LATEST UPDATES

Savage Divinity - Chapter 737

Published at 3rd of May 2024 05:48:50 AM


Chapter 737

If audio player doesn't work, press Stop then Play button again








Chapter 737

Behind every Great General lay a mountain of corpses, and having risen to fame in the turbulent Western deserts, Gao Changgongs mountain towered over most.

Not a point to take pride in, to have killed and lost so many of his countrymen over the course of his career, but an inevitability of war. At sixty-seven years old, his career spanned over five decades now, having first taken up arms at the tender age of fifteen after desert nomads slaughtered his family in a fit of rage over his familys lacklustre larder. Those were hard days during difficult times, when peasants rose up in revolt every other month because they were too hungry or thirsty to work, hence why the Western Imperial Army was willing to take in commoners to train them from the ground up in hopes of uncovering a diamond in the rough.

Gao Changgong had been one such diamond, and Bai Qi another, but rather than build a friendship upon this foundation of similarity, they became the most bitter of rivals instead.

He still remembered the first time he met the cruel Prince of Barbarity, during the Kang Tao rebellion. Changgong had been but a raw recruit back then, trembling from head to toe as he stared across the field at the army arrayed against him. Fisherfolk mostly, men and women he would have once called his own people before that life was lost to him, and it pained him to point his spear at such pitiful souls. The conflict all started after a local merchant lord passed away and his heir refused to honour the contracts signed in his name, a conflict which soon spiralled out of control as rioters took the streets and set fire to the Magistrates manor, killing the Imperial Tax-Collector housed within.Updated from novelbIn.(c)om

An unfortunate turn of events that led to this all-out rebellion, and Changgong could see the sheer desperation in their eyes even from so far away. These were not people who murdered out of greed and excess, but impoverished labourers sick of going hungry while working day and night to meet the Provinces demands. He remembered well the pain of knowing there was salted fish sitting in the warehouse next door while his stomach sat empty and swollen, stored and secured by the merchants who owned fathers fishing boat and charged him for the privilege of using it. Nets too, with a hefty penalty for each one that broke since they were woven from materials which had to be shipped in, enough so that many took to using sharpened stones lashed to reeds instead because they could no longer afford to take on more debt. Having known what their lives were like and the struggles they faced, how could he not empathize with the poor souls across from him?

One thousand soldiers had gathered here along the coast, so close to the village Changgong once called home. Against them stood ten to twelve times their number, desperate commoners holding their ground against trained Martial Warriors with naught but the same nets and sharpened stones they fished with. The commoners were no match for the military force arrayed against them, this much was clear, and they knew it too, their lines already wavering before the battle had even begun. With only two years of basic training and garrison duty behind him, Changgong knew little of actual warfare as this would be his first real large-scale engagement, having only seen actual combat in barroom brawls and the occasional bandit hunts. As such, he expected the Commanding Officer would open a dialogue with the fisherfolk and offer them a chance to surrender, but there would be no discussion on the field that day. Instead, the horns sounded the charge, and being the novice soldier he was, Changgong followed orders and joined his fellow soldiers in slaughtering every last man, woman, and child who stood against them.

A battle which haunted Changgong to this day, because as pitiful as those who died might have been, at least they were spared the horrors of what came next as Bai Qi re-established order by terrorizing the survivors into compliant servitude.

Even in his youth, Bai Qi was not a man of half-measures, and his quick resolution of the issues plaguing the Magistrate earned him a promotion to Major once he demonstrated he had the strength to contend against a Demon. This more than anything made Changgong sick to his stomach, the fact that the higher echelons of command cared naught for the suffering of the Western people so long as shipments of fish and clean water came in on time. However, as a soldier locked into service with no backing or significant talent to speak of, he had no choice but to continue serving under Bai Qi for another five years. The war-crazed slaughterer sought out conflict after bloody conflict, and while not all campaigns were as abhorrent as the first, Changgong soon discovered that stringing up dead and dying bandits proved no less distasteful than doing the same to impoverished rebels. Effective? Undoubtedly so, for few cared to cross Bai Qi twice assuming they survived their first encounter, so for the sake of his career, Changgong kept his head down and followed orders because he felt he had no other choice.

