Valkyrie's Shadow
Chapter 9The Tiger and the Dragon: Act 8,
The Tiger and the Dragon: Act 8, Chapter 9
Chapter 9
This chapter is updatđŽd by freÄwebnovel.com.
8th Day, Lower Water Month, 0 CE
âRanaâer, Maharana Dratha sure is amazingâŚâ
Great, even Xocâs calling him that now.
âIs he?â Saraca asked.
The young Ocelo looked up at him, nose and whiskers twitching slightly.
âHeâs not?â
After taking a look at all of the markets and speaking to the new residents around Corrin â that was what Mitra said the signs called the city, at least â for a couple of days, Saraca decided to head further downriver. According to Khhschlr, the closer to recently-conquered lands they got, the less âorganisedâ Clan Torokghaâs occupation became. With the state of the local Humans as miserable as it was, he could only keep going in hopes that he would find ones in a more regular state.
Their river barge drifted down the Rolâenâgorek at a leisurely pace, surrounded by the deceptively idyllic â to some races, at least â scenery of the occupied Human nation.
âWell,â Saraca asked, âwhat makes him so amazing, in your opinion?â
âHe conquered so much new territory for everyone,â Xoc counted off the pink pads of her right paw. âEveryone seems to respect him and he has Ranas of every race under his banner. Heâs pretty much conquered the Draconic Kingdom, but heâs still preparing for another conquest. Weâre getting stronger all because of Maharana Dratha.â
To the people of Rolâenâgorek, it must have seemed that way. If they were lucky, it would work out the way that they hoped. Their problem now, however, lay not in the conquered states or any small countries that lay in their path. It was in whether their actions would upset the regional powers. Yet, recognition of that problem was entirely absent in the ranks of Clan Torokgha.
One might speculate that it was some form of âvictory diseaseâ from their smooth and successful conquest of the Draconic Kingdom, but if Rana Dratha was truly a Warmaster, he should have been essentially immune to its effects. Another plausible line of thought was that, as with the rest of Rolâenâgorekâs population, Clan Torokgha was simply ignorant of the world beyond their jungle. Either way, the seemingly heedless decision to extend their conquest was further indication that the Warmaster was no Warmaster at all, and any early indications that he was was merely happenstance.
Not that I expected there to be a Warmaster here in the first place.
Then again, he might have just gotten carried away with his speculations, seeing things that werenât actually there. âWarmasterâ may have simply been a title used by people who had no idea what it was, much like so many other things.
âYouâŚyou donât think the same, do you?â Xoc asked him.
âThe answer is more complicated than I can easily convey,â Saraca replied. âTell me: is there anything you donât like about how things are being handled here? Anything that you think you can do better?â
âMe?â The Oceloâs eyes widened, âN-n-n-n-no way! Iâm just a nobody. How could I come up with anything better? Heâs a Warmaster and he has a guru and all those strong Ranas under himâŚâ
âThat doesnât mean you canât have your own thoughts about whatâs going on,â Saraca told her. âConsider it a part of your instruction.â
Xoc fell deep into thought, staring past the starboard railing of their barge. As with the rest of the Rolâenâgorek, the settlements along the shores were cleared of Humans and groups of migrants followed the road west. All of the migrants they had spoken to were completely oblivious to the fact that the conquest of the Draconic Kingdom was almost complete and they would continue their migration beyond where they expected it to end.
âI donât like that thereâs not enough land for the migrants,â Xoc said, âbut that canât be helped, right? They thought the fighting would be harder, so they ended up with more people than they needed. They canât just tell them to go home.â
âThatâs true,â Saraca replied. âBut just because something unexpected happens doesnât mean that youâre absolved of all responsibility. As a Lord, you must lead to the best of your ability no matter what happens.â
âThenâŚwhy are they obsessed with raising Humans as livestock?â
ăWow, right to the main problem.ă
âAs you say, it appears to be some sort of obsession. It could also be something they decided was a good idea in advance and theyâve invested themselves into seeing it through. What would you do in their stead?â
âRaise better livestock. They said that itâs best to slaughter Humans before the age of thirty. Thatâs a long time. Even if they take care of themselves, theyâre still taking up land. Nug are slaughtered after a year and they yield ten times the meat.â
âWhat if Nug canât be raised in this environment?â
âThe Humans have animals too. Or used to. You could smell where they used to keep them. They should be worth raising if the Humans are raising them for the same reason. Uh, Humans eat meat, right?â
âThey can survive on a mix of things,â Saraca replied, âincluding meat.â
He breathed an internal sigh of relief. At least the type of thinking harboured by Clan Torokgha and the migrants to the Draconic Kingdom didnât appear to be natural for the people of Rolâenâgorek as a whole. Or maybe Xoc followed different lines of thought because she had grown up in Ghrkhorâstorofâhekheralhr.
