Awkwardly untying the hovlings, Mark sent them on their way. Luckily, the meek little creatures didnât seem interested in a fight.
He couldnât help but be curious over who wore down the stones, if not the hovlings. However, he wasnât too interested in pressing Alzuz for a history lesson, and he figured that the creature would have known if other threats had existed down in the mine, so he decided to leave it.
After filling several bags with ore samples and staying several hours for Venjiminâs pupils to map some of the caves, they prepared to leave.
Elowen had wanted to study cave art and map what she believed to be the characters of the missing primitive civilizationâs language, but it wasnât hard to convince her to leave. After all, she knew how much work waited for her back at the fort.
In the end, Mark promised to have Venjimin send somebody who could finish the job of mapping the language for her when they sent a party to set up a settlement, which was a priority Mark planned to resolve immediately upon returning to Fort Winterclaw.
***
Touching down back at Fort Winterclaw, Mark immediately called Henric and Venjimin to a meeting in his cabin.
âImperator,â Henric said. âIâm not sure if you noticed on your way in, but weâve had an influx of Imperials join us from Frostwind Traderâs Post. We now have a man for just about every trade⦠and a growing night industry,â he grimaced.
âNight industry?â
âAhem,â Henric cleared his throat. âWe considered shutting the girls down, but theyâre having a noticeably positive effect on the morale of the mercenaries and tradesmen that came from the trading post. Not to mention, itâs fueling the economy. Weâre draining our coffers by directly paying so many people to expand the fort, and the girls have them spending said money, which they then spend on essentials for themselves, much of which we command a monopoly on, funneling a good portion of what we spend building the fort back into our own coffers."
âAh, I think I understand,â Mark grimaced. He wasnât sure he wanted his budding nation to rely on less reputable income sources, but with the threat of the wargs, he wasnât about to sabotage what was working. âThatâs fine. Weâre not in a position to be picky. If the girls are helping the economy, then let them. In fact, we should ensure their safety. Tell me, these girls are the same Imperials currently living in the Low District, right?â
âYes, that is correct. We havenât space to invite all the new Imperials into the Imperial District yet. But cabins are constantly going up.â
âRight, have a few mercenaries patrol where they work. Iâd rather Trumus not have total control of security, especially not when Imperials are concerned,â Mark said. He didnât care so much for the Imperialâs sense of superiority but was worried about the guard masterâs influence growing too powerful.
âWill do,â Henric nodded.
âWe also need to organize a settlement party for the mine as soon as possible. Weâll need guards, miners, support staff, and a chief. Can you organize that, Henric?â
âI can. But itâll thin our numbers of mercenary guards in the fort if we rely on them to settle the mine as well. And as for a chief, do you have someone in mind?â
âSend some ferals with them; that is fine. But none of Trumusâ men. Letâs restrain his influence on Fort Winterclaw. As for the leader of the mine...â Mark hummed. "Check with Payon. Hopefully, the master smith has a good idea of who would be the right pick. I would send someone I know to be loyal, but everyone has important jobs and don't dare place an acolyte in command of grown men."
" Good idea," Henric said. "I will see it done.â
âAlso, tell me what would have happened to the trading post if all their skilled labor had come here?â
âWell,â Henric cleared his throat. âWe gave them all the furs and food we had stocked on the wagon in return for the manpower. Weâre currently preparing another wagon to send, but to be honest, Iâm not sure what goods of value theyâll have to offer us.â
âAnd you believe theyâll have interest in trading our furs now that the invasion has severed the supply lines to the Imperium?â
âNo, of course not. We prepared a wagon full of food and other vital goods. They have no subsistent food production and are relying entirely on trapping and hunting. However, considering how dangerous the wilderness is becoming, their ability to extend themselves beyond their defenses is no doubt strained. I personally canât see any way they can continue to feed themselves properly. Especially once their stockpiles are drained.â
âPerfect. But scrap the wagon and fill my throne ship with the food instead.â
âPardon?â Henric exclaimed.
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âIâll take it myself. But I wonât just be handing them free food. From the sounds of it, we have already taken what we need from them. If they expect us to continue to feed them, theyâre going to have to work for me.â
âI see,â Henric scratched at his chin. âWith how desperate they have become, they might just agree to that.â
âAnd itâs exactly what we need,â Mark continued. âWith the trading post under my command, weâll have successfully extended the influence of Fort Winterclaw. I want you to prepare a wagon to be filled with commoners but wait for my return before sending them to the trading post. The next part will be integrating them into our lifestyle.â
âDo you think thatâs wise, Imperator? We wonât be able to support them from so far away if the Imperials decide to do something to them. Even here, the Imperials and ferals, they argue endlessly, and Iâve only just managed to prevent bloodshed on multiple occasions.â
âValid concern. But itâs a necessary risk. If we leave them on their own, their integration wonât be complete, and theyâll become my followers in name only. In return, Iâll also demand that they send some of their skilled warriors back to Fort Winterclaw, which should help to even out the populations a little more between Imperial and feral.â
"Not a bad idea, but I can't help but feel it is too risky."
