Supreme Viking System-Chapter 79 - 71: The end of a Legend
Arthur
Morning came thin and colorless, as if the land itself had not decided whether it wished to witness what followed.
Arthur stood with his cloak drawn tight, looking back toward the distant rise where Ironbear Hall still loomed—dark lines against the low sky. Smoke drifted lazily from its chimneys. Ordered. Calm. Alive.
Too calm.
They had thrown themselves at those walls with valor worthy of song, and the walls had answered with silence and steel. Two hundred men had fallen in less than an hour. Not crushed. Not routed. Simply removed, as if the battlefield itself had decided they no longer belonged.
Arthur turned away from the sight.
A king did not stare at failure.
Behind him, his captains gathered—men with scars older than Anders’ entire reign, men who had bled for Britain when Rome still whispered in its stones. They waited for him to speak first, and in their eyes he saw it: the question they would not voice.
How do you fight something that does not break?
"We cannot take the Hall," Arthur said at last.
No one argued.
"The walls are not walls," one captain murmured. "They breathe. They move men faster than thought."
Arthur nodded once. "Then we do not fight the Hall."
He knelt and pressed his dagger into the damp earth, drawing a crude shape—sea to the east, fortress to the west.
"We strike the beachhead," he said. "Burn the ships. Cut their return. Let the foreign king learn hunger."
There it was. A way forward. Not victory—survival.
The captains leaned in. The plan took shape with quick words and quicker nods. Split columns. Silent march. Speed above all else. If they reached the coast before Anders could reposition, the war would change shape entirely.
Arthur rose. "We move now."
The order passed like a held breath finally released.
And the army turned away from Ironbear Hall.
Anders
The horn call reached him before the scouts did.
Not loud. Not urgent. A single, measured note carried on the wind—confirmation, not alarm.
Anders stood atop the western parapet, hands resting on the stone, eyes following the distant movement of men threading through the countryside like a dark seam being pulled loose.
"He’s turning," Magnus said quietly beside him.
"Yes," Anders replied. "He has to."
There was no triumph in his voice. Only understanding.
Arthur was not a fool. He had recognized the impossible and refused to break himself against it. That alone made him dangerous.
"He thinks to take the beachhead," Anders continued. "Burn the ships. Force us inland."
"Will it work?"
Anders shook his head. "No."
He turned, already issuing orders.
"Signal the eastern column. Five thousand. Quiet march. Shadow his rear."
A runner vanished.
"And the coastal force?" Magnus asked.
"Parallel advance," Anders said. "Do not reveal until they see the water."
He paused, eyes narrowing.
"Let him believe he is winning."
Arthur
The march was brutal.
They moved fast, cutting through hedgerows and low hills, men sweating beneath mail despite the cold. Discipline held, but Arthur could feel the strain in their steps. Too many had seen Ironbear Hall up close. Too many had watched friends fall without ever reaching a wall.
Still, when the scent of salt reached them, hope surged like blood returning to a numbed limb.
The coast lay ahead.
The ships were there—black shapes at anchor, masts like ribs against the sky.
A murmur rippled through the ranks.
Arthur lifted his hand. "Hold formation."
The beachhead fort came into view—low walls, modest towers. Nothing like Ironbear Hall.
This, he thought, we can take.
"Forward," he commanded.
Anders
The trap tightened.
From the inland hills, his first column emerged—not rushing, not shouting. Shield walls unfolded with mechanical precision. Spears angled. Crossbows lifted.
Arthur’s rear scouts saw them too late.
The horns sounded then. Not one. Many.
From the coast, Anders’ second force rose like the tide itself, cutting off the beach.
Anders watched from horseback as panic finally flickered through the enemy ranks.
"Now," he said.
Arthur
The world narrowed to noise. 𝒻𝓇𝑒𝘦𝘸𝑒𝒷𝓃ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝒸ℴ𝘮
Horns behind him. Shouts from the flanks. Men turning, colliding, trying to understand how the ground itself had betrayed them.
Arthur spun in the saddle, heart hammering.
Steel walls where there had been open land.
Banners he did not recognize—silver stars on blue—on both horizons.
Encircled.
"Reform!" Arthur bellowed. "Shield wall! Face inland!"
The command was obeyed—but imperfectly. Too many units had already broken formation in the dash toward the coast.
And then the bolts came.
Not volleys. Selections.
Arthur watched a veteran captain—one of his best—lift his shield just as a steel-tipped bolt punched through its rim and into his throat. He fell without a sound.
Another bolt took a standard-bearer in the leg, pinning him to the earth.
This was not slaughter.
This was disassembly.
Anders
He did not order the kill yet.
He rode forward instead, stopping where Arthur could see him clearly across the churned grass and fallen men.
Let him see.
Let him understand.
"Target the command knot," Anders said calmly. "Do not advance."
A small unit broke from Arthur’s line—young men, brave or foolish, charging with spears raised.
Anders raised a hand.
The crossbows spoke once.
Three men fell. One crawled. None reached ten paces.
Anders lowered his hand.
Arthur
Arthur’s breath came hard now.
This was wrong. All of it.
No war he knew moved like this. No enemy waited when they could finish it. No king stood so still in the face of blood.
He met Anders’ gaze across the field.
And understood.
This was not a battle.
It was a lesson.
Arthur drew his sword and raised it high—not in challenge, but command.
"Hold!" he shouted. "No more advances!"
The men obeyed—but fear had already done its work.
Behind him, another horn sounded—closer this time.
Arthur turned.
The inland column had closed the last distance.
Steel met steel.
The Engagement
It happened at the center.
Arthur’s household guard—thirty men who had followed him since youth—locked shields as Anders’ enforcers advanced.
No shouting. No wild strikes.
Just pressure.
The enforcers drove forward in steps, shields biting, spears thrusting low and precise. Arthur watched one of his oldest friends, Sir Bedwyr, parry a spear—only to be hooked at the ankle and pulled down, the formation swallowing him whole.
A man screamed.
Another went silent.
The line bent.
Then broke.
Arthur rode into the press, striking left and right, buying seconds where he could. He felt steel glance off his helm, felt the jolt in his arm as his blade struck something solid—and was caught.
A young enforcer twisted Arthur’s sword aside with practiced ease. Not strength. Timing.
Arthur kicked his horse free and fell back, heart pounding.
These were not raiders.
These were trained soldiers.
Anders
He watched Arthur fight.
And felt a flicker of respect.
The king did not flee. Did not hide behind men. He moved where the line was weakest, reinforcing, rallying, leading.
But leadership could not close a pincer.
Anders lifted his hand one final time.
"Cease fire," he said.
The crossbows lowered.
The battlefield stilled, broken only by groans and the surf beyond.
Anders rode forward alone.
Arthur
The silence was worse than the noise.
Arthur stood amid his men—alive, wounded, shaken—and waited as Anders approached at a measured pace.
This time, Anders did not smile.
"You chose well," Anders said, his voice carrying easily. "If you had struck the Hall again, you would be dead."
Arthur laughed once, harsh and breathless. "And this?"
Anders gestured around them—the encircled army, the unbroken lines.
"This is mercy."
Arthur closed his eyes for a heartbeat.
When he opened them, the war had changed forever.







