Steel and Sorrow: Rise of the Mercenary king - Chapter 365
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- Chapter 365 - Chapter 365 Money of the land (3)
Chapter 365: Money of the land (3) Chapter 365: Money of the land (3) One of the key reasons warfare evolved so dramatically from the medieval period to the modern era was the dramatic increase in population, fueled in large part by successive agricultural revolutions.
These innovations in food production transformed societies, enabling nations to support vastly larger armies than had ever been feasible before.
Contrary to what some might think, the relatively small size of medieval armies wasn’t due to a lack of manpower.
There were plenty of people, but the agricultural output of the time simply couldn’t sustain large forces for extended periods.
Feeding thousands of men, along with their horses, was an immense logistical challenge in an age where food production was limited and vulnerable to seasonal fluctuations.
Medieval military campaigns, as a result, were dictated by the agricultural calendar.
Armies typically marched in the months following the grain harvest in late summer, when food was at its most abundant.
This timing allowed armies to either forage from the freshly reaped fields or rely on supply lines laden with the fruits of that season’s labor.
But even then, these armies were constrained.
A campaign could last only as long as the provisions held out, and the ability to gather more from the surrounding land often determined the success or failure of an expedition. As agricultural advances increased the efficiency of farming, nations could produce surplus food, sustaining not only larger populations but also armies that could remain in the field for far longer. All of this was pictured in an instant by Alpheo, who stood amidst the golden grains.
His hands, still dirty from the soil he had inspected earlier, trembled slightly-not from excitement, but from a gnawing fear that grew with each passing moment.
He wasn’t a man prone to panic, but the weight of the realization pressed heavily on his chest.
He literally held in his hands the power to reshape warfare itself, and with it, the seeds of his own potential undoing.
This… this could change everything, he thought, his gaze sweeping over the swaying stalks of wheat.
The simple yet profound method to supercharge food production, could alter the balance of power in ways he wasn’t sure he was ready for.
Increased food meant larger armies, longer campaigns, and a capability to sustain war on a scale the world hadn’t seen in centuries. However not for him alone but for everybody, even his enemies.
If word gets out,he mused bitterly that I have a method to make lands produce nearly twice what they do now… how long before my fear of facing a coalition would happen? The thought sent a chill down his spine.
For now, his neighbors turned a blind eye to his little “miracles”-soap and cider.
Those luxuries, while useful and profitable, weren’t enough to raise a sword and make the empire their enemy .
But this?
This was different.
The only thing that had protected him so far was the Empire’s fragile shadow looming behind him.
The empire still claimed suzerainty over the western continent , and their diplomatic support had been enough to deter most aggression.
But Alpheo knew better.
The empire was a lion of paper, a once-mighty force now bogged down in its endless civil war.
Their ability to offer any real assistance if things turned dire was laughable.
If the princedoms banded together against him, he’d be alone, outnumbered, and outmaneuvered.
 He clenched his fists, his nails digging into his palms.
The power to revolutionize agriculture was a double-edged sword.
It could elevate his realm to unprecedented prosperity, yes, but it could just as easily paint a target on his back so large that no amount of planning could protect him.
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Alpheo took a deep breath, trying to steady himself.
He was not a coward, nor was he naive.
But as he stood there, staring at the fertile field that promised so much, he couldn’t shake the feeling that this discovery might be the very thing to spell his doom.
Perhaps the safest route is to set up shop,” he thought, the idea gnawing at him like a pest.
“If the other princes could purchase it, then maybe they wouldn’t feel the need to demand it from me outright by threatening war.
I could control its distribution, set the terms, and sell it to those I want.
But as quickly as the thought emerged, it dissolved under the weight of reality.
He couldn’t possibly produce enough fertilizer to meet both his own needs and the insatiable hunger of his neighbors.
Even now, his resources were stretched thin.
The process of composting was labor-intensive, required months of careful tending.
Scaling it to meet the demands of an entire region-or worse, multiple principalities-was impossible.
