Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 117
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- Chapter 117 - Chapter 117 An ambush for a crown(3)
Chapter 117: An ambush for a crown(3) Chapter 117: An ambush for a crown(3) The first volley of arrows and javelins rained down mercilessly upon Ormund’s army.
The soldiers barely had time to react before the sky above them darkened with deadly projectiles.
With a sharp hiss, arrows and javelins plunged into the unprepared ranks.
The men shouted in agony as the missiles found their marks, sinking into exposed flesh, armor, and the flanks of terrified horses, whom had no armor .
Some of the infantry attempted to raise their shields, but their movements were sluggish, panicked.
These were levied men, hastily recruited and not even given basic training.
Their shields, while offering protection on one side, left the other side vulnerable to the deadly rain of arrows from both flanks.
The screams of the wounded echoed through the narrow road.
Soldiers stumbled over their fallen comrades, trying to shield themselves as best as they could, but it was futile.
The arrows came from every direction.
A javelin struck a man in the chest, toppling him to the ground, while arrows pierced through the gaps in hastily raised defenses.
The toll of casualties rose sharply with each passing moment, as bodies fell in the chaos.
Ormund’s poorly trained infantry was no match for the enemy.
With little coordination and no proper training, they could do nothing but huddle beneath their shields, trying to survive the relentless barrage.
But their shields were too few and the arrows too many.
For every man who blocked one side, another was struck on the opposite.
And then came the charge.
From both sides of the road, Alpheo’s infantry burst out of the cover of the trees, descending like wolves upon their prey.
The enemy was already shaken, disorganized, and bloodied by the missile assault.
Now, they faced a brutal charge from experienced fighters.
The mercenaries came roaring down the slopes with arms raised, crashing into the stretched and fragmented column.
The levy, already reeling from the constant rain of arrows, had no time to form a proper defense.
Blades cut through the disorganized ranks as Alpheo’s men hacked and slashed their way through the vulnerable troops.
The road had become a slaughterhouse, with Ormund’s forces utterly overwhelmed, the air thick with the sounds of death and the chaos of war.
Ormund himself, riding in the van, could only watch as his soldiers, now scattered and leaderless, fell to the well-coordinated assault.
His pride in the army he had gathered was quickly replaced with horror as his men were systematically cut down, caught between the deadly rain from above and the merciless infantry charge.
Amidst the chaos, some minor lords-each commanding small pockets of men-desperately tried to rally their troops.
Their voices, hoarse from shouting, struggled to rise above the din of the battle.
They raised their swords high, trying to form semblances of order, but the panic-stricken soldiers barely registered their commands.
Men were too focused on survival, ducking beneath arrows or retreating from the advancing infantry.
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“Hold the line!
Form up!” one of the lords shouted, his voice cracking with urgency.
His banner flapped wildly in the wind as he frantically gestured for his men to group together.
But they were scattered, disoriented, and pinned on both sides by Alpheo’s relentless assault.
One lord managed to gather a few dozen soldiers into a defensive line, their shields raised shakily.
But as soon as they tried to form a barrier, the mercenary infantry smashed into them.
The impact was devastating.
The hastily formed line collapsed almost immediately, shields splintering under the pressure of the charge.
The soldiers, many of whom had never seen real combat, broke ranks as soon as the first wave hit.
Another minor lord, mounted and flanked by a small group of cavalry, attempted to charge forward, thinking he could cut through the mercenaries and turn the tide.
But the narrow road, hemmed in by the thick forest on both sides, made it impossible for the horsemen to maneuver effectively.
Their charge was met by a wall of spears and arrows.
Horses screamed as they fell, taking their riders with them.
The lord himself barely managed to turn his mount before a javelin struck him in the shoulder, toppling him from his horse , only for then be finished off by a footman with an axe through his skull.
One soldier, barely more than a boy, trembled as he faced a grizzled mercenary.
His spear was shaking in his hands as the mercenary, a man with cruel eyes and a scar running down his cheek, advanced slowly, swinging a bloodied axe.
The boy lunged forward, his spear aimed at the man’s chest, but the mercenary sidestepped with ease.
The axe swung in a wide arc, catching the boy’s leg just below the knee, and he crumpled to the ground, screaming.
The mercenary raised his axe again, and the boy’s cries were silenced.
Elsewhere, a mercenary armed with a mace was swinging wildly at a group of terrified levies.
His brutal strikes shattered shields and sent men sprawling.
One levy, desperate to defend himself, lunged at the mercenary with his spear, but the blow simply went into contact with the chainmail. The mercenary grinned savagely and brought his mace down on the man’s shoulder with a sickening crunch, splintering bone and armor alike.
In another corner of the battlefield, a riderless armored knight was engaged with two infantrymen.
His sword flashed in the dying light as he parried one strike and dodged another.