Then came the fateful day when he finally opened his eyes, the day Bai Qi promoted him to the rank of Captain to reward him for his years of honourable service. You be the most promising talent under this soldiers command, Bai Qi had said, his slim build and youthful features making him look younger than even Changgong. Had I a thousand others just like you, then we could usher in an age of peace unlike any the West had ever seen, one which would last for ten-thousand years.

A jarring statement to hear, for Changgong saw no such peace in sight, nor could he see a future in which any peace could be secured. The peace of oppression was no true peace at all, no different from the cruel injustice his father suffered at the hands of the merchants who all but owned them. Having grown older and wiser after seeing the world, he knew that his family had been slaves in everything besides name, ones free to do whatever they pleased so long as their masters harsh demands were met. A province under the tyranny of Bai Qis rule would be no different, peaceful yes, in the sense that there would be no bandits or rebellions, but only because the remaining people of the West lacked the courage and strength to stand against him. Was it worth it, the exchange of freedoms for the sake of peace and prosperity? Having seen the thankless fate of most fisherfolk living under merchant rule, Changgong did not believe so.

Having found the courage to look back on his actions and see them for the sins they were, he was determined not to continue forwards on this path and set himself to task seeing Bai Qi brought to justice. The moment he learned enough characters to convey his message, Changgong penned an anonymous letter to the Disciplinary Corps detailing the atrocities committed under Bai Qis command. When this failed to elicit any sort of response, he sent copies of his letter to influential merchants, Officers, noble families, and anyone else he thought might care. Eventually, someone took notice of his efforts and brought it up to someone in the higher echelons of command, until it finally came to the attention of the local Magistrate who had Bai Qi drawn up on accusations of suspected Defilement. Changgong only learned of all this after the fact, as itd all been handled quietly and nothing came of it save to bring him to Bai Qis attention, who not only emerged unscathed from the investigation, he also recognized the handwriting on the letter accusing him of all his misdeeds as the brushwork of one of his favoured Captains.

To his credit, Bai Qi didnt retaliate against Changgong for raising his concerns in so cowardly a manner, and instead merely had him transferred into a different retinue after stating that their bond of trust was broken. Say what you will about the murderous bastard, but he dealt with his problems in a frank and forthright manner, and Changgong could respect that much at least, the one useful lesson he took away from his time serving under the future Lord of Martial Peace. Anything worth doing should be done in an open and aboveboard manner, because to do otherwise would be to admit shame in your actions. Changgong wanted Bai Qi to pay for his crimes, but in a public trial with the reason for his fall from grace known to all, so that others could learn from his terrible example.

Now, nearly fifty years later, Changgong scorned his younger self for not slitting the monsters throat in his sleep, for in doing so he could have prevented so much needless suffering.

For decades, Changgong and Bai Qi rose through the ranks as the most accomplished officers of their time, and though they never served in the same conflict together again, they were both accredited with bringing peace to the West. Changgong was always a step or two behind though, never quite able to match up with Bai Qis exploits even after taking into account their difference in age. The reason was simple: if you needed a soldier to fix a problem, like the rebel Magistrate of LuoYang or the ShaNan marauders, then Gao Changgong was the soldier to call on. However, he was merely the hammer with which to flatten any protruding nails, whereas Bai Qis horrific methods offered lasting change and stability by ensuring every last nail was embedded so deeply they could never rise up again. He was a man who believed the ends justified the means, and so long as people had food and water aplenty, they should not mind the iron boot resting atop their necks.

Still, the results spoke for themselves and there were times when Changgongs determination wavered as he saw the changes wrought by Bai Qis rise to prominence, for it was true that the West had never known such peace. Twenty years without an official rebellion, that was what Bai Qis supporters claimed of late, and it was true. No force had risen up to reject the rule of law in that time, but only because the Lord of Martial Peace responded to rumours of civil unrest with preemptive and heavy handed military action. The oppressed soon learned to keep their heads down and their mouths shut lest they receive a visit from one of Bai Qis loyal dogs, who were more than happy to hang ten peasants to keep ninety in line, and after centuries of turmoil, the people saw it as an acceptable outcome, if not the best one possible. As an added effect, with no more sieges to break, Changgongs once ascendant career stalled at the rank of Major General as he served at the Western Wall for the better part of a decade, but he cared naught for fame or renown. All Changgong wanted was a Western Province in which the people had food and water enough to survive, and under Bai Qi, such a dream had been made possible, albeit in the worst of ways.

