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Now reading: Chapter 575: Putting an end to the war (4) from Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king, a Action novel by Allevatoredicapre.

Chapter 575: Putting an end to the war (4)

Alpheo tapped his fingers lightly on the table once more, a rhythm of finality, of tightening nooses.

In this negotiation, two sets of terms would weigh the heaviest on the conquered: the Seizure of Land and the War Reparations that they would be forced to pay.

“With three of the four pillars of peace now laid before us,” he said, voice slow and deliberate, “we co to the last matter. Perhaps the most imdiate—reparations.”

A shift rippled through the three lords, like the quiver of a beast cornered yet too proud to bare its throat.

“The Crown,” Alpheo continued, “has poured an ocean of coin into maintaining the armies that crushed this insurrection. The feeding, clothing, arming, and marching of n across scorched earth is not a matter of whim—it is blood paid in silver. Not to ntion the toll inflicted upon our towns, our roads, and our villages—the burning, the pillaging, the loss of life where the Oizenian and Herculeian boots trampled through like a plague of foreign locusts.”

He smiled, cool and calm.

“And so, compensation must be made.”

At that, Lord Lysandros stood sharply, his chair screeching backward across the tent floor like a shriek. “Your Highness, with all due respect,” he began, barely leashing his fury behind the ceremonial tone, “those damages were made by foreigners! We didn’t lead the Oizenian raids—we had no say over the pillaging they did. We held back our n, we only besieged Florium for a few weeks, and even then, we restrained our forces from wrecking the countryside to the minimum.”

Alpheo turned his gaze toward him, sharp as a whetted dagger.

“Oh, how noble,” he said dryly. “Only a few weeks of siege, then. A rcy. And perhaps you sent them wine and bread while you were at it?”

Lysandros scowled.

“The Crown recognizes no distinction,” Alpheo pressed on, “between the sword that slits a throat and the hand that points the way. You brought them here. You invited the wolves into our sheepfold. Do you believe you are blaless simply because you couldn’t leash the beasts you loosed upon us?”

The silence that followed was deep, cold, and heavy.

“No one forced you to rise in revolt,” Alpheo went on. “You weighed your fortunes, rallied your banners, and cast the die. You lost. Now the wounded villages, the orphaned children, the burned storehouses—they cry out for help from the crown. And since your ambitions sparked the blaze, it is only just that you pay for the buckets.”

Lysandros clenched his jaw, but slowly, bitterly, sank back into his seat, folding his arms as though to keep the words from spilling out of him like venom.

Alpheo’s voice softened to a mockery of courtesy, a nobleman’s elegance with a wolf’s teeth beneath it.

“You had no reason,” he said, each word clear and deliberate, “no cause to drag the realm into fire and blood. The Crown never trampled your rights. Never infringed upon the sacred privileges of your peerage. When Her Grace first ascended, untested and alone, you prodded—not out of concern, but to test her resolve and see how far you could go. When the crown called for its lords for war, you did not answer. Upon that provocation the Crown answered not with the sword, but with patience. rcy.”

He raised a single brow, the ghost of a smirk twitching at the corner of his lips.

“And yet still you rose. You cloaked your ambition in noble outrage, cried misdeeds and tyranny as you roused your banners. And now, here you kneel beneath the rod you provoked—so tell , lords. Now that your armies are shattered, now that you kneel upon that who you despised. Speak. What transgressions do you accuse us of?”

Silence throbbed for a mont before Lord Niketas shifted slightly and cleared his throat.

“Well, Your Highness,” he began carefully, “there was… so concern among our peers regarding the reforms to the governatorial offices within Crown lands. Many of our kin who once held those positions lost—”

Alpheo’s hand rose, and with it, his voice sliced through the tent like drawn steel.

“It is the Crown’s prerogative,” he snapped, “to govern its own domains however it sees fit, just as it is the right of the nobility to rule their lands without royal ddling. Or is it your belief that the throne should ask your permission to determine who will govern land that answers to the Crown alone?”

Niketas opened his mouth, brow furrowed, but Alpheo did not pause for a breath.

“Because if so,” he said, his tone darkening, “then perhaps you mistake the throne for a council seat in one of your provincial halls.”

A low, uncomfortable stir passed between the rebel lords.

Alpheo stood then, slow and towering, eyes cast like judgnt upon their bowed forms.

“Tell , my lords,” he said, each syllable like a nail in a coffin, “did any other house complain? Did any other noble call the Crown’s governance unjust? No. Only you. Only the lords gathered here, now stripped of armies, with tongues heavy and backs bent.”

