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Now reading: Chapter 170: The Singing Road from The Unwanted Prince of Prussia, a Adventure novel by Preciouslore.

A minute ago, the ten battalions—ten thousand n on the imperial road—had been singing.

Not the quiet kind that fills the miles. This was the kind of sound an army makes when it believes history can be forced to kneel. They had crossed the border less than an hour earlier, and the lack of resistance had gone to their heads like wine. The first battalion threw the verse forward, raw voices scraping through dust and heat—Edirne struck again and again like a hamr on iron. God. Sultan. Vengeance. Old wounds turned into promises.

The n behind caught the chorus. Then the next. Then the next—never perfectly together, never clean, but enough that the song ran the length of the column like a rope you could grab when your lungs burned and your shoulders ached under straps.

It ca in call and answer, shouted more than sung:

"Whose land is this?" "Allah's land!" "Whose city waits?" "Our Edirne waits!"

And then, here and there, it darkened.

Not as one voice, not as one disciplined hymn—more like rot surfacing through wood. A cluster of n near the road would howl a line, ugly and gleeful, and another cluster would answer with sothing worse, and the chant would ripple for a few seconds before the main chorus swallowed it again.

"What grows where the gâvur prayed?" "Ash!" "What falls when the crescent rises?" "Necks!"

They laughed at the words. They spat them out like curses. They sang of the enemy as filth, as animals, as prey—of hos broken open, of spoils counted, of captives taken and dragged along as proof that victory had teeth. They sang of churches stripped and silenced, of priests hauled down, of the enemies world overturned and made to choke on its own symbols.

The verses were crude. Repetitive. Easy to rember.

"Blood for blood!" "Fire for fire!" "What they took—we take back!"

Revenge beca a chorus because it needed no lody. It fed itself. It was hunger given rhythm—rage turned into breath and made holy through repetition.

And like the hot dry air itself, the words were brutal.

Sumr sun straight overhead, white and rciless. No wind, not even enough to stir a sleeve. Dust clung to lips and tongue until every breath tasted like dry earth. n sweated through caps and collars; dark stains spread across grey-green cloth, and leather straps chewed into shoulders with each mile. Breathing felt like drinking sand. And still they sang—because singing turned suffering into proof, and proof into certainty.

Above them the banners rode high.

Red cloth—sun-hot, dust-bright—white crescent and star glaring hard as fresh paint, lashed to long poles that creaked and complained with every step. They swayed over the column like moving landmarks, visible even when the n themselves vanished around bends and shallow rises. Ten battalions drawn out into a line so long it felt unreal: the rear still threading a turn while the front was already climbing the next low hill. Where the stone held and the road widened they marched six abreast, shoulder to shoulder, rifles slung and gleaming; where the road pinched between scrub and thin trees the formation narrowed and lengthened, stretching, compressing, stretching again—an accordion of bodies and dust. From a distance it looked less like a march than a living thing crossing the hills, a red spine scaled in n.

They had been across the border less than an hour.

Not even long enough for sweat to dry at the throat. Not long enough for the first thrill to sour into caution. The land still looked half-familiar—fields, low villages, the sa flies and sun—yet stepping over that invisible line had turned every stone underfoot into ours in their minds. Edirne—Edirne returned—was already spoken of as if it were waiting ahead with its gates unlocked and its streets intact, as if history itself would sit politely and let them take their seat again.

And the scouts were out ahead.

That was the comfort that made arrogance feel like sense. If danger existed, soone would see it first. Soone would shout first. Soone would die first—well ahead of the singing, well ahead of the banners.

Then, in the gap where the song had been, sothing else slid in.

A faint crack—so far away it could have been a wagon board splitting under heat.

Then again.

The song stumbled. A few voices tried to carry on out of stubbornness, but the rhythm died in their throats. Heads turned. The column's sound changed from music to boots and breathing.

This ti there was no mistaking it. Every man who had ever handled a rifle knew that sound even softened by distance: a sharp, tearing snap that did not belong to trees or carts or birds.

