Imperator: Resurrection of an Empire

Chapter 316: 312 - Interlude - The Southern Hammer



The third week of the southern campaign began not with a trumpet's call, but with silence.

And in that silence — Romanus moved.

The southernmost coastal stronghold had fallen, its defenders buried or broken, its walls now flying the gold-and-crimson eagle.

From its heights, Elheat had overseen the dispatching of twelve cavalry outrider units, each tasked with sweeping wide arcs across the southern coast — not merely scouting, but destabilizing.

Fires rose in the distance before sunrise — controlled, precise, like punctuation marks across the Achaeian shoreline.

Watchposts.

Signal towers.

Supply caches.

Minor garrisons.

All gone.

None of it random.

Elheat knew what he was doing, he had served as a commander in the Lunanese military for decades, and while no wars had been fought he had still participated in numerous conflicts.

And just like then he was removing the enemy's eyes.

And once they were blind — the blade would follow cutting their heads off.

~

The Iron Cavalry advanced like a living storm cloud, shadowing the rocky coastlines while the three legions under Varro's command followed just inland, forming a moving bastion of steel and discipline.

Every few leagues, Achaeian and Francian forces attempted resistance — sometimes an entrenched Francian detachment left to fortify their allies, other times a desperate local militia raised from terrified villages.

But they were too slow.

Too scattered.

Too used to a world where war moved like molasses and messengers still dictated the speed of conflict.

Romanus moved at the pace of thunder.

Elheat made sure of it, he had been trained originally in infantry tactics, but after pledging himself to Julius he was instructed in cavalry tactics, most specifically something referred to as a Blitz attack.

He wielded cavalry not like a sword, but like a fire: fast, all-consuming, and utterly without mercy for the unprepared.

Within days, five more towns fell — some resisting, others surrendering outright at the sight of the Iron Cavalry's advance.

For each one that resisted, the result was the same: garrisons destroyed, defences stripped, and surviving civilians offered a singular ultimatum.

"You belong to Romanus now,"

The heralds would announce in fluent Achaeian.

"Kneel, and be governed. Resist, and be forgotten."

Few chose the latter, and as a result, Romanu's claimed lands grew.

~

One night, by the black sands of the Port of Kynthos — a minor but strategic harbour town that once serviced Francian naval supply ships — General Elheat held war council with his military command.

The sea was still.

So was the sky.

A fitting mirror to what Romanus had done to the coast — silenced it.

Varro, now grim with dust and blood, unrolled a new map across a makeshift table.

"These were once Achaeian trade routes,"

he said, tapping inked lines that led from coastal roads into the mountainous inland.

"Now they're nothing but exposed arteries."

Elheat nodded slowly.

"And arteries bleed when cut."

To the east, Germanian warbands had broken through several mountain passes, but lacked the supplies and discipline to press deeper to finish the job and force the Achaean surrender.

Romanus would change that.

Already, supply columns rolled behind them — coordinated from the Eternal City via Julius's System Interface, keeping pace with the needs of the campaign like veins delivering lifeblood to muscle.

All the while new naval shipping had already been set forth from Romanus's ports as sailing allowed for larger transport of goods at a faster pace than to continue doing so entirely through land.

Elheat understood the implications better than anyone.

This wasn't just a war to destroy Francia's foothold in the east.

This was an occupation plan in motion, the coast wasn't simply being captured, it was being annexed.

~

By the end of the week, the coastlines once filled with Achaeian fishing villages and merchant piers now served as makeshift Romanus outposts.

The wreckage of Francian influence smouldered beneath the banners of the Empire.

Small harbors, now fortified.

Watchtowers — repaired or raised anew by Romanus engineers — stood over once-silent shores.

The Iron Cavalry pushed deeper inland by the day, hammering westward, striking enemy roads from the rear, cutting off reinforcements that might've reached the central fronts.

And through it all, Elheat stayed ahead of the blade — never content to chase, always striking before the enemy could even set their footing.

~

By the seventh day of the southern campaign, Elheat stood atop the hill overlooking what remained of an Achaeian coastal province capital — once a port of some renown, now gutted and quiet, its surviving citizens ushered into order beneath a provisional Romanus governor's watch.

Ships burned in the harbour.

The Francian banners — once hung from the old garrison's towers — now lay in a pile of ash.

"Send a bird to the Emperor,"

Elheat said to his aide, watching smoke trail off into the pale evening.

"Tell him the southern coasts are ours. The Achaeians will not trouble the interior anymore, and we're prepared to begin our advance north until we've claimed all the coasts till the Virellan Bay."

The aide bowed, scribbled the cipher, and ran for the comms tent.

Elheat stared at the sea.

He didn't trust it.

Too open.

Too vast.

But it would be the next battlefield one day.

And Julius would need these ports.

With these coasts under Romanus control, they could build drydocks, house naval garrisons, dominate the sea trade routes, and force the Franks to confront not just the legions on land — but the Romanus navy on water.

It would take time.

But that, too, was already in motion.

Behind him, the storm kept rolling inland.

~

Far from the front, across the waters, the Franks were only just beginning to realize what they had awoken.

But by then, it would be too late.

Romanus had come not to repel an invasion.

Romanus had come to redraw the world.

And Julius would become the architect of this new world, the rising Emperor to replace the rule of the old world and bring back the glory that the old tales spoke of in life under the Ancient Empire.

Even as the old man continued to ruminate his own thoughts drifted to the old emperors and mused at what historical title his own master would be given one day.


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