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Now reading: Chapter 208: Counter-Stroke from The Game Where I Was Rank One Became Reality, a Fantasy novel by VedScans.

Private Ollen Marsh had not slept in twenty-eight hours.

The number was specific because Ollen counted everything. Hours awake. Rounds remaining in his quiver (fourteen). Days since his last hot al (six). Steps between his sentry position and the latrine trench (forty-seven). Counting was the thing that his mind did when the alternative was thinking about where he was and what was happening and how unlikely it seed that the next week would include him being alive.

Ollen was Rootist. Twenty-two years old. A farr’s son from a village in Deterra’s southern territories where the wheat grew tall and the rain ca when the goddess said it should and where nobody had ntioned, when the recruitnt officers arrived, that military service in the Green Accord would involve standing in a frozen forest on Day 29 of a war that made less sense with each passing hour.

He was posted on the Accord’s southwestern periter — the section of the line that Durnok’s aggressive advance had stretched thin. His unit was auxiliary, which ant they weren’t the Crushist heavy infantry who wore eighty pounds of armor and who believed that forward montum was a theology. Rootist auxiliaries wore leather and carried spears and existed, as far as Ollen could determine, to stand in places that the real soldiers didn’t want to stand in.

The forest was quiet. Wrong-quiet — the absence of birdsong that Ollen’s farming instincts recognized as predatory silence. He gripped his spear. The wood was cold. His fingers were cold. Everything was cold, and he was hungry, and the last supply wagon had arrived two days ago carrying half of what it was supposed to carry.

His stomach made a sound. He pressed his hand against it — acknowledging hunger was better than pretending it didn’t exist, even if pressing his hand against it did nothing.

Sowhere in the forest behind him, a horse nickered.

Ollen turned. The sound ca from the wrong direction — from the south, from behind the periter, from the space that was supposed to be safe. Horses didn’t live in this forest. Horses ant cavalry. Cavalry from behind ant—

The tree line erupted.

They ca through the undergrowth like a breaking wave — mounted riders in formation, two columns, the leading lancers hitting the gap between Ollen’s company and the company to his left at full gallop. The sound was not what he expected. He expected the thunder of hooves, the dramatic crash of an assault. What he heard was breathing — the labored, rhythmic breath of two hundred horses pushing through forest at combat speed, the lung-sound of animals being driven hard by riders who had been waiting in darkness for this mont.

The first lancer passed Ollen at six ters. Close enough to see the rider’s face — a Human woman, maybe thirty, her expression the concentrated blankness of soone focused on a single act. The lance caught the militiaman next to Ollen — a Goblin nad Tetch who had been drafted from the sa village — and Ollen watched Tetch leave the ground. He didn’t fall the way people fell. He moved the way objects moved — lifted, carried, the spear punching through the chest and the montum dragging the body forward and, when the rider pulled the lance free with a practiced twist, depositing what remained on the forest floor three ters from where Tetch had been standing.

Tetch had been talking to Ollen forty seconds ago about soup. Barley soup — the kind his mother made, with the turnip chunks that were too big and the pepper that was too much and the warmth that was the entire point.

Tetch was on the ground. The ground was dark. Ollen’s brain inford him that the dark was blood, and his body inford him that it was running, and the connection between the two facts — that he was running because Tetch was dead — would not beco clear for several hours.

***

The Sword Saint ca through the breach twenty minutes after the cavalry.

Kael Verenthis — seventh holder of the title, 41 years old — did not look the way legends were supposed to look. He was average height for a Human. dium build. Brown hair cut short because long hair snagged on armor straps. The sword at his hip — the Blade-blessed weapon that the Crucible consecrated for each new Sword Saint — was plain. No gems. No inscriptions. A working tool, maintained by a craftsman who understood that ornantation was weight and weight was death.

He led the Crucible Guard through the gap the cavalry had opened — twelve hundred soldiers in disciplined formation, their Blade-blessed weapons carrying the faint luminescence that Knowledge-domain enhancent produced. They moved through the broken Rootist line the way water moved through a crack in a dam: fast, controlled, expanding the breach in both directions.

One Rootist sergeant — a Lizardman who had the good sense to recognize a tide that could not be held — threw down his weapon and raised his hands. "We surrender! We surrender, damn you!"

The nearest Crucible Guard soldier stopped. Assessed. Pointed to the rear. "Go south. Hands visible. You’ll be collected."

The sergeant went south. Around him, other Rootists made the sa calculation that every rational soldier made when the position collapsed: the weapon in your hand was only valuable if the hand attached to an alive body. Spears dropped. Shields dropped. The clatter of weapons being discarded by n choosing life over duty was a sound that Kael Verenthis had heard before and that he never interrupted, because every surrendered soldier was a soldier who didn’t need to be killed.

Kael’s personal retinue — 200 handpicked soldiers — pushed through the center of the breach while the Crucible Guard rolled the Rootist line laterally. The retinue’s mission was depth — penetrate as far south as the montum carried them, disrupting supply lines, cutting communication routes, sowing chaos in the rear area that forced the enemy to look over his shoulder when he should be looking forward.

The Sword Saint fought as he moved — the fast, brutal, thoroughly undramatic violence of close combat in a forest, nothing like the dramatic dueling that the title suggested. Sightlines were asured in ters and engagents lasted seconds. A Rootist officer erged from behind a tree with a raised sword. Kael’s blade found the gap between helm and gorget. The officer fell. Kael stepped over him without breaking stride.

