In the ruined capital of Qingyang, Liu Dai paced the governor's mansion like a caged tiger, fists clenched behind his back.
Every passing hour felt like another knife pressed against his throat. He had already lost fifteen thousand men without a single proper battle. He would not lose the rest.
Thirty-five thousand soldiers remained — hardened veterans, sect disciples, and clan warriors who had survived the mysterious losses of the last two weeks. Yet forging this force into a single, decisive hammer blow would take time.
Wagons had to be loaded with grain, arrows, and spare armor. Horses needed fresh shoes. Supply lines to the newly captured cities had to be secured, or the army would starve on the march.
They would need two full days to ready themselves. Two days filled with barked orders, the groan of straining axles, and the relentless ring of steel on whetstone. Only then would they march south and bring the matter to an end.
In Qingshui City, two hundred miles away, Alex sat behind the polished oak desk in his private office.
He wasn't alone.
Zhuge Liang stood at his right shoulder, arms folded, studying the same live feed that streamed directly into Alex's mind.
They had been watching Liu Dai's camp for the last forty minutes.
Ling Xue never realized that a Gaia Band-Aid had been placed on her neck amid the chaos of battle. The Wudang Elders had applied it in the final moments of the mist trap — completely silent, weightless, and undetectable even to Core Formation cultivators.
The nanomachines had already infiltrated her bloodstream and were feeding a steady flow of intelligence directly from Liu Dai's camp. Every observation passed through her without her knowledge.
Whatever Ling Xue saw or heard, Alex witnessed in perfect real time. Satellite feeds from above the ruined capital of Qingyang completed the picture.
Alex leaned back in his chair, eyes distant.
"Thirty-five thousand," he said quietly. "They'll be ready to march in two days. Food, water, spare horses, medical supplies everything. They're going all-in."
Alex exhaled through his nose.
He could field ten thousand Wudang disciples—maybe. The rest were still drilling, still integrating the new tech, still learning how to fight alongside drones instead of against them.
Another ten thousand drones was the absolute ceiling Mother Ai could keep in the air at once without burning through their power reserves or exposing the hidden launch sites.
Twenty thousand total.
Against thirty-five thousand elite, battle-hardened troops surging forward like an unstoppable tidal wave? His forces would have to fight with just twenty thousand soldiers.
This time, the enemy would remain on high alert both day and night. Launching a sudden attack or ambush would be extremely difficult.
It would be nothing short of a bloodbath.
He looked at Zhuge Liang.
"If they're coming straight for us,” Alex said, voice low and steady, "why let them choose the battlefield?"
Zhuge Liang's eyes sharpened. He waited.
Alex tapped the holographic map. A glowing line traced north from Qingyang, straight to the distant provincial capital of Tianyuan Province—the true heart of Liu Dai's power.
The place where his remaining grain stores, his family compounds, and his political allies all sat behind thick walls.
"We'll deploy ten thousand Wudang disciples along with ten thousand drones," Alex continued. "They fly the whole distance — fast and completely silent. At full speed, they can reach the capital in just half a day. They'll strike Tianyuan City before Liu Dai even realizes they've crossed our borders. Capture the walls, seize the granaries, take the governor's mansion, and force every person there to use a Gaia Band-Aid. Turn them all into our assets."
A cold smile curved at the corner of his mouth.
"Once that's done, we'll control eight of his cities. Liu Dai will be forced to pivot. He'll have to wheel his entire thirty-five thousand troops north to defend his capital. That gives us valuable time and splits his attention."
Zhuge Liang was silent for three full seconds, running the numbers in that lightning- fast mind of his. Then he gave a single, decisive nod.
"It is bold," he said. "They expect us to defend Qingshui like cornered rats. They've never considered that we might strike straight at their heart instead."
He paused, then added with quiet respect, "Depending on how many troops they divert back north, we can attack them from both front and rear. As long as they split their forces, we can slowly grind them down and eliminate them piece by piece.” Alex stood up. The holographic map spun and zoomed in on the northern capital. "Tell the Wudang Elders to pick their best ten thousand," he ordered. “Full stealth formations with maximum drone escort. They depart in one hour. No food needed - they'll sleep and eat after they've taken the city. I want Liu Dai's scouts sounding the alarm in the north before his main army even finishes loading their wagons."
"Let's see how brave Governor Liu Dai feels when his own capital is burning behind him."
***
Meanwhile, deep inside the hidden Wudang training realm, the mountain air hummed with anticipation.
