Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 434
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- Chapter 434 - Chapter 434 Tribal Meeting
Chapter 434: Tribal Meeting Chapter 434: Tribal Meeting The next morning arrived like the blade of an executioner-cold, sharp, and unrelenting.
Dawn did not creep gently over the land; it struck, slicing through the comfort of sleep like a knife to the throat of the night.
The sky bled at the edges, streaks of crimson and gold spilling across the horizon as if the gods themselves had torn open the heavens.
Torghan awoke to the distant calls of the morning herders, their voices thin and brittle against the biting wind.
The air carried the scent of damp earth and burning wood, a reminder that the world outside was alive and restless.
The village stirred with a quiet unease, the kind that settles in the bones before a storm.
Today, words would wield more power than swords.
Today, fates would be sealed.
He stood in the dim light of the hut, already clad in the armor that had been gifted to him.
The polished steel gleamed faintly, catching the first rays of sunlight that pierced through the cracks in the walls.
It was heavier than the simple leathers he was used to, the weight pressing down on his shoulders like a promise-or a burden.
This was his proof.
His chance.
His breath came hard and slow, each inhale measured, each exhale steady.
The outcome of this meeting rested on him alone.
He had spent countless nights dreaming of power, of standing at the helm of something greater, and now the moment had come.
His people would listen.
They would judge.
They would decide.
The soft creak of wood snapped him from his thoughts.
At the entrance of the hut, his father stood waiting, arms crossed, his silhouette framed by the pale light of dawn.
The fire from the previous night had long since burned out, leaving only the faint scent of smoke lingering in the air between them. Torghan let out a final, deep breath, then stepped forward, each movement deliberate, each footfall heavy with purpose.
As he reached his father’s side, he didn’t speak.
Neither did Varaku Torghan walked through the village, his boots pressing firmly into the dirt paths that wound between the familiar huts of his people.
The morning air was crisp, carrying the scent of damp earth and woodsmoke, yet everything felt different.
As he moved, he noticed eyes peering from doorways, hushed whispers following him like a ghost. The village was awake, but not in the usual way.
Normally, the communal square ahead would be bustling with life-women weaving baskets, men preparing hides, children running underfoot as laughter and conversation mixed with the sounds of daily labor.
It was the heart of the tribe, where work and kinship came together.
But not today.
Today, the square was filled with warriors.
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They stood in clusters, the hardened men of the tribe.
Their faces were unreadable, but their presence alone was enough to make Torghan’s heart beat faster.
These were the men who fought, who bled, who had seen hardships no outsider could understand.
And now, they were here for one reason-because their leader had called them.
At the center of it all, Varaku stood waiting, his expression carved from stone.
He said nothing as Torghan approached, merely watching, waiting.
Torghan swallowed hard.
This was it.
This was the moment.
Varaku took a deliberate step forward, his presence rippling through the square like a wave.
The hum of voices stilled, swallowed by the weight of his arrival.
Every eye fixed on him, every breath held. “A month ago,” he began, “we marched on the wooden walls the outsiders had raised.
Our blades were sharp, our fury sharper.
We thirsted for their steel, for the blood that would stain it.
We were ready to take what we deemed was ours.” He paused, letting the memory of that day settle over the warriors like a storm cloud. “But that day,thanks the spirits” Varaku continued, his voice softening just enough to draw them closer, “the clash of steel never came.
Instead, hands that should have wielded weapons reached out in peace.
The outsiders came bearing gifts, speaking of lands beyond the sea-lands rich and fertile, where the soil yields crops as bountiful as a mother’s love, where herds roam thick as the stars in the night sky.
Lands where our people could flourish.” A ripple of murmurs spread through the crowd, but Varaku raised a hand, and silence fell like a blade.
“I am no fool,” he said, his voice sharpening.
“I did not take their words at face value.
I sent our own to see these lands, to test the truth of their promises.
Among them was my son, Torghan.” He paused, his gaze sweeping the crowd, letting the name hang in the air like a challenge.
“And five others-warriors whose loyalty to this tribe is beyond question, men whose word is as unbreakable as their swords.” At the mention of Torghan, the crowd stirred.
Eyes turned to the young warrior, some filled with respect, others with doubt.
Torghan met their gazes, his jaw tight, his fists clenched at his sides. Varaku’s voice cut through the tension like a whip.
“My son has walked their lands,” he declared, his tone leaving no room for challenge.
“He has stood before their leaders, seen their fields, and breathed the air of their world.
He will tell you what he has seen.
Torghan,” he said, turning to his son, “step forward.
Speak the truth.” Torghan moved into the center of the square, his every step measured, his shoulders squared under the weight of the tribe’s expectations.
He felt their eyes on him He took a deep breath, and when he spoke, his voice was steady, clear, and unshakable.
“I have seen the land,” Torghan began, his voice steady but carrying the weight of a man who had witnessed something extraordinary.
“And I tell you now, without hesitation or doubt, the outsiders’ promises are true.
I walked fields so vast they seemed to swallow the horizon.
I stood on soil so rich, it felt alive beneath my feet-like the earth itself was breathing, nurturing every seed planted in its embrace.
Crops grow there as if the land is a mother, cradling them in her arms.” He paused, letting the image take root in the minds of the warriors.
His eyes swept across the crowd, meeting their gazes one by one.
“There are no jagged hills to climb, no barren stretches of dust and stone-nothing like the lands we’ve struggled against for generations.
It is flat, soft, and yielding, as if the earth itself bends to the will of those who tend it.
Whatever you sow-barley, wheat, vegetables-it thrives.
There is no battle with the land, no fight to wrest life from its grasp.
And for our herds?
Grasslands stretch endlessly, green and lush, where our animals will grow fat and strong.
No more hunger.
No more scarcity.” Torghan’s voice grew sharper, more urgent, as he leaned into his next words.
“But the land is only half the truth.
The outsiders-our hosts-are not weaklings cowering behind their walls.
Their strength is real.
I saw their army-thousands of men, all clad in armor like this.” He struck his chest, the metal ringing out.
“Their swords are sharp, their discipline unshakable.
They are well-fed, well-trained, and always ready for war.
They are not offering us empty promises.
They are offering us protection.
They will defend their lands-our lands-from any who would try to take them.
We will not suffer as we have before.
We will not lose what we build.” The crowd stirred, murmurs rising like a low hum.
Torghan’s voice cut through it, rising with conviction.
“I saw more than I ever imagined.
Wealth.
Strength.
Opportunity.
This is not just a place to survive-it is a place to thrive.
A place where our children will grow tall, where our herds will multiply, where our people will flourish.
It is everything we’ve dreamed of, everything we’ve fought for.
And it is within our grasp.” He stepped forward, his voice now a commanding call to action.
“The land is waiting for us.
The outsiders are not fools.
They are men of their word.
They have more land than they can work, more wealth than they can manage alone.
They need settlers-people to farm, to build, to grow.
And they have chosen us.
They see our strength, our resilience, and they want us to share in what they have built.” Torghan’s voice dropped slightly, drawing them in.
“And they are not asking us to come empty-handed.
They have made an offer-one that proves their sincerity.
They will give us livestock.
Two hundred heads for our herds.
One hundred goats.
One hundred sheep.
Animals that will breed, that will grow, that will feed our families as we settle the land.
” The murmurs grew louder, but Torghan raised his hand, silencing them.
“These animals are proof.
Proof that they mean us no harm.
Proof that they want us to succeed.
They are offering us more than land-they are offering us a partnership.
A future where we are not just surviving, but thriving.
Where we are not just a tribe, but a people with a legacy.”
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