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Now reading: Chapter 34: Rumors of the Hunter from GoT: From Mud To Iron, a Action novel by Zefyrus0.

Solomon drew the Myrish blade gifted to him by Raymun Darry. The fine steel flashed a cold silver arc in the dim forest light.

"Lushen! Sound the horn!"

"Soldiers! With ! Kill!"

This was his first ti leading a charge. But he was ready.

With a roar that shook the leaves, Solomon and Lushen's squad burst from the dense undergrowth, slamming into the flank of the already panicked Burned n.

Savages equal rit! rit equals gold! Ti is money!

Solomon took the lead, weaving through the trees with supernatural agility. His sword moved like lightning, every strike seeking a vital point.

The strange enhancent to his senses—perhaps a gift from his arrival in this world—was fully active. The world seed to slow down.

A wildling with a battle axe roared and lunged at him.

Solomon sidestepped the heavy blow with effortless grace. A simple flick of his wrist, and the man's head was severed from his shoulders.

Behind him, his soldiers stared for a split second.

"Is that... is that Lord Solomon?"

They had never seen a noble fight like a demon before. It only fueled their frenzy.

anwhile, at the rear of the column, Lauchlan's squad struck like a dagger into the enemy's back.

The trap snapped shut.

The Burned n were encircled. The Stone Crows, seeing the slaughter, abandoned their loot and their "allies," fleeing toward the forest edge.

Within minutes, the remaining Burned n—less than a dozen—were compressed into a tight circle, surrounded by dripping spears.

Solomon raised his hand. The killing stopped.

He looked at the survivors. Del son of Cheek was propped up by two of his warriors, bleeding heavily from an arrow wound.

"Drop your weapons," Solomon said coldly. "Surrender or die."

Del spat blood onto the ground. He looked at the Lowlander with pure hate.

"A warrior of the Burned n never drops his weapon!" he sneered.

Solomon smiled. A cold, predatory smile.

"Is that so?"

He turned to his n.

"Throw spears! Loose arrows!"

The soldiers blinked. The enemy was practically defenseless. Why waste arrows?

But they obeyed instantly. Solomon was their provider, their god of fortune. His word was law.

Thwack! Thwack! Thwack!

Another volley of wood and iron tore into the small circle.

Screams of agony filled the air. Soon, only bodies remained on the forest floor, twitching in the dirt.

"I don't take prisoners," Solomon said flatly.

It was the final injection of madness.

The soldiers roared and surged forward.

"rit! Money!"

They fought over the bodies to deliver the killing blows, to claim the heads and ears. There was no rcy, no hesitation.

The massacre ended as quickly as it began.

Silence returned to the forest. But it was a heavy silence, absent even of birdsong.

Solomon looked around.

Limbs and entrails were scattered across the leaves. This was war in the age of cold steel—at grinding against at. It was a test of the human soul.

But when he looked at his n, he saw no trauma.

They looked at him with eyes burning with fanaticism. Their faces were sared with blood and mud, but they were grinning. They were hungry for more.

Since that first payout, they had ceased to be farrs. They had beco beasts. Human life was now just a currency exchange.

This is the law of Westeros, Solomon told himself. To survive, to protect what is yours, you must be stronger, crueler, and colder than the enemy.

rcy was a luxury for the victor.

He exhaled slowly. Is this the army I wanted? Perhaps not. But it is the army I need.

Solomon turned his gaze to the terrified captives huddling on the ground.

Outside the walls of Runestone. The siege camp of the Mountain Clans.

It was a sprawling, chaotic ss of animal skin tents, crude lean-tos, and massive bonfires. Garbage and bones were scattered everywhere.

The Burned n occupied the largest section. They loved fire above all else.

Inside the great tent of Titt son of Titt, the air was thick with smoke and tension.

The chieftains of the clans sat in a circle. They wore furs and looted armor, their unique and terrifying weapons close at hand.

Titt sat at the head. He was a nightmare made flesh—massive, covered in burn scars, with one empty eye socket that seed to stare into your soul. He was a Red Hand, a war chief of the Burned n.

To his left sat Shagga son of Dolf of the Stone Crows. He was a hairy giant, drinking looted wine from a horn, his twin axes leaning against his thigh.

To his right was Chella daughter of Cheyk of the Black Ears. A small, wiry woman, flat-chested as a boy, with a necklace of dried ears.

Around them sat the leaders of the Milk Snakes, the Moon Brothers, the Sons of the Mist, the Painted Dogs.

The chieftain of the Milk Snakes coughed nervously.

"There is a rumor," he began. "They say there is a..."

"Rumors!" Titt barked, his voice like grinding stones. "What ghost story have you cowards invented now?"

"It is not a story..." the Milk Snake chief stamred. Everyone feared Titt. "They say there is a Lowlander army. They say... they are hunting us."

The eyes of the other chieftains flickered. Several raiding parties had failed to return recently.

"Hunting us?" Shagga laughed, bits of wine dripping from his beard. "The sheep hunting the wolves?"

"It is true!" the chief of the Howlers shouted. "My son took n to find grain! He never ca back!"

"Your son probably got killed by a rabbit!" Titt sneered. "Cowards!"

"Who are you calling a coward?!" the Howler chief jumped up, hand on his sword.

The tent erupted.

Accusations flew. Old feuds resurfaced. The fragile alliance, built only on the promise of loot, was cracking under the pressure of the unknown.

Weapons were drawn. The air humd with the threat of violence.

Shagga slamd his axe into the dirt. Boom!

Even that didn't fully silence them. Chella watched with cold eyes, hand on her knife, ready to kill anyone who ca close.

"Enough!" Titt roared.

He stood up, towering over them. He drove his longsword into the earth, burying it halfway to the hilt.

"If you want to run back to the mountains like beaten dogs, go! If you want to plunder, you follow Titt son of Titt!"

The eting broke up in chaos. The chieftains stord out, taking their anger and suspicion with them.

No consensus was reached. The alliance was fracturing.

And out in the dark, the hunter was still watching.

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