Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 488
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- Chapter 488 - Chapter 488 Rock of Aracina(1)
Chapter 488: Rock of Aracina(1) Chapter 488: Rock of Aracina(1) The wind howled through the battlements like a dirge, carrying with it the scent of damp stone and cold iron.
Asag stood motionless atop Aracina’s walls, his cloak whipping behind him like a tattered standard.
Below, the city roused itself-not with the orderly precision of a garrison preparing for war, but with the desperate, scrambling energy of a beast backed into a corner.
Armor straps creaked as men tightened them with shaking hands.
Bowstrings thrummed in testing pulls, the sound sharp as snapped bones.
Soldiers sprinted along the ramparts, their boots hitting the stone of the wall as they reached their position Yet Asag’s gaze never wavered from the horizon.
The Oizenian host had come.
They spread across the fields like a living flood, their banners-blue as drowned flesh, crimson as fresh wounds-snapping in the wind.
The weak dawn sun glinted off their spears, turning the distant ranks into a shifting, glittering nightmare.
They moved with the terrible, rhythmic certainty of a storm front, their war drums pounding like the heartbeat of some vast and hungry beast.
The ground trembled beneath their march.
Asag’s hands gripped the parapet, his knuckles bleaching to the color of old bone.
The cold gnawed at his skin, but he ignored it.
His mind was a whetstone, sharpening itself against the nightmare that would come.
The Oizenians numbered between 2,500 and 3,000.
Not a horde to shake the earth, but more than enough to drown Aracina in blood.
His own forces?
1,050 men.
A pitiful figure, and even that was a lie.
Three hundred of them were barely soldiers-peasants and laborers handed spears, their armor little more than their tunic and desperation.
Some carried nothing but sacks of stones to hurl when the arrows ran dry.
They were meat for the grinder, bodies to clog the gears of the enemy’s advance for a few precious seconds longer.
Asag exhaled, watching his breath curl into the air like a dying man’s last prayer.
He knew why he had been sent here.
He was not Jarza, Alpheo’s iron fist, the general who always found a way to do Alpheo’s bidding.
Nor was he Egil, the hound of the crown, the man who was released only when bloodshed was required.
No.
Asag was neither.
He was expendable.
His purpose was not to win.
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It was to hold.
To bleed.
To die slowly enough that his corpse bought time.
Alpheo needed days-just days-to crush the rebellion in the north.
Then, and only then, would he turn his gaze southward.
And if Aracina’s fall was the price?
So be it , but he knew that the Oizenians would only rule over its ashes.
If history remembered him as a fool, a failure, a man who broke beneath the tide, it did not matter.
So long as his bones bought one more hour.
The walls of Aracina were old, their stones worn smooth .
But they would hold today.
And so would he.
The wind carried the stench of fear and iron as Asag leaned against the weathered parapet, his lips curling into a predator’s smile.
The memory played behind his eyes with perfect clarity – the Oizenian envoy’s smug satisfaction when he’d delivered his terms, the way the man’s eyes had gleamed at what he thought was an easy victory.
“If my prince does not relieve me within a week, I shall surrender the city to you.” The lie had slipped from his tongue like honeyed poison.
He could still see the envoy riding back to his prince, could still feel the delicious tension of those seven long days as the enemy host made camp beyond arrow range, their fires twinkling like mocking stars each night. Then, when the appointed hour came and the prince rode forth in his gilded plate to claim his prize, Asag had given his answer – not with steel, but with shit.
The contents of every chamber pot in Aracina, collected in reeking buckets, rained down upon the prince’s shining procession.
The man’s screams had carried all the way to the battlements, his polished armor dripping with the city’s defiance.
A dry chuckle escaped Asag’s lips.
Alpheo would have appreciated the crude poetry of it.
The prince had the luxury of grand gestures – sweeping charges, cunning stratagems, but he always had a knucle for vulgar commedy.
But Asag?
He was just a stubborn bastard with nothing to lose.
Who wouldn’t mind having history remember him as the lord who fought with shit and spite if it must.
His amusement faded as he turned to survey his men.
Along the battlements, they stood like a gallery of doomed saints.
The ground began to tremble.
Not the subtle vibration of before, but a deep, rhythmic pounding that set the loose stones dancing along the walkway. Asag breathed deep, tasting iron and damp stone.
This was where stories ended.