Gunfire.

Not close—kiloters away. Not loud—more like distant thunder under a cloudless sky, wrong precisely because the sky was so clean and blue.

The column slowed by instinct. n craned their necks as if they could see through low hills and patches of scrub and the abandoned villages crouching in the heat. Sowhere up front an officer shouted sothing—too far back for most to hear—and the first battalion compressed as n drifted closer without aning to, curiosity and unease tightening the ranks.

More cracks. A short burst. Then silence.

And then—worse—more cracks from another direction.

Left. Far ahead. Then, faintly, from the right, as if the sound was circling them at a distance, shutting doors one by one across the horizon.

The lieutenant colonel in the forward battalion reined his horse, eyes narrowed beneath the brim of his cap. He listened, jaw working, and the staff around him went still. Soone lifted field glasses and stared at empty hills that stared back.

They waited for a ssenger from the forward scouts.

None ca.

So the lieutenant colonel sent his own rider back through the line at once—hard hooves, dust flaring—to warn the battalions behind that sothing might be happening, that they should keep the line closed, that they should be ready, that nobody was to panic at shadows.

But no one had anything real to say, because no one had anything real to know.

The waiting stretched into sothing sour.

n shifted their grips on rifles. tal glead hard and indifferent. No bayonets fixed—this was still a march, still supposed to be safe—and that made the weapons feel strangely incomplete, like tools missing the part that admitted what the day might beco. A few whispered prayers under their breath now, not for glory but for understanding. Others said nothing at all, jaws clenched, eyes fixed ahead.

They had crossed the border without resistance. In their minds, Edirne had already fallen. They had imagined themselves entering it in a week if they marched well, with banners raised and songs bouncing off old stone.

Now the road ahead felt longer.

Uncertainty pressed in from all sides—thicker than heat, heavier than any load on the back. Not knowing was worse than fear. Not knowing ant imagining everything at once.

A man near the middle of the column muttered, barely loud enough to hear:

"Why hasn't anyone co back?"

No one answered him.

A full minute had passed since the last distant burst.

Still the column kept moving—because stopping felt like admitting doubt. Because stopping made fear visible. Because stopping invited questions no one wanted to ask, and an army's pride is often stronger than its caution. They moved forward on numbers and habit and the belief that ten thousand n could not be surprised.

And at first—other than those earlier cracks—nothing looked wrong.

Then a captain riding along the side of the front ranks slowed his horse as a voice called out behind him—sharp with the excitent of discovery.

"Sir—look. A wire."

The soldier had already crouched, fingers hovering above it as if he ant to pluck it free like a weed.

"It's like the kind we use in the mines to blast rock," he said, half-laughing. "What's it doing here?"

Heads turned. The marching rhythm faltered. n bumped shoulders as the front of the column compressed, curiosity tugging them closer.

The captain leaned in, eyes narrowing.

A thin wire lay half-buried in the dirt where stone t grass, running parallel to the road—too straight, too deliberate, as if soone had placed it there with care. It did not sag. It did not tangle. It did not belong.

Sothing cold slid into his stomach.

The n around him still looked puzzled—annoyed, even, as if this were rely another inconvenience left behind by fleeing villagers.

But the captain had seen war.

Not enough to know every trick, but enough to recognize intent when he saw it.

His mind produced the image instantly: sothing hidden beneath the earth. Sothing waiting.

He opened his mouth to shout an order—halt, spread out, take cover—

But before he managed to produce the words, he noticed sothing as sunlight struck the low ridge ahead.

He squinted up at it—barely a rise, a swelling of earth where grass t stone and the road curved slightly around it—

—and sothing flashed.

A brief glint.

Like sunlight off glass.

His heart stuttered.

He raised his binoculars without thinking.

Another flash.

Then another.

No—more than that. Two. Three. A handful, scattered. The light winked and vanished, then reappeared sowhere else, as if the hill itself were blinking at him.

But the ridge looked empty.

Grass. Dirt. Rocks.

No banners. No trenches. No n.

