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Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 540

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  3. Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king
  4. Chapter 540 - Chapter 540: Alone and divided
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Chapter 540: Alone and divided
This was not how it was supposed to go.

That singular thought echoed in the minds of the men now gathered in grim silence—men once hailed as the architects of rebellion.

They were lords of ancient bloodlines, masters of men and land. They had taken up arms against the crown with iron conviction, bolstered by the weight of their silver and the swelling ranks of their supporters. They had entered the war not in fear, but in expectation—expectation that numbers, coin, and fury would suffice to bend fate to their will.

They had been wrong.

Blindingly, humiliatingly , gut-wrenchingly wrong.

They had expected the War Prince to buckle beneath the weight of what they’d amassed against him—to fracture like glass beneath a hammer. After all, who could stand against such a storm? Against so many blades, so much silver, so many bitter hearts? They had assumed his strength, like theirs, was finite—chained to the laws of war and attrition.

But now, reality stood before them in the tent like a bitter sermon.

The truth had arrived not with swords drawn, but in words spoken. Cold. Clear. Irrefutable.

And it came from the man standing calmly at the center of their tent—a grave news brought to them by such a young envoy

The news he carried was simple, but it struck with the force of a thunderclap: They were alone

One by one, the pillars of their hope collapsed. The plans they’d made with so much pride, so much whispered cunning, now lay in ruins around them. They had thrown every obstacle they could conceive at Alpheo—three separate threats from three different fronts—and the war-prince had not only met them, he had dismantled them, as though they were nothing more than old furniture clogging the path.

If they weren’t so scared and confused, they would had no choice but admire him

It was then that understanding, grim and undeniable, took hold.

They were no longer the hunters.They were the hunted.

The knowledge settled in their guts like stones. Ignorance, they now realized, had been a mercy. This truth—this sharp, cutting truth—was a torment.

It was a reminder that no matter how high a frog may leap, it would never match the flight of a falcon.

And the falcon… was now diving.

Not with rage, nor desperation, but with calm precision—talons outstretched, eyes fixed on the kill.

This—this—was the moment that shattered whatever illusions they’d carried into the war. Not the clangor of a lost battle, not the collapse of a stronghold, but the simple, inescapable truth delivered by a single man in a quiet tent:

Alpheo was no longer simply winning.

He was finishing and he was coming towards them.

Lord Niketas stared hard at the young envoy. His jaw was set, his knuckles white against the armrest of his chair, but it was his eyes—piercing and incredulous—that spoke the most.

“How?” he demanded, his voice low and disbelieving, like a blade being drawn slowly from its sheath. “How can your prince retreat without even a fight?Is that all that his resolves comes down to?”

He leaned forward, his gaze narrowing. “Does he not see? If the Mud Prince will somehow emerge victorious, he will come for you , next.” His voice grew in force, not yet shouting but vibrating with tightly-coiled fury.

He pointed a finger sharply, like a commander stabbing his sword toward an enemy line. “If your prince wish for peace—true peace—he would seize this chance and strike now. While there is still time. If they joined us, if we combined our strength, then we might still stand a chance to halt what is coming.”

But before he could continue, the young envoy lifted a hand.

“Enough, my lord,” he said quietly, and yet with a steadiness that made the entire tent fall still. “You speak as though words can yet sway the course of this river. But you are too late.”

Niketas blinked, taken aback by the calm assurance of the youth before him.

“No matter what you say now, the decision has already been made,” he said. “Your pleas cannot change what has already passed. His Grace—” he paused, choosing the words carefully, almost gently, “—should already be back in his homeland by now.”

A silence stretched through the tent, heavy and suffocating.

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“All that remains,” the envoy went on, “is for me to return to him… and deliver your words. Whatever they may be.” He looked around the room, letting his gaze settle briefly on each lord. “But I fear there is little use in it. I am an envoy, nothing more. I hold no sword, I command no banners. I bring messages… I do not bend fates.”

