Reincarnated Lord: I can upgrade everything! - Chapter 399
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- Chapter 399 - Chapter 399: The Unicorn
Chapter 399: The Unicorn
It was dawn, and the sky wore the gentle hue of lilac. Wisps of mist clung to the earth like forgotten veils, reluctant to rise. The morning dew still glistened on rooftops and cobblestones, yet the stronghold pulsed with life—its people drawn out from their hearths and homes by a singular, thunderous procession.
The citizens stood shoulder to shoulder, pressed along the ramparts, rooftops, and balconies, their breath misting in the cool air. All eyes watched the road, wide and muddy, now consumed by the march of an army the likes of which had not been seen in this age of Tenaria.
They came in waves, like the slow, inevitable roll of a tide. First, the Heavy Infantry—10,000 strong—clad in blackened steel plate, their helmets adorned with two jagged horns. They marched in flawless ranks, their movements so precise it seemed the very land bowed in submission. Their white cloaks, pristine and heavy, flared slightly with each synchronized step. The earth shuddered beneath their boots, and the sound—a deep, echoing thunder—resonated through the bones of all who watched.
Behind them, the Heavy Cavalry rode, equal in number and grandeur. Warbeasts bred for battle, their manes braided with colored cords denoting unit and rank, bore riders in full armor—men who looked as if they had been carved from the mountains themselves. Lances gleamed. Banners snapped. Each paw was like the drumbeat of war.
Next came the White Wolves—3,000 of them, beasts of muscle and instinct, their bodies swathed in layered barding that protected their vital organs but left their speed and agility unhindered. They moved as a pack, unnervingly quiet despite their size, guided only by subtle gestures from their handlers.
And then the Seekers—2,000 archers, once known across the realm as the Goshen Longbowmen, now reborn. Clad in similar, reinforced armor with sleek hoods and cloaks that shifted between white and grey, they were shadows in motion. Many rode atop the newest marvel of Tenarian warfare—the towering engines of war known as the Titan X.
There were fifty of these massive constructs, each a fusion of enchanted wood and forged steel, five meters long and thrumming with quiet menace.
Mounted on their backs was a siege tower housing twenty Seekers and a weapon that turned even the bravest warriors pale: the Hwacha—a devastating machine capable of firing over 100 arrows in a single, hissing volley.
Every Titan X carried over 2,000 arrows, stacked in precise racks alongside tools of war and crates of oil-drenched rags.
But these war machines did not move on horses or wheels alone. Within each Titan X stood the heartbeat of the beast: the Mage Pilots.
These were no ordinary spellcasters. Trained from youth in an art that blurred the line between magic and machinery, Mage Pilots poured their essence into arcane sigils carved deep into the framework of the Titans. Without them, the machines were nothing more than towering husks. With them, they became beasts of war. Each pilot had an assistant to help with power distribution, mana flow, and defense, and together they gave motion to steel and wood.
The reinforced wheels, rimmed in black steel and layered with runes, allowed the Titan X to glide across stone, mud, and gravel alike.
Yet even these constructs were not the most fearsome sight.
That honor went to the Orc Siege Catapults.
Fifty of them marched with the rear guard—machines born not in the forges of man but in the madness of necessity. Built from blackened, splintered wood, they looked ancient, wild, and defiant.
Each one was dragged forward by a team of three enormous wolves, their eyes glowing faintly, their fur matted with leather bindings and bits of chainmail.
The machines bore the shape of a massive flatbed, upon which sat a **cabin, dark and squat, flanked by twin unlit torches. At the prow, just behind the wolves, loomed an iron skull, forged to resemble some forgotten predator—fangs bared, eyes hollow and angry.
Mounted upon the deck was a trebuchet, poised like a vulture.
Two meters behind it stood a tall vertical pole that ended in a crow’s nest, where scouts could peer above the throng, eyes sweeping the world from a god’s height. This was not merely a post—it was a throne of vigilance.
Behind the cabin, dominating the rear of the machine, was the true weapon: a massive spoon-shaped catapult, chained, loaded, and ready to rain flaming boulders upon their enemies. A trailing cart brimmed with stones, ready to be fed into the maw of war.
Behind these marvels came the logistics wagons—hundreds of them—filled with crates of grain, barrels of water, smithing tools, medical tents, and everything a marching army required to survive the crucible ahead.
And so they marched.
At dawn, they moved.
At noon, they rested, fed, repaired.
At dusk, they marched again.
And in this rhythm, the world seemed to hold its breath.
To the left, the Ash Mountains loomed—tall, jagged, and silent, like giants watching from stone thrones. A month before, Asher had sent scouts ahead, tasking them with finding a pass through the mountain wall. And find it they did.
Two weeks slipped by like smoke.
Asher now stood atop a rise, flanked by Count Alec, Commander Lambert, Commander Paul, and a handful of high-ranking officers. Before them stretched a vast encampment, nestled in a sea of emerald grass and swaying wildflowers. Tents gleamed white under the sun, and the banners of the noble houses fluttered proudly.
“Who would’ve thought such a paradise lay hidden behind the Ash Mountains,” Asher murmured, his gaze distant. “From the look of it, no sentient race has ever called this place home.”
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Count Alec nodded slowly, arms folded behind his back. “A virgin land, Lord Asher. Not blood has touched it’s soil.”
Asher turned to Commander Aquila, eyes sharp. “How long until we reach House Nubis?”
Aquila, ever precise, responded without hesitation. “Two more weeks, Your Lordship.”
Asher gave a nod, slow and grim.
“We shall keep up the pace and—”
Asher’s words faltered, vanishing into the wind as his eyes snapped to the horizon. His commanders followed suit, their movements crisp and unified, as though guided by a collective instinct honed on the battlefield.
Far out on the plains, a dark blur broke free from the edge of the world. At first, it looked like a shadow untethered, racing with impossible speed. The rising sun cast golden rays across the landscape, but the creature seemed untouched by light—a silhouette of living dusk.
The earth quivered faintly beneath their boots. The rhythm of its approach was like thunder muffled by velvet—fast, smooth, relentless. Whatever it was, it moved unchained.
A hush fell over the command hill. No one spoke. Even the banners above the camp slowed in the wind.
As the creature drew closer, its form sharpened—and then, they saw it.
It was a horse, but unlike any they had ever known. Massive, with limbs coiled in lean muscle and hooves like obsidian anvils, it glided rather than galloped, each stride eating up the ground as though space bent for it. Its coat was pitch black, darker than midnight, and shimmered like polished onyx beneath the morning light. Its mane flowed like woven silk, long and regal, streaked with glints of starlight.
But what truly stole the breath from their lungs was the horn—a single, spiraling, crystalline horn that jutted proudly from its forehead. It caught the sun and refracted it in a spectrum of colors, like stained glass forged by divine hands. It was not just a horn—it was a crown.
“It’s a unicorn…” someone whispered behind him, awestruck.
But Asher knew. This was no ordinary unicorn—if such a word even applied. This was the king of horses. A creature of legend, said to exist only in the songs of ancient seers and the dreams of dying kings.
The black unicorn slowed its stride as it neared, proud and unhindered, its horn glowing faintly. Every soldier and commander, whether noble-made or lowly squire, had fallen still.
Asher stepped forward, cloak trailing in the wind, his eyes locked with the beast’s.
“What are you doing?” He muttered to himself.
And the unicorn… stopped a few feet before him.
Tall, powerful, and silent. It dipped its head, ever so slightly, and for a moment, the ruler of men and the ruler of horses stood in quiet recognition of one another—two sovereigns on the edge of destiny.
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