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Soulbound: Dual Cultivation-Chapter 402: Let them come
When the Ice Belle had fully dispersed herself through the unseen currents of the valley, there was no visible sign of her presence. The air did not shimmer. The temperature did not drop. No frost traced the stone. Yet Lucas could feel the difference through the Core of Dominion, a subtle pressure beneath the surface of things, like a lake held in perfect stillness before a stone is cast.
He gave a small nod, satisfied.
"Return," he said quietly to Volde.
They ascended the ridge with measured speed, retracing their path until the forward lines of Valerion came into view once more. Soldiers adjusted straps and checked shield grips. Sergeants murmured last instructions. Nothing in their posture suggested urgency. That was intentional.
Lucas mounted his horse and rode along the split formation. His presence steadied the men more than any speech would have. Word had already spread that he carried the Core. That alone was enough to quiet fear.
He stopped near the center and raised his arm.
"We advance."
No dramatic flourish. No raised voice. The order passed cleanly down the ranks.
They began to move in coordinated progression toward the valley mouth. Shields aligned. Spears angled forward.
Behind them, the king and the second contingent continued their slow, deliberate approach. From a distance, it would appear that Valerion was committing exactly as expected.
Within the valley heights, the usurpers had finally revealed themselves.
Their forces lined the ridges in staggered tiers, infantry positioned along the upper slopes, shield lines prepared to descend once Valerion’s vanguard was fully inside the choke point. Above them, archers lay concealed behind carefully arranged rock cover, cloaks blending into the gray-brown stone.
They believed themselves invisible.
From their vantage point, Valerion’s divided formation likely appeared disorganized, perhaps even cautious to the point of weakness. The gentle advance would confirm what their spies had reported. Yes, the army had hesitated. Yes, rumors had spread. Yes, they were still coming to the valley.
The trap was intact.
Or so they thought.
One archer shifted slightly behind a ridge lip, adjusting his angle for a clear shot. He felt nothing unusual in the air. No chill. No warning. Only the steady anticipation of battle.
The Ice Belle was already around him.
Her presence moved through the currents between their ranks, brushing armor, slipping through cloth, tracing the hollow spaces within helmets. She did not act. She simply occupied.
Lucas rode forward until the leading edge of his formation crossed into the shadowed threshold of the valley.
The moment felt heavy.
Volde moved to the eastern rise with his thirteen, positioning themselves near the fracture points Lucas had identified earlier. Each man flexed his arm once, feeling the faint pulse of the Dominion bracelet. The resonance between them and the Core tightened, becoming sharper, more focused.
Lucas slowed his horse and surveyed the heights.
He could see them now. Barely. A glint of metal here. A silhouette there. Movement too coordinated to be natural.
"They believe we are blind," Volde murmured.
Lucas’ gaze remained steady.
"They believe we are predictable."
The army continued its steady entry into the narrowing pass. Dust rose in low clouds around marching boots. Shields brushed against stone as the walls closed in slightly.
Above, the usurper commanders watched.
They waited for the perfect moment when enough of Valerion’s force would be committed that retreat would be costly. Their archers nocked arrows quietly, drawing bowstrings halfway in readiness.
None of them noticed how their breath lingered a fraction longer than before.
None of them sensed how the warmth in the valley floor seemed to sink subtly downward, as if the sun’s reach had shortened.
The Ice Belle remained patient.
Lucas lifted his arm slightly, a signal only Volde and the bracelet bearers would recognize. Not yet activation. Only readiness.
The first ranks of Valerion now stood fully within the choke point.
The usurpers above exchanged subtle signals.
Lucas positioned the first thousand men at the very front of the formation, shields forward, spears angled, cavalry slightly staggered behind them. They were the visible edge of Valerion’s blade, the portion meant to meet steel first. He made no attempt to disguise their role. They would be the ones to collide headfirst when the valley erupted.
Behind them, the remaining forces formed layered support lines, disciplined but thinner than they should have been for a confrontation of this scale.
Across the narrowing stretch of stone and dust, the usurpers revealed the full weight of their intent.
Three thousand infantry began forming at the opposing mouth of the valley, tightening ranks with confident efficiency. Their shield wall locked into place, pikes bristling in disciplined rows. Behind them, another three thousand waited in reserve, packed densely enough to reinforce any breach or exploit any weakness.
And beyond that, their cavalry.
The sight of it alone was enough to chill lesser commanders.
Horse after horse shifted restlessly behind the infantry lines, armored mounts snorting plumes of breath into the dry air. They were at least triple the number Valerion had managed to field. If they gained momentum in the confined valley, they would crash through the front thousand like a tidal force.
The first charge would be devastating.
Any conventional commander would have hesitated.
Lucas did not.
He studied the opposing formation carefully, not with fear but with calculation. Numbers were visible. Momentum was predictable. Overconfidence was inevitable.
Then he noticed something else.
A tremor in posture.
A subtle instability in stance.
The usurper front lines, though numerous, did not look entirely steady. Several soldiers shifted their weight more often than necessary. One man wiped at his brow repeatedly despite the absence of oppressive heat. Another bent briefly as though steadying his stomach before forcing himself upright again.
Lucas narrowed his eyes.
Sweat gleamed across faces that should not have been sweating in this mild air. A few soldiers’ grips on their shields tightened and loosened in uneasy cycles. Even from this distance, he could see the pallor.
Pale skin beneath helmets.
Lips slightly parted as though breathing required more effort than it should.
He felt no change in the temperature.
The Ice Belle had not acted yet.
This was something else.
A faint satisfaction settled into his expression.
Patrick had done his work well.
The alchemical spheres had been scattered precisely where the usurpers established their base camp the previous night. Invisible vapors released gradually, too subtle to alarm sentries, too insidious to be recognized as attack. By morning the exposure would not kill them, but it would weaken them. Nausea. Fatigue. Slowed reflexes. Dehydration masked as anxiety.
And here they were, prepared to launch a decisive charge while their bodies quietly betrayed them.
Lucas watched as one cavalry rider adjusted himself in the saddle, shoulders sagging for the briefest moment before stiffening again under a commander’s glare.
They had no idea their strength had already been thinned.
Volde approached from the flank, his voice low.
"They look unsettled."
Lucas nodded once.
"They are."
He allowed his gaze to sweep across their cavalry again. Three times the horses. Three times the thunder. Under normal circumstances, that first impact would shatter morale and formation alike.
But weakened legs meant slower acceleration.
Nausea meant compromised focus.
Sweat meant dehydration before exertion even began. 𝘧𝓇ℯ𝑒𝓌𝑒𝑏𝓃𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘭.𝒸ℴ𝓂
And when the Ice Belle tightened the air, when cold seized muscle already trembling with toxin, when traps fractured their descent and Dominion pulses disrupted their rhythm, that numerical superiority would become a burden rather than an advantage.
Lucas turned his attention back to his own thousand at the front.
They stood firm.
The bracelets on key officers pulsed in quiet synchronization with the Core resting against his palm beneath his cloak.
He lifted his gaze once more toward the heights where hidden archers waited in confidence.
The usurper commanders signaled.
Their three thousand at the front began to move forward, shields lifting, boots striking stone in accelerating rhythm. Behind them, cavalry riders lowered lances in preparation.
From a distance, it looked overwhelming.
Lucas exhaled slowly.
"Let them come," he said under his breath.
Because what appeared to be devastation was, in truth, exhaustion disguised as force.







