Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 234
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- Chapter 234 - Chapter 234 Battle of the bleeding plains(5)
Chapter 234: Battle of the bleeding plains(5) Chapter 234: Battle of the bleeding plains(5) Egil’s voice bellowed across the charging line, fierce and unyielding.”Either victory, or we all die!” The words thundered over his riders, igniting a fire that burned as hot as the sun glinting off their raised weapons.
Behind him, a ragged cheer erupted, raw and wild like that of wolves, rippling through the ranks as the riders felt the weight of fate settling upon them, a destiny shared in blood and steel.For one moment Egil felt as if his tribesman rode once again behind him.
Swords, maces, and axes rose into the air, glinting as they caught the light, sharp and eager for the fray.
Together, they tore forward, cutting through the winds like a flock of fierce hawks, low and fast, barreling across the plain.
Dirt and dust flew beneath pounding hooves, and the roar of their approach swept ahead of them, a dark wave surging toward the Herculean forces.
In Egil’s sights was the rear of the right flank, the unyielding line that had defied Alpheo’s assault for so long. No more!
Egil thought as the winds whipped on his face.You don’t send the footmen to do a riders’ job.
The riders held nothing back, every man braced for the clash, for the glory and danger of that first, furious impact. The clash was a thunderous eruption, as Egil’s light cavalry smashed into the rear of the Herculean flank like a spear thrust through armor.
The shrill clamor of clashing steel, the crunch of bone underhoof, and the guttural roars of men locked in desperate struggle filled the air.
Dust and blood mingled, clouding the scene as Egil’s riders drove their mounts into the fray, swords and axes swinging down with relentless force.
The Herculean infantry, unprepared and overwhelmed, staggered under the brutal assault, breaking formation as Egil’s men tore into their ranks.
Egil himself was a whirlwind in the heart of the melee, each swing of his weapon leaving death in its wake.
His sword came down onto the shoulder of a spearman, cleaving through the shoulder and sinking deep into the bone.
Luckily the men on the rear had little armor, as most was used for the first lines, leaving them even more exposed to the attacks coming from them.
With a powerful yank, he freed his blade from the dying man, as another soldier came forward with a trust of his spear.
With a brutal efficiency, Egil deflected the thrust and then brought his blade down in a sweeping arc, severing the man’s arm at the elbow.
A scream rang out, but it was soon drowned out by the next clash as Egil plunged forward.  He shouted for his men to press harder, to drive the advantage they’d won, his battle cries urging his men onward as they hacked deeper and deeper into the Herculean ranks.
The soldiers of the Herculean right flank began to falter, their faces etched with terror as the reality of their situation set in.
Pressed from both the front and rear, they found themselves ensnared in a deadly vise, Alpheo’s infantry driving them backward only to meet the ruthless charge of Egil’s cavalry behind them, a standard application of the hammer and anvil tactic.
The sight of Egil’s riders, relentless as storm winds, cutting down their ranks like wheat before the scythe, sent waves of dread through the men.
Then, with a single collective behaviour, it finally happened. Realizing their commanders had vanished , the first to run when the cavalry came into sight and they realized they were not allied, made their morale fall to the mud, the last threads of resistance dissolving.
One by one, soldiers threw down their arms and turned, no longer looking back as they fled the scene, as their fighting lines was effectively cut into two by the charge.
The sound of boots thudding against the ground rose in panic, the once-organized flank devolving into a hasty retreat.
A cry echoed among them, urging others to run, and soon the entire right flank was in full retreat, leaving weapons, shields, and fallen comrades scattered like remnants of a broken wave crashing against the shore.
Alpheo watched in astonishment as the Herculean right flank began to break, men abandoning their weapons, and fleeing in every direction.
It was the very sight he had prayed for since the beginning of this brutal clash.
He blinked, hardly able to believe what he was seeing, as though he feared it was a mirage born from the desperation of hours of fighting.
Then his thoughts found their way to Egil.
That reckless, cleptomaniac whoremonger of a friend-who had, against all odds, managed to turn the tide.
A grin tugged at the corner of his mouth, and he let himself savor the moment.
