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Now reading: Chapter 201: First Crack from The Game Where I Was Rank One Became Reality, a Fantasy novel by VedScans.

Tidewatch held on the twenty-second day of the war because its defenders understood sothing that Sylvaen’s forces did not: a harbor was not a piece of geography. It was a relationship.

The city sat where the Pale River t the western sea — a natural port that the kingdom’s engineers had spent 180 years converting from a fishing village into the Sovereign Dominion’s primary mariti gateway. Stone breakwaters channeled the harbor’s mouth into a 400-ter opening. A chain boom could seal it in seven minutes. Defensive towers flanked the entrance, each equipped with ballista platforms and observation posts that gave the garrison complete visual coverage of the approaches. Behind the harbor, the city climbed the coastal bluffs in terraced construction — warehouses at the waterline, residential districts above, the temple of the Grand Ordinator at the summit, its spire visible from twenty kiloters out on clear days.

The fishfolk had built it. The walls and towers were standard kingdom military engineering, designed by the sa doctrine that had produced the Ashwall — but the harbor itself, the docks, the breakwaters, the underwater channel markers, the tidal defenses that used the ocean’s own rhythms as a weapon, those were fishfolk. The fishfolk understood water the way Dwarves understood stone: not as a force to be resisted but as a partner to be directed.

Sylvaen had expected the harbor to be a weakness. Water was her domain. The god of Currents and Tidal Flow should have owned any battlefield that involved an ocean.

She was wrong.

The fishfolk defenders — 4,200 militia and 800 regular garrison — had fought Sylvaen’s aquatic assault forces to a standstill now entering its fourth week. Their advantage was intimacy, not military superiority. They knew every current, every reef, every tidal shift in the harbor’s approaches. They had fished these waters for generations. Their grandfathers had fished these waters. The channel markers weren’t just navigation aids — they were the accumulated knowledge of seven generations of fishern who had learned, through drownings and capsizings and storms, exactly where the ocean was dangerous and exactly where it was safe.

Sylvaen’s divine constructs — sea serpents, tidal elentals, current-shapers that could redirect water flow at tactical scale — attacked predictable targets. The harbor mouth. The breakwater foundations. The dock infrastructure. Each attack followed the logic of naval warfare: control the water, control the port.

The fishfolk redirected the attacks — fighting water with *knowledge* rather than force. When Sylvaen’s current-shapers pushed a tidal surge toward the breakwater, the fishfolk opened secondary sluice gates that channeled the surge through drainage culverts beneath the city, converting destructive energy into the hydraulic power that operated Tidewatch’s grain mills. When sea serpents attempted to breach the chain boom, fishfolk divers — using weighted nets and hooks designed for landing creatures far larger than any fish — entangled the constructs in steel sh that resisted divine-enhanced strength long enough for the ballista towers to concentrate fire.

Fourteen divine constructs destroyed over twenty-two days. Fourteen creatures that Sylvaen’s depleted FP could not afford to replace.

The harbor held because its defenders didn’t fight the ocean. They worked with it.

***

Zephyr watched the Pale Coast through his divine sense — a god’s-eye view of the western front that showed him the disposition of forces, the movent of Sylvaen’s remaining naval assets, and the growing hesitation in the enemy’s operational pattern.

Sylvaen was pulling back.

The withdrawal was subtle. A mortal commander wouldn’t have caught it through battlefield observation alone. But Zephyr could feel the shift in her divine presence — the quiet withdrawal of domain energy from the theater of operations, the way a god’s attention receded when continuity lost purpose. Sylvaen’s Currents domain influence in the harbor approaches had diminished by approximately 15% over the last three days. Her construct deploynt had shifted from offensive patterns to screening positions — creatures guarding her withdrawal route rather than attacking the harbor.

[INTELLIGENCE ASSESSNT — PALE COAST FRONT]

[Day 22 — Updated Analysis]

[Sylvaen Force Status: DIMINISHED]

[Divine Constructs Remaining: 8 (from original 22)]

[Mortal Naval Forces: 12 warships, 2,400 marines]

[FP Expenditure Rate: Declining — consistent with force conservation, not offensive operations]

[Behavioral Assessnt: Withdrawal preparation. Sylvaen is repositioning for exit.]

[STRATEGIC IMPACT]

[If Sylvaen withdraws: The Pale Coast front closes. Kingdom naval forces freed for redeploynt. 4,200 fishfolk militia released from garrison duty — available as interior reinforcent.]

[Coalition Impact: The Green Accord loses its naval component. Remaining Accord forces are exclusively land-based. Mariti approaches to the kingdom beco secure.]

[This is the first defection. The coalition is cracking.]

Zephyr assessed the situation with the strategic clarity that 251 years of divine existence had refined into instinct. Sylvaen was not an enemy to punish — she was an opportunity to exploit.

A minor god withdrawing from a losing war was a problem for Deterra. A minor god withdrawing from a losing war *cleanly and publicly* was a ssage to every other Accord participant: the door is open. You can leave.

Zephyr chose not to pursue Sylvaen’s retreating forces.

