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Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 519

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  3. Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king
  4. Chapter 519 - Chapter 519: Victory(3)
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Chapter 519: Victory(3)
Alpheo stepped through the entrance of the large medical tent, the heavy canvas flaps parting before him as he strode inside. The air within was nose-wrenching —stale with the scent of sweat, blood, and damp cloth, mingled with the sharp bite of medicinal herbs. The flickering glow of lanterns cast long shadows against the tent walls, making the place feel smaller, more suffocating.

The moment he entered, a hush fell over the tent. All eyes—dozens of them, sunken with exhaustion, fever, or barely concealed rage—snapped toward his direction. He could feel the weight of their stares, the barely restrained venom in some, the dull, defeated recognition in others. But then, like iron shavings drawn to a lodestone, their gazes slid from him and settled upon Egil, who entered at his side.

Alpheo saw it instantly—the shift in the air, the tensing of jaws, the tightening of fingers over thin sheets or trembling bandaged limbs. It was not him they despised most at this moment, the prince that destroyed any dream they had of a glorious campaign.

It was Egil.

A bitter kind of amusement curled at the edges of Alpheo’s lips.

He allowed himself a slow glance around the tent, taking in the miserable display before him. The nobles who had once commanded with arrogance and certainty now lay in cots, stripped of their fine armor, reduced to weary, broken men swaddled in linen and humiliation.

Their wounds told the story of their downfall. Bandaged arms, slings supporting limp shoulders, blood-crusted wrappings binding shattered legs. He noted that nearly all the injuries were to the limbs—an obvious sign. Anyone who had taken a javelin to the chest or the gut had been left behind in the dirt by Egil,as he realised they would not survive.

Of course I will have to send someone to retrieve the bodies….

Egil shifted beside him, his arms crossed, his expression unreadable. But even without looking at him, Alpheo could feel the tension radiating from his frame.

Someone in the tent let out a breath—shaky, bitter.

Finally the moment Alpheo was waiting for happened.

“Damn you, you wretched cur!” one of the nobles spat, half-rising from his cot before his wound forced him back down with a sharp wince. “You butcher! You filthy noble-slayer!”

“Brute!” another voice snarled, his teeth bared like a cornered animal.

“Savage!”

“Royal murderer!”

Their words lashed like whips, fueled by indignation, by pain, by sheer helplessness. Each one carried the weight of centuries of entitlement—the belief that their blood, their titles, their very existence should have shielded them from such disgrace. Yet here they were, reduced to wounded prisoners in the hands of the very men they had sought to crush.

And Egil?

He smirked.

That damned, insufferable smirk that seemed to exist solely to infuriate men like these.

His arms were crossed, his stance casual, as if their anger was nothing more than a mild amusement. His gaze swept over them, brimming with mockery, his scarred face only making the expression more infuriating.

Alpheo could practically hear the grinding of teeth. He could see their fingers twitch, their jaws tighten, the sheer rage rolling off them in waves. If they were not bound by injuries, if they had even a sliver of strength left, they would have lunged at Egil then and there.

Sensing the situation teetering on the edge of something unpleasant, Alpheo lifted a hand, his voice cutting through the noise with smooth authority.

“Enough.”

His tone was light, almost pleasant—almost. But it was more than enough to silence the tent, given that the air of fame around the young man , certainly no better than Egil, was certainly not pleasing.

He offered them an easy smile, one that did not quite reach his eyes. “I understand your frustrations. Truly, I do, my lords. But let us not forget the situation you find yourselves in.”

His gaze swept over them, taking in their sorry states. “You are prisoners. And while I assure you that you will be treated with the honor your station demands, let us not pretend that your positions afford you anything beyond that.”

Silence.

Alpheo let his words settle, let the reality of their predicament take root. “You will be allowed to write to your families, to arrange for a ransom. That is, of course,your rights and it is in our interest for you to do so..”

The words stung—he could see it in the way their faces twisted. No man, no matter how highborn, wished to be reminded that he was to pay as much gold as his name could summon.

Then, after a beat of silence, a voice, quieter than the rest, broke through.

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“And… the prince?How is his grace’s health?”

The question was tentative, hesitant—as if the man already feared the answer.

Alpheo turned toward him, his smile softening—just a little.

He shook his head.

“Unfortunately,” he said, voice laced with mock sorrow, “there was nothing we could do to save his life. His soul has already been claimed by the gods.”

A deathly stillness fell over the tent.

Some closed their eyes, grief washing over them like a tide. Others simply sat there, staring blankly, their faces drained of color. A few muttered quiet curses under their breath, their hands clenched into weak, trembling fists.

And of course the information of their prince’s demise stoked once again another line of insults.

“You killed the prince, you horse-fucker!” one noble bellowed, his face red with fury, his veins standing out against his pale skin.

“Bloodthirsty butcher!” spat another, his hands trembling as he tried to prop himself up on his cot.

“You filth! You—”you were supposed to capture him honorably, not send him to the gods!”

More voices rose, overlapping in a cacophony of rage. “Brute!” “Savage!” “No better than a highwayman!”

And yet, through it all, Egil stood relaxed, arms crossed, his expression one of pure, unbothered amusement. He let them shout, let them scream, before finally—when he had clearly had enough—he sighed, rolling his shoulders as though stretching after a long day’s work.