Still… there were shapes. Small irregularities. Places where the ground looked too neat, or too broken—details his mory insisted hadn't been there when he was a boy on these roads.

Behind him soone muttered, trying to laugh the unease away.

"Probably nothing. Refugees drop all sorts of rubbish when they flee."

The captain did not laugh.

The wire at his feet.

The flashes on the ridge.

The silence ahead where scouts should have been.

His skin tightened as if the air itself had grown teeth.

"Stop—" he began.

The word never finished leaving his mouth.

Crack.

Distant. Precise.

The captain jerked in the saddle as sothing struck him hard in the chest. For a heartbeat he didn't understand what had happened—only that his breath had been stolen and his hands no longer obeyed him.

His horse reared and scread.

The world tilted.

He slid sideways, hit the stones in a tangle of limbs and leather, and the sky spun above him—too blue, too calm.

n barely had ti to react when more cracks snapped through the air.

Crack. Crack. Crack.

Other officers toppled almost at once—pitched from their saddles, faces frozen in disbelief as command vanished in seconds. n stared, stunned, as leaders folded into dust without ever seeing what had killed them.

And then—

Further down the road, sothing shifted.

Not a man—just a shape. Green. Broken by shadow. Half-hidden in grass.

An arm moved, low and controlled.

A finger pressed down.

Click.

For half a second, nothing happened.

Then the world split open.

Boom.

The roadside erupted in fire and earth. The first explosion tore n and horses into the air, stone and flesh flung together in a single, violent motion that erased the front ranks in an instant.

A heartbeat later, the second.

Then the third.

The blasts raced down the road like a ripping seam, one after another, the ground heaving beneath the column as if the earth itself were tearing apart. The imperial road folded inward under the shock, its packed stone and dirt collapsing into craters, the dense mass of n crushed by its own montum.

Boom.

Boom.

Boom.

n were hurled screaming into ditches. Bodies snapped mid-air. Horses went down wailing as the ground vanished beneath them, legs shattering, eyes rolling white. Smoke poured across the road in thick, choking waves, blotting out the sun until morning turned briefly to ash-colored dusk.

Limbs arced through the air. Sothing—an arm, a leg—caught and hung grotesquely from a roadside tree, swaying slightly as the blast wind died.

Ears rang. n scread. Orders dissolved into raw noise and then into nothing at all.

So soldiers, driven by instinct alone, dropped flat and pressed themselves into the stones, faces buried in dust, hands clamped over their caps as if the ground itself might forgive them for being there.

And before anyone could understand what they had walked into—

The hills and trees ahead ca alive.

Not with movent, but with sound.

A ripping, sustained roar tore through the smoke, unlike anything they had ever heard. Not the slow, uneven clatter of old machine guns. Not bursts or volleys.

A continuous scream of tal.

A chanical howl.

Buzz saws.

Green shapes rose from the grass and treeline—n who had been there all along, invisible until the mont they stood. Gun barrels flashed. Streams of fire ripped straight down the road, cutting through ranks as if flesh and cloth were nothing more than tall grass.

n were cut apart where they stood.

Whole sections of the column collapsed as if scythed. Limbs vanished. Bodies fell in heaps. The road itself disappeared beneath a carpet of dead and dying.

Horses scread and thrashed, dragging fallen riders until bullets caught them too. Packs burst open. Rifles slipped from numb hands and vanished beneath bodies.

So n tried to scatter.

Others refused to move and just pressed themselves flat behind corpses, faces shoved into dirt and stone as bullets stitched the road inches above their heads. They clutched their rifles, their packs, anything solid—anything that might convince the world not to notice them.

Crack.

A single sharp report.

A man scread once—and went still.

Sniper fire.

asured.

Patient.

Anyone foolish enough to rise. Anyone who tried to shout orders. Anyone whose posture suggested command was answered with a single, final shot.

And then a new sound entered the chaos.

Thump.

Thump.

Not rifle fire.

