Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 900
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- Chapter 900 - Capítulo 900: Battle of the eagles(7)
Capítulo 900: Battle of the eagles(7)
After some minutes had dragged past, a stretch of time that somehow seemed to last for hours, a horn finally sliced through the air.
It was a war horn, yes, the kind Alpheo had heard perhaps a thousand times? And yet… this one was different.
Perhapse it was its meaning that made it so.
Against the endless, metallic clangor of battle, it should have been swallowed whole. Instead, it sounded small, almost delicate, and yet it cut through the chaos, reaching Alpheo’s ears with an unnatural, chilling clarity.
He felt it resonate deep inside his chest, as though the horn’s low, bronze note had been blown straight into the marrow of his bones. It mocked him; mocked his helplessness, his crushing uncertainty, his utter inability to seize the reins of the impending disaster.
The battle was no longer his to command.
If that horn belonged to the enemy, it was their doom . There were no men left to throw into the line , no fresh walls of shields to stand between his exhausted army and annihilation.
The flanks were shredded, Egil was gone, wounded and bleeding out somewhere, and the levies were being eaten alive by the pressure on the left. A charge from the rear now would not just break them, it would shatter them utterly.
But if it was a friend…
Then perhaps, for the first time in countless desperate years, he might permit himself the weakness of whispering a prayer to whatever indifferent god still walked this cursed world.
The horn sounded again, closer now.
The colossal dust cloud visibly trembled with motion, and the dying sun vanished entirely behind a pale, suffocating veil of pulverized dirt and ash. Every soldier still standing, friend and foe alike, turned their dust-caked face toward the horizon. Even the dying seemed to pause in their gasping, their heads lolling back to catch the note.
Alpheo hated this waiting. He hated it more than the stench of cooling blood, more than the screams of his men. It was a familiar, acid kind of helplessness, one he had spent two decades believing he had buried forever.
It felt like the old days. When he was still a slave. When his every breath, every meager meal, and every crushing beating depended entirely on another man’s fleeting will.
He remembered staring at the mud floor, waiting for an order, knowing his life was not his own. Only the night had ever been his. The night, and the silent sanctuary of his thoughts.
He had paid the price for freedom in blood and fire. He had killed the men who held his leash. He had earned the right to be his own master. He had made his masters pay…And yet, here he was again, trapped on this field, waiting for a hand unseen to decide whether he lived or died.
He closed his eyes, forcing his ragged breath to deepen. The words that had once kept him sane, rose unbidden and yet loud in his mind:
The mind is your true self. Pain is not yours. Hunger is not yours. The body is a puppet, just that. Fear is poison, cast it out. The mind is all you are, all you’ll ever be.
He whispered it again, and again, against he felt his tongue go dry.
For most of his life, he had been a rat. He had clawed and bitten his way into the light, into command, into a crown that still didn’t fit right upon his head.
How laughable that now, at the edge of all things, he should finally heed his own words.
He lifted his eyes to the dust storm rising before him. The air shimmered with heat and fear. His men waited, half-praying or cursing, but all staring at the horizon where fate itself rode cloaked in dirt.
If victory lay behind that dust, he would live to see another dawn.
If not… then at least his death would not find him kneeling.Of that he was sure, the last thing he could decide was his death, his only last true choice.
Fear was poison and yet he was drowning in it.
He feared for his life. He feared for his family.He feared for all he had built with his blood and will and rage,everything that could be undone in the next heartbeat.
The dust on the horizon was growing now, boiling upward like the breath of a god. Every step of it made his heart pound harder, every gust of wind carrying that cursed veil closer to them.
Alpheo’s knuckles were white on the reins, his horse restless beneath him, sensing his master’s turmoil. Beside him, Shahab said nothing, and yet the silence between them was deafening. He didn’t need to look to know his grandfather-in-law’s expression, to know that it mirrored his.
They stood shoulder to shoulder,and watched as fate marched toward them shrouded in dust.
The old and the young, the tired and the ambitious , both staring at either death or glory in that foreign field.
Every second dragged. Every moment was an eternity.
In his mind, Alpheo saw the dust turn left. He saw the riders within emerge with enemy banners and iron lances, the sun flashing against their armor as they swept down upon his rear lines like a tide of doom. He saw everything collapse,his army, his hopes, his stand, and himself crushed beneath it all.
