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Chapter 67: I Have No Choice but to Change the Ga Myself. (3)

Baron Favreau, a retainer of the Digald and the commander of the supply unit, paced around the tent, unable to sleep.

He wasn’t concerned with matters like strategy or unit maintenance.

He was simply too thrilled to fall asleep.

“Heh heh, I’m finally getting my own fief.”

Favreau didn’t own any land.

The land Digald ruled over was small and insignificant, so there was no real chance for a retainer like Favreau to be awarded a fief.

But this ti was different. If things went well, he would be able to obtain a portion of Ferdium’s territory.

“It was the right decision to side with Desmond. The best choice of my life.”

Favreau had been accepting bribes from Desmond and always advocated on his behalf.

It wasn’t just Favreau; most of Digald’s retainers were the sa way. Controlling the land in any way they wished wasn’t difficult at all.

“Hoho, maybe this ti, I can finally make a na for myself?”

Even though he was in the supply unit, simply participating in the war would grant him so renown.

In high society, just being involved in a war was enough to draw attention.

Besides, he was in the rear unit, so he faced no danger at all. He only needed to supply the main force with resources.

To reap all the benefits from a safe distance—where else could there be such a sweet war?

“By the way, I didn’t expect Count Desmond to have so many soldiers. With this much, isn’t he stronger than Raypold?”

Although they had disguised them as conscripted soldiers and rcenaries from the Digald territory, the sheer scale was unmistakable.

Desmond had sent reinforcents equivalent to the forces of several dium-sized estates combined.

The main force was so large that it was barely possible for Digald’s troops to form a secondary supply unit.

“Ha, Ferdium is finished. Absolutely done for.”

If they were on a similar level, there might be so back-and-forth, but at this level, Ferdium would be utterly crushed.

With siege weapons on their side, Ferdium likely wouldn’t last a single day.

It was a war they couldn’t lose, even if they wanted to.

That was why Favreau had been in such a good mood every day lately.

Rumble, rumble.

“Hm? What’s that sound?”

Favreau, who had been savoring his pleasant dreams, felt a strange vibration and snapped back to reality.

Stepping outside the tent, he saw several knights looking around in confusion.

“Hey, what’s going on here?”

Favreau asked, and one of the knights shook his head, as if he had no clue either.

“I don’t know. An earthquake, maybe…”

They hadn’t even considered the possibility of an enemy ambush.

The idea that Ferdium, already short on troops, would send a separate force to attack was beyond their imagination.

There had been no reports from the main force up ahead, either.

Rumble, rumble.

In a matter of monts, the vibrations grew even stronger.

Favreau scratched his chin, deep in thought.

“What could it be? Maybe a herd of cattle running wild?”

As soon as he thought of cattle, Favreau realized that the vibrations were similar to the sound of hooves.

“Co on, no way.”

He chuckled, amused by his own absurd thoughts.

Though they had lit torches, the cloud-covered sky made it too dark to see far ahead.

They could only rely on sound to judge the situation, which took them a long ti to fully grasp.

Drdrdrdrdr!

It wasn’t until Ghislain’s army had drawn completely near that they realized the source of the noise.

“Wake up! Wake up! It’s an ambush! Ambush! Move it!”

So of the quicker-reacting knights shouted out.

The commander, Favreau, wore an expression of disbelief even then.

“An ambush? How? Why?”

Thud-thud-thud-thud!

“Aghhh!”

Only when the enemy was practically upon them did Favreau finally snap back to his senses.

He yelled desperately while retreating backward.

“The enemy is here! Enemy! Everyone, get out and hold them off!”

Even in the midst of it, he hadn’t thought they would lose.

The enemy forces, at most, would number a few hundred.

Otherwise, there was no way they could have flanked the main unit so quickly.

Despite being a supply unit, they had a thousand soldiers here. Fending off an ambush of this scale should be no problem.

“Move quickly! Quickly! We have plenty of n! We can hold them off!”

The soldiers rushed out of their tents, hastily grabbing their weapons.

So didn’t even have ti to gather their gear, and their formation was a ss.

At that mont, as they were moving around in a daze—

Boom!

Ghislain’s forces erged from the darkness.

“Aaaargh!”

The soldiers stationed on the outskirts were swept away in an instant.

Torches, knocked over by the flying bodies, fell to the ground.

Soon, flas began to spread around the area, and the soldiers, now thrown into confusion, started to panic and scatter.

A few of Digald’s knights scrambled to rally the troops.

