Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king-Chapter 624: A new dawn(3)

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Chapter 624: A new dawn(3)

The clash of bodies had long lost any semblance of battle and had turned into a blood-soaked melee — a grotesque theater of groans, screams, and steel biting into flesh. The ground beneath the fighters had become slick with blood, not just splattered but pooled in shallow depressions, turning every step into a risk of slipping — and many did, falling not to blades, but to trampling boots and hammering feet. fɾeewebnoveℓ.co๓

The Chorsi line, made of boys who longed to be men, was faltering. Their breathing was ragged, their swings wild, desperate. Many gripped their weapons like clubs now — chipped spears, notched axes. They fought with a defiance born more of fear than pride.

But their fear could not stop the Duskwindai.

Heavier, older, and angrier, they came down like an avalanche of bone and bronze. They hacked without mercy, without hesitation. One Chorsi youth screamed as a war axe sank into his shoulder, the sound sharp and ugly, cut short when a second blow opened his skull like rotted wood. His body dropped, twitching, tripping the man beside him, who was gutted before he could get back to his feet.

Blood and offal coated the Duskwindai’s blades, staining their hands to the elbow. Their faces were twisted in war-cries and maddened howls — not out of fear, but something worse: satisfaction.

A Chorsi boy, no older than sixteen, stabbed out with a jagged spear. It caught one of the attackers in the thigh — but before he could pull it free, the wounded man roared, yanked the shaft from his own leg, and drove it, butt-end first, into the youth’s face. The crack of bone was followed by a spray of red and teeth.

Another Chorsi stumbled backward, blinded by blood pouring from a gash across his forehead. He screamed for help, arms flailing, only to fall onto his back, where a boot crushed his throat before a blade opened his belly with a wet rip that sent his entrails spilling into the mud.

There was no room for strategy here. No space to think. It was hand against hand, limb against limb, the stronger dominating the weaker in the most primal and brutal expression of violence.

And the Chorsi were weaker.

Even from a distance, it was clear. Their formation was crumbling — not shattered yet, but sagging, the center bending like iron under a forge hammer. For every Duskwindai that fell, three Chorsi were left in the dirt, their blood bubbling from mouths too young to have kissed their first lover.

Their war cries were fading, replaced by choking gurgles, cries for mothers, gods, and help that would not come. Some tried to fall back, but there was nowhere to go — only comrades too busy dying to offer space, and enemies too eager to let them escape.

It was not war. It was not battle.It was butchery.And the Chorsi were moments away from breaking before their chieftain finally understood it was the moment.

–UNNNNNNNN–

A great horn bellowed through the valley, deep and ancient, like the groaning of some titanic beast awakening beneath the earth. The sound rolled over the battlefield, silencing the clash of steel and the screams of dying men for a heartbeat — just one. Enough.

The Duskwindai, their axes mid-swing and blood still fresh on their blades, froze. For a blink, they glanced at one another, confusion wrinkling their blood-streaked brows. That sound... it wasn’t theirs. It came from the woods — from both sides.

Then they saw them.

From the treeline, in a crashing of underbrush and the glint of sunlight through steel, thousands of warriors emerged — not boys, not ragged raiders, but warriors armored in gleaming chainmail, shields slung over one shoulder, and axes that caught the sun like fire off a mirror.

They came in a roaring wave, descending upon the flanks of the Duskwindai like twin jaws of a beast closing shut upon them.

At first, the enemy thought it a trick of the light , none of them had ever seen so much steel after all. But as the ranks swelled and the pounding of boots became thunder, the truth struck harder than any axe.

It wasn’t just the surprise that sent the Duskwindai reeling.It wasn’t even the numbers.It was the sight — that unnatural, awe-striking sight of the Chorsi warriors equipped with steel. A glistening tide of iron and fury.

Their formation shattered like glass under a hammer.

Thousands of warriors had joined the fight , not in scattered groups, but in coordinated waves. Their armor gleamed, chainmail vests catching the sun like the scales of dragons, helmets smooth and polished, and axes honed to such a finish they flashed with every killing arc.

