THE EVE OF BATTLE
It turned out to be unusually easy for Clayman to
convene a Walpurgis Council.
The use of Carillon’s “betrayal” as the topic
was important to him. The way it was explained to the demon lords was basically
that Carillon violated their nonaggression agreement by invading the Forest of
Jura, and Milim punished him for it. That was clearly a screen, but none of the
other demon lords protested. It would all be coming out during the Council—but
by then, it’d be over. That was Clayman’s aim. Walpurgis would earn him
valuable time toward awakening himself, becoming a true demon lord, and
obtaining immense powers. And Milim would be there, too. If she acted subservient
to him in front of the other demon lords, that’d just prove to them all that
Clayman was not willing to accept any back talk.
That was his plan, and to make it reality, he
needed his military operation to succeed. It had to wrap up quickly, before the
other demon lords could interfere. He also had the perfect excuse—to punish
Carillon for violating that treaty, just like how the Council was convened. He
just had to produce the evidence he needed to prove it.
With everything in
place, Clayman immediately took action. Passing through the demon lord Milim’s
domain, his forces pressed on into the Beast Kingdom of Eurazania. Yamza, a man
faithful to Clayman from his very heart, was chosen to be their leader. He was
the only one who knew his master’s true aims—to drive his army of thirty
thousand into Eurazania and claim the over ten thousand souls inside before the
Council began.
“These people drive me
up the wall! How dare they propose that we work together?!”
The man yelling angrily was Middray, head priest
of the temple built for the Dragon Faithful in their domain’s largest city.
This made him leader of those who worshiped Milim as a goddess.
“But, Father Middray, failing to follow this
order would put us in serious trouble. Yamza, their commander… He bore an
imperial edict from Lady Milim herself, did he not?”
The simpering associate pleading his case
before Middray was Hermes, a member of the priests who served this temple. He
had a transcendental air about him, which most people mistook as him being spaced
out and insincere. It grated on Middray’s nerves.
“Silence, Hermes. I don’t need you telling me
that! I know it!”
Hermes couldn’t help but roll his eyes at the
enraged head priest, even though he understood too well what irked him. It was
those magic-born who had been camped out since yesterday. They had come here,
to the City of the Forgotten Dragon, without warning and promptly occupied it
like it was theirs all along. Apparently, they were a force from the demon lord
Clayman, heading for the demon lord Carillon’s domain to investigate an
agreement he had broken.
Refusing them simply wasn’t an option. Middray
could rant and rave all he wanted; it wouldn’t have changed a thing. There was
a pretty good reason for this—the demon lord who toppled Carillon’s Beast
Kingdom of Eurazania was none other than Milim, the object of Hermes’s and his
fellow priests’ worship. If their supreme being was involved, it was only
natural for Clayman’s forces to ask them for help in collecting evidence
against Carillon. In fact, if they didn’t find
anything, that would put Milim in an embarrassing position. Milim herself
wouldn’t care, but Hermes and the others would.
“Ah, Lady Milim can be such a handful
sometimes…”
Her selfishness could be forgiven, Hermes
reasoned, but just a little—really, a tiny amount
would be fine—he wished that she gave them a moment’s worth of consideration.
“How dare you,
Hermes! You will never cast doubt upon Lady Milim’s
actions!”
“No, I know that, but…”
But it’s getting harder and harder for us because
we’re always spoiling her. He didn’t say it. It’d just spark another wave of
anger from Middray. This is quite a handful, he thought, sighing.
He recalled how things had spiraled downward
since yesterday. The army had requested permission to pass through in advance,
and even then, their high-pressure tactics rubbed the priests the wrong way.
This force clearly looked down upon the Dragon Faithful; it was obvious that
their requests for “support” weren’t really requests at all. They were orders,
through and through.
The Dragon Faithful
that resided here, in the City of the Forgotten Dragon, numbered less than a
hundred thousand in total. They all worked together in their daily lives, there
being no central government to speak of. As a result, none were particularly
gifted in battle—they relied on Milim’s protection to keep the peace.
That, at least, was how it appeared to outside
observers. But this was only half right.
Yes, there was no government. All the crops
and other goods produced were collected at the Central Temple, where it was
distributed equally by the head priest. It might seem like this system would
fail, encouraging people to grow unproductive and lazy, but that wasn’t the
case. Everyone, workers and nonworkers, was guaranteed at least a certain
amount of the wealth—and the more hardworking would also be provided with
additional supplies.
