Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king-Chapter 636: Last day before a new life(1)

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Chapter 636: Last day before a new life(1)

It had been, without question, the hardest month and a half of Merza’s life.

Not the kind of difficulty that tested one’s stamina for a day or two. No. This was the kind that carved into the soul—slowly, methodically—stripping layer after layer until nothing remained but bone, muscle, and obedience.

He had been broken, humiliated in full view of his peers, beaten into something harder than flesh, something colder than pride. Whatever childish wonder had once danced in his eyes at the thought of serving in Yarzat’s elite—at the thought of gleaming armor, battle chants, and noble glory—had long since withered and blown away like sand in the desert wind. All that remained now was discipline. Routine. The dry, mechanical march of one day into the next.

He liked to think of himself as a soldier now. Or at least... nearly one.

The only thing standing between him and the coveted black and white wool surcoat that marked a man as one of Yarzat’s finest was the final test. No one spoke of what it truly was.

In fact, it was the very absence of knowledge that fertilized the wild rumors. Fear grows best in the dark, after all.

Some said the test involved a duel to the death. Others whispered of putting an hand and swear an oath in fire, yet they all agreed on one thing—it would be the hardest thing they would ever face.

The reward, however, was enough to keep them enduring.

To be counted among Yarzat’s elite meant honor, wealth, status beyond most men’s dreams.

It meant that a shot at becoming a noble .

It was everything Merza had ever dreamed of—at least before those dreams were torn apart and replaced by the reality of what being a soldier truly meant.

Looking back, he wouldn’t even know where to begin if someone asked him what training had been like.

The first few weeks were the worst. Those were the weeks when the body still clung to its old comforts—when the ego still resisted, when the stomach still expected full meals, when the spirit hadn’t yet accepted that humiliation was now part of the daily routine.

They weren’t just taught to swing weapons and raise shields. That would’ve been merciful.

No, Yarzat’s finest were being forged into tools—reflexes before reason, movement before thought, instinct over individuality. They were starved until their stomachs knotted like rope. Marched until their legs trembled and gave way. Made to piss themselves while standing in formation, stripped naked under the morning sun, and forced to carry out tasks that not even the lowest peasant would dare speak aloud.

The goal was simple: to erase the man and leave only the weapon.

But something unexpected came of it—something their cruel instructors must have predicted all along. When a group of people suffers together, bleeds together, trembles beneath the same lash, they begin to bond. It was not camaraderie born of choice, but of necessity. A silent brotherhood built in the trenches of misery.

They learned to fear their commanders—but to rely on each other. And so punishment became a communal affair.

When one man failed, the group paid. That was the way of it. If one stumbled, the rest marched harder. If one disrespected a superior, all of them ate mud that evening instead of bread. At first, it caused resentment. But soon, resentment became resolve.

Because there was another punishment, harsher and quieter, that came once the sun had set and the eyes of the trainers turned away.

If a man endangered the group through cowardice or insolence, he would find himself gagged and bound in the night, beaten in the dark by the very comrades who had shared his meals and borne his burdens. They didn’t do it out of cruelty—they did it to survive. Either the weak link was reforged, or the whole chain would break.

And by dawn, the decision had always been made. The guilty man would rise, bruised and silent, and either correct his path... or leave, never to return.

Merza had seen it more than once. And each time, he had wondered if he would be next.

But he was still here. Still standing. Still enduring.And the test—whatever it was—was coming.

After that first brutal month—the month that tore them down like old walls, peeling away everything soft and unready—came the second phase. If the first had stripped them bare, the second shaped what remained.

Now they were no longer men being broken—they were iron being forged.

The instructors became blacksmiths, and the soldiers-in-training were the glowing-hot ore, beaten again and again, not to destroy but to refine.

Now came the endless repetitions, the hardening of instinct into doctrine. Merza and his cohort were drilled on the art of war with the same intensity once reserved for their humiliation.

They learned formations—not just how to stand in a line, but how to move as a living organism of iron and bone. They were made to rise at dawn and drill until their muscles ached and their limbs trembled. Each movement became a matter of survival, each command an order from the gods.

They trained in fighting stances, alternating guards, and posture discipline.

They learned to build their own camps from scratch—tents, trenches, palisades, latrines—taught that comfort was not to be expected, but constructed. They were drilled in the maintenance of every piece of their issued gear, down to the last rivet on a greave or the edge of a whetted blade.

And above all, they were trained to obey.

The command structure was sacred. A word from the sub-centurio, once relayed by the decurio, had to be acted upon with no hesitation. A heartbeat too long was the difference between order and chaos—between a shield wall holding and a slaughter.

They practiced the square formation, designed to withstand cavalry, the square was a box of men with shields locked and javelins braced outward like thorns on a hedgehog. The front ranks formed the wall, the second provided reinforcement, and the center would throw their javelins from there moments before the cavalry would come into contact

Thirty seconds. That was the time they were given to form it. Any longer, and it was considered a failure.

