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Now reading: Chapter 505: Shield of Aracina(3) from Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king, a Action novel by Allevatoredicapre.

The battle erupted like a storm breaking—all screaming tal and flashing steel, all blood and fury and the raw, animal desperation of n who know there is no retreat.

The attackers ca in a howling tide, their blades hungry, their eyes wild with the promise of conquest. They shoved and hacked and died, their bodies piling up like cordwood as they fought for every inch of stone.

The defenders t them with teeth bared and shields locked, their backs to their city, their hos, their children. They fought not like soldiers, but like wolves with their den at their backs—cornered, savage, utterly without rcy. Every sword stroke carried the weight of seventeen days of siege. Every spear thrust carried the mory of friends already lost.

Then—the halberdiers struck.

They had waited like coiled vipers, their long weapons useless in the initial press, their patience absolute. Now, as the enemy line stretched thin, as the attackers beca tangled in their own dead, the halberdiers moved with chilling precision, like a snake that first curled his sleek body around his prey before sinking its maws around it.

The halberds sang.

The first swing took a rcenary full in the chest, the axe-head shearing through mail like parchnt, splitting ribs, bursting lungs in a spray of crimson. The man didn’t even scream—just gaped like a fish as his legs gave out beneath him.

Another halberd hooked downward, its spike punching through the base of a soldier’s neck. The blade bit deep, nearly severing spine from skull, sending the man’s helt spinning away, his face still locked in a rictus of shock.

A third attacker—so green boy barely old enough to hold a sword—turned to flee.

Too late in that wise decision.

A halberd’s hook lashed out, catching his ankle, yanking him off his feet. He hit the stone hard, his scream cut short as the follow-through crushed his ribcage like kindling.

"Running already?" A defender laughed, bloody spittle flying from his lips from an earlier wound as he smashed his shield into an enemy’s face. Bones crunched. The man dropped like a sack of grain. "Thought you wanted our fucking cityl!" he shouted as he went downward with his dagger

Another halberd whirled, its spear-tip punching clean through chainmail, gutting a man like a pig. He stumbled back, hands clutching at the ruin of his belly, his intestines spilling between his fingers. A defender kicked his blade off with a sneer.

"Welco to Aracina, you shit-eating dogs!" he roared. "Hope you like the view!"

The enemy line wavered. Their charge had been reckless, fueled by numbers and bloodlust, but now they were caught in a killing ground. The halberdiers worked with machine-like efficiency, their long weapons carving through flesh and bone, turning the wall into a charnel house. Every gap in armor was exploited. Every overextended thrust t with a counter that left n choking on their own blood.

Yet still, they ca.

A giant of a man bellowed a war cry and charged, his shield bristling with arrows. He smashed into a defender, sending the man sprawling, then raised his sword for the killing blow—

—only to have a halberd’s spike punch clean through his throat from a man that had quickly flanked him.

The giant gagged, and dead he went like the other.

The stones soon grew slick. The air stank of blood and voided bowels. n slipped in the carnage, their deaths coming as they struggled to rise.

And still—still—the defenders held.

They fought like n possessed, like demons given flesh. They fought for every cobblestone, every inch of their ho. They fought until their arms burned and their vision blurred and their throats ran raw with screams.

The battle was certainly not over, as after all the true horror of a siege tower was not in its imposing height or the creaking nace of its slow advance—it was in what it allowed the enemy to do once it reached the walls.

A ladder assault was easy to defend again and predictable. n climbed one by one, vulnerable to arrows, stones, boiling sand, and fire. Even those who reached the top would find themselves faced with a waiting defender, sword or spear already poised to strike them down before they could gain their footing. A ladder ant struggle, a desperate, grueling ascent through death itself.

But a siege tower?

When the bridge dropped, the enemy didn’t trickle in one by one—they poured in.

No frantic scrambling. No mont of weakness. No isolated fighters easily cut down before reinforcents could arrive. The n inside the tower simply marched forward as if stepping into another room, shield raised, sword ready, throwing themselves straight into the fray.

And the worst part? They never stopped coming.

The defenders could cut them down, hack and stab and shove them back, but the flood did not end. Each man who fell was replaced by another stepping over his corpse, fresh and eager, surging forward without hesitation.

