Chapter 366: The North’s Will (1)
Dorgon came and went like the wind. Of course, the kind of art he displayed belonged in the depths of hell, but that didn’t change the fact that the raid by over 10,000 nomads was enough to turn the Sarei front into hell.
The nomads’ activity on the front was short. However, becano one in the whole North and in all the continent could truly threaten him.use they caused concentrated chaos in that short time, the results were absolutely disastrous. Their horses trampled over troops. Their riders, fully prepared for battle, slashed with their swords and rained arrows down upon the ranks.
“We’re pulling the front line back.”
It was bad enough for Father to make such a decision, but this wasn’t simply because our side suffered heavy losses. The real problem wasn’t the troops that can be replenished from other fronts, but this damned terrain.
Honestly, most of the North was far from ideal for defense, but the Sarei tribe’s territory was especially bad. The Sarei tribe didn’t have to worry about attacks from other tribes; rather, they were the ones beating others up. So, they chose a territory that was easy to expand to, not one advantageous for defense.
“From now on, there won’t be small-scale battles like before. Dorgon is leading a full-scale offensive.”
The other officers nodded at these words. While the empire could gradually expand the front lines against hundreds or thousands of nomads, we needed to switch to defense now that the Khan had appeared while leading an army of over 10,000.
If we foolishly try to gain territory like before and end up annihilating our army corps, we wouldn’t be able to face the Emperor.
It might be a bit odd to be on the defensive when we came on an expedition, but we were fighting against a moving army, not fortresses and castles. As long as we destroyed Dorgon and his forces, it wouldn’t matter how much land we gained or lost in the process.
“There’s a river to the south. We’ll make that our front line.”
It was frustrating to use the very river we just crossed as a defensive wall, but there was no other choice.
Crossing a river twice was better than getting steamrolled by Dorgon twice.
“Inspector.”
“Yes, Marshal.”
I hastily responded to Father’s sudden call.
“Thanks to the Inspector, I and many soldiers were able to escape the traitor’s blade. As the commander of this front, I offer my gratitude once more.”
He kept his tone formal, likely for the sake of the other officers watching. But despite the stiffness of his words, his voice was noticeably softer.
“You’re too kind.”
So, I bowed my head with a slight smile.
This battle hadn’t ended well, but at least Father was still alive. At least I could return to headquarters knowing that.
***Due to the battle on the Sarei front, the empire pulled back its front lines and even lost the chance to take the Khan’s head, their war objective. Looking at the results alone, it was a one-sided loss for the empire.
However, looking at the flow afterward, it turned out to be beneficial for the empire.
“The tribes that maintained neutrality until the end have all surrendered at once.”
The Invincible Duke nodded at the officer’s report.
Dorgon’s offensive had been a direct attack on the heart of the Imperial forces. But in doing so, he had effectively declared to the world, ‘This is my entire army.’
Tribes that didn’t show up when the Khan himself was launching a large-scale offensive? They could no longer be called neutral. They were clearly tribes that differed in opinion from Dorgon, the Khan—and differing in opinion from the Khan during wartime meant siding with the empire.
If they don’t want to die, they have to stick with us.
From that moment on, the so-called neutral tribes abandoned all pretense. They scrambled to defect, tearing off their neutrality like a mask they no longer needed. The Empire itself hadn’t wronged them in any way, but they had insulted the Khan by refusing to fight in his campaign.
So it was a natural action, but...
Spineless bastards.
I couldn’t hide my complex feelings. Even before this mass desertion of neutral tribes, there were many justifications for the nomads to surrender to the empire, like the Kaitana tribe’s advances or the Barandiga tribe’s joining.
Despite this, they conflicted until the end and only surrendered now. Was it their pride? Or were they just that indecisive?
It’s a pity.
Of course, it wasn’t the empire that was pitiful but the tribes that surrendered last. Latecomers always suffered the same fate—they joined the winning side too late to be rewarded for it.
They weren’t like the Kaitana tribe who bowed their heads from the early stages of the war, nor did they have high symbolism like the Barandiga tribe, so there was no particular need to value them highly.
After all, the empire knew that these guys surrendered because they had no other choice. Where else would they go if they didn’t surrender to us?
They had no leverage and no bargaining power. For latecomers, this was the bitter reality.
“They’ve shown their intention to lend their strength in fighting the evil one. They claim that their experience in the plains will make them a valuable asset—“
And to overcome this reality, the latecomers scrambled to prove their worth.
Until now, most surrendered tribes had not been directly involved in combat. It was a given that we wouldn’t push them onto the battlefield. It would only cause unrest if we forced them to fight, and we were also uneasy about entrusting our backs to those who were our enemies until recently. The fact that their surrender had reduced the enemy’s numbers was already enough of a contribution.
But for the latecomers who needed to prove their worth somehow, there was none of that.
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