Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 131
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- Chapter 131 - Chapter 131 The head of the pack(1)
Chapter 131: The head of the pack(1) Chapter 131: The head of the pack(1) The snow stretched endlessly in every direction, a blinding, desolate white landscape where neither animal tracks nor even the faintest hint of weeds broke the monotony.
It covered the earth like a great frozen blanket, its stillness only interrupted by the biting winds that howled through the frozen plains.
Nothing lived out here, at least nothing for long.
Among this barren expanse, thousands of tents sprawled haphazardly, dark patches against the white canvas of snow.
Thin columns of smoke rose from a few lonely fires where dozens of figures huddled for warmth, their ragged furs pulled tightly around skeletal bodies.
Some of the fires crackled with an eerie glow, for mixed in with the wood and kindling were the charred remains of those who hadn’t survived what the shamans proclaimed as the Great Migration.
Weak, sick, or simply too old to keep up-they had become fuel for the flames.
This was the camp of the northern savages, the tribes that had been denied passage beyond the Bane time and time again.
Now, they had gathered under one banner, united by a single leader.
A man known only as the Great Knotur, a figure who had managed to bend the many wild tribes of the north to his will.
Amidst the sea of tents and snow, towering figures strode through the camp, closer to giants than men.
These immense beings stood four times the size of an ordinary human, their hulking forms draped in layers of thick animal pelts.
Their breath steamed heavily in the cold air, but it was not their size alone that commanded awe-it was the creatures they rode.
Beneath them were colossal beasts, great beasts covered in dense, matted fur, their massive nose curving outward like ancient, twisted horns.
These beasts were the heart of the camp’s survival, and their presence loomed large over the huddled masses.
Without them, the tribes would have perished long ago in the unforgiving cold.
The mammoths, with their powerful trunks and keen senses, were the only creatures capable of finding food hidden beneath the layers of ice and snow.
At times, these giants and their mammoth mounts would lead parties deep into the wasteland, where the great beasts would root through the frozen earth, using their strength to dig out what little sustenance lay buried below.
Once they found a promising spot, the tribes would swarm around, shoveling furiously to uncover roots, tubers, and anything that could be scraped together to throw into the great cauldrons.
These grim, steaming soups were all that stood between them and starvation.
Without the mammoths, and the giants who commanded them, the Great Migration would have failed within a month.
It was they who led the way, finding sustenance where none seemed possible, allowing the thousands of desperate souls to cling to life in this bleak, frozen expanse.
The tribesmen often huddled together near the sparse fires, their voices low and filled with awe as they whispered about Gowulf, their Great Knotur.
How had he managed to bring the giants to his side?
These massive, near-mythical beings, so aloof and untamable, had never bowed to any leader before.
Yet now, they marched under his banner.
Rumors swirled through the camp, each more incredible than the last.
Some claimed that Gowulf had bested the giants’ leader, a towering figure twice the size of a man, in a brutal contest of strength.
They said he had wrestled the giant to the ground, refusing to yield until the great beastly man had no choice but to swear loyalty.
Others whispered of a different contest-one not of battle, but of endurance.
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They said Gowulf had outlasted the giant chief in a grotesque eating contest, devouring more raw flesh than even the giants could stomach, earning their respect through sheer ferocity and relentless will.
Still, others claimed it was a test of drinking, with Gowulf downing enough of their bitter, fiery brews to kill a dozen men, standing tall while the giant fell to his knees in defeat.
Gowulf himself never confirmed nor denied any of these tales.
Whenever the stories reached his ears, he would only smile faintly, his expression unreadable, adding fuel to the growing myth that surrounded him.
It was not the first time that the tribesman of the north, united together , yet while all the others aimed to break the rock separing them to the south,Gowulf had another plan, one equally dangerous.
These people, who had seen their numbers dwindle from the harsh journey, now looked toward the Bane with one final hope, differently from what they thought.
hower , the Great Knotur had no intention to throw his followers against the cold stone of the castle, he instead turned his eyes eastward, toward The Great Ice Flow.
