frail. "You look thinner."

I knelt beside her, taking her hand. "I'm leaving again."

She smiled faintly. "For war?"

"Maybe for sothing worse."

Her gaze softened. "The fire still burns, doesn't it?"

I nodded. "Stronger every day."

"Then rember this," she said, her voice trembling. "Fire destroys, yes — but it also protects. The choice is yours: to burn the world, or to light the path."

I fought back tears. "You always make it sound so simple."

She chuckled weakly. "Because I believe in you."

Silence filled the room — only the crackle of the fire and the faint pulse of the pendant on my chest.

### To the Frost Plains

Dawn ca cold and gray. Farel waited at the gate, already in full armor. "Border duty, huh? Guess we're heroes now."

"Or bait," I muttered.

Arven rode up on his horse. "Move out."

The journey to the Frost Plains took two days. Snow replaced grass. Silence replaced birdsong. The horizon stretched endlessly white — like a frozen grave.

"Sothing's off," Farel whispered. "No tracks, no sound… not even wind."

He was right. The air felt heavy, humming — as if it were watching us.

Then the sky… cracked.

A black fissure split the clouds, spilling out shifting shadows — wings, claws, fangs. The demons had returned.

"Formation!" Arven shouted. "Archers, ready!"

The ground shook. Spears of ice erupted beneath us, skewering soldiers before they could move. Screams echoed through the ranks.

Farel drew his sword. "They're everywhere!"

"Stay close to !" I shouted, summoning the fire. Golden fla burst from my hands, burning through the darkness.

The demons shrieked, turning to ash — but for every one that fell, two more appeared.

Arven fought like a storm, his silver blade flashing as he barked orders amid the chaos. "Advance! Break their line!"

We pushed forward — step by step — until the rift in the sky pulsed again, growing larger, darker.

Then the voice ca.

A voice within the storm, cold and deep:

"Child of Fire… return what was taken."

The world froze. Even the demons stopped moving.

I staggered, clutching my head. The pendant on my chest burned. "Who are you?!"

"The one betrayed by your king."

The voice ca from everywhere — the wind, the snow, my own mind.

Arven shook my shoulder. "Xanders! Focus!"

But the world had already changed. Shadows rose from the snow, forming a colossal figure — a demon king, his body bound in chains of ice.

"Arven…" Farel whispered. "That's—"

"I know," the general replied sharply. "Everyone, fall back! Now!"

I couldn't move. The pendant pulsed faster, my fire screaming to be unleashed.

"Farel, go!" I shouted. "Get them out!"

He shook his head. "Not without you!"

The ground split beneath us. Fire burst upward, clashing with ice in a blinding storm of light.

The demon king raised his hand.

"That fire is not yours, mortal."

"Maybe not," I growled, "but I decide what it burns for."

I raised both hands. Golden fire exploded, striking the demon's frozen heart. The blast swallowed the entire plain.

When the light faded, silence fell. The snow had turned to vapor. The rift in the sky was gone.

Farel knelt beside , gasping. "You… did it."

I stared at the scorched earth. "No," I whispered. "It's not dead. Just waiting."

Arven limped closer, his armor cracked. "The king must be told what happened here."

I looked at him sharply. "He already knows."

Arven frowned. "What do you an?"

I didn't answer. The voice still echoed in my mind —

"The one betrayed by your king."

And for the first ti, a terrifying thought struck : The demons weren't hunting us.

They were hunting **him**.

The more I thought about it, the less I understood why everything happened so fast. "Did I take the wrong step?" I murmured quietly, still lost in thought.

"Enough," Arven said firmly. "Let's get back to base and tend to the survivors."

"Wait," Farel said, frowning. "Aren't there vampire and werewolf clans around here?"

Arven nodded. "Yes, but their numbers have dwindled. They've been forced to mix with humans. Still, the northern region belongs to the Human Clan."

We both nodded at that.

"Then we'll stop by the vampire and werewolf territories," Arven ordered his remaining troops.

We trudged through the snow, our wounds still open, but the cold no longer reached us. I glanced at the few soldiers left, and the words echoing in my mind refused to fade.

What did it all an?

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