None of that mattered once the Western Wall fell to treachery and deceit, a failing Changgong took full responsibility for. Though hed not been in command of the entire Wall, he gave the order to his fifty-thousand soldiers to withdraw instead of staying to stem the Defiled tide pouring through the breach. A gatehouse had fallen, faster than anyone believed possible, and a decision had to be made, but rather than set the example and pray his fellow commanders followed suit, Changgong placed his faith in the soldiers of the West instead of the Wall itself and brought his army away before they were overwhelmed so that they could live to fight another day. Two months they held in Shen Sha, the City of the Divine Sand, and when it became clear they could hold there no longer, he ensured that every last person under his protection was seen to safety before finally abandoning the city to the Enemy forces. He led the survivors north to the Defiled held coastal city of Taktala, where he freed the captured population and set fire to the ocean trawlers feeding the Enemy combatants, while simultaneously plundering enough dried and salted rations to feed his forces for months. Even under Bai Qis rule, the West was never wholly settled, and Changgongs people had plenty of shifting dunes, abandoned mines, and hidden oasis's to hide in while he and his soldiers went to ground while doing everything in their power to make the Enemy bleed for every step they took in the Western Province.

All the while holding out hope for the Lord of Martial Peace to make his presence known and drive the Defiled back from whence they came.

It didnt take long for Sha Meng harbour to come into view, less than half an hour of Cloud-Stepping in total, and the Legate had them stop a good distance away to rest and give time for his spies and scouts to assess the situation. The reports soon came back indicating that the inhabitants were in poor condition, but mercifully still alive unlike the unfortunates back in LuZhuo. Seeing the remains of his fellow countrymen used to create such a grotesque spectacle almost broke the young Legate, and truth be told, it almost broke Changgong himself, because hed been foolish enough to believe in the Legates naive aspirations of saving the people of the West at minimal cost. No, better to accept that the fighting would be bloody indeed, with death tolls in the millions when factoring in civilian casualties. A hefty butchers bill to pay, but so long as they drove the Enemy from the West and rescued enough people to start over, then it would be well worth the cost.

A mindset which ironically was similar to Bai Qis attitude wherein the ends justified the means. By doing this, Changgong was consigning millions of his countrymen to their deaths, but the difference was that under Defiled rule, they were dead either way, and at least this way, he might save a fraction of those poor souls.

The scouts reports continued to filter in over the next hour, and they painted an increasingly grim scene. Aside from the twenty-thousand estimated prisoners housed inside the fort, one sturdier than LuZhuo as it had been built by Imperial hands to combat pirates and bandits alike, there were at least eight-thousand Defiled stationed in and around the harbour, a pittance compared to the fleet anchored in LuZhuo, but far more than three-hundred Peak Experts could manage with ease. While a single soldier was supposedly worth ten Defiled, and a Peak Expert worth a hundred Defiled, this assumed the Imperial soldiers were holding a defensible position against tribal savages, not assaulting a fortified encampment full of disciplined soldiers clad in Runic Armour, to say nothing of the Enemy Peak Experts or Demons lying in wait. Whats more, not every Peak Expert could match the likes of Bai Qi, Nian Zu, Du Min Gyu, or Mitsue Juichi, able to kill dozens with a simple wave of the hand. Peak Experts were faster and stronger than your average Warrior, but on a battlefield, individual strength mattered less than overall coordination, and Peak Experts held no advantages there besides an abundance of experience accrued over a lifetime of trials and tribulations. Even if the odds were more in their favour, losing a single Peak Expert to eliminate a mere three-thousand Chosen would make for a poor trade, given how it generally took the better part of four decades to replace a Peak Expert, to say nothing of the vast luck, effort, and natural talent required, as opposed to the mere seconds it took to train a generic Defiled Warrior. Were there maybe half as many Defiled, an argument could have been made to whittle the Enemy numbers down by striking hard and fading away, tactics favoured by bandits and pirates both, but unless they could identify the Enemy Peak Experts by sight, then Changgong was in favour of lying in wait to observe the situation while the fleet made its way over, but the Legate seemed determined to make a play tonight, as he ordered his scouts to focus on uncovering the enemy positions above all else.

