Inside the black void of Pascalâs thoughts, he was going through everything that may happen now that the snow was melting. From the South, he received news that the Geth Empire was preparing for a last big push, trying to break through. If that failed, they would have no choice but to start retreating and establish a firm grip on the land they conquered before Ishillia could launch a counterattack.
As for what he gathered, their ally, the Sar Empire, had also used the winter to consolidate their defenses, even if they lost a chunk of their eastern regions to Roblesia and the Theocracyâs joint conquest. They were now in a similar stalemate, especially after the Sar Empire managed to outmaneuver and destroy the Theocracyâs navy. Which meant that Geth would soon receive reinforcement. If not enough to push through, it is certainly sufficient to establish their rule on their occupied territories.
He tried thinking about how to avoid that possibility, to maybe kill Kadosa himself; cutting off the head would make sure that Geth would fall into complete turmoil and a war for succession. Yet no matter what, Lucca couldnât find any options to strike that wouldnât leave them open. The only positive thing he could count on was his disciple, Kivaâs continued suppression of the Kingdom of Scorc and their rebelling forces. Just what he needed because a top-priority message had reached him only a few days ago.
âMaster?â The three consciousnesses asked, greeting Pascal as they linked up their thoughts to his summoning magic.
âBarth,â Pascal spoke, and he already knew why he had singled him out.
âOur spy in Atuvia was discovered.â He explained to the others with a slight shrug, âBut only the mage. Because my connection with him was cut out after a sudden flare, I am sure he is dead.â
âThe others confirmed it.â Pascal continued, âWe still have regular forces there, working without being discovered. We just received the news that this bastardly Avalon is going to use Atuvia to skirt around Barthâs encirclement to penetrate into our territory via the old Scorc. They use the discovery of our spy to push their will through Atuvia. They will surely entice further rebellion after entering the Eastern Provinces and use them to bog Kiva down while they move towards the Capital.â
âNot if we have anything to say about it.â Kiva snorted, making Pascalâs thoughts cut through the others, forcing them to remain silent.
âBarth, how sure you are that our spies are not compromised?â Pascal asked, waiting patiently for his answer, which took a minute to come.
â85%. There is a chance as they did find our mage⦠But they found him because he was a mage. It is evident that Mirian is focused on eliminating everything magical, knowing we have lost too much afterâ¦â
âAfter that idiot,â Pascal grunted, remembering Kathrienâs sacrifice. Since that day, they have been losing mage after mage, leaving them with the untrained, freshly discovered, or simply the untalented ones. âBarth, send a portion of your forces, without being noticed, to reinforce Kivaâs side.â
âUnderstood.â
âAny instructions, Master?â Kiva asked, waiting for Pascalâs design before offering his own ideas.
âLet them break through.â He spoke after a momentary pause, âWe donât want them to know we are aware of their plans. When they push into Ishillia, you can encircle them and crush them before anything.â
âIf they use the Judgementâ¦â Kiva muttered, making Pascal grunt and continuing in an annoyed tone.
âOur remaining ships will be given to you. Destroy the Judgement by any means necessary.â
âIt will be done,â Kiva answered in a cold tone before his disciples slowly, one by one, retreated from his consciousness.
âBetter beâ¦â Pascal exhaled, feeling his head hurting because he was suddenly unsure of too many things. One was the Spear, leaving with Mirianâ¦, and the other was the possibility of the Vasa bloodline returning. Coming back to eliminate the legacy of Ishillia. The heroâs own descendants... The family that saved the world once from certain doom and from being dominated and enslaved. âNo⦠We are Ishillians⦠we will survive.â
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âWhat?â Milan asked, holding his son and looking at Mirian with a stunned expression. "What do you mean by Iâm not coming?â
âAs I said.â Mirian shrugged, stepping closer and looking at the two men who she loved the most. âYou two stay in Cerna. I am not risking anything. I will lead the army forward; you stay and take care of things here, make sure our supplies run smoothly. That is that!â
âBut!â
âNo buts,â Mirian answered, stomping once, making their son turn in his sleep, sucking on his thumbs, âI have already decided, even if you donât like it!â
âI donâtâ¦â
âMe neither, but this is how it will be.â She continued with a softer voice, watching them with a smile. âIt should be only until winter. With how things stand, there is a high chance we will win without a prolonged conflict.â
âIf Avalon manages what they said they would do...â Milan sighed, thinking back to the plans that were already in motion.
