Chapter 760: In a pickle(2)

Chapter 760: In a pickle(2)


Marcus kept his pace steady as he descended deeper into the mine’s winding tunnels, his boots crunching on gravel and loose rock.


The air grew heavier with each step, thick with the mingled stench of sweat, dust, and smelly air.


Every time his eyes adjusted to the gloom, they found the same miserable sight, ent, skeletal figures in ragged scraps of cloth, hacking away at the rock face with dull pickaxes.


The deeper they went, the less the light of the sun reached them.


Here and there, torches had been jammed into iron brackets or wedged into cracks in the wall, their flames sputtering, casting thin circles of light that barely pushed back the shadows. Beyond each circle, the darkness swallowed everything whole.


The overseers loitered along the tunnel walls, leaning on whips or spears, watching their assigned groups of slaves with bored or predatory eyes.


Occasionally, one would crack a whip across a miner’s back for pausing too long or for swinging their tool a little slower than before. The sharp snap of leather against flesh cut through the dull rhythm of pickaxes striking stone, followed by a stifled grunt or cry.


Marcus’s gaze wandered across the workers’ faces.


Filthy, hollow-eyed, sunken-cheeked, most looked like they could collapse at any moment. Weeks here could strip the life from a man, and he knew for a fact that many of these souls hadn’t been in the mine for more than a month. Yet already they had that look, of a man resigned to a slow death.


Compared to this, his old life as a carrier in the Romelian army had been almost comfortable. The work had been backbreaking at times, yes, but he hadn’t lived under the lash daily or been worked to the brink of death every day.


That was a death slower that came after months of starving, not weeks of hard labor.


A few faces in the crowd were his own people, men hidden in plain sight. As he passed each section, Marcus made careful note of where they were stationed, how many of them there were, and how many of the enemy oversaw that stretch. He counted, memorizing positions.


Every detail mattered. Every gap in coverage, every blind corner, every lazy guard could make the difference between success and slaughter.


If their plan was going to work, there could be no surprises, especially since odds were already against them.


For the most part, they moved through the tunnels without drawing attention. Most overseers only cared about getting through their shift so they could drag themselves back to the castle and collapse. A few had already wandered off to squat in a corner or lean against the wall for a smoke of oppium, leaving their charges to toil unsupervised for a few precious minutes.


But most didn’t mean all.


Every workplace had its zealots, those men who took their role far too seriously or who simply enjoyed making life harder for others.


"Oi, where are you going?"


The voice came from behind. Marcus forced his shoulders to relax before turning, schooling his face into something between irritation and boredom. An overseer was making his way toward them, the tip of his whip scraping lazily across the stony ground.


"Taking a piss," Marcus said, letting his tone carry just enough annoyance to sound believable.


"The exit’s on the other side." The man scratched the side of his cheek with the whip’s handle. The gesture pulled his collar slightly, and Marcus’s eyes flicked to the burn scar snaking across the man’s neck, old, ugly, and deep.


"I like to piss in the dark," Marcus shot back, stepping toward him, his voice hardening. "You got a problem with that? Or do you want to come hold my hand while I take a piss?"


The overseer didn’t flinch, didn’t even blink.


"Then why’s he going with you?" he asked, tilting his chin toward Marcus’s companion. "What, is he going to hold your hand too?"


"None of your fucking business," Marcus snapped, sharp as a whip crack. "Unless you’re volunteering to join us."


The overseer stared at him for a long, silent moment. Then, with a faint shake of his head, he muttered, "I don’t swim in that part of the river," and turned away, ambling back to his post.


Marcus only let his fingers slip from the hilt of the dagger at his hip once the man’s back was fully turned. Without another word, he jerked his head toward his subordinate, and together they pressed on, heading deeper into the tunnels.


As they moved deeper into the winding tunnels of the mine, Marcus began to feel it.


They were lucky. Exceptionally lucky.


The tunnels didn’t run in a straight line. They coiled and curled like a lightning bolt frozen in stone, forming a maze of walls and blind corners. That worked in their favor. If things went to plan, they could act in one section without alerting the others.


