Reborn as a Hated Noble Family, We Start an Industrial Revolution-Chapter 100: A Bloody Victory

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Chapter 100: Chapter 100: A Bloody Victory

The snow descended upon Northveil with a deceptive, slow grace, but its flakes were no longer the pristine, crystalline white of the northern wilderness. The ash from the catastrophic explosion of the enemy Dreadnought and the thick, greasy soot from the burning tenements had desecrated the very atmosphere, painting the twilight in a haunting, monochromatic gray. It was a somber, suffocating dusk that should have been beautiful, but instead felt like a funeral shroud draped over a dying city. Along the jagged shoreline, the rhythmic roar of the tide was punctuated by the violent, high-pitched hissing of superheated metal cooling as it touched the freezing seawater. The air was a nauseating cocktail of scents: the metallic tang of spilled blood, the acrid bite of machine oil, and the sharp, ozone-heavy residue of spent mana-lasers.

The soldiers of the Sudrath lineage—their armor dented beyond recognition and their faces masked by a thick layer of grime and blackened soot—slowly began to lower their weapons. There was no instantaneous roar of victory, no triumphant cheers to pierce the heavy silence. Instead, a crushing, soul-deep exhaustion seemed to have shackled their tongues. They stood amidst a landscape of twisted iron rumbles and the lifeless husks of Junk-Cyborgs, staring at one another with hollow, vacant eyes. It was a moment of silent communion, each man checking the person beside him to ensure they were still breathing, still tethered to the world of the living through the haze of carnage.

Suddenly, from the distance, a different kind of mechanical roar vibrated through the scorched air. It wasn’t the high-pitched, elegant hum of the Titan tanks, but the refined, rhythmic thrum of powerful internal combustion engines. A procession of blackened, armored SUVs—modern vehicles with a rigid, militaristic design that whispered of both luxury and lethality—sliced through the piles of debris littering the streets of Northveil. Motorcycle outriders, their sirens spinning with a low, authoritative pulse, cleared a path through the throngs of stunned, soot-covered soldiers.

The lead vehicle, a monster of reinforced plating and mana-etched bulletproof glass, ground to a halt directly in front of the primary defensive trench. The heavy door swung open with a hiss of pressurized air, and Duke Lucian Sudrath stepped out into the dying light of the afternoon.

Lucian stood tall, his pristine military dress uniform a stark, almost insulting contrast to the landscape of total destruction that surrounded him. Yet, his eyes held no trace of arrogance or triumphalism. He surveyed the rows of bodies lined up along the roadside—his own soldiers, now draped in the gray-and-gold banners of House Sudrath. With a slow, deliberate movement that carried the weight of a thousand years of history, the "Lion of the North" removed his gloves and offered the longest, most solemn military salute of his life. It was not merely a ceremonial gesture; it was a profound acknowledgement of the lives sacrificed to preserve the dignity of a family that their own King had seen fit to discard as political collateral.

"Father..." the voice was raspy, heavy with the weight of the day’s slaughter.

Sir Riven Sudrath stepped forward. The massive knight looked like something born of a nightmare; his armor was scorched black at the shoulder, dried blood stained his stubbled cheeks like war paint, and his mechanical battle-axe still vented faint, rhythmic wisps of steam. Riven no longer looked like a man from Earth, nor a mere noble of Aethelgard; he was a god of war who had just stepped off a stage of butchery. He offered a salute, his hand trembling with the tremors of extreme physical and neurological exhaustion.

"Reporting, Lord Duke. The shoreline has been secured. The primary enemy fleet has been decimated. However... the cost was high. We have lost many good men. Two Titan MK-1 units have been completely decommissioned—incinerated in the final exchange," Riven reported, his voice cracking slightly at the mention of his fallen comrades.

Lucian approached his son, ignoring the smears of blood and oil that threatened to ruin his immaculate uniform. He placed a firm hand on Riven’s scorched shoulder, squeezing it with a strength that spoke of a father’s pride and a leader’s gratitude. "You have performed your duty beyond what any father could ask, Riven. You have held the line when the world expected us to break. Go now, rest. Let the logistics and recovery units take over the cleanup."

On the other side of the city, within the subterranean depths of Medical Bunker Sector B, the atmosphere was anything but celebratory. The bright, clinical glow of Magitech lamps illuminated a room filled with the low, agonized groans of the wounded. The sharp, stinging scent of antiseptic fought a losing battle against the iron-heavy odor of open wounds and burnt flesh.

