A while ago, a messenger had sent us a letter ordaining the start of the Imperial Council. Currently, as specified by the letter, we were headed towards a large building in the center of Sutherland.
There were many gentlemen wearing gaudy clothes, all accompanied by brawny soldiers, and they were headed towards the top floor of the building.
âWeâve got to be in the wrong place,â Aquido said.
âYeahâŚâŚâ Zem agreed.
They sent me a pleading gaze which I casually ignored as I followed suit and headed towards the top as well.
Soon, I stepped into the large hall on the top floor to find famous nobles around the empire all gathered inside.
I walked to the couch located next to what I thought was the entrance to the reception area and said, âIâm Grey Millard, here as part of the expeditionary force. Iâve come to participate in the Imperial Council, as was ordered.
A woman wearing a red dress who was in charge of the expeditionary forceâs registration responded, âOkay. Please wait a moment.â
She flipped through a couple of pages and circled something before handing me a sheet of parchment.
âPlease peruse through this while you wait for the meeting to start,â she said.
âMy thanks,â I said and migrated to the corner of the room.
All the forces would be lined up, creating several u-shaped rows. The Imperial Army would be stationed in the back, and we, the expeditionary force, would be in front. The Millard Family would not only be in the frontmost row, but also smack dab in the center; weâd be the first ones targeted in the heat of battle. The probably intended to use small, weak nobles as so-called meat shields. I feel like I finally understand why my shitty stepmother sent me here now.
Well anyways, I had expected this, so it wasnât too surprising. Stillâ
âWhat do you think of this plan?â I sighed and asked Aquido after finishing reading the parchment.
âItâs a stupid plan,â Aquido spat out, his face dyed in anger, and the people around focused on us as if startled.
âL-leader!â Zem exclaimed.
âSorry.â Aquido looked around before bowing in apology towards me.
âNo, youâre fine,â I said. âI actually feel the same way. The person who thought this up must have been quite the idealist.â
Weâd march in a u-shape formation, surround the enemy, and destroy them. It was a classic tactic and wasnât that crazy in it of itself. Yes. If the enemy didnât have several times more forces than we and werenât tireless undead, that is.
Some greenhorns without even a single battle under their belt probably copied this tactic straight from the book.
âKihihi, you think so as well, child?â asked a short, sage-like old man with white hair and white clothes as he approached me while stroking his long beard.
Honestly, despite my looks, Iâm definitely not a child inside, but from his point of view IÂ must be a child.
âYou think the same, old man?â I said.
âNaturally. Iâd give the idiot that thought up this clumsy plan a failing grade.â
âAgreed. Itâd be one thing if they used a flexible pincer movement, but to use a fixed formation against someone commanding an army of undead would practically be the same as going without any plan at all.â
Immediately, the old man wiped the smirk off his face.
âAre you to say their advance is unnatural?â he asked.
âItâs obvious just by the fact that theyâre advancing towards the capital.â
During these couple of boring days where we were ordered to be on standby, I put more thought into the undeadâs advance. As a result, it wouldnât be an exaggeration to say that several of my deductions could prove fatal to the empire.
âHowever, undead naturally seek out the living, so wouldnât them seeking out the capital be perfectly normal?â he asked.
âAquido, give me the map,â I ordered.
âYeah, sure.â
I took the map from Aquido, opened it, and set it on the table. Then, I ran a pen along the undeadâs route.
âThe undead were first sighted here, in the northernmost part of the empireânear the Giant Forest, Rudoa,â I began. âHereâs their route as they continue to advance southward, and hereâs each cityâs population. Donât you feel somethingâs off?â
The white-haired old manâs eyes shot open as he froze in place. After a short pause, he squeezed out, âI see. So weâve been operating on a completely incorrect premise.â
The undead destroyed every large city during their advance towards the capital and Sutherland. Certainly, their route trended towards uncoordinated as they aimed for large, famous cities. Itâs not that you couldnât say that there was someone directing them, but it looked extremely implausible.
