In the Gerlin hinterland, a city on a major transport route, the locals were already in utter chaos.
News had long since spread that the Leite Kingdom's troops had marched in and the Gerlin frontline troops were completely annihilated.
In fact, that was the case: with the main force of the Gerlin Kingdom invading the Leite Kingdom being wiped out, it had beco a matter of ti before the Leite troops invaded Gerlin.
Evacuees carrying luggage, dragging their families from the border areas, retreated here, and mingled among them were so wounded soldiers and nobility's carriages seeking refuge.
The hodgepodge of people congested the roads, making the entire city seem overcrowded and creating an oppressive atmosphere.
Watching the crowded streets from his window, the city lord of Gerlin, an Earl of the Kingdom, complained angrily, "Useless! All useless!"
Just monts before, he had received a ssage that a small town 30 kiloters away from him had been captured by the Leite Kingdom's troops, and his location had beco the front line of the war zone.
An officer hurried in, standing behind Lord Earl and reported with his head bowed, "My lord! The enemy is approaching! Only two of our scouts have returned, the rest are out of contact!"
They had hoped to clarify the situation around them, but the scouts they sent out were clearly no match for the rangers from Northern Ridge. The differences in combat experience and weaponry were such that defeat was hardly a surprise.
Since most of the scouts had not returned, the nearby circumstances remained unclear, shrouded in the fog of war, which would make anyone uneasy.
Hearing that his scouts had not returned, the Earl subconsciously thought they had fled rather than being annihilated by the enemy.
In his view, the likelihood that so many scouts were wiped out was slim to none; more likely, the scouts without constraint had turned into deserters.
And indeed, he was not mistaken in his thoughts, as quite a number of the scouts he had dispatched had beco deserters—after all, the level of their regular training left much to be desired, so the presence of deserters was hardly surprising.
This was much like certain Kuomintang troops during the Liberation War: seemingly nurous and well-ard but in reality poorly trained, with extrely low initiative, unable to dispatch small units for recon or transfer them promptly... They were ultimately crushed with ease by the Liberation Army, like zombies.
Thus, he cursed vehently, making the reporting officer even more unable to lift his head, "Cowards! At the country's ti of need, relying on these base commoners is a mistake! They are all natural-born slaves! After this is over, they all should be executed!"
"What, what should we do now, my lord?" asked the officer, completely at a loss about what to do, thus inquiring in hope of so ingenious plan from the person in charge.
He knew that things were unsafe outside the city; the Leite military forces had already advanced to an unknown location, and any encounter outside the city walls would likely lead to a dead end.
Defending from within the city was actually a more rational defense strategy, as even if the enemy began their siege, surrendering could allow them to negotiate terms, rather than inexplicably losing their lives.
As expected, an Earl would still be an Earl, who, even in tis of such chaos, held onto so of his own ideas—at the very least, he had to maintain his deanor and seemingly offer so of his own thoughts.
The Earl then spoke to reassure the officer, "Don't panic! Have our n hold the city walls! They have co from afar, surely without many cannons; we definitely have an advantage in cannon numbers..."
In the Earl's view, since the enemy had already advanced nearly 200 kiloters forward, deep into the Gerlin Kingdom's heartland, the artillery accompanying the advancing troops would have been long left behind.
In these tis, having artillery that could keep up with the infantry was rare; and even if there were so, their calibers were so small they could not shatter city walls.
Having realized this, the Earl grew even more confident, feeling his chances of holding the city were greater.
But the officer by his side was anxious, stumbling over his words with uncertainty, "Is, is that so, my lord?"
"Yes! Listen to , it's the right call! Hurry and make arrangents! Quick!" The Earl cleared his throat, waved his hand irritably, and dismissed the officer.
"Yes, yes! My lord!" With no other option, the officer could only brace himself and agree.
He had his own calculations in mind, thinking he would first go to the city walls to have a look. If the situation turned dire, he could open the city gates and negotiate openly with the opposing forces.
So he turned to leave but hadn't taken two steps when, from the distant horizon, a crisp explosion was heard.
The sound of the blast made the Earl and the officer in the room shiver instinctively. The officer shrank his neck and, looking towards the Earl, realized that Lord Earl had also recoiled and was looking back at him.
The two of them were montarily embarrassed, but the Earl was the first to recover, straightening up, coughing, and asked with feigned authority, "What was that sound?"
"Hmm?" The officer blinked in confusion, not knowing what had happened. After all, hadn't he just been here, never leaving the room?
