Read Daily Updated Light Novel, Web Novel, Chinese Novel, Japanese And Korean Novel Online.
This chapter is updated by JustRead.pl
Rekkar stood atop the lower ambulatory of Fortress Al-Lavik, a small balcony that ran the circumference of the tower near its base. Archers stood to either side of him, wielding greatbows mounted to the brickwork. It was only a step removed from full ballistae. The lance-like arrows they wielded were enough to punch through most armor of any poor sod hit by them, and then anyone standing immediately behind them as well. The Eternal Empires armor protected them to a degree, but it still obeyed the rules of reality. Any lance that struck a knight launched them backward, bowling over their own allies.
The archers hadnt loosed a lance in several minutes now. With the addition of the Anvils forces to the Shieldbreakers, Black Knights, and every other squad capable of doing damage, the melee had become too hectic. There was too great a risk of hitting their forces.
Unfortunately, following an initial success of pushing back the Empire forces around the base of the tower, they quickly closed ranks. The Empire tightened gaps, covered each other well, and hunkered down, becoming an effective fortress of their own even if they lacked the brick walls. It wouldnt last. It couldnt last. They would tire. They would break. They would fall. Fortress Al-Lavik ensured it. They had no support and nowhere to retreat to tend to their injured. No stores of food to maintain their strength.All it would take was a little time.
Rekkar curled his lips in anger. His tusks would have been on full display were it not for the shadowy helmet he wore.
Time they apparently did not have anymore.
Recall them, he snarled off to one side.
Evelyn, some human with one arm who hadnt bothered to get it replaced with Hale, raised her eyebrows. She stared a moment but moved before Rekkar felt the need to snarl at her. She grasped one of the trumpets and sounded the warning to pull back.
With that done, Rekkar turned to the Protector looming over the archers. All teams youre in contact with need to return to the tower, he said, grinding his teeth together. Assemble in the lower levels for further orders.
The Protector nodded, presumably carrying out Rekkars orders.
The orc turned back, gripping the railing as he leaned forward, glaring at the now-fighting retreat down below.
Another few hours and they could have claimed victory over that force. Another few hours and he would have claimed victory. The airships would have remained overhead, but they were someone elses problem. He would have destroyed an army that was said to have never known defeat. Sure, it was only a fraction of that army, but the sentiment stood. The greatest achievement he could have imagined. Some of the old boys he once knew never would have thought him capable. A petty raider of farmers and craftsmen turned to a successful general who clashed on a scale of nations.
Now, they were pulling back, leaving the army alive to cause more problems. All because they didnt have time.
Damn Arkk, he muttered.
The retreat wasnt going as well as he had hoped. Were he in the position of the enemy army, he would have been relieved that they were being given some breathing room. The Eternal Empire wasnt so grateful. The moment they had even a smidgen of space, they tried to turn the tables.
Archers, Rekkar barked. Suppress them. Aim far. Hit one of ours and Ill throw you over the edge myself.
A few of the closest archers gave him wary looks at that. They were all smaller than he was. Several were humans, but a few beastmen were among their ranks. Those without the skill to fight in close combat and without the ability to conjure up great amounts of magic. The greatbows only required careful aiming, with the winches attached to the tower wall doing all the work of actually drawing the bowsmaking the distinction between the bows and ballistae even fuzzier.
Rekkar wasnt worried. The retreat had sounded. Their forces were backing away. While the Eternal Empire advanced in their wake, they werent in such a tight melee anymore.
He was pleased to see that it was an orderly retreat. Nobody turned and sprinted away when the trumpets sounded. They covered each others backs. Even the metal men from the anvil used their strange, puppet-like movements to throw oncoming attacks off balance.
A thunk from one of the nearby greatbows rattled the air. He watched the heavy bolt arc and fall, slamming into the center of the Eternal Empires forces, well away from anyone retreating. It wouldnt help their forces disengage, but it would hopefully keep the Eternal Empire from becoming overwhelming.
Left side warning, he said, noting the way the enemy forces were maneuvering, trying to create a concave around their retreating forces.
Evelyn picked up a trumpet and started sounding an alert. Rekkar called out a few more commands, both to her and to the Protector. Having an elevated view of the battlefield was a tactical advantage he couldnt have even imagined in his raider days. Every so often, he noticed the inevitable injury. There wasnt much he could do to help that, not beyond what he was already doing.
Arkk was teleporting individuals out, both injured and people who got trapped in precarious positions. According to the Protector, nobody quite knew where Arkk was or what he was doing. He did wonder why Arkk wasnt simply teleporting the entire army back. Perhaps he was busy, or perhaps there were simply too many. With the Anvil forces, their numbers had more than doubled. Maybe even tripled. Given their sudden appearance and all the chaos going on, nobody had given him a number and Rekkar hadnt bothered trying to count.
