Reborn as a Hated Noble Family, We Start an Industrial Revolution

Chapter 169: THE GENERAL’S LAST WORDS



Chapter 169: THE GENERAL’S LAST WORDS

​10:30 AM. The sun climbed higher into the sky.

​In Northveil, the remnants of Rudigor’s forces—approximately seven thousand cyborgs—were making a desperate last stand in the northern fortress. But the encirclement was absolute. From the west came Leofric and his remaining tanks. From the east, Thorne and his infantry. From the south, Zoldrak with 201 dragons. And from the heavens, Seraphina with 127.

​There was no escape.

​Rudigor stood in the center of his dwindling legion. His face was streaked with blood—his own, from wounds he hadn’t time to tend. Yet his eyes still burned with an unyielding fire. Even after Martin’s fall. Even after Drayk had been reduced to slag. Even after Arctus had plummeted. Even as Varkon, at his side, began to recalculate the grim probabilities.

​"My Lord," Varkon said, his mechanical eyes whirring with data. "The probability of victory... three percent."

​Rudigor laughed. It wasn’t the laughter of a madman, but of a general who had seen too many battlefields to fear the end.

​"Three percent?" He hoisted his hammer. "Enough."

​Varkon didn’t reply. He simply activated his weapon systems.

​The final assault erupted simultaneously.

​Leofric struck from the west, his tanks grinding forward. The 105mm Wolf-Tusk cannons roared. One cyborg shattered. Two. Three. Four. Five. But Rudigor was no stationary target. He lunged—a massive, gravity-defying leap—directly toward the lead tank.

​CRASH!

​It was the fourth tank he had pulverized that morning. The crew—Leofric didn’t know if they had survived.

​"Rudigor!" Leofric shouted over the radio. "He’s still a monster!"

​Thorne, hearing the report from the east, raised his Sudrath Spear.

​"ADVANCE! DO NOT STOP!"

​His infantry surged, their Sudrath Spears barking in unison. Cyborgs fell in droves. But Varkon was there, his aim lethal and unerring. Thirty, forty, fifty soldiers fell in a heartbeat. Thorne gnashed his teeth, his eyes narrowing.

​"Don’t falter! KEEP MOVING!"

​In the sky, Seraphina and Zoldrak were not idle. They descended not as majestic creatures, but as a living storm.

​"STRIKE!" Seraphina screamed.

​Dragons unleashed torrents of fire. Cyborgs melted under the searing blue flames. Yet Rudigor held firm. Varkon remained precise.

​"Zoldrak!" Seraphina called out. "Support the ground! I’ll hold the sky!"

​Zoldrak nodded. The 201 dragons flew low, raining hellfire upon Rudigor’s position. Fire was everywhere. Cyborgs burned, melted, and disintegrated.

​Still, the battle hung in a precarious balance.

​The cyborgs possessed no fear. They marched forward, firing and resisting. More dragons fell—one, two, three. More tanks were reduced to scrap. More soldiers perished—dozens, then hundreds.

​But no one retreated.

​Leofric, inside his tank, watched Rudigor demolish a seventh armored unit. His fists clenched white.

​"Gideon, we’re losing too many!"

​Gideon checked the data. "But they are losing more. Rudigor is isolated. Varkon is nearing exhaustion."

​Leofric gritted his teeth. "Forward. Don’t stop."

​Thorne, on the front line, had already lost a hundred men. But he did not yield. He kept firing, kept advancing, his voice a hoarse roar.

​"THEY’RE RUNNING DRY! MOVE!"

​Atop the eastern skyscraper, Borch remained in the same position.

​He hadn’t moved since the previous night, save for shifting between rooftops. Since Martin died. Since the battle began. His right leg was numb. His hands trembled—not from fear, but from sheer physical exhaustion. His eyes stung from the acrid smoke, and his ears rang with the unending thunder of explosions.

​Dom, beside him, whispered, "Borch. Can you still do this?"

​Borch didn’t answer. He simply adjusted his scope with glacial slowness. In the distance, he saw Varkon. Still there. Still firing. Still directing the metal legion.

​He held his breath.

