Chapter 251: What to do What to do....
Many were pinned to the ground or bound with coarse ropes, forced to remain conscious and watch as their spouses were violated by the very men who had raided their fields.
They were made to endure the heart-wrenching, anguished cries of their wives as the strangers forced themselves upon them.
Which ended up becoming a form of psychological torture that began to break the spirit of the village as much as the physical violence broke their bodies.
While these heinous actions naturally garnered the deep-seated and simmering resentment of every surviving villager, Henry remained entirely unmoved by the suffering he had facilitated.
On the contrary, he was quietly pleased when he noticed the immediate change in the way his men addressed him as he moved through the encampment.
