Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 24: The Logic of Wolves from GoT: From Mud To Iron, a Action novel by Zefyrus0.

It was surprisingly easy.

Solomon stood on a rise behind the shield wall, watching the confusion unfold.

The Burned n—forty hardened killers who had terrorized the valleys for weeks—were standing frozen at the edge of the trench. They looked like actors who had forgotten their lines.

Barbarians, Solomon thought, suppressing a snort of laughter. If you don't use your brain, you stay a savage forever.

He had spent the night sweating, expecting a desperate, bloody lee in the dark. He had feared his green troops would break at the first scream.

Instead, the enemy had slept in, eaten a hearty breakfast, and then jogged into a kill zone like they were late for a party.

It wasn't that Solomon hadn't wanted to launch a night raid; he just didn't trust his soldiers to handle a chaotic skirmish in the dark.

He knew the reputation of the Hill Tribes. Tyrion Lannister had rated them highly. The Burned n were the most feared of all—warriors who mutilated themselves to prove their courage. Burn off a nipple, a finger, an ear. The more you lost, the more of a man you were.

Their war chief, Titt son of Titt, had supposedly gouged out his own eye with a red-hot knife.

When Solomon learned last night that he was facing the Burned n, he had panicked. But to his shock, the enemy hadn't tried to break out or attack while the camp was unfinished.

So Solomon had ordered his n to dig. All night long, they used farming tools and bare hands to turn the village exit into a fortress.

It wasn't a complex piece of military engineering. Just a ditch and a fence made of sharpened stakes. But against unarmored savages, it was a wall of death.

"Enemy charge!" Lushen scread, galloping along the line. "Shields up! Spears ready!"

But the charge faltered.

The Burned n skidded to a halt at the trench. The montum of their run died instantly. The warriors in the back bumped into the ones in the front, turning their terrifying wedge formation into a confused mosh pit.

They stood there, weapons raised, staring at the ditch.

The ferocious grins on their faces faded, replaced by a look of profound, existential confusion.

Why aren't they running away? their expressions seed to ask. Why are they hiding behind sticks?

The silence stretched, awkward and heavy.

Finally, one warrior stepped forward. He was a giant of a man, his cheek branded with a jagged scar. He pushed his way to the front, carrying a spiked club the size of a tree branch.

He walked right up to the edge of the trench, ignoring the archers aiming at his chest.

He planted his feet, puffed out his chest, and roared.

"Oi! You cowards!"

His voice echoed in the morning silence.

"Hiding behind wood? Is this how Lowlanders fight? Who is your chief? Step out! Face like a man!"

He stood there, radiating arrogance. To him, three hundred against forty was already an overwhelming advantage. Hiding behind a wall on top of that? It was pathetic.

Solomon watched from the high ground.

He's just standing there, Solomon thought, marveling at the absurdity. He walked into a siege and asked for a duel. How presumptuous.

Solomon felt the tension leave his shoulders.

"Archers," Solomon said, his voice bored. "Loose."

The bown on the flanks looked at him, arrows nocked. They had been tracking the loud barbarian the entire ti.

Thwip. Thwip. Thwip.

Twelve arrows hissed through the air.

There was no duel. There was no exchange of speeches. There was just physics.

The Burned Man didn't even have ti to look surprised.

Thud-thud-thud.

Arrows slamd into his chest. Two took him in the gut. One punched through his thigh. He looked, for a brief second, like a very surprised pincushion.

His shout died in his throat. His spiked club fell from his hand with a heavy clang.

He swayed, blood bubbling from his lips. His eyes went wide, staring at the shafts sticking out of his body.

Until the mont he died, he couldn't understand it.

He had t Lowlanders before. Knights in shining armor who talked about chivalry and honor. They would have ridden out. They would have fought him man-to-man.

But this... this was cheating.

He collapsed backward into the trench with a wet splash. Dead.

The Burned n roared in fury. They had never seen a Lowland chief so shaless!

"No honor!" they scread, shaking their axes. "Cowards! You killed him with sticks from afar!"

"Reload," Solomon ordered calmly.

Lushen and Lauchlan looked at him, slightly stunned. Even they had expected... sothing more noble. A challenge. A parley.

Solomon didn't explain.

Why follow rules? he thought. Why accept a fair fight?

It's a joke. A stupid, primitive joke.

War is inherently unfair. One side is always stronger. And today, the advantage is mine.

You are reading GoT: From Mud To Iron Chapter 24: The Logic of Wolves on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

The Innkeeper cover
Same genre

The Innkeeper

lifesketcher ·Action

Inthedepthsofanewbornuniverse,acultivatortakesadvantageoftheabundantenergytorefinehimselfatreasure.Butafter14billionyearsofrefiningandquiteafewmore...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.