âImperator,â Venjimin raised a hand. âI have another request. Would you do me the honor to hear my plea?â
âGo on, Tribune. Speak your mind.â
âDo you remember the temple I told you of? The one that I was dismissed from as the warlord in the south brought new clans into his command?â
âI do, yes.â
âOur scouts have informed me that it has been abandoned now. The federation recalled all of its guards in preparation for the battle against the Warg army. When the guards left, so did the imposter priests who were left to mind the temple. Now, all the knowledge of my people lies unguarded. Not only would its retrieval be of great aid to us, but it would be devastating if the wargs were to get their hands on itâeither because they might destroy it or take advantage of it for themselves. I beg you to secure this for Fort Winterclaw, Imperator.â
âHmm, not the best timing, but we canât leave valuable information to our enemy. It will go on my to-do list, but securing the mine and visiting the trading post must come first. As important as that information is, it wonât win a battle in the same way that iron and manpower will.â
"I understand," Venjimin bowed. "Thank you, Imperator."
âIâll have the men prepare everything immediately. Once your ship is stocked with the food for the trading post, I'll send a runner,â Henric saluted.
âPerfect. Then you're both dismissed. Weâre on the cusp of turning this whole mess around; remember that. We have no time to slack. If we pull this off, we might just survive all this.â
***
In his cabin, Mark eyed a map drawn up by Venjimin. It labeled the outposts they were building and patrol routes of their scouts. Once Frostwind Traderâs Post is added to it, they will have created a squarish sphere of influence in the central region of the Frontier.
He might not have the ability to defend it all just yet, but that would come once they laid down the foundation.
However, there was one more thing he needed to be built as a priorityâa proper training ground and military.
Having some targets placed up against the palisade was fine for a start. But it wouldn't do going forward. He wanted to progress into a disciplined and structured military, and that needed a suitable base of operations.
Mark eyed a blueprint provided by the mason for the keep he had started building. The stone foundation for the keep within the Imperial District had been coming along nicely, but it was progressing too slowly.
Scribbling on the blueprint, he made alterations to the keep currently being built to extend the current stone wall foundation to outside the wooden palisade that currently encompassed the Imperial District. The plan was to make room for a walled training courtyard.
He then made wrote up proclamations. He would increase the salary for any masons who worked on the keep and invite the trolls to assist with the manual labor.
The trolls were so much more than just warriors. Their strength was unparalleled, and with their help, stones could be moved into place much faster.
Once he had completed the keep, he could move on to the plan's second phase. Forming an elite order of soldiersânoâknights. They would have a headquarters that most throughout the Frontier would envy, and with it, he would provide a guaranteed income. The hope was not just to provide a training ground and accommodation for this new order but also to entice the fittest, best, and brightest to the orders' ranks. To do that, he needed to offer something formidable.
With his plans written up, Mark folded the notes and called for an acolyte runner to send them out.
Now, he just needed to get a good meal before heading out again.
**Trumus**
âBossman,â a greasy-haired feral bowed before the short-statured Trumus, who sat in his throne-like chair.
âSpit it out,â Trmus groaned with a flail of his wrist.
âTis the Imperator, heâs back.â
âIâm aware, idiot.â
âThe big fella has made new proclamations; he has,â the feral nodded enthusiastically as Trumusâs scowl bent curiously. âHe says he founds a mine. He be recruiting fellas to go settle it, he is.â
âIs he?â
The man nodded.
âWho are we sending? Make sure itâs someone competent. That last fool almost got us into a world of trouble during the siege. Had his stupid plan worked, weâd likely be dead by now.â
âWellâthe thing is,â the man pulled on his dirty, cloth collar.â
âWhat thing?â Trumus narrowed his gaze on the man. "Speak."
âItâs wellââ
âSpeak, damn it!â
âThe big man, he donât pick none of your fellas, boss,â the man said, flinching and raising his hands above his head as he cowered backward.
âNone of my men? How? We are the guards. How is he going to defend that damned mine without the guards?â
âHe be using them Imperials and a couple of nobodies from the Lows.â
âNobodies?â Trumus growled, realizing that there was no mistake. The Imperator was intentionally dampening the reach of his influence.
âSomething needs to be done about this,â he muttered to himself. âBe gone!â he waved, dismissing the man who scurried off.
âWhat do we do, bossman?â A large, thick-browed man said at his side.
âWe need to approach this carefully. I have been reckless and made the Imperator suspicious. There's no more room for mistakes.â
Trumus was happy to remain in the shadows and had no interest in opposing the wargs himself. Having the Imperator in command of the fort was a benefit, if anything. But he had been determined to grow his influence in the background. This, however, threw a wrench into his plans. Not just because he would miss out on growing his influence over an extremely valuable asset but because he realized he was exposed.
He would have to lay low for now. Work on regaining the Imperatorâs trust. Then, once relations were repaired, he could continue to grow his shadow empire.