Mirian and Elliotâs forces were being gathered, joining up just beyond Cerna, out of any possible eyes of Ishillian spies. When the signal comes that Avalon is ready, the army will start marching. They will consist of more than two hundred thousand soldiers gathered from all the regions of the North. Along them will come the newly developed Avalonian mechanized troops, these long-range cannons Milan was studying in the past year or so. Then, there was Mirianâs own walking machine and the Judgment which would fly out, leading the army and aiming to retake the Capital.
At the same time, Avalon said they would cross over the defenses of Ishillia and drop directly behind their backs, disabling it for the main army. As for how, he didnât know, but he wasnât about to question them. Not after everything he saw and learned from his sister. He studied old wars in Ishillia's history a lot when attending the academy within the Capital⦠and if the Empire survives, this war will have its place in the history books, being taught as the Avalonian Maneuver, if anything.
âJust⦠be safe, okay?â Milan asked, making Mirian giggle like a little girl, giving him a firm kiss.
âDuh. You will still have to gift me a girl too!â
âA girl?â Milan chuckled, blinking his eyes in shock, hearing Mirianâs answer.
âOf course! Leon has sons. If I want him to be a firm ally in the future, it is best if we intermarry our familiesâ kids!â
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The workshop inside my underground base was filled with the noise of people working, doing their best to ensure that everything was ready for our offense against Ishillia. In the past few days, I have been occupied by a single thought: figuring out how to launch and recover six biplanes from this flying fortress. Finally, I came to a decision, one that was the most feasible to achieve and deploy before we made our move.
I stood at the center of the chaos around me, surrounded by blueprints spread across a massive, rectangular table, while I explained everything to the different groups before me, including Krel, who was present to learn. In the end, he decided to keep manufacturing toys and to help me train my people or work for me whenever I called upon him. And that time came sooner than he expected. Still, with what we were doing here, his sharp mind was something I was happy to employ to its fullest. I had already spent multiple days debating with Sasha, bouncing our ideas between us, and considering how to turn the Camelot into a mobile airbase. After finishing them, it was time to transform theory into reality.
âIt has to be on the top deck, as the bottom will be occupied by transferring the mechs over the barrier!â I exclaimed, running my fingers over the blueprint of the airshipâs cross-section. The space above the main hull was also an area large enough to support such a mechanism without compromising the Camelotâs existing features. My words were met with murmurs of agreement from some of the engineers and leading foremen.
âThe weight distribution will need to be recalculated,â Kraus, my Forgemaster, added, stepping up beside me. His tone was even, but his furrowed brows revealed his concern. âAdding a launch and recovery system will shift the center of gravity. Even with magic reducing the shipâs weight, we need it to be viable without its effects, too. Donât worry, My Sovereign, we can adjust with auxiliary stabilizers.â
âIâll trust you to handle the issue,â I replied with a smile. âIâm more interested in making sure this works without turning the Camelot into a sitting duck in the sky. If we canât deploy and recover those planes efficiently, itâll be a liability, and I can postpone it.â
âIt will be done.â He nodded, already scribbling notes onto a nearby slate, accompanied with his orders to his men.
âStart with the launch system,â I called out, raising my voice above the din. âWe need a way to get the planes off the deck quickly, one after the other.â@@novelbin@@
âA catapult system,â the others muttered, reading my blueprints, which were presented to them. âA rail mounted on the top deck could accelerate the planes for takeoff. Will it be magical or mechanical?â One of them asked, looking at me.
âBoth,â I replied, nodding at him. âMainly, it is a spring-loaded system using compressed energyâspiked with a magical enhancement for extra thrust. If the planes can reach a minimum speed within a short distance, theyâll have no trouble taking off and keeping in the air. It isnât hard to install; the last thing we need is overcomplicated mechanisms that take weeks to repair if something goes awry. Make sure itâs durable enough to withstand turbulence and the elements.â
While speaking, I could see the gears turning in my people's heads as they nodded and set to work drafting more detailed sub-designs for their own use. The real challenge, though, was recovering our launched birds. Throwing out the planes was relatively straightforward; bringing them back aboard midair was another story entirely.