That, however, was where the pitfall lay. If you pushed past your preconceptions and thought outside the box, you would easily see how unnatural their route was. It was superbly camouflaged, of course, but there were about ten different places where the undead sniffed out a city with a large population and yet continued marching on. It wasnât impossible for them to have just risen up from the ground on their own, but for now it would be more appropriate to interpret the undead as moving under a single will.
âThen what about Lampertsâs death?â he asked as a large vein bulged on his forehead.
Lamperts Brauser climbed the ranks to become general despite his status as a commoner, even among this empire that valued family lineage so highly; he was a true hero.
âI looked at his achievements, and heâs truly a great commander. I think if the undead just rose up from the ground, even if he couldnât win, he wouldnât have died,â I said.
âAre you to say thereâs a mastermind?â
âYeah, thereâs a huge difference between mindless undead and humans. Basically, if we donât change how we perceive these undead, weâll get the rug pulled out from under us.â
At the very least thereâs a dragon-class monster thatâs been turned undead. If the mastermind is moving the undead under their own will, it would be dangerous even for me to just charge in without a plan.
âSo then you must have a plan?â
âYes, I can think of a few,â I said. âStill, theyâd all take dozens of days.â
We could certainly take out many undead without breaking a sweat, but it was an entirely different matter once you added in the mastermind into the mix.
This is just a gut feeling, but maybe the mastermind isnât even that set on destroying the empire.
And even if the mastermind were set on that, they could just spawn a large number of undead into the capital instead of taking such a roundabout path. There was no need to dress up that fact unless they had another motive.
âLetâs hear your plan,â the old man said sharply, his composed manner from before completely gone.
âSure, but itâs quite difficult.â
I could easily hypothesize what those peace-loving idiots would say. They would generally brand any who advise prudence as worthless cowards and then advance into their own destruction.
âWeâll be destroyed if we donât do it, right?â the old man shouted. âThen we need to do it. Stop putting on airs and spit it out!â
I shrugged and began to talk.
ââââââ
âHow idiotic! Are you saying that them trying to destroy our eternal empire, Archive, is a mere distraction?â
âIâm saying that the possibility exists if you think about it calmly.â
Although the emperor wasnât present, the white-haired old man prodded everybody to begin anyways.
Currently, the white-haired old man and a pompous group of middle-aged men wearing extravagant garbs were in the middle of a heated argument.
âHow sad. So even Sieg, hailed as a sage, has turned to cowardice. It looks like you just canât beat the onset of old age,â said a giant man with short hair as he shook his head back and forth and shrugged his shoulders.
Every generation has countless simpletons who canât differentiate between imprudence and bravery. And without fail, theyâd rise up to become the backbones of the government and the military and become ill-natured.
âSay what you want! But this is directed towards the emperor.â
âThereâs no need for you to do that,â said a handsome, young man wearing silver armor as he flamboyantly led his group inside.
âIâm The Hero, Yukihiro,â he said.
âNow our victory is all but certain,â one noble said confidently.
While receiving praise left and right, he walked up to me and snarled, âOi, brat. Thatâs my seat. Move!â
There shouldnât have been any assigned seats, but itâd be annoying to try to explain that to a wild beast that doesnât have any common sense or even know how to speak.
âMy apologies.â I stood up as everyone else threw sneers my way.
âIn the first place, why is a child participating in this Imperial Council?â Yukihiro said.
âI heard heâs under the auspices of Margrave McBurn and Count Hartwig,â one noble said.
âHow come I see neither of them?â another added.
âTheyâre probably planning to come late to show off their authority.â
âA mere Margrave getting on his high horse!â
âLeaving that aside, arenât the mercenaries behind that kid The Fools?â
âHmph, poor nobles have poor followers.â
I put my hand up to stop Aquido, who was about to fly into a bout of rage. In my opinion, Iâd rather not associate myself with these idiots around me who donât even try to hide their jealousy and antagonism despite it being a time where they need to band together to prevent their own countryâs destruction.
The black-haired man sat down where I just was.
