The soldiers spoke in hushed whispers as they watched Callavan pass by.
A coward whoâd fled the battlefield.
A thief who later barged in and usurped command.
There were many different stories floating around, but the hottest among the soldiers was only one.
âMaster CalliusâŠâ
He planned to kill Callavan.
Such rumours were spreading all over the place.
At a time when the Orcs might attack the very next moment, would the armyâs discipline not be shaken by such a mischievous rumour?
It was the commanderâs duty to strengthen the failing discipline by quashing such rumours right away.
But â
Callavan didnât do that.
âMaster Callavan. Shouldnât you take action? If not, you have to at least teach that bastard a lessonâŠâ
One of the Knights following Callavan advised, but he didnât care.
âHeâs playing a trick. If we get thoughtlessly tangled up, things will flow in just the direction he wants.â
âOh, I see.â
Despite his words, Callavan was not without worries.
Who knew if that fucking bastard would suddenly go into a frenzy and attack him in his sleep or something?
If only he disappeared, Callius would become the next Patriarch.
And he would even have more authenticity than Callavan himself!
âYou have a bad complexion.â
âOh, I couldnât sleep, so I was doing paperwork until morning. Iâm just a bit tired.â
To put it bluntly, Callavanâs face didnât look very good.
Dark circles around the eyes almost reaching his chin, bloodshot eyes, flaky skin and even cracked lips.
âBut we canât just stand still. If he really wants to kill Master CallavanâŠâ
âOf course, I donât want to leave it alone. Thatâs why I stayed up all night.â
âThenâŠâ
âI decided to form a separate wing.â
Callius would be set up as the captain of a unit that moved independently of the main army.
âThe Orcs canât stay forever encamped in front of Jevarsch. The most important problem would be food.â
Although they were procuring food by hunting and gathering in the nearby forest, there was a limit to it.
Of course, the same went for the besieged inside Jevarsch, but the Orcs would need more food than humans. Theyâd also need to feed the beasts that accompanied them.
In any case, they had to procure supplies, so it would be of great help to the humans if a separate unit were to be set up to intercept or interfere with that.
Of course â
There was a limit to the number of soldiers that could be moved out of the castle right now, and the headcount had to be small enough to avoid the Orcsâ notice.
The Knights of Callius were the perfect answer.
âItâs a mishmash of people who donât even deserve to be called Knights, but being a general means you have to be able to use what you have.â
Itâs good if they are successful. Itâs better if they fail.
You wouldnât have to see that thorn at your side ever again, and best of all, itâd even be legally justified.
âHeâs a pretty annoying obstacle on my road to revenge on Elburton.â
Annihilate the Orcs as soon as possible.
Take the opportunity to kill Elburton whoâs already ill, and become the master of Jevarsch.
This plan had been in the works for a long time.
He couldnât let such great preparations be spoiled just because of one crazy idiot.
âGather the Knights.â
The war had just begun.
Behind the temporary barracks.
Callius was spending time with Emily.
Kaang! Chaeeng!
âYeah, good job.â
Ignoring the summons, he had been training alone. Events flowed naturally towards having a match with Emily, whoâd appeared with Lucen in her hands.
âLike this?â
âRight.â
Kaang!
The sound of sparks erupted.
âItâs been two weeks since I pierced her divine blood.â
For such a short duration, sheâd made quite good progress on the amount of divine power she could handle.
Moreover, the technique of operation as well as her idea of condensing it were also going in a not bad direction.
It was hard to believe that she was only a ten-years-old girl. Emily was indeed a genius of the sword.
She was already at a level of skill that would not be easily defeated by any other Knights.
As she accepted and internalized the practical experience and advice that Bernard and Callius imparted to her, one or two words at a time, she was already creating her own swordsmanship, with sharpness and softness coexisting.
Of course, that swordsmanship still had to be polished further, but it was self-evident that she would become a great Knight in the near future.
âHaa, hoo, how is it?â
âUseful.â
However, contrary to what she thought â
Calliusâ words were monotonous.
Even just a single word of praise â
Was difficult to get, for some reason.
Wouldnât she get a big head if complimented too much?
So Calius was being careful with his every word, because he had a lot of concerns about her getting hurt on the battlefield.
Because of this, the words he uttered were short and concise, enough to colour the eyes that had twinkled in anticipation dim with disappointment.
âThank you⊠for your guidance.â
âI donât need it.â
âStill, I want to thank you.â
Calliusâ nose twitched.
The frigid atmosphere of a duel somehow warmed up in an instant.
A cosiness that felt very awkward.
âWhatâs that hanging around your neck?â
âThis is made from the horn of the beast I caught last time. Isnât it cool? Iâll blow it when the war starts. Itâs pretty loud and amazing. Want to hear it?â
ââŠâ
I donât know what to say to Emilyâs face, whoâs proudly caressing her prize.
I wonder why the traits of a maniac donât activate.
In the end, Emily is also a Jervain.
âStill, maybe itâs because I donât want to show my daughter my foolish side.â
I really donât knowâŠ
That was then â
Somebodyâs footsteps were caught in Calliusâ ears.
