Lord: Starting with Biological Modification Chapter 13 - 9: The Absolute Dominator
Wails, argunts, and curses mingled together, plunging the situation into chaos.
"Shut the fuck up, all of you!"
Barrett’s thunderous roar only bought a mont’s silence.
Despair is a far more stubborn emotion than fear. It’s like the muck in a swamp; once you’re caught, any struggle only makes you sink faster.
Before long, the sounds of complaint rose again, eventually coalescing into a single word—"Back."
Barrett’s face was ashen. He knew the situation was spiraling out of control.
These pioneers weren’t soldiers. They were paupers, a pitiful and detestable lot.
Suppress them with force?
His rcenaries could cut down enemies five tis their number without hesitation, but drawing their blades on these unard civilians would only make things worse.
His n also began to shift uneasily, their palms sweating as they gripped their weapons.
They could feel the atmosphere of despair—cold and damp, slowly eating away at their morale.
No one wanted to go down with a sinking ship for a mission dood to fail.
Just as Barrett was about to make one last attempt, Velin moved.
He walked over to a cargo crate, stood upon it, and calmly gazed down at the distorted faces below.
One minute... five minutes... ten minutes.
The clamor gradually dissolved under his silent gaze until all that remained in the village was the sobbing of the wind.
"I understand your fear."
Velin spoke. His voice wasn’t loud, but it carried clearly to everyone’s ears.
His tone was flat, as if stating a fact rather than offering comfort.
"I promised to give you enough land to feed yourselves. But did I say I would give it to you now?"
"Open your eyes and look at yourselves. A band of refugees who nearly starved to death on the road, a pack of slaves who should have been collared! What makes you think you deserve to have everything imdiately, just for showing up here empty-handed?"
Velin looked them straight in the eye. Wherever his gaze fell, people lowered their heads in sha.
"My promise still stands. Those who want to leave may do so."
A faint stir went through the crowd. A flicker of hope appeared in so people’s eyes.
"However," Velin’s tone suddenly turned cold, his wine-red pupils growing more vivid, "from this mont on, all food and fresh water will be held and distributed by alone."
"Anyone who attempts to leave the village will be considered to have automatically renounced their status as a pioneer. They can go back, but they won’t be taking so much as a single grain of wheat or a single drop of water."
Velin’s voice wasn’t loud, but it pierced every heart.
Everyone was stunned by his ruthlessness.
Leave without supplies?
On the edge of this swamp, in the middle of nowhere? How was that any different from suicide?
"Captain Barrett."
"Here, my lord." Barrett subconsciously straightened his back.
"I need your rcenaries to imdiately take inventory of and confiscate all food stores from every family for centralized managent. You are authorized to use force against any who resist."
"Also, send two n to dig a cistern right here," Velin drew a circle in the mud with the toe of his boot, "and build a simple filtration device. For the water source... use what we brought on the carriages for now."
"Finally, assign them to the empty houses. No one is to leave without permission. Anyone who disobeys will be dealt with as I’ve just described."
The orders ca one after another—clear, concise, and leaving no room for negotiation.
For the first ti, genuine astonishnt showed on Barrett’s weathered face.
He had seen his share of nobles.
Arrogant ones, foolish ones, those who were all bark and no bite, and the self-righteous ones.
But he had never seen anyone like Velin.
In a situation this chaotic and on the verge of collapse, he showed no panic, made no empty promises, and offered not a single word of comfort.
He chose the most simple and direct thod.
Seize their food, and restrict their freedom.
To use absolute power to grasp everyone’s lifeline.
When the very right to survive is held in soone else’s hands, no amount of despair or anger can be expressed; it can only be suppressed deep down.
"...Yes, Lord Velin." Barrett replied in a low voice. He gave Velin a deep look with his one eye, then spun around and roared at his own stunned n.
"What the fuck are you all standing around for? Didn’t you hear the lord’s orders?!"
"Rat, Sam! You two, get over there and start digging!"
"The rest of you, with ! In pairs, go house to house and collect all the damn food! If anyone dares to resist, let ’em have a taste of your fists!"
The Gray Wolf rcenaries snapped out of their daze and sprang into action.
They were rcenaries; carrying out orders was their duty.
Once their employer gave a clear directive, they had their justification to act.
In an instant, the village was filled with the rcenaries’ rough commands, the weeping of won, the low curses of n, and the sound of sacks being dragged across the ground.
The pioneers dared not resist.
These burly, blade-wielding rcenaries weren’t about to reason with them.
They could only watch helplessly as their pitifully small stores of food—so black bread, a few bags of oats, several pieces of dried, salted at—were rcilessly confiscated and piled up next to Velin’s carriage.
That was their last hope.
Now, even that had been taken from them.
A despair even thicker than before settled over the crowd.
Velin paid them no mind.
He didn’t even spare the paupers another glance.
’The confiscated rations, plus our own reserves, should be enough to support everyone for two or three months,’ he silently calculated. ’Food won’t be an imdiate problem.’
His gaze traveled past the lifeless Gray Mist Village and settled on the swamp shrouded in gray mist.
In the eyes of others, it was a symbol of death.
But in his eyes—the eyes of a biology Ph.D. from Earth—it was an ecological treasure trove waiting to be deconstructed.
’A salt marsh is an extre environnt, but any stable ecosystem must have an internal cycle and flow of energy.’
’In other words, there must be producers here.’
’There has to be so plant, or several types of plants, that have adapted to this high-salinity, high-humidity environnt and ford the foundation of a food chain.’
’These plants are the key to breaking this deadlock.’
’They might be ugly and misshapen, they might contain mild toxins, and they might taste terrible.’
’But they have to exist.’
’And what I have to do is find them before our food and Golden Sun run out.’
"My lord."
Barrett’s voice sounded beside him, interrupting Velin’s thoughts.
The one-eyed rcenary captain had already completed the initial arrangents. His n were carrying out their orders as efficiently as a pack of wolves, bringing the entire village firmly under control.
"All the food has been gathered and is being inventoried. What’s next... what do we do?"
In Barrett’s tone, there was a hint of... obedience... that even he himself had not noticed.
The thods Velin had displayed had already won him the veteran’s basic respect.
"Good." Velin nodded. His gaze swept over the numb pioneers before finally landing on the tightly shut doors and windows of the village’s original inhabitants. "Bring everyone to the square. Including the natives here."
Soon, more than a hundred sallow and gaunt natives were half-pushed, half-coaxed before Velin by the rcenaries.
At their head was a hunchbacked old man. His cloudy eyes showed neither fear nor submission, only a vast grayness.
He raised his head, staring at the young noble on the cargo crate, and sighed inwardly.
’Another lord...’
The mont his eyes t the old man’s, Velin’s heart gave an inexplicable leap, and he subconsciously used his ability.
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