Font Size
15px

The castle housing High King Brian Boru, his son and grandson, Máel Sechnail, Mael Ruanaidh Ua hEidhin, and Tadhg Ua Cellaigh, and the guild representatives was well-fortified. In the large village of Kilmainham, it was also out of place. There were weak points. There were too many soldiers and too much tension. Any mont could be an attack on them, their king, and their plans to rule the kingdom.

Thus, the soldiers bristled when Kazi and Samantha arrived. The front gate was littered with guards and twenty feet was the closest the pair could get. Guards in chainmail, padded leather, and pinecone helts.

"Stop! In the na of the king!"

Samantha’s little smile turned to faux surprise. "Oh! Apologies, but we are here to deliver a ssage to the High King."

Four guards ca together, exchanging suspicious looks. One of them asked, "What kind of ssage?"

Samantha and Kazi also shared looks, pretending to be puzzled. "Logistics," Kazi answered. From the back of his hand he revealed a scroll. "The number of soldiers for each commander, the number of soldiers from another world, number of horses available, etc."

"You’re late," the guard stated. "Moreover, I assud it would be our n handling the logistics."

Samantha went a bit over the top, eyes widening and said, "Ah, they didn’t tell you? Our sincere apologies. If you only need the paper, we don’t mind. Kazi, please hand it over to these wise gentlen."

"Of course." Kazi offered the paper over with an inviting smile.

Another quick glance between the guards, who settled on the conclusion that these two were the real deal. "No, it’s alright. Go in."

Easy-peasy lemon squeezy. Act confident, be confident, and everyone else would be confident.

The guards gave way, the gate opened, and they were inside the bailey, grass surrounding them with several pathways leading to certain areas. The castle wasn’t a gargantuan like so were. To the left was the structure containing the hall Kazi had spawned at, the throne room. There were four towers and one of them held the war room. They didn’t know which was which, so Samantha improvised.

"Good sir!"

"Huh—"

Samantha ran up to a nearby guard and put her hands into a prayer. "We have instructed to give the king his prayers! Yet...we cannot find him!" She wiped at her forehead, shaking her head. "Oh, the horror! Without the Lord, we cannot win!"

"The horror!" Kazi chid in. "Where do we go, O Son of God?"

"Err, that way?"

The north-east tower. This was too easy.

"Thank you!" Samantha took the guard’s hands in her own and gave it a kiss. "The Lord will not forget this! For the King! For Ireland!"

They waddled off after that, leaving a confused guard behind. There were another set of guards protecting the north-east tower, but with a quick show of the letter and the sa Oscar-level acting they gave the guards at the front gate, they were allowed in.

"Jeez. There are a lot of stairs," Samantha comnted. Indeed, the stairs went in a swirl and took a good minute to climb. The wooden door was in view. Voices could be heard. The king was there as were the guild representatives.

"Should we knock or go in a blaze of glory?" Kazi asked Samantha.

"Knocking is the more polite option," she replied.

’aning, go in dramatically.’

He pushed open the door. All eyes landed on them, the intruders. There was confusion, then a question from the High King.

"You are...?"

"Logistics," Kazi replied.

"I don’t recall our logistics ssenger being accompanied by a woman," High King Brian Boru pointed out.

"She’s a friend and I’m new." Kazi tossed the paper over to Marchad, the High King’s son. Why him?

In the room were the king’s top commanders—or rather, allies. The fifteen year old Toirdelbach, Máel Sechnail the king of Mide, Mael Ruanaidh Ua hEidhin the King of Ui Fiachrach Aidhne, Tadhg Ua Cellaigh the King of Uí Maine, and finally, the de facto leader of the army due to the High King’s advanced age and the heir, Marchad. Marchad was the man with the authority here. He was the one they needed to convince, next to the High King himself. Everyone else would follow.

Marchad checked the logistics. Everything was sound. Kazi had stolen it, after all. Since birth, he had been an excellent pickpocket. Chalk it up to natural talent or his impoverished upbringing.

"Five thousand soldiers and two thousand five hundred n from another world," Marchad declared. "Sufficient numbers if we assu each of the Templars are worth three n."

"Not just the Templars," Griffith interjected. "The Red Dragons too."

"We are worth ten n," Ksenia added.

"Says the guild with a asly twenty people," Griffith snapped back.

Maccabees, Justice Sect, Orthodox Sect, Templars, Red Dragons, Sapphire Order, Holy Dynasty, Yajna, and Thunderstrike Brotherhood. So many of them all in one room. An argunt was brewing. Great.

"I am sure you have all co with a wonderful plan," Samantha said, smiling at each of them.

"We’re the logistics and the soldiers are...tense, to say the least. It would be smart for us to prepare early," Kazi clarified.

Marchad approached the table and gestured at the map laid out on the table.

"We have four main forces. The Connacht, the Dal Cais, the Munster, and, of course, the Otherworlders. Our enemy is the sa: there are the Mann Vikings, the Dublin Vikings, the Orkney Vikings, and their own Otherworlders. The Orkney and Mann will be coming by ship and are led by Sigurd of Orkney and Brodir respectively."

Marchad pointed at the water area in the east. There was a red line that went west to land, through Dublin Bay and the heart of the battle: Clontarf. Everything would converge at Clontarf which was above the bridge leading to the capital city of the enemy.

The map was exactly as Kazi morized it. His plan was also the sa.

"The Templars and Holy Dynasty will lead the first rush of attacks. They will go from here, Kilmainham, up to Finegall and plunder. Following that..." His finger went from Finegall, then all the way to right directly at Howth. "...and Howth. It has been explained to us that these two parties are capable of summoning horses at will, thus granting them great efficiency in speed. Upon victory, they will use their signal to advance."

"We have flares," Cillian explained.

"Speed. That is our greatest advantage. The Templars and Holy Knights will plan a rush attack that will let them take over the city before the Viking backup arrives," Marchad said. "Everyone else will be close behind, waiting for the forces of Orkney and Mann."

"There are only seventy Templars and fifty knights of the Holy Dynasty," Kazi pointed out. "Do you plan to have two people per horse?"

"Exactly." Cillian, representative of the Templar Order, was rather calm. "A hundred horses will carry two hundred players. Ordinarily, it would be a four hour walk from Kilmainham to Finegall, and an additional four hours from Finegall to Howth. With horses, however, the whole journey would be two hours at best. Including rest and plundering, less than eight hours total."

"The ti it would take for travel ti will instead be squeezed into an assault." Morchad went on. "Although this does depend on the abilities of the Templars and Holy Knights. If they are not worth what they claim to be..."

"It will be a wasted slaughter," Toirdelbach finished. "So you better be worth it."

A sound strategy on paper.

You are reading Strongest Among the Heavens Chapter 151: Map of the Battle of Clontarf on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.