Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 318
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- Chapter 318 - Chapter 318 Peasant assault
Chapter 318: Peasant assault Chapter 318: Peasant assault Inor’s men surged toward the towering walls of the castle, hauling ladders through the chaos, their faces grim with determination.
The assault roared like a storm, the clang of steel, the thrum of arrows, and the guttural cries of the wounded weaving together in a brutal symphony.
A group of attackers heaved a ladder against the stone battlements, its wooden frame shaking as dozens began their ascent.
The defenders above wasted no time, hurling rocks down onto the climbing men.
A stone smashed into one man’s helmet, sending him sprawling back to the ground, lifeless.
Others clung to the ladder despite the onslaught, their hands slipping on bloodied rungs.
At the top of the ladder, the first attackers reached the battlements, only to be met by defenders wielding swords and spears.
One soldier thrust his spear into the chest of a climber, the man’s body sagging before he was pushed back, dragging others below him into a chaotic fall.
Another attacker swung his axe wildly as he stepped onto the wall, splitting a defender’s shield in half before being cut down by a sword stroke to the neck.
Arrows rained from above and from below stone came .
Defenders took up positions at the crenellations, loosing shafts into the mass of attackers swarming the walls, while taking cover from the stones of the slingers on the ground .
“Hold the line!
Push them back!” bellowed the commander of the garrison, his voice cutting through the cacophony like a whip.
He strode along the battlements, barking orders as the melee unfolded.
“Archers, focus fire on the ladders!Drive them down-don’t let them get a foothold!” His presence galvanized the defenders.
A group of spearmen surged toward the latest ladder where attackers had managed to gain a foothold.
With precise thrusts and swarming attacks, they drove the climbers back, toppling the ladder with a mighty push.
Men on it screamed as they plunged to the ground below, landing amidst the chaos of the siege.
Elsewhere, an attacker armed with a short sword engaged a defender in close quarters.
The two men traded blows, the clash of their blades echoing across the wall.
The attacker feinted left and then lunged, his blade finding the gap beneath the defender’s armpit.
The defender grunted in pain, blood spurting as he fell to his knees, but before the attacker could finish him, another soldier came up behind him, driving a dagger into his back.
——————– Seeing the attack going nowhere, the men below decided to call it a day,not that an order was given more like they did not feel like wasting their lives in the assault.
The men on the ladders scrambled down in haste, their footing slipping in their panic.
Others abandoned the climb entirely, leaping down and landing hard before fleeing back toward the sprawling camp in disarray.
The defenders, bloodied and battered but resolute, stood victorious once again atop the battlements.
A raucous cheer erupted among them.
Helmets were tossed into the air, and exhausted soldiers clasped each other’s shoulders in celebration.
The sight of the rebel forces retreating was enough to rekindle spirits that had been dulled by days of relentless siege.
Some men sank to their knees, offering whispered prayers of thanks to the gods.
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Others leaned wearily on their weapons, their faces pale with exhaustion but lit with the faintest glimmer of triumph.
The garrison commander, stood apart from the celebration.
His eyes swept over the bloodstained battlements, taking in the sight of the fallen.
The stench of death clung to the air, and the lifeless forms of comrades lay scattered where they had fallen, their sacrifices making the victory possible.
Of the original 300 defenders who had held the small castle, only 170 remained.
Over a week of near-constant assault had worn them down, and the toll was evident in every haggard face and slumped shoulder.
The commander tightened his grip on the pommel of his sword as he surveyed the ramparts, silently counting the men still standing and committing their faces to memory.
Below, the rebel army retreated in disorganized clusters, licking their wounds and reforming within the safety of their sprawling camp.
A Thousand of them remained or so it seemed -a vast and seemingly endless tide.
Even from the battlements, the gleam of chainmail could be seen among the mass of soldiers.
How they could have acquired those was still a question that he asked himself.
The commander leaned heavily against the battlements, staring out at the rebel encampment with a furrowed brow and clenched fists.
The faint echoes of laughter and celebration from his men grated against his nerves; the victory felt hollow, knowing how precarious their position truly was Where in the gods’ name is our help?he thought bitterly, his lips pressing into a thin line.
His mind churned with doubt and anger as he glanced at the horizon, searching for even the faintest glimmer of hope-an approaching dust cloud, the glint of armor, the sound of horns heralding reinforcements.
