Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 182
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- Chapter 182 - Chapter 182 Broken family
Chapter 182: Broken family Chapter 182: Broken family Geowulf, the Great Knotur of the united tribes, walked slowly through the stone halls of the Royal Palace of Sarlan.
Each step echoed softly in the cold, empty corridors, the solid clack of his boots against the polished stone alien to him.
He had spent nearly all his life on the rugged, windswept white plains and mountains, where the snow was soft beneath his feet and the howling wind was a constant companion.
Here, there was no wind.
The thick, impenetrable walls kept out the biting cold he had known all his life, and though the stillness was unfamiliar, Geowulf found a strange sense of peace in it.
These walls, once a symbol of the power of the Sarlan kings, now belonged to him. The royal city had fallen quickly-far more quickly than the proud nobles of the kingdom had expected.
Geowulf’s forces had surrounded the city in a swift and brutal siege, their giants protecting the man below from arrow, as they created a foothold for his infatry to sweep in on the walls.
Once his men got inside, chaos reigned as the city’s once-mighty defenders were overrun.
The battle had been short, brutal, and decisive.
The royal family-once the heart of Sarleon-was no more.
Geowulf had made certain that no member of the royal bloodline survived the fall of Sarlan.
The king, his sons, and every man related by blood to the royal house had been executed, their line severed completely on a first correlation descendance .
No one who could claim the throne through direct descent remained.
The dynasty that had ruled Sarlan for generations had been eradicated in a single, bloody stroke. He paused in front of a large window overlooking the ruined courtyard, his gaze sweeping over the smoldering remains of what had once been a proud city.
Perhaps during winter he could force some of his new subjects to restore the city they had destroyed, but for now, the beauty of a destroyed city suited the Knotur’s taste.
Geowulf stopped in front of a large wooden door,he stood there for a moment, his hand resting on the cold iron handle, feeling the weight of the silence around him.
Taking a deep breath, he bellowed, his voice deep and commanding, “I am entering.” Without waiting for a response, Geowulf pushed the door open with a firm shove.
It creaked on its hinges, revealing a modest chamber bathed in the dim light of the setting sun.
There, near the wide arched window that overlooked the ruined city, stood his daughter, her back to him.
She was holding her small son in her arms, her posture straight but distant, as if her mind was far beyond the room’s walls.
Her name was Sifka.
Tall and strong, with the proud blood of the unifer of the tribes running through her veins, she stood still, gazing out over the city that had been conquered under her father’s rule.
The child in her arms shifted slightly, his small hands gripping the edge of her fur cloak as he peered down at the crumbling streets below.
Geowulf said nothing.
He stepped inside the room and closed the door behind him, the sound of it clicking shut muffled by the thick stone walls.
He remained by the door, his towering presence a contrast to the quiet stillness of the chamber.
His eyes studied his daughter’s silhouette, but Sifka did not turn to face him. She did not greet him, nor did she acknowledge his presence.
Instead, she stood there, unmoving, watching over the city as if lost in a world only she could see.
He had come to speak, but now, seeing her like this, even he was unsure what words would break through the wall she had built around herself while he provided her the bricks to build it.
Geowulf stood in the silence for a moment longer, his rough hands clenched at his sides before he broke it with a quiet, low voice.
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“How are you, Sifka?” His tone was softer than one might expect from a man who had just taken a kingdom by force, but there was a heaviness beneath it, a tension that filled the space between them.
Sifka said nothing, her eyes still fixed on the darkened city below.
She seemed far away, as though she hadn’t even heard him.
Geowulf frowned, stepping forward, his boots making a dull thud on the stone floor.
“How is Beor?” he asked, his voice growing a little firmer, trying to reach her.
But again, Sifka remained silent.
She shifted slightly, pulling her son closer to her chest as if shielding him from the world.
The child, no more than a few months old, nuzzled into her fur-lined cloak, unaware of the tension that surrounded him.
Geowulf’s patience thinned, and he took another step toward her, his large frame now looming closer.
“It is time, Sifka,” he said, his voice deepening with command.
“I am his grandfather.
