Chapter 321: 317 -
The dawn after the failed raid broke red and cold.
Smoke hung low over the valleys like mist, curling through the charred remains of Francian dead.
Crows gathered in the still silence between camps, their cries harsh and echoing.
Soldiers trudged through the frostbitten fields with practiced grimness, dragging bodies into pyres or laying them out for rough identification.
The numbers had come in.
Over 1,500 Francians are dead across all three camps.
Three coordinated assaults.
Three crushing defeats.
Romanus losses?
Fourteen dead.
Fifty-nine wounded.
Julius had read the reports in silence, eyes flicking across the bloodless ledger like he was reading grain manifests.
Numbers, in the end, told a story far clearer than any spy or scout ever could.
This was not just a miscalculated raid.
This had been a probing strike — a gamble.
A gamble Amaury had lost.
Badly.
Legate Sabellus approached just as the final figures were being carved into the stone slate that held the campaign's record.
"Clean strikes across all fronts,"
he reported.
"The northern camp had the heaviest push — over six hundred hit them. Gallius repelled them with the auxilia's heavy scorpions and a false retreat line. Brilliant use of terrain."
"And the southern?"
"Minimal resistance. Only about a hundred there. Likely a feint. But the enemy's tactics were too uniform to be simple banditry. Coordinated charges, timed torch signals, even withdrawal patterns."
Sabellus offered the final scroll — lightly scorched from the night's chaos, but still legible.
Julius didn't reach for it.
Instead, he stepped forward, his gaze sweeping over the valley below.
The battlefield stretched before them like a broken tapestry: torn banners fluttering, riderless horses trotting in confused circles, glinting weapons half-buried in frost.
"Three strikes, three fronts,"
Julius said.
"Amaury sought a killing blow. Or a spark."
He paused.
"He got neither."
Sabellus folded his arms behind his back, cautious.
"The men are calling it a slaughter. Some even say the gods favored us."
Julius's lip curled faintly.
"Fools say that when the ground is kind to them. Let them say it now. But when that ground turns red, I'll see who still believes in favor."
He turned back toward the central camp, already alive with preparation.
The legions were moving with renewed purpose now.
Supplies being restocked.
Banners unfurled with intent.
No more false neutrality.
No more diplomatic patience.
The prince had made his choice.
Now it was Julius's turn to answer.
That same afternoon, the three Romanus generals convened beneath the command canopy again.
The atmosphere was changed — not tense, not uncertain.
Focused.
Julius stood at the head of the table, dressed not in the black-laced gold of ceremony, but in the simple lacquered steel of a field commander.
Caetrax placed a fresh map upon the war table, ink still drying.
"These are the confirmed retreat paths. Enemy survivors fled west and northwest, likely regrouping at either Calverne or High Thandor."
"And the center column?"
Julius asked.
Gallius tapped a set of ridges south of the Dhorlin marshlands.
"Scattered. Some broke into the forest. Likely hoping to reach the Francian hold at La Morienne. That's where the majority of Amaury's retinue was last seen."
Julius considered that.
"Good. Then that's where we start."
He leaned forward and pressed a marked token onto La Morienne.
"Elheat is already tightening the southern coast. Once he has his staging ports, I want two full legions dispatched for naval deployment."
"You're calling for a landing?"
Sabellus asked, voice hushed.
Julius didn't look up.
"I'm opening a second front, whether Brittania joins in, we will force Francia to divide their forces furthering the division of their nation."
He turned, this time addressing all three men.
"We'll push through the central corridor — burn every forward garrison until the Francians are forced to retreat behind their rivers. Meanwhile, Elheat lands behind them, cutting off their western lands, and severs their supply chain, while forcing the capital to divert reinforcements west instead of east. Let them choke in their own heartland."
As the generals dispersed to relay their orders, Julius remained once more.
The war table, ever his altar, seemed heavier now — not with weight, but with certainty.
He stared at the smudged lines dividing kingdoms, provinces, and ancient tribal lands.
So many claimed ownership.
So many borders drawn by trembling hands centuries past.
But history did not remember maps.
It remembered the hands that rewrote them.
He would be that hand.
A voice broke his reflection.
"Your Majesty,"
said the courier.
"We've received word from the western scouts — refugees fleeing from the town of Harthald report burning villages. Francian troops torching their own borderlands to prevent your march."
Julius didn't flinch.
"Scorched earth?"
The courier nodded.
"On a small scale. But it's begun. And they've begun conscripting local peasants into militias."
He let out a breath, slow and controlled.
So.
Amaury had learned from Julius's earlier campaigns.
Too late, but still — adapting.
"A desperate man digs graves faster than he builds walls,"
Julius murmured.
"Let him burn his people's food and shelter. We'll leave his army to starve in the ashes."
He turned away from the map and gestured to the east.
~
That evening, as the last of the dead were burned and the stars broke through the smoky veil above, Julius stood by himself on the western ridge.
His breath fogged in the air.
Below him, the battlefield was quiet now — only cinders and silence.
He knelt and scooped a handful of blackened soil into a small iron jar.
He sealed it and slipped it into the pouch at his side.
"For the archivists,"
he said to no one.
This ground would be remembered.
The first true strike.
The first true blow.
Tomorrow, the world would no longer whisper of tension between kingdoms.
It would speak of war.
And war would speak with the voice of Romanus.
Now done, he moved back to the camp, the long day was done but the true horrors of war were about to begin, the Francian captives had been tended to, and now out of immediate life threatening danger, it was time for the agents of the root accompanying the army to do their thing and gain some intelligence from the captured forces.