Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 307
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- Chapter 307 - Chapter 307 Rise and fall
Chapter 307: Rise and fall Chapter 307: Rise and fall The Sultan of Azania departed his capital in grandeur and purpose, leading the full might of his army southward to confront the marauding horse lords who had dared to raid and besiege his towns and cities.
His banners, adorned with gilded edges, fluttered in the arid winds as the rhythmic cadence of drums announced the march.
The Sultan himself rode at the head of the formation, mounted on a magnificent white stallion draped in rich silks, his armor gleaming under the harsh sunlight.
Behind him followed a disciplined array of soldiers-archers, spearmen, cavalry and camel’s riders ready to confront the enemy in the souther part of the sultanate.
The decision to leave the capital had not been taken lightly, but the Sultan understood the urgency.
The horse lords had grown bolder, their actions no longer simple raids but instead occupations.
To allow such affronts to go unanswered was an insult to his honor and a threat to his reign.
Thus, resolutely, he took command of his forces, leaving the palace and its delicate politics behind.
As was customary in Azania during military campaigns, the governance of the capital was entrusted to the eunuchs.
Deprived of the ability to sire heirs, they were considered loyal and unambitious-ideal stewards in the Sultan’s absence, as they posed no threat of establishing a dynasty.
Among them, the one who wielded the greatest authority was Arkarth, an aged eunuch who had served the Sultan since his boyhood, a bit like a tutor.
His years of unwavering service had earned him the ruler’s trust, making him the natural choice to oversee the palace and manage the affairs of state while the Sultan led his army to war.
The palace was in an uproar, its usual calm shattered by the frantic movements of servants, midwives, and guards rushing through its grand halls.
The cause of the commotion was none other than the High Priestess Shuaa, revered as both spiritual guide and mother of the Sultan’s unborn son, who was now deep into her labor.
Her chambers, an ornate sanctuary adorned with silken tapestries and golden lamps, had been transformed into the places where she would sire that latest son or daughter of the sultan The air was thick with incense and the hushed murmurs of prayers, as attendants darted in and out with basins of water, linens, and medicinal herbs.
Outside her chambers, a growing crowd of courtiers, eunuchs, and advisors gathered anxiously, their faces a mixture of excitement and concern.
Whispers of the child’s importance-a potential heir to the throne-buzzed through the palace like an electric current.
Arkarth, the trusted head eunuch, stood at the forefront of the gathering, his sharp eyes scanning the chaos with his usual calmness  As the Sultan’s most trusted confidant, Arkarth was privy to plans that even the palace’s highest-ranking officials dared not imagine.
He knew well the weight of this birth.
The Sultan’s ambitions for the unborn child had been whispered to him in the privacy of shadowed chambers, plans that would reshape the power dynamics of Azania forever.
If the child was a son, the Sultan intended to consolidate both spiritual and temporal authority into a single throne.
The boy would inherit the dual mantle of Sultan and High Priest, a merging of power that would shake the foundations of the empire.
Arkarth’s sharp mind saw the brilliance of the plan, but also its perils.
Such a move would undoubtedly provoke the ire of the nobility,causing the crown to clash with at least half of the nobles .
Among them, none posed a greater threat than Pasha Mamud.
Pasha Mamud had long positioned his family for dominance.
His nephew, the product of a union between his sister and the Sultan, was one of the strongest contenders for the throne.
Should the Sultan’s plans come to light, Mamud would not stand idly by while his carefully constructed ambitions were dismantled.
A clash between the Sultan’s vision and Mamud’s influence seemed inevitable, yet Mamud was strong enough that the sultan couldn’t simply take it out from the palace’s intrigue struggle.
———– Inside the chamber, chaos reigned.
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Shuaa, the High Priestess, lay on the grand bed, her body wracked with agony.
Her screams pierced the heavy air, reverberating off the gilded walls of the chamber, adorned with sacred symbols of the gods she served.
Blood soaked the silken sheets beneath her, pooling dark and ominous despite the flickering lamplight.
The midwife, a seasoned woman with steady hands but worry etched into her features, worked tirelessly.
“Breathe, High Priestess!
Deep breaths now, come on!” she urged, her voice firm but strained.