Sothing heavier. Hollow. Wrong—like soone striking a great drum sowhere behind the smoke.

n looked up just in ti to see dark shapes arc overhead, moving too far, too smoothly, like stones thrown by an impossible arm.

Grenades.

They dropped into the packed ranks and burst with flat, vicious force—explosions that didn't roar so much as tear. n folded inward. Limbs vanished. The road beca a wet confusion of bodies and dust, and what the guns had missed, the blasts finished.

The first battalion—one thousand n—stopped being a formation. It beca a mob.

The second tried to hold shape for a few heartbeats longer, then broke too—n stumbling over one another, crawling, running, pressing faces into the dirt and whispering prayers into mud because prayers were the only thing left that didn't jam or misfire.

Officers shouted until their voices turned raw. Signals ant nothing. Orders died before they reached the next file.

Then—before the dust could settle, before anyone could even understand where the grenades had co from—sothing heavier answered.

A deeper impact.

Slower.

Heavier.

Boom.

Mortars.

The ground betrayed them.

Fresh craters ripped open the road, swallowing n whole. Others were thrown into the air like broken dolls, arms and rifles and fragnts of earth spinning together. Dirt and stone rained down in hard, choking sheets. Smoke rolled outward in thick waves, blotting out sky and direction alike until the world beca nothing but dust, noise, and screaming.

Still the Ottomans tried to respond.

Rifles cracked wildly into the haze—into trees, into shadows, into nothing. n fired because firing felt like action. Because standing still felt like dying.

So prayed.

So scread verses into the smoke, begging Allah to make sense of it.

Others—caught in terror and feverish faith—rose and ran forward in small, desperate knots, bayonets out, convinced this was the mont that would make their deaths aningful.

They ran three steps.

Then they were cut down.

A few officers farther back managed to gather little clumps of n and push them toward the treeline, shouting, trying to impose order on madness. The trees offered no shelter—only more uncertainty. n stumbled into holes they hadn't seen. A scream rose as soone went down hard, impaled or trapped, and still no enemy revealed itself—only the sense of being watched, of being asured.

In the distance, brief green shapes appeared—broken silhouettes that dissolved the closer anyone tried to look.

Amidst it all, a young officer lay pinned against a fallen horse—his horse—its bulk steaming and twitching beside him. His ears rang so badly the world felt distant, as if wrapped in thick cloth. Smoke drifted low across the ground, and through it he saw sothing that his mind refused to assemble into aning.

The lieutenant colonel was still alive.

Or what was left of him.

He had been torn open from the waist down. His left arm was nothing but shredded fabric and at. His uniform was burned black and soaked dark, his insides exposed to the open air like sothing ripped from a butcher's table. And yet—impossibly—he pushed himself upright with his one remaining hand, balancing on what remained of his body.

For a heartbeat, the stump of a man that was him, just stood there.

The young officer stared, unable to move, unable to breathe. The colonel looked at him. His mouth opened. He tried to shout orders—anything—but no sound ca. His eyes dropped, following the line of his own body down, and for the first ti understanding reached him.

The pain arrived all at once.

A scream tore out of him—raw, animal, unbelieving. He clutched at himself as if he might gather the pieces back together by force alone. His fingers ca away slick and useless. He sagged forward, touched the ruined flesh in dumb shock, and then the strength left him entirely.

He went slack.

Utterly still.

Around them the battle did not pause. Bullets cracked overhead. n fell screaming. Explosions tore at the earth. Trees splintered, caught fire and burned. Horses thrashed and shrieked until the sounds cut off one by one.

But the young officer could not look away.

Neither could the others nearby—n crouched in shell holes and behind bodies, staring at the colonel's remains with the sa hollow disbelief, as if sothing fundantal had broken in front of them. The man who had given them orders that morning, who had ridden at their head beneath the banners, was now just at cooling in the dirt.

Sothing snapped inside the young officer—not courage, not faith—just refusal.

His head turned, and his hand closed on the fallen banner near him: red cloth, crescent and star sared with dust and blood. He gripped it hard, as if it could anchor him to the world.