Split into groups of five and maintain Concealment as you surround the harbour fort, the Legate Sent, dispatching these same orders to the rest of his command cadre once he had all the information he needed. Avoid direct engagements and pick off the Enemy while they run. Defiled? Run? Even tribal sorts were not so cowardly as to flee from a force ten times smaller, even one comprised solely of Peak Experts. No, the orders stated to remain in Concealment, so how did the Legate expect to make the Enemy flee? Gao Liang, youre with me, the Legate continued, flashing a strained smile as he Sent, Pass the word along that discretion is the better part of valour. I know you and yours are eager for vengeance, but youll kill no more Defiled once youre dead. Better to kill ten today and spend the rest of your life fighting than to slaughter thirty or forty before falling.

Warmed by the young mans sentiment more than he was annoyed by the Legate looking down on his skills, Changgong swallowed what he wanted to say about teaching ones grandpa to butcher hogs and simply nodded instead. By your will, Legate.

As the Peak Experts broke off and moved into place, Falling Rain Cloud-Stepped out over the water to stand atop the natural harbour wall, an outcropping of stone and coral that forced incoming ships to gather at the mouth of the bay and enter one by one after making a sharp, ninety degree turn on the approach. The natural wall also made for the perfect vantage point to take in the harbour and fort, which was likely why the Legate chose to stand here, but it left him exposed and vulnerable should the Enemy discover his position. Thankfully, Falling Rain was not so foolish as to come out here alone, as accompanying him were his Death Corps Guards, Imperial Protectors, Bekhai Khishigs, and Templar assassins, as well as the solitary smiling monk and the tiger beside him. Despite harbouring many doubts regarding the wisdom behind these actions, Changgong knew the time for discussion had long since passed. Even a bad decision was better than sitting around arguing in the field, especially considering they risked discovery with each passing second. Besides, the young Legate had enough people second guessing his decisions, so Changgong was content to advise only when asked and serve in whatever capacity was necessary, which meant keeping Falling Rain safe and sound. Losing three-hundred Peak Experts would make for a disastrous start to the campaign, but it would be nothing compared to losing the Legate himself, for upon his broad shoulders sat the hopes of a free West, a hope that would die alongside him, binding the surviving Warriors of the West to his cause more tightly than any Oath ever could.

Unfortunately, much like Bai Qi, the Legate was not a man to do things by half-measures, for as soon as he received word that his troops were in place, he ordered the torches lit and dropped his Concealment before Changgong could interject. This is Legate Falling Rain, the boy declared, bold as could be. I have come to demand your surrender. Lay down your arms and your lives will be spared. Resist or harm an innocent, and your lives are forfeit. Almost as an afterthought, he added, So long as no one is killed during the wait, you have five minutes to comply before I sound the attack.

The balls on this boy, to use his own presence as a bluff to make the Enemy think twice, but while the Defiled were a great many unpleasant things, cowards they were not. The Legates warning only served to give them enough time to move out to the walls and ready a defence, but despite the obvious refusal, Falling Rain stood tall and proud out in plain sight as the Enemy readied for battle. If the opposing commander had half a brain, he would know that the Legate could only have gotten here so quickly by Cloud-Stepping over in haste, meaning he would only be accompanied by Peak Experts. As such, the smart thing to do was to hold position and wait for Enemy Peak Expert reinforcements to arrive, and it seemed as if he was preparing to do just that.

Five minutes are up, the Legate declared, accurate to the second by Changgongs count, and he readied his staff to defend the boy with his life. By your actions, I can only assume you are rejecting my offer of surrender? The Enemy forces jeered and crowed in response, and several screams rang out as Imperial citizens were thrown to their deaths with a sickening splat on the jagged rocks below. Stifling a sigh, the Legate lowered his head in regret and raised his hand to signal the attack. For a split second, Changgong wondered if the Legate wanted the gathered Peak Experts to storm the walls in a battle of three-hundred against eight-thousand, but then the Heavens roared with righteous fury and shook the world around him. No, not the Heavens, but the Legates Runic Cannons, the dragon-shaped tubes launching heavy iron spheres from the left and right flanks of the fort. There was no earth-shattering rumble as the walls came apart, but instead, a chorus of screams rose up as Defiled died in droves atop the battlements to the cannonballs which had been aimed lengthwise along the wall to maximize the casualties.