This was similar to the “universal basic
income” idea that had gained traction around modern Japan. The main issue was
who got to decide how much of a contribution each individual made to
society…and that was Middray’s job, granted exclusively to him by Milim.
That right afforded Middray all but absolute
power in this city, but he never abused that power. Why? Simple: Because the
other priests who served him had the right to dismiss him from office. If he
got too selfish with his decisions, he’d lose his post. That understanding was
what kept Middray from becoming a tyrant. (Of course, they already had a tyrant on hand in Milim, and nobody was stupid enough
to try to imitate her game, but still.)
Thus, these tens of thousands of people were
far better led and organized than one would expect at first. While some may
think the city was lacking in military strength, that was completely untrue.
The Dragon Faithful, thanks to certain local conditions, all had very strong
physical skills. In addition to their organizational acumen, each adult was
strong enough to almost reach C rank. Their pacifism didn’t make it clear at
first, but this was actually quite a formidable group of warriors.
The priests, in particular, were in a class of
their own. There were only a hundred or so of these guys, handpicked from the
best the region had to offer, and they could definitely mess you up. Their
daily “prayer sessions” to Milim (i.e. battle training) gave them superior
combat skills, and once you got up to the level of Middray or Hermes, they were
even strong enough to give Milim a run for her money. That’s why Middray was so
enraged that Clayman’s forces were treating them like dirt.
And that wasn’t this people’s only secret. The
second one was the clincher.
Another day passed.
Clayman’s army was now freely raiding the city’s storehouses for food supplies.
The veins throbbed on Middray’s forehead as he was asked to remain patient with
them.
“But why has Lady Milim not returned?” he
asked, trying to adjust the target of his rage.
“Well, who knows?” Hermes distractedly
replied. They had gone through this back-and-forth a dozen times or so, and it
was getting on his nerves more and more.
“We prepared this wonderful meal for her… I
hope Lady Milim is not hungry somewhere out there, you see…”
“I doubt it,” Hermes countered. In fact, he
was sure about it. The wonderful meal Middray mentioned was a “plate of
nature’s bounties,” which in fact was a bunch of raw vegetables on a plate. The
last time he had a meal with Milim, Hermes stole a glance at her, only to find
her lamely chewing away, all expression drained from her face.
I could tell she wasn’t
enjoying it, he thought. She was
just trying her best to power through it. Judging by her joy when some
roasted meat was brought out, there was no doubt in his mind.
He had suggested to Middray that actually
cooking the food might please Lady Milim more, but that fell on deaf ears. It
was the head priest’s firm belief that providing all the glories of nature, in
their most natural form, was the best possible way to pamper her. That’s exactly why Lady Milim hardly comes around any longer,
he wanted to say, but it’d be his neck on the line if he did.
Hermes had traveled extensively across the
land, giving him insight into the cuisines of many nations. The other priests,
meanwhile, didn’t have that experience. They were too closed-minded to think
that anything apart from “pure nature” would be right, so Hermes just gave up
eventually.
“Perhaps, perhaps not,” mused Middray. “But
just imagine. That villain Clayman, thinking he’s king of the world, making
Lady Milim write that edict…”
It was definitely written in Milim’s sloppy—
Er, unique handwriting. They had no choice but to
carry it out, but they could only go so far with it.
“Yeah, true. We can’t do much if it’s Lady
Milim’s orders…but they’ve emptied out Food Storehouse Number Three, too. We’ve
only got seven left. That’s going to make things lean until the next harvest…”
“Dammit all!!”
Veins swelled across Middray’s bald head like
the skin of a melon. It was rather clear just how angry he was. And given how
he had to work hard to keep from laughing at it, Hermes was a pretty shameless
priest, too.
As they spoke, the very
source of all their troubles came walking up—the general manager of the Clayman
force.
“Feh! Keep your cool, Hermes.”
“I hear you.”
You first, Hermes thought. He was hoping the man would walk on past, but sadly,
he was headed straight toward them. They closed their mouths and waited for the
man, Yamza, to arrive.
Yamza was the general commander of Clayman’s
forces, a man seen as one of the demon lord’s most trusted confidants. Slender
in size and build, he looked light enough to float into the air, making him a
fighter built for speed. Or perhaps, not a fighter so much as a swordsman. A
first-class swordsman with arms as fast as a passing gale. The Ice Blade, a
Unique weapon gifted to him by Clayman, allowed him to use the aspectual magic
Ice Blizzard. Between that and his latent sword skills, the Frozen Swordmage
was an A-plus magic-born in rank.