More lances launched and more orders turned to the toots of trumpets.
Halfway through their return to the fortress and the situation was starting to deteriorate. Rekkar opened his mouth, about to call for a stop, for their side to push against the Eternal Empire just enough to shove them back a step. The command never made it out of his mouth before he heard a sharp, grating whistle in the air.
An obsidian pillar slammed into the ground in the center of the Eternal Empires forces.
It stood tall, imposing. Its sleek, polished surface reflected the chaos around it. A moment of stunned silence fell over the battlefield as both sides paused, their eyes fixated on the enigmatic structure. The air seemed to hum with slowly building energy as a low, resonant thrum reverberated through a sudden wind.
Without warning, the obelisk burst into life. A brilliant line of blood-red energy lanced from its apex, frying the very air as it targeted a random soldier in the Eternal Empires army. The beam ignited anything it touched with malevolence. One of the Eternal Empires ancillary squads, perhaps a logistic unit or loaners from Evestani, scattered like ants caught under a lens of glass as the beam swept over their position. The obelisk tracked them with cold efficiency, each movement calculated, each moment a brief eternity before a swathe of soldiers was cut down.
The commander of the Eternal Empires ground forces barked out orders. Rekkar couldnt hear from this distance, but he could see the way the man was swinging his arms about, directing units around him in an attempt to deal with this new threat in their midst.
A second obelisk slammed down, crushing him.
Bombardment magic active once more, the Protector intoned, making Rekkar hop lightly in surprise.
Rekkar glanced upward, frowning at the lack of airships. One of them had been interfering with bombardment spells earlierthen the bombardment chamber had blown up, taking down the towers defensesbut with the airships gone, they must have gotten some ritual working again. He wasnt quite sure where the bombardment team had pulled that spell from, but it was working wonders. The blood-red beams didnt do as mch to the knights as they should have based on how they cut down the unarmored units, but it was the exact kind of chaos they needed.
The retreating forces broke away from the Eternal Empire, leaving them behind fully.
Treat any injuries, Rekkar said as the first obelisk started crumbling apart. He hadnt noticed any real damage inflicted upon it. It must have run out of magic. A third one quickly replaced it. Organize anyone healthy into fresh squads. Anyone too exhausted will remain here. Those who can still fight need to move to the teleportation chamber and begin making hops to Fortress Al-Mir. Everyone else, get them patched up as much as possible and seal the tower.
Understood.
Rekkar nodded his head, then glanced around at the awe-struck archers. True, their near ballistae couldnt contend with bombardment spells, but that was no excuse to not try. Did I tell you to cease your attacks? he barked out, pausing just a moment for them to mentally answer the rhetorical question. Suppress them into the ground.
Repeated thunks of launching lances thrummed the air as the archers followed his orders. There was a lot of confusion at the moment. Likely even more with those soldiers he had just ordered back. They would have questions for him. Questions he would very much like hearing the answers to.
Turning, Rekkar gave a light nod to Tellir. He would have command, though it wouldnt be much of one. The battlefield would be empty of anyone to command soon.
Airships increasing in speed, Sir. Dont reckon Ive ever seen something move so fast. Barring teleportation, that is.
Arkk spared Harvey an appreciative nod of his head. It seemed as if his forces noticed what was going on. People were transferring to Elmshadow and then back to Fortress Al-Mir as fast as they could. But Fortress Al-Mir, despite its name, wasnt Al-Lavik. He hadnt spent months filling it with weapons and magic for war. Assuming any assailants would have to go through Elmshadow to get to him there, it just made more sense to occupy his time at Elmshadow.
They didnt have a bombardment room. They didnt have the magical defenses that had kept Al-Lavik safe from both conventional magic as well as those magic-draining eggs. All they had was an admittedly thick layer of earth followed by the reinforced bricks of the fortress. Bricks that had already proved they could crumble and fail when drained of magic.
They were running out of time.
They stood before the crystalline archway. Lesser servants curled around both sides of its base, holding tight, as if a slight slip of their grip would see it running away. The rocks that had been partially blocking it were gone, cleared away courtesy of even more lesser servants. Now, it was just a simple archway, just like every other portal they had seen.
Except it wasnt active. No silvery membrane stretched between the archway.
Zullie? he called out.
The witch turned back, lips curled in frustration. It must be something in Fortress Al-Mir. Everything here should connect.
Ive followed all of your instructions. Everything in Al-Mir looks how I expect it to look and how you described.
Then check again! Zullie snapped, her irritation getting the better of her.
Behind Arkk, he heard Camilla mutter, Cant even draw a straight line in this place and thinks her work is perfect
Arkk didnt exactly disagree. While he was fairly certain the problem was here, he still sent a lesser servant crawling up the Al-Mir archway, inspecting every little rune and even every little scratch. From their experiments with returning Agnete home, they knew the portals werent so sensitive. The highlands portal still functioned even with a significant slice of material having been shorn off for use in the small anvil portal. The real problem was that they didnt have a keystone.
