Supreme Spouse System.

Chapter 309: The Shelter Beneath the Ashes



The Shelter Beneath the Ashes

Ash. Smoke. Silence.

The battlefield was hollowed out—just this enormous crater, ripped straight into the earth like some god had slammed a fist down and left the world cracked open. The ground around it was scorched bare. Nothing left but blackened dirt, shattered bits of armor, twisted swords, and splintered spears—fragments of men who used to have names. Even the banners were ruined. What once flew proud, noble, full of color and war-cry, now hung in strips, tugged gently by a wind that smelled like dying breath.

And above it all, the sky was wrong.

The clouds churned, slow and wide, stained red like they'd been watching too long. They moved like something heavy was hanging in them. All of it—every drop of dread, every weight of silence—hovered above just one place: Silver City. The rest of the world beyond that horizon stayed untouched. Calm. As if the ruin had been caged here, wrapped up and locked down by something cruel and specific. As if the universe had made a choice.

Ash floated down in soft, almost pretty flakes—weightless, delicate. Like petals falling at a funeral. From far off in the haze, faint embers still drifted upward, slow and glowing. The last breath of a fire that didn't know how to stop.

Silver City—his city—was still burning.

The worst of it had already ripped through, but fire still clung to the wreckage. Flames flickered on broken rooftops, deep in corners, stubborn as memory. Towers had cracked in half. Stone had melted. And through it all, the air reeked—smoke, blood, and something darker. Something older. Magic, twisted and raw.

And right at the edge of that massive, hollow wound, Duke Leon stood.

Not speaking. Not moving. Just... there. His tall frame streaked with ash and sweat, frozen like a statue the world forgot to shatter. But if you looked closely, the truth bled through. His arms, trembling just enough to betray him. His breath, rough and uneven. Black hair matted down, stuck to his skin. And his eyes—that fierce, golden fire—gone dull. Heavy. Like something behind them had caved in.

Nothing moved. Even the wind held still.

And then—his knees buckled.

He dropped. Just like that. A low grunt punched out of him as his hand slammed into the ash to keep from collapsing completely. Steam curled off his back in thin wisps. Each breath sounded like it hurt, like it took something from him he didn't have left to give.

Three hundred meters behind—everyone saw it.

His wives. His loyal maids. The soldiers who had bled for him. The battered civilians who'd survived because of him. They stood in the distance, frozen, staring across that vast ruin. They didn't speak.

They had seen monsters fall beneath their lord's might. They had seen him command fire and sky like a god. But now... now they saw him kneeling.

Blood stained their torn muscles, dirt smudged their cheeks, and yet no one made a sound.

For a second, no one breathed. Then their hearts jolted into life as they saw him kneeling. Until the silence cracked.

Then—

"Daddy!" Rias's scream cracked the silence wide open. Her voice was shrill, raw with panic. Her crimson eyes blew wide as she stumbled forward, breaking into a run.

"Darling!"

"My Lord!"

"Leon!"

"Lord Duke!"

The names came flooding—rushed, desperate. Panic broke loose, and with it came the sound of feet pounding over charred earth. No order. No ranks. Just raw fear, bursting from the seams.

Rias, Aria, Tsubaki, Cynthia, Mia, Lira, Syra, Kyra—all of them. The ones who loved him, needed him. They reached him first, dropping down around him like they didn't even think. Arms everywhere. Hands reaching, clinging, touching any part of him they could reach, like their palms could hold him together.

"Darling… are you okay?" Cynthia's voice shook, breaking on the edge. Her fingertips trembled against his cheek.

"Leon…" Kyra's voice was hollow, stunned like the ground had just vanished. "Leon! What happened?!"

"Are you hurt?!" Mia's voice ripped out, her hands locking around his arm like if she let go, he'd vanish.

"Darling, talk to us!" Aria's eyes shimmered, her voice cracking under tears that hadn't even fallen yet.

Lira's voice came sharp, brittle with fear she wasn't ready to feel. "Tell me you're not bleeding—tell me you're okay."

They wrapped around him—arms, voices, everything they had. Love, terror, desperation. Like he was the last solid thing in a world still falling apart.

But he barely heard them. All those voices tangled, crashing over each other. Too many. Too loud. Too scared.

Then came the others—Fey, Rui, Lena, Mona, Mira. His five newest maids. They ran forward without thinking, hearts already tangled in his. Just behind them came Chloe and Lilyn, a few steps slower but just as shaken. They dropped down too, knees hitting blackened earth. They hesitated—only for a breath—and then forgot how to.