“Well, hello there, Father Middray. We do
appreciate the provisions you’re supporting us with. With an army of thirty
thousand, there’s just never enough to go around.”
He flashed a friendly grin at them, but his
eyes weren’t smiling. He silently, carefully gauged Middray’s response. He
didn’t give Hermes a glance. It was a common thing to see, magic-born treating
humans like second-class citizens. Hermes wasn’t a fan, but he sucked it up,
just as Middray told him to. There was no point starting a fight. He saw it as
just a temporary affront.
“Ha-ha-ha! It’s an honor to be in your
service. However, sadly, it is difficult to provide you with much more than we
already have. Lady Milim would be saddened if our people don’t have enough to
eat.”
“What are you saying?!” Even that little
retort was enough to set Yamza off. “Your Milim was
the one who stepped out of line. We’re trying to clean up the mess she made, so
the least you could do is show us all the respect you can!”
It was an act, of course. He was pretending to
be mad so that he could see how Middray reacted. If the head priest retaliated,
he clearly intended to use that as a pretext to sack the city.
“Ah, my pardons,” Middray modestly began. “We
were thinking only about ourselves there, for a moment. We will provide you
with all the cooperation we can, so please feel free to ask.”
Hermes was thoroughly impressed. All that
haughty elitism, and Middray didn’t let any of his anger reach his face. He
kept the smile going the whole time.
Well done, Father Middray. Your head didn’t go
all melon-like at all. I would’ve snapped at him long ago.
Yamza returned his smile. “I see, I see. I was
hoping to hear that. We have enough people to sweep up the Beast Kingdom, but
allow me to give you the opportunity to help us out. You should be able to
support us with material transport, shouldn’t you?”
“W-wait just a minute! First you take our
food, then you take our people from—”
Hermes hadn’t intended to resist him. He just
let his mouth run off. The next instant, Hermes felt an intense pain in what
used to be his left arm.
“Ah?!”
“Silence, you piece of trash!”
The slitted eyes of Yamza, placed upon Hermes
for the first time, were cold as ice. Holding his severed arm in place, Hermes
gritted his teeth and glared at him.
“…So you don’t know your place. You appear in
a hurry to die.”
Now his smile was brutal in its chill, as
Yamza pointed his bloodstained sword at Hermes.
Bastard. Thinks he can tell me what to do—
Just as Hermes was about to lose his temper,
he was thrown back by a force like a wild animal butting against him. This was
a kick, from Middray, hard enough to nearly break the skin.
“Ah, no, my apologies for all of this, Sir
Yamza. I’ll teach this fool how to behave correctly, so please, by my name, I
hope you will forgive him.”
Middray bowed his head toward the magic-born.
“Pfft. Always a pain, isn’t it, when the
people below you are such idiots? I will forgive him just this once. We will
depart tomorrow morning, so I want all of you priests to prepare immediately!”
Middray’s mediation was enough to make Yamza
sheathe his sword. But it came at a heavy price. The Dragon Faithful’s priests,
the leaders of their people, had just been forcibly conscripted.
Yamza promptly left with nothing more to say.
He wasn’t expecting fighters among the Faithful; he just wanted the priests and
their healing magic. And thanks to Hermes’s needless meddling, Yamza had
everything he wanted.
After he left, Middray
sighed and healed Hermes’s wound.
“You utter fool. I warned you about that.”
“I’m sorry—I just couldn’t help myself…”
Hermes held his arm in place as Middray began
his work, casting the holy magic Recovery on it. In a few moments, the
amputated limb was good as new. The blood loss made him a little light-headed,
but he could use his own Healing skill to tackle that.
“All right. Well, even if the priests are
gone, our people won’t be affected right away. But that man…”
The anger he held back was now clear on his
face as Middray glared in the direction Yamza walked off to.
“…He is damaging Lady Milim’s own assets.”
He was referring to his attack on Hermes. It
was an unforgivable act of aggression, although he was now trying to sweep that
kick he landed under the rug.
That kick hurt like hell, too, y’know…
But Hermes didn’t bring it up. He knew Middray
didn’t mean ill of him. As befitting someone who worshiped Milim, Middray
tended to fly into violent rages all too easily. Something you could say about
everyone in this domain, really…
“No, but really… Do you mind if I kill him?”
