Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 474
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- Chapter 474 - Chapter 474 War Plan(1)
Chapter 474: War Plan(1) Chapter 474: War Plan(1) The chamber was utterly silent-not the quiet of contemplation, but the thick, smothering hush of a tomb.
A strange observation, given the figures seated around the long oak table, their faces carved into sharp relief by the flickering candlelight.
The air itself seemed to curdle with unspoken tension, the kind that pressed against eardrums and turned breath shallow.
Even the flames seemed hesitant to dance too boldly, as if afraid to disturb what was being laid bare.
Jasmine’s fingers drummed a slow, measured rhythm against the polished wood, the only movement in the stillness.
Her silver laurel glinted as she turned toward Alpheo, the question in her eyes as sharp as a blade’s edge.
“Are you sure?” Her voice was controlled, but beneath it thrummed something taut-something between hope and dread, the last fragile thread before the fall.
Alpheo didn’t flinch. “I am positive.” His voice was iron, unyielding. “My contacts in Herculia and Oizen report the same: granaries stuffed to bursting, armories overflowing, roads choked with supply trains.
They aren’t just preparing for war-they’re preparing to drown us in it.” A beat.
Then, with deliberate weight:Â “They will march.” The silence that followed was suffocating.
Shahab shifted, his arms crossed, his expression as inscrutable as a fortress wall.
When he spoke, his voice was low, methodical-the tone of a man dissecting a corpse for hidden wounds. “And we cannot ignore the rebels.” Alpheo exhaled through his nose, a sound like a whetstone dragging along steel. “No.
We cannot.” He spread his hands flat on the table. “Herculia from the west.
Oizen from the south.
The northern lords gnashing at our flanks.
A three-front war.” The words landed like stones in still water, rippling through the room.
They had all known, of course-had seen the signs, had felt the storm gathering in their bones.
But to hear it spoken aloud, to have the shape of their doom laid so plainly before them-that was different.
That made it real.
Jasmine’s fingers stilled.
She looked at Alpheo, her gaze unflinching. “Then what do we do?” No hesitation.
No waver.
His answer was a hammer striking anvil: “We fight them.The very thing I am more apt at ” A pause.
Then, softer but no less certain:Â “And we prepare with what we know.” A bitter laugh cut through the tension-dry, humorless.
“That’s it?
That’s the grand plan?” Shahab asked Alpheo turned his head just enough to pin the man with a look that could have flayed flesh from bone.
“Do you have a better one?” Silence.
The lord’s mouth snapped shut.
Jasmine exhaled slowly, her fingers interlacing as she leaned forward, the silver threads in her sleeves catching the candlelight.
“There may yet be another path,” she began, her voice measured but insistent.
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“Herculia came out bleeding from last war.
If we offered some concessions along the borderlands-they might be persuaded to rescind their attack.” Alpheo’s response came like a gate slamming shut.
“No.” The single word hung heavy in the air before he continued, his voice rough as grinding stone.
“Every concession we make becomes a foothold for their next demand.
Give them some sword today, and tomorrow they’ll want the forges.
By summer’s end, we’d be negotiating which of our lord to send as hostages.” A muscle twitched in Jasmine’s jaw as she held his gaze.
“Oizen has ammased its armies ,” she countered.
“The northern rebels grow bolder by the day.
If we can remove even one threat from the board-” “-we’d be cutting off a hand to treat a wound that needs cauterizing,” Alpheo interrupted, his palm coming down on the table with quiet finality.
“Herculia won’t make peace.
They’ll take whatever we offer, catch their breath, and stab us the moment Oizen’s vanguard appears on the horizon.” He leaned back, the shadows deepening the hollows of his face.
“We fight with what we have, not what we wish we had.” The silence that followed was broken by Shahab’s dry cough.
The strategist unfolded his arms, the lamplight glinting off the silver rings he wore “There remains the Imperial option,” he said, his voice carefully neutral.
“The Romelians have the resources to aid us.
A word from our ambassador and Romelian troops could be marching south within the fortnight.” Jasmine’s eyes brightened with sudden possibility.
“The trade agreements alone would give them reason to intervene,” she said quickly.
“Not to mention their vested interest in-” “Madness.” Alpheo’s voice cut through the chamber like a winter wind.
“Invite the Empire into our lands, and we’ll need another war to remove them.” His fingers traced the carved lion’s head at the table’s edge, a habitual gesture when weighing terrible choices.
“Do you know what the Romelians call ‘military aid’?
An investment.
One they collect with interest in territory and tribute.” Shahab raised an eyebrow.
“Better a temporary friend in one’s home than an unleaving enemy” Alpheo’s laugh was bitter as wormwood.
“There’s nothing temporary about imperial ‘assistance’.
First they’ll see our situation.
Then they’ll ‘suggest’ advisors for your treasury and demand the production of either soap or cider for the help, after all better to give up one of the two , than lose both, Right?
Before you know it, we will half of our income disappear and hundreds of Romelian serving as a garrison in our capital.” His gaze locked onto Jasmine’s.
“Today we ask for their help?
In twenty summers we will be called the souther province.” Jasmine’s fingers tightened around the armrests of her chair.
“Then what would you have us do?
Fight on three fronts with no allies?” Alpheo pushed back from the table, the legs of his chair scraping against stone.
