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Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 537

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  3. Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king
  4. Chapter 537 - Chapter 537: Falling sword(4)
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Chapter 537: Falling sword(4)
Lucius moved through the corpse-strewn halls of the keep with the grace of a pride surveying conquered territory Behind him, his mercenaries fanned out like shadows given form—bloodied, breathless, but excited in their victory.

The trembling kitchen boy leading them skittered ahead like a startled hare, his wide eyes darting between every archway and alcove.

A rat knew its own maze best.

Yet even with their guide, the silence gnawed at Lucius.

No last desperate charge. No final rallying cry. Just the occasional corpse slumped against the wall, their lifeblood pooling in the grooves between stones. The absence of resistance was louder than any battle cry.

They’ve turtled, Lucius mused, his fingers drumming idly against the pommel of his sword. Hunkered down in some last choke point, betting everything on a bottleneck.

He could already picture it—some narrow passage near the lord’s chambers, where a handful of desperate men could hold back an army, forcing attackers to die three at a time in a grinder of steel and flesh. A noble last stand. A fool’s gambit.

But Lucius wasn’t worried about the choke point.

He was worried about the other possibility.

Keeps like these—old, proud, built by lords who valued survival over honor—always had secrets. A postern gate hidden behind a tapestry. A wine cellar with a door that led nowhere official. A tunnel, forgotten by all but the rats and the ruling family, dug for nights exactly like this one.

If he were a lord, he’d have ensured an escape route.

And if such a route existed here?

Then the prize—the true prize—might already be slipping through his fingers.

The city was his. The walls had fallen. The garrison was broken. But letting the old turncloak’s whelp vanish into the night? That would turn victory into vexation. He didn’t just want conquest. He wanted theater. A spectacle of chains and submission, a lesson carved into the world’s memory.

And for that, he needed the lord.

Lucius paused beneath the arched entrance to the great hall, his breath curling in the cold air. Behind him, his men halted—not out of fear, but something quieter. Awe, perhaps. Or the instinctive reverence of killers standing in a place that had outlived kings.

The hall was a relic of another age. Filigree of tarnished bronze curled through the stone like vines of frozen lightning. The vaulted ceiling loomed overhead, its murals flaking but still grand—gods and battles rendered in pigments that had dulled with time. Once, this place had thrummed with feasts and intrigue. Now, it stood as empty as a tomb.

Lucius smirked.

“Opulence,” he murmured, dragging a gloved finger along the cold stone. “Just empty opulence”

His voice barely carried, yet it seemed to slither into every corner of the hall, a verdict delivered by the silence itself.

He stepped forward, his boots now striking the marble with deliberate force—each echo a hammerfall, a countdown. His men lingered at the threshold, as if sensing that this moment was not theirs to share.

The last time Lucius had stood in this city, he’d been one of a thousand faceless swords.

Now he walked in it as a conqueror

And then, as he rounded the final curve of corridor, he found it—his golden goose.

A knot of spears and iron will.

Thirty men, give or take, jammed tight into the final hallway before the lord’s chambers. Shields locked. Spears leveled. Helms glinting dully in the torchlight. They looked like a wall built from old pride, each man wedged in by desperation and duty. There was no shouting, no grand declarations. Just silence—and the cold determination of men who knew they were going to die and chose to do so standing.

Lucius stopped, studying them with the detached calm of a craftsman surveying his final cut.

There it is, he thought. The last teeth of the beast.

He raised a hand, palm low and flat.

His men froze behind him, halting at precisely ten meters—no clatter, no confusion. Clean. Controlled.

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The defenders didn’t move. But Lucius could feel their eyes—sharp, suspicious, angry. A few of them recognized him. He saw it in the way their jaws clenched, how their grips tightened. They may not have known his name, but they had seen his face before. In backroom betrayals. In sieges. In the fall of friends.

Lucius let the silence hang.

Then, casually, as if selecting a wine from a rack, he stepped forward—one, two, three deliberate strides.

He turned slightly and flicked a hand.

One of his men, tall and built like a wall of oak, stepped forward and wordlessly offered his shield. Lucius took it without looking.

“Last thing I need,” he muttered, slipping his arm through the straps, “is for some glory-starved oaf to open my throat with a lucky throw.”

The shield was heavy, well-worn—probably taken from one of the city’s own guards earlier that night. He tapped the base of it against the stone once. The sound rang out like a war drum, low and final.

Ahead, the defenders stiffened, the line bracing. Spears lowered an inch.

Neither side moved.

The tension in the corridor coiled tighter with each breath. The torches on the wall hissed and sputtered like they too felt the weight of what was coming.

Lucius tilted his head slightly, studying the faces behind the wall of steel. So many young ones. Some barely men. One looked as though he still had peach fuzz clinging to his jaw. And yet they stood. They waited. Loyal to the last.

