NOVEL NTR: Barbarian Harem Conquest Chapter 86: Intruders

NTR: Barbarian Harem Conquest

Chapter 86: Intruders
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Chapter 86: Intruders

Two days after sending Ravan back with his daring diplomatic message, the mountain pass was fully fortified.

Repurposed siege engines sat bolted into the stone, aiming directly down the choke point.

Seraphine decided her sixty elite warriors were staying put.

She claimed the choice was for ongoing supervision of fortification.

However, Kane noticed how she positioned herself whenever they shared the same space.

She was definitely not done assessing him yet.

Leaving Rutheus to watch the northern approach, a one-armed veteran with thirty years of campaign experience was exactly the right person to watch a vulnerable road; Kane rode back to Sylvandar.

Thora, Grieselda, Kessa, and six Bloodfang warriors flanked his horse as they made the journey home.

Stepping through the front gates, the manor felt noticeably different.

Brak actually kept the place in order, which was genuinely surprising.

Caelindra’s study was organized with frightening precision.

Firlia’s intelligence documents were filed in a complicated system that definitely wasn’t there before she arrived.

Thessaly had the kitchen staff producing aromas that made the Bloodfang warriors practically drool onto the courtyard cobblestones.

Jogging out to meet them, Brak practically vibrated with the pent-up energy of a boy who spent four days cooking instead of fighting.

"Chief!" Brak grinned, looking at the blood still crusted on Kane’s boots.

"How many did we kill?"

"Three hundred and twelve," Kane answered casually, tossing his reins to a stable hand.

Brak nodded with happy satisfaction.

"Good numbers. I conjecture we could have gotten four hundred if I was there to hold the line."

"Keep practicing your shield bashes, and you might get the chance next time," Kane laughed, clapping the boy on the shoulder.

Evening settled into a comfortable rhythm Kane hadn’t felt since before the tournament began.

It wasn’t exactly true relaxation; he learned a long time ago never to drop his guard fully, but rather a much lower operational register.

The quality of a household finding its natural footing after a long period of crushing pressure.

Everyone gathered at the main table.

Thora, Sira, Kessa, Grieselda, Brak, Caelindra, Firlia, Lirael, and Lyssel all shared the space.

Thessaly brought out plates of meats and seasoned vegetables that clearly served as a bold statement about what proper cooking actually looked like.

Conversation flowed easily.

Nobody discussed strategy or troop movements.

"My father’s face was like a painting," Lyssel laughed softly, taking a sip of wine.

"When he heard about the channel fight, I could see him instantly recalibrating his entire political existence. He suddenly realized he backed a very winner, and he is scrambling to figure out how to exploit it."

"Speaking of repositioning," Firlia added, smiling over her cup.

"Aldrin was just reassigned to the Sylvandar gate guard. A very quiet administrative decision that moved him much closer to my location without anyone needing to officially acknowledge why."

Kane watched Caelindra carefully cut her meat, saying nothing to Brak. ƒreewebηoveℓ.com

Brak stared intensely at his own plate, saying nothing to Caelindra.

They were both performing this awkward silence very specifically.

’I conjecture those two are going to be a problem eventually,’ Kane smiled to himself, taking another bite of perfectly cooked venison.

’I guess Caelindra is off the menu now.’

After dinner, Kane retreated to the quiet study.

Pouring a cup of elven wine, he spread the captured Morvak intelligence reports across the polished wood.

Ravan was a consummate professional.

He would have delivered the message within forty-eight hours of his release.

Chancellor Morvak was currently sitting in his capital, processing the humiliating reality that his eight-year grand strategy failed in a single, embarrassing engagement.

’He retaliates,’ Ravan had warned.

Kane tapped his finger against the parchment.

’Not escalates. Retaliates. That’s a specific word. A man who loses an entire invasion force without taking a single inch of ground usually takes that failure personally. I need to be ready for an unconventional response.’

Filing the documents away, he closed the leather portfolio.

Finding Thora on the upper balcony, he leaned against the stone railing beside her.

Below them, Sylvandar’s evening lights flickered to life.

Faded tournament banners still hung from the silver spires, lingering weeks after the Celestial Aurora concluded.

"It’s quiet tonight," Thora noted softly, resting her head on his shoulder.

"For now," Kane agreed.

"When are you going to let yourself actually enjoy the quiet for once?" she asked, tilting her face up to look at him.

Staring out at the managed elven woods beyond the city walls, he let out a long breath.

"I’m trying. It feels strange not having a sword pointed at my neck."

Taking his hand, she laced her fingers through his.

They stood there for a long time, not planning traps or anticipating troop movements.

Just existing in the shared space.

[System Notification]

[Note: Ravan delivered the message fourteen hours ago.]

[Chancellor Morvak read it this morning.]

[His first response was to close his office and see no one for three hours.]

[His second response has not yet been determined.]

[Enjoy the quiet.]

[It has approximately thirty-six hours left.]

Boom!

The fuck?

The attack arrived during the third hour of the night.

Morvak didn’t strike at the fortified pass or a legitimate military target.

He aimed straight for Sylvandar.

Specifically, he targeted the quiet manor in the old district where a red-haired warlord who embarrassed his empire was currently sleeping.

This retaliation was not eight hundred arrogant cavalrymen.

It was forty silent professionals.

They wore no insignias and carried no crimson armor.

Dressed in midnight fabrics and wielding poisoned blades, they were the tools an empire deployed when they wanted a problem solved without anyone taking credit.

They were paid purely for outcomes, not honorable engagements.

Grieselda noticed them first.

Awake long before the first grappling hook caught the stone wall, the intricate mark on her chest pulsed with a burning rhythm.

It only did that when hostile intent closed in.

Making no sound at all, she rose from her chair, gliding gracefully down the hall to Kane’s bedroom door.

Pulling the door open, she found him already standing.

He felt her approaching before her hand even touched the handle.

"How many?" Kane asked smoothly.

It was not a question of if, just a matter of logistics.

She held up four pale fingers.

Closed her fist.

Then held up four fingers again.

Forty.

"Positions," he shouted, stretching his neck.

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