Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 341
- Home
- All Mangas
- Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king
- Chapter 341 - Chapter 341 Rise of an horde
Chapter 341: Rise of an horde Chapter 341: Rise of an horde The horizon rippled like waves on a stormy sea, but it wasn’t water that stretched endlessly before the city of Al-Kahis-it was horses.
A vast, unbroken horde of riders astride their mounts, forty hundred strong, the manes of their horses dancing like dark wings in the arid wind.
The sheer mass of them consumed the plains, the grass trampled to dirt, the air thick with the dust churned up by uncountable hooves.
It was a sight the city had never witnessed, and the people on its walls stared in stunned silence, their hearts seized by awe and dread.
In their long history the saw their villages rided my some horse lords, yet they never saw such numbers, worse they were not here to simply pillage.
The one leading them after all had named himself Khan of all Khan.
The riders were of course no less merciless than the previous one however.
Villages dotting the countryside were left smoking husks, their homes razed, people enslaved, and women raped.
Those whose lord refused to bow to the horsemen found their subjects’ fields salted and their wells filled with bodies.
From atop the wall of Al-Kahis, the city’s defenders could see their uncountable numbers.
The riders themselves sat tall and proud in their saddles, their faces obscured by scarves, their eyes like black coals.
Weapons gleamed at their sides-curved sabers, spears and bows with quivers filled with arrows The horde stopped just out of arrow range, their sheer number pressing against the senses of those watching.
It wasn’t just an army.
It was a force of nature, a storm that consumed everything in its path, not deigning to spat even the grass out, used to let their steeds feed themselves.
Three weeks ago, the Sultan of Azania, adorned in the splendor of his station and astride his finest steed, had ridden out to meet the horde in battle.The son of their god, finally riding to put an end to the countless horses that ravaged their land.
Yet faith crumbled in the face of reality.
The Sultan’s armies, proud and mighty, were swallowed whole by the sheer ferocity of the horde.
When the dust settled, the Sultan was nowhere to be seen.
Yet soon the news of his fate was carried by the winds itself, with the Great Khan being its messanger, his towering lance bearing the severed head of the Sultan.
The great trophy swayed with every step of the Khan’s steed, unmistakable to all who laid eyes upon it.
The beard, carefully combed even in death, the high-arched nose-features so familiar to those who had once bowed in reverence to their Sultan.
The sight of it broke the will of city after city, and lord after lord.
Nobles who had shared wine with the Sultan, who had knelt in his court, could not deny the truth before them.
Their god’s chosen had perished.
To every city in his path, the Khan sent his demands.
Two things were required for the gates to remain standing: women, to sate the riders who hungered after their conquests, and gold, to swell the Khan’s coffers and proclaim his dominion.
Those who hesitated were made examples, their walls crumbled, their people quartered by horses and whoever was alive was made their slaves And so, the shadow of the horde stretched ever closer, devouring the plains, the villages, and the pride of those who had once stood defiant.
Luckily for the citizens of Al-Kahis, their lord was a man of pragmatism and survival, unburdened by the arrogance that had led others to ruin.
When his eyes laid on the Sultan’s head, impaled upon the Khan’s lance, he did not hesitate to act.
Gathering his most trusted retinue, he rode out to meet the horde, not in battle but in surrender.
Follow new episodes on the "N0vel1st.c0m".
At the edge of the plains, before the thunderous assembly of forty thousand riders, he dismounted.
With trembling hands and a bowed head, he presented his offering: five thousand young women, their veils concealing tear-streaked faces, and five chests brimming with gold and silver, their contents a glittering testament to submission.
The Great Khan, atop his black warhorse, watched impassively as the lord knelt before him.
A silence hung over the plains, broken only by the restless snorting of horses and the whisper of the wind.
Then came the pronouncement: the lord of Al-Kahis was now a tributary of the Great Khan, spared the wrath of the horde in exchange for his offerings.
As the decree was given, the riders erupted into a deafening roar, their war cry, “Ashalah-Ashalah!” surging like a tidal wave over the plains.
