The air, heavy with the stench of blood and iron, hung thick in the ruined chamber. Kai, the elder brother, knelt before his fallen sibling, his eyes glued to the crimson staining his hands. Guilt, a venomous serpent, coiled in his gut, twisting and squeezing the breath from his lungs.
Leto, the silent observer from the shadows, saw the agony etched on Kai's face, a mirror reflecting the emptiness in his own soul. This wasn't the victory he craved, not the vengeance his blood had sought. This was the bitter dregs of betrayal, a poison seeping into every corner of his being.
Kai's voice, raw and ragged, broke the oppressive silence. "How can a brother bear the weight of another's life? How can he turn a blind eye to such brotherly deeds? What type of monster I am?"
Leto, struck by the raw honesty of the question, felt a tremor of empathy crack through his hardened shell. He saw not an enemy, but a man broken by the cruelest of ironies. He pushed Kai's fallen swords towards him, a silent offer of choice.
"The only battle truly lost," Leto rasped, "is the one you surrender before it begins. Rise, Kai. Face me. Let steel, not sorcery, decide our fates."
Kai, surprised by the warrior's unexpected offer, stared at him, searching his eyes for a flicker of deceit. He had never encountered such nobility on the blood-soaked battlefield, such a willingness to grant a fallen enemy a final act of defiance.
"You are an honorable warrior," he finally admitted, his voice thick with shame, "but I am not worthy of your respect. I am not the man I once was."
His words were cut short by a brutal blow, a heavy sword finding its mark in the center of his chest. Leto watched in horror as Kai crumpled, his eyes widening in shock and betrayal. The attacker, none other than the Juton leader, stood over the fallen brother, a cruel grin twisting his lips.
Leto, fury boiling within him, turned his rage on the leader, his voice a low growl. "You and your men gave me incomplete information. You didn't tell me about the traps or the weapon the enemy had. You kept firing the catapults even though we were inside the front. And you attacked the enemy dishonorably from behind."
The leader, unfazed by the warrior's outburst, looked at him, a dry rasp in the tense air. "War, warrior," he sneered, "is not a game of chivalry. There are only victors and the damned. Remember, we fight for the same cause."
Leto, his grip on his own sanity tightening, unsheathed his sword, its cold steel a promise of retribution. "For now," he hissed, the word a barely contained threat.
A frantic soldier burst through the door, his voice ragged with panic. "The ropes are severed, sir! Our access to the dam is cut!"
The leader, eyes gleaming with predatory cunning, turned to the soldier. "Prepare the catapults. It's time to reshape the landscape."
As Leto followed the leader out, his gaze swept over the frenzied activity. Soldiers scrambled like ants, hauling the catapults into position. The air crackled with anticipation, the drums of war beating a relentless rhythm.
The leader, a shark circling his prey, explained his plan. "The dam ahead holds a greater number, but its construction is newer, tougher. We need time, warrior, time to weaken its defenses before your clash with the middle brother."
Another soldier, fear a tremor in his voice, announced the catapults' readiness. Without hesitation, Leto, a lone warrior against a tide of steel, climbed aboard one of the catapults. Fear, a serpent slithering in his gut, was drowned out by his burning resolve.
The enemy, arrows poised like venomous fangs, waited on the other side. The air, thick with anticipation, held its breath. Then, with a deafening crack, the catapults were launched, hurtling Leto and his companions into the sky.
A rain of arrows, a deadly storm, met them as they soared. Soldiers fell, pierced by feathered harbingers of death. But Leto, a whirlwind of steel, deflected the arrows with his blade, a single guardian angel amidst the chaos.
He landed on the enemy dam, feet planted on a battlefield forged from stone and fear. The roar of the oncoming battle, a symphony of clashing steel and dying screams, filled his ears. His hand tightened around his sword, the only instrument he needed in this macabre concerto.