And they drilled it until they could form it in twenty-five.

Then came the shock formation—the aggressive mirror to the square. Soldiers were trained to charge in a wedge, an arrowhead of steel aimed at the enemy’s ribs. They learned to sprint while maintaining formation, to crash into enemy lines and bend them, to turn their momentum into pressure that could shatter ranks like glass. Every movement had to be precise, fluid, merciless.

That afternoon, under the molten sun of late Semptember, all four hundred and ten remaining trainees stood in formation.

They were no longer disorganized boys or wide-eyed recruits. They stood in five long rows, shoulders square, feet planted in the packed earth of the yard. Sweat ran in rivers down their cheeks, pooling at their chins, soaking their tunics until they clung to their ribs. Their shields rested at their sides, their javelins slotted into braces, the steel tips glittering in the light.

The sun beat down on them with the cruelty only late summer could bring—hot, golden, and unrelenting.

No one flinched. No one moved.

The air was heavy with the scent of iron, leather, and dust.

They stood waiting—not for water, not for rest, but for the next command.

However if they were expecting that they would be wrong, as it would come for a surprise for all of them ,that that was the last day they would be recruits.

---------

Sir Edric walked slowly through the silent ranks of the trainees, the sound of his boots crunching the dry earth beneath him the only interruption in the still afternoon heat. Rows of sunburned faces stared forward with disciplined silence—faces he had once seen filled with doubt, rebellion, fear. Now they stood resolute, backs straight, eyes forward, jaws clenched not in defiance but in readiness.

He passed them one by one, reading in their faces the story of what they had endured. Bruises long faded, pride long awakened. He saw the hollow eyes of hunger replaced with a soldier’s calm, and the twitchy nervousness of youth hardened into something unyielding.

And for all the pity he still carried in his heart—for what had been broken in them to reach this point—it was dwarfed by the awe he felt at what stood before him

They were the foundation of an army the world would come to fear.

He paused, turned, and faced them all.

Then, with a slow breath, he raised his voice—not shouting, but clear enough to carry across every man in the yard.

"You came to us as names written on a clerk’s ledger. Ragged, wide-eyed, foolish boys with too much to prove and too little to offer."

He stepped forward, hands clasped behind his back, letting his words strike with weight.

"But today, I don’t see boys. I see the steel that was hiding beneath the rust. I see men—sharpened, disciplined, and worthy of the cloak and sword that our prince offers.Not yet soldiers, but men , yes."

A few of the younger recruits blinked.

"You have been bled, broken, starved, and rebuilt from the marrow out. What stands here now is the future of Yarzat’s host. The very spine of a force that, given time, will make our enemies speak our name with dread.

We will become the echo of the old legions of Romelia, led by a man on the par of Vrivius the red’’

He let that sink in. No need to shout. The silence roared louder.

Sir Edric turned his head slowly, scanning their faces once more.

"The trial you are to face now is the final gate. Pass it, and you take your place among Yarzat’s finest—not as conscripts, but as brothers-in-arms, as soldiers of the prince, as guardians of the realm."

A low rustle passed through the formation—barely more than a breath—but enough to be noticed. The recruits were glancing at one another, eyes narrowed in a shared confusion. Muscles tensed.

Sir Edric, noticing the silent exchange, allowed a thin smile to break the edge of his expression. He let the silence linger a few moments more, heightening the tension until the air itself felt heavy with it.

Then he spoke, voice clear and solemn:

"You’ve marched farther than your fathers. You’ve bled deeper than your kin. But tomorrow—"

He paused, drawing a breath.

"—tomorrow you face the final test of your life."

The silence deepened. One or two of the younger recruits involuntarily clenched their fists.

"A test not just of your strength, but of your will. Of your loyalty. Of the steel that has grown in your spine. And those who pass it..." He stepped forward, eyes burning with intensity. "...will not only earn their place in the White Host, but unlock a world of opportunity you never dared dream of. Land. Rank. Honor. Coin. The right to wear the white plume and the bronze sun upon your chest."

He let those words sink in. A flicker of hope passed over even the most stoic faces.

"And to honor those who endure and rise above it," Edric continued, "His Grace himself—Prince Alpheo—will bless the proving ground with his presence."

The reaction was visible now—spines stiffening, jaws setting. The idea that the prince himself would witness their final test lit something in them, excitement and awe.

"This is not just another drill. It is your moment. Each of you stands at the threshold of history. Tomorrow, when the sun climbs the sky, you will step forward—and earn your name in the ranks of men."

He took a final, long look at them. Sweat glistened on their brows, the sun beating mercilessly on their shoulders. But not one moved. Not one broke formation.

With a crisp nod, Edric turned.

"Rest well tonight, soldiers," he said over his shoulder. "Tomorrow, the forge closes. And what comes out will be a weapon—or nothing at all."

This content is taken from free web nov𝒆l.com

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