âSkyhooks,â Sasha said, her tone contemplative when she suggested it and sketched a crude mechanism on my slate one night. âExtendable arms that can lock onto the planes mid-flight. Theyâll need to be guided by beacon runes to align properly. Just make the hook on the planes out of CC, and it will react like a magical magnet.â
âThe pilots will have to be precise,â I said, folding my arms when I heard her suggestion, âIf they miss the hook, theyâll risk colliding with the airship or falling out of the sky.â
âThat is why make the hook out of CC. It is durable, and it will react to the magic, helping them to connect. If they can match our speed, they just need to line up next to the Camelot and get into place. It will click and lock the plane down. Then, with a simple crane, we can bring it aboard.â She explained confidently. âYes, it wonât be risk-free, but you said you trust them and that they learn surprisingly well!â
âIndeed,â I nodded when we spoke about it. âWe will do it this way then!â
Now, I was retelling it all to my top engineers, explaining everything, reaching the point where I was taking questions, receiving one that I was happy to hear being answered not by me but by my Forgemaster and his intuition.
âIf the skyhooks fail, what then?â
âA secondary net system?â Kraus proposed. âWe could add a barrier thatâs soft enough to catch the planes but strong enough to keep them from crashing into the deck.â
âIf we have the materials, make it happen,â I said. âIf weâre going to send my pilots into combat, we owe it to them to make their landings as safe as possible.â
âWhat about storage?â Another asked. âWhere are we putting six planes when theyâre not in the air? The deck isnât exactly spacious.â
âThis will be a unique situation,â I shrugged. âIt is for our assault against Ishillia. For now, we will store them where we find space atop the Camelot, fastening them to its body. After Ishillia is done, we can redesign it and probably move it to the bottom of the Camelot, establishing permanent hangars. Or we can build a second airship, specifically for carrying planes within its belly and launching them. The planes will be needed when we reach the Capital.â I said, looking at them, âThe city, for sure, will be protected against magic. But not against our planes flying over it, dropping our packages down on Pascalâs head.â
âIt will be done, My Sovereign.â Kraus nodded encouragingly. âWe will build it for you, as always!â
Nodding, we poured hours into the blueprints as we refined the designs for a last time, adjusting for weight distribution, material durability, and potential scenarios we may face on the battlefield. By the time we had an actual, workable plan, it was already deep into the night.
âWeâll need to build a prototype of the system first,â I said, addressing the room. âThe Camelotâs top deck will have to be modified, but weâll test the concept on the ground before committing to anything permanent.â
âIâll oversee its construction,â Kraus saluted, slapping his chest. âWe can have something ready within a week.â
âGood. Once the prototype works, weâll move on to installing it aboard the Camelot. Time is critical; I donât want to be caught unprepared, but I also do not rush it. Spring is still wet, and troops will have a hard time traveling in mud. We need the weather to stabilize and the ground to be hard enough for our allies to march.â
As the room began to empty and the others headed out to rest before starting their work, I remained behind, staring at the blueprints spread across the table. The Camelot was already a massive undertaking, a symbol of what we managed to achieve. Adding the biplane system would elevate it to an entirely new level, making me feel a certain sense of accomplishment. Barbarians, my ass! We made this possible⦠People just need an opportunity, and they will flourish.
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âYouâre surprisingly quiet,â Sasha said, stepping back into the room after putting our kids to sleep in their own room. She placed a hand on my shoulder, sitting down next to me on the edge of our bed, Mikan, Yuri, and Luna already asleep behind us.
âJust thinking,â I answered. âAbout what is about to come.â
âWar,â she said with a small smile. âBut after it is done⦠we probably wonât see another war for a long time.â
âOptimistic!â I chuckled softly. âBut, when you put it that way, it doesnât sound so bad.â
âIt isnât,â she whispered. âThen, we can⦠relax. Isnât that what you wanted?â
âYeah. I just wanted a place to live leisurely, have you girls, and do nothing but enjoy being a noble. Somehowâ¦â I shrugged, looking around the room and out the window towards my city. âSomehow, things just⦠snowballed out of my control.â
âComeâ¦â she pulled me into bed, into the embrace of my wife. âSoon, you will have time to relax, and we will be there to enjoy it, too!â
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