But it did not turn.
The dust kept coming.
Straight toward them.
He waited for the gods’ punishment but it never came. That was their boon.
The dust just kept coming forward.
A single note broke the silence,a horn, deep and full, rising above the battle’s chaos like the voice of salvation itself. Then another answered it. And another.
Alpheo’s heart lurched.
For a heartbeat, Alpheo forgot to breathe.
Then he laughed.
It burst out of him raw and hoarse, tearing through his throat like he was coughing up years of despair. But it was laughter nonetheless, a sound so wild and unrestrained that Shahab turned to him, eyes wide, before his own lips split into a grin and joined in with a booming, aged cackle.
They were allies.
Allies.
From where? Who? How many? It did not matter. The dust they raised was vast, hundreds.
They were saved.
Alpheo threw his head back and roared with laughter, the sound lost in the chorus of horns that now filled the sky. It was as though the heavens themselves had joined the battle.
He did not wait another moment. Without a word to Shahab, he spurred his horse forward, racing down the blood-soaked slope toward the front lines. The sight of him galloping through the rank, armor splattered with mud, the falcon of Yarzat gleaming on his banner,sent a ripple through the weary soldiers.
He looked at their faces as he passed: dirt-streaked, bloodied, hollow-eyed men who had stood their ground for hours with no promise of survival. To him, they had never looked more beautiful.
“MY FAIR SOLDIERS!” he shouted, voice cutting through the din like a blade. “REINFORCEMENTS! AT LONG LAST HAVE COME!”
The men blinked at him, stunned for a moment. They had suspected and now it was official.
Cheers erupted up and down the line, cries of disbelief turning to shouts of triumph.
Alpheo rose in his saddle, raising his sword high, the blade catching what little sunlight pierced the haze.
“WE HAVE WON! YOU HEAR ME? WE SHALL LEAVE THIS FIELD WITH VICTORY BEHIND US!”
His voice broke, but the fire in it burned bright.
“KEEP YOUR HEADS HIGH AND YOUR HEARTS FIRM! ONE LAST EFFORT, MY BROTHERS,ONE LAST PUSH AND THIS DAY IS OURS!”
The roar that answered him shook the ground.
Men who had fought for four hours straight, who should have collapsed where they stood, lifted their weapons instead. Shields locked. Spears lowered.
And when Alpheo shouted “CHARGE!” they surged forward, not as tired men but as avenging gods.
To the enemy who thought they had the Undefeated cornered, the legions of Yarzat brought only death.
Alpheo was not the only one who had fixed his gaze upon the rising wall of dust. Every soul on that field, soldier, commander,whatever allegiance, had turned their eyes to it, sensing that within that storm of earth lay the answer to their fates.
The hope and glee that flared like sunlight on one side of the plain was mirrored by despair on the other.
They had hurled men into that wall of steel and discipline for hours, wave after wave breaking upon it like water against stone. Each assault ended the same. They had the numbers. They had the advantage. And yet, no matter how many they threw forward, the line of Yarzat never yielded and all that came out was meat.
Even from afar, one could feel it: the cold, implacable will of a people who refused to die.
When the horns sounded once more, the wall surged forth.
The ground trembled beneath the synchronized roar of their advance. Men who had fought all morning with weary limbs suddenly moved like beasts possessed, their weapons flashing with the light of renewed purpose.
And so with death coming at their rear, and death coming at the front, the Romelians coming from the eastern province,did what normal men would do.
The first to break was a boy whose spear slipped from his hands along with his will to fight. He was not at the rear where the great dust was heading their way, not at the front where fellows bastards like him were being grinded into simple meat.
He looked to his left on the ground, where the one he had shared his place with for most of the battle was pinned on the ground, he did not know his name nor the sound of his voice, and yet when he saw him with a javelin stuck on his gut, it was as if he had lost part of his soul.
That could have very well been him….
He ran.
The first stone of a falling avalanche.
Across the plain, the banners of Yarzat rose higher, the falcon soaring above the chaos as their prince led the push that shattered the day.
And on the bloodied and weary talons of that small and yet mighty beast, it carried the crown that had belonged for three centuries to the eagle.
One animal bowing his supremacy to the other.
It was no longer the age of the eagle.That of the Falcon had finally come.