Book 4: Chapter 45
Things were tense in the meeting room, not because of anyone there but because of the pressure pushing down on all of them. Months of preparations had gone mostly well; soldiers and adventurers had been trained, walls had been constructed, defenses built, cannons secretly installed, and Cindy had brought a small force of gunners to Avalon City with her the month before.
Scouts have confirmed the information we received about the armys movement; theyll be hitting the edge of our territory by later this afternoon at the earliest. Curcius Mapsight, leader of Avalons small military reported. Kay faintly hoped that this debacle earned him a General Class or something similar to bolster their military even further.
Status of the evacuations? Kay asked the table.
Almost complete, Meten responded, We started pulling out the farthest out towns and villages first; all thats left are the ones closest to the city. We should have everyone behind the walls by tomorrow with no trouble.
The walls?
Construction is complete for the first layer. We dont have time to start the second layer that we planned for expanding the city, but we have some replaceable defenses in a few places to slow the enemy down where the second layer is going to go. As it is, we have walls at every entrance into the valley and a stretch at the top of the mesa to prevent anyone coming in over our heads. David, the Minister of Planning, gestured at the map in the center of the table. We added in extra stairs here and here to allow soldiers to get to the upper walls faster, and we installed barracks to sleep in since it's a long hike up for anyone lower than tier four.
Manning on the walls has been focused on the main entrance to the valley on the Eastern side, Curcius tapped the map in that section, The enemy shouldnt have perfect knowledge of our defenses, which makes it likely that theyll just head straight to the easiest area to move through. Climbing the mesa would be a pain for them, as would drilling through it, and moving around the go over the mountain to the south would take time and would involve them crossing the lake or wasting a bunch of time climbing a mountain and then detour right back into our defenses. Any of those three would be very noticeable for an entire army to try, so well have plenty of warning to move troops around if necessary. Its entirely possible that theyll have smaller groups of troops try that or any other routes that dont involve coming right at us, so we have scouts, patrols, and checkpoints set up to intercept anything like that or get out a warning at minimum. He pointed at several sections of the map, We have major checkpoints here, here, and here, between the western walls and the main body of the city. There are smaller checkpoints in these sections, and we have patrols on varying routes throughout the rest of the areas between the walls and the city.
Good. Supplies?
Weve been stockpiling as best we can, and while we wouldnt be able to hold out forever, we can weather a pretty substantial siege if necessary. Murunel consulted a long list of supplies as she answered, We have enough food to feed our entire population for at least six months stored, and there are farms in the western section of the valley that are still running. Those, plus the fishing from the lake, as well as any monsters we can hunt, will keep us fed for some time. The lake is functionally a massive reservoir, so were not worried about running out of water, and we have mages and enchanted items available to make sure it stays clean enough to drink, even if they try contaminating it. She glanced over at Islas illusionary human disguise. Ive been told we shouldnt have to worry about that, but we prepared just in case.
I applaud the wariness. What information Ive been able to glean paints a picture that makes it unlikely theyll attempt to poison the lake or its sources, but it is always better to have precautions available. The illusion replied.
Thanks. After that, we have enough medical supplies to last, although many of them arent easily replaceable, so well start to run out if we end up in a prolonged siege. Construction and crafting materials are in similar positions, although we do have some harvestable wood in the valley, and if we needed to, we could send miners up the mountain for some metals. Wed have to send guards with them, though.
One way or another, Im not expecting this to turn into that long of a siege, but the planning is good. Kay stated calmly, From the reports weve received, the army theyre bringing isnt enough to encircle us, which means well have some methods of getting people out to get what we need, whether it's food or materials. He paused and considered what hed just said, Sorry, let me rephrase that. Im not expecting us to be truly besieged for a prolonged time. They dont have the numbers to completely block us in, and if they try, theyll be spread out enough for us to start chipping them down piecemeal. And at the end of the day, whatever the motivations of the constituent pieces that have come together to create the army marching for us, the main overall goal they have is to remove me and any other vampyr who are in the city tricking everyone. The longer they stick around, the more chances we have to show them that there are no vampyr here, and vampires are a different thing.
