Thracia did not greet newcors with walls.
It greeted them with people.
The road narrowed as it approached the first true city of the United Kingdom—white stone rising from green hills, banners snapping in a cool wind that carried the scent of rain instead of dust.
Nana felt it imdiately, the shift from the harsh indifference of Antiochia and the Ancient State to sothing denser, more lived-in.
This land had been preparing for war for a long ti.
The city was called Kalyndra, a border hub where the old Thracian Kingdom and its forr neighbor—Valecor—had once pressed against one another like clenched fists.
Now they stood unified beneath a single crown, their banners intertwined: a silver gryphon and a black sun stitched together along the sa field of blue.
United Kingdom.
That na wasnt just one thrown about by a King bragging about conquering his neighbors through conquest, but rather to exemplify the unification of the two forr rivals into one cohesive kingdom.
Two royal families had married more than a generation ago to end a war neither could afford to keep fighting.
Their children ruled together now.
Their armies drilled together.
Their people, after years of bitterness, had learned to call one another countryn.
And now they waited.
The caravan passed through the gates under the watchful eyes of city guards clad in heavier armor than Nana had seen since leaving Romanus territory.
Scale reinforced with plate.
Spears tipped with polished steel.
Not simply ceremonial, these were clearly used.
And not in a goodway, while the weapons had plainly seen combat, that simple reason alone spelled out their incompetance, the obvious need for maintenance showed the weapons neglect even if handled by seasoned pro’s.
Inside the walls, Kalyndra buzzed with restrained urgency.
Markets were open, but stalls sold more salted at than sweets.
Blacksmiths worked openly on spearheads and armor fittings, sparks flying even as custors haggled nearby.
Notices were nailed to public boards: recruitnt calls, ration schedules, lists of approved rcenary companies.
No panic.
Just readiness.
Nana dismounted with the rest of the guards as the caravan master negotiated docking fees and unloading schedules.
She kept her head down, posture relaxed, letting the role settle back over her like a familiar cloak.
A rcenary passing through.
Possibly staying.
Possibly leaving.
Invisible.
She spent the first day doing nothing remarkable.
She helped unload crates.
She accepted her share of the bandit loot’s coin without comnt.
She drank watered wine in a public house and listened more than she spoke.
And what she heard confird her suspicions.
"...Francia broke it first, didn’t they?"
"Of course they did. Concordat ant nothing once Romanus started winning."
"Doesn’t matter who broke it. What matters is Visigoth’s been waiting for an excuse."
That word—Concordat—ca up again and again.
Nana leaned back against a wooden pillar, mug untouched in her hand, ears tuned.
The Concordat had been the unspoken balance that held the continent together: an understanding among the great powers that no empire, kingdom, or republic would pursue total domination.
Borders could shift.
Wars could happen.
But no one crossed certain lines.
Francia however had crossed them.
Their war with Romanus—reckless, desperate, and ultimately catastrophic—had shattered the illusion that the old rules still applied.
And everyone knew what that ant.
Visigoth had never believed in restraint.
"They say Visigoth’s armies are already mobilizing," one man muttered. "Not against us yet. Their true armies are fighting the divine kingdom first."
A bitter laugh followed. "Fighting... dont kid yourself their performing an extermination from what i heard"
Nana stored that away.
~
On the second day, she visited the rcenary guild.
The guild was one mirroring the rchants guild except instead of selling products, they showcased the martial might of various groups, its stone walls lined with boards listing companies, pay rates, and casualty notices.
A clerk with tired eyes barely glanced up as Nana signed her na under independent contracts.
No background questions.
No scrutiny.
Just a simple signature on a form that detailed incredibly basic information and a rough sketch of her appearance was all it took to enlist her into the guild, her reward for doing so was sothing akin to a dogtag.
Just a simple tal plate that was engraved with her na, and the location in which she registered as a rc, along with a rank assigned by the guild to showcase her skill level or power on the field of battle.
If Julius was here he’d be shaking his head at the similarities that the rcenary’s guild had with those of Adventurer guilds common in otherworld Isekai stories back on earth.
But there was a reason for the simplicity in joining up.
The United Kingdom needed bodies.
Or rather the Eastern Coalition did.
That alone spoke volus.
She took a room in a modest inn near the eastern gate—close enough to leave quickly, far enough from the city center to avoid attention.
From there, she began the real work.
Observation.
The coalition banners were everywhere now.
Not just Thracia’s gryphon and sun, but others too—seven symbols in total, stitched onto standards flying above governnt buildings and training yards.
Seven nations.
Seven fears.
One enemy.
She followed patrol routes discreetly, noting how often soldiers rotated, how many supply wagons passed through the gates each day, how often ssengers rode in from the north.
Frequently.
Too frequently for comfort.
By the third night, she had what she ca for.
The truth wasn’t hidden.
It was simply spoken quietly, shared in taverns and council chambers alike, as if saying it too loudly might summon the thing itself.
The Eastern Coalition had not ford because Visigoth attacked.
It had ford because Visigoth might.
And the spark had been Romanus.
Francia’s war—its arrogance, its betrayal of the Concordat, its destruction—had proven sothing terrifying to the eastern nations.
The old world was gone.
If Romanus could rise that quickly, conquer that decisively...
Then Visigoth, unbound by treaties and ideology alike, would not wait forever.
"They’re watching the Young Emperor," a Thracian officer said quietly to a companion in the inn’s common room, unaware Nana sat two tables away. "Not because they fear him. Because they fear what his existence ans."
Nana didn’t move.
"He’s proven empires can still be built," the officer continued. "And Visigoth has always wanted to finish what it started, replacing the Empires of Old like Ro."
Finish.
The word settled coldly in her chest.
Romanus had not been the cause of the coalition.
It had been the catalyst.
A reminder that power could still change the world.
That conquest was still possible.
By the ti Nana returned to her room that night, her internal report was already taking shape.
The coalition had been ford to act more as a defensive force than an aggresive one, even if their actions thus far had been more agressive than defensive.
And while so idealists might be willing to believe their coalition had a chance to topple the giant that is Visigoth, the rulers themselves were hedging their bets.
Praying for the current campaigns to deal enough of a blow to the empire to entice Romanus, Brittania, or the Slavics to strike against them as well.
Allowing for the eastern war to co to a much needed end and distracting the Empire from its intentions in the east, all while the eastern nations could recover and prepare for the next war as they take turns whittling down the strength of the Visigoth empire, and gaining rewards of land and money in the process as each bite at the elephant before them could nourish the invading nations until the beast was gone and in its place would be a number of saturated nations tired once more from war and satisfied with the al they had consud enough to bring a new era of peace to the lands once more.
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