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Egil had done it, and in the way only Egil could: charging in like a storm and scattering the enemy in one swift blow.
He would have kissed the man if he was in front of him.
Alpheo’s soldiers needed no orders.
Without hesitation, they surged forward, instinctively sensing their victory.
A battle cry erupted from their ranks as eight hundred soldiers poured across the field in pursuit, relentless and merciless as they swept over the remnants of the Herculean flank.
Armor glinted, shields raised, and weapons poised as they charged after the fleeing soldiers, the thunder of their footsteps a rolling wave of fury that would not be stopped.
As Alpheo’s soldiers chased down the fleeing Herculeans, a chorus of jeers and taunts filled the battlefield, a cacophony of scorn that matched the merciless gleam in their eyes.
Spears pierced backs, axes came down on shields and shoulders, and swords struck as they closed in on their retreating enemies.
“Run faster!
Is that all you’ve got?” one soldier shouted, laughing as he swung his mace, sending a Herculean soldier sprawling into the ground , before quickly being finished off, his blood tainting the ground red.
“Not so brave now, are you?” A man said as he yanked the axe out of the man’s shoulder, “Go on, scurry back to your prince!
Tell him we are coming for him next!” he shouted as he went off in search of the next victim.
A rider thrust his sword forward, knocking a fleeing man to the ground.
As he withdrew the bloodied weapon, he laughed, “Cowards!
We’ll paint the ground with you!” The chase surged onward, Alpheo’s men fueled by a vengeful satisfaction.
The field had become a place of slaughter, as Alpheo’s forces exacted a ruthless vengeance upon those who had dared to stand against them for so long.
What began as a break in one flank soon spread like wildfire through the entire Herculeian force, transforming a local collapse into a full retreat, as the army was small enough for the soldiers from the other flanks to see what was happening at their right and left.
Alpheo’s soldiers, once contained to pressing a single weakened wing, now surged across the battlefield, their shouts and jeers echoing as they cut down every soldier who stumbled or hesitated.
From his position in the rear, Lechlian could see the full extent of the devastation, the once-solid lines of his army buckling, wavering, and finally splintering apart.
He knew the tide had turned irrevocably, the battle slipping through his fingers like sand.
His jaw tightened, but his decision was swift.
Lechlian gave the command for a full withdrawal, rallying those closest to him to set an example, as they turned their horses towards the capital.
Even those flanks that had been holding strong were now forced to abandon their gains, leaving their hardened positions and hard-won ground.
Some soldiers threw down their weapons to flee faster, while others scrambled back, casting nervous glances over their shoulders at the oncoming storm of Alpheo’s men.
The victorious soldiers, freed from resistance, turned their bloodlust toward the scattering enemy, sweeping through the field with relentless fury as even the most timid levied peasant became an blood-thirsty hound after hours of being on the receiving end.
Some of the slowest among the fleeing Herculeian soldiers, realizing there was no hope of escape, dropped their weapons and raised trembling hands in surrender.
But the men they now pleaded with had spent hours locked in brutal combat, enduring the Herculeians’ relentless assault.
Mercy was not a luxury they could afford, nor a sentiment they carried in their hearts.
This happened more with the enlisted soldiers from the countryside, as the elitè of Alpheo more or less accepted their surrenders, taking their weapons and telling them to lay on the ground, as they knew how much their leader wanted to have as many prisoners as possible.
For the others soldiers, the fury of the battle had boiled over into a bitter, vengeful rage.
The sight of raised hands did little to sway them, their minds still filled with the cries of comrades who had fallen, with the memory of sweat and blood spilled on the field.
The only mercy they offered to those who surrendered was a swift death-a blade across the throat, or a spear to the chest This was no longer a battlefield but a slaughter, as the victors exacted a grim vengeance on those too slow to escape their reach.
The rout was total-Lechlian’s once-proud army a mass of fleeing men, a dwindling line of soldiers desperately trying to escape the chaos.
As while the noble prince cut the ground between him and safe refuge with his horse, he felt those words he exchanged with the low-cur prince re-enter his mind once again.
He would come for the capital next.
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