Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 426
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- Chapter 426 - Chapter 426 Ants in a hive(3)
Chapter 426: Ants in a hive(3) Chapter 426: Ants in a hive(3) In all his life, Torghan had never felt as small as he did now, walking past the silent ranks of armored warriors.
Nearly two thousand eyes followed his every step, pinning him in place like a creature under a predator’s gaze.
It was as if he were an ant wandering into the den of giants.
The men before him were not mere soldiers-they were killers, hardened and sharpened like the steel they wore.
Their nasal helmets built with chainmail attacked concealed their faces, but not their eyes.
Cold, calculating, and utterly without fear, they watched him with the quiet assurance of those who had spilled blood and would spill it again without hesitation.
Their chainmail draped down over their ears like woven ironwood, their bodies encased in metal as if it were their second skin.Torghan had known warriors all his life.
But these men were something else.
He could see it in the way their gazes lingered-not on his eyes, but lower.
To his throat.
He had seen that look before.
It was the look of men who had killed so often that their minds had learned to picture the act before it happened.
He could almost feel their thoughts tracing the motion-how easily their blades would carve flesh, the wet gurgle of a severed throat, the flicker of fear as a man realized his life had already slipped beyond saving.
His fingers twitched, craving the familiar weight of his weapon.
But what good would a blade do here?
Against an army of men who wore war like a second skin?
If they wanted him dead none could stop it.
His heart pounded in his chest, each beat echoing in his ears like a drum.
He forced himself to keep walking, his pace steady, his face calm.
He would not show fear.
He could not.
Not here.
Not in front of these men.
They walked beneath the weight of a thousand stares, each one as sharp as the steel glinting beneath the sun.
The world felt smaller under their gaze, the very air thick with something unspoken, something heavy.
What the outsiders had told his father-it had been the truth.
Every man standing before him bore the very thing his people would have fought, bled, and died for: steel.
Not scraps, not rusted fragments scavenged from the dead of a nation much stronger than them, but whole suits of mail, shields polished to a dull gleam, swords resting easily in their scabbards, waiting for the moment they would drink blood again.
He had never seen so much steel in his life.
It clung to these warriors like a second skin, draped over their shoulders, encasing their arms, sheathing their legs.
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It was not just armor-it was a statement, a silent declaration of power.
They were better than them His people carved their lives from the bones of the earth, shaping wood and leather with skilled hands, fighting with weapons made of bronze.
But here, steel was not a treasure.
It was not hoarded, not treated as something rare and precious.
Here, it was simply worn as a commen tunic of wool.
Ahead of the great city gates, between the rows of silent warriors, a group of men sat atop their horses.
Their presence alone spoke of status, of command.
But among them, there was no question as to who led.
Torghan did not need an introduction.
His eyes were drawn, inexorably, to the one standing at the forefront.
It was not just the way the others hung slightly back, as if even among their own ranks, he stood apart.
It was the way his armor gleamed-not simply well-made, but elegant, forged for more than mere survival.
It was a suit meant for those who dictated the course of battles, not merely fought in them.
Since the moment they had departed, Aron had spoken of the man who ruled this land as if he were something beyond mortal.
A force of nature.
A storm given human form, who had sent thousands to their graves with nothing but the edge of his blade and the weight of his will.
Torghan had built an image in his mind-a towering figure of unshakable pride and muscle, the kind of warrior who had spent a lifetime carving his legend into the world.
But what sat before him was not that man.
The leader of this mighty nation was no hardened warlord past his prime, no grizzled veteran with the scars of a hundred campaigns.
He was a boy.
A boy no older than himself.
Torghan’s fingers curled unconsciously around the reins of his horse, gripping the leather as his mind reeled.
This was the one who had shaped an empire with steel and blood?
This was the force that had crushed enemies and bent men to his will?
He had expected strength carved into thick muscle, arrogance worn on an unshaken brow.
Instead, he found something else-something quieter, something colder.
And somehow, that was far more unsettling.
