Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king-Chapter 620: A life always on the moving

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Chapter 620: A life always on the moving

Alpheo had always harbored a quiet fascination with the nomadic tribes—their wandering lives, the absence of tilled soil beneath their feet, and the way their existence seemed to glide past the very concept of permanence. He had long struggled to wrap his mind around the idea that entire peoples could thrive without the bedrock of agriculture, that they could live untethered to stone walls and wheat fields.

And with confusion, of course, came curiosity—the lifeblood of every true historian. That hunger for understanding had only deepened over the years, especially since Egil—his stalwart companion and the only one among them born to a nomadic lineage—could recall little of that life. Egil’s memories were fogged with time, and even those fragments stemmed from a period when his people had already been resettled under Romelian rule.

That thirst for knowledge was precisely why Alpheo had tasked Aron and Valen with keeping detailed journals throughout their journey. Every observation, custom, and idle conversation with the tribes was to be recorded and later sent back to the court. Alpheo didn’t expect these writings to yield any immediate political or strategic benefit—no, this was a matter of pride. Scholar’s pride.

History had taught Alpheo that whenever a nomadic culture brushed up against a settled civilization, one of two outcomes usually followed: the nomads either resisted and after looting the place, they would go theri merry way , or they were absorbed—bit by bit—into the world of cities, tax levies, and iron laws. Such was the fate of countless tribes that the old Romelian emperors had coaxed into their lands with promises of pasture, only to eventually civilize—or subdue—them.

There were exceptions, of course. The Mongols came to mind, who, despite forging empires and touching every continent with their thunderous hooves, somehow clung to fragments of their ancestral ways even into the modern age. A rarity, but a compelling one.

Still, not to wander too far afield—Alpheo knew that nomadic life came with more than just different tents and meals. It came with an entirely different worldview. One that shaped everything from diplomacy to warfare, marriage to memory. These weren’t merely people without cities—they were people without roots, and that changed everything.

The mountain tribes that Alpheo and his companions now dealt with were semi-nomadic. They did not drift aimlessly across the land, but moved within a vast ancestral domain—cycling from valley to highland with the turn of seasons, always following the grass, always keeping the herd fed. They did not think in terms of land ownership, but rather of influence—wide swaths of terrain that belonged to them only in use, not title.

And therein lay the tension.

Where one tribe’s influence ended, another’s began. And where those hazy borders overlapped, conflict was never far behind. Sometimes it erupted in the form of raids and blood feuds; other times, it was smoothed over with barter, marriage alliances, or the ceremonial sharing of salt and meat.

Either war or diplomatic solution.

In the case of Varaku’s tribe and the Duskwindai it was the first.

The Duskwindai were among the most formidable tribes in the mountains—not the absolute masters, perhaps, but certainly in the top tier of power. They commanded the largest herds, boasted the broadest swaths of pasture, and wielded a force of warriors that could trample most opposition without breaking a sweat. And with that strength came hunger—a constant, gnawing hunger for more land, more grass, more sky.

That hunger eventually led them to encroach upon the territory of Varaku’s tribe.

The ultimatum had come swiftly and without ceremony: surrender the grazing lands or be prepared to defend them with blood. And though Varaku’s people were proud, they were not fools.

Before them stood a tribe whose numbers dwarfed their own, whose warriors could outmatch theirs five to one. So they chose exile—abandoning their ancestral pastures and moving into rougher, harsher terrain that offered little more than survival.

But even survival has its price.

Unlike most mountain tribes, who centralized their people around a core settlement or stronghold, the Duskwindai had grown so large, so vast in scope, that they had fractured by necessity. Their strength came from decentralization. Instead of one massive camp, they spread out across the hills and valleys like wildfire—each sub-tribe acting as an extension of the main body. Semi-autonomous, yet loyal.

Among these offshoots was the Wiskandai, a powerful branch of the Duskwindai who had settled in the rich hills that once belonged to Torghan’s people—Varaku’s tribe. Their rule there was overseen by Vhomo, one of the Great Chieftain’s sons, appointed as a kind of vassal-lord. He held all the authority of a tribal chief within that smaller territory, answering only to his father and flying the banners of Duskwindai dominance.

So when word began to spread—hushed at first, then roaring like wind through dry leaves—that Varaku’s exiled tribe was returning, not as refugees, but as warriors, ready to reclaim what had been taken—Vhomo was the first to face the storm.

The Great Chieftain still sat comfortably in his northern highlands, unaware or perhaps unconcerned. But his son, now lord of a contested pasture, found himself staring down the very ghosts his people thought they had buried.

