Chapter 355: Wolves and Dogs (3)
Dorgon’s sky-cutting incident wrapped up smoothly. Some people were terrified that the enemy could tear the sky, but the fear turned into cheers since we immediately countered it successfully.
So the enemy has a warrior strong enough to cut the sky? Well, it’s not a problem if we have a similar strong fighter on our side, right?
Even the Invincible Duke smiled, seemingly satisfied with boosting the morale that almost plummeted. He was usually extremely strict when leading the army unlike in private settings, but here he was, actually smiling in the middle of the camp. That alone spoke volumes about his mood.
It is worth being happy about.
Honestly, considering the pain the Invincible Duke went through in the last war, it wouldn’t be strange if he gave a standing ovation instead of just smiling.
Now that I could cut the sky myself, countering that move had been simple. But in the early stages of the Great Northern War, only Kagan could cut the sky. In other words, there was no way to prevent our troops’ morale from dropping back then.
The Invincible Duke must still remember what it was like to command troops in that extremely harsh situation. So for him, this counterattack must have been deeply satisfying.
“There was a small clash in the Hitra tribe’s territory.”
With the immediate chaos under control, the Invincible Duke started occupying nearby areas as soon as the base was set up. The 4th Manager, who was acting as my escort, relayed information to me whenever it came in.
“Oh? Was there a tribe living there?”
“It was closer to a clan in size than a tribe. Moreover, it’s almost embarrassing to call it a clash, as it was just the fleeing nomads shooting a few arrows.”
So it was just an operation to drive out the natives and not even a nomad raid. That barely even counted as a conflict. The imperial army probably didn’t focus on pursuit, concentrating on occupying the territory.
Thanks to this, there hasn’t been anything that could be called a battle yet, but there will be clashes in the future that will make us miss this current peace.
“If we’ve reached the lands of a fallen tribe, that means other tribes must be packed in nearby.”
The 4th Manager nodded at my words. If they’d settled all the way down to a fallen tribe’s territory and one right next to the empire at that in the vast North, then it meant that there was no space left elsewhere. They’d likely been pushed here because stronger tribes had already claimed all the better lands.
Which meant conflict was inevitable. Either the empire would push forward, expanding its territory, or one of the surrounding tribes would make the first move.
Either way, blood would flow.
“Starting tomorrow, stay with me at the headquarters. It’s better to hear the reports directly than secondhand.”
“Yes, Master.”
At her firm answer, I opened and closed my mouth a few times before shutting it again. It was fine to call me master when we were alone, but it was problematic if she did it when others were around.
First of all, it was a problem that someone from the Special Service Agency force considered someone other than the Emperor as their master, but having a romantic partner call me ‘Master’ was just as bad. If people found out, the whispers would probably be asking if I was the head of the Pervert Department rather than the Inspection Department.
...She’s not the type to make mistakes.
Still, I kept quiet because I trusted the 4th Manager. She wasn’t the type to put me in a difficult position, so she wouldn’t call me master in front of the others.
That was what I chose to believe.
***Simultaneous battles began once we occupied all the areas designated by the Invincible Duke.
We hadn’t yet reached the point of tens of thousands of troops clashing yet—but in the morning, we were woken by alarms of nomad raids. The imperial army marched towards nearby tribal territories at lunch, and it was ‘we had fun, goodbye’ in the evening as both sides withdrew after some scuffling. With these kinds of battles happening all over, the leadership was busy moving about.
“About 800 nomads have appeared on the Bakira front. Hutus Bagia, who went missing with Dorgon in the past, is commanding.”
“We’ve occupied the southern part of the Larkin tribe’s territory, but we’re in a standoff due to fierce resistance. The field is requesting mage unit deployment.”
“Reports have come in of Keshik flags seen on the Sutio front. Given the lack of a large-scale offensive, it seems they’ve sent a few Keshik as field commanders.”
They were really moving busily.
So this is the headquarters.
This was the headquarters I could only visit when summoned by the Invincible Duke when I was just a team manager. Now I was staying here like a resident ghost, witnessing every piece of information as it came in.
It was a strange experience. Reports flooded in at any given moment like hundreds, sometimes thousands of soldiers were on the move. Counterstrategies were formed just as quickly, as if it were second nature. It was a place where the fate of hundreds or thousands was decided with just a word.
Come to think of it, many of the high-ranking officers in the military weren’t actually warmongers. Most of them were rigid, calculating, and cold. I just accepted it before, but now I think I understand why.
Being sentimental would make it unbearable.
When a simple command can send countless men to their deaths, they couldn’t afford to let emotions get in the way. Otherwise, they’d break under the weight of it. Especially field commanders—the ones who dealt with the soldiers up close.
...Then again, maybe field commanders were included in the sacrificial side rather than the commanding side.
“Your Excellency, the Kaitana tribe is moving south towards the Hitra front! Their estimated force is 3,000!”
As I was absentmindedly listening to the officer’s reports, the Invincible Duke’s gaze shifted to one officer’s urgent cry.
3,000?
My gaze also turned to that officer.
3,000 was not a number that could be taken lightly. It might be understandable for an allied force, but it was quite a large number for a single tribe to lead. This was a number that only notable tribes could mobilize even in the last war.
Kaitana...
It was a name I’d never heard before. It seemed like information recently gathered through reconnaissance since the officer knew it, which meant they must have been one of the neutral, independent tribes that sat out the last war.
It was astounding. Back when Kagan united the anti-imperial forces, I had already been stunned that he had somehow scraped together an army of 100,000, but there were still tribes left that could mobilize thousands? If these had joined Kagan, the war would have been even crazier.
But now this tribe was moving south?
Damn it.
If Dorgon had several of these kinds of tribes under his command, then his forces weren’t just the estimated 60,000—we could be looking at 70,000 or more.
“Tell the mage units stationed in Hitra to attack all at once when the Kaitana tribe enters firing range.”
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