“Fool,” the head priest promptly replied. “You
don’t stand a chance.”
He wasn’t wrong. Hermes probably couldn’t even
scratch him.
“Yeah. That sword’s unbeatable, and I think
he’s hiding something else, too.”
“Indeed. He is the confidant of that scheming
sneak Clayman; he won’t reveal his true powers that easily. A real man would
put it all on the table to secure victory, but not them…”
I wouldn’t call that approach very smart, Hermes thought, but
again, Hermes didn’t agree too often with the way people thought in this
domain. So he pretended to agree and went back to work. With the new deadline
of tomorrow morning coming out of nowhere, he had a mountain of business to
settle.
The next morning, with two days left until the
Walpurgis Council, the Clayman force continued their forward march.
It was the morning
after the summit. I had been working all night, and my body was giving me a lot
of guff for it. Or my mind was, anyway. In reality, I couldn’t have been
healthier. Not needing to sleep helps a lot at times like these.
Last night, after our conference, Soei
contacted me again. He participated in the meeting in the flesh, but one of his
Replications reported in this time, after collecting information from across
the Beast Kingdom. Soka, and the other four people on his team, were
contributing as well, providing a few more solid leads.
The Clayman force, ever on the lookout, still
had not moved.
In the midst of this, they all searched for
someplace to deploy our own forces, but a problem arose. The fleeing residents
of the Beast Kingdom were spread out all over the place. If we wanted to rescue
them, then no matter where we transported our army to, we might have some areas
left unevacuated before time ran out. Thanks to the Clayman force’s invasion
route, we were lagging behind schedule.
Suggestion. It would be
more effective to transport the citizens to a single location.
Hmm.
I see. Yeah, I suppose it would be. No reason why that kind of transport is
military only. Dominate Space allowed me to
smoothly travel wherever I wanted, including to Soei, his Replications, or Soka
and the others. I could then use the new type of transport spell we devised to
collect all the evacuees together.
Thanks to that, things got very busy after the
conference. First, I had Geld’s army go on ahead to build a field base that
could accept these refugees. I transported them over to the former location of
Eurazania’s capital, which Milim had turned into a vacant lot. Being a
wide-open field, it stuck out like a sore thumb, but there’d be no better place
to deploy a large force in.
Then I personally went from village to
village, transporting the refugees out. This we wrapped up before the end of
last night, which was why I was so exhausted—mentally speaking, that is.
Phobio was with me, which thankfully kept us
from dealing with any resistance, although it exhausted him as well.
“Performing all this teleportation,” he marveled before he left, looking at me
like I was some kind of fiend. “How can you keep yourself together…? And such
elaborate transport magic, over and over again… It seems absurd.”
Well, that’s rude of him, isn’t it? Of course I’m
tired.
By now, Phobio should have been asleep in a
room inside one of the field tents Geld’s force built. But that didn’t matter.
Our main force would be ready soon, so I needed to perform one really big transport shortly.
I headed for an empty
field just outside town. Rigurd was there, having spent the night preparing for
this. Unlike me, he was running and hopping around, a bottomless well of
energy. Rigur was called back as well, and he was pitching in all he could to
help Rigurd. Once they were done, it was my job to transport all the people
gathered here to our Beast Kingdom field camp. Once that was over, I planned to
start preparing for the Walpurgis Council two days from now.
Upon reaching the field, I found lines of
Tempestian soldiers waiting for me—including ten thousand beastmen, led by
Sufia and Alvis. Their armor was piecemeal, nothing unified about it, but that
was unavoidable. We had simply provided them whatever armor we didn’t need, and
since many were capable of transformation anyway, this was better than
confining them in full uniform.
Next to them were my leaders, ready to serve
as reinforcements. Even compared to the Charybdis battle, our size—and our
power to wage war—had grown tremendously.
Benimaru, noticing,
stood next to me and took this opportunity to explain the evolutions that had
taken place.
Following my own demon lord evolution,
everyone else in Tempest had some change of their own. The World Language said
something about everyone in my “genealogy” receiving “gifts,” and I assumed
that meant everyone I had named.
“Based on what we heard from the townspeople,”
he said as we faced the ranks of soldiers, “the men now enjoy enhanced stamina.
The women report that their skin is glossier and more beautiful than before.
