Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king-Chapter 554: A Parlay(3)

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.

Chapter 554: A Parlay(3)

Gregor’s patience, long eroded by days of stalemated tension, dwindling supplies, and a prince who refused to charge finally gave up its last ghost. His voice cracked the heavy air like a whip.

"Your... Grace," he spat the honorific like a curse, "spare us your theatrics. Did you summon us here simply to preen like a cock before the slaughterhouse? Or is there some actual purpose to this farce?"

The other rebel lords stiffened as if struck, their collective intake of breath sharp enough to draw blood. Even the horses seemed to tense beneath them, ears flattening at the sudden venom in the air.

Alpheo turned his head with deliberate slowness, the movement of a predator who knows his prey has nowhere left to run. The dying sunlight caught the gilding on his armor, setting him aglow like some avenging spirit as his lips curled into a smile that never touched his eyes.

"Oh Gregor," he sighed, his voice dripping with false sympathy, "still swinging that dull axe of yours, I see. Tell me, does it ache? Knowing every swing falls short?" He made a show of examining his nails. "No, I didn’t bring you here to mock you - though watching you flail about is admittedly entertaining. I brought you here so you might finally grasp the depth of the hole you’ve dug for yourselves.If you were not lords you were have made fine gravediggers"

A murmur rippled through the royal guards behind him, half-suppressed chuckles and approving nods. Alpheo waited for it to die before continuing, his voice dropping into a tone one might use to explain something painfully obvious to a dim child.

"You see, unlike with your late friend Shameliek, the Crown still remembers mercy. Even for traitors. Even for fools who thought rebellion was just another game for bored lords to play at between feasts." His hand drifted to rest on his sword hilt, the movement casual yet charged with menace. "But make no mistake - this isn’t desperation speaking. I didn’t come begging. I came offering. Because after crushing two armies and reducing your rebellion to a pack of starving rats clinging to a rock..."

He paused, letting the image sink in.

"...I find myself with time to spare. And what better way to spend it than being merciful?"

The silence that followed was so absolute they could hear the distant cry of a hawk circling high above. Even the wind seemed to hold its breath.

There was a long silence, the sort that stretches taut like a bowstring.

Then—abruptly, like a man stepping through a door without thinking—Niketas spoke.

"What are the terms?"

Even he blinked in surprise at the speed of his own words, as though his tongue had betrayed his pride.

Alpheo regarded Niketas with the measured patience of a cat watching a mouse consider its final move. The fading sunlight caught the gold threading through his gloves as he adjusted them with deliberate precision—each finger straightened, each seam aligned—like a magistrate preparing to pass sentence.

"Very well," he said at last, his voice carrying the weight of inevitability. "Since you ask so... forthrightly."

He nudged his warhorse forward a single step, the beast’s iron-shod hooves crunching deliberately on the dry earth. The royal standard-bearer moved in perfect synchronization, causing the falcon banner to snap sharply in the sudden breeze—a visual punctuation to the prince’s words.

"First," he began, holding up a single gauntleted finger, "your men. The common soldiers who followed your treasonous banners will be permitted to return to their homes. Unharmed. Unmolested." His lips quirked. "Assuming, of course, they can still remember the way after this little adventure of yours."

"Your officers will surrender their arms and armor—not as spoils, but as... let’s call it a lesson in humility. They may keep their lives and their limbs, which is more than most rebels can claim when the dust settles."

He held up a second finger, the motion slow and ceremonial.

"Second—you, my noble lords, will ride to the capital. Unarmed. Unguarded. And there, beneath the throne built by princes greater than you could ever aspire to be..." His voice dropped to a velvet-wrapped blade, "you will kneel. Not the pretty little court bows you’re accustomed to, but proper kneels—foreheads to the marble, like penitent children who’ve finally learned their lesson."

The prince’s gaze swept across their faces, noting each flinch and twitch with quiet satisfaction.

"You will confess—publicly, explicitly, without your usual weasel words—that this war was born of your own arrogance. Your greed. Your staggering inability to recognize when you were well-governed." He growled the anger at the thought of month war coming in his voice "And then, if you’re very convincing, the Crown might deign to forgive you."

A third finger joined the others.

"Your heirs will accompany you to the capital, where they’ll remain as... honored guests of the court.They’ll be educated in proper governance, shown the error of their fathers’ ways... and held as surety against any future foolishness."

Alpheo’s expression hardened as he raised a fourth finger.

"Every temple, every merchant house, every foreign power that lent you coin or comfort—you will name them all. In writing. With evidence." His smile turned razor-sharp. "And in recompense for their generosity toward traitors, only a quarter of your lands and half your vassals will be returned to the Crown’s keeping."

The prince produced a small scroll from his saddlebag, letting it unfurl with theatrical flair.

"The sum of twelve thousand silverii from each of you," he announced, "payable over three years. Plus every scrap of treasure, every religious relic, every last copper penny your rebel allies funneled into this doomed enterprise."

Finally, he turned his attention to Elios, his voice taking on a particularly poisonous sweetness.

"As for you, holy father... you’ll retire. To a nice, quiet temple somewhere far from here. Perhaps by the sea—the salt air does wonders for aging lungs." His smile didn’t reach his eyes. "Your followers will be... redistributed to more orthodox houses of worship. ’’

Alpheo rolled the scroll back up with a crisp snap.