It was one thing to see a ugly and bad wolf on top of a herd, and another to see a sheep.
As they approached the mounted figures, Aron moved first.
Without hesitation, he slid from his horse and dropped to one knee, pressing his fist over his heart in a deep, practiced bow .
The tribesmen followed, though with a touch more hesitation, their movements stiff and uncertain.
Yet they knew enough to mimic their guide, lowering themselves in respect before the ruler of this foreign land.
Then, from the prince, a voice rang out-not the deep, seasoned growl of an old warlord, but a youthful, clear tone.
“You may rise,” he said, his voice carrying the ease of one accustomed to command.
“You have done well, Aron.
The service you have provided me has not gone unnoticed.” Aron lifted his head, his expression composed, though a flicker of something lighter-pride, perhaps-played at the edges of his features.
“It was both my duty and my pleasure, my prince,” he replied, his voice steady.
With that, he rose to his feet, and as he did, so too did those behind him, the soft rustling of fabric and leather filling the air as the tribesmen followed suit.
The prince did not simply remain atop his steed, distant and untouchable.
Instead, he moved.
Swinging himself down from his horse with effortless grace, his polished boots met the ground with a soft thud.
Behind him, his men followed his lead, dismounting with quiet precision.
As he stepped forward, he reached out-not as a ruler to a subject, but as something more personal.
His hand came to rest on Aron’s shoulder, fingers firm yet not overbearing.
“Good things are ahead for you,” he said, the words carrying a weight beyond mere pleasantries.
For the first time, Aron’s composure cracked, if only slightly.
His lips parted into a smile-not the polite, measured one of a servant in the presence of his lord, but something genuine, something full of quiet triumph.
The prince’s gaze shifted, his sharp eyes sweeping over the kneeling tribesmen.
He studied them for a moment, his expression unreadable, before turning back to Aron with a slight raise of his brow.
“Are they going to introduce themselves?” he asked, his tone carrying neither impatience nor amusement, merely curiosity.
Aron dipped his head.
“Of course, my prince.” He turned to the translator, speaking swiftly in Azanian, his words carrying the practiced weight of formality.
The translator listened intently before turning to the kneeling tribesmen, repeating Aron’s words in their own tongue.
“The man before you is the Prince Consort, Lord of Confluendi, and Marshal of the Princedom of Yarzat,” Aron declared.
“You may rise.” The translator echoed him, and slowly, the tribesmen obeyed, pushing themselves to their feet.
Some moved with cautious reverence, others with veiled curiosity, their eyes lingering on the young prince who had already defied their expectations.
Aron then turned fully toward Alpheo, his voice steady as he continued.
“And this,” he said, gesturing toward one among the tribesmen, “is Torghan, son of Varaku the chieftain of the tribe I was a guest of until two weeks ago.” The prince’s gaze settled on Torghan then, weighing him with the same quiet scrutiny he had given his warriors.
And for the first time since setting foot in this land, Torghan felt that he was truly being seen.
Torghan swallowed, suddenly aware of how small he felt beneath the weight of not only Alpheo’s gaze but that of the thousands of warriors standing in rigid formation around them.
The sheer intensity of their presence made his skin prickle, their silent judgment pressing down on him like a great, unseen hand.
He squared his shoulders, but his fingers twitched at his sides, his body fighting the urge to shift under such scrutiny.
Then, unexpectedly, Alpheo smiled.
A warm, easy expression-nothing like the cold steel Torghan had braced himself for.
The prince closed the last bit of distance between them and placed a firm hand on Torghan’s shoulder, gripping it with a familiarity that felt strangely disarming.
“Are you hungry?” Alpheo asked.
The words were so simple, so casual, and even though Torghan did not know what they meant he knew it was something simple.
He blinked, glancing at Aron, who only gave him a knowing smirk,as he translated.
Alpheo’s grip remained steady, his smile unwavering, as if he had just asked a friend to join him for a meal rather than a guest from an unknown land standing before an army that could erase his people from existence.
”Thai thi thrusot ” (Yes Tribe Lord)
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