The primitive tribal societies of many races raided their neighbours to secure resources in times of scarcity. It wouldnât be unfair to say that raiding behaviour was one of the pillars of culture that evolved as a civilisation did. The thing was that raiding usually didnât evolve into more raiding after a certain point. It tended to just become âworkingâ.
Raiding was essentially importing resources from outside of oneâs territory through forceful means. When new territories were acquired, one usually did not go from raiding the neighbours to ranching the neighbours because they were no longer neighbours consuming externally-sourced resources. They were taking up internal resources that could be more efficiently utilised doing other things, making them go from assets to liabilities depending on how they were employed.
âThen why didnât you tell them that what they were doing was wrong?â Xoc said, âYou didnât like it, right? I thought you would get angry. I mean, you didnât look mad, but I could tell you were mad. Mad without getting mad.â
ăGrrâŚwhen did this girl become so attentive to youâŚă
Saraca winced as Mitraâs claws dug into his right arm. Why was he always the one getting hurt when others were the source of her jealousy?
âFirst of all,â Saraca replied, âmy job out here doesnât involve telling people what to do unless I see that itâs to my governmentâs advantage somehow. That includes the instruction that youâve been receiving. Secondly, they wouldnât listen anyway.â
âThey wouldnât? But that guru knows where youâre from.â
âTheyâre heavily invested in their âworkâ,â Saraca said. âItâs something that theyâve been planning for decades to accomplish. Furthermore, itâs an achievement â one that theyâve spilt blood over. Dissuading them from their path would be an exercise in futility. They have to come to their own realisations. As for getting angryâŚthat would be hypocritical of me and perhaps harmful to them.â
âWhy?â
He looked out over the carefully cultivated landscape of the Draconic Kingdom, trying to imagine what Clan Torokghaâs conquest had been like. It was often said that history repeated itself, and Saraca would be hard-pressed to deny the assertion.
âThe Beastman Confederation is very old by the standards of most civilisations on the continent. Weâve done many things over the course of our development, and we rarely came up with the right answers the moment we decided to do something or were faced with a problem.â
âSo you did Human ranching as well?â
âAmong other things,â Saraca replied. âHistory is never only filled with things that one can be proud of, but learning from our mistakes is often more important than being told the right answers. If one never learns from their mistakes, they are doomed to repeat them, and if one is afraid to make mistakes, one will eventually get stuck. The mistakes that countries make have far greater consequences than personal ones, which is why countries are better off making those mistakes early on.â
âSome mistakes can just kill you,â Xoc said. âYouâll never get a chance to learn from those.â
âThatâs true as well,â he admitted. âBut mistakes that can destroy a country are usually part of a long line of mistakes. There are also mistakes such as getting on the bad side of Ancient Dragons and the like, but I think most races have a natural aversion to angering entities of that calibre. They cease to exist otherwise.â
âThenâŚare these Humans making a âmistakeâ as well? One that they have to learn from?â
âWe still know very little about the Humans living in this part of the world,â Saraca said. âBeyond that, there is never only one answer to a problem, and an answer that serves in one situation may not in another. Thatâs why my instruction is so vague: I can only guide you to an answer that works for you and your people, and coming to your own realisations will help you face future problems.â
Their next stop along the Rolâenâgorek was a city that looked slightly smaller than Corrin. A few kilometres from its walls, a Baagh official waved wildly at them from the northern shore. He shouted out to them as they drew close.
âDonât bring your ship any further than this!â
âDid something happen?â Devi asked.
âItâs the end of the land managed by Clan Torokgha,â the official answered. âPast this point, migrants are responsible for their own security. Most boats going past the next city donât survive, so itâs strongly suggested that you go by land from here.â
âThey donât survive?â Saraca furrowed his brow, âDo you mean they get attacked by Humans? Or is there a territorial tribe living in the water?â
âItâs the Humans. We can thrash them on land, but fighting them on the water is something else. Well, itâs not so much fighting as them ramming their ships into ours. Itâs a waste of two good ships. Ohâif youâre leaving that boat for good, Clan Torokgha will purchase it from you.â
They moored their vessel under a willow tree that dangled over the water. The official gave Saraca and his entourage an appraising look.
âYouâre a bit overequipped for the Draconic Kingdom,â he said.
âWe didnât know what to expect,â Devi said. âThe criers upriver talk about land and opportunity, but little about what it costs to obtain.â
âThatâs fair, I guess. Since youâve gone to all that trouble to prepare, Iâll do you a favour and let you in on somethingâŚâ
âWhatâs that?â
The official leaned forward with a conspiratory air.