“Oh, come now,” he drawled, “this is all very dramatic, isn’t it?We are enemy are we not?”

A noble nearly lunged at him, stopped only by the sharp flare of pain that left him groaning back onto his cot.

Egil smirked. “Let’s be clear about something, shall we?” His gaze swept over them, gleaming with a sharp, mocking edge. “We gave you a chance to yield. You didn’t take it. So we took it upon ourselves to ensure that the appropriate response was met with the appropriate result.”

The words were spoken so simply, so casually, that for a moment, the nobles merely gawked at him, stunned by the sheer audacity.

Then—

“Yield?!” one noble thundered, practically spitting the word. “How dare you speak of yielding when not a single word was exchanged between us!”

Egil shrugged. “I sounded the horn three times. You didn’t stop. Seemed pretty clear to me.”

“The horn?” another noble gaped at him, eyes wild with disbelief. “What in the name of the gods were we supposed to make of that?!

Egil merely lifted his brows, his smirk widening. “Not my problem.” He gestured around the tent lazily. “But look! Now you’ve yielded, and here you are, still breathing. So, in the end, it worked.”

A chorus of outrage followed.

“Many of our fellows were nailed to the ground by the javelins of your brutes!” a noble roared, fists clenched so tightly his knuckles turned white.

“And you call that mercy?!” another seethed.

And then, turning their anger elsewhere, their furious eyes landed on Alpheo.

“How,” one noble spat, “how could you allow such creatures into nobility, your grace?”

“It is a disgrace,” another sneered, pain in his voice. “You sully the very concept of nobility by elevating such beasts.”

“He is dishonorable!” one man nearly howled, his hands trembling as he pointed a weak, accusatory finger at Egil. “A savage! A brute with no chivalry—no appreciation for the noble laws that bind our society together!”

The words hung in the air, thick with venom, thick with contempt.

The sound of slow, deliberate clapping filled the tent.

Alpheo’s hands met in a steady, rhythmic applause, a sharp contrast to the nobles’ furious outbursts. Each clap echoed, slicing through the thick air of hostility, forcing all eyes to snap toward him.

Then, as silence fell, he sighed—a deep, almost mockingly exhausted sigh, as though he were listening to the complaints of petulant children rather than defeated lords.

“I fear,” he began smoothly, his voice carrying an edge of cold amusement, “that you all have greatly misunderstood the situation.”

His gaze swept over them, lingering on their wounded forms, their torn and bloodied clothes, their eyes still smoldering with righteous fury.

“Victims,” he said, almost tasting the word. “You speak as though you are victims. As though some great injustice has been dealt to you. As though you did not march into my lands, raise your armies, trespass my home, burn my fields and dine at the cost of my subjects.”

He stepped forward, slow and measured, his boots pressing into the dirt floor of the tent.

“You colluded with my treacherous lords. You sought to unseat me. You expected an easy road to my capital, a swift and triumphant march through my fields, my rivers, my cities. Yet now—now that the carriage has stopped, now that the road has been cut short—you complain. You wail. You curse the very blade you forced into another man’s hand.”

His eyes gleamed as he turned slightly, gesturing toward Egil.

“As for this one?” He tilted his head. “You come here crying and demanding me to punish him, of course I would no such thing . He did what any man would do in the defense of what he calls home.He killed them.”

The nobles bristled, but Alpheo did not stop. His voice hardened, growing sharper, each word laced with the weight of his authority.

“You, however,” he continued, “seem to believe that you were owed something different. That we would greet you with open arms. That we would take your blades into our bellies without returning the favor. And now—now that you lie here, broken, defeated—you dare speak of honor?”

His lips curled into a thin, sharp smile.

“I will tell you something about honor.”

He turned fully to face them, his presence filling the space, commanding their attention.

“Where I am from, when an enemy is struck down, we do not cry over it.” His voice was calm, almost gentle, but there was something far more dangerous in that very calmness. “We reward the one who did the deed.”

A tense, suffocating silence followed. Some nobles still glared, their hands trembling with restrained fury. Others averted their eyes, jaws clenched, unable—or unwilling—to meet his gaze.

Alpheo let the silence stretch before finally, with a chilling ease, he added:

“You may all come whenever you wish. March into my lands again. Raid my villages. Besiege my castles. But do not think for a second that your return journey will be as easy as your arrival”

His smile widened, though it did not reach his eyes.

“And this time when you finally do crawl back home, once your family paid the price of course, I would like you to deliver a message to your noble fellows.”

He stepped forward once more, lowering his voice just enough to force them to listen.

“Tell them they are welcome to try the shit you just pulled. Any time they like.”

Then, with a slight tilt of his head, he added, his tone almost mockingly cordial:

“Of course, they must be willing to pay the toll for it, as the lot of you will do now.

Make sure to also tell it to your new prince, as I fear that his stay in my court may not have been enough for him to learn the lesson.

But please do not despair if the lesson wasn’t clear enough, as you shall have two other examples to look upon in the next months.

After all you were not the only one trespassing through my domain.”

Come back and read more tomorrow, everyone! Visit Novel1st(.)c.𝒐m for updates.

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