Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 276
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- Chapter 276 - Chapter 276 Divided tribe(1)
Chapter 276: Divided tribe(1) Chapter 276: Divided tribe(1) Geowulf , the Great Knotur of the tribes behind the North’s bane, stormed through the stone halls of the Royal Palace of Sarlan, his boots striking the floor with force, the sound echoing through the cold, empty corridors.
His jaw clenched tight, his teeth grinding together in frustration as his thoughts churned with bitter anger.
How could they raise these issues against him after everything he had done?
He had led them from the brink of death, from the frigid white plains where starvation and frost had claimed so many of their kin.
He had fought, bled, and sacrificed, carving a path southward, defying fate itself.
Where countless Knoturs had failed, forced to bow their heads and knees to the southerners for scraps, he had succeeded.
Geowulf, and no one else, had moved their people to fertile lands, warm and rich, where their bellies could be filled each day and night, their ancestors head’s now bowing to what they had achieved.
The grandeur of the palace around him-a fortress once symbolizing the might of the Sarlan kings-seemed to mock him.
These halls were his now, their opulence a testament to his triumph.
Yet, the weight of that victory felt hollow in this moment, his daughter’s venomous words cutting deeper than any blade ever had, as his men now raised an hutt into his own palace.
What more do they want from me?
he thought bitterly, his fists tightening at his sides.
He had given everything-his blood, his will, his son, his very soul-for the survival and strength of their people.
He had turned death and ruin into life and prosperity.
Yet, instead of gratitude, he was met with anger, resistance, and scorn.
Pausing for a moment beneath a massive archway, Geowulf exhaled sharply, his breath hissing through his teeth.
His vision blurred slightly, not from tears but from the sheer force of his fury.
He looked out at the courtyard below, its crumbled stones and soot-streaked walls still bearing the scars of conquest.
“Ungrateful,” he muttered under his breath, the word like a curse spat into the cold air.
His grip on the edge of a stone pillar tightened until his knuckles turned white.
“After all I have done… survival, victory, warmth, land of our own… and still, it is not enough.” Geowulf’s mind raced.
His legacy, his unifying of the tribes, his conquest of Sarleon-these were not just victories; they were salvation.
He had carved life from the barren snow, transformed suffering into strength, and replaced the icy winds of death with the fertile promise of life.
Yet, the very people who owed him their survival now dared to question him, as if they could not see the cost he had borne for their sake.
His breath came heavy, the fire in his chest refusing to die.
He clenched his fists and resumed his march He was Geowulf, the Great Knotur, the savior of his people, and he would ensure they never forgot it.
Geowulf strode into the great hall, now refashioned as the Hutt, the traditional meeting place of a tribe’s elder.
The stone chamber, once a site of royal banquets and councils for the Sarlan kings, now bore a rougher, tribal character.
Heavy furs draped over the high-backed chairs, and the floor was scattered with woven mats and animal hides, symbols of the traditions Geowulf and his people had brought south with them.
A fire burned in a massive hearth at the room’s center, its light flickering over the gathered figures seated in a circle, each representing one of the tribes now bound to Geowulf’s side.
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This was no kingdom anymore.
What had been the unified and orderly realm of Sarleon had been transformed into a confederation of tribes, each retaining its distinct identity and leadership under the overarching authority of the Great Knotur.
For most present, this arrangement was unprecedented.
In the north, it was common for a victorious tribe to absorb or scatter the defeated.
The weak were folded into the strong, their names and customs erased.
But here, Geowulf had not merely conquered; he had unified by force, compelling these disparate peoples to follow his banner.
 The Sarlan lands they had seized were rich and fertile, their bounty alien to those who had spent their lives struggling against the harshness of the Great Snow.
For the first time, many of them found themselves living off the labor of others-southern farmers who yielded their crops without resistance, seemingly willing to part with their food.
It was a concept foreign to them , who had grown up in a world where a man would sooner spill his guts than surrender his provisions.
As Geowulf entered, the hum of conversation quieted.
The gathered leaders shifted in their seats, some nodding in deference, others watching him with guarded eyes.
This was a Hutt like no other-a place where not one tribe, but many, convened.
The elders of the Snowspears, the Frostmanes, the Bitterrocks, and others sat shoulder to shoulder with Geowulf at their head, each carrying their own grievances and ambitions.
The leader of the Bitterrocks, Klarik, rose from his seat as soon as Geowulf entered the Hutt.
Klarik was a striking figure, even among the hardened warriors gathered in the room.
His long, tangled beard was streaked with gray, and a deep scar carved a jagged path across his left eye, rendering it milky and unseeing.
His front teeth were missing, giving his words a sharp, snarling quality.
He wore a battered suit of chainmail, its links dulled and dented, taken as spoils during the battle against the Sarlan.
It clinked softly as he stood, pointing a calloused finger at Geowulf.
“What in the gods’ name are we doing here?” Klarik’s voice boomed, echoing against the stone walls.
His tone was raw with frustration and disdain, each word spat like a challenge.
“Sitting on our arses in stone halls, watching fields grow!
This is not our way” Some of the younger leaders muttered uneasily, while others turned their eyes to Geowulf, waiting for his response.
