Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king

Chapter 683: Battle for a crown(4)



In any ordinary battle, Alpheo would never have dared to execute a maneuver so audacious, some might say reckless.

Leaving a hundreds-meter gap between his center and right flank would, under normal circumstances, have been tantamount to suicide. A competent enemy commander would see such an opening and immediately drive a wedge through it, splitting the army in two and outflanking both fragments in a devastating blow.

But this was no ordinary battle.

He had read Lechlian like an open scroll, proud, cautious, and above all, reactive. The entire design of Alpheo's plan hinged not on aggression, but on control: Lechlian had in fact pointed everything on choosing a terrain that would put whoever came to the other in disadvantage, and well Alpheo just made use of that, as it worked both ways.

What future historians would one day marvel at wasn't merely the brilliance of the maneuvers, nor the sharpness of Alpheo's strategy, it would be the sheer audacity of turning the enemy's greatest advantage into their own grave.

And so, as the left wing of the Yarzat host moved into place, it did so with great precision and all the calm in the world

Their lines did not march directly forward but slowly and steadily inclined, each company shifting their orientation by degrees. Their advance took on a distinct diagonal shape, an oblique angle designed to stretch their line toward the exposed flank of the enemy, while still maintaining cohesion.(map of battle from first phase)

The obliquity gave them reach, allowing the flank to expand without thinning dangerously, and kept their formation fluid enough to adapt when meeting the many obstacles between the enemy and them.(map of battle from second phase)

Five hundred veterans from the First led the angle, pivoting slightly with each forward movement. The halberdiers of the Third, stationed to their right mirrored the motion with the same discipline, polearms gleaming like a row of spears as they moved following the First.

To the untrained eye, it might have seemed disordered, an angled wave instead of a solid front, but to the soldier who understood the rhythms of war, it was a blade being drawn across the enemy's throat. Quiet. Inevitable. Precise.

The right wing marched like a single living creature, broad-shouldered, iron-hearted, and patient as death.

Their boots thundered in steady rhythm across the brittle valley floor, sending up small puffs of dust with every step. Helmets caught the faint morning light in glints and flashes, and shields moved like scales across the back of a great beast. The banner of the White Army, fluttered high above the forward line, visible to every man in the ranks.

But the terrain was no ally. Gnarled roots, bramble-thick ditches, and stony outcroppings jutted from the ground like the bones of the earth, determined to trip, scatter, or halt their disciplined crawl.

As the first company approached a shallow ravine , a voice rang out from the left part of the flank

"Gap and fold! Front three back!"

At once, the front line peeled away. The three foremost ranks halted, stepped to the side, and wheeled backward in quick arcs, allowing the remaining ranks to squeeze away.

The moment the last boot cleared the ravine's edge, the command echoed again.

"Reseat ranks, close left, close right!"

And like teeth snapping into place, the lines re-formed, shields touching and shoulder to shoulder. The flow never stopped. No man ran. No man rushed.No man tripped.

It all work like clockwork.

Farther down the line, the halberdiers of the Third encountered a thick patch of thornbrush, waist-high and tangled. An officer with a half-scarred jaw that he got at Aracina took the lead, his voice cutting through the rising wind.

"Break and bind! File two down!"

Two ranks slid sideways, halberds raised, while others moved to cut a narrow path with practiced swings. The brush was reduced to twitching roots and scattered leaves in moments, of course there were still some spiny branch, but the armor that the soldiers had would allow them to pass harmlessly.

The moment it was clear, he shouted again, "Return and press!"

The files rejoined with a rattle of armor and a low, unified grunt of effort. Their halberds lifted as one, blades gleaming, ready again.

Across the whole line, it repeated.

A dance of motion and discipline.

Each command was answered with precision, the result of relentless training and hard-earned trust.

To the watching eye, it was like watching a great mechanical serpent slide through a thicket, adjusting its scales without ever stopping its forward glide.

From the rear, Alpheo watched with a tight nod of approval. The plan, the men, the movement, they were all working as one.

Of course, no one was more stunned by the Yarzat advance than the Herculeian front itself.

From their vantage point, the enemy soldiers watched with mounting unease as the black-striped ranks of Alpheo's right flank moved like clockwork across treacherous terrain. What should have broken their cohesion.

Ditches, brambles, small hills barely slowed their approach. Each obstacle was met with eerie precision, their formations momentarily shifting only to reform with effortless unity moments later.

