Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king-Chapter 553: A Parlay(2)

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Chapter 553: A Parlay(2)

The two factions faced each other across the barren stretch of earth, the setting sun stretching their shadows into grotesque parodies of nobility across the cracked ground. The royal retinue stood motionless as statues, their polished armor reflecting the dying light in flashes of molten gold. Only the occasional stamp of a hoof betrayed they were flesh and blood at all. Yet the air between them thrummed with tension - a silent, predatory energy like wolves circling before the kill.

The prince’s personal guard had subtly shifted formation, their mounts edging forward with the quiet precision of men who’d danced this dance before. Their hands rested casually near sword hilts, fingers twitching with the barest anticipation. They didn’t glare - that would have been too obvious. Instead they watched the rebels with the detached interest of butchers surveying livestock.

The silence stretched, broken only by the whisper of wind through dry grass and the distant drone of cicadas.

Finally, Lord Niketas inclined his head with the precise degree of deference owed to royalty - no more, no less. "Your Grace " he intoned, his voice carrying just enough warmth to avoid outright insult while still tasting of ashes.

The others followed suit - Gregor with the stiffness of a man forcing himself to bow, Lysander with theatrical grace that couldn’t quite mask his hesitation, Eurenis with a barely perceptible nod that might as well have been a sneer.

Alpheo remained mounted, studying them from beneath the weight of his circlet with the amused detachment of a cat watching mice. When he finally spoke, his voice carried the quiet, dangerous lilt of a blade being drawn slowly from its scabbard.

"How curious," he mused, "that you still remember how to bow. The forms of fealty haven’t completely left you, then. And yet..." He leaned forward slightly, the movement causing sunlight to glint off his armor in a deliberate flash. "Not so long ago, you found these same courtesies... what was the word you used? Ah yes - ’tyranny’s velvet glove.’, how curious...."

Niketas straightened, his jaw working beneath his carefully maintained composure. "Your Highness, if I may - this rebellion was never about disrespect for the crown, but about-"

Alpheo’s laugh cut through the apology like a whipcrack. "Oh please, my lord , spare me the rehearsed lines. I didn’t ride through the stink of burning villages and the screams of dying men to the south and to the east of my reign listen to you justify your treason with pretty words."

He dismounted with deliberate slowness, his boots kicking up small clouds of dust as they hit the parched earth. "You seem to misunderstand this gathering," he continued, stepping forward until he stood barely a sword’s length from the rebel lords. "This isn’t a debate where you argue the righteousness of your cause. This isn’t even a negotiation where you bargain for your lives.I am not a tutor discussing philosophy and you are not lawyers defending your case."

His smile was a blade’s edge in the fading light. "This is simply the moment where you learn what happens to men who play at rebellion and lose."

The rebel leaders shifted uneasily in their saddles, the truth of their position settling over them like a shroud. Niketas swallowed hard before finding his voice again. "Then... why summon us here at all, Your Highness? If not to discuss terms?"

Alpheo’s grin widened, revealing just a hint of teeth. "Why, to share some delightful news, of course." He clasped his hands behind his back and began to pace before them like a lecturer before dull students. "It seems your dear ally, that pustulent, backstabbing, gold-grubbing whoreson Prince Shameliek of the Oizenians - may the gods piss on his grave - has taken an unfortunate tumble into the afterlife."

He paused, savoring the way the color drained from Niketas’ face. "His once-glorious army now decorates the fields outside Aracina . Some face up, some face down - the only difference being which patch of dirt they rot in ." A theatrical sigh. "Such a shame. I’d hoped he’d last long enough to watch me beat you all."

At that, a visible twitch went through the rebel lords, the tension now a creeping vine wrapping around spines and throats. Eyes darted to one another, staggered .

But it was old Elios who betrayed the deepest reaction. The priest’s breath hissed between yellowed teeth like steam escaping a cracked kettle, his gnarled fingers tightening around his staff until the ancient wood groaned in protest.

Alpheo’s gaze settled on him with the predatory focus of a hawk spotting movement in the grass. "Ah, Elios," he purred, his voice dripping with false sympathy. "I see that sharp mind of yours working behind those rheumy eyes. Calculating, doubting, scrambling to find some flaw in my words." He leaned forward, his smile widening. "Tell me, does it sting more to know your precious rebellion is dying—or that it’s being buried by hands younger than your last good piss?"