His voice, though soft, cut clean through the mounting tension like a knife through silk.

“And what I carry back may well be a final insult,” he added, almost as an afterthought. “Or a last warning to them.Whatever it is will accomplish the same, nothing.

I was sent not to negotiate,” he continued , his gaze steady, “but only to inform. With the Oizenains defeated in the field, His Grace believes that his involvement in this war has fulfilled its purpose. He has no further stake in prolonging bloodshed where none is required. He did not vanish in secrecy, my lords. I stand here before you precisely because he wished you to hear it from an ally’s lips, rather than a scout’s report or the whispers of fleeing peasants, so that you may see to prepare yourselves as you see fit . This is not a betrayal, but a courtesy, as his grace’s thoughts turn to you.”

A loud scoff broke the growing tension.

Lord Gregor shifted forward, the heavy chain draped across his chest clinking with the movement, his square jaw tightening beneath his thick beard. His eyes glinted—not with confusion or surprise, but with fury that had long been simmering beneath the surface.

“Courtesy?” he barked. “Do not dress cowardice in silks and call it chivalry.”

The envoy remained silent, unmoving, but Gregor pressed on, his voice rising.

“Your prince’s ‘interests,’ as you call them, are molded not by ambition, but by fear—fear of a battle he believes he cannot win. A true ally doesn’t slip away under the shroud of night like a fox scenting fire. A true ally would have stood beside us, shoulder to shoulder, sword in hand, not vanished the moment the wind shifted.”

He leaned over the table now, knuckles pressed hard into the wood. “Tell your lord that next time he sends a message to his allies, he might as well save the ink. A man who runs when the hounds are loosed should not pretend he ever meant to hunt.”

The young envoy did not flinch. He had expected as much—perhaps even worse. His eyes lowered for a breath, almost as if he allowed the storm to pass over him, and then returned to meet Gregor’s.

He said nothing in response. For what was there to say?

He had known from the moment he was given the sealed letter and instructed to ride for the rebel camp that the words he would carry back would be nothing more than echoes—discontented, bitter, and likely laced with insult. He had accepted that.

In truth,he too had wondered what hope the rebels clung to—what distant flame they chased in this storm of blood and steel. But even if he shared those thoughts, they were not his to speak.

And so, he merely stood there, silent and unmoved.

Like a tree in a tempest, knowing full well that winds, no matter how furious, cannot move mountains.

The young envoy gave a shallow bow, his wrists still bound but his posture once again composed. “If there is nothing more, my lords,” he said, his voice calm, “then I shall take my leave. My task here is done.”

He turned to go, but before he could take more than a step, Lord Niketas’ voice rang out, low but sharp as a drawn blade.

“Tell your prince,” Niketas said, eyes locked on the envoy “that his fate is now tied to ours. Whether we rise or fall, he has bound himself to that outcome and has chosen to let fate pick for him.

The envoy paused mid-step. He gave Niketas a long, unreadable look—no fear, no disdain, only the faint glimmer of something like understanding… or perhaps pity. Then, with a slow exhale, he lowered his gaze, gave a final bow, and left without a word more, the tent flaps brushing closed behind him.

The silence he left in his wake clung to the air like smoke. The lords sat still, the tension thick and heavy, as though the entire tent now bore the weight of the inevitable.

Lord Lysandros, usually a tower of steel , looked around with hollow eyes. His voice came quiet and ragged, like wind brushing ash. “What… are we to do now?”

No answer came at first. Only the rustle of the tent fabric and the faint creak of wood shifting beneath the weight of despair.

Then Niketas stood, slowly, deliberately, his gauntleted hand pressing against the table for support as he rose. His voice, when it came, was cold and steady. “We break the siege,” he said”We have no use to break the city now that we know the truth .

The others turned toward him, some wide-eyed, others grim.

“We retreat,” he continued. “Back to ground, we know. The ground we choose. The final battle is coming, whether we will it or not, and we shall bet all of our fortune on it.”

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