"Prepare bayonets," he said.

His voice sounded wrong to his own ears—too thin, too small.

No one reacted.

The n around him were frozen. So were wounded. So shook uncontrollably. A few stared at nothing at all, their trousers darkened with fear. They looked at him as if he were mad, as if the words belonged to another life entirely.

Then, for a brief—terrifying—pause, the fire slackened.

Not silence. Never silence.

Just… less.

A gap in the ripping roar. A thinning in the hail. A mont where the smoke stopped shuddering with impacts and the living realized—at the sa ti—that whatever was killing them needed to breathe. Needed to reload.

n lifted their heads by inches. Mud-streaked faces. Eyes wide and wet. Mouths working without words. Hands still clamped to rifles like prayer beads. The road was no longer a road—it was a butcher's floor: torn packs, splintered stocks, slick stone, bodies piled in knots where formations had been.

And in that gap, with the dead still warm beside him, the young officer understood exactly what would happen next.

If they stayed down, they would be fed into the next burst like grain into a mill.

If they ran backward, they would be shot in the spine like animals.

If they tried to think—really think—about what was happening, their minds would break before their bodies did.

So he chose the only thing left that still resembled a decision.

He drew breath until it hurt and forced his voice into the open air like a blade.

"Bayonets!"

It ca out harsh, cracked by dust. Too small again.

No one moved.

They stared at him from shell holes and behind corpses, n shaking so hard their caps fell off their heads, n with hands pressed to their throats to keep from sobbing, n whose eyes were empty already—gone sowhere safe where sound couldn't reach. A few didn't even look. They just stared at the ground like it might open and swallow them gently.

The young officer swallowed blood and spit.

He tasted iron. He tasted smoke. He tasted fear—and he hated it.

So he stood.

Flag in his left hand, rising through the heat and ruin like sothing torn from myth.

Then his voice cracked the smoke like a whip.

"Fix bayonets!"

It wasn't a command—it was a challenge. A dare.

"There's no point lying here waiting to be butchered! You want to stay on your bellies like worms and let their guns harvest you—fine! Or you can turn your backs and run like cowards and be shot in the spine like dogs!"

Heads snapped toward him.

Eyes that had been full of terror only monts ago now flashed with sothing harder.

He stepped forward.

His boot slid on sothing slick—he didn't look down. He wouldn't give the ground the dignity.

"I will not run!" he shouted. "I refuse! Because how could I ever live with myself after that? To flee would be to spit on the corpses of the brave—today, yesterday, throughout our history! You want to crawl away and pretend you didn't see this? Pretend you didn't hear them die?"

He raised the banner and drove it down into the stone like a spear.

"Then look at them! Look at our brothers! Look at our officers! Look at the n who marched beside you an hour ago and now lie torn open in the dust!"

His voice shook with fury.

"If we kneel here—if we rot here—then their deaths an nothing. Nothing but at thrown to pigs!"

Sothing in him snapped—not into calm, not into wisdom—

Into raw refusal. A kind of holy rage.

He turned and climbed the dead horse beside him.

Boots grinding into tack and blood-soaked hide, he pulled himself up into the smoke—rising above the broken line of n like an on.

And there he stood.

One hand gripping the banner.

The other drawing steel—a cavalry sword dark with dried blood, sunlight catching the edge like a thin, cruel smile.

From up there, he saw it all: the shattered column stretching back into haze, bodies scattered like dropped grain, the second ranks crouched and waiting, half-dead already without knowing it.

He lifted the banner higher.

"Rise!" he roared, voice ripping itself apart.

"Rise and press your fear away!

Rise and bring forth your pride—as heir's of the faithful!

As sons of empire! As heirs of warriors!

Bring forth your fate—your rage—your answer to this slaughter!"

And as if heaven itself chose that mont to answer—

The wind stirred.

Small. Indifferent.

But enough.

The red cloth snapped open.

Crescent and star—streaked with blood, crusted with dust—unfurled in the smoke like a challenge thrown at the sky.

n stared.

