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Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 587

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  3. Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king
  4. Chapter 587 - Chapter 587: A new place(1)
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Chapter 587: A new place(1)
The road ahead wound like a pale ribbon through the green hills, the sun glinting off iron and leather as the company marched toward the great capital . Fifty riders, proud and straight-backed, led the way, their horses snorting and stamping the earth with rhythmic certainty. Behind them, twenty warriors on foot trudged, their boots stirring dust clouds as they bore their boots down on the dirt.

At the very tip of the column rode two figures, side by side. One was young and full of restless energy, his broad shoulders squared, his brown hair whipping behind him in the breeze.

Torghan, son of the wild hills and newly blooded chieftain, held his reins easily, his every movement betraying the vigor of youth touched at last by the glory of battle. At his side rode Maraya, his sister — older by a handful of years.

Together they rode not just toward the capital but toward something greater — the formal union that Torghan had fought for through three months of brutal campaign,his weapons proudly tied beneath the royal colors of Prince Alpheo.

It had been two weeks since the final clash, since the enemy’s banners were toppled and their coffers spilled open.A glorious affair, his peers said once home.

And beyond the songs and stories, there was the true measure of victory: the treasure —pockets heavy with coins, fine weapons forged in distant lands, sleek horses bred for speed and war — the rich spoils of conquest, shared with a generosity that only the victorious can afford.For Torghan and his people, it was not merely a bounty of wealth but a gateway to a new way of life.

Upon settling into their newly granted lands, they quickly discovered a revelation: here, people with goods, which they discovered they were called ‘Merchants’ did not trade through barter as they had done in the rugged highlands; here, everything had a price in silver or bronze.And so the joy of returning with full saddlebags was made even sweeter, as coins — clinking in their hands like a promise — opened doors that had once seemed closed forever.

Salt, that rare and precious treasure in the hills, now could be had for a handful of coins; fabrics dyed in vibrant colors, iron tools — all within easy reach.To their astonishment and growing delight, the luxuries they had once bartered blood and sweat for now seemed almost laughably affordable.

Of course none was happier of what had happened than Torghan , as before the war, his place as chieftain had been precarious — appointed by the Crown’s decree rather than winning it by the age-old rite of single combat against his peers. Among the proud and stubborn blood of his tribe, this had marked him as a weak man.

And though victory had not erased those muttered doubts entirely, the blood spilled by his own hand and the gold now hanging from his people’s saddlebags and belts had silenced many mouths, at least for now.

As long as he could bring results, it would be okay.

Still, Torghan could feel it — the weight behind some glances, the tension that lingered like the sharp scent of steel in the air.

Tradition was not so easily slain, not even by blood and treasure.

The young chieftain sighed as he cast a sidelong glance at his sister as they rode together at the head of their band. Maraya’s face was a mask of coldness, her jaw tight, her eyes fixed on the horizon as if willing herself away from the moment. She had hardly spoken a word to him since they left the coast, her silence as sharp as any blade.

He knew it was not just the prospect of marrying a man twice her age that soured her mood — though that alone was enough to rattle any young woman. It was also the sea crossing she had protested against from the very start, her stubborn spirit bristling at the idea of abandoning their homeland. Yet in the end, their father’s will had prevailed: a final kindness to his brother , a last slap to her , a last attempt to secure a future for his children in this new, sprawling world.

Torghan shifted in his saddle and said, with an attempt at lightness, “You know, soon enough we won’t see each other much. You might end up regretting wasting these last moments giving me the cold shoulder.”

Maraya turned her head sharply toward him, her eyes flashing. “There’s little to say. How could I ever be happy marrying an old man?”

Torghan let out a short laugh, shaking his head. “Lord Jarza is no crumbling elder with one foot in the grave. He’s a tall, strong man — a seasoned warrior. Not just any soldier, but one of the most trusted blades at the Prince’s side.” He leaned slightly closer. “He has the favor of Alpheo himself. That alone means more here than a lifetime of honor back home.”

He paused, letting his words hang in the air before adding, more seriously, “We need to weave ourselves into the fabric of this land’s high society, Maraya. Blood, coin, and marriage — that’s how power moves here. You’ll not just be a bride; you’ll be a bridge between our people and theirs.”

Maraya said nothing. She kept her gaze forward, lips pressed into a hard line.

