Armed Summoners - Black Spears and the Brave Men of the Other World

Episode Two Thousand Three Hundred and ninety-one: The Battle of the Valley of Oath (XI)

Mills, along with five thousand men under him, followed Setuna and stormed into the Eastern Imperial Army position, but there were no battle-like fights during the period leading up to the main line.

Because Setuna went around destroying the position with unimaginable force, and the terrible storm of destruction thrust the Eastern Imperial Army to the bottom of the terror, which was being disrupted by the failure of the waterfall. A tent called the tent in the position was blown away by a pitch-black spear and a number of attacks weaved by armor, and a fence called the fence was smashed. The brave soldiers who tried to intercept Setuna have, however, been beaten without even being able to touch Setuna.

Mills never knew the battlefield. Since the time of his predecessors, he gained practical experience by crusading the Imperial Demon and knew and understood what battle was like by means of repeated exercises. He's also been through a world war. But none of the fights he's ever been through showed a battle like Setuna, and I couldn't imagine a one-sided fight by a handful so far.

The only strength that seemed to be good for Setsuna was that not only Mills, but even Mills' escorted armed summoners lost their words, and they were uniformly stunned, and some of them even fell in love with Setsuna's strength. So much so that Setuna's power is immense, and I'm glad it's even absolute.

Of course, with the Eastern Imperial Army, I wasn't sitting down and watching the destruction of the position. Nothing stood up to Setuna resolutely, and the armed summoners mobilized by the Eastern Imperial Army for this battle seemed to concentrate all their power when they realized Setuna was the first opponent they had to defeat. But Setuna kicked it over.

Armor sleeves touch.

Mills, who had no fine dust, such as doubting the power of the Empire's armed summoners, had to reconsider more or less if he saw the power difference to the despair that lay between him and Setuna.

Bad opponent.

I think so, but it will eventually become clear that Setsuna is not the only one who is apparently strong.

This operation of assaulting the Eastern Imperial Army positions from the north and south, naturally, besides the Setuna and Mills who attacked from the south, there are troops who attacked the enemy from the north. It was the armed summoners under Setuna, and the strength of those armed summoners could only be compared to the armed summoners of the Empire. The Eastern Imperial Army position was instantly devastated and the Eastern Imperial Army General was in such a state of havoc that it was not only the activity of one Setuna, but also a force of immense power pushed in from the north.

The armed summoners under Setuna will also destroy the Eastern Imperial Army positions while showing strength far above the Eastern Imperial Army armed summoners, exerting total control over the enemy soldiers coming up against them.

The Mills should have gone as far as the deserted wilderness, but they should have made their way to the enemy formation.

That, then, is gratifying.

The fact that only five thousand people could be brought in due to the structure of the ship had caused Mills considerable anxiety. Whatever, tens of thousands of enemy soldiers are attacking inside enemy positions. He had lost a lot on the number and could not possibly be a contender from the edge. Regardless, there was no doubt that a failure to attack the water would create confusion for the enemy, and attacking there as an opportunity is not an incomprehensible measure. Rather, it is a far more successful and trustworthy tactic than Mills' proposed measures. But still, the opponents are only imperial soldiers. If we preempt enemy attacks, such as confusion, we will recover to our positions. And would it be easy to destroy tens of thousands of troops in front of them, such as about 5,000?

Such anxiety was worrying him as he headed to the main unit.

None of the five thousand men under Mills were missing, traveling north within the Eastern Imperial Army position, changing course along the way and east. The main battalion was on a hilltop stretching to the east of the position. The Mills were never attacked, either on the road to the hill or while climbing the hill. The only thing that could have been called Mills' job was to order him to detain a general of the Eastern Imperial Army who had just been beaten down and lost his mind. That's about it, he had nothing to do. Lightly enough to clap out, we reach the enemy formation.

Once we get to the main unit, thousands of generals are lying on the ground without a voice. Setsuna. Setsuna knocked me down. The elites who stood up to the main battalion were powerless before Setuna, who was left alone. Life and death are unknown, but given what has happened so far, who hasn't died alone?

He fought in a way that, as a favor from the Emperor, he would do as little as possible to kill people.

Given the difference in force, it shouldn't be a situation where he thinks about it, but he doesn't want to lose words, either, because he's doing it without such common sense or anything. In fact, it serves the purpose of making no difference in force, not killing enemies, and rendering enemy forces powerless. That's not true of the enemy.

And Setuna, by the way, apparently hasn't sustained one wound.

One, confronting a young woman. From that glittering armor, I could imagine her being the commander of this army, and as soon as I approached her, I knew what it was.

Mina-Zaion.

She is the belly sister of Mills and the ninth princess of the previous emperor. Age will be twenty-three this year. This would mean that Mills and I are fourteen years apart, but his older brother or sister is not otherwise rare to him. But Mina was sometimes the youngest of Mills and her belly brothers, and both Mizgaris and Mills were even more adorable about her. Even Mizgaris, a difficulty man, would have sometimes drowned just saying that it didn't hurt to put Mina in his eyes, a distant sister of his age. That's where Mills admits it, as a matter of fact.

I suspect that Mina grew up to be the owner of such a highly temperamental personality because of the influence of Mizgaris, but on second thought, perhaps the influence of her mother is far stronger. Including myself, the Millwoods child never felt like he had a personality problem.

In that regard, how about Niewe and Nina, the sons of Nilsara, the Millwoods maids?

Niewe and others were far more personable than Mizgaris and others. He didn't blame Mills, even though he understood that Mills was losing a political dispute with Mizgaris and was trying to reckon with Niewe and create a rival force as if it were a return of interest. I decided that was for the imperial subjects and rather praised Mills for what he was trying to do. I guess I got up because I couldn't let the country be left to the bad guys who pretend to be emperors like Mizgaris, and let Mills justify what he did. As he touched the magnitude of Neewe's instrumentality, he became ashamed of his shallowness and revered Neewe as emperor in a true sense.

That's why we couldn't lose to Mizgaris, and we couldn't give Western Imperial territory to the Eastern Imperial Army led by Mizgaris.

I'd rather die than surrender to Mizgaris.

Otherwise, I can't apologize to His Majesty Emperor Niewehein for bringing something like himself to life.

That thought was driving Mills.

That's why he wanted to entrust everything to a special attack that didn't even hate his death.

But his thoughts were cut off as useless.

It's pointless to do that, he said.

Kneewehein was in the dark that surviving shame and devoting himself to the Empire was what the royal family should look like.

Niewehein's request to Sethna not to kill as many General of the Eastern Empire as possible, an enemy nation, is a manifestation of his vision for the distant future, where there is the sight of the dawn when the imperial territory was united.

The sight of the imperial subjects singing their daily routines together.

There, naturally, should also be the appearance of hostile and hateful brothers, even if temporarily Mills descended on the enemy, it had nothing to do with it.

Niewehein's horizons are far wider than Mills' and look extremely far away.

When he understood the fact, he was convinced that it was not a mistake to deduce Neewe, and at the same time he was embarrassed enough to tremble at his shallowness.

That's why he tried not to speak up to Mina, who lost his power and stood up.