Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 584
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- Chapter 584 - Chapter 584: Grand return
Chapter 584: Grand return
The Princess of Yarzat stood still as a statue, draped in pale silks that shimmered in the spring sun, outside the high gates of her court.
Behind her rose the stone-boned halls of her city’s keep — lofty, old, and cool in its shade — but before her stretched the wide green breath of the capital’s royal expanse, a sea of meadowlike calm that rippled toward the city.
Just off the main promenade leading down to the royal court, the Crown Gardens bled into view — a dreamlike enclave of color and perfume, where willows leaned like gossips and fountains whispered to the breeze, inviting any onlookers to its peace.
But there was no peace in the city today.
For the last week, the capital had drowned in celebration. The sound of lutes and bells, drunken laughter and the pounding drums of victory was all that could be heard. Banners danced from every rooftop, and children had not stopped screaming for joy since the fires of war had been quenched.
Three months the land had burned. Three months of burnt villages, of names crossed from maps and prayers whispered from cellars. But now… now there was only triumph. And none could question who held the laurels. The war was over.
Alpheo had won it.
The sound of the royal host reached her ears even from this distance — horns blaring like triumphant angels, and the cheer of the crowd rolling like thunder down the hills. The victory parade marched through the capital’s heart, no doubt with Alpheo at its helm,his black armour with his purple cloak and iron-willed, basking in the radiance of public glory.
She could see it already in her mind’s eye — him smiling that tilted, one , holding up some relic of conquest for the adoring masses to gasp at. Perhaps a broken banner. Or some gaudy trinket taken from the enemy’s halls, polished until it gleamed under the sun like a king’s jewel.
The man who wore victory like others wore perfume.
He would soak in their praise, drink it like wine, let it spill down his chin for all to see.
She knew him better than anyone — perhaps better than he wished to be known.
Alpheo, was a man crafted of performance , a creature who wore brilliance like armor and charm like perfume. But where others saw only the glint of his smile or the daring lilt of his victories, she had long since learned to see beneath the polished surface. And what she saw was not hollow — no, never that — but brittle, perhaps. Brittle in the way old stone bears weight without complaint until the day it cracks.
He needed recognition — not as a vanity, but as breath. The praise of others was not merely pleasant to him; it fed him. Every glance of admiration, every whispered “Yarzat’s little fox ,” every gasp at his triumphs — these were not ornaments to him. They were proof. Proof that he was, and that he mattered.
He pretended otherwise, of course. He moved through the world with that polished aloofness, that careful disinterest that said: I allow admiration, but I am not hungry for it.
But she had watched him too long, and too closely, to believe such illusions. He burned when he succeeded, yes — but he shone only when seen.
When the crowds gathered and his name was on their lips, he basked in it with the restraint of a man who believed that to lean too far into glory was to risk betrayal — yet still he leaned. She had watched it again and again: at the Battle of the Bleeding Plains, where the Herculeians had doubted him — and so he bled them, bled until the fields turned to rusted gold, just to earn what should have been given.
Perhapse to prove something to himself.
And now again, he carved triumph after triumph across the land, as if each enemy he struck down was another word in a sentence that read: You were wrong about me.
Smashing the enemy sword until it broke
No, he did not require an audience to burn.
But still, something in him needed to be seen — not by all, perhaps not even by many — but by someone.
She believed it came from whatever lay buried in that past of his — the one he guarded like a wounded animal, snarling at the approach of any who neared it too boldly. She had pried; he had never offered.
She suspected it was not shame that drove his silence, but fear — fear that if the truth was dragged into the open, it would dissolve like dust in sun, and with it, the man himself.
As if he thought he was made of sand.
And that, if anyone ever truly saw him — the whole of him, not just the curated face — he might crumble. Bit by bit. Grain by grain.
Jasmine turned her head toward the royal gardens — a vast stretch of green and bloom that Alpheo had insisted be expanded, adorned, and refined to rival those of any court except the Romelian’s
It had once been a modest patch of trimmed hedges , but under his hand it had grown wild with beauty: trellises spilling over with white blossoms, fountains that caught the sun like shards of glass.
She found it strange, even now, to imagine him there — Alpheo, with his restless hunger and fire-wrought stride, a man more often found planning an enemy demise than plucking petals from vines. And yet, he had cared for it. Insisted upon it, spending much silver to make it nobler and more colorfoul.
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He had paced those paths during its construction with the eyes of a general surveying a battlefield.
It was difficult to picture someone so ambitious, so electric with forward-motion, slowing down to walk among flowers. And yet — that was where she had first spoken with him.
She remembered that night, he had not been consort then. Just a rising figure, wrapped in murmurs and contradiction.
Even now, she recalled how his gaze had shifted when he asked her what she wanted.
That was where she had first glimpsed it — the ambition that sat behind his eyes like a storm on the horizon.
And it was there, perhaps, that she had also realized: if she did not claim this man , someone else would and she would fall under his tower.