The Azure Ascendants unveiled five Runic Cannons during the siege of Centrals Citadel, and they used them here again to great effect, but there were three more cannons now, borne by figures whose leather armour identified them as Bekhai Khishigs. Two gold-furred half-monkeys with irascible smiles flanked a hulking, one-eyed half-bear whose rage and fury was fearsome to behold, and together with the Azure Ascendants, they loaded their cannons and fired again, the second volley arriving mere seconds after the first. The heavy weapons belched solid death and rendered Defiled Warriors into meat paste with a spray of blood, and then they did so again, and again, and again, firing at a rate of perhaps one shot every three seconds. Changgong had seen the weapons at work during the siege and thought them a powerful tool, but here atop the close confines of the fort wall, they were nigh unmatched in sheer, destructive power.

The slaughter continued unabated as the Enemy Peak Experts were picked off before even coming close to the cannons, and less than a minute later, the Defiled ran screaming and shrieking in abject terror as they fled from certain death. Some even were crazed enough to throw themselves from the walls, following the unfortunate prisoners to their inevitable deaths on the jagged rocks below. Some survived the drop, but only just, and Changgong derived no pleasure in seeing the fearless Defiled drag their broken bodies through the rocks and sand in a desperate attempt to find shelter from the explosions above. The majority kept a cooler head, or at the very least retained enough survival instincts not to risk a nigh fatal drop in order to avoid near certain death, but they did not stop running once they were free of the fort walls. To them, the sturdy stone walls no longer offered any protection and instead had become the cage they would die in, so they fled into the surrounding desert and scattered across the sandy dunes where the waiting Peak Experts picked them off with ease. Send word to let a few escape, the Legate declared. So they can spread word about what happened here to the cities inland and bring hope to those who still endure.

And if they set a trap for u at the next harbour? Changong asked, Or Heaven forbid, slaughter the captives and withdraw entirely? A price he was willing to pay, but would still rather avoid if possible.

Then well deal with it as it comes, though ideally Id like to attack the next harbour within the hour before they have time to put any nasty surprises together. We need to move fast in order to save as many lives as we can, and only then can we rest easy after having given it our best. A statement which more than anything showed how different his mindset truly was. Peak Experts were the noble elites of humanity, yet Falling Rain not only wanted to work them like dogs to save commoners, he believed it was their duty to do so. Most other commanders would have chosen the safe route at the expense of insignificant lives, but instead he was here putting himself and his Warriors at risk to save them, and Gao Changgong loved the man for it, as would all his fellow survivors of the West. There was a time when Changgong shared this ideal, but time and reality ground it away to nothingness, so to see it in the young Legate was most heartening indeed, a sign that Changgong had not lived his life in vain. This was a cause worth fighting for, a cause worth dying for, so they would join him in this risky gambit of his. Strike hard and strike fast, a lesson many Great Generals learned too late, but the Legate had his own mountain behind him and picked things up far quicker than most.

Eyes narrowed in muted dissatisfaction as he took in the slaughter, the Legate had the look of a man about to put down his favourite camel, an unpleasant task, but a necessary one given the circumstances. Most would have relished the bloodshed and victory, like Akanais cannon wielding husband up on the battlements, but not the young Legate. Hed known suffering enough to derive no pleasure from it, or at least, so Changgong believed until the boys eyes lit up in delight. Demon birth, he exclaimed, with all the excitement of a child catching sight of his favourite sweets. With me. Kill it before it escapes.

A strange man, this Legate Falling Rain, mourning the death of Defiled while celebrating the birth of a Demon, a fate far worse than death. No matter though, because Changgong had sworn to serve the young Legate, and would march headlong into the Fathers Maw with but a single command.

Not without hesitation of course, but hed do it regardless, because if anyone could bring them back out alive, it would be Falling Rain, Chosen Son of the Mother.

Chapter Meme




Please report us if you find any errors so we can fix it asap!


COMMENTS