âThe Draconic Kingdom isnât the end of our migration,â he said in a low voice. âWeâre going to take the Human lands on the other side of the water, as well. Once the monsoon season is over, weâll make the crossing.â
âThe other migrants donât know about this?â
âClan Torokgha will let them know soon enough. For now, weâve spread them out so they can feed on the Humans while they wait. Otherwise, theyâd be crowding the shores to be the first ones across â some idiots may even try to make the crossing on their own and thatâd warn the Humans on the other side.â
âI see. In that case, weâll keep the information to ourselves. Thank you for letting us know.â
Even when they try to be âhelpfulâ, theyâre presumptuousâŚwe didnât even say that we were migrants.
It was another symptom of the so-called âvictory diseaseâ he had noted since entering the Draconic Kingdom. The fruits of victory were tumbling into their paws too quickly, and a collective sense of power, control and destiny had fallen over the conquerors. Their words and actions were heedless and only saw their version of ârealityâ.
âLooks like weâre finally getting somewhere,â Girika said.
Saraca focused his gaze on the city skyline ahead.
âWhat do you mean?â
âThat city still has Humans living in it,â the Inquisitor replied. âThereâs too much smoke for it to be these local Beastmen.â
ââŚthen where are the Beastmen?â
âThere are a bunch running security on the city walls,â Girika said. âPretty sure everyone else is âspread outâ like that pompous official said.â
âAre we going in?â Devi asked.
âThis is exactly what weâre here for,â Saraca answered. âItâs more than we hoped for, even.â
The entrance of Rivergarden lay wide open â or rather, it had been broken open. Pieces of gate and portcullis lay scattered outside the walls. A few dozen Humans were active just inside, but they scattered at his entourageâs approach.
How do we beginâŚ
There was no reason for the Humans to assume that they were anyone other than the Beastmen that were taking over their territory. Some things, however, didnât require the cooperation of the locals.
âWhat do you think, Devi?â
âAssuming these Humans were subjected to the same calamity that befell Rolâenâgorek,â his first wife said, âtheyâve recovered remarkably quickly. Itâs nothing one would expect of a Human nation this far from the centres of civilisation.â
âDid they receive support, or is it simply the result of trade?â
âI couldnât say until we have a better idea of the region.â
âGirika,â Saraca said. âSee if you canât acquire a map from the locals.â
âSure thing.â
The Inquisitor entered a nearby alley and vanished. Mitra concealed herself as Saraca made his way further into the city. The Chaaran went ahead of them, peeking into the doors and windows of the buildings. She returned to his side when they reached the central plaza.
âItâs quiet,â she said, âbut the workshops are still running, making what necessities theyâre allowed to. The people here are hiding a lot of things from casual observation, though.â
âI wonder how many Beastmen get stabbed here,â Girika said as he appeared beside him. âI got your map.â
âWhere did you find it?â
âAn abandoned estate. The âconquerorsâ took all the shinies away, but they left a lot of other goodies behind.â
After Saraca received the map, the Inquisitor produced several more articles. He held up a roll of vellum towards Mitra.
âCheck this out.â
Mitraâs lips moved silently before she described the content aloud.
âThis isâŚa futures contract? For twenty thousand barrels of wine. Delivery is due onâŚit looks like they use a run-of-the-mill elemental calendar, but Iâm not sure how their dates line up with ours. Theyâre in the northern hemisphere, so it should be upside down?â
Devi leaned in to examine the parchment.
âItâs not in the script used by Merchants along the Sapphire Coast,â she said, âbut the format is the same. How much more of this was there in that estate?â
âWho knows,â Girika replied. âIt was all over the floor.â
The Merchantâs mouth fell open in horror. Rolâenâgorekâs victorious migrants had no idea that they had probably left tens of thousands of platinum trade coins on the floor, instead taking whatever pieces of art and metalwork they thought had value. The contracts had no intrinsic value on their own, so their Merchants wouldnât be able to discern their worth.
âWell, itâs not as if the parties involved can complete the transaction now,â Mitra said with a shrug. âGimme that map, ji.â
Saraca placed the map into Mitraâs grasping claws. Her eyes hungrily devoured the details inked upon it.
âSlane TheocracyâŚKingdom of Re-EstizeâŚBaharuth EmpireâŚCity State Alliance of KarnassusâŚoh, thereâs the Great Northern Steppe.â
âDid you see any Minotaur technology while you were in there?â Saraca asked.