The fight beca a war of endurance—who could last longer? The ones holding the wall, battling exhaustion and dwindling numbers? Or the endless wave of n pouring from the tower, driven by the knowledge that if they hesitated, they would be the ones cast down to the blood-soaked stone below?

That was why siege towers were so much deadlier.

They didn’t just attack the walls. They swallowed them in numbers until one side broke and the other roared.

-------

Asag’s eyes flicked downward, tracking the relentless rhythm of the enemy’s battering ram as it pounded against the city’s gates.

Each impact sent vibrations shuddering through the stone beneath his boots—a deep, resonant boom that echoed in his bones. Beneath their wooden mantlet, draped in water-soaked hides to repel fire, the ram crew worked with chanical precision, driving the iron-capped log forward again and again, their faces slick with sweat in the stifling heat of their shelter.

But Asag’s mouth curled into a grim smile.

The cauldrons were ready.

A soldier at the base of the wall had just enough ti to glance upward before the first cascade of scorching grit rained down. His scream was a raw, animal thing, torn from his throat as the molten grains poured into every gap in his armor. It slithered beneath his breastplate, filled his gauntlets, trickled into his boots. He dropped his weapon, clawing at his own skin, but the sand clung like a second layer of flesh, searing deeper with every frantic movent.

Beside him, another man tore off his helt in a blind panic—only for an arrow to punch through his exposed eye. Others staggered from beneath the shelter, slapping at their armor like n possessed, their shrieks joining the chorus of agony. So collapsed, rolling in the dirt, but the sand had already done its work. Their skin blistered and blackened, their screams thinning to whimpers as the heat fused their clothing to their bodies.

The ram’s crew was broken.

Asag didn’t linger on their suffering. His gaze had already shifted—eastward, where the true threat lood.

Where the siege tower had t stone.

The battlefield roared around him—a tempest of steel and screams—but he stood silent at its eye, his face carved from stone. He had long since learned to drown out the chorus of dying n, to let their anguish wash over him like rain against a cliffside. A commander could not afford to feel. A commander could only act.

Yet as his gaze fixed upon the eastern wall, sothing cold and heavy settled in his gut.

The siege tower’s maw had opened, disgorging a river of killers onto the battlents. His halberdiers fought like n possessed, their long blades reaping lives with brutal efficiency, their hooks dragging screaming foes into the abyss below. But even demons tire. Even wolves can be overrun.

How long? he wondered. How long before they break?

"My lord!"

The ssenger’s voice was a ragged thing, torn from a throat raw with smoke and desperation. The boy stumbled forward, his face streaked with soot and sweat, his chest heaving.

"The eastern wall—they beg for reinforcents!The enemy is gaining ground"

Asag’s jaw clenched so tight his teeth ached.

Damn them.

Damn them all to the deepest pits, why can’t they not hold a wall for a day?

Still, he had known this would co. The eastern wall was the city’s rotten tooth, weak and crumbling. The loss of the second siege tower had bought them ti—but ti was a currency spent quickly in war. Now, the ledger was coming due.

"Calion!" His voice cut through the din like a blade.

The grizzled sub-centurion turned. He did not speak. He did not need to.

"Take forty n. Hold that wall with all that you can give."

Calion’s nod was sharp as a headsman’s axe. He turned, barking orders, and like shadows summoned from the earth, warriors peeled away from the fray—so limping, so bleeding, all gripping their weapons with hands that had long since forgotten fear, all doing their duty, all ready to die for it.

Forty souls.

Each one that of a giant, but still forty souls.

That was all he could spare.

By the Gods how low we have fallen, he thought as he watched them go, his chest tight. Around him, the remnants of his reserves stood like ghosts, their armor dented, their eyes hollow. Boys with old n’s faces. Veterans with blood crusted beneath their nails. If the line broke elsewhere, there would be no one left to plug the gap. No miracle waiting in the wings.

Only the streets.

Only the last, desperate barricades, where n would fight back-to-back in the ruins of their hos, where every alley would beco a grave, every square a pyre.

This is how cities fall, he thought. Not with a crash, but with a whisper.

The wind howled through the battlents, carrying with it the stench of blood and burning flesh. Sowhere beyond the smoke, the sun was setting—its dying light painting the walls in hues of rust and gold, as if the very stones were bleeding.

Asag exhaled, slow and asured, and turned back to the slaughter.

Hold, he willed his n. Hold, or let the city burn with us and them inside.

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