Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 238
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- Chapter 238 - Chapter 238 Message to those insides
Chapter 238: Message to those insides Chapter 238: Message to those insides The days slipped by like a steady march, each one bringing the army closer to the final act of their siege.
Outside the city of Arduronaven, Alpheo’s soldiers worked tirelessly, transforming the barren landscape into a theater of war.
Engineers directed crews to haul timber,and the dirt filling path would pass through the ditch shielding the city’s walls.
The onagers, finally having been dragged back to camp after the battle, resumed their relentless barrage.
Stones the size of barrels crashed against the walls, sending up plumes of dust and chips of rock that rained down like hail upon the defenders.
The air reverberated with the deep thrum of impact and the distant cries of the besieged.
To the soldiers in Alpheo’s camp, the sound was a steady drumbeat of progress.
Siege towers began to take shape, their skeletons of wood rising slowly under the efforts of carpenters and laborers.
Ladders were prepared, and sharpened stakes were affixed to thei ground between the walls and the camps, creating wooden shields for the archer to take refuge in while shooting at those on the walls.
After the parlay, the lord of Arduronaven, Vroghios, seemed to age a decade overnight.
His once-proud bearing was diminished, replaced by a nervous energy that was plain to all who served him.
The grim terms Alpheo had laid before him played endlessly in his mind, and though he had rejected them, the prince’s confidence had planted seeds of dread.
 The watch during the night was doubled as the lord feared for a night attack. Recruits filled the gaps left by the failed sortie, hastily conscripted and given armor stripped from the wounded, who were left to their fate in crowded infirmaries, where groans of pain mixed with the acrid scent of death were in everyone’s nose and ear.
The morale of the city’s defenders was as fragile as it has ever been, as the knowledge of the outcome of the battle had reached everyone’s ears.
Even the presence of the lord did little to improve morals, as their trust in holding the city was at an all-time low.
—————— Two soldiers paced along the crumbling parapet of Arduronaven’s walls, their spears tapping rhythmically against the stone as they walked.
The elder of the two, a wiry man with a streak of gray in his beard, squinted toward the horizon where the sun was beginning its slow descent.
“Look at that,” he muttered, motioning with his chin.
“Sun’s almost gone.
Won’t be long before those bastards start throwing rocks again.” The younger soldier, a stocky lad with a perpetual scowl, groaned loudly.
“Don’t remind me.
I haven’t slept properly in days.
Between the screaming, the damn engines, and the captain shouting orders every other minute, I’m ready to pass out standing.” The older man chuckled, a rough, knowing sound that carried a hint of weariness.
“You think this is bad?
Twelve years ago, I was stuck in the Lord’s rebellion.
When the campaign went to hell, and we holed up in the city, it was worse than this.
They threw their soldiers at us three times a day, every day.
You should count yourself lucky you haven’t had to fend off a storming attempt yet.” “Yeah, well, at least they didn’t have boulders back then,” the younger one shot back, stealing a nervous glance over the edge of the wall.
“I swear, the last one hit so close I felt my teeth shake in my head.” The older soldier shrugged, his grip tightening on his spear.
“Better get used to it, boy.
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As long as that prince and his army are camped out there, the only thing coming our way is more trouble.” The younger man snorted in frustration but didn’t argue.
His eyes stayed fixed on the enemy camp as shadows stretched long over the fields. The two soldiers stood on the wall, waiting as the sun dipped below the horizon, painting the landscape in hues of orange and deepening blue.
The younger one shifted on his feet, his eyes darting nervously toward the enemy camp.
But no boulders came, no screech of onagers to shake the air.
Just silence, thick and uneasy.
“Strange,” the older man muttered, leaning on his spear.
“I thought for sure they’d start hurling stones again by now.” The younger soldier glanced over his shoulder.
“You think they’re planning to attack the city?” he asked, his voice tight with apprehension The elder gave a sharp laugh, sparing a single glance at the camp.
“With what?
They’ve got no ladders, no towers outside.
You can’t storm a wall with just enthusiasm” But then, suddenly, there was movement in the enemy lines-men gathering in clusters, dragging objects toward the open field.
The younger soldier squinted, his heart hammering in his chest.
“What are they doing now?” The answer came with a cacophony of noise.
The enemy soldiers began taking potsand smashing them with maces and hammers in front of the walls.
The racket echoed through the night like a chaotic drumbeat, metal clanging and clay shattering, the noise grating against the nerves of everyone within earshot.
“What in all the gods’ names are they playing at now?” the younger one shouted, covering his ears.
“Maybe they’ve run out of boulders,” he muttered, his voice wavering slightly.
“And they’re just doing this to keep us from sleeping?
Wear us down before they try something?” The older man stroked his grizzled beard, his expression thoughtful but grim.
“No that ruckus will be keeping their own soldiers awake.
Maybe they are trying to scare us thinking they are going to attack?” Both men stood there, watching the chaos below.
Neither could know that Alpheo had no grand siege tactics underway, nor any plans of psychological warfare beyond the obvious.
What the prince was doing wasn’t about exhaustion or intimidation.
The clamor, loud and unrelenting, was a deliberate message meant for the right ears among those in the cities.
——– Marcus adjusted his tattered cloak, pulling it tighter around his shoulders to shield himself from the cool night air that drifted through the square.
The so-called refugee camp within Arduronaven was a grim cluster of tents and makeshift shelters, pressed into the city’s main square. To anyone else, Marcus and Lucius looked like just another pair of weary souls driven from their homes by Egil’s raids.
But they were anything but that.
Standing near the edge of a firepit, Marcus leaned casually against a post, his sharp eyes scanning the square.
His posture was loose, but his gaze missed nothing: the guards patrolling the perimeter, the clusters of refugees too quiet to be genuine, the children darting between tents.
He glanced toward Lucius, who crouched a few steps away, fiddling with a frayed strap on his worn boot.
“Are you hearing it?” Marcus asked, his voice low and calm, barely audible above the crackle of the flames and the muffled hum of city life beyond the square.
Lucius straightened, rolling his shoulders as though easing a knot of tension.
“Yeah,” he replied, his tone equally muted.
He didn’t look at Marcus but instead let his gaze wander, pretending to study the movements of the refugees.
“I’ve been hearing it for a while now.” The faint clang of metal against metal drifted over the city walls, carried on the night air.
To most, it was just another layer of noise in a restless city.
But to men like Marcus and Lucius, it was a clear signal.
For weeks, they had lived under the guise of refugees, enduring the same hardships as those genuinely displaced by war.
It was a harsh, grinding existence, marked by cold nights and the gnawing pain of hunger that never truly left them.
The meager rations and dehumanizing treatment had worn at their patience.
They clung to the hope that this charade would end soon, that the call to action would finally come and deliver them from this misery.
But now that the signal had been given, a cold, creeping dread settled over them. It wasn’t just an idea anymore; it was a moment that demanded action.
For the first time, they truly understood what they were about to do.
They weren’t armed soldiers marching into battle;they were starved and armed with little more than kitchen knives and scraps of resolve.
The confidence they had bolstered during the long wait began to falter, replaced by the terrifying realization that they were about to pit themselves against soldiers with only the flimsiest of weapons and even flimsier hopes.
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