"These," he declared, "are the terms. Generous, given the circumstances. More generous than you deserve." His gaze turned flinty. "And non-negotiable."

The rebel lords stood frozen, a collection of statues carved from varying degrees of shock, rage, and resignation. Gregor’s massive hands trembled where they gripped his reins. Niketas had gone pale beneath his weathering. Lysander’s pretty mouth worked soundlessly, as if trying and failing to summon one of his famous silver-tongued retorts.

Only Elios remained still, his face an impassive mask—though the white-knuckled grip on his staff betrayed his turmoil.

Alpheo watched them with the quiet satisfaction of a chessmaster who’d just declared checkmate. He could see the calculations running behind their eyes—the desperate search for alternatives, the cold realization that there were none. No hidden cavalry. No miracle reinforcements. No divine intervention coming to save them.

Just the inexorable weight of defeat, settling onto their shoulders like a mantle of lead.

Elios opened his mouth, his breath drawing with that familiar fervor of the pulpit, but before he could utter a word, Niketas raised a hand and stepped forward, cutting the priest off with a glance that said enough.

The old noble turned to Alpheo.

The wind carried the scent of damp earth and trampled grass as Niketas bowed his head, his voice barely rising above the whisper of the breeze. "Your Grace speaks of mercy," he began, each word measured like gold on a merchant’s scale, "yet from all we have witnessed—your victories stretching across three battlefields, the collapse of our alliances, the utter ruin of our hopes—you hold no need to bargain. No reason to spare us." His eyes lifted, dark with exhaustion and something perilously close to curiosity. "Why then offer terms at all?"

Alpheo stilled, his face an unreadable mask for three heartbeats—four—before his lips curved into a smile that didn’t quite reach his eyes. It was the expression of a man savoring a joke only he understood.

"Honestly," he mused, the words laced with cool amusement, "I didn’t think any of you capable of such introspection at this stage."

He shifted in his saddle, the polished leather creaking softly as he turned his face toward the heavens, as if consulting some invisible arbiter.

"Let me spare you the trouble of dissecting my motives," he continued, his voice dropping into something almost conversational. "The war is won. The rebellion is broken. That is the simple, unchangeable truth of it." His gaze swept back to them, sharp as a honed blade. "No amount of negotiation will alter that scale.You are on your last legs, one small push and you are down...."

For a moment, the only sound was the restless shift of horses and the distant cry of a falcon circling high above. Then Alpheo exhaled, the sound almost weary, and something in his posture shifted—not softening, precisely, but settling, like a sword being sheathed with deliberate care.

"The gods have favored me," he said quietly, and for the first time, there was something approaching sincerity in his tone. "Not just on the battlefield, where steel decides all, but in the quieter victories—the ones that matter more, that at home." His gloved hand flexed briefly on the reins. "Peace is harder won than war, and more precious. Perhaps that is why I’m inclined to... gratitude."

He leaned forward then, the movement bringing him into a shaft of sunlight that set his armor ablaze. The rebel lords instinctively tensed, as if bracing for a blow.

"Make no mistake," Alpheo murmured, his voice carrying clearly in the hush, "this mercy isn’t for you. It isn’t because you deserve it." His smile returned, beautiful and chilling. "But what better way to honor divine favor than by granting it to those who strove so earnestly to see me in the ground?"

He straightened, the motion fluid and regal, the falcon banner behind him stirring as if in agreement. The morning light caught in the embroidery of his surcoat, setting the threads alight like liquid gold.

"Don’t mistake this for kindness," he warned, his voice hardening. "Consider it opportunity. And thank whatever gods you wish, for that piety moves me today."

Niketas drew a breath that seemed to cost him dearly. The other rebel lords watched him with the tense stillness of men balanced on a knife’s edge, their silence pressing against his back like a physical weight. When he finally spoke, his voice was quiet but unwavering, the words dragged from some deep reserve of dignity.

"Your Grace," he began, then hesitated—a rare stumble for the silver-tongued lord. "Might we... have until tomorrow to confer? To give these terms the consideration they warrant?"

Alpheo regarded him for a long moment, the wind tugging playfully at the hem of his cloak, as if even the elements waited on his verdict. Finally, he inclined his head—a single, precise motion, like the fall of a guillotine.

"You may," he allowed. "But mark this well." His hand lifted, pointing toward the eastern ridge where the sun would first breach the horizon. "When dawn breaks there, I will have your answer. If it does not come..." He let the implication hang, heavy and sharp. "There will be no more parlays. No more envoys. The next words between us will be written in steel and smoke." freewёbnoνel.com

His gaze hardened, the amiable mask slipping to reveal the ruthless general beneath. "This is your last moment of civility. Waste it, and the war will speak for you. And I promise you—it does not stammer."

With a final, lingering look, he turned his horse, the animal stepping neatly to the side as if sensing its rider’s intent. The royal guard parted before him like wheat before the scythe.

"One of our banners will lie trampled in the dirt before this ends," he called back, the words floating over his shoulder like a prophecy. "I have every intention of ensuring it isn’t mine."

And with that, he rode away, the falcon standard snapping proudly above him, leaving behind only silence and the slow, sinking realization of a morning yet to come.