And then there was the Empire.
If the Romelian regent caught wind of this innovation, they wouldn’t simply request it.
As soon as they bdiscovered that he could not possibly produce enough to meet the empire’s need , he would instead demand it.
Expecting Alpheo to funnel the majority of his production to support their dominion. The Empire’s appetite for resources was unending, and to deny them could bring ruin.
After all their alliance was built on interest, he needed their diplomatic support, and to also have their northern border safe, while the empire used their trade with him to keep their treasure float.
If the interests of one side were threatened or were not convenient anymore, than Alpheo harbored no doubt, that he would have to face the empire in war.
The deeper fear, however, lay not in the empire’s demands but in its ambitions if he gave in .
If the Romelian regent sees this as the key to their dominance, Alpheo thought, what’s to stop them from siding with the coalition instead of opposing it?Either way they would get the secret to produce it…
The Southern princedoms had long been a thorn in its side,so close and yet so distant.
their defiance etched into the history of the land.
Three times the Empire had attempted to extend its dominion over the southern princedoms, and three times it had been repelled by the combined might of all the princes standing together, of course they achieved some victory and conquered some cities, yet by the end they would always be repelled.
But this-this could change everything.
If the Empire gained access to a method to increase their agricultural output by half, or even double it, they wouldn’t need to rely on fractured alliances or precarious logistics.
With granaries overflowing, they could field an army of 30,000 men without breaking a sweat.
A force of that magnitude, unified under a single imperial crown, would sweep across the south like a scythe through wheat.
Alpheo’s stomach turned at the thought.
“It would be the end of us all, me included” Unfortunately for Alpheo, the one thing his dominion lacked was an island-a secluded haven where he could experiment, innovate, and guard his secrets with impunity.
The idea was tantalizing: a self-contained pre-industrial powerhouse, humming with activity day and night.
In his imagination, the island would be a fortress of ingenuity.
With a proper navy patrolling its waters, its perimeter would be impenetrable.
Sleek ships would glide along the coastlines in perpetual watch, their crews trained to spot even the faintest whisper of clandestine activity.
Espionage?
Sabotage?
Forget it.
No rival spy or saboteur could ever hope to slip in unnoticed; the very waves would betray them.
On the island itself, every inch of land would be put to work, be it for fertilizer, soap, alchohol and cider . But alas, no such paradise lay within his grasp.
His dominion was decidedly landlocked, its borders hemmed in by forests, hills, and rivers-not a single speck of an island to his name.
A man can dream, Alpheo thought wryly, kicking a loose clump of dirt as he thought so.
The closest island he could take was Harmway, which unfortunately was a trade hub, which meant that it would be much less profitable to change it as an industrial production center.
Plus to do that he would actively have to go against the Confederation of the Free Isle, and also snatch away land that the Romelians had claims over.
What he had instead were rolling fields, stubborn nobles, and enough political intrigue to fill a library of tragedy plays.
Plus his navy consisted of less than twenty ships at best which meant that going against both Empire and Pirates , was just a fool’s quest.
He brushed a hand through his hair, dislodging bits of dirt that had clung stubbornly to his fingers from his earlier inspection of the soil.
For now, he muttered under his breath, his voice barely audible above the rustling grains, this must be buried deep, .
It wasn’t just the fear of rival princes or the specter of imperial betrayal that weighed on him.
It was the sheer enormity of what he had discovered.
To unlock this secret prematurely, to let it slip into the wrong hands-or even the right ones too soon-could spell disaster not just for him but for countless others.
For now, the fertilizer, this double-edged gift, would have to remain in the depths of his mind, tucked away in the vault of his plans. When the time was right-when he was strong enough, powerful enough, to stand unchallenged-then, and only then, would he unleash its potential.
He sighed again, softer this time, and cast one last look at the fertile field.
“Patience,” he whispered to himself, a word that had become both his anchor and his torment.
When the time comes, the world will know, and perhapse by then I could be a king already.
King in the South…it has a nice ring to it.
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