Recalling that the Lord Earl had not left either, he fiercely berated with embarrassnt and anger, "Go and look! Hurry and see what's happening! What's all this noise about outside?"
"Yes, my lord!" The officer nodded briskly, then turned and ran outside the room. The Earl, watching the officer's retreating back, suddenly felt that perhaps this officer was no longer so reliable.
He snatched his weapon belt from the coat rack, hastily wrapping it around his waist, and then, accompanied by a few of his guards, he made his way to the gates of his estate amidst their protective circle.
The clamor outside grew even louder, as if the refugees crowding the roads had plunged into chaos, everyone frantically running, causing a scene of utter pandemonium.
Before they had even left the estate gates, gunfire was heard in the distance. The sounds were still far away, yet they made the Earl increasingly uneasy.
"Bang!" Another gunshot rang out, this ti seemingly close by. The Lord Earl instinctively reached for the left-wheel handgun at his waist, his expression tense.
Just then, the officer who had gone to scout ca running back frantically, pushing through the crowd and tumbling before the Lord Earl, wailing with the news of doom, "My lord! My lord! It's terrible! The troops from Leite Kingdom have breached the city!"
"What? They've broken through? What about the soldiers defending the city? What are they good for?" The Lord Earl was shocked, his eyes wide as he demanded answers.
He had 3000 soldiers, a significant portion of whom were his private army, better trained and equipped than the Kingdom's troops, his true loyalists.
Yet, these loyalists, seemingly unable to hold out even for a single day, had let the city fall to the advancing Leite military, who appeared to have arrived without significant heavy weaponry...
For a mont, the Lord Earl, who had prided himself on the combat prowess of his private army and had deed himself sowhat talented in warfare, turned deathly pale and faltered, nearly collapsing to the ground.
The officer, who knew not whence ca his information, pointed towards the direction of the city gates and yelled, "Their cannons have blasted open the gates, our n are scattered!"
"Counterattack! Counterattack! Push back the attackers! Push them back!" The Lord Earl barely gathered himself from the panic and despair, furiously shouting as he prepared to lead his trusted guards toward the direction where the gunfire was steadily intensifying.
The officer, fearful of death and keen to flee or surrender, quickly tried to persuade, "My lord, our troops have dispersed! Let's flee while we can!"
But this Earl of Gerlin possessed a certain resolve, glaring at his cowardly subordinate, he fiercely scolded, "Flee? Flee what? I am the City Lord! I am the Earl! I am the Earl of Gerlin! There is no 'flee' option with !"
Fired up by the chaos before him, he recklessly drew the S2-type left-wheel handgun, manufactured by the Great Tang Group, which gave him a profound sense of security, and aid it at the craven officer.
The officer, not expecting the Earl to draw his gun so uncharacteristically, was still standing there, frozen in shock.
"Bang!" Before the officer could beg for rcy or say anything else, the Lord Earl pulled the trigger of his handgun, firing a bullet.
"Ah!" The bullet struck the officer squarely in the chest. He scread and clutched at his chest as he fell backward, tumbling down a short flight of just three stairs, to lie dead where he fell.
Feeling as if he had regained control of the situation, the Lord Earl waved his left-wheel handgun in front of his luxurious estate's gate, vigorously motivating his guards, "Listen up, everyone! Follow into the fray! Drive back the enemy! Anyone who charges with will get a reward of 100 gold coins after! No, make it 200 gold coins!"
As the saying goes, under substantial rewards, there will be brave n, and he believed that such a hefty sum would surely inspire so to fight to the death for money.
Thus, he grandly declared, as if he too were sacrificing a great fortune for the country, "For the Kingdom of Gerlin!"
"For, for the Kingdom of Gerlin!" A few guards, cautious and tentative, echoed the Lord Earl with a ragged chorus of slogans.
"Bang!" At that mont, another gunshot rang. Several soldiers with M35 steel helts and rifles at the ready were taking aim from the street corner.
One soldier, helt adorned, raised high a wolf banner, running from one side of the street to the other.
All the guards from the Kingdom of Gerlin started to panic; it was their first ti encountering the enemy so close.
In the frenzy, soone finally noticed the Earl lying on the ground with a bullet in his head: "Ah! The Earl, Lord Earl... he's dead! The Lord Earl is dead!"
"Run! The Lord Earl is dead!" Another guard, seeing the Earl's bloody face, also began to shout.
"Run for it!" The remaining people started yelling, so kneeling to beg for rcy, others scattering like birds and beasts.
Reviews
All reviews (0)