Klarik, however, was undeterred.
He stepped forward, gesturing wildly with his hands, his chainmail rattling with each motion.
“I’ll tell you what I see,” Klarik snarled.
“A land of weaklings!
Farmers who bend the knee without a fight, who hand over their grain like beaten dogs!
And we-you, me, all of us-we’re just sitting here, eating their food, sleeping in their homes, when we should be raising our weapons and raiding their fields!
Taking what we want by right of strength instead of meekly waiting for them to give it to us!” A few of the leaders, particularly those from tribes more accustomed to raiding than governance, raised their weapons high in agreement.
Spears clattered against shields, and war cries echoed through the chamber.
Klarik turned, his single good eye gleaming with satisfaction as he saw the support growing around him.
“They are weak!” Klarik bellowed, his voice rising over the din.
“We all saw it with our own eyes!
Their men broke like dry sticks in the snow when we stormed them on the field.
Their nobles wept as they begged for their lives!
And now you tell me we’re supposed to sit here, governing them?
Eating their scraps like old wolves too slow to hunt?” The cheers grew louder, several leaders pounding their weapons against the floor in agreement.
Geowulf remained seated, silent as a mountain, his dark eyes fixed on Klarik.
The Great Knotur’s face was unreadable, his thoughts locked behind a mask of cold indifference.
But inside, a storm churned.
Not even three steps into the room, Geowulf thought grimly, and the cause of my troubles stands before me, as loud and blind as ever.
Klarik’s sneer deepened, his scarred face twisting with contempt as he jabbed his finger toward Geowulf.
“And instead of taking the land of the nobles, we let them keep it!” he roared, his voice thick with disdain.
“All we asked for was their word!
Their loyalty!
Do you think they care for your oaths, Knotur?
Do you think their words are worth the piss it takes to speak them?” Klarik leaned forward, his voice dropping into a low growl.
“Do you think you’re our king now?
That we’ll bend our heads and obey your whims, like those craven farmers bowing in their fields?” The room erupted into murmurs and snickers, some leaders nodding in agreement, others exchanging uncertain glances.
But before Klarik could press further, Geowulf rose to his full, towering height, his hand raised to silence the noise.
“We do not bow to anyone!” Geowulf’s voice thundered, reverberating through the chamber like a winter gale.
The murmurs ceased immediately, and the leaders turned to him, the weight of his authority cutting through the discontent.
Geowulf’s piercing gaze swept over the gathered leaders, his voice steady but commanding.
“I am not your king,” he said, his words deliberate and unyielding.
“And I do not want you groveling at my feet or kneeling every time I go to take a piss.” He stepped forward, his presence dominating the room.
” It is by conquest that I stand here.
By my blood, my sweat, and the blood of the thousands who fell before us.
We fought, we bled, and we endured what no one else could.” His eyes bore into Klarik.
“It is by that conquest I gained the vassalage of these people, their oaths sworn not to you or your tribes but to me.
To me.” Geowulf turned, his gaze sharp as he addressed the room.
“Each of you has received lands.
Lands that are yours to govern, to rule, to defend.
Do with them what you will.
Tax them, raid them, farm them, or burn them to the ground-it is no concern of mine.” He paused, his tone growing colder.
“But the nobles who swore their oaths swore to serve me.
Not you.” He turned back to Klarik, his dark eyes narrowing as he took a step closer, towering over the Bitterrocks leader.
“So tell me, Klarik,” Geowulf growled, his voice low and menacing, “what the fuck do you want?
Your stomach bulges with meat, milk, wine, and grain-things you never had in the north.
You have land to call your own.
You are no longer chasing hares in the snow, scraping moss from rocks to keep your people alive.” Geowulf’s voice rose again, cutting through the tension in the room like a blade.
“What more do you want?
Another raid?
Another slaughter?
Or do you just want to spit and whine because you can’t stand the thought of having more than nothing?The thought that your people no longer starve?Or perhapse the thought that during winter you shall have a warm fire beside you, keep you awake at night?If you dislike those things perhapse you should turn your back and return to our old desolate home….” Geowulf’s hand shot to his belt, gripping the haft of his massive axe.
With one fluid motion, he tore it free, the sharp edge glinting menacingly in the firelight.
Without breaking his gaze from Klarik, he raised the weapon high and brought it crashing down onto the thick wooden table beside him.
The impact was deafening.
The axe cleaved clean through the surface, splinters flying in all directions as the table cracked and sagged under the blow.
The room fell into an uneasy silence, the leaders flinching at the sudden violence, their previous murmurs now replaced by tense stillness.
Geowulf leaned on the embedded axe, his knuckles white around its haft as he fixed Klarik with a glare as sharp as the weapon itself.
His voice, low and deadly, sliced through the air.
“Or is it a fight you’re after, Klarik?
Is that what all this barking is about?Because if it is that, maybe it is time that you get to know my axe closely” His eyes narrowed, his voice rising like a storm.
“If you think you can take me, here’s your chance.
Pick up a weapon, stand before me, and take your swing.
Come on, Bitterrock!” He spat the name with disdain.
“Let’s see if your stomach can hold more than wine and complaints!”
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