Torghan sighed and straightened in his saddle, stubbornly refusing to be cowed by her silence. He gestured ahead toward the road that stretched toward the distant shimmer of the capital’s walls.”You think this is some quiet, shameful thing? No, Maraya,” he said, a grin tugging at his lips. “This marriage will be an affair the whole capital will speak of! The Prince is a generous man. He’ll make a ruckus the likes of which you’ve never seen for the wedding of one of his trusted men.”

Maraya turned her head just enough to shoot him a sidelong, unimpressed glare.

Torghan, undeterred, pointed behind them with a gloved hand.”Look behind you, sister. Look at the escort His Grace sent to bring us in!”

Maraya gave a reluctant glance over her shoulder. The sun gleamed off polished steel and gilded horse armor. Fifty mounted knights rode in disciplined formation, their white cloaks billowing behind them, golden steeds emblazoned on their shields — the personal guard of the Crown, known far and wide as the Golden Steeds. Even on foot, twenty more squires and men-at-arms marched, their banners snapping smartly in the wind.

“See how imposing they are?!” Torghan said, a note of pride slipping into his voice. “This is not some backwater arrangement. This marriage — you — mean something. The Prince favors this union. He favors us.”

Maraya huffed, her braid bouncing with the motion.”If you’re so taken with this honor, brother, you marry him,” she snapped. “Or better yet, find some wrinkled old hag with ‘noble blood’ and tie yourself to her. See how happy you are then!”

Torghan barked a laugh, tossing his head back. “You’ve got the tongue of a viper today!” he said, shaking his head. “But listen — listen — we need this. It’s not enough to have spilled blood on the battlefield. It’s not enough to have raised our axes in the Prince’s name.”

“We fought for him!” Maraya cut him off sharply, her voice rising. “We bled for him. We crushed his enemies. Isn’t that enough to stay safely under his sky?!”

Torghan’s smile faded a little, becoming grim.

“Battles win respect for a season,” he said lowly. “But alliances? Blood ties? They last beyond the turn of a year. When the swords are sheathed, it’s who you share your bread with that matters. Not just who you fought beside.”

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Maraya looked away again, her mouth a stubborn line.

Torghan saw the stubborn tilt of Maraya’s chin and realized that reason would not win today.So he changed his tack — dropped reason like a worn sword and took up guilt like a hammer.

He slowed his horse until he was close enough that she couldn’t ignore him even if she tried. His voice lowered, rich and heavy, like the coming of a storm.”Tell me, sister,” he said, his words almost a whisper, “do you want me to annul this marriage? To refuse the prince’s generosity? To throw it in his face and make an enemy of the very man whose favor shields us?”

Maraya stiffened but said nothing.

Torghan pressed on, leaning closer.”Shall I invite slaughter on our people? Shall I see the lands we have worked with our blood and sweat ripped from under us? Lands that fed us, that gave us safety when our enemies sought to tear us apart?”

Her lips parted, but still she said nothing. Only her fingers, gripping the reins white-knuckled, betrayed her rising turmoil.

He jabbed the point home.”Have you not grown plump from the fruits of this earth?” he said, voice now sharp as a blade. “Have you not lain your head each night on a soft bed, your belly full, the cold kept out by walls built by the mercy of this bountiful land ?”

Maraya’s face cracked — the first real break in her iron defiance. Her mouth quivered, and her gaze fell, staring at the road ahead as if salvation could be found there.

Torghan saw it and hammered the nail deeper.

“This is not for us alone, Maraya,” he growled, “but for all of them — our kin, our blood. Would you doom them all to ruin because you could not endure the sacred duty entrusted to your gender? Would your pride cost us everything?”

Maraya squeezed her eyes shut, as if his words were stones thrown against her soul.

Torghan, merciless now, drove the point home.”Your son — and you will have one — will not be some low hunter scrabbling in the dirt,” he said, voice rising. “He will be a lord of men, leading warriors to battle, commanding fields ripe with grain. He will be stronger than father will ever be.”

He saw her lip tremble. She was cracking, and he pressed harder.

“Back in the tribe,” he spat, “women would kill for the chance you are spitting on. Their fathers would Kill me, if they thought it would give their daughters even half your fortune!”

Maraya’s eyes darted toward him.

Torghan shook his head, his voice quieter now, but no less fierce.”If you will not do it for me,” he said, “then do it for them. We all bear our stones, sister. Heavy, back-breaking burdens. But we carry them. We suffer in silence, because we know it is not for ourselves alone — but for all those who stand behind us.”

A long silence fell between them, broken only by the clopping of hooves on the dirt road.Maraya said nothing. But the fight had gone out of her shoulders.

And Torghan knew, that the battle had been won, though no satisfaction came from it.

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