Dr. Elena moved through the chaos like a tireless, biological machine. Her once-immaculate hair was a tangled mess, and her white surgical gown was a macabre tapestry of her patients’ blood. She had just finished suturing a jagged gash on a young soldier when the heavy blast doors of the bunker were thrown open with a violent, echoing clang.

Rianor Sudrath stormed in, his pace frantic, his eyes darting wildly across the room. The cold, mechanical genius who had conducted the battle from the heights of the Clock Tower was gone, replaced by a man whose face was pale with a primal, visceral fear. When his gaze finally landed on a bed in the far corner, surrounded by a forest of Magitech oxygen tanks and mana-monitoring crystals, his heart felt as though it had stopped beating.

Elara lay there, motionless. The girl who was usually a whirlwind of energy and fire now looked hauntingly fragile, a porcelain doll shattered by the weight of the world. Her skin was nearly the color of the white linens, and most terrifyingly, the vibrant violet glow that usually defined her mana-signature was nearly extinguished. Her aura was a faint, dying ember, flickering in the darkness of her coma.

"Elena... what is her condition?" Rianor’s voice trembled, the sharp, analytical edge he had used at the tower completely shattered.

Elena looked at her brother-in-law with a gaze full of profound sorrow. She wiped the sweat from her brow with a bloodied sleeve and shook her head slowly. "She absorbed far too much destructive energy, Rianor. Her internal organs are suffering from systemic failure due to the mana-backlash of the Totem. I’ve done everything possible through both medical science and magical intervention. The rest... the rest depends on Elara’s own will to survive. Her mana is too dim. She’s fading, Rianor. Fast."

Rianor collapsed onto his knees beside Elara’s bed, his joints hitting the cold floor with a dull, hollow thud. He gripped her hand, which felt as cold as the northern ice he had spent his life fighting. The tears he had suppressed through the heat of the battle finally broke free, hot and bitter, soaking into the back of Elara’s hand. The genius who could build the most complex machines in the world, the man who could calculate trajectories of light and sound, now felt utterly, pathetically helpless in the face of destiny.

"Elara... can you hear me?" Rianor whispered, his voice fracturing into a desperate sob. "Wake up... I promise you, if you wake up, I will leave the laboratory. I will leave the gears and the circuits behind. I will spend every second of my life by your side. I... I will marry you the moment you open your eyes. Don’t leave me alone in this cold world, Elara. Please... come back to me..."

The vow echoed through the silent, sterile infirmary, witnessed only by the rhythmic clicking of medical instruments and the agonizingly slow, shallow pulse of Elara on the crystal monitor. In that moment, something within Rianor shifted. His grief began to crystallize into a darker, more venomous resolve. If the Kingdom had allowed this to happen, and the Iron Empire had pulled the trigger, then he would ensure that none of them would ever know peace again. His genius was no longer for progress; it was for retribution.

Meanwhile, atop the half-shattered Needle Tower, Count Hektor remained frozen in front of his primary radar array. He had been trying to clear the static interference caused by the Behemoth’s massive explosion, but what he saw next made the hair on the back of his neck stand on end.

"No... this can’t be right. It has to be a sensor glitch," Hektor muttered, his fingers trembling so violently he could barely touch the glass screen.

The radar, which had been clear of enemy signatures only moments ago, suddenly flared a violent, pulsing red. A singular, massive blip emerged from the thick wall of fog at the edge of the ocean, followed by hundreds of smaller dots that spread across the screen like a virulent plague. The energy scale read by the sensors surpassed anything Hektor had ever witnessed in his long career as an engineer. This wasn’t just a reinforcement fleet; it was a full-scale annihilation force.

"The radio is dead... the central transmission is severed!" Hektor shouted into the empty, wind-whipped room. He realized with a jolt of horror that he couldn’t warn Lucian through the wireless network because the Clock Tower had lost its primary broadcast antenna in the last exchange.

Ignoring the weakness in his legs, Hektor bolted for the stairs, his boots clattering against the cracked stone. He had to reach the shoreline. He had to tell the Duke that the victory they were currently mourning was nothing more than a brief, cruel interlude before the real storm arrived. "They’re coming back! A bigger monster is coming!" he screamed into the hollow corridors, his voice only producing a mocking echo.

Far out at sea, hidden behind the impenetrable wall of fog that cloaked the churning ocean, a monolithic monster of blackened steel plowed through the waves. Its name was The Emperor, a Super-Dreadnought class vessel that represented the absolute pinnacle of the Iron Empire’s technological madness.

It was three times the size of