Isaac - Chapter 119
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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While Rivelia fought her desire to unveil the truth behind Isaacâs lies, Count Wolfgang and Isaac had agreed upon the terms with satisfaction.
âIâve already finished speaking with the Department of Administration. One signature from you and your realm will become mine temporarily. This contract was signed by Mazelan sunbaenim as a witness, so you donât need to worry about this being a scam. To seal the deal, I had Mazelan sunbaenim wait for us to call him, so why donât the two of you speak together after you sign this. You can get through a lot with connections in the Department of Administration, and if youâre lucky, they might even offer some aid with no strings attached. That fella takes good care of me, you know.â
Rivelia retched in response as Isaacâs flaunting had ballooned beyond reason.
âBweh!â
With plenty of supplies and funds provided by Isaac, Count Wolfgang eagerly made his moves. The recruitment of additional soldiers and mercenaries, combined with a slowing of the Black Banditsâ activities, allowed Wolfgang to focus on the war.Â
When all preparations were finished, Count Wolfgang ordered the advance. Breaking through the haphazard forces of the Marquis, Wolfgang quickly recovered his lost territories and advanced into Marquisâ lands.
Wolfgangâs goal to finish the war in the shortest time possible was close to fruition, as he conquered most of the Marquisâ lands. But that was when the Marquis struck back.
Somehow, the Marquisâ forces were suddenly aware of all of his forcesâ positions, crushing them and his overstretched supply lines.
Plus, there was an astronomically high casualty rate for officers, leading to the annihilation and mass surrenders of leaderless troops. Whenever a battle occured, every leader was killed, from its highest general to its lowest officers.
It was most definitely assassination, but aiming for officers was common knowledge in war. Wolfgang had neither the excuse nor time to file a complaint. Thanks to some battalions that had resisted desperately, Wolfgang bought enough time and ordered his troops regroup, but even his rendezvous locations seemed to have been leaked. The remnants of Wolfgangâs forces that managed to retreat back to Countdom were only slightly more than half of what he started with.
A crushing defeat. Wolfgang even considered the possibility that the Marquis had been sending incapable officers to lull him into a false sense of security before this one decisive move, but the officers and advisors of Wolfgang couldnât wrap their heads on how to analyse the Marquisâ forces. How did half their forces survive despite losing in terms of both intelligence and strategy?
âWow. I really have nothing to say to these retards. How am I supposed to look at those dumbasses losing despite having map hacks and cheats on.â
Isaac was at a loss for words to describe forces of Marquis, which were the epitome of incapability. Isaac had given them all the information and killed all the top officers to streamline the process, yet they somehow lost a few battles against remnants of the Countâs armies.
This war would have been over long ago if Central hadnât intervened. And as if pouring oil to fuel Isaacâs flaming fury, these Marquisâs generals actually believed they won because they outsmarted their foes and charged recklessly despite countless warnings of an ambush â only to be caught in the forewarned ambush and lose decisively. Isaac could feel his blood boil just watching them.
Still, Isaac managed to make steady profit from this. The sudden change of course in the war attracted significant attention, and the gambling scene engorged itself once more.
Even Wolfgangâs army, which boasted of its elite troops, were helpless when their positions were leaked and left without a leader. They were cornered.
Pushed back by the relentless advances of the Marquis, Count Wolfgang lost all his territories except his initial barondom. Even that was mostly occupied by the Marquis, and Wolfgangâs forces prepared for their last stand in the Countâs castle.
Two preparations had to be made before a siege could take place. First, only volunteers could participate in a siege battle on the defending. Second, all civilians unrelated to the war had to be evacuated.
These two preparations needed to be finished before even starting the battle even if the castle was surrounded, but some of the Marquisâ forces couldnât wait patiently and bickered amongst one another about their shares of loot when the war was over. Some of his forces openly fought one another, granting the dishonour of infighting during a war to the Marquis.
Of course, the Marquis was furious, and he ordered the two noble families to fall back to the reserves. But the two families were so caught up in their emotions that they requested the start of provincial warfare to the Department of Administration against each other, beginning a battle in the midst of occupied territory. They were the first in history to fight a provincial war against allies in the middle of another war; the Marquis was fuming with anger.
Meanwhile, not one soldier from Wolfgang deserted their post, declaring their will to fight unto death. Even the evacuated civilians remained in sight of the castle, praying for Wolfgangâs victory in their hearts.
âWow! These dumbasses. Iâm really done with them.â
But the wishes and efforts of the soldiers and refugees were pointless, as the result was already predetermined. As soon as the judge announced the start of battle and Marquisâ forces charged, the castle gate was opened.
Isaac shook his head when he watched the Marquisâ army rush headlong toward the gate, throwing caution to the wind.
Not everyone in Marquisâ army were fools. There were plenty of officers who prepared proper tactics and made preparations for a decisive victory. But it was always the fools who had the power to decide, so the result was the same no matter how many advisors tried.
Even now, Isaac clicked his tongue, watching the high nobles scream at their soldiers to take the castle and capture Wolfgang alive despite their advisorsâ warnings against traps and ambushes. The nobles were charging forward nonstop, racing other nobles to the prize that was Wolfgangâs capture.
It was understandable why they were so obsessed with capturing Wolfgang, since such a feat would be listed first in the list of all war efforts. And it was Isaac who made Wolfgangâs efforts useless by opening the castle gate to finish the battle quickly.
âAre the Countâs forces that stubborn? Or are the Marquisâ forces that useless?â
âItâs both.â
âYou have a point.â
Rivelia answered uneasily and Isaac agreed.