The sound echoed across the land, drowning out all other noise and sending a shiver of dread through the city’s inhabitants.
Dozens of similar encounters played out across the plains and deserts of Azania.
Wherever the horde’s shadow fell, the story repeated itself except for a few exceptions that were made as example.
City after city bent the knee, offering up their daughters and their treasures in desperate bids for mercy.
By the end of the campaign, the Khan’s riders could boast of enough spoils that each man could easily claim two brides, their tents swelling with the wealth of a hundred conquered towns.
But for all the gold, silver, and women that flowed into their camps, these prizes were not what truly drove the Great Khan Oghulai.
His ambitions stretched far beyond the fleeting spoils of war.
What Oghulai sought was not mere plunder but dominion.
He was not just the leader of a warband, sating the transient hunger of his warriors; he was a visionary conqueror with a singular purpose.
Where his countless predecessors had stolen riches, Oghulai stole land.
With each city that surrendered, with each lord that groveled before his lance, Oghulai wove allegiances.
The lords of Azania, men once sworn to the Sultan, now swore their fealty to the Khan. And as the campaign reached its zenith, Azania-long a formidable thorned apple standing against the advance of the horse-horde-now lay stripped of its defenses, ripe for the taking.
Oghulai did not merely seek to break the land; he sought to reshape it under him.
The southern states, once thriving as bastions of defiance and commerce, became the first morsels of the Khan’s feast.
Like the edges of a great piece of meat, they were bitten away, their people subjugated, their cities swallowed into the newly growing empire.
For Oghulai, this was not just conquest, it was the calls for all of his brothers across the Stepps that now had a home that they could claim as theirs, as long as they went and serve its ruler, Oghulai.
The land, the lords, and the people were no longer Azania’s .
They were now the Khan’s, a new order that effectively plunged the whole western continent into the shades of total war.
The Khan responsible for all of this , Oghulai , was a man whose very presence demanded reverence and fear.
In his late fifties, his body bore the marks of decades spent in the crucible of the lawless abyss that was Bairthai.
The brutal region, a realm where survival was both an art and a testament to one’s will, had sculpted him into something more than a man-a living embodiment of the horde’s indomitable spirit.
He never knew peace, inaction for him was poison, violence was his only knowledge, language, love , hate and care, with blooshed is means to show them.
His face was a map of harsh lines and weathered skin, etched by the scalding winds of the steppes and the fierce sun above.
A grizzled beard, streaked with silver, framed his jaw like the mane of a predator.
For years, Oghulai had survived in Bairthai’s chaos.
By the end of it, he rose as the Khan of Khans, uniting many warring clans, ruthless brigands, and desperate nomads into a singular force, many of course not all, for every clan that bowed to him, two more moved across the stepps after being defeated.
His rise was not through birthright or fortune but by the strength of his arm, the sharpness of his mind, and the unyielding force of his will.
Now, under his banner, the greatest horde the world had ever seen thundered across the land-a staggering forty thousand raiders bound not just by fear but by a fierce loyalty to their Khan.
He himself was at all time sorrounded by warriors, his sons by blood or bond, followed him with a devotion that shook the earth beneath their hooves.
Their battle cries echoed like storms through mountains, their thirst drained rivers dry, and their hunger left entire plains barren.
But Oghulai’s ambitions were not constrained by the steppes.
He was no mere horse lord seeking fleeting victories or transient plunder.
What Oghulai sought dominion over something no horse lord had ever claimed: the land itself.
He was not content to merely conquer-he sought to rule.
For Oghulai, the lands of the sands were not just prey; they were trophies to be seized and kingdoms to be forged.
The legacy he envisioned stretched far beyond the fleeting cries of battle; it was a legacy of power, permanence, and unyielding authority.
He was the shaper of empires desire to create a distany that would exist after him and not to simply be one of the many names swallowed by the land of the horses.
Come back and read more tomorrow, everyone! Visit Novel1st(.)c.𝒐m for updates.