The decision was counterintuitive in mortal military terms — an enemy in retreat was vulnerable, and conventional doctrine prescribed pursuit to maximize casualties and prevent reorganization. But Zephyr was not playing a conventional ga. He was playing a coalition ga, and in coalition warfare, the most destructive weapon was not the sword that killed the enemy. It was the door that let the enemy’s allies walk away.

Let her go. Let the others see her go. Let them rember that the first one through the door survived.

***

The formal withdrawal ca through Divine Communion on Day 23.

The formal withdrawal bypassed public channels entirely — divine politics operated through the sa communion system that all gods shared, a private channel where voices carried the weight of existence and where lies were difficult because each participant could feel the shape of the other’s divine presence. Communion didn’t reveal thoughts. But it revealed tension. It revealed fear. It revealed the degree to which a god believed what they were saying.

Deterra hosted the communion. All six Accord gods — Deterra, Gorvahn, Durnok, Morglith, Thalveris, and Sylvaen. The sa communion format that had opened the war three weeks earlier. The sa participants, minus the confidence.

"The Accord’s operational tiline has been compressed," Deterra began, her communication carrying the asured authority that centuries of divine existence had carved into her. "The Ashwall breach has opened the interior offensive. Phase Three will comnce within forty-eight hours. The Iron Sovereign’s Hero deploynt on Day 20 was a significant tactical response but has not altered the strategic trajectory. We advance."

Six seconds of communion silence.

Durnok’s presence responded first — aggressive, heavy, the Crushist war-god’s communication carrying the blunt certainty of soone whose entire theology was built around forward montum. "My forces will lead the advance. The Hero is withdrawn. The gap is open. We attack."

Gorvahn’s presence followed — calr, far more asured. "The Hero withdrawal is not a guarantee of non-redeploynt. Intelligence suggests the Iron Sovereign maintains two additional Heroes in reserve. Any advance through the gap must account for the possibility of secondary deploynt."

"The Hero killed eight hundred troops in eight hours," Durnok communicated. "We have sixty thousand remaining. The mathematics favor volu."

"The mathematics favored volu against the Ashwall." Gorvahn’s response was dry. "We spent nineteen days and fifteen thousand casualties learning that volu is not sufficient against prepared defenses."

Deterra intervened before the exchange could develop. "The tiline is twenty-two days remaining in the operational window. Acceleration is required. Gorvahn, your forces will advance through the gap’s eastern corridor. Durnok, the western. Thalveris, your fortification teams establish forward positions. Morglith, continue pressure on the northern passes. Sylvaen, maintain the naval siege."

Sylvaen’s presence contracted.

It was a subtle thing — a minor god’s divine energy drawing inward, the way a creature pulls its limbs close before delivering a statent that it knows will provoke a response. Every god in the communion felt it. The contraction of a divine presence that was preparing to separate itself from the group.

"I withdraw from the Green Accord."

Six words. Four hundred years of alliance — the loose, shifting web of mutual interest that Deterra had woven between minor gods who shared a border with the Sovereign Dominion — dissolved in six words.

"My forces are insufficient to maintain the Pale Coast siege," Sylvaen continued, her communication carrying the flat finality of a decision already made. "Tidewatch’s defenses exceed my capability to breach. I have lost fourteen constructs. My FP reserves cannot sustain continued offensive operations. The strategic incompatibility between my operational capacity and the Accord’s requirents makes continued participation untenable."

"Strategic incompatibility." Deterra’s response carried a temperature that the Stone-and-Decay domain god in the communion recognized as the divine equivalent of winter. "You are abandoning an alliance during active operations."

"I am preserving my territory and my believers." Sylvaen’s presence held steady. A minor god speaking to a greater god with the courage that self-preservation gave to creatures who had no other courage available. "The Accord’s objective was to contain the Iron Sovereign’s expansion. The Accord is not containing the Iron Sovereign. The Accord is being attritied by the Iron Sovereign. I will not sustain further losses in pursuit of an objective that the coalition cannot achieve."

The communion fractured.

The fracture was sequential — the gods withdrew their attention one by one, each departure leaving a diminishnt in the shared space. Sylvaen went first, her presence receding like a tide pulling away from shore. Morglith’s attention dimd but did not withdraw — the Stone-and-Decay god listening, assessing, holding his position. Durnok’s presence intensified — fury, offense, the Crushist god processing betrayal as a personal insult. Gorvahn remained still. Thalveris remained silent.

Deterra’s presence remained last. The Rootmother, alone in the communion she’d hosted, surrounded by the echoes of an alliance that was cracking.

The Green Accord was seven gods on Day 1. It was six on Day 23.

The first crack had appeared, and in the arithtic of coalition warfare, the first crack was never the last.

[ACCORD STATUS — DAY 23]

[Original Coalition: 7 gods (Deterra 6 vassals/allies)]

[Current Coalition: 6 gods (Sylvaen withdrawn)]

[Withdrawal Impact: Naval siege lifted. Pale Coast secured. Kingdom western front: CLEAR.]

[Coalition Morale: DEGRADED. Each withdrawal increases probability of subsequent withdrawals by estimated 18-22%.]

[Zephyr Assessnt: The coalition is a political entity, not a military one. Political entities fracture under stress. Stress is increasing. Continue pressure on all remaining fronts. Let the arithtic do the work.]

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