Even the echoing clang of pickaxes, so constant and overwhelming, became their unwitting ally, masking footsteps, muffling whispers, and it would soon be hiding murders.


After several turns and another descent, they reached the end of one tunnel. A cramped, dark cavity where the last twelve slaves of the batch worked under the dull glow of two torches.


Two overseers stood watching the workers lazily. One leaned against the wall with his whip curled around his shoulder, the other nudged a sluggish slave forward with the butt of his boot. They barely reacted to Marcus’s approach until the faint clink of metal armor caught their attention.


One of them straightened. His brow furrowed in confusion as he turned to face Marcus and his companion.


"What are you doing here?" the man asked, stepping fully away from the line of slaves, his eyes narrowing.


Marcus’s heartbeat quickened, but his face remained blank. No hesitation. He glanced back briefly to confirm what mattered most: the bend in the tunnel behind them kept them completely hidden from view. No one else could see or hear what was about to happen.


He turned back, his voice low but urgent, loud enough only for nearby ears. "Haven’t you heard?"


The man frowned, stepping closer. "Heard what?"


The second overseer looked over now, finally paying attention. Marcus gave him a slight wave, beckoning him closer. The man hesitated but began moving toward them, though slower, less convinced.


"New orders from the captain," Marcus said vaguely, stalling, buying seconds.


The first overseer was close now, maybe two strides away. He scowled. "Well? Out with it, are we finall-"


He never finished.


In one fluid motion, Marcus’s hand shot to his belt, dagger flashing like as fast lightning. The blade punched through the man’s throat, just beneath the chin. A wet, gurgling gasp escaped him as his knees buckled. Blood sprayed in short bursts, warm and arterial, it would have painted Marcus’s hand and chest if he had not turned to the unwounded side of the neck, avoiding the crimson burst.


The man clawed weakly at Marcus’s forearm before collapsing to the ground, twitching.


At the same instant, Marcus’s companion struck. His dagger came in low and fast, sliding beneath the second overseer’s raised arm, piercing the soft flesh of the armpit and closing his hands around the man’s mouth to muffle his whimpers. The blade angled upward, severing arteries and puncturing the heart in one brutal thrust.


The overseer’s eyes widened in confusion, he tried to cry out, but only a strangled wheeze emerged as his breath caught in his throat, which was easily muffled by the work of the slaves. His legs gave way, and he crumpled in a heap, limbs spasming before going still.


Silence returned, broken only by the oblivious pickaxe strikes of the slaves a few paces away who haven’t seen anything given they were with their faces toward the wall.


Marcus stood over the bodies, breathing hard through his nose, blood dripping from his dagger. No screams. No alarms. Just two corpses cooling on the stone.


It had worked.


For now.


After a few long, tense seconds, one of the slaves, thin, sunken-eyed, and caked in dust, turned around, perhaps drawn by a flicker of movement or the sudden lack of whipping sounds. His eyes landed on the two corpses lying in the red-tinged dust, their blood pooling slowly across the uneven stone floor, dark and glistening in the torchlight.


Marcus stood over the bodies, dagger still in hand, blood dripping from the blade in a slow rhythm.


The slave froze. His cracked lips parted slightly in disbelief. His gaze traveled from the bodies to Marcus’s face and back again.


Marcus lifted a finger slowly and pressed it to his lips, signaling for silence.


The man gave the faintest nod.


More slaves began to turn, one after another. The noise of mining closest to Marcus faltered. The harsh rhythm of pickaxes on stone slowed, then stopped entirely.


None of the slaves made a sound, shocked and awed.


Perhaps in another place or time, they might’ve taken the opportunity to rest, to sit, to stretch their aching limbs. But not now.


Marcus lowered his hand and stepped forward slowly, speaking just loud enough to be heard by all in the small tunnel. His voice was calm, steady, but laced with urgency.


"We’re here to free you," he said. "Cooperate and you’ll walk out of here as free men."


His words lingered in the stale air, there was no cheer, no immediate eruption of joy. These men had been broken by time and hunger .


Hope was but a luxury they had long since learned to live without.


Or at least that was the case until it was literally shoved on their face, as this was exactly the case.