The keystones, like the ones they had received from Sylvara for the Silence or the Laughing Prince for the Necropolis, seemed to force a connection. The Underworld had been established by Xelatriss and the Anvil keystone came from the distant portal in the Underworld. Thus far, they hadnt visited anywhere else, and thus had no access to other
Keystones.
Arkk blinked. Realization hit him.
Zullie, if Fortress Al-Mir had access to a keystone on that end, would it be able to force the connection open with no further input on our end?
Zullie paused her inspections, turning her head back to face Arkk. Though she still looked frustrated, she did raise a curious eyebrow. Where are you going to get a keystone? More delving in the temple? Wont that be hard while youre here?
No, Arkk said. The Anvil. When the portal closed, trapping Agnete on the other end, the Infernal Engine did so by removing the keystone. It then dropped it into a bank of similar rune-covered crystalline stones. Keystones! A whole bunch of them!
As Arkk spoke, he was already resetting the Fortress Al-Mir portal. The lesser servants scurried over it, undoing the changes he had made so that they could reach the Anvil instead.
Come to think of it, the undead of the Necropolis might also have a stockpile of stones. It wasnt much of a surprise if the Silence lacked anything similarthere wasnt anyone living there to organize such a collectionand if the Underworld ever had the same, it was likely buried under the ravages of time.
But he knew the configuration required to set the portal to the Anvil without even consulting with Zullie. He had memorized that long ago.
How will you know which one is which? Zullie asked, moving alongside him as she cupped her chin with her thumb and forefinger. Even I couldnt tell just from holding the stones.
Doesnt matter, Arkk said. Well just try them all. One by one, until we find one that connects to the Maze. If it doesnt connect here, at least well have made progress. We can try reconfiguring again from there.
One of Zullies assistants, the orc Vezzok, had remained behind to manage magical matters at Fortress Al-Mir. Now, following a quick game of charades from the lesser servant, Vezzok moved forward and planted his hand on the portal, trying to activate it once again. Unlike earlier with their failed connections to the Maze, this one lit up almost instantly. Fast enough to surprise Vezzok, who likely assumed it would fail again. He jumped back from the forming membrane.
The lesser servants surged forward. As soon as the image of the massive factory that was the Anvil appeared in its portal, they moved through. He had no idea how long he might have before the denizens of the Anvil grew angry with him for pilfering their keystone collection. If they got upset at all. With Agnete, they had formed something of an alliance. Unfortunately, he was in no position to explain.
Only when the servants climbed up a tall ladder and moved across a narrow catwalk to the bank of keystones did Arkk notice his immediate surroundings.
Zullie, Camilla, and Luthor were all staring at him. Harvey with the crystal ball kept glancing up, but kept the majority of his attention on the images inside its glass surface.
What? he asked, looking around.
Zullies lips formed a thin line, but it was Luthor who asked the question on all their minds.
D Didnt you say magic would flood into our world if you connected to too many more realms? You and Zullie were talking about magic toxicity levels T-trying them at random isnt going to start with this portal almost guaranteed, which means were opening at least two portals.
Then Ill skip the first keystone I select, Arkk said. Well go straight to the second.
Zullie managed the flattest stare possible despite her lack of eyes. Thats not how statistics work, she said in an equally flat tone of voice. Shaking her head, rubbing her temples, she drew in a deep breath. With the war, weve not had time for a full risk analysis n the situation.
It isnt going to be an instant problem, is it?
The lesser servant in the Anvil moved as he spoke, searching through the neatly organized bank of keystones. Some possessed symbols he recognized. The Underworld, the Silence, even the Anvil. He ignored those, selecting one of each from the other dozen different patterns.
One of those mechanical eyes loomed overhead on its gantry, watching the servants actions. It didnt raise an alarm or try to shut off the portal. Arkk took that as a good sign, that his actions were sanctioned by the factoryor at least tolerated.
Certainly not, Zullie said, splitting Arkks focus. Recall what Yoho told us. He didnt use specific numbers, but from context, we can conclude that it was at least a hundred years after the Calamity began that the last living people in the Necropolis died. I doubt they even realized the true scope of the problem in the first several years, beyond the obviousness of the portals failing. And the Underworld didnt turn to the state it is in overnight.
Arkk looked from Zullie to his scrying team. They werent his typical advisory council. They were employees. People whose well-being was his responsibility, both to return them home as well as to avoid them starving to death in a world filled with too much magic.
We could still try to use our sympathetic link with Xelatriss
You think thats less risky?
Well, no
Arkk shook his head. Well deal with the consequences later. For now, lets open some portals.