Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king

Chapter 715: Wolf's cloth



A lone man strode forward through the scorched remnants of what had once been a proud settlement, the wind whispering like the voices of the dead.

Draped in the heavy pelt of a northern wolf, its grey fur matted by old blood and snow, he carried himself with the pride of a mountain lion.

Behind him, two slaves trailed in silence, bent low beneath the weight of tightly wrapped bundles.

Their feet stirred the dirt path, no longer hardened from winter's bite but cracked from the breath of early spring. Dust rose around their ankles like ghosts.

It had been five long months since the massacre at the edge of the world, the Chorsi's so-called campaign of retribution, in which their warriors had butchered kin and kinfolk of the Duskwindai.

And though the snow had sealed the lands in silence, burying blood and ash under its frozen blanket, the pain had not slept.

Some had lost sons and daughters. Others, lovers. Even their chieftain lost his kin, he had been captured, mutilated, and left strung on a crooked pole. His screams, they said, had lasted for days before death took pity.

They had all wanted revenge. But the winter had denied it. Now, with its retreat, the Duskwindai had come, not with screaming hordes or raised axes, but with a message.

And the man who bore it came with his head held high, his stride sure, his heart unshaken.

He entered the broken square at the center of the settlement , where once their songs were sung. Now, only silence greeted him, save for the shuffling of hostile feet gathering at the edge of the plaza. He was surrounded before he had reached the middle, hundreds, perhaps thousands of Chorsi, packed tightly along the edge of the square. Warriors and elders. Their eyes burned holes into his back. Many wore the faces of restrained hatred.

Yet he showed no fear.

Reaching the center of the square, he stopped, the wolf pelt draping behind him like a cloak of winter shadows. Slowly, he clapped his hands—once, twice.

Behind him, the two slaves stepped forward.

They were young, gaunt from travel. They carried their burdens to a spot just a few paces in front of their master and set them down with reverence, as if placing an offering at the foot of an altar. Then they stepped back and fell to their knees, heads bowed.

Still, the envoy did not speak.

He turned his gaze to the crowd instead and let the silence thicken like fog. He allowed the weight of his presence to speak louder than any declaration, standing as a lone figure in the enemy's hearth, daring them to strike, daring them to ask why he had come.

But none would.

Five months ago they had annhilated one of their tribe; now, however, the full strength of the horde was to come.

The man slowly turned in place, his fur cloak sweeping behind him in the cold morning wind. He met the gaze of dozens, then hundreds, his eyes scanning across the crowd with a predator's patience. Where others would have bowed, broken, or blinked, he stared back, unblinking, unmoved.

Then, with arms stretched wide and voice rising like thunder from a mountain hollow, he spoke.

"Two years ago, we gave you a choice."

The words slammed against the walls of the square, echoing into the streets beyond, seizing the attention of even those who had dared to look away.

"To die like wolves... or to live like sheep."

A wave of murmurs spread through the crowd like ripples on water, and he grinned at the unrest. His eyes shimmered with cruel amusement.

"When we came here, when our banners flew over your homes and our warriors drank from your wells, we saw no wolves. We saw no fangs, no courage. You fled. You yielded. You bowed."

He paced now, slow and deliberate, letting his presence fill the space like a coiling serpent.

"Our herds fed on your grass. Our hunters stalked game in your forests. And still, you lowered your heads, choosing peace over pride. We thought the matter closed."

He paused and looked upward for a moment, as though giving the gods themselves a moment to listen.

"But we were mistaken."

His voice dropped , quieter now, almost tender. More dangerous.

"You rose. You struck from the shadow. You raised weapons you did not forge. You fought a war that was not yours to start."

Then, rising again like the roar of an avalanche:

"You killed the chieftain's son , our blood, our kin! You spilled noble blood upon this soil and thought yourselves brave. Victorious. Free."

He stepped forward, closer to the masses, until the front line of the crowd involuntarily took a step back.

"I do not know who gave you the steel you wielded. I do not know who whispered in your ears and told you to howl again like beasts. Perhaps you were promised safety. Perhaps you thought yourselves men once more."

His voice turned to ice.

"But know this."

He raised his hand and pointed toward the crowd, not as a gesture of accusation, but of judgment.

"You may have won a battle. You may have tasted, for a single heartbeat, the thrill of victory, But here we are, the consequence of your actions. We are the weight that falls after your reckless hands struck flint. We are the storm summoned by your first drop of blood."

He nodded to the crates behind him.

"We come as the memory you tried to bury. As the vengeance you thought had frozen and died with the winter snow."

He let the silence grow, watching the tension swell in the crowd like a rising tide.

"But understand this well, this fate is not yet sealed. If you continue on your path, then yes, death will come for you like wolves in the dark. But it is not hatred that brings us here."

He paced again, slowly, deliberately, his voice cutting through the thick, cold air.

"We do not hate you for taking what you could. That is the law of the living: take what you may, hold what you can. We hate you for believing that we were the ones to be taken from. That we were weak."

He gestured and almost in perfect unison, the two slaves unfastened the bundles they had carried.

From one, they drew a crimson cloth, beneath which glinted axes, shackles, and broken bones.

"Here lies war," the envoy said, turning toward it. "If this is your choice, then blood will flow. Your men will scream, your women will be taken, and your children will know the yoke of slavery. We will not stop until your name is erased from the mouths of your own dead.So that all may know of the prize given to those who angers the Duskwindai"

He turned now to the second bundle, from which the slaves drew wool, coils of dyed thread, and a ceremonial veil of woven flax.

"And here lies peace. Not the peace of equals, but the peace of the defeated. For your bravery, we offer mercy. You will become tjener to our people, servants, herders, vassals beneath our law."

His eyes swept the crowd again, unflinching.

"You will be permitted to stay. You will raise your sheep and bury your dead on this land. In exchange, you will give us tribute, wool every year, and women. And you will speak, truthfully, of where you found the steel that let you wound our kin."

He stood tall, now at the center of the square, arms wide like a man pronouncing judgment.

"That is our offer. A better choice that we gave you two years past. You know both paths now, and it is time to make a choice."

The square erupted as the choice was already made, he had expected it, but it did not hurt to hope.

A single voice shouted first—raw, guttural, furious:

"War!"

Then another, and another, until the entire crowd was roaring it like a chant

"WAR! WAR! WAR!"

It was thunder without stormclouds, a flood of noise crashing down like a wave upon the stone square. Old men banged their walking sticks against the earth, no longer able to fight they let their will be express by their sounds. And warriors, prideful of their victory and their desire to keep it, screamed it because they knew no other word for pride.

Fists rose. Spears rattled against shields. Some spat on the ground, others howled toward the overcast sky as if trying to summon the spirits of their slain.

The rage of the Chorsi, starved, bruised, beaten, but not broken, had burst loose like wildfire in dry grass.

The Duskwindai envoy stood at the center of it all, still as a stone amidst the storm.

His hair flapped in the wind stirred by the frenzy.

He knew this madness. He had seen it before, wielded it.

He opened his arms wide and shouted with all the strength left in his lungs, but his voice was lost to the crowd, swallowed whole by the fury of ten thousand throats.

Still, his lips moved with solemn clarity in that meaningless gesture:

"You have made your choice and we welcome it!"

He looked to the sky, letting the tension of the moment settle like dust on his shoulders.

Then, calmly, quietly, as if speaking to the wind itself he added:

"Death will come to the Chorsi.And our kin shall be avenged"

And he turned, slowly, robes trailing behind him like a shadow at dusk, his task accomplished not in the way they hoped, however, as the roar behind him instead of stilling itself, grew louder than ever.

War was to come once more.


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