It is my right to hold my blood in my arms.” He paused, his eyes narrowing as he continued, “Beor is my grandson and the heir to all I have conquered.
To all I hold.” His words were weighted with the authority of a man who had led countless warriors into battle, a man who now stood as the ruler of a kingdom he had claimed through bloodshed.
But the moment the words left his mouth, Sifka spun around, her eyes blazing with a fury that seemed to ignite the very air between them.
The calm that had cloaked her shattered like glass, revealing the raw, ferocious anger beneath.
“The man who made Beor fatherless,” she hissed, her voice filled with venom, “has no right to even think of holding him.” Her words cut through the room like a blade, her voice sharp and unyielding as she stared at her father with the intensity of a lioness defending her cub.
Sifka’s hands tightened protectively around her son, her body coiled with tension.
Geowulf’s expression darkened as his daughter’s words struck deep.
His jaw clenched, the muscles in his neck tightening as the fury slowly built within him.
For a moment, he said nothing, just staring at her with a storm brewing behind his eyes.
“How long will you hold onto that, Sifka?” he growled, his voice growing rougher with each word.
The room felt suddenly smaller, the tension thickening like smoke in the air.
Without waiting for a reply, he stormed toward the table where a plate of half-eaten food sat, untouched and forgotten.
With a snarl of frustration, he grabbed the plate in one large hand and hurled it across the room.
It shattered against the stone wall, bits of food and pottery scattering everywhere, leaving a jagged smear on the surface.
The sharp crash echoed through the chamber, but Sifka didn’t flinch, her gaze locked onto his with defiance.
Geowulf took a step forward, pointing a thick, calloused finger at her.
“It is thanks to Beor’s father that you, him, and tens of thousands of our people can eat well and sleep without fearing they’ll wake up to see their parents or grandparents burning on the same fire they use to keep themselves warm.” His voice was like thunder, booming through the room, filled with the raw truth of the harsh life they had led before.
“Do you forget what we were, Sifka?
Scattered, starving tribes with nothing but our fists and stones?
It was his sacrifice, his blood, that helped us take the land we were promised and ensure that our people wouldn’t be starved like dogs anymore!” His hand curled into a fist, trembling with the force of his anger.
“Your son will grow up in a world where he doesn’t have to fear death every day.
But you-” he shook his head, his voice dripping with frustration.
“You sit here, mourning a man who fought for this, who knew exactly what it would cost!
” Sifka’s voice rang out like a thunderclap.
“I know what door his sacrifice opened!” Her eyes blazed with fury, her words sharp and seething.
“And I love him for that-a thousand times more than I ever did, and that love will last a thousand times longer than he lived.
But that does not mean,” she spat, her voice trembling with emotion, “that I bear no poison for the man who took him from me, from us.” She clutched Beor tighter, her grip protective, fierce.
“The man who ripped him from his son, from my arms.
You took him, Father!
You made him die for this-” her voice cracked but she held on, the grief nearly suffocating her words-“for your war, your glory!” Geowulf’s face hardened, but beneath his stern expression was the flicker of pain.
“It was necessary,” he said, his voice low but resolute.
“For the spirits of the ancestors to hear us, for them to bless our people, a great sacrifice had to be made.
His death wasn’t in vain.” Sifka glared at him, tears glistening in her eyes, but Geowulf pressed on.
“Did you not see?” he continued, his voice growing louder with conviction.
“Did you not see how ice shattered against his body as if it were mere pebbles?
Blows that should have felled a tree only winded him!
Do you think he could have done that if the spirits hadn’t taken hold of him?
If they hadn’t accepted their sacrifice?” Sifka’s face twisted in a mixture of rage and sorrow.
She couldn’t stand to hear any more.
“Go!” she screamed, her voice raw, breaking under the weight of her grief.
“Just go!” Geowulf’s breath hitched for a moment.
He looked at his daughter, at the baby in her arms-his grandson-and knew no words could heal this rift.
He let out a long, heavy sigh, his anger slipping into something else: exhaustion, regret.
Without saying another word, he turned and left the room, the door closing softly behind him as Sifka’s sobs filled the space as the fall of a kingdom , was followed by the destruction of a family.
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