Gaia had already done the work. Ten thousand of the sect's finest disciples stood assembled on the wide stone terrace that overlooked the mist-shrouded peaks.
Liu Piao walked among them, white robes snapping in the mountain wind.
"Ten thousand of us," Liu Piao said, voice carrying across the ranks. "And that bastard Liu Dai thinks he can march on our city like he owns the province."
"How dare the great Mount Tai disciples come into our territory and try to take what's ours? Let's see who's taking who this time."
A low, hungry cheer rolled through the disciples.
Not every disciple had reached the level of sustained sword flight.
Ten thousand sleek drones rose silently from their charging platforms, hovering in perfect formation. The ones who could fly would ride their blades.
The rest would be carried beneath the drones.
No one needed to shout orders. No runners carried messages.
Inside every disciple's mind, the faint silver thread of Gaia's nano-processors glowed like a second nervous system. Satellite feeds painted the sky in crisp overlays.
Alex's voice-calm, precise, and everywhere at once-spoke directly into their thoughts.
"Move out," he said. "Tianyuan City. Take the capital. Then split into eight strike teams of one thousand each. Hit every major town in Yan Province while their garrisons are empty. Fast. Clean. No civilian casualties."
The sky erupted.
Ten thousand Wudang disciples and ten thousand drones launched upward in a single coordinated wave. Sword light streaked across the darkness like falling stars in reverse.
The drones hummed low and steady, carrying their passengers without a single wasted motion. The entire force became a silent silver river cutting north through the clouds, invisible to any scout on the ground.
They struck at the hour before dawn, when the walls of Tianyuan City were at their weakest.
The first warning the defenders received was the sound of ten thousand swords slicing the air.
The city's remaining garrison-barely eighteen hundred men left behind to guard the granaries and the governor's mansion-scrambled to the battlements. Alarm bells clanged wildly. Arrows whistled upward in ragged volleys.
They never stood a chance.
Liu Piao hit the eastern gate like a thunderbolt. His sword carved a blazing are that sheared straight through the iron-reinforced timbers. Wood exploded outward in a storm. of splinters. Behind him a hundred Wudang disciples dropped from the sky in perfect formation, palms glowing with qi. A single coordinated palm strike slammed into the gatehouse. The entire structure collapsed in a roar of stone and dust.
FindNovel.net
Inside the city, the remaining soldiers tried to form ranks in the wide main avenue.
Their commander—a grizzled captain—shouted for a shield wall, but the Wudang were already among them.
The fighting was fast, brutal, and one-sided.
A Foundation Establishment elder
spun through the air, sword flashing in a storm of blue light. Three guards went down before they could raise their spears Drones darted, overhead, firing precise sedative darts into the backs of anyone who tried to run. Wudang disciples flowed through the streets like water-silent, disciplined,
unstoppable.
By the time the sun crested the eastern hills, the last pocket of resistance around
the governor's mansion had been broken.
Liu Piao kicked open the heavy doors of the main audience hall himself. The few
officials and servants still inside dropped to their knees instantly, faces white with
terror.
"Secure the granaries,” he ordered, voice calm. “Lock down the armory. Seal the city gates. No one leaves until Lord Bai says otherwise."
Gaia's voice spoke inside every Wudang mind at once.
"Capital secure. Split now."
The ten thousand disciples moved like a well-oiled machine. Eight strike teams of
one thousand each peeled away from the main force without a word. Each team took a fresh squad of drones and vanished into the morning sky, heading for the eight smaller cities scattered across Yan Province.
Those towns had been stripped almost bare-only a few hundred soldiers left in each to keep order.
The results were the same everywhere.
In Hongshan City, one thousand Wudang dropped out of the clouds
at sunrise and took the walls in
under fifteen minutes. In Luyang, the local garrison surrendered the moment they saw the sky filled with
sword light. In every town the story repeated: gates shattered, soldiers
disarmed and restrained, granaries and supply depots seized without a single unnecessary death.
By noon, the entire province of Yan was bleeding.
Every major city, every storehouse of grain, every secondary armory now flew the
white banner of Lord Bai.
Liu Dai's war chest had just been gutted from the inside.
Back in Qingyang, the governor was still shouting at his supply officers when the
first panicked raven arrived. The bird landed on the table in front of him, a small
scroll tied to its leg.
Liu Dai tore it open.
His face went the color of old ash.
The scroll slipped from his fingers and fluttered to the floor.
"Yan Province has completely fallen to Bai Xiaochun's soldiers."
For the first time in his life, Governor Liu Dai felt the ground disappear beneath his
feet.