And in their staring, sothing caught.

A breath. A thought. A flicker of heat that hadn't died after all.

The young officer leaned forward, eyes blazing with fury and disbelief, and scread until it felt like his lungs might rip open:

"Rise for Allah! Rise for the Sultan! Rise for our people! Rise for the courageous fallen—

and make the world rember that you were n!"

Then he threw two fingers to his lips and blew the whistle.

Sharp. Final. Cutting.

A sound that didn't belong in the chaos—but sliced through it clean, like steel through silk.

Bayonets clicked onto rifles.

One. Two. Ten. A dozen.

The sound spread like a sickness—cold, chanical, contagious.

And then n began to stand.

Not cleanly. Not like in drill.

They stood like wounded animals—shaking, bleeding, furious. So rose with arms hanging wrong. So rose dragging a leg. One man with his face wrapped in bloodied gauze stood, vomited into the dirt, wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, and fixed his bayonet anyway. Another trembled so badly his friend had to guide the blade onto the muzzle for him.

Blooded.

Broken.

Not beaten.

And the ones farther back—those who hadn't heard the words, hadn't seen the banner—saw only one thing:

A lone officer, high above the smoke, standing atop a dead horse, a blood-slick banner in one hand, a naked sword in the other, roaring like a man already written out of this world.

The sight was enough.

It didn't matter what he'd said.

It mattered that he stood.

n rose because the ones in front of them rose.

n rose because their chests burned with sha at staying down.

n rose because to crawl was worse than death.

A sound swelled up—not an order, not a chant, not a drill command—sothing feral, sothing grieving, sothing holy.

"Charge!"

It ca in waves.

"For Allah!"

"For the Sultan!"

"For the fallen!"

"Allahu Akbar!"

And then they went.

So poured into the trees, bayonets forward, crashing through brush as if the forest itself had betrayed them.

Others ran down the road—boots slapping blood and stone—scrambling over the bodies of their friends, their brothers, because to stop was to die, and no one had rcy left inside them.

The wounded charged too.

n with holes in them. n with arms tied to ribs with rags. n limping hard, teeth bared, eyes red, who ran not because they thought they would live—

—but because they refused to die quietly.

The enemy answered.

The buzz-saw roar returned—ripping through the haze.

n dropped in lines. Bodies burst. Explosions flung limbs like dolls tossed by a cruel hand.

And still they didn't break.

Still they rose.

Still they pressed forward—bleeding, burning, broken—but breathing. Moving. Living.

They fired blind into smoke. They slashed at ghosts. They stabbed at shadows—not because they thought it would change anything—

—but because doing nothing would be worse.

They didn't charge out of courage.

They charged out of refusal.

Not fearless. Never fearless. But possessed by one brutal, perfect truth:

Better to die reaching for the enemy

than to rot on your knees.

So there, on that blood-soaked road, with the screams still ringing and the air thick with powder and iron, the Ottoman ranks did what n sotis do when the world turns into an abattoir:

They rose again. Even shot, they rose. Even maid, they rose.

So n couldn't stand on their own—they were lifted by brothers beside them.

So n couldn't see—they followed the rhythm of boots and shouted prayers.

So ran screaming.

So charged silent.

But they all surged forward—one body now, one breath, one defiance—like an unstoppable tide made of smoke and steel and mory.

They did not rise for orders.

They did not rise for the hope of victory.

They rose because to stay down ant to betray the ones who already lay still. They rose because the dead could no longer scream, and soone had to do it for them.

And they roared.

They roared like n possessed—not by hate alone, but by sha, by duty, by a fire that wanted to make aning of this slaughter.

They ran not only for Allah, not only for Sultan, not only for Edirne—

They ran for the fallen.

They ran so the nas of the n beside them would not vanish into ash and silence.

And on that road—choked with blood and smoke and bone—the fateful of Allah showed their enemies what it ant to face n who had nothing left to lose but their place in history.

Their fate was to suffer.

Their choice was to rise anyway.

And so they did.

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