However, if one were to assume that the young man—granted powers equal to those of a chieftain—greeted the news of war with hesitation or dread, then they would be sorely mistaken.

Vhomo felt no fear.

No, what surged through his veins that day that he was informed war had came to his doorstep, was not caution, but exhilaration. The kind that made his breath catch and his heart pound like a war drum. War was not a burden to him. It was a gift. An opportunity wrapped in steel and blood.

For Vhomo, this was the moment he had long prayed for.

The return of Varaku’s tribe—those same people who had once fled before the might of the Duskwindai—was seen by others as a minor disturbance, an upstart tribe trying to bite the hand that once slapped it away. But to Vhomo, it was a stage, and the spirits themselves had set it.

He was the youngest of three sons in the house of the Great Chieftain. The third-born, the overlooked one. His eldest brother was a seasoned war-leader, bloodied in the campaigns against the Whitefang clans of the northeast, sung about around campfires with cups raised in his name. The second brother, a skilled man, had raided the lowland settlements and returned with plunder, captives, and tales to match.

Vhomo had no such victories to his name. No scars to show, no bards to sing of him. Until recently, he had been little more than a boy among men—kept out of council, out of war, and out of favor.

That changed when his father, perhaps out of pity or calculation, handed him a vassalage over the Wiskandai-held hills—fertile lands once grazed by Varaku’s people. It was supposed to be a simple, quiet post. A place to learn, to make mistakes out of sight. No one expected him to shine there.

But now fate had drawn a sword and laid it in his hands.

The same tribe that had once tucked tail and left their homeland without a fight had returned, teeth bared, demanding war. To the warriors under his banner, this was insult. To Vhomo, this was salvation.

Because if he crushed them—if he routed their warriors and held their chieftain’s head high before the gathering fires—then he would no longer be the forgotten son.

This wasn’t just a skirmish for some windswept pasture.

This was his proving ground.

And Vhomo intended to soak it in glory.

"Should I send word to your father and inform him of the recent developments?" asked the older man standing beside him , his voice measured, careful. "Perhaps request that he gather his warriors and march to reinforce us?"

Vhomo turned to face him, excitement barely veiled behind his sharp eyes and composed features. The man was his father’s choice—a seasoned retainer sent not only to assist but also to observe, to report, perhaps even to restrain. Vhomo had always known that. But now, with the fire of war on the wind, he had no intention of letting this moment slip into another man’s hands.

"Yes," he said finally, "send word to Father. Inform him that the Chorsi are mobilizing, and that we may soon meet them in battle."

The man nodded, already turning as if to carry out the order, but Vhomo’s next words made him pause.

"—But tell him we’ll be marching without him."

A brief silence fell between them, punctuated only by the whinnying of horses nearby and the faint call of herdsmen in the distance.

"He won’t reach us in time," Vhomo continued, voice steady. "By the time his warbands arrive, the goats will be gone, the sheep scattered, and our warriors angry that we let our land burn beneath our feet. We have a herd to protect. What excuse shall I give them while we cower and wait?"

The older man arched a brow. "You could call the herd inside the settlement. Fortify. Buy time. It would be wiser than risking everything on open ground."

Vhomo smiled thinly—the kind of smile that didn’t reach the eyes, but still told the truth.

"No," he said. "We will march at once. We are not sheep to hide behind walls while wolves circle. Our warriors will not tolerate timidity—not when the enemy treads on their own soil."

The man studied him for a long moment. Behind the sharp cheekbones and the fire of youth in his eyes, he saw it clearly now—not just the eagerness to fight, but the hunger for something greater. Vhomo didn’t want a shared victory. He wanted his moment. A triumph unmarred by his father’s shadow or his brothers’ names. He wanted no one to claim what would soon be his. fɾeewebnoveℓ.co๓

"I see," the man said at last "Then shall I raise the warriors?"

"Yes," Vhomo said. "Send word. Let every clan and household hear of the Chorsi aggression. Tell them our herds have been threatened and that our blood will not be spilled without answer. "

He paused, eyes fixed on the distant hills, as if already watching the coming battle unfold.

"Let them rise as one, and ride as stormclouds roll down these mountains."

The older man gave a small nod, turned, and left to carry out the order. Vhomo remained where he stood, feeling the wind lift through the valley, ruffling his cloak like the wings of something ancient.

He had made his choice.

But in this stillness, before the first cry of war—Vhomo let himself believe, if only for a moment, that he was already victorious.

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