By the ti the snow finally began lting, nobody in Elarion rembered what silence sounded like anymore.
Winter had changed the territory.
Changed the people too.
The northern walls no longer looked newly built. The stone carried black burn marks from cannon fire, claw scars from beasts, and frozen blood buried deep within cracks that even spring thaw couldn’t fully wash away.
The soldiers looked different now.
Harder.
Thinner.
Quieter.
Even the rifle regint had changed.
The nervous recruits from the first battle were gone—not dead necessarily, though so were—but transford into sothing colder and steadier.
Reload.
Aim.
Fire.
The motions had beco instinct.
One young marksman cleaned his rifle atop the western wall while staring toward the retreating snowfields beyond Elarion.
"You know what’s strange?"
The soldier beside him yawned.
"What?"
"I don’t panic anymore when the warning bells ring."
A pause.
"...I’m not sure if that’s growth or trauma."
"Probably both."
Fair answer honestly.
Below the walls, workers dismantled temporary winter barricades while supply wagons finally began moving properly through the valley roads again.
The first rchants in months had arrived two days earlier.
They looked horrified.
Mostly because Elarion no longer resembled a frontier settlent.
Smoke stacks now rose above entire sections of the territory. Reinforced workshops covered the western district while rail prototypes, steel foundries, powder mills, and military yards expanded steadily outward from the fortress.
Even the roads had changed.
Stone reinforced.
Wider.
Cleaner.
And always busy.
One southern rchant quietly whispered to another while staring at the rifle patrol passing nearby.
"...How long were we gone?"
Inside the fortress council chamber, Lucas reviewed the final winter casualty reports with exhausted eyes.
"We survived."
Cedric laughed tiredly from beside the fireplace.
"That sounds less enthusiastic than it should."
"Because I am calculating how expensive survival was."
The administrator tossed another ledger onto the table.
"Do you know how much powder we used this winter?"
One dwarf engineer proudly answered from nearby:
"Not enough."
Lucas pointed at him imdiately.
"You are part of the problem."
"I am part of progress."
anwhile Aurethar occupied nearly the entire southern balcony while sunlight reflected across his golden scales for the first ti in months.
The dragon looked deeply pleased with himself.
"I killed thirty-seven large beasts."
Cedric crossed his arms.
"You counted?"
"Of course."
A pause.
"One exploded before I could finish eating it though."
"...Why would you tell us that?"
Aurethar blinked slowly.
"Conversation."
Lucien stood quietly near the fortress windows overlooking the valley below.
The first signs of spring had finally begun appearing beyond the snow.
Not warmth yet.
But survival.
And for the first ti since arriving in Elarion—
The territory genuinely looked alive.
Then—
Ding.
The sound froze Lucien mid-thought.
The system window appeared before his eyes instantly.
[Hidden Seasonal Quest Completed]
Survive the First Northern Winter
Conditions:
Defend Elarion from beast tides ✔
Maintain territorial stability ✔
Preserve industrial output ✔
Sustain civilian population ✔
Establish permanent military force ✔
Reward Calculating...
Reward Granted:
[Blueprint Acquired: Mauser 98k Bolt-Action Rifle]
[Blueprint Acquired: Copper Jacketed Ammunition]
[Minor Reward: Industrial Machining Knowledge Package]
---
Lucien’s eyes narrowed slightly.
The Mauser 98k.
A true military rifle.
Far beyond the flintlocks Elarion currently fielded.
Far beyond what the kingdom could even imagine.
Information flooded through his mind afterward.
Bolt-action cycling systems.
Stripper clip feeding.
Internal magazines.
Precision rifling.
Pressure tolerances.
Mass production requirents.
And imdiately—
He understood the real problem.
These rifles would completely dominate battlefields.
But Elarion barely possessed the industrial capability required to manufacture them consistently.
Not yet.
Which ant the reward itself was also a challenge.
Lucas noticed Lucien suddenly going silent.
"...You have that look again."
Cedric frowned.
"What look?"
"The dangerous one."
"I do not have a dangerous look."
"You absolutely do."
Aurethar slowly lifted his head.
"The human has received another absurd idea."
Lucien exhaled quietly afterward.
"Possibly."
That answer terrified everyone in the room imdiately.
Lucas looked genuinely exhausted now.
"...Last ti you said ’possibly’ we invented artillery."
"One successful artillery piece."
"The wall still shakes when it fires!"
anwhile outside, the First Rifle Regint completed another morning drill in the courtyard below.
The soldiers moved smoothly now.
Disciplined.
Efficient.
Veterans already despite their age.
One recruit adjusted his hearing trumpet afterward and glared toward the western battlents.
"I still bla the cannon."
A nearby dwarf overheard instantly.
"She is a masterpiece."
"She gave permanent ringing!"
"A masterpiece of sound."
The soldier looked ready to cry.
Lucien watched the regint from above afterward.
Flintlocks had carried them through winter.
But against real kingdoms?
Against organized armies?
Eventually rifles alone would not be enough.
And the system clearly intended to keep pushing Elarion forward whether the world was ready or not.
Far beyond the northern valley anwhile—
The kingdom still believed Elarion relied on outdated flintlock designs.
Prince Cassian was investing royal wealth into improving weapons Lucien already intended to surpass.
And sowhere deep inside the capital—
Southern engineers were proudly refining yesterday’s future.
Lucien looked toward the growing factories below.
Then toward the fading snow beyond the mountains.
Spring had arrived.
Which ant Elarion could finally begin expanding again.
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