The siege that started at noon was still going on as the sun was setting, boring Isaac.
âI can see that they arenât going easy because itâs not his anymore. Yeah, break it all. I see that the reconstruction business is quite profitable too.â
The Marquisâ forces struggled to advance into the castle partly because this was their first siege battle, but also because their plan of advancing quickly through the main roads was thwarted by the relentless resistance from Wolfgangâs forces, who hid inside buildings and in the streets, disregarding civilian damages.
The winner had to assume debts from civilian damages; in this case, it was the Marquis. The Marquis argued with the war judge furiously as he watched the battle unfold, but the judge did not accept the Marquisâ argument, as Isaac had bribed him.
The rights for the territory had already been passed on to Isaac, so all civilian damages had to be handled by Isaac. So Wolfgangâs forces that resisted until death didnât have to care about it. It was also Wolfgangâs revenge on Isaac.
âIt was you right? That told Wolfgang.â
ââŠâ
Rivelia acted innocent as she avoided Isaacâs sharp glare.
âAs you said, Director, only a fool would be oblivious.â
Rivelia didnât tell him directly. She simply orchestrated an event that would allow Wolfgang to learn that Isaac had bet on Marquisâ victory after a chain of rumours.
This would have been enough for Wolfgang to realise that Isaac was backing the Marquis when Marquisâ forces advanced with endless supplies despite Wolfgangâs constant raids on their supply lines.
And Rivelia revealed this to Wolfgang just before the siege battle. It was an act of petty revenge on Isaac, who sought personal profit through the war, but watching Isaac grumble was such a refreshing feeling to Rivelia that she thought it was worth it. And since it had little impact on the war and only increased Isaacâs losses, Isaac didnât have a good reason to scold her.
âI donât know if I should be happier that you are getting more conniving, tsk.â
Isaac commented on Rivelia, who was looking far into the distance when he received news from Kainen. The Marquis had broken through into the castleâs keep, and Wolfgang and his few remaining soldiers were facing off against the Marquis in their last stand.
âI guess thatâs it for my war business. Tks. This is your punishment for leaking the info. Donât move from here.â
âWhat?â
âYou can see whatâs happening with the communicator, so just watch and donât move.â
âButâŠâ
âThis is an order. Donât move. And think about the homework I gave you. The answer will come soon.â
â⊠Yes sir.â
The last survivors of the battle locked themselves inside the banquet hall, which was the largest room in the keep. Its doors were reinforced by furniture inside the room, but this crude barricade was smashed open with ease. The Marquisâs soldiers poured into the room, surrounding Wolfgang, his knights, and the rest of his soldiers.
Wolfgang himself sat upon the chair at the end of the Banquet hall with his family. His grim expression changed to fury when Marquis Lichten entered with absolute arrogance.
âHuhuhu. Itâs been a while, Wolfgang.â
When the twoâs eyes met, Count Wolfgang kissed his wife and held his children dearly as he whispered.
âIâm sorry, Laila, Julia. Your fatherâs greed for vengeance has made it difficult for you.â
Julia burst into tears and tried to bury herself in her father, while Lailia tried her utmost to hold back her tears and glared at Marquis Lichten.
Marquis Lichten engraved the image of Laila into his mind, seeing how ferocious her eyes were, before speaking to Wolfgang.
âIâm really curious, so Iâd like to ask. Why did you aim for me? If you wanted the title of Marquis, you could have simply taken over your neighboring territories. Why did you aim for nobles under my rule only?â
âAre you really asking that question?â
Wolfgangâs eyes were vengeful, yet the Marquis responded as if he was truly oblivious.
âYou wonât say you didnât know my father, will you?â
The Marquis rubbed his chin and reminisced.
âWolfgang⊠Yes, Of course. I remember. Aindolf Wolfgang. A fool whose arrogance went beyond his measly title of Baron. Ha, dear me⊠That petty reason is why you pointed your sword at me, a Marquis?â
âPetty reason? This land suffered for a long time because of you. And you say petty?â
âThat was just my underlings moving at their own volition. All I did was state my disapproval of that man.â
âThat one statement was why my father was caught in your noblesâ schemes, expelling him from the Campus. That one statement was why this land was constantly harassed by other nobles, locked into poverty. My father spent his entire life living in despair, watching his poverty ridden fiefdom crumble and his residents leave to make a living elsewhere.â
Wolfgang cast sleep magic on Julia, who had been throwing a tantrum in refusal to leave her fatherâs side. After putting her to sleep, Wolfgang handed Julia to his wife, while patting Lailaâs head once before coming down from his chair.
Watching Wolfgang step down with a sword in his hand, Marquis Lichten shouted furiously.
âYou should have been happy with that title of Count. How dare a clueless pup seek to aim for me?â
âYouâd gloat over this victory when you would have been obliterated if it werenât for that Warlock organisation and Isaacâs schemes?â
âHa! Such brave words you speak when you donât even know the reason why you lost?â
â⊠What?â
Wolfgang asked back, realising something was behind the scenes. But Marquis Lichten showed no signs of answering and pointed at Wolfgangâs wife and children with his chin.
âIf you donât want them to see you die in front of them, have them leave. I hear your wife is a branch family of Dorothy, so I will protect her until her family sends an escort.â
âHow dare you even suggest such nonsense, to trust your despicable nature!â
Pount, who had remained silent in conversation between Wolfgang and Lichten, shouted out furiously. His cries echoed throughout the banquet hall, causing the Marquisâ combat knights to flinch. The Marquis frowned at this sight.