Chapter 14: The Land Beyond the Mountains
Morning arrived beneath a sky buried beneath layers of pale gray cloud, the sunlight struggling to pierce through the endless winter haze that hung above the northern frontier like a curtain that never truly lifted, and though the city had already awakened long before dawn, there remained a heaviness within the air that reminded everyone living beneath those walls that survival here was not a temporary hardship, but a permanent condition.
Within the castle, activity had intensified.
Not chaotically.
Not recklessly.
But with asured direction.
Orders traveled through corridors with increasing frequency, administrative reports began moving between departnts at a faster pace than before, and for the first ti in years, several officers within the fortress found themselves uncertain whether the sudden efficiency surrounding them was coincidence or the result of deliberate change.
Lucas Marcus ensured that uncertainty remained unanswered.
Because uncertainty—
When controlled—
Created attention.
And attention created discipline.
Lucien stood near the large strategic table inside his chamber, several maps spread before him beneath the soft illumination of mana lamps fixed into the walls, his eyes moving across the drawn terrain of the northern territory while his thoughts arranged themselves around the information he already possessed.
The city was stable.
For now.
The officers had accepted his authority.
The administration had begun restructuring.
The loyal knights had already departed to survey the surrounding terrain.
And most importantly—
The foundation for sothing far larger had finally entered his hands.
Industry.
Production.
Infrastructure.
The knowledge granted by the system had not faded after acquisition; instead, it remained within his mind with unnatural clarity, every design and process accessible the mont he focused on it, allowing him to understand not only what needed to be built, but in what order it needed to erge.
But knowledge alone changed nothing.
Resources did.
Trade did.
Supply lines did.
And those—
Required rchants.
Lucien lifted his gaze slightly.
"Lucas."
The administrator stepped forward imdiately from the far side of the chamber where he had been organizing several reports into categorized stacks.
"My Lord."
Lucien spoke calmly.
"Arrange a eting with the rchant representatives operating within the territory."
Lucas processed instantly.
"Internal rchants only, or external caravans as well?"
"Both," Lucien answered. "Anyone controlling resources entering or leaving the frontier."
A pause.
"And prioritize those involved in iron, lumber, coal, transportation, and construction materials."
Lucas nodded once.
"It will be done."
Lucien’s fingers rested lightly against the map.
"Discretion matters."
"Understood."
Another pause followed before Lucas added, "How much information should be disclosed?"
Lucien’s eyes narrowed slightly.
"None beyond imdiate necessity."
The administrator inclined his head.
"As expected."
Then he turned and departed imdiately, already calculating schedules, influence networks, pricing leverage, and logistical possibilities before the door had fully closed behind him.
Malen, who had remained standing near the wall in his usual silent manner, finally spoke.
"You trust rchants?"
Lucien gave a faint exhale through his nose.
"No."
A pause.
"But I trust greed."
That earned the slightest shift in Malen’s expression, not amusent exactly, but acknowledgnt.
"Greed moves faster than loyalty," Lucien continued calmly. "And unlike loyalty, it can be directed predictably."
Gandalf stroked his beard thoughtfully from where he sat near the window.
"A dangerous truth."
Lucien did not deny it.
Because dangerous truths remained truths.
And in his previous life, he had learned sothing very clearly—
People rarely moved because of ideals.
They moved because incentives aligned with survival or ambition.
This world would not be different.
Only the thods changed.
Before further discussion could continue—
A knock sounded against the chamber door.
Three strikes.
Disciplined.
asured.
Malen moved first, opening the door slightly before identifying the individual outside.
One of Lucien’s loyal knights stood there, armor marked with traces of frost and snow accumulated from long travel beyond the city periter.
"My Lord," the knight said imdiately upon entering, kneeling briefly.
Lucien’s attention sharpened.
"You’ve returned early."
"Yes, My Lord."
The knight rose.
"There is sothing you should see."
Lucien exchanged a brief glance with Malen before speaking.