"My Lord… are you alright?" Lilyn's words came soft, brittle, like they might snap.

"Leon…" Chloe barely whispered it. She clutched his father's old cloak like it could hold her upright. Her eyes, brown and wide, shimmered, ready to spill.

And behind them—his men. His last, his loyal. Captain Black. Ronan. Johny. They pushed through smoke and ruin, armor dented, blood dried on steel. They didn't speak at first. Just dropped to one knee in silence.

"Lord… are you okay?" Black asked, voice like gravel dragged across glass.

"Tell us, my Lord," Ronan murmured. Calm words, but something coiled tight behind them.

Leon didn't answer. Couldn't, not right away. He sat there in the dust and smoke, shoulders heaving, shaking under a weight that wasn't just pain. It was grief. It was guilt. It was all of it. And physical pain also.

Pain burned in every part of his body and muscle, and yet, as their hands touched his arms and shoulders, grounding him, he didn't pull away. It was overwhelming—their questions, their worry, the crowd surrounding him like a shield—but strangely, it warmed something in him. Something buried beneath ash and blood.

It was too much, but somehow not too much to hold.

He felt them. All of them. Their voices. Their warmth. Their fear. Their love. It reached him—cut through the fog, the silence, the ruin still ringing in his ears.

So many voices. So much concern. So much love.

And still… he smiled. Barely. A small, cracked thing. But it was there.

He raised a hand—slow, shaking, crusted in blood—but it moved.

"I… I'm okay," he rasped out. The words barely came, caught in a breath that hurt. "Just… catching my breath."

That broke the silence. That one moment. That one small movement.

"Don't worry," he said, soft.

Relief rippled through them like wind across a lake. A soundless exhale, released at once.

"I'm really fine," he said again, steadier now. "Just… give me a moment."

Shoulders began to fall. A few maids sobbed, quiet and sharp. Some still clung, tighter than before. Tears streaked down cheeks marked with ash.

Without a word, Aria and Tsubaki moved closer. Slipped their arms under his. No drama, no speeches. Just slow strength. Gentle. Careful.

They helped him rise.

All around them, eyes lifted to meet his. Wounded. Wet. Smoke-smeared. Survivors. Children clutched in their mothers' arms. Old men leaning on cracked staffs. Soldiers with chipped blades held tight.

Every gaze found him—not demanding, but hoping. Hoping that if he stood, maybe things could be okay again.

Leon looked across them all. Every wound. Every tear.

Then he turned toward the horizon—and saw it.

Silver City still burned.

The flames were weaker now, but not gone. Smoke billowed upward, dark and endless. Stone cracked, roofs split open. Rubble where homes had been. Streets that used to echo with laughter and music and life were silent now—just layers of ash.

His chest clenched. His hand curled into a fist.

He hadn't lived long in this city since arriving in this world—but this body had. This place had shaped him. It had fed him, trained him, watched him rise. These streets had once echoed with his footsteps. And now... now they smoldered.

"This…" he murmured, almost to himself. "This was home."

No one dared interrupt his thoughts. Not even a whisper passed between the women at his side. They, too, looked toward the ruins and burning city.

Even the new girls—Lira, Tsubaki, Mia, and the five young maids—Fey, Rui, Lena, Mona, Mira—who had only known Silver City for a single day, felt something crack inside. hey had seen it bright and alive just yesterday. They had heard its music. Touched its stones. And now it was ash, and it hurt.

The sound that came next split the air like a scream held back too long.

A rumble—low, sudden, sharp.

Heads jerked up. Breath held.

Through a break in the smoke, sunlight broke in—a single, golden shaft of light. Soft. Almost shy. It fell over the stone, over the cracked earth, warm and clean. For a single, precious second, it looked like the city breathed again.

Then it vanished. Swallowed by the clouds. Thunder rolled far away.

Leon lifted a hand, brushing ash off his brow.

Then, gently—rain began to fall.

Light. Soft. A hush followed it. Like the world had leaned in to listen.

The earth drank it. The sky wept it.

Captain Black stepped forward. His right arm hung at his side, soaked in blood. His voice was quiet.

"My Lord…"

Leon turned. His expression unreadable.

"Yes, Black?"

The man paused, eyes drifting to the smoldering ruins beyond them. His lips parted, then held.

And finally, he asked:

"What do we do now?" It came as a breath. "Silver City is gone. Should we wait here… for royal aid? Or… do we move to the next city?"

Leon's jaw tensed as he stood in the falling rain, staring at what used to be his city...


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