âI did, actually,â Girika replied. âThey had a few fridges and freezers on the lowest floor. The things looked pretty out of place, so they were probably imported.â
Still, it confirmed trade links with the Minos League, and if there were trade links, there would also be intelligence agents. How safe would it be to head north? The presence of Confederacy delegates would likely spur the Leagueâs Expeditionary Vanguard to drastically step up their operations in the region, and the Confederacy wasnât ready to keep them in check.
âWhat are the distances marked on the map?â
âMmhâŚâ Mitra tilted her head sideways, âitâs a Merchant map, so it only shows route distances. Letâs seeâŚthe lake between the Draconic Kingdom and the Slane Theocracy is a hundred kilometres across at the most. Thereâs no direct route to the Baharuth Empire from the Draconic Kingdom. The only way north is from the Theocracy, going up this highway two hundred kilometres to a city called E-Rantel in the Kingdom of Re-Estize.â
Mitra wandered over to a nearby bench in the plaza, placing the map upon it. Everyone gathered around.
âThe highway splits there,â she traced a road on the map with a claw, âgoing east to the Baharuth Empire, the City State Alliance and eventually to the Great Northern Steppe. It goes west through Re-Estize to this Holy Kingdom of Roble in the southwest and the Argland Confederation in the northwest. Thereâs a lot of stuff on this map, but itâs pretty small. Assuming these maritime routes mark the coastline accurately, it looks like you can squish everything west of the City State Alliance into Rolâenâgorek.â
Did that mean Clan Torokghaâs ambitions were actually feasible? If the region was broken up into many small states, they could each potentially be crushed by the weight of Rolâenâgorekâs migrants alone.
âDoes it say anything about the races that live in the region?â
âNo. Assuming that Khhschlr is correct about the Slane Theocracy, the fact that it has a trade route running north means that the Kingdom of Re-Estize is probably a Human state. Humans being Humans, I wouldnât be surprised if this region was all Human.â
âDonât forget about what Khhschlr said about the Draconic Kingdomâs northern border,â Karuvaki said.
âThe persistent negative energy zone, huh,â Saracaâs eyes went to the blank space on the map that the trade routes circumvented. âWait, isnât this too big? I wouldnât be surprised if Death Knights and Soul Eaters popped out of there.â
âTheyâre Humans,â Girika said offhandedly. âI bet you theyâre dumping.â
Faces around the bench twisted in disgust.
âYou canât be serious!â Karuvaki said, âIf they want to commit mass suicide, they can do it without involving everyone else.â
Negative energy dumping was a practice that was considered taboo around the world. Civilisations that cared little for the world beyond themselves would designate areas to settle their disputes through warfare, effectively âdumpingâ negative energy. To them, negative energy zones were simply a convenience. They didnât know or care that they were contributing to the growth of an unnatural blight.
Countries caught dumping negative energy were censured by the international community. If they persisted, they would be destroyed before their actions put the entire region at risk. Removing a negative energy zone once it became persistent was an expensive and time-consuming effort.
âLooking at it from another angle,â Saraca said. âIt also means that the countries surrounding this negative energy zone have the means to destroy whatever comes out of itâŚor maybe they donât.â
âMake up your damn mind,â Girika said. âWhat the hell does that last part mean?â
âRana Dratha expected more substantial resistance from the Draconic Kingdom,â Saraca replied. âSince they didnât encounter it, I was thinking that it had been coincidentally lost in a conflict with another country. But with this negative energy zone being as large as it is, they may have been lost fighting something powerful that spawned there.â
âThese guys are in for a nice surprise if thatâs the case.â
âThereâs no sense of alarm from the Draconic Kingdomâs Humans related to anything like that,â Saraca said, âso a coalition of surrounding states may have taken care of the problem. At least I hope so.â
âShouldnât you let Clan Torokgha know about this?â Xoc asked, âThe Undead are everyoneâs enemy.â
âItâs a speculative warning at best, but weâll let Khhschlr know on the way back through Corrin. The migrants are decentralised past this point, so anything insubstantial wonât get anywhere.â
Mitra packed away the map and Saraca looked around the plaza. Unfortunately, the Humans there had vacated the area so there was no one to speak to.
âA city centre should have some offices,â he said. âDoes anyone see anything familiar?â
âThereâs a Merchant Guild office over there,â Devi pointed to the western end of the plaza. âWould you like me to take a look? Actually, I needed a place to deposit everything I made from Rolâenâgorek.â
ââŚdo you really think theyâll take your deposit?â
âWhy not? The Merchant Guild is the Merchant Guild.â
They silently followed Devi across the plaza, leaving most of the house guard at the bottom of the officeâs front stairs. Saraca and Mitra ducked to fit under the doorframe as they made their way inside. The buildingâs occupants scattered at their entry.