âWhatâs going on, old man?â
It was Bernard.
âWhy did you disobey the summons?â
âI didnât want to go.â
âYeah, and thanks to that, you and your Knights are now ordered to move as a separate unit.â
Calliusâ lips twisted as if heâd known in advance.
âThatâs what Iâd been hoping for.â
âCrazy. Do you want to die? Donât you know that disobeying orders in wartime is a death sentence?â
âI know.â
âThen why did you do this despite knowing that?â
âBecause he wonât be able to kill me anyway.â
â⊠Your headâs messed up.â
Callavan couldnât do it.
Even if he tried to enforce discipline like that, if Callius started making a riot, heâd only lose more face for nothing.
Anyway, Callavan couldnât do anything about Callius, who had a honoured bloodline.
No matter how renowned a fool Callius might have been, he was still of Elburtonâs bloodline, and the Son of God who had returned from the Order.
âWhat do I have to do?â
âLook for yourself.â
Whirlik.
Tas.
The gray eyes pored over the parchment quickly.
Emily, curious as well, asked.
The order that was written on the parchment.
âHeâs asking me to take their supplies.â
âUh⊠isnât that a good thing?â
Even if her talent for swords was excellent, she was still a child in this aspect.
âItâs a good thing. Good enough to die for.â
What does siege warfare mean?
It means being isolated.
An Orc army is encamped in front of the castle gate, and you never know when the war might start.
To get out of the castle, avoiding their eyes, and to destroy or grab their supplies?
Itâs no different than telling you to just go out and die.
Itâs good if you succeed, and itâs good if you fail.
âWhen the gates open for a moment and a surprise attack is launched from our side, the detached corps will draw their attention and advance north.â
It was an order to become a bait and to distract the enemy.
It sounded like ordering him to die, but Callius didnât care.
It was what he had hoped for in the first place.
In Jevarsch, the characteristic of a maniac kept rising within him, making it difficult to control.
It was more convenient to go out and act separately.
If something goes wrong, itâd be fine to die.
After all, the war had begun.
âBecause the time has come to finish the quest slowly.â
Callius crumpled up the parchment and grabbed the hilt around his waist.
To raise the quest rewards to S rank, more special conditions were required.
âThat Great Orc Warrior.â
His battle with Kelâtuk was not over yet.
If they meet this time.
Only then would the fight with him be put to an end.
âAre you going with?â
âI canât. I have a separate mission.â
âAs expected.â
There was no way Callavan would leave a Paladin as powerful as Bernard alone.
The showdown would be three days later.
Callius was already waiting for that moment.
Three days later.
Callius spoke calmly to the Knights who looked at him.
âThose who want to live, stay. Those who want to die with me, follow.â
Thatâs all.
Callius headed towards the closed gate.
But his Knights followed behind, without hesitation.
âYou are blessed. Isnât it?â
âThatâs right. As a maniac.â
Callavan strode to the side of Callius, who was at the forefront, and looked the Knights arrayed behind him.
After these long and short skirmishes, the wandering aspirants of the White Forest had become full-fledged Knights.
True Knights with boundless faith and loyalty, to Callius.
Callavan looked at those knights with a smirk and twisted his lips.
Yeah, theyâre going to die anyway.
Thereâs no need to think more.
âOpen the gates.â
âOpen the gates!â
âOpening!â
Chwaaaak!
The soldiers turned the pulley, and the iron gate began to open with a trembling groan.
In front of it was a green sea, waiting.
Callius drew his sword without hesitation. The same went for Callavan.
âYou said you were going to kill me, but youâre going to die soon.â
âOnly time will tell.â
Are you forgetting your own situation?
How can you be so calm despite knowing what kind of mission youâve been given?
Callavan bit his lips.
Ppuuuuuu â!
A horn made from a unicorn sang with a loud and magnificent clarion call.
A trumpet announcing Calliusâ departure.
âThatâs a good sound.â
âIs it? Itâs Emilyâs horn.â
âEmily?â
He still looked bright, despite facing a battlefield where death awaited.
A young girl caught Callavanâs eye, who had been wondering who Emily was.
He saw her, holding a horn in her hands.
âAre you still alive?â
Heâd thought her ripped apart on the Wheel by now.
âLook forward to it. Callavan.â
âWhat do you mean?â
Callius, marching out of the gate, spat at him.
âThe day I come back here again.â
That day â
âWill be the day your head falls off.â
Gulp. Unknowingly, Callavan swallowed with a parched throat. But then he smiled.
âYou must fight fiercely. Youâre still Jervainâs blood, so Iâd like to give you a sword funeral. I just donât know if your corpse will be intact.â
It was funny to hear him being sarcastic.
Callius spoke, looking at him with an expressionless face.
âSurvive to the end, Callavan. So I can chop your head off.â
Tas!
Blood was pouring down in front of Callius as his red cloak fluttered in the wind.
The colour of the blood was green.
Fountains of blood splattering from the Orcs in his path.
After a long time â
In front of Callius, who had heavily diverted his way while being pursued by the Orcs â