Another engagent — two Crushist heavies who had been repositioning south and who stumbled into the retinue’s advance. They locked shields, presenting the armored front that Crushist doctrine prescribed. Kael’s retinue split around them like river current around a stone — two flanking elents that hit the heavies from behind simultaneously. The fight lasted four seconds.

A boy — a courier, sixteen at most, carrying a dispatch case — rounded a corner in the path and found himself facing the Sword Saint of the Iron Kingdom. The boy’s eyes went wide. His feet stopped. His bladder, with the indifferent honesty of biology, released.

Kael raised his hand. Stop. The retinue stopped.

"Put down the case," Kael said. His voice was the quiet, uninflected voice of a man who issued instructions the way surgeons issued instructions: with the expectation that they would be followed because the alternative was worse. "Sit down. Don’t move. Soone will collect you."

The boy sat. The dispatch case fell from fingers that had forgotten how to hold things. He was still sitting there, in a growing dark stain, when the retinue moved past.

Behind them, the breach was complete. The four-kiloter Rootist section had collapsed in ninety minutes — not from lack of courage but from lack of everything else. Food, reinforcent, ammunition, the fundantal logistical infrastructure that turned courage into defensible positions. The auxiliary soldiers had been brave. They had also been exhausted, starving, and facing a force that had slept in beds and eaten hot food.

Logistics was not glamorous. But logistics won wars, and the Rootist auxiliaries had been positioned at the end of a supply line that no longer existed.

***

The news reached Durnok’s command post at 08:30, carried by a runner who had seen the cavalry charge from a hilltop and who had run four kiloters in twenty minutes on legs fueled by the pure, uncut urgency of a soldier delivering a ssage that his commander did not want to hear.

"Southwestern flank — broken, sir. The whole section. Cavalry and infantry, at least three thousand, and the Sword Saint is leading them."

Durnok processed the report through the frawork that governed every decision he had ever made: apply more force.

"Redeploy the Third Hamr to the southwestern sector. Counterattack imdiately. Close the breach."

The order went out. The Third Hamr — 3,000 Crushist heavy infantry, the best formation in Durnok’s army, the soldiers who had spent twenty-nine days hamring the kingdom’s secondary line and who were, as of 08:30, the only combat-effective force under Durnok’s command with sufficient mass to plug a three-thousand-man break — disengaged from the central front and began marching south.

The march took four hours. Four hours during which the secondary line — the five-day-old earthwork that the kingdom’s soldiers had been defending with decreasing resources and increasing desperation — went quiet.

On the central section of the secondary line, Corporal Voss Hamrtide experienced the quiet the way a drowning man experienced air. He didn’t understand it at first. The constant pressure — the probing attacks, the sapper infiltrations, the random crossbow bolts that turned standing up into a gamble — stopped. All at once, without warning. One minute, the Accord’s infantry was testing the earthwork’s strength. The next minute, the Accord’s infantry was marching away.

"What’s happening?" Voss asked. His voice was hoarse. Five days of shouting orders and warnings and the nas of wounded n who needed to be dragged behind the earthwork had reduced his voice to a instrunt that sounded like gravel being poured into a bucket.

Sergeant Hamrfist — Dwarf, eighty years old, the stone-faced lifer who had been fighting since before most of his platoon had been born — looked over the earthwork at the retreating Accord soldiers and said nothing for eight seconds.

"They’re redeploying," he said finally.

"Why?"

"Because sothing went wrong for them sowhere else, and their commander is doing what commanders always do when sothing goes wrong sowhere else — he’s taking his best troops from where they’re needed and sending them where he wishes they were. It’s the oldest mistake in warfare. It won’t help."

The engineering teams ca forward — nobody ordered them to, because soldiers who had been fighting for five days and who suddenly had four hours without combat did not need to be told what to do with the ti. Earthworks were repaired. Timber bracing replaced. The shallow trench that protected the line’s base was deepened by eighteen inches — the difference between cover that stopped crossbow bolts and cover that stopped crossbow bolts and ballista projectiles.

Fresh water ca forward. Hot food — the first hot food in three days, carried from the field kitchens that had been operating behind the supply line. The soldiers ate in shifts, half the company maintaining watch while the other half ate rice and salted at that tasted, at that mont, like the finest al any of them had ever consud.

Private Resk Thornvane ate a bowl of rice and didn’t taste it. The Kobold crossbowman was performing the chanical act of feeding a body that his mind had temporarily vacated. His hands brought food to his mouth. His jaw chewed. His throat swallowed. The processes happened without his participation, because Resk’s participation was concentrated on the spot twelve ters in front of the earthwork where a Crushist soldier had been standing yesterday and where Resk had put a crossbow bolt through the gap between the man’s helt and shoulder guard and where the man had fallen.

Resk had counted: seven bolts fired, three hits, one kill.

He did not know the man’s na. He knew the exact sound the man’s body had made when it hit the ground — the specific, wet collision of armored weight eting packed earth that produced a sound unlike any other sound Resk had ever heard. The sound lived in his mory now. It had moved in and it was not leaving.

Sergeant Hamrfist walked the line. He stopped at each position. He checked ammunition. He checked water. He asked if anyone was hurt. He did not ask if anyone was afraid, because the answer was obvious and asking obvious questions was a waste of ti that could be spent making tea.

He made tea. Over a small fire, in a battered tin cup, using dried leaves from a supply packet that tasted like soone had brewed sawdust in warm creek water.

"Best tea in the kingdom," Hamrfist said, and drank it, and the lie was the most comforting thing any of them heard that day.

Four hours. The Sword Saint’s attack had given the secondary line four hours of peace. In war, four hours of peace was a lifeti.

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