​The distance was immense—far beyond standard operational parameters. But it was within the lethal reach of his Gauss Rifle.

​He waited.

​A breeze drifted from the east. The projectile’s velocity needed a slight adjustment. His heart rate—it had to be slow, agonizingly slow.

​Dom fell silent. He knew.

​One minute. Two. Three.

​Five minutes. Seven.

​Borch’s breathing became a mere ghost of a sigh. His heart slowed. The world around him dissolved. There was only the crosshair and Varkon.

​Varkon paused for a fraction of a second. He turned—as if something had prickled his sensors. As if he knew.

​But it was too late.

​Borch pulled the trigger.

​A faint, magnetic hiss.

​The projectile streaked through the ruins. Through the smoke. Past dozens of cyborgs. Through a hairline gap between two piles of rubble.

​It struck Varkon directly in the head.

​THUD.

​Varkon fell. He didn’t move. His mechanical eye flickered once—then went dark. His tall, angular frame collapsed onto the debris, never to rise again.

​Rudigor turned. He saw Varkon—his right hand, the last of his inner circle—slumped in the dirt.

​He didn’t scream. He didn’t rage. He simply stopped. For the first time that morning, the General was still.

​He looked toward the eastern building—the source of the shot.

​"You..." he murmured.

​Dom, on the roof, watched Varkon’s fall. He patted Borch on the shoulder. He didn’t speak. He didn’t need to.

​Borch exhaled a long, shuddering breath. His hands still shook. His eyes still burned. But a thin, almost invisible smile touched his lips.

​"Target eliminated."

​Without Varkon’s tactical link, the cyborgs fell into disarray.

​Commandless and aimless, they moved as individuals, becoming easy prey. Thorne and his infantry surged forward. Leofric’s tanks began to squeeze the life out of the formation. The dragons descended even lower.

​Rudigor still stood. But his army was evaporating.

​From seven thousand, to five. To three. To one. To five hundred. To a hundred.

​Finally, he stood alone amidst the ruins.

​Leofric halted his tanks. Thorne stopped his infantry. Zoldrak and the dragons hovered in the sky, watching. Seraphina circled above, waiting.

​Rudigor looked around. No cyborgs remained. Only him. Debris was everywhere. Smoke choked the air. Fires still licked at the distant ruins.

​He laughed.

​It wasn’t a mad laugh, or one of despair. It was the laugh of a general who knew his war was over. A laugh that erupted from a chest that had carried too many burdens for too long.

​He hoisted his hammer—still intact, still powerful, still lethal. His steam armor hissed, venting the last of the pressure he had never released.

​"YOU THINK YOU HAVE WON?" he roared, his voice echoing through the ruins like thunder. It bounced off shattered walls, a ghostly boom. "EMPEROR REGULUS WILL AVENGE MY DEATH! HE WILL CONQUER THIS CONTINENT!"

​He lunged. Directly at the front line—where Thorne stood.

​It was a high, desperate jump. His massive frame soared through the air, hammer in hand, his semi-optic eye glowing a fierce red.

​Thorne saw him coming. He didn’t retreat. His hands gripped the Sudrath Spear.

​"THORNE!" Elian screamed from behind. "GET BACK!"

​Thorne didn’t move.

​He raised his weapon. Aimed. Waited.

​Rudigor drew closer. Ten meters. Five. Two.

​Thorne fired.

​BANG!

​The first shot struck Rudigor’s shoulder. His steam armor cracked, pressurized vapor screaming out. But he didn’t stop.

​BANG!

​The second shot hit his gut. Rudigor faltered in mid-air, but his momentum carried him.

​BANG! BANG! BANG!

​Three more shots. Chest, arm, thigh.

​Rudigor fell. He didn’t just land; he dropped like a stone, hitting the earth with a violent impact. Dust billowed.

​He wasn’t dead. He was still moving, still trying to rise. His hand reached for the hammer lying in the dirt beside him.

​Thorne gave him no quarter. He stepped forward, Sudrath Spear in hand, and continued to fire.

​BANG! BANG! BANG! BANG! BANG!

​Rudigor collapsed again. He didn’t rise. He didn’t move.

