Isaac - Chapter 112
Due to some copyright issues. I changed some word such god= supreme-ruler. /diviné= supreme. And some Chinese words etc, all of this to avoid copyright *.*
Since we barely make any profit from our site, I will close the site and turn it into a Blogger blog where I will publish the two most famous novels on the site. After we finish translating the novels, we will close it.
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There wasnât a single citizen of New Port City that didnât know of Cordnellâs reputation. While they refrained from even looking at Isaac out of fear, Cordnell would stand his ground and fight back whenever things broke down.
It wasnât surprising that Cordnell had such a reputation, considering that his screams echoed from the rooftop all too frequently. And it was this reputation that kept the cityâs citizens silently in line.
The first wave of disqualifications occured before the training started, weeding out those who volunteered with skant optimism. Lanburton and Rizzly further pruned the ranks with brutal training that took no consideration for the loss of life. Still, 300 persistent souls managed to survive until the end.
âWho provides equipment for mercenaries in the first place? They should be glad they were even given any in the first place, even if itâs second hand.â
Cordnell grumbled. The main difference between a mercenary and a professional soldier was that a mercenary had to provide all of their own equipment themselves, while professionals were provided with equipment by the army.
There wasnât a single case like Isaacâs. Who fed, sheltered, trained and even provided equipment for mercenaries without signing a contract with them? Isaac did, all because he wanted to start a mercenary business.
The volunteers took no risk of being tied down to the guild for the rest of their lives; they were free to leave for a better place after completing the training. That was part of why there were more volunteers than expected.
That was why Cordnell, who acquired enough equipment for a hundred men thinking it was enough, desperately scavenged for more equipment for the unexpected number of those who qualified. This delayed all of his other work, which was piling up into a mountain awaiting his return.
âTrue. I guess it doesnât matter so long as they look the part.â
Isaac nodded nonchalantly. He looked down on the mercenaries in front of the City Hallâs plaza. The mercenaries formed a line as sharp as a swordâs edge; you couldnât even hear them breathe. Isaac nodded with satisfaction.
âHm. They donât look half bad.â
âIâm not sure youâll be happy with the result. There just wasnât enough time.â
Lanburton looked down at the mercenaries unhappily. Lanburtonâs stare alone made the mercenaries tense up â a testament to his harsh training.
âIt doesnât matter. We just need to look nice at the moment. You can train them as much as you want when they return.â
âYes sir. I was quite disappointed with the short training period we had, since there were a number of fine candidates that made the training worth it.â
âFine candidates? In this place?â
Isaac asked with great surprise, and Lanburton pointed at the mercenary band as he replied.
âYes. Training may have been cut short, but these men passed the Combat Agent Training Course with above-average evaluations.â
âMen? Not just one or two?â
Isaacâs eyes followed Lanburtonâs finger and looked at them with keen focus and even greater surprise.
âThey were capable and demonstrated great leadership, so I made them the bandâs officers. Most important is that they are very interesting.â
âHow interesting?â
If Lanburton the elf said they were interesting, they must be extremely special. Lanburton grinned.
âTheyâre swearing loyalty to you, Sir Isaac.â
Isaacâs eyes gleamed.
âSwearing their loyalty to me⊠Now that really is interesting. But whatâre their reasons?â
âThat man at the head of the line â the temporary leader of the band â says he was about to starve to death with his sister in the streets when you were appointed. The others were in similar situations. They were, how to say, given a hand of salvation from Sir Isaac when they were just waiting to die. They say itâs an honour to repay their debts through this means.â
Isaac burst out in laughter.
âSalvation my ass, those naive fools.â
From a man whoâd just outgrown teens to a man at the doorstep for retirement, all of these men from all ages looked at Isaac with a burning passion.
Isaacâs eyes met those of the man who was the bandâs leader, positioned at the head of the line.
Coming face to face with this strange passion, Isaac breathed out some smoke and asked Lanburton.
âWhatâs the name of the temporary leader?â
âHe calls himself Flander.â
âFlander huhâŠâ
Isaac muttered and met eye-to-eye with Flander again. There was a clear sense of fealty in those eyes, and Isaac tried his utmost to stop the sly grin from surfacing on his face.
âTheyâve finally come out.â
âThere are so many special people in the world.â
âThatâs what makes this world interesting.â
Lanburton added, and Isaac nodded.
âDeploy them. And when this job is over, throw them down into the mud so badly that those nutcases will never utter the bullshit that they swear loyalty to me.â
âSorry? Isnât it good to have loyal subordinates?â
Lanbortun tilted his head as Isaac walked away from the balcony of the roof. He buried himself into the sofa and answered.
âI prefer subordinates who hate me over those that are loyal. Itâs very amusing to see their faces writhe in pain as they are forced to follow my orders, even as they dream of slitting my throat.â
Cordnell grumbled and jeered at Isaac.
âSounds like youâre talking about me.â
âOf course not, I like capable individuals. Superiors want to leave their work to trustworthy subordinates, you know.â
If it werenât for that silver tongue of his⊠Cordnell spoke, his eyes burning with anger.