“We fight smarter.” He moved to the war map pinned along the far wall, his shadow swallowing whole provinces as he traced supply routes with a calloused finger.
“Our position is not as dire as you all think it is, the enemy is not unified but is divided on a three different and unlinkable front” Turning back to the council, his expression hardened.
“I’ll request grain shipments from the Empire.
Weapons.
Even gold if they’re feeling generous.
But not one imperial boot steps across our border unless it’s over my corpse.” Shahab studied the map like a gambler eyeing his last roll of dice, while Jasmine’s gaze sank to her folded hands, as if they held the weight of every unsaid word between them.
She exhaled-slow, deliberate-her silver laurel glinting like a blade in the candlelight as she straightened.
Her eyes swept the chamber, sharp as a hawk’s, before locking onto Alpheo with a look that could’ve carved stone.
“We aren’t facing one enemy,” she said, her voice a tempered steel. “Not two.
Three.
Three forces, Alpheo.
That means precautions aren’t just wise-they’re survival.
And survival demands sacrifice.” Alpheo’s lips parted, but she rode over him like a tide. “You refuse the Empire’s aid.
You won’t even entertain talks with Herculia-” “Because both are poison wrapped in pretty promises” Alpheo’s voice slashed through the air. “Jasmine, open your eyes.
If the Empire marches south, their ‘help’ comes with chains.
And Herculia?
Their idea of peace is us kneeling with a dagger at our backs while robbing us of what we have gained from them !
You call it negotiation-I call it suicide.” Jasmine’s fingers tightened, but her voice remained ice. “And I call your defiance arrogance.
This isn’t last summer’s war, where you outmaneuvered two-to-one odds.
This time, it’s three blades for every one of ours.
We.
Are.
Surrounded.
Or do you truly believe your strategies alone can defy the impossible?” “I cannot just what?” Alpheo asked , his boots striking the floor like a gauntlet thrown.
“He who dares already has accomplished half the deed, a has achieved a thousand more than he who is plagued by hesitation.
You’re asking me to trade our future for fleeting safety.
Let the Empire in, and we’ll be their puppets by winter.
Bow to Herculia, and we might as well hand them the keys to our treasury while we’re at it!” Jasmine’s knuckles whitened. “And if we stand rigid?
If we charge ahead with nothing but swords and pride?
Tell me, Alpheo-what happens when the last arrow is spent?” He dragged a hand through his hair, frustration sparking like flint. “We have supplies.
We’re securing more.
We can hold-” “At what cost?” Her voice lashed out, low and searing. “You’ll gamble so much in a game of dice, because the thought of concession burns your pride more than defeat ever could.” At the accusation something in Alpheo shattered.
His jaw clenched like a vice, teeth grinding hard enough to spark.
“ENOUGH!” For a moment, the room was utterly still – not the quiet of peace, but the terrible stillness of a drawn bowstring trembling at its limit before release.
The silence that followed Alpheo’s outburst thickened like clotting blood, pressing down on every soul present until breathing itself felt like defiance.
The candles guttered as if even their light feared to disturb the equilibrium of the moment.
His oldest company knew that tone like they knew the taste of their own fear.
They’d heard it before, that dangerous undercurrent beneath his normally easy manner, like finding a razor’s edge beneath velvet.
Not one of them so much as shifted their weight.
They’d stood beside him long , they had seen how his face looked when the mask slipped .
There was nothing that burned in Alpheo hotter than being second-guessed, no quicker way to wake the sleeping wolf than to imply he might not have considered every angle.
And so they did what battle-hardened veterans do when they sense the ground is about to explode beneath them – they became statues.
Across the war table, Jasmine and Shahab sat frozen in their chairs, the comfortable familiarity of council chambers suddenly feeling like the slick marble of a executioner’s platform.
The weight of their miscalculation pressed down on them with physical force.
They’d almost forgotten.
Forgotten that behind the quick smiles and easier laughter stood the man who had crossed the blood-slick stones of Yarzat’s throne room without breaking stride, who had driven his blade through the last prince’s elaborate armor like it was parchment, then calmly wiped his sword clean on the royal banners before turning to address his daughter after taking her capital as if discussing the weather.
The same man who, still smelling of smoke and iron, had walked into their own capital and rearranged the world with nothing but his will and a dagger at the right throat.
The truth settled over them like winter’s first frost: Alpheo did not negotiate with reality – he reshaped it.
With a jest if possible, with steel when necessary.
With words first, with wounds last.
The world bent.
Prince broke.
And Alpheo…
Alpheo kept walking forward.
Jasmine’s fingers curled slightly on the armrest of her chair, the only outward sign of the storm raging behind her composed features.
Shahab drew a slow breath through his nose, the kind of breath a man takes before stepping off a cliff, but wisely kept his silence.
This was not the Alpheo who traded bawdy jokes.
This was the Alpheo who carved paths through impossible odds, who treated fate as a suggestion rather than a law, the strategist who looked at a losing battle and saw only pieces that hadn’t been moved to their proper places yet.
And in that crystalline moment of understanding, the final piece clicked into place with terrible clarity: Their agreement was irrelevant.
Their objections were academic.
The decision had been made the instant Alpheo recognized the shape of the game, and now they were merely witnesses to the unfolding of his will.
True power had always rested in those deceptively relaxed hands, and they were only now remembering how heavy that truth could be.
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