None of that mattered to me—or I should say, it was beyond my comprehension,
but I suppose you could say their spiritual strength has risen.”
Some, he reported, looked like they turned
back the clock a few years. Everyone appreciated it. But these were the
townspeople. They were holding down the fort back home. Let’s see what our
fighters are packing.
Among our platoons, as well, there was a
litany of changes. Some soldiers learned new skills for themselves; others
gained the same skill in groups, based on the unique nature of their squad. I
couldn’t wait to dive in and see for myself.
We first visited a group that had been with me
almost from the start—Gobta’s goblin riders, a legion of hobgoblins led by
starwolves that almost never naturally appeared unless the right conditions
were in place. But were they really hobgoblins? That’s their species, perhaps,
but their essence was something wholly different now.
Astoundingly, they had all learned the extra
skill Unify. This was a rare one that let man and mount quite literally become
one, turning them into mobile, high-speed, four-legged warriors. They were
awarded an A-minus rank in this form—they didn’t manage a solid A since they
were geared mainly for one-on-one combat, but they were killers in battle. A
few working together could probably beat an A-ranked magic-born.
That was the whole gimmick with them, of
course. The goblin riders were a team, guaranteed to work rapidly with one
another’s thoughts and remain steadily in formation. They were keeping up with
Hakuro’s training, after all—and if you imagine a hundred moving in tandem, you
can see what made these Riders so fearsome.
I definitely felt like the human-invented
ranking system was doing these guys a disservice. I could expect a lot more
from them than that, even.
Next, we visited some
of Benimaru’s personal trainees.
Once I became leader of the Forest of Jura, we
started enjoying a lot more combat-ready monsters in our midst. This included
three hundred ogres, the most powerful of which were young men and women from
the village that sought my help early on. They looked up to Benimaru a lot,
which affected the “gifts” they received.
It was really a crazy sight to see. Some had
volunteered for the force, making them named warriors from the start. They were
strong enough to be considered low-level magic-born, which made them a
tremendously reliable asset. Even a wild, non-sentient ogre ranked a B—and
these guys were both fully equipped and had learned some Arts. These were never
gonna be wimpy kids.
These ogres had formed a sort of elite
personal guard for Benimaru, and each was A-minus in rank. I named them Team
Kurenai, or red flame.
Now, for the fighters
assigned to Benimaru’s main force.
This was around four thousand hobgoblins, and
their evolution was really fascinating to me. They had more or less taken on
the flame element, learning skills like Control Flame and Resist Temperature
Change. Kind of a surprise. Each soldier ranked a B equivalent, and you could
call them a specialized assault team.
By the way, these hobgoblins all had a
reference to the color “green” in their names, since their skin was green. I
don’t know who named them, but I really wish he thought a little more about the
long-term effect with that.
Report. They were named
by you, Master.
I know!!
Eesh, I wasn’t expecting to get dissed by my
own skill here. Talk about unwanted sarcasm. Like, I can’t read that far into every single thing, guys. These monster
evolutions just made no sense.
Since everybody was named “green” something, I
named this army the Green Numbers. Might as well go with it. I wanted to go
with “red” something since these were Benimaru’s forces, but I kinda liked the
feel of this, too. It’d be a nice little surprise, this green force unleashing
all these flame attacks. I think I’ll have their equipment repainted green for
the battlefield sometime.
Next up was Geld’s
force, a sort of complement to the Green Numbers.
The high orcs all evolved in the same way,
earning power-up skills like Steel Strength and Iron Wall. Their officer class
also had the extra skill Control Earth, letting them mold and sculpt the land
around them. Good for digging trenches in a hurry, as Geld put it.
In addition, everyone in the army had earned
the extra skill Armorize Body, making them into much more of a defense-oriented
tank unit. They had also taken on a lot of my personal resistances—Resist Melee
Attack to start with, followed by Pain, Rot, Electricity, and Paralysis.
Kabal’s Charus Shield, the completed version of the one I gave him as a
present, was now a Unique piece of equipment that boosted his magic resistance.
Basically, whether it was melee or magic, they could deal with it. I gave half
a thought to exposing them to Shion’s cuisine so they could gain poison
resistance but quickly banished the thought.
Still, obtaining all those shield-like scales
from Charybdis was really a stroke of luck. Kurobe had made lots of copies of
the items Garm had created from them, and I really have those craftsmen to
thank for that.