He gave them that, at least. Loyalty was a rare thing. Priceless, really.

And utterly useless tonight.

Lucius stood motionless in the torch-lit corridor, his breath slow, measured. The air here was thick—not just with the scent of oiled leather and cold stone, but with the copper-sharp promise of blood yet to be spilled.

The quiet before the storm.

Then he spoke.

“Lord Orymus.”

His voice cut through the dark like a knife through silk—not raised, not strained, but carrying with the effortless weight of a man who had long since stopped asking for things and started taking them.

“Are you there?”he called again, tilting his head slightly, as if listening for the scuttle of rats in the walls.”Or have your men already dragged you down into some bolt-hole, hoping the shadows will spare you?”

The words hung in the air, their echo slithering down the passageway like a dying man’s last breath.

For a moment, there was nothing. Just the distant moan of wind against the keep’s outer walls, the faint creak of armor as men shifted their weight. Then—

“You.”

The voice that answered was rough as gravel, bitter as old wine left to sour. It came from behind the shield wall, from the dark at the corridor’s end.

“You treacherous bastard. You snake. You turned your cloak faster than a whore drops her skirts for silver.”

Lucius chuckled—a low, dark sound, like the rumble of distant thunder. Not mocking. Not angry. Amused, if anything. The sound of a man who had waited a long time to watch this particular fire catch.

He took a single step forward, the torchlight catching the cold gleam in his eyes, the faint, knife-edge curve of his mouth.

“Turned cloak?” he repeated, shaking his head as if disappointed by the simplicity of the insult. “How can I be a turn-cloak if I never wore one? I was never yours to begin with. Nor Lechlian’s. Nor any man’s but His Grace’s.”

He began to pace, slow and deliberate, his boots whispering against the stone. His voice was calm, almost conversational, but it carried—each word a hammer driving nails into a coffin.

“This city—your precious city, as you’ve so proudly called it—was never yours. It belonged to the Crown before your father spat on his oaths and called it ‘rebellion.’It was conquered by force of arms, than lost by treachery.

And tonight…”

He stopped. Let his gaze drift over the line of spears, the battered shields, the faces of men who knew they were already dead.

“Tonight, it goes back through treachery”

A ripple passed through the defenders. A tightening of grips. A shifting of weight. Lucius saw it—the doubt, the fear, the slow, creeping realization that they were not just outnumbered, but outplayed.

He smiled.

“The gates are ours. The walls are ours. Your precious knight-captain? He’s already feeding the crows. ” A shrug.”You are alone …”

He raised a single finger, pointing past the spears, past the defiance, to where he knew Orymus stood in the dark. Not a threat. A verdict.

“You are the last flicker of a candle that’s already burned out. The last gasp of a house that’s already fallen.”

He lowered his hand. The gesture was final. Not dramatic. Just true.

For a long moment, the only sound was the hiss of torches, their flames bending as if straining to hear what came next.

Lucius tilted his head slightly, his voice dropping to something almost gentle.

“I won’t lie to you, my lord. There are only two paths left to you now.”

Another step forward. Close enough now that the men in the shield wall could see the ice in his gaze.

“In chains… or in pieces.”

He let the words settle. Let them sink into the stone, into the marrow of every man standing against him. Then, softer, as if offering advice to a doomed friend:

“Choose chains, and His Grace may be merciful. He spared your brother and sisters, didn’t he?Whosays that he won’t be mercuful again if you surrender?”

A pause. A breath.

“But this is the last choice you’ll ever make, my lord. The last one that will matter.”

Then silence.

Ten heartbeats. Twenty.

Lucius didn’t move. Didn’t blink. He stood like a statue carved from patience itself, watching the flicker of torchlight on the defenders’ faces—seeing the doubt, the fear, the slow erosion of resolve.

Thirty. Forty.

Fifty.

Not a twitch of impatience. Let the lord stew. Let him choke on his pride. Let him dig through every hollow corner of his courage and find it empty.

Finally—

“I choose steel.”

The words were raw, ragged. Defiant to the last.

Lucius didn’t react. Didn’t flinch. He simply exhaled, long and slow, as if releasing a breath he’d been holding for years.

“So be it,” he murmured, almost kindly. “Then may you die well. A good death is the last gift any of us can hope for tonight.”

He turned, walking back to his men with the same measured calm. Behind him, steel whispered from scabbards—a chorus of blades bared in perfect unison, like a serpent uncoiling to strike.

The silence shattered.

And death stepped forward.

And so the last ember of a house that had existed for more than a century extinguished itself in a single night, simply from the crimes and ambitions of one single man, whose faults now followed his son.

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

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