“Gather around! Form a line!”

But forming a proper line was impossible.

The enemy, exploiting their superior mobility, smashed through anything that stood in their way in a long, unbroken line.

They crashed through tents with such force that so rcenaries ripped them to shreds as they plowed forward.

Thud-thud-thud!

One of Digald’s knights, spotting Ghislain charging ahead of the rest, drew his sword.

Dressed differently from the others, displaying unparalleled horsemanship—

The knight instinctively knew the man before him was the enemy commander.

‘If I kill him, we win!’

He raised his sword, intending to slash down upon him in one swift strike, horse and all.

Thud-thud-thud!

Due to the spreading flas, he couldn’t make out the man’s face as he approached.

Against the backlight, he could only barely discern a shadowy figure, yet even then, the knight saw it.

The man’s eyes, blazing red with a terrifying intensity.

The mont he felt the inexplicable hatred and endless fury within them, the knight froze on the spot.

“Aaaaaaah!”

He frantically drew forth as much mana as he could, trying to shake off the fear, and charged forward with all his might.

“Die!”

Ghislain leaned slightly to the side.

Then, with all his strength, he swung his axe upward from below.

Crack!

With a single blow, the approaching knight was split in half from his groin to his head and collapsed.

The rcenaries following Ghislain let out cheers and whistled.

Thwack! Thwack!

All the soldiers standing in front of Ghislain either had their heads crushed by his axe or were decapitated.

Belinda looked at Ghislain with a worried expression.

She was concerned that he might be hiding any disturbance within himself, given that this was likely his first ti killing soone directly.

anwhile, Ghislain, who had swiftly reached the opposite end of the encampnt, imdiately turned his horse around and spoke.

“Finish them off.”

At his dry command, the rcenaries shifted direction and charged at the enemy again.

With only a few knights left, Digald’s forces crumbled helplessly.

There were no trenches or obstacles to halt the cavalry.

Knowing the timing and location that made ambushes easy was also part of a commander’s ability. And Favreau was not much of a commander.

“Gillian and Kaor, handle the remaining knights.”

Thud, thud, thud!

The rcenaries split into two groups and surrounded the enemy.

They moved so organically, without a single mistake, that they looked like a seasoned cavalry unit.

“Well-trained.”

Ghislain nodded in satisfaction.

In his past life, he had often relied on mobility-based ambushes and charges.

He had emptied his pockets to outfit the rcenaries with equipnt and warhorses, specifically for this shock tactic.

Although the King of rcenaries’ personal combat prowess was ranked seventh among the continent’s strongest, his ability to wage war was ranked in the top three.

He was both a slaughterer and the king of the battlefield.

The soldiers of Digald scread.

“Aaagh!”

“We have to stop them! Shields, where are the shields?”

“Regroup! Gather around!”

Having rushed out without proper equipnt, there was no way they could hold back the determined attack of the rcenaries.

Without formation, even a large number of infantry couldn’t demonstrate their full strength. Moreover, there was no way to command effectively in this chaotic skirmish.

The massacre began anew.

One by one, Digald’s soldiers started abandoning their weapons and fleeing.

“Don’t let a single one escape!”

Following Ghislain’s orders, the rcenaries chased after the soldiers who were scattering in all directions.

Those running in fear from mounted soldiers were easy prey.

So enemy knights put up a fight, but they were each hunted down by Gillian and Kaor.

With only a few knights in the supply unit, the enemies quickly collapsed.

“Ha ha ha! This is absolutely exhilarating!”

Kaor, along with the Mad Dogs, raged like fish in water.

In the Forest of Beasts, the abundance of monsters and the constant danger had forced them to focus solely on survival.

But now, facing humans, they could unleash their madness without restraint.

So dismounted from their horses and charged at the nearby soldiers.

“Ahahaha! Die! Die!”

“You’re too weak! You worthless worms!”

A few of Digald’s soldiers banded together to resist, but they couldn’t reverse the already one-sided battle.

Ghislain road the battlefield without rest.

Whenever he spotted a cluster of enemies or sensed rcenaries in danger, he would rush over without fail, splitting his enemies’ heads with his axe.

Over a thousand of Digald’s soldiers were swept away in vain like that.

“It’s over.”

Belinda watched Ghislain mutter as if it were only natural, her gaze strange.

‘What’s this? This must be his first war, right?’

Killing monsters and killing humans were entirely different matters.

Anyone experiencing war for the first ti would struggle to keep their sanity.

But her concern turned out to be needless worry.