Now, this unit was sturdy enough that each
member ranked a solid B. That, plus the Unique equipment on each one, made them
impervious to any normal force. It was almost unfair how defensively able they
were, and they numbered five thousand, their ranks beefed up by a constant
stream of volunteers. Normally, they were involved in construction work, but
when they received the call, they transformed into a powerhouse, an iron wall
that no attack could pierce.
Their official name was now the Yellow
Numbers.
Close behind them were
the hundred dragonewts under Gabil’s command.
Dragonewts were naturally gifted with a pretty
decent array of skills, and they had all but breezed into the A-minus ranks.
Now, with my gifts, the dragon in their blood had awakened to an even stronger
degree. Each of them now had the intrinsic skill Dragon Body, along with either
Flame Breath or Thunder Breath, giving them some much-needed long-range
attacks. Gabil could use them both, which meant he really was
an exceptional dragonewt, I guess.
What I still didn’t really get was Dragon
Body.
Report. The intrinsic
skill Dragon Body is—
Oh, um, I didn’t need
the full documentation. I know now that I can’t use it, so there’s not much
point in hearing it. I’m sure Gabil and the rest will take the time to figure
out how to use it best, if they want. What’s the point of having power if you never earned
it for yourself? That’s what I think.
Huh? What about me? Well, I have the ultimate
skill Raphael, Lord of Wisdom. If I have a problem, Raphael will help me out.
No issue there. That’s my power, so in a way, it’s like
I’m the one making the effort there. I don’t think
it’s going too far to say that.
So! Hopefully Gabil and his team can learn how to
use that Dragon Body thing before it’s too late! Not to throw it all on you,
but good luck.
Still, in a way, it was almost like this
squad’s talents were going to waste with Gabil. They could fly; they could
breathe fire and lightning from the air… It’s nuts. And thanks to their
intrinsic species aspects, they were resistant to pretty much everything—scales
of steel, breastplate armor of magisteel. Whether by sword or by magic, no
halfhearted strike was going to break their skin. Flight alone was enough to
give them an overwhelming advantage, but look at that defense! Speed, offense,
defense—the complete surprise-assault package, all in one.
I named them Team Hiryu, or flying
dragon. They only numbered a hundred, but they were the strongest unit
in our forces.
Last but not least, we
had a brand-new unit, one positioned as my personal elite guard. Led by Shion,
they were also a hundred strong, composed of the victims I revived after the
battle in Tempest. There were some children, age-wise, among them, but
apparently they had grown up to—and beyond—the point of maturity. I guess their
frustration at not being able to fight encouraged that kind of evolution? Who
knows?
As far as skills go, they all earned the extra
skills Complete Memory and Self-Regeneration. Those two complemented each
other. Complete Memory meant that even if their heads were blown off, their
memories remained in their astral bodies. They could then use Self-Regeneration
to recover fully instead of dying instantly. This meant they had basically
gained the astonishing healing skills of the Orc Disaster of yore.
If Self-Regeneration ever evolved into
Ultraspeed Regeneration, they’d be pretty much immortal. And I had a hundred of
these guys. I couldn’t even deal. And thanks to that regeneration, they were
durable enough to take Shion’s ultra-intense training and deal with it just
fine. As a female member put it, one who was just a little girl not long ago:
“We don’t die or anything!” I didn’t have much of an answer to that, no. I
wasn’t sure if this was the best thing for ’em, but hey, have fun! Break a leg!
Their strength was at around a rank C for now,
but I had a feeling that, over time, they’d become the strongest unit in our
forces. With that expectation, I decided to name them Team Reborn. They all had
a whole new life ahead of them, after all.
That rounded out the
briefing.
It felt like the effects of my evolution
dovetailed well with everybody’s personal efforts to bear some major fruit for
us. My first impression was Wow, we’re more damaging than
ever. The total force was under ten thousand, but we could whip pretty
much any army out there. Their numbers weren’t as strong as the Farmus military
I wiped out, but in terms of war power, we would’ve totally overwhelmed them.
All this stuff came as a total surprise to me.
Being outnumbered is still a weakness, but we’d just have to gradually build
that up, between strengthening our country and negotiating with others. I think
a standing force of around ten thousand would be the number to shoot for.
Plus, we still had our
reserve forces protecting the Forest of Jura. They weren’t part of this
campaign—the difference in training was just too much—but if we could work ’em
up, they’d serve us well enough in battle, too. That’s something to tackle in
the future
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