Soon, the rhythmic beat of hooves broke through the distant din of the city — not the heavy, uncoordinated thunder of a host, but the clean, measured cadence of a single rider. Jasmine’s gaze lifted toward the horizon where the great green expanse stretched between the Royal Keep and the city beyond, and there, cresting the final hill like a figure painted into legend, came Alpheo — her husband, the consort-prince, the war-bearer of a land that many had once thought doomed.
He rode upon his white stallion, tall in the saddle with his cloak snapping in the breeze like a royal banner, streaked in red and sun-warmed dust.
His armor was polished . No laurels adorned his brow, but none were needed. The image of him, solitary and proud, galloping the final stretch toward her, was already more triumph than ceremony could hold.
Behind him came the only part of the Royal Host granted the honor to approach the court — his standing army. Hardened and disciplined, these were not the flowered knights of pageants, but the spine of Alpheo’s power: the White Army, glory-cloaked and steel-eyed, forged in months of fire and blood. Their standards were held high, though their march was quiet, restrained — this was no parade. It was return.
But they would not cross the final threshold. As one, at a silent signal, they halted. Jasmine saw the brief gesture — Alpheo’s hand raised slightly, then swept back — and the army responded like a single creature. They turned in perfect unison, cloaks fluttering, and began their march back to the city, to the acclaim of the crowd, to the laughter, to the wine. Their prince, however, did not follow.
This last stretch was for him alone.
He came forward at a canter now, the white stallion gleaming beneath him, and Jasmine felt the air shift — the stillness that descends when fate itself arrives not as a trumpet’s blare, but as a man of flesh and bone and maddening ambition, riding toward his wife like a star that refused to fall.
He swung down from his stallion with the fluid ease of a man who’d done it a thousand times before, boots crunching against the stone path as he landed. For three long months, Jasmine had not laid eyes upon him — not in the flesh, not in the scent of sweat and iron and all things wild about war. She had heard the tales, read the reports, felt the tremors of victory that shook her court — but now here he stood: the Prince returned.
And gods, did he look it.
The weariness clung to him like an old coat — not hidden, not masked — but worn with a quiet pride, the kind that only those who had come back from fire dared to bear. His eyes, dark and heavy, held all the sleepless nights — but none of that was what struck her first.
It was the beard.
A thick, unkempt, storm-dark thing that had claimed his jaw like an occupying army. It framed his face with unruly defiance, streaked with dust and perhaps a crumb of travel bread or two. Jasmine’s brows lifted on instinct, even as he approached her.
He said nothing — he didn’t need to. In a few steps, he was before her, and without preamble, he took her in his arms. It wasn’t a regal embrace, nor the soft clasp of courtly lovers. It was rough, tight, the pull of a man anchoring himself back to the world he had fought for.
Jasmine’s arms slid around him, a little slower, but just as firm.
Alpheo leaned in, aiming for her lips with the confidence of a man who had conquered cities.
But Jasmine let out a sudden, musical laugh and deftly put a hand to his chest to stop him. “Absolutely not,” she declared, grinning as she tilted her head away.
He blinked, surprised. “What?”
“You stink,” she said, the laughter still in her voice as her hand slid up to his chin. With two fingers, she tugged at the wiry curls of his beard, inspecting them with theatrical distaste. “And this? What is this? You’ve returned from war, not from the woods.”
“I thought it gave me character,” he muttered dryly, though his smirk had already returned.
“It gives you fleas,” she shot back, giving the beard a light tug. “I prefer you shaven. Less barbarian, more prince and civilized.”
He leaned closer again, whispering, “Perhaps I’ve grown fond of being a barbarian.”
“And perhaps,” she replied, brushing a fleck of dirt from his collar, “You’ve grown fond of not being kissed”
They stood like that for a moment, faces inches apart, one smelling like horse and road-dust, the other like lilacs .
Jasmine’s fingers, delicate yet deliberate, slipped beneath the edge of Alpheo’s tunic, finding the trail of scarred, hardened skin along his belly.
Alpheo inhaled, the first true breath he’d taken since stepping foot in the capital. Her hands rested low, thumbs brushing against the lines of his hips.
“It’s been months,” she said softly, her voice now lower, huskier — silk draped in smoke. “Months since I’ve had you to myself… And I am very tired of sleeping like a widow.”
Alpheo chuckled, though it came out more like a growl. “I would have liked to meet Basil first. It’s been month since I’d seen my boy”
She leaned in close, lips brushing the side of his neck — just barely. “You can meet Basil later,” she murmured, her breath warm against his skin. “He’s not going anywhere.”
“However since you’re filthy,” she said, stepping back at last with a wicked smile” here’s what you’ll do: go get a bath. Fetch a servant, have that poor excuse of a beard removed, and when you’re no longer fit to frighten horses…”
Her eyes glinted, voice dropping further.
“…come to our chamber. I’ll be waiting.”
She turned with a grace that only royalty and well-fed cats could master, leaving Alpheo standing there — sweaty, roadworn, and suddenly very, very motivated to find a razor.
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