She leaned forward, wiping sweat from Shuaa’s brow with a wet cloth Shuaa’s head thrashed side to side, her jet-black hair clinging to her face.
“It burns!
” she cried, clutching the bedpost with trembling hands.
“By the gods, help him!” The midwife didn’t falter, her hands moving swiftly as she adjusted Shuaa’s position.
“The child is stubborn, but he’s coming, I swear it.
Keep pushing, my lady!
” Another scream tore from Shuaa’s throat, raw and unrelenting.
She reached out blindly, gripping the midwife’s arm with surprising strength.
“Do not let him die!” ”Yes my lady!” the midwife replied firmly, though a flicker of doubt crossed her face as she glanced at the blood-soaked bed, that was too much blood.
Turning to an assistant near the corner of the room, she barked, “More towels, and get that bowl of water heated again!
Quickly!” The assistant scurried to obey, while Shuaa’s cries grew louder.
Outside the chamber, the muffled sound of servants whispering and praying could be heard, a reflection of the mounting tension within.
But inside, the battle raged on, between life and death, mother and child.
Shuaa’s screams reached a crescendo, a sound so raw and primal it seemed to echo through the palace like a hymn of life and death intertwined.
Her body arched against the pain as if straining to defy it, and then, at last, the midwife’s voice broke through the haze of agony.
“The head-it’s coming!” she exclaimed, her voice a mix of relief and urgency.
The midwife’s hands, calloused from decades of bringing life into the world, moved with practiced care.
From the blood and shadow, the crown of the child emerged-a slick, dark shape, glistening in the lamplight like a pearl in a tide of crimson.
”Please no!Don’t let him die!” “Push, my lady, push now!
The worst is almost done!” the midwife urged, her voice trembling slightly with the weight of the moment.
Shuaa clenched her teeth, her strength wavering but undeterred.
With a guttural cry, she bore down one final time, her entire being focused on expelling the life she carried.
The child slipped further into the world, the midwife cradling its delicate, fragile form as it emerged, like a just blossomed flower.
The room seemed to hold its breath, time freezing as the midwife lifted the child-slick with blood, tiny fingers curled instinctively.
For a moment, the chaos gave way to an eerie stillness, broken only by the crackling of the lamps.
Then, with a piercing wail, the newborn announced its arrival, filling the chamber with a sound so vibrant and fierce it seemed to chase away the shadow of death that had loomed only moments before.
“A son!” the midwife proclaimed, her voice triumphant, her face glowing despite the exhaustion etched into her features.
“High Priestess, you have borne a son!” The wail of the newborn should have brought relief, but instead, Shuaa’s screams redoubled, filling the room with a chilling intensity.
Her body convulsed, hands clutching at the blood-streaked sheets as if grappling with an invisible foe.
“He’s dying!
He’s dying!Help him, oh Father!
” she cried out, her voice raw with despair and grief.
The midwife, her hands still cradling the slick, squalling infant, froze in confusion.
“What is she saying?” she muttered to herself as the child was healthy as an hornse , she turned to a servant.
“Fetch the doctor, now!” Moments later, the doctor-a thin, severe man with graying hair tied back tightly-rushed into the room, his medical satchel clutched tightly in his hand.
He moved swiftly to Shuaa’s side, pressing two fingers against her wrist, his face a mask of concentration, putting an hand over hear forehead .
Shuaa’s cries grew more frantic, tears streaking her pale face.
“He is dying!
He is gone!Father, help us!” she sobbed, her voice rising to a fever pitch.
The doctor’s brow furrowed.
“Her pulse is strong, and the bleeding has stopped, maybe she lost too much blood and is delirious…” he said quietly to the midwife.
The child in her arms squirmed and wailed, a vivid symbol of life against the chaos of the room.
“But the child is alive, High Priestess,” the midwife said hesitantly, holding him up as proof.
“He cries strong and healthy.
See?
He’s here, and he’s well!He wants milk…” Shuaa’s eyes darted wildly between them, her breath coming in short, shallow gasps.
She shook her head violently, her hair clinging to her sweat-drenched skin.
“Not the child!” she cried out, her voice breaking with grief as tears fell down her eyes.
“The Sultan!
My love!He is dead.”
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