He was skilled, moving with the fluid grace of someone who had seen many battles.
One mercenary lunged forward, aiming a dagger at the knight’s exposed armpit, but the knight caught the attack on his gauntlet and drove his foot into the attacker’s chest, sending him sprawling.
Before the second mercenary could react, the knight swung his sword in a brutal, downward arc, cleaving through his opponent’s shoulder and down into his chest.
The man fell with a gurgling scream.
Before the knight could turn around to face the other, however, he had his head smashed in by a mace coming from a third man that saw the fight and came to lend a hand.
Ormund watched in horror as the battlefield descended into chaos.
His once-proud army was being torn apart.
Men were falling all around him, their screams drowned by the relentless sounds of arrows whistling through the air and javelins crashing into shields .
The ground was littered with bodies, and the mercenary infantry, fierce and unyielding, had broken through every line of defense his minor lords tried to form.
What was left of his foot soldiers were being cut down, overwhelmed by the mercenaries’ brutal efficiency.
The smell of blood filled the air.
Ormund’s heart pounded in his chest, his throat dry as he scanned the battlefield.
The columns of his troops had been stretched too thin along the road, and now they were trapped, slaughtered like cattle.
He could see men desperately trying to form up behind shields, but it was no use.
The arrows and javelins continued to rain down, piercing through any gaps.
The panic spread like wildfire; there was no rallying them now.
“Get over here!” he barked, grabbing his son’s arm.
His voice cut through the din, and his son, face pale with fear, rode up beside him.
“We have to get out of here.
Now.” With the remnants of his mounted knights, barely more than 30 men, he wheeled his horse around and bellowed for his riders to follow him.
They had no hope of winning this battle.
The only chance was to make a break for it, escape the slaughter while they still could.
Ormund spurred his horse forward, charging through the chaos.
He cleaved his axe down through the chest of a mercenary who lunged at him, the blade cutting through flesh and bone with grim ease.
His son followed closely behind, eyes wide in terror, clutching his sword as if it were the only thing keeping him tethered to the world.
“Push through!” Ormund shouted, slashing at anything in his path.
His knights did the same, cutting down footmen and mercenaries who tried to block their escape.
The clatter of steel, the shouts of men, and the thundering of hooves surrounded them as they fought their way to the front of the battlefield.
His sword flashed again, cutting down another mercenary who stood in their way.
As they broke free from the melee, Ormund didn’t dare look back.
Behind him, he knew his army was being wiped out, but he couldn’t risk a glance.
The fate of his forces was sealed, and he would gain nothing by watching them die.
All that mattered now was survival.
Only 16 men managed to follow him-riders who had somehow kept pace and survived the carnage.
Covered in blood and dirt, they rode hard, leaving the slaughter behind.
Ormund’s face was grim, his lips pressed into a tight line as he raced away from the battlefield, his son close at his side.
——— The ambush was brutally efficient.
Alpheo watched from his vantage point as the chaos unfolded beneath him, his eyes cold and calculating.
The mercenary forces on either side of the road had closed in so swiftly, so effectively, that at certain points along the battlefield, the two flanks of the ambush had met together.
They clashed with the remnants of Ormund’s shattered army in the middle, their merciless assault folding the enemy in on itself.
In some places, the bodies of Ormund’s men lay so thick that the attackers on both sides ran into each other, exchanging brief nods before turning their attention back to the work of slaughter.
The sounds of battle-a constant rhythm of steel meeting flesh, screams of the dying, and the crash of arrows-rumbled across the field.
It was a massacre.
On the left terrified, many of Ormund’s peasants had broken minutes since the fighting reached them.
The moment they realized the hopelessness of their situation, they threw down their weapons and fled, their fear overriding any semblance of order.
Spears clattered to the ground, and shields were discarded as they ran, scrambling away from the mercenaries that pursued them.
Their panicked shouts echoed across the road as they scattered into the woods, desperate to escape the death that closed in from all sides.
But Alpheo’s soldiers paid the fleeing peasants no mind only pursuing enough to scare them into not looking back.
They were not worth the effort; victory was certain.
Instead, the mercenaries shifted their focus to more valuable targets.
Without hesitation, they wheeled toward the right, charging with grim determination to aid their comrades in finishing the encirclement of Ormund’s van and the center of his army, turning around like a wheel to clash onto the enemy exposed back.
It was a well-coordinated assault, the soldiers moving like a pack of wolves, tightening their grip on the remaining pockets of resistance.
The core of Ormund’s forces, surrounded and pressed on all sides, had no escape.
Mercenaries wielding maces, hammers, and swords crashed into them, cutting them down with ruthless efficiency.
The battlefield was now a tightening noose, the soldiers from both flanks coming together, crushing the remnants of Ormund’s army between them, capturing those that surrendered while killing all those that did not.
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