Even from a distance, the uniformity of their armor was unmistakable, iron glinting beneath the disciplined black streaks painted across shields and coverings of the front armor. They looked less like men and more like some dark, unstoppable tide inching forward, slow but steady and unyielding.

And of course, this caused whispers to ripple through the Herculeian ranks like wind over tall grass.

"Gods, they're not even flinching…"

"How do they do that?''

"Those stripes…are the stories true?"

The awe wasn't loud, but it was corrosive. It chewed at resolve. Men adjusted their grips on spear shafts slick with sweat, eyes flickering nervously down the line for someone, anyone, who didn't look afraid.

Atop the rise behind them, Lechlian stood with his fists balled at his sides, eyes locked on the advancing formation. His jaw worked slowly, grinding back whatever bitter taste was rising in his throat.

He recognized it immediately: discipline. True discipline.

"If only I had such army…" he muttered, voice small so that only he could hear it.

A bitter pang of jealousy twisted in his gut. Not for the formation. Not even for the effectiveness.But the sort of tool that Alpheo held in his hand.

He stared, jaw clenched, at that seamless, creeping oblique line. That formation, he knew what it was. It was designed to envelop slowly, pressure, and suffocate through expansion of the line, which of course meant that they had to answer it if they did not want to get swallowed.

Initially, Lechlian had staked everything on the resilience of his right flank. He had trusted that the thick mass of men, arrayed in deep, stubborn ranks, would hold long enough for his center or right to deliver the decisive blow. The enemy, after all, could not be equally disciplined across every segment. The famed Black Stripes may have been formidable, but surely the rest of Alpheo's army would crack.

But now, with Alpheo's right advancing in that relentless oblique line, its numbers stretched to the edge of visibility, Lechlian felt the first true stirrings of unease. The enemy flank wasn't just pressing forward.

It was expanding, slowly but unmistakably, threatening to wrap around his position like a black noose. If he kept his men bunched in their tight, deep files, the Yarzat line would simply slide past and pivot into his flanks.

He had no choice.

"Damn it all," he growled, spinning toward one of his aides. "Have the lords extend their lines, thin the ranks! Match the enemy length or we'll be strangled before we can strike!"

The aide nodded and ran, but Lechlian already regretted it.

Unlike Alpheo's army, where commands were passed swiftly down a streamlined, military hierarchy, from legion commander to sub-centurion to decurion, each man drilled to respond in concert, the Herculeian army was a patchwork of different lords levies . Units were divided not by standardized size or structure, but by who owned them. Lords brought their own levies, dressed and armed according to their province's wealth and preference,

So when Lechlian's order went out, it did not flow like a river. It splashed, stumbled, and choked.

Some lords understood immediately and began shouting to thin their files, however that required space, which the other lords units did not give yet. Others mistook the command, believing it meant to advance instead. Still others hesitated entirely, unsure whether the order applied to them or was meant for another noble's contingent.

The result was chaos in motion.

Sections of the line began to stretch out unevenly, creating dangerous gaps as troops shuffled sideways without coordination. Some units overextended, thinning themselves too much and exposing fragile points. Others didn't move at all, forming swollen knots that disrupted the cohesion of the left flank like tumors.

The lack of unified standards meant there were no agreed spacing protocols, no practiced drill for coordinated lateral movement. It was improvisation, done in real time, with men dragging shields, bumping into each other, and officers bickering over who was encroaching into whose territory.

The command to extend the Herculeian right , simple in theory, proved a monumental burden in execution.

What should have taken minutes stretched into far too much time as men stumbled sideways across uneven ground, packs jostling, shields scraping, officers screaming over the din of hundreds trying to move at once.

Formations dragged apart like melting wax, too slow to adapt and too proud to yield. Some bands overcorrected and drifted too far; others hesitated, afraid to abandon the safety of their tightly packed ranks. Lines that had once looked like iron walls now resembled a scattering of ill-fit panels of a roof , dotted with cracks and uneven edges. Shield edges no longer kissed. Flanks dangled half-supported. And worst of all, none of them truly understood who was to anchor whom.

By the time the Yarzat right was upon them, five hundred footmen and two hundred fifty halberdiers gliding in their oblique advance, their lines angled like a blade, much of the Herculeian realignment remained unfinished.

It was in that vulnerable, awkward disarray that the Yarzat line struck.

And as it was said, what had once been the Herculeians' strongest segment, those solid, deep ranks of disciplined defense, had become, through simple enemy maneuvering, their weakest.

A mighty chain made worthless by the failing of a few links.


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