He leaned slightly forward, voice dropping into a dangerous softness.

“You cry tyranny only when your coin purses are lightened, and shout ‘unjust’ only when your power is challenged. But loyalty is tested not in comfort—but in discomfort. And while others kept their oaths, you drew swords.”

A mont of silence followed, heavy and suffocating. No rebuttal ca—only the clink of Niketas’ ringed fingers curling over the edge of the table, whitened with restraint.

Alpheo gave a slow, final nod and sat back down, his composure returning like the calm sea after a storm.

“A man’s view of the world,” he said, “is forever twisted by the shape of his own heart.”

The lords glanced at each other, brows tense, lips pressed to silence.

“You,” Alpheo continued, lifting his gaze like the unsheathing of a blade, “let imagined slights fester in the darkness of your halls. Whispered doubts turned to poison. The rustle of change, of a Crown shaping the future, beca thunder in your ears. You let fear—that ancient, soft-bellied coward of the soul—rule you. And fear, my lords, births every injustice, every falsehood, every cowardly stroke of the blade in the night.”

He stood again, one hand resting on the poml of his sword, the other gesturing with solemn gravity.

“It was fear that made you refuse the terms I gave you that day on the hill,” he said. “It was fear that made you slink like wolves in the night and strike before dawn, spitting on the truce offered until sunrise. A slight I could’ve brought to this table with righteous fury—but did not. Not because I forgot. Because I forgave.”

The tent was silent. Even the guards seed to hold their breath.

“But what did fear win you?” he asked, voice rising. “A broken army? Crumbled alliances? Sons and kin buried in shallow graves? You believed you could shake the foundations of the realm—yet it was the Crown, led by courage and not complaint, that stood its ground. That held the line. That shattered a host three tis its size and marched across your lands like a storm of purpose.”

His eyes narrowed now, fire behind the calm of his expression.

“And make no mistake—those who moved against the Crown shall pay. First you. Then your allies. Then the worms hiding in their keep, awaiting pardon they have not earned. Your domains will feel the grip of justice, your nas—once roared in pride—will now whisper with sha through corridors of history.”

He leaned forward, voice dropping like the final toll of a bell.

“So,bear it. If your pride can take it. Or fight it… raise your blades once more, and let tear the rest of your world down brick by brick. Those are your choices. One ends in peace, the other in coffins. Which shall it be?”

The silence after was not re quiet—it was heavy, pulsing, alive with the sting of humiliation. Lord Niketas looked to his companions, then back to the prince, and lowered his eyes with a breath that might’ve once held defiance, now hollowed by realism.

“We…” he began, voice hushed, “will pay the reparations for the damages caused by this war.”

Alpheo gave a single nod, no triumph on his face—only inevitability.

“Then we are nearly done.”

Alpheo leaned back in his chair, his hands folding neatly before him, the embodint of a man who had just finished carving his enemy’s fate into stone.

“I believe,” he said, voice dripping with casual finality, “that all which remains… are re details.”

He turned his head slightly, the golden thread of his cloak catching the light, and nodded toward Lord Shahab, the old lion of the east, who watched everything with the air of a man who had seen a hundred wars rise and fall like the tides.

“For those,” Alpheo said with a small, almost lazy smile, “you shall treat with Lord Shahab. He has a…finer touch for matters of parchnt and ink than I do. And fewer sharp edges.”

The lords gave a series of small, reluctant nods, perhaps even happy that he was leaving.

Alpheo pushed himself up from his chair with a smooth, deliberate motion, and as he rose, so too did the silent n that had flanked him throughout the eting, Egil , Jarza and Asag. They had not spoken a word during the talks, but only stood there with a bit of a nacing aura.

It was clear now, though: they had not been needed for nace. Alpheo had wrapped the lords in rings of iron and silk all by himself, tightening the noose with every syllable.

“And of course,” Alpheo said as he reached the tent’s entrance, turning his head slightly to cast his words like a king dispensing rcy, “to celebrate the end of this foolish war, a feast shall be held the night after this. A true festival, for peace hard-won.”

He paused, a glint of sothing sharp in his eye.

“As brokers of this peace, you shall all be present ,of course”

Without another word, he stepped out into the sun, the flaps of the tent snapping in the breeze behind him like banners of victory, leaving the defeated lords to stew in the ashes of their pride and the ticulous dissection of their futures.

What a good day it was for the Crown….

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