âWhat do you mean thereâs no need?â the white-haired old man, Sieg, frowned as he asked The HeroâYukihiro.
âIt means the emperor is busy and has no need to worry about stupid things like this. I alone could take out all the undead,â Yukihiro said.
As expected of The Hero, everyone was bathing him in praise once again.
âDonât you know Lamperts lost?â Sieg continued. âItâs better to be cautious right now.â
âLamperts? Ahh, that ordinary guy who couldnât even use magic. Thatâs because he was just a small fry.â
Snickers leaked out from the knight-like women behind him.
âWhat did you just say?â Sieg said in a chilling voice as everyone began hallucinating that their surroundings dropped several degrees.
âHmm? Did you not hear me? I said he was just a small fry. Even though he was weak, he yearned for achievements and put on airs.â
âTry to limit how you handle this idiot who doesnât even know his place. Donât get too heated,â I whispered to Sieg from behind.
âI wouldnât even if you didnât say anything.â
âSorry, but I donât think youâre that strong. Thus, I need the emperorâs decision,â Sieg said, adding gasoline to the fire.
âAre you trying to say that Iâd be defeated by mere undead!?â
âNah, you, The Hero, could easily defeat any amount of normal undead on your own. Even Iâll admit that. However, I donât think normal undead are what did Lamperts in.â
âYou dare put me on the same level as that small fry!?â
âWell, yeah. Youâre certainly superior in terms of magic, but if we consider skills and battle sense, Lamperts is overwhelmingly superior overall.â
His magic, which Sieg praised, was Cânot even at Satellaâs level. Itâs because you needlessly flatter him that he gets all arrogant. Just tell him flat out that you canât trust him because heâs weak.
Still, I got excited to finally meet someone from the same village as me, but heâs all talk.
During this explosive situation where Sieg and The Hero, Yukihiro were exchanging furious gazes, a man wearing messenger-like clothing entered the room and bowed.
âThe emperor arrives.â
Everyone immediately stood up, placed their hand on their chest, and bowed.
I followed suit, and Aquido and Zem bowed deeply.
âI see youâre going at it, as the discussion has gotten heated once again. A refined plan will lead our country to victory. Very good,â the emperor said.
This voice, I feel like I heard it just earlier.
I raised my head to see a handsome golden-haired man over two meters tall. In the end, he had never given his name. I thought he had his reasons, but to think that it was because he was actually Georg Rose Archive himself.
âLooks like Greyâs here too. Thereâs still some spots open, take a seat.â
âSureâŚâŚâ I replied.
Behind Emperor Georg stood Margrave Mcburn and Count Hartwig.
Sieg then kneeled before the emperor and said, âYour Majesty, I have a request.â
âSieg, you!!â Yukihiro yelled.
âI donât mind. Speak,â said the emperor, completely ignoring Yukihiroâs words.
âIâve some suspicions about the undeadâs movement. Please grant this old man permission to improve the battle plan.â
âHm, improve you sayâŚâŚâ the emperor murmured while grinning as he gave me a sidelong glance.
âEmperor, youâve no need to listen to this coward. Iâll show you that I can take responsibility and erase this disturbance.â
âWhat do you guys think?â the emperor turned to ask Margrave McBurn.
âThereâs no disadvantage in trying to improve. I say we accept his request.â
âYour Majesty, Iâm afraid now is a time of rest before the war. I donât think we should needlessly exploit our soldiers,â said the man with a curly mustache and luxurious clothes as he stood up.
âSir Cyrus has a point as well,â the emperor said. âSo does the old man have any plans for this?â
Sieg looked towards me, so I nodded in response.
âThis is just a supposition, but what if you just left the matter just to me and any like-minded individuals that I trust.â
In an instant, the room erupted in chatter. The emperor simply smiled in response, and said, âThen I have no reason to decline. I, Georg Rose Archive, grant you permission. Sieg, act to your hearts content. Deliver any documents detailing the places where traps and such are set up another day. The lords will arrange the details and deliver it to the imperial headquarters. That is all.â