‘Why is he so calm?’

Ghislain dealt with the enemies as if he were rely doing what needed to be done.

At this rate, it wouldn’t be an exaggeration to call him a born warmonger.

‘It’s not that he’s calm.’

As he swept through the battlefield, Ghislain looked like a man forcibly swallowing a blazing fla.

She couldn’t understand it.

What could have driven Ghislain to hold such a deep-seated grudge against Digald?

While she pondered this, the screams of their enemies began to die down.

It ant this fight was nearing its end.

Monts later, Gillian dragged soone over and threw him down in front of Ghislain.

“This one seems to be the commander.”

Favreau looked up at Ghislain, trembling.

No matter how poorly trained Digald’s soldiers were, over a thousand troops had been annihilated in an instant.

“P-please, spare .”

Favreau had relied on the sheer number of soldiers and missed his chance to escape.

He’d barely managed to slip away, only to be caught by the pursuing Gillian.

He couldn’t bear to die like this, so unfairly.

‘The main force will win anyway.’

As long as he stayed alive, he might be released eventually.

In most cases, nobles captured in war were taken as prisoners rather than killed.

It was more profitable to ransom them back to their liege or family.

For this reason, Favreau felt safe surrendering.

“Please, spare ! Count Digald will surely pay a ransom! I surrender! I surrender!”

Ghislain silently scanned Favreau’s face.

The mont their eyes t, Favreau, who had been frantically pleading, clamped his mouth shut in terror, feeling as if he couldn’t breathe.

His cold, snake-like gaze, his expression devoid of any emotion.

The predator’s gleaming eyes were studying him.

As if deciding whether or not to devour him.

“Na.”

“B-Baron Favreau. And who are you?”

“Ghislain Ferdium.”

“Ghislain…? The Young Lord of Ferdium?”

Favreau’s mouth hung open.

He had heard of Ghislain’s na. Wasn’t he, along with Digald’s heir Gilmore, one of the two notorious scoundrels of the North?

And yet this man had brazenly launched an assault and slaughtered over a thousand soldiers?

It would’ve been more believable to hear that Count Ferdium was secretly a dragon.

Still, he couldn’t exactly call Ghislain Ferdium a scoundrel to his face.

Favreau quickly bowed his head without betraying his thoughts.

“Young Lord, please accept my surrender. It would not be unprofitable for you. You could demand a handso ransom.”

But Ghislain responded with sothing unexpected.

“No matter how I try, I can’t seem to rember.”

“W-What do you an?”

“It ans you’re so utterly insignificant that you don’t even stick in my mory. Well, not that it changes the outco.”

Ghislain grabbed a fistful of Favreau’s hair and yanked him up, raising his axe with his other hand.

“Ahhh! Spare ! I-I’ll pay a generous ransom!”

“I don’t make deals with scum like you.”

“What are you saying! I am a noble! Respect the customary rights of nobles!”

“Since when is there custom on the battlefield?”

Ghislain spoke with a hint of amusent, though there wasn’t a trace of a smile on his face.

“Well, there’s one thing I can take from you.”

With a dispassionate tone, the axe fell.

Crack!

“Your life.”

* * *

Clink, clink!

Ghislain moved into the castle.

The rcenaries in armor trailed behind him, snickering noisily.

As soon as the people inside the castle saw Ghislain, they lowered their heads and stepped aside.

Every step he took left a trail of blood, as if painted onto the ground.

Blood dripped from his body, covering him from head to toe, but he didn’t even bother to wipe his face.

What was even more terrifying were Ghislain’s eyes.

Those sa indifferent eyes that hadn’t changed at all.

If they had even glinted with murderous intent, it might have been less frightening.

Once, he had been a troubleso figure no one wanted to deal with; now, he was soone to be feared, soone no one dared to cross.

Thud!

Ghislain opened the door to the main hall and strode in without hesitation.

Zwalter and his retainers, who had been in the middle of a eting, gaped in shock at the sudden sight of Ghislain.

They had thought the Young Lord had fled.

Yet here he was, drenched in blood, as if he’d just co back from a fight.

“W-What on earth have you done?”

Zwalter asked, his voice trembling.

Without answering, Ghislain rely bowed slightly, then placed the box he was carrying onto the table with a loud clatter.

Seeing the blood-soaked box, the retainers gasped.

No one seed able to fully grasp the situation.

Then Ghislain’s voice echoed through the hall.

“The supply unit has been annihilated. It’s ti to begin the siege.”

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