The meeting was hanging onto the illusions every word, and Kay mentally applauded Islas showmanship. Oh? Do tell, He said drolly, giving her the opening she was looking for.
The illusion shot him a quick grin, They started recruiting nobles, mercenaries, and military leaders with personal troops to reinforce them. Wrapping back around to what I was saying earlier, the actual military troops from the Concord and the Empire arent coming here officially; theyre attached to the generals leading them, who are both on vacation. They have orders to help remove any potential vampyr that may or may not be in Avalon, but their governments sent them out here for different reasons. As far as those generals know, theyre here as part of a general and deniable plan to poke us with a stick and see what happens, the normal behind the scene political shit that happens when a new kid shows up and starts to look interesting. What Ive discovered, however, is that both of these generals have been making waves back home that certain movers and shakers in their general area arent fans of, and they got sent here to be out of the way for a while or maybe never come back. The Empire general has been making eyes at an Imperial Princess consort, and the general from the Concord has been dipping his toes into politics against people much better than he is. Neither the Empire nor the Concord are actually interested in having a real war with us, mostly because it would cost too much and get them too little. Were too far away and not rich enough to conquer just yet. The illusion looked over at Murunel, Does that answer your question?
Perfectly, thank you.
The rest of it is similar, if not the same. Each itty bitty piece of the army has its own goals for this, mostly fame and glory, or loot and land, although the people who think theyre going to set up their own little fiefdoms down here off of our hard work are idiots, none of them have brought enough troops or supplies for that. The only sections we have to worry about are the Nelamian troops weve learned about and the portion of a Clan Legion that joined the army a few weeks ago. The Nelamians want to crack down on us to try and stem the escaped slaves filtering through our borders and out into the rest of the world, and the Clans want us to stop existing entirely, but theyre mostly marching on us as some kind of demonstration that their traditions are better and stop the flow of people immigrating here. I think thats moronic, but I didnt grow up in that culture.
I can understand it. Ahthia muttered, I agree that its not very smart, but I can work through their logic.
Should we be worried about them? Kay asked her.
During the fighting, as much as anyone else on the field. After? No, not really. Some of the information that my people and I have uncovered recently points to some interesting information about why the Clans are the way they are and some motivations for attacking us. If we beat them, I can talk to whoevers left in charge or send someone to the Clans themselves, and we should be able to talk them down.
Yes, weve been combining our information to help each other, and we can disarm any casus belli the Clans come up with later fairly easily, Islas illusion added, Nelam, we just wipe out the Clans we beat down enough, and theyll pull back, theyll be more concerned about their losses than dealing with us.
And everyone else?
The patchwork force that barely had enough time to work out the best way to fight together, let alone set up a truly robust chain of command that would be able to deal with losing leaders? We take out the driving force for the campaign and let the army implode. If we either convince the Crusade and the Order that theyre entirely mistaken and shouldnt be here at all, or we wipe them out. The remaining hodgepodge force wont have any real motivation left to work together or keep attacking us, especially if were winning handily. Thats with extra emphasis if we manage to convince the Crusade and the Order that theyre wrong. The rest of them who want glory wont get any if they keep prosecuting a war based on a mistake, and the ones after loot wont have the handy excuse to cover their bad behavior.
Kay stared at the illusion for a moment before smiling. I think that recruiting you is going to go down in history as one of the best decisions I ever made.
The illusion puffed up with a big grin, and Kay could picture the small smile Isla normally gave in response to heartfelt compliments, wherever she happened to be hiding at that moment. Thank you, my lord. I deeply appreciate that.
Kay nodded, then looked around at everyone. Alright, whats next? We need to work at making sure that were around long enough for someone to write history about my good decisions.