​Thorne stood over him. His breathing was ragged. His chest heaved. His hands shook—not from fear, but from the raw surge of adrenaline.

​He lowered his weapon.

​"For Northveil," he whispered. "For Garrick. For everyone you butchered."

​He fired one last time, for certainty.

​BANG.

​Rudigor was still.

​Thorne let out a long breath. He turned to his men. Only a hundred soldiers remained of the original eight hundred. They stood amongst the husks of cyborgs, amidst the rubble and the rising smoke.

​"Dead," he said. "Rudigor is dead."

​At the command hill, the report arrived.

​Hektor read the pager with trembling hands. "Rudigor is dead."

​Rianor didn’t answer. He simply stared at the map. The red dots that had once swarmed the screen were now nothing but ash.

​He remembered the first time he had looked at this map. Weeks ago, when they first arrived at Northveil. The red dots were overwhelming—hundreds of thousands of them.

​Now, the red was gone.

​Hektor took a deep breath. "Is it... over?"

​Rianor didn’t respond immediately. He gazed toward the north. There, in the shattered fortress, amidst the smoke and dust, Rudigor was gone.

​He reached into his pocket. His fingers brushed the Snow Chrysanthemum petal—still there, still warm.

​"Not yet," he replied softly. "But for now... it is enough."

​On the battlefield, the troops began to cheer.

​Their voices were hoarse and weary, but filled with an electric spirit. They raised their weapons, slapped each other’s shoulders, and laughed through their tears.

​"WE WON!" a young soldier screamed.

​"NORTHVEIL IS OURS!" another roared.

​Leofric climbed out of his tank. Gideon stood beside him, still clutching his tablet.

​"What are you recording now?" Leofric asked.

​"Casualties. Damage. Remaining ammunition." Gideon didn’t look up. "We must report everything to Lord Rianor."

​Leofric laughed—a sound he hadn’t made in a long time. "You never change, Gideon."

​Gideon shrugged. "It’s my duty."

​Thorne stood beside Rudigor’s corpse. He lowered his Sudrath Spear, letting the tip touch the dirt.

​Elian approached. "Captain. We won."

​Thorne nodded. "We won."

​He looked at Rudigor one last time. The General of the Iron Empire who had nearly destroyed them. Who had brought hundreds of thousands of cyborgs. Who had nearly trapped them twice.

​Now, he was nothing but a pile of iron and flesh in the dirt.

​"Garrick," Thorne whispered. "Did you see that? We’ve avenged you."

​In the sky, Seraphina flew low.

​Her eyes searched—searching for something that wasn’t there. Roland wasn’t here. Roland was in Iron Heart, waiting.

​She offered a faint smile.

​"We won," she whispered. "I’m coming home."

​Zoldrak flew beside her. The ancient dragon exhaled a long, heavy breath.

​"This war... it reminds me of battles from centuries ago."

​Seraphina looked at him. "Did you win then?"

​"I survived." Zoldrak smiled—a rare expression for the old beast. "That is enough."

​At the command hill, Rianor remained standing.

​He didn’t descend to the battlefield. He didn’t need to. He had seen it all from here. The tanks coming to a halt. The infantry cheering. The dragons gliding slowly through the sky.

​He reached into his pocket one more time. The petal was still there. Intact. Warm.

​He remembered the hospital garden. He remembered Elara in her wheelchair, the Snow Chrysanthemum in her hand. He remembered the promise he had made.

​"Once I have reclaimed Northveil, I will marry Elara immediately."

​Rianor smiled.

​It wasn’t a smile of victory. It wasn’t a smile of satisfaction. It was the smile of a man who had kept his word.

​Hektor said, "We have to rebuild the city."

​Rianor nodded. "We will rebuild it. Better than it was."

​He looked toward the south—toward Iron Heart. Elara was waiting there. His family was waiting.

​"Home," he murmured. "Now, I can go home."

​On the battlefield, the troops were still cheering.

​But Rianor no longer heard them.

​He had already closed his eyes, imagining the day he would stand beside Elara, take her hand, and say, "I’m home."

​In the distance, the sun continued to rise.

​Northveil had returned.


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