<h4>Chapter 1332: The Cause of All Mankind</h4>
<strong>Trantor: </strong>Henyee Trantions <strong>Editor: </strong>Henyee Trantions
“My lord, my subordinates have informed me that we have just subjugated Gust Castle, those lowlifes are now fleeing south!” a Junior Demon dered loudly while genuflecting.
“Good job! I’ll report your contributions to the Sky Lord.” Totolock nodded in approval. “Don’t mind the escaping troops for now, keep cutting at the lowlifes’ line of defense towards the east until their army is in aplete disarray!”
“Yes, sir!”
“This battle will give you a chance to upgrade, you need to seize this opportunity and trade their blood for our honor!”
“As youmand!”
After the Junior Demon left, Totolock gave a coldugh and looked at the map provided by the human nobles. “Lord Hackzord is overthinking things, the lowlifes are this and nothing more. Their trap might work once or twice, but it can’t work every time. In the end, strength is what prevails in war. Even if their resistance has grown a lot stronger since four hundred years ago, it can’t make up for the overall gap between the two races.”
“But our losses are not small either.” The tentacles on Siacis’s chin made hissing noises. “In eight days, we have lost almost forty thousand warriors, our front line troops are down thirty percent. If we keep fighting like this, our strength might bepromised subsequently.”
“So what? Haven’t the lowlifes always been stubborn at first before they end up falling apart?” Totolock said indifferently. “Only strong races that can withstand losses can achieve final victory. The western side of Wolfheart is now in our hands, how much longer can the remaining two citiesst? When we start attacking from all directions, they will very quickly lose the will to battle—just like now!”
Siacis didn’t repudiate him.
Although the strength of the humans’ resistance were beyond his expectations, he still agreed with Totolock’s view deep down.
After all, he’d already seen too many stalemate situations copse, like the seemingly solid surface of a frozen river suddenly shattering.
And the cause was usually due to one small crack.
The humans were always most intense in the beginning, but as their losses increased and failures umted, they gradually lost confidence. Internal conflict would emerge and, in the end, they would utterly lose the will to resist. At the start, his race had more losses than humans, but as long as they persisted unrelentingly and oppressed them, the situation would be reversed.
Near the end, it wouldn’t be too much to say that the humans would flee at the mere sight of them.
This wasn’t simply a problem of courage but as Totolock said, the intrinsic gap between the two races.
Humans needed plenty of rest, they needed to eat, to have warm beds and shelters to shield them from the wind, and all these conditions were difficult to satisfy in a war.
He had once closely observed the humans. Right now, he didn’t even need to take a look at their state with his own eyes to imagine how dire their situation was.
By using the Primal Demons like expendables, his race had maintained days of relentless attacks. Adding on his race’s advantage in numbers, it was basically impossible for the humans to get enough rest. Their mental state was likely on the brink of copse, and having sufficient food and rest was impossible.
These unfavorable conditions would gradually eat away at the humans’ morale. The news regarding Metalstone Ridge and Gust Castle would spread through their army sooner orter. Under thebination of these two blows, how long could the Sand City and Sedimentation Bayst?
Meanwhile his race didn’t need such things; both food and rest could be solved by the Red Mist. The more cruel the war was, the clearer the advantage they had over the humans became.
Siacis concurred with Hackzord’s opinion, but he firmly believed that the final victory belonged to the demon race. Humans—not lowlifes, had already performed well enough.
“I will bring the news of victory back with me to the Sky City and leave the subsequent attacks to you,” Siacis said. “Don’t underestimate the humans, use the power we currently have to capture the Kingdom of Wolfheart—At times like this we shouldn’t add any more pressure to our rear.”
Totolock spewed out a breath of hot gas. “Rx, if our troops are not enough, I will fill in the nks myself.”
...
After they retreated to a safe area, Jodel slept for over ten hours.
When he woke up, he felt as if his body was drained of energy and his stomach was protesting in pain. He subconsciously felt at the bag around his waist for his food rations but discovered that the clothes he was wearing had been changed into new ones. His familiar rifle was also gone from beside his bed.
There were around a dozen other wooden beds inside the tent, all of which were empty.
Was this... the field hospital?
His team mates had probably sent him here because when he fainted, his expression under the intense pain brought by the side effects of the Dying Agent was too frightening.
He wondered how Farry was right now.
In order not to expose her identity, she inflicted more damage on the injury on her arm while enduring the agonizing pain to make it lookpletely different. Even if it didn’t threaten her life, it would need a very long time for her to recover.
When he thought about how his battle partner, whom he lived and fought together with for over half of year, was actually a Divine Lady, Jodel felt his cheeks grow hot—He had not felt this way when he was retreating from the Gust Castle.
But his agitation and nervousness was very quickly pushed away by his intense hunger.
If he didn’t eat something soon he felt that he would faint again any time.
Jodel slowly got up from the bed and dragged his feeble body in the direction of the tent’s exit.
To his surprise, just when he pulled apart the curtain, the strong aroma of meat filled his nostrils. The smell was so captivating it was like it came from the heavens.
“You’ve woken?” A nurse very quickly noticed him. “Didn’t the higher-ups tell you? You can’t eat Dying Agents one after the other. If you had eaten one more, you probably wouldn’t have seen the light of the day again. You’re really hungry now aren’t you? I’ll bring you to the canteen.”
After he followed the nurse and entered a huge tent, Jodel almost couldn’t believe his eyes.
Seven or eight metal buckets filled with steaming food were lined up in a row along a long table, from steak to soup—it had it all. Everybody lined up in a queue and passed the long table one by one with containers in their hands. When over half of the food in a bucket had gone, someone would tip more inside—the food was unquestionably made on the spot by the services department.
<i>But... isn’t this too extravagant?</i>
As a past Mojin hunter who often teamed up with other small ns to hunt, he naturally knew how hard it was to provide fresh food for an entire group of people, let alone in times of war! The First Army was clearly short on both men and ammunition, how could they waste their precious transportation equipment on things like this?
Jodel couldn’t help but voice his confusion and the nurse chuckled. “The food wasn’t sent from Graycastle, they came from the cities in the Kingdom of Dawn. And it wasn’t the First Army caravans that transported them but the people you saved.”
“The people... we saved?”
“Yeah.” The tone of the nurse’s voice was gentle and filled with warmth. “Not only are there escapees from Everwinter among them, there are also refugees from Wolfheart. A number of them went to Neverwinter and the remaining wished to stay and do something to help in fending off the demons. They sent this food over here bit by bit by pushing carts and even carrying it on their shoulders.”
Jodel was suddenly at a loss for words.
He had undertaken evacuation jobs before and honestly, the refugees weren’t very cooperative at the start. Often, there would be conflict among them. He had been secretly annoyed about it and even regarded them as incurable idiots. But now, it was precisely those ‘fools’ that brought them hot and freshly cooked food.
“It’s not only the ones who were saved,” the nurse’s tone sounded cheerful, “the merchants in the Kingdom of Dawn have also stood on our side. Not only did they provide several horses, they even voluntarily lowered food prices, which is why everybody can enjoy fresh meat and vegetables here right now.”
She raised her head, looked at Jodel and smiled. “Doesn’t this prove that the battle we’re fighting for all humankind is slowly being epted by everyone? When I think of this, I feel invigorated!”