But the horizon remained achingly empty, the distant hills and fields offering no reprieve.
 The prince had to send help soon-or all would be lost.
he had already written a week ago and he had received a response saying that help was on its way.
What the commander didn’t know was that the prince’s forces were nowhere near the castle.
The kingdom’s only fielded army, led by the prince’s eldest son, Arnold, was embroiled in a grueling campaign to crush the western rebels.
Arnold’s troops had achieved many victories, but their march toward the castle was still far off, delayed by the stubborn resistance of the western insurgents who were however soon to be dealt with .
The rebels encircling the castle, meanwhile, grew bolder with each passing day, their numbers seemingly undiminished despite the heavy casualties they had suffered.
The commander cursed again, his teeth gritting as he stared down at the enemy camp.
They’ll come again, he thought grimly, his mind racing.
And when they do, I don’t know if we’ll have enough strength left to repel them.
———– Lucius and Marcus stood on a low rise overlooking the besieged castle, the late afternoon sun casting long shadows over the battlefield.
The air was thick with the mingled scents of smoke, sweat, and blood, drifting faintly toward their vantage point.
Below them, the rebels milled about their encampment, the latest failed assault leaving behind a frustrated hum in the air.
Lucius crossed his arms a lock of his curly blonde hair falling on his face , his sharp eyes scanning the battered walls of the castle.
“If we had proper engineers,” he remarked with a trace of disdain, “this siege would’ve been over days ago.
A ram, and those gates would be nothing but splinters.” Marcus, a man of broader build and rougher humor, snorted, leaning on his spear.
“Engineers?” he said with a grin.
“We’re lucky we’ve got carpenters who can cobble together a ladder without it snapping in two.” Lucius’s lips quirked into a wry smile as if the carnage was above them.
“Fair point.
Though I imagine those ladders don’t feel so lucky to the poor bastards climbing them.” Marcus chuckled, nodding toward the castle.
“True enough.
But look at them up there-half-starved and outnumbered.
Every time we pull back, they cheer like they’ve won the war.
It’s all a show, though.
They’ve lost quite a number of men already, and their numbers can’t grow.
Ours can.” “Yes, ” Lucius replied dryly, “we have the advantage of numbers.
But sheer numbers can be a curse as much as a blessing.” Marcus raised an eyebrow.
“A curse?
You’d rather be holed up in that deathtrap with some hundred of men and food running out?” Lucius shook his head, his expression darkening.
“You misunderstand.
Numbers don’t mean much if they’re the wrong kind of people.
Our ‘army’-” he gestured toward the sprawling camp behind them”-is nothing but a horde of desperate peasants.
They’re here because they want food , not because they believe in something .
Their mood shifts like the wind.” Marcus frowned, his grin fading.
“You think there’s a risk of… what?
A riot?” Lucius nodded, his tone grim.
“I’ve seen it before.
Give them a few more failed assaults, a few more friends and family members falling to the defenders’ arrows, and see what happens.
Morale is as fragile as glass in a group like this.
One crack, and it shatters completely.” Marcus glanced uneasily at the encampment, where a few small scuffles had broken out between groups of rebels arguing over spoils from the latest assault.
“You think it’s that bad already?” Lucius sighed.
“Not yet.
But it’s brewing.
There’ve been desertions-small numbers, yes, but it’s a warning.
If we keep throwing men at those walls without success, the whispers will start: ‘Why are we dying for nothing?
Who’s leading us, anyway?Why do we care about that small castle ‘ Those whispers can turn into shouts very quickly.” Marcus scratched his beard, his eyes narrowing in thought.
“So what’s the solution?
We can’t just sit here and wait.” Lost in thought, Lucius scanned the camp, his sharp eyes flitting from one cluster of activity to another.
His mind churned over the grim reality of their situation-if they continued like this, they were headed for nothing but failure and he would hate to report only that .
Suddenly, however his gaze seemed to bless him as it finally came to rest on the supply carts, where a handful of rebels were securing barrels and sacks.
That could work…
A glint of realization flashed in his eyes, and a sly smile curled across his lips-the same smile he’d worn when he hurled a rock at the turncoat lord during the charge to seize the gates.
He murmured, almost to himself, “Maybe it’s time we lend our friends in the castle a helping hand… once again.” From behind him, Marcus’s voice rang out “I know that look,” he said, his own lips curving into the same grin.
“You’ve got an idea, don’t you?”
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