"Report."
The knight stepped closer toward the table, placing a rolled parchnt map upon its surface before unfolding it quickly.
His finger moved westward.
Far beyond the outer patrol regions.
"We continued surveying according to your instructions," he said. "Searching for isolated terrain suitable for hidden developnt."
Lucien listened carefully.
"At first, the land appeared unsuitable—too exposed, too unstable due to miasma flow—but after crossing several frozen ridges..."
The knight paused briefly.
"We found mountains."
Lucien’s gaze fixed on the map.
Large formations.
Dense.
Natural barriers.
"What kind of mountains?" he asked.
"Massive, My Lord," the knight answered imdiately. "Too large to cross directly without proper preparation. Most pathways appear narrow and naturally concealed."
Malen stepped closer to observe the map himself.
"That alone would make the area defensible."
"Yes," the knight replied. "But that isn’t the important part."
Lucien’s eyes narrowed slightly.
"Continue."
The knight pointed again.
"There’s a valley system between the mountain chains."
A pause.
"And surrounding it..."
His voice lowered slightly, almost uncertain despite his discipline.
"A natural canyon."
The room grew quieter.
"Depth?" Lucien asked.
"We couldn’t determine fully," the knight admitted. "But large enough that even mounted units would struggle to cross except through limited routes."
Gandalf’s eyes sharpened faintly now.
"A naturally protected basin..."
The knight nodded imdiately.
"Yes, Grand Mage."
Lucien leaned slightly over the map.
Mountains.
Narrow entrances.
Canyon protection.
Isolation from primary routes.
His thoughts accelerated instantly.
Hidden workshops.
Slting facilities.
Storage.
Testing grounds.
Defensible production centers.
Everything aligned almost too perfectly.
"Distance from the city?" Lucien asked.
"Several days if traveling normally," the knight answered. "Less with prepared routes."
Another pause.
"There’s more, My Lord."
Lucien looked up.
"We found signs of abandoned structures."
That changed everything.
Malen’s gaze hardened slightly.
"Ruins?"
"Yes."
"What kind?"
The knight hesitated briefly.
"Old."
Not useful.
Lucien spoke imdiately.
"Military?"
"Possibly."
"Dwarven?"
"Uncertain."
"Ancient kingdom?"
"Also uncertain."
The knight exhaled slowly before continuing.
"We did not investigate deeply due to visibility concerns and possible beast activity, but parts of the stonework were still intact beneath the snow."
Gandalf finally stood fully upright.
"That region may possess historical mana significance."
Lucien glanced toward him.
"You sensed sothing?"
The old mage nodded faintly.
"The western flow around this territory has always been unusual."
A pause.
"Most assud it was because of the mountains."
Another pause.
"But perhaps..."
He did not finish.
He didn’t need to.
Because everyone in the room understood the implication.
There might be more hidden there than terrain alone.
Lucien’s gaze returned toward the map.
The system had given him tools.
Now the territory itself had given him a location.
A concealed industrial base inside naturally protected mountains would change everything.
No kingdom oversight.
No noble interference.
No easy infiltration.
And most importantly—
Ti.
Ti to build without attention.
Lucien straightened slowly.
"How many know about this?"
"Only the scouting group, My Lord."
"Good."
His voice deepened slightly.
"It remains that way."
The knight bowed imdiately.
"Yes, My Lord."
Lucien looked toward Malen.
"Prepare a smaller reconnaissance unit."
Then toward Gandalf.
"I want magical analysis of the region."
Finally—
Toward the map again.
"Lucas will begin preparing supply allocation quietly."
Because now—
The plan had moved beyond theory.
Now—
It had a place to exist.
Outside, the wind struck against the fortress walls once more, carrying distant traces of snow across the city beneath the pale northern sky, while far to the west, beyond the frozen ridges and beneath the shadow of massive mountains, sothing waited in silence.
And soon—
Lucien intended to claim it.
End of Chapter 14
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