Undaunted, Devi walked up to the reception counter, ringing the service bell. Xoc jumped at the sound.
âWhat does that do?â She asked.
âIt summons a friendly clerk from the Merchant Guild,â Devi said in a slightly loud voice. âThe Merchant Guild is an international organisation that facilitates the business of its hundreds of millions of members.â
The Oceloâs eyes grew wide.
âHundreds ofâŚis the world being taken over by Merchants?â
âThatâs right,â Devi answered with a nod. âMerchants make the world go round.â
âWhile that last part might be metaphorically true,â Saraca said. âTheyâre only a small percentage of the worldâs population.â
Devi rang the bell again. Frantic whispering rose from deeper within the office, followed by a resigned sigh. A balding Human in a familiar uniform rose from behind a desk, walking up on unsteady steps.
âThe old and infirm sacrificing themselves,â Girika said, âkarma ratings are through the roof.â
âWeâre not here to eat them,â Devi shot the Inquisitor a sidelong glance. âIâm here to make a deposit.â
Devi produced heavy sacks of precious metals and gems, lining them up on the counter. The old clerkâs gaze crossed over them. He swallowed.
âTheâŚthe Merchant Guild reserves the right to refuse deposits of illegally-acquired assets.â
âTheyâre not illegal!â Devi growled, âI spent the last two months trading the length and breadth of Rolâenâgorek for this. Theyâre not familiar with the organisation, so there was nowhere to deposit my earnings.â
She fished out her account book and placed it on the counter, tapping it with a claw.
âIâm an upstanding member of the Guild. You canât refuse me service.â
The clerk hesitantly reached out to take the account book. His eyes widened as he leafed through the pages. It was no small wonder: Devi was probably wealthy enough to buy the entire Draconic Kingdom â before it had been invaded â outright.
âWhere did you last update this?â He asked.
âStormport.â
ââŚplease bear with us.â
After the clerk turned and disappeared into the office, Saraca let out a snort.
âI canât believe that worked.â
âOf course it worked,â Devi furrowed her brow at him. âBut the deposit wonât go through.â
âWhy not?â
âThose Merchants that scattered,â Girika said. âTheyâre all using paper.â
âSo itâs not safe to hold physical assets because the new management is stealing them.â
âSomething like that.â
âSavages,â Devi muttered. âNever mind any regional threats: when the Guild hears about this, theyâll obliterate Rolâenâgorek.â
âTheyâre Merchants, right?â Xoc tucked her tail between her legs.
âDonât look down on Merchants,â Devi told her. âSnuffing out lawless savages is all in a dayâs work for those who maintain the financial and economic systems of the world.â
âSo weâre doomed,â Xocâs whiskers drooped.
âItâs something that would happen in stages,â Mitra said. âFirst, theyâll contain Rolâenâgorek, then engineer the downfall of the ruling castes. After that, theyâll replace them with new overlords that will enforce civilised conduct upon the native population!â
The Chaaranâs dramatic voice rose with every sentence, and she lifted her paws in a grandiose way at the last. Xoc visibly wilted, cringing behind Saraca.
âStop scaring the poor girl,â he said.
âYou think they wouldnât finance a punitive expedition?â Devi said, âHardly anyone would care about a country beyond the edge of nowhere being crushed. Especially one that crossed the Merchant Guild.â
The clerk returned with a binder in hand. As the Merchant Guild was an international organisation, it faced certain challenges from region to region. While the format of their documentation was standardised and numbers were easily decipherable, language barriers posed a problem and the guild had developed protocols for dealing with them.
âWeâve recognised your membership with the Guild,â the clerk said, âbut we canât take your deposit. Nothing against you in particular, of course â itâs just that the occupying forces have no respect for private property. Our branch was ransacked shortly after Rivergarden fell, so we canât guarantee the security of your deposits.â
âI see,â Devi sighed. âWell, it was worth the attempt. Iâll just have to carry this all around until I return to the Sapphire Coast.â
âSince youâll be headed that way,â the clerk produced a sealed envelope, âwould you be so kind as to deliver this to the Stormport branch?â
âIt would be my pleasure,â Devi replied. âSince weâre here, could you answer some questions we have about the Draconic Kingdom? About its industrial and economic situation in particular. Before this invasion, of course.â
The clerk, now more visibly relaxed, leaned against the counter and nodded.
âSure, why not,â he said. âThose other Beastmen have been sizing us up recently, so I donât know how much time we have left. But weâll have to entertain you in the back. Canât have what little business that remains frightened off.â