Chapter 377: 373
The rain did not cleanse the camp.
Days passed, and still the ground reeked of iron and smoke, of sweat and encroaching rot.
The Francian host was gone, their banners trampled into the mud, their camp stripped bare.
Yet the memory of them lingered, thousands of corpses laid in rows like offerings to a god of war that demanded too much and gave back too little.
The legions of Romanus worked with unflinching efficiency.
Every morning, the horns sounded, and the weary soldiers rose to their tasks.
Mass graves were dug in neat, rectangular pits that scarred the countryside.
Men heaved bodies by the arms and legs, tossing them down in layers.
The sound of flesh striking mud became as regular as the clash of shields had been only days before.
Others stripped the fallen methodically.
Armor was pried off stiffened limbs, swords and shields stacked in towering piles.
Blacksmiths had already begun melting down the iron, turning the blades and weapons of war back into ingots of iron to be reforged to feed the ever hungry war machine of romanus, that demanded an endless tithe.
What had been Francian became Romanus, one scrap of steel at a time.
There was no celebration.
Victory had been too vast, too absolute.
It weighed heavy.
The legionaries moved like shadows, faces hollowed by fatigue and the ghosts of those they had slain.
Even the laughter of the camp followers was subdued, as if they feared to offend the dead still lying unburied.
Julius walked among them in silence.
Everywhere he turned, he saw eyes lift toward him — eyes bloodshot, weary, yet burning with faith.
They had seen him stand alone against the Francian tide.
They had seen him break the host with his own hands.
To them, he was not just Emperor.
He was Providence given form.
That belief sustained them.
And so, it must sustain him.
When the corpses were stacked high, when the pyres burned or the earth swallowed them whole, Julius would stand at the edge and watch.
His praetorians lingered close, silent shadows in gilded armor, but he never asked them to leave.
He did not deserve privacy.
He forced himself to witness every moment of it.
The screams of battle had faded, but their echoes remained.
He could not let himself forget them.
"Your command makes this bearable, lord,"
Sabellus told him one evening as another trench was filled.
"Without your presence, the men would falter, the scale of battle is a thing we've never seen before, not since the dark days."
Julius did not answer.
He merely nodded.
Words would have sounded hollow, since he knew this was just the beginning, the opening act if you will in the future, the scale of conflict would only continue to grow larger, threatening to consume the entire world.
By the third day, the rhythm of the camp had shifted.
The wounded were stabilized thanks to Julius's covert use of his Holy Nova skill, the dead buried, the loot catalogued.
Scouts ranged far in all directions, searching for signs of the Francian reinforcements they had expected to clash with.
Every dawn Julius braced himself for their horns in the distance, for banners cresting the horizon.
Every dusk the scouts returned empty-handed.
Until the fifth day.
Sabellus brought word personally, his face grave.
"The Francian force to the north has not advanced. They turned back upon learning of the main host's destruction."
The Emperor closed his eyes.
Relief flickered for a heartbeat — then cold calculation.
"So they have chosen to abandon their allies to die alone in the mud,"
Julius murmured.
"Francia is not broken yet, but their spirit cracks so it seems."
"Shall we pursue them?"
Sabellus asked.
"A march north might see them routed entirely."
Julius shook his head.
"No. Let them run. Fear will spread faster than our legions can, we need to break Francias spirit more than we need to slaughter its peoples. Better they retreat home to whisper of Romanus than force us to bleed in another battle."
Sabellus inclined his head, satisfied, though Julius could read the disappointment in his friend's eyes.
Commanders craved decisive ends.
Julius craved something deeper — endurance.
A war was not won by speed alone, it was won by making your opponent understand that they had infact lost, and not just been beaten.
The camp settled into uneasy waiting.
Engineers worked to refortify the captured position, turning Francian ditches into Romanus earthworks.
Supply trains were redirected, roads repaired, discipline kept sharp.
But beneath the surface, unease gnawed.
Soldiers who expected one more battle found themselves digging, waiting, watching.
Waiting wore heavier than war.
On the seventh day, the pigeon came.
It fluttered down at dusk, wings ragged from its long flight, collapsing into the hands of a watchman who hurried it to the Emperor's tent.
Julius unrolled the strip of parchment with steady hands.
His eyes scanned the cramped handwriting once, twice — then hardened.
He passed the message to Sabellus.
The general read it aloud, his voice flat.
~Concordate broken, Wells poisoned, March halted~
A silence fell over the tent.
Poison.
Not battle.
Not steel.
The Francians had chosen another weapon.
Julius's jaw clenched.
"Cowards,"
he hissed.
"They will not face us with honor, so they turn to this."
But inwardly, he felt a cold ripple.
This was not the strike of a kingdom merely retreating.
This was something else — calculated, patient, insidious, and a sign of a far greater threat looming.
"Shall we send aid?"
Sabellus asked.
"Yes,"
Julius said.
"Medicii, clean supplies, escorts. And triple the scouts along our flanks. If they strike with poison once, they will strike again, and send out word to all our forces, even those back at home to prepare, for the Francians have just unlocked the gates of hell upon us all."
He turned to the brazier burning in the corner of the tent, watching the flames twist upward.
The relic at his hip pulsed faintly, as if sensing the shift in the war's tide.
Steel could be met with steel.
Poison, whispers, shadows — these demanded something darker.
For the first time since the victory at the camp, Julius felt the battlefield slip from beneath his feet.
The Francian host was broken.
But the war was not over.
No.
It was changing.
And change was always more dangerous than battle.
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