The Great Ice Flow stretched out before them, a vast, frozen river spanning over thirty meters in width, its depth unknown to all who gazed upon it.
The surface shimmered under the pale, unforgiving northern sun, a jagged expanse of ice and treacherous waters that seemed to swallow the very light around it.
For the tribes who had traveled so far, enduring endless days of snow and starvation, this river now stood as their final trial.
Whispers ran through the huddled masses, voices thick with doubt and fear.
To cross the Great Ice Flow was to court death itself. The flow was known for its violent currents, unseen beneath the ice but strong enough to pull whole caravans into its depths.
It was suicide, many thought.
But what choice did they have?
Behind them lay only the brutal winter they had escaped from, and they knew that to turn back was to embrace death.
Yet the Great Knotur, Gowulf, stood resolute.
He had not brought them this far only to fail.
His eyes, cold and unwavering, were fixed on the distant horizon beyond the river, where he claimed a paradise awaited.
He had told them that across the ice, in lands no northern tribe had ever dared reach, there were fertile plains untouched by winter’s bite.
Great lands of green stretched endlessly, where plants grew every season of the year, and hunger did not exist. The Great Knotur stood at the forefront, towering above his people as tens of thousands of eyes fixated on the figures gathered near the frozen expanse of the Great Ice Flow.
Ahead of the masses, Gowulf’s broad, powerful back faced his people, his long beard dancing in the biting wind.
Beside him stood the elite of each tribe-elder shamans, keepers of ancient knowledge and magic.
They circled a lone figure, a young man barely past twenty winters, standing bare-chested against the freezing wind, as if daring it to defy him.
 Their mouths moved rapidly, muttering ancient, unintelligible words-syllables not meant for ordinary ears.
“Zhar’ka thrul.
Zhar’ka thruloi vo Firen , ohna thresht,Trekka’va!
Your bones, the bones of giants.
Your heart, the heart of the flame.
You will not break!” They chanted, their voices rising and falling like the howling winds.
Their canes struck the ground with each step, creating a steady beat beneath the chorus of their cryptic incantations.
One shaman, his face painted in ash and blood, raised a bowl filled with dark liquid and flung its contents onto Rolf’s chest.
The young man’s bare skin sizzled as the substance met the cold, though he did not flinch.
Another shaman dipped their fingers in a concoction of roots and oils, drawing spirals and jagged lines on Rolf’s forehead while chanting, “Erghan, kazhn, rothar!
Let the spirits awaken in your veins!” A third shaman, the oldest of them all, leaned in close, whispering guttural phrases that seemed to come from deep within her chest.
“Trekka’va!
You will not break!
” After long minutes of chanting, Gowulf strode forward.
He embraced the young man from behind, his massive arms encircling him, and pressed a kiss to the top of his head.
With solemn reverence, he closed a collar made of animal claws around the young man’s neck, each claw representing a life taken in the harsh wilderness of the north, hoping that their soul would unite with his.
Gowulf held his gaze, his fierce eyes locking with the youth’s, before placing into his hands the end of a long, thick rope-the product of weeks of labor by thousands of people.
Their fate now rested on this single thread, tied to the only hope they had left.That was his son, but not of blood.
Gowulf’s voice boomed over the frozen silence, cutting through the wind, as he addressed the masses.
“Rolf, son of Ignor and Fjerta, you shall be the spear that pierces the belly of famine and drives it from our people.
Offer your body and soul to the tribes-to your brothers and sisters.
Let the strength of our ancestors flow through you, and may they grant you victory and salvation for us all!” Rolf, the chosen one, rose from the snow, his breath steaming in the frigid air.
With a primal roar that echoed across the endless white, he slammed his fists against his chest.
The countless rows of tribesmen stood in awed silence as he bellowed: “Father, Mother, witness my deed!
Let your souls be proud of your flesh !” Without hesitation, Rolf seized the thick rope and sprinted toward the Great Ice Flow, his feet pounding against the frozen ground.
He ran with the weight of thousands of lives on his back, knowing that one way or another, the river ahead would be his grave, but maybe not that of his people.
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