The prince straightened in his saddle, his armor catching the fading light as he addressed them all. "But let me spare you the trouble of wondering. Prince Shameliek is indeed dead—his corpse currently serving as a feast for crows. His army? Scattered to the winds like chaff. Those who weren’t cut down now decorate my dungeons, their ransom letters already winging their way to their grieving families."

He made a show of examining his nails. "As for your other allies... well. Let’s just say the Herculeians remembered they had pressing business elsewhere when they saw my banners approaching. Something about their wives being lonely, I believe." A cold chuckle. "Though I’m sure they’ll be back—just in time to find Arduronaven’s gates shut in their faces and my archers laughing from the walls."

The silence that followed was thicker than blood, heavier than chainmail. Alpheo let it linger, savoring the way their faces twisted as realization set in—like men slowly understanding they’d boarded a sinking ship.

"Now," he continued, his voice dropping into a conversational tone that somehow made his words cut deeper, "let’s speak plainly. Even if—by some miracle of the gods—you managed to defeat me here today, do you truly think that would be the end of it?" He shook his head slowly, like a disappointed tutor. "I would raise another army. And another. And another. I would strip the gold from temple roofs and the swords from peasant hands if I had to. This princedom has bled before, and it will bleed again—but it will never break, not when it has me at his lead."

His gaze swept across their faces, noting every twitch, every flicker of doubt. "But you? Lose this army, and it’s over. No more noble allies riding to your rescue. No more righteous causes to hide behind. Just a short walk to the headsman’s block and an unmarked grave." He tilted his head. "So I ask again—do you really think you can win?"

The question hung in the air like the pause before an executioner’s axe falls. Around them, the wind whispered through the grass, carrying the distant cries of carrion birds already circling overhead—nature’s impatient witnesses to the death of a rebellion.

Not a single rebel lord could meet his eyes.

The silence stretched taut between them, thick enough to choke on. Not a single rebel lord dared speak—until at last, the old priest Elios broke the stillness with a voice like grinding stone.

"You speak of gods as though they keep ledgers," he rasped, his yellowed eyes burning with fervor beneath heavy brows. "But the divine do not tally their favor by the size of your camp or the weight of your coffers." He drew himself up, staff trembling in his grip. "We stand with heaven’s blessing upon us! No matter how vast your armies, how long your shadow falls across this land—without the gods’ favor, your victory will turn to ash in your mouth!"

He delivered the words like a prophet casting doom, his voice rising to a thunderous crescendo...up and up , only for the pronouncement to die meekly against the indifferent breeze. No lightning split the sky. No earthquake shook the ground. Just the quiet flutter of banners and the distant calls of camp followers going about their evening chores.

Alpheo blinked once—slowly.

"The gods, you say?" He gestured expansively behind him at the sea of tents, the forest of spears, the countless cookfires twinkling like fallen stars. "How curious. They’ve had ample opportunity to prove their favor, haven’t they?"

He began counting off on his fingers with theatrical precision.

"When the Oizenians marched to your aid—did the gods stay their hands? No. They broke like wheat before the scythe." Another finger. "When the Herculeians dug in at Arduronaven—did divine winds blow them to safety? No. They ran like rats from a flooding sewer." A third finger. "At the northern valleys, when my ambush should have cut your army to ribbons—did heavenly fire strike us down? Or did my men simply... win?"

The prince leaned forward in his saddle, his voice dropping to a deadly whisper.

"So tell me, priest—if your gods are truly with you... why do they keep missing?Am I that little to aim at ?Am I moving too fast?Or perhaps it is what you fear, deep in your mind, unsaid, unspoken but known to all of us?"

The silence that followed was deafening.

Elios stood rigid, his face a mask of impotent fury. The only sound from him was the audible grinding of teeth—the frustrated gnash of a zealot whose miracles had failed to materialize. His knuckles whitened around his staff until the ancient wood groaned in protest, but no rebuttal came.

Alpheo snorted—the derisive sound a man makes when a barking dog finally realizes it’s chained.

Then he turned his gaze to the rebel lords, his eyes moving from Niketas’ ashen face to Gregor’s clenched jaw to Lysander’s poorly concealed tremor. These were men who had ridden to this parley still clinging to some shred of dignity, some last desperate hope of bargaining from strength.

Now they understood.

Understood that the boy-prince they’d dismissed as a pampered upstart had outmaneuvered them at every turn.

Understood that the gods they’d invoked remained conspicuously absent.

Understood—as the royal banners snapped triumphantly overhead—that this was no negotiation.

Only surrender and woe to the vanquished.