The DuskWindai turned—first to their right, then their left—and realized too late that the enemy now surrounded them on three sides.

From both sides, the Chorsi veterans crashed into them with brutal precision — axes biting through exposed backs and sides, spears sliding under ribs, shields slamming into heads with dull, meaty thuds. The air filled with the crack of breaking bones, the metallic shriek of weapons, and a fresh symphony of screams — this time, Duskwindai screams.

The attackers had become the attacked.

Caught in a perfect pincer, almost surrounded and unprepared, the Duskwindai fought back with the desperation of drowning men. Their proud charge had become a trap — and now they were animals, cornered and bleeding, trapped between the remains of the Chorsi front line and the full fury of their hidden strength.

The balance of the battle shifted in a single breath —And the valley wept anew, this time for the pride of the Duskwindai.

One Duskwindai warrior, wide-eyed and sweating, turned to meet the oncoming steel—but too slowly. A Chorsi warrior smashed his shield into the man’s face with a grunt, shattering his nose in a wet explosion of blood.

"Where’s that pride now, goat-thief?You took our hills!" the Chorsi snarled, driving his axe down into the man’s collarbone. There was a crack, then a pop, and the warrior’s scream was cut off as the blade lodged halfway into his chest.

Another Chorsi, blood splattering his mail like rust, gripped a spearman who had stumbled in the mud. With a snarl, he kicked the man’s knee backward. The Duskwindai shrieked, but the Chorsi only laughed as he slit his throat.

"Thought we’d run again, did you?" one shouted over the din, kicking the corpse. "Thought we’d beg you for mercy like last year?"

A Chorsi axe found the spine of a young Duskwindai who turned too late. The veteran who struck him didn’t stop—he pulled the man’s head back by the hair as he shouted

"For our home!Remember the hills!"

With the blood of the enemy still warm on their hands, the Chorsi roared their fury into the storm of screams and steel. They taunted the men they struck down. Some spat curses. Some recited names of people who had crossed the sea to pay the price to bring back their homes, reminding themselves of every sister taken , every friend lost and every father that was missed.

The mud turned black with gore. Bones cracked like kindling. And for the first time in what had seemed like a glorious charge, the Duskwindai were the ones who broke—no longer proud warriors, but panicked beasts, slipping in blood, gurgling through ruined throats, and choking on the weight of revenge long delayed.

The DuskWindai had charged down the hill like a storm—unified, loud, wild. But what met them now was not the ragged line of half-naked youths they had scorned just minutes ago. What surrounded them now was steel, discipline, and vengeance made flesh.

Every direction they faced, the story was the same.

To the east, a cluster of DuskWindai tried to form a shield wall—but their padded and boiled leather meant nothing when Chorsi axes cleaved through their guards like wood, splitting shields and shoulders alike.

"Their armor! We can’t break through!" one shouted, just before a hooked axe tore his jaw from his face.

To the west, another group tried to fall back up the hill—but Chorsi warriors had already looped behind them, cutting off any retreat. The terrain they once thought a blessing, where they could show off their martial abilities, now became a trap. Those who turned to flee were hacked down from behind, cries silenced mid-sentence, blood painting the slope in thick, black lines.

In the center, where Vhomo’s elite had led the charge, the fighting was the worst. There, the Chorsi were young and unbloodied; however after minutes of being slaughtered and now seeing the battle turned to their sides, changed their fear in anger and fury.

The Duskwindai had always prided themselves on ferocity. But here, ferocity met better equipment and better tactics, and of course it crumbled.

They were forced to fight in all directions, spinning, sweating, bleeding—always reacting, never striking first. For every blow they landed, the Chorsi landed five. For every man they cut down, ten of theirs fell.

Their roars had turned to whimpers. Their unity broke. Formations became clumps, clumps became knots, and soon, each knot became a mass grave in the making.

By the time the sun reached midday in the open sky , the DuskWindai were no longer an army.They were prey.

Surrounded. Shattered. Dying.

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