âThatâs good and all, but are you mad?â
âWhatâs annoyed you this time?â
âMr. Saints sent me an invoice, and it says we are paying 1000 Giga for each mercenary we are sending.â
âWhat, did you think they would pay to hire mercenaries that only looked the part?â
âAre you saying we are paying them to use our mercenariesâŠâ
Cordnell put his hands on the back on his neck, his blood pressure rising dangerously. Out of pity, Isaac spoke to Cordnell with a soothing tone.
âWars make money, you know.â
âHow so?! If any of them die, weâll need to provide compensation as well! Plus, neither Count Wolfgang and Marquis Lichten wanted to participate in War Gambling in fear of intel leaks!â
âWhat? They didnât?â
Isaac looked with a hint of surprise, and Cordnell seemed to gain a bit of confidence.
âOf course they didnât! This war isnât just about rights or land; their titles are on the line!â
âThatâs a little troublesomeâŠâ
âEven the Department of Administration requested that you restrain yourself this time.â
âFor whose good? Go ahead with the gamble anyway.â
âWhat? How? The Department of Administration willâŠâ
âWhoâs higher? The Commissioner of Administration or the Director of Security from Central?â
ââŠâ
It was clearly the Director of Security. Not just by a few steps, but significantly so. The Department of Administration couldnât even utter a word against a decision from a Director of Central.
âBut will the Count and Marquis be willing to reveal their strength?â
âIt doesnât matter. In fact, itâll be more interesting this time with the lack of information. This war will have special rules.â
âSpecial rules?â
âNo information given. Thereâs no need to stop baseless rumours, but they must bet with their instincts alone on who will win this war â the Count or the Marquis. Now this is true gambling.â
â⊠Thatâs good and all but will the Count and Marquis stand for this?â
âTell them weâll donate the winner an amount equivalent to the total bets on them winning. From the sound of things, they both seem like they are in a bit of a stretch, so I doubt theyâll go against it. Now, theyâll try even harder to win. Which would make the war all the more interesting.â
ââŠâ
The continent was wrapped up in a strange frenzy of excitement. This was war on a massive scale, not like the other instances of Provincial Warfare. A war with both the land and titles of the participating families on the line. A war that only occured between families that are deeply embroiled in hatred. Winner taking all, the loser losing all. A zero sum game.
This massive war involved just the main families but even the branch families and their vassal families too. Somebody once said war is an opportunity. Just as the saying went, those who sought fame, riches, titles and honour for their families flocked to Count Wolfgang and Marquis Lichten to prove themselves.
It was only Central who was exhausted by this. This war of a massive scale was the perfect environment for turncoats to spread their wings. They couldnât let their surveillance slip up for even a moment, so all core agents were deployed to search for any signs of turncoats, be they from the Directorates of Strategy, Surveillance or Analysis.
âWars are so much more fun to watch when they tussle around. Wars in our place just have explosions. It doesnât have such a fierce atmosphere like this.â
Isaac muttered excitedly as he sat on a chair atop a hill, observing the war with a telescope. He munched on some cookies as two thousand of Count Wolfgang faced off against Marquisâ three thousand.
This scale would be considered an all-out battle for an average provincial war, but a war of this scale wouldnât end in a single day or two. Both sides having summoned all military families under them, Count Wolfgang had 45 thousand, while Marquis Lichten had 60 thousand men. It was a total of 100 thousand combatants; a war on this scale would only be seen maybe once in a hundred years.Â
So it was typical for both sides to skirmish with one another to test the other side and whittle down their numbers until the tug of war escalated into a massive all-out battle. And considering that siege battles would also take place since the familyâs lives were at stake, no one could predict when this war would end.
This battleâs stalemate shattered when Marquis Lichtenâs right wing fell apart. The frontline quickly crumbled and were pushed back rapidly, ending up in full retreat.
âI swear, itâs so easy to make money when youâre running the gambling ring.â
Those obsessed with gambling flocked to this special occasion of provincial war gambling. They were monitoring the war in real time from the screen installed at the City Hall Plaza. And the betting would begin when the battle started.
So those who wanted to gamble focused on the screen as they sorted out their meals and even slept at the city plaza. Count Wolfgang and Marquis Lichten, at first infuriated by Isaacâs intention to make money using them, soon realised the benefit of this and deployed promoters to New Port City.
The promoters put in their all to attract bettors, boasting of their respective sidesâ forces and prowess. The real information was hidden anyway, so they could boast all they wanted and assure the gamblers that their side would win.
Meanwhile, Isaac received exact information through Central, so he could easily figure out which side was likely to win.
âI can see why the Marquis is scared shitless. They are no match at all.â
Isaac figured out that Count Wolfgang was bound to win in this war the moment he looked at the military analysis sent from Central.
Who would win between a sheep that commands a hundred lions and a lion who commands a hundred sheep? The importance of leadership was paramount in the military, more than any other organisations.
When you considered that, the Marquisâs forces were no use. These brats without a single experience found their position through their birth and boasted of their titles; only two or three of them were Campus graduates.
And these graduates werenât from the main family, but as branch and vassal families so they only served as low ranking officers or advisers. Which was why they would lose to Count Wolfgangâs forces, whose leadership was organized by experience with perfect candidates filling every job.