Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 263 263: General Mobilization from Vikings: Overlords of the Icy Seas, a Action novel by YonkoSlayer.

That afternoon, once the wooden bridge was completed, Shrike did not press onward. As procedure dictated, he ordered the army to make camp.

After years of training, the regular army had developed a precise system for constructing field camps. Each unit perford its assigned role efficiently. Within a short ti, a fortified temporary camp stood ready.

After supper, Shrike appointed the officers for night watch and retired to his tent.

The Night Assault

Deep into the night, dozens of shadowy figures crept toward the camp.

They lay flat against the earth, inching forward whenever the sentries turned their heads. Finally, one of them rolled into the ditch before the palisade—only to be impaled on iron caltrops hidden within. Blood sprayed as he scread.

"Enemy!"

A whistle shrieked from the wall.

Nearby soldiers raised light crossbows and fired at the dark shapes beyond. Other sentries followed suit, shooting at anything suspicious outside the periter—arrows seemingly without end.

In truth, they did have plenty.

With improvents to iron furnaces, Britannia's pig iron output rose year after year. Combined with the full production capacity of the Tyne Fortress and Londinium arsenals, the regular army could afford to expend ammunition lavishly—far beyond any army in Western or Northern Europe.

By dawn, the sentries had fired more than twenty thousand bolts.

When daylight ca, roughly a hundred bodies lay northwest of the camp.

Two hours later, the army dismantled tents and palisades and resud marching toward Athlone.

The Siege of Athlone

At ten in the morning, scouting cavalry returned: Athlone was under siege by more than four thousand rebels.

Shrike did not rush. He maintained steady pace and arrived at two in the afternoon.

Before them flowed the River Shannon, running north to south across central Ireland. Athlone lay on its eastern bank—the largest settlent in the region and the key crossing point to the west.

From higher ground, Shrike surveyed the disorderly rebel encampnt. Most wore ragged clothing, though a handful appeared better equipped—likely renegade minor nobles or landed gentry.

"What's the rebel leader's na?"

A baron in Eamon's retinue replied, "Sven. They always call themselves Sven."

Years ago, when Vig aided Ivar in capturing Dublin, a lord nad Sven escaped and later stirred rebellions among Irish tribes. Mortally wounded in one battle, he urged his followers to keep the na alive—a curse hanging forever over Ivar and his heirs.

Shrike was unimpressed.

"Ireland rebels more often than anywhere in Britannia. The problem isn't 'Sven.' It's Ivar—and nobles like you who abuse your people."

The baron bristled.

"Don't look at like that," Shrike added coolly. "Those are the king's words."

The Battle

The two infantry regints deployed into a broad line.

Shrike ended the conversation and gave the order to attack.

The rebels were mostly light infantry—lacking cavalry and heavy troops. Shrike chose a classic tactic:

Spearn would advance steadily, pinning the rebel center.

Cavalry would strike from the flank and rear.

At 120 paces, four hundred longbown halted.

The commander loosed a brightly fletched arrow high into the air. It arced and fell deep within enemy ranks.

"Match this angle."

The longbown began rapid volley fire—twelve arrows per minute per man. Accuracy mattered little. Volu did.

In under three minutes, nearly ten thousand arrows darkened the sky.

The rebels lacked armor. Casualties mounted instantly. Survivors scrambled into dozens of small shield walls to survive the storm.

A whistle shrilled.

Viking spearn leveled their weapons and advanced.

anwhile, over four hundred cavalry hidden behind a low hill one kiloter away received the signal and charged.

They did not arrive in ti for a grand clash.

The rebel line had already broken.

"Damn it," the cavalry commander muttered. "What a waste."

He ordered the horsen to pursue in detachnts.

Most rebels fled north toward lake country, vanishing into dense reeds. Despite pursuit by cavalry and mountain infantry until dusk, more than two thousand escaped.

Taking Control

Shrike ordered Athlone's gates opened.

Though he and the local lord were both earls, he showed no courtesy.

"From this mont, central and western Ireland are under my command—until His Majesty arrives. Any objections?"

The local lord flushed red but dared not protest.

"None."

Shrike refused reckless advance westward. Instead, he focused on logistics:

Constructing pontoon bridges

Repairing roads

Converting Athlone into a supply base

He intended to prepare for the king's main force.

Londinium — Total Mobilization

On the very day the regular army departed, Vig issued a general mobilization order across Britannia, summoning all nobles and militia.

After two weeks, over eight thousand n gathered in Londinium.

Vig did not delay.

He ordered departure the following day, bringing:

500 Royal Guards

The 3rd Infantry Regint

The remaining thousand guards and newly ford 4th Infantry Regint stayed behind with arriving militia to defend against potential West Frankish aggression.

Frode's First Campaign

To give his eldest son experience, Vig assigned Prince Frode to the 3rd Infantry Regint—with strict orders not to reveal his identity.

"Ah?"

Frode was not yet fifteen—about the sa age as Eamon. He had expected to serve beside his father, as his cousin Leif once had.

Instead, he was sent into the ranks.

Strangely, he felt relieved.

"Understood, Father."

Colonel Breken of the 3rd Regint escorted him away and assigned him as a company clerk in 2nd Company, 1st Battalion.

"Your Highness, co to if you encounter any problems."

"No need, my lord."

Frode understood his father's character. Until the war ended, he would remain at the grassroots level.

And that suited him.

Being a company clerk was far easier than standing beside the supre commander.

He located the company tent and stepped inside, where a worried middle-aged man stood.

"Reporting. I am Bob, first-year command student of the Army Academy. Assigned as probationary clerk to Second Company."

He handed over his transfer orders—signed by the Minister of War Bafers, the Army Academy, and Colonel Breken.

The man examined the docunt and sighed.

"I expected they'd send a student to fill the gap—but you look far too young."

After a lengthy grumble, he introduced himself as Ingvarren and ordered a veteran to escort Frode to collect equipnt and familiarize him with his duties.

The prince of Britannia had just begun his education in war.

—------------------------------

Pat reon Advance Chapters: patreon/YonkoSlayer

You are reading Vikings: Overlords of the Icy Seas Chapter 263 263: General Mobilization on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Timeless Assassin cover
Same genre

Timeless Assassin

RajShah7152 ·Action

Leoawakensinaworldhedoesn’trecognize,withnomemoryofwhoheisorwhyhe’sthere.Allheknowsisthatsurvivalisn’tjustanecessity—it’shisonlychancetouncoverthet...

Lord of the Truth cover
Same genre

Lord of the Truth

TruthTeller ·Action

RobinBurtonisayoungmanwhogrowwitheverythinganyonecanhopefor,immensetalentforcultivation,sharpmind,awealthyfamilythatwillstopatnothingtoprotectandnu...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.