Not with glorious last stands sung by bards, but in the mud and blood and shit of a city.
His fingers found the notch in the parapet where an Oizenian arrow had struck yesterday – one more scar among many.
The air grew thick with tension as the enemy host marched into range.
The archers along Aracina’s walls needed no command-death was coming for them all, and only fools waited for permission to fight back.
A hundred hands moved as one: calloused fingers finding familiar grooves in well-worn bows, arrows drawn from quivers , the rasp of fletching against wood as shafts were nocked.
For a heartbeat, the world held its breath.
Then the sky turned black.
A storm of arrows screamed through the morning air, their deadly song a chorus of whistling death.
The sound was almost beautiful-until it found flesh.
The Oizenian front ranks raised their shields in unison, the movement so practiced it might have been choreographed.
Wood met arrowhead with a cacophony of splintering impacts.
Some shafts shattered harmlessly against the thick oak planks.
Others buried themselves deep, the fletching trembling like frightened birds.
But death always finds its way.
A soldier screamed as an arrow slipped between shield and helm, the broadhead punching through his cheekbone with a wet crunch.
He staggered, hands fluttering uselessly toward the shaft protruding from his face .
Another took an arrow through the knee, the barbed tip severing tendons with surgical precision.
His leg buckled instantly, sending him sprawling as the ranks behind trampled over his writhing form.
“Shields up!
Keep formation!” bellowed an officer, his voice raw with panic.
Too late.
A second volley darkened the sky.
This time, the arrows fell like judgment.
A young soldier-barely more than a boy-gasped as a shaft punched through his mail shirt as if the rings were mere parchment.
He looked down in dumb shock at the feathered end protruding from his stomach, his fingers brushing it lightly before painfully keeping on marching.
Nearby, a veteran cursed as an arrow pinned his shield arm.
The pain came slow at first-a dull pressure, then white-hot agony as the barbed head caught muscle with every movement.
“Gods damn it!” he roared, trying in vain to wrench himself free without dropping his only protection.
The screams rose in a ghastly chorus: “Gods Help me!” “Mother…oh mother…” “Pull it out!
Just pull it-AAAAAH!” Somewhere in the press, a man sobbed openly as he clutched at an arrow buried in his thigh, the shaft bobbing obscenely with each panicked breath.
His companion tried to drag him forward, only to take an arrow through the throat mid-step.
He collapsed without a sound, his blood arcing crimson over the churned earth.
Still the advance continued.
The dead became stepping stones.
The wounded were left behind without a backward glance.
The Oizenian host marched on, their boots churning the mud to bloody slurry as they closed the distance to Aracina’s walls.
And high above, Asag watched the carnage unfold, his face as unreadable as the stones beneath his hands.
The archers were already reaching for fresh arrows, their movements mechanical, their eyes hollow.
This was but the first verse of a much longer song-one that would end in blood.
The Oizenian tide, however, still rolled forward, unstoppable as the turning of the seasons.
Shield walls locked tight, their overlapping rims forming an armored shell against the deadly rain from above.
The once-distant walls now loomed overhead like the clenched teeth of some ancient beast, their shadow swallowing the advancing ranks whole.
War horns split the air – not the clean, bright calls of morning drills, but the guttural bellowing of beasts scenting blood.
The sound crawled up men’s spines like cold fingers, driving them forward even as their guts turned to water.
Then the ladders came.
With a chorus of grunts and curses, teams of armored men heaved the ladders upward.
The wooden frames groaned like living things, protesting the weight of desperate climbers. The garrison tried everything to fend the ladder away, but for every ladder that fell, two more took its place.
“UP!
DRIVE IT UP!” roared a soldier, his face a mask of sweat and dirt.
His comrades obeyed, muscles corded like ship’s rigging as they forced another ladder against the stones.
The instant it struck, armored figures began swarming upward like ants on a honeyed branch.
The defenders answered in kind as they could as after all the branch was their home.
All along the wall, the dance of death played out in countless variations.
Spears thrust downward found soft throats.
Arrows fired at point-blank range punched through eye slits.
Men grappled at the precipice, locked in final embraces where the only consummation was mutual destruction.
And through it all, the drums kept pounding.
The horns kept screaming.
The walls kept demanding more blood, more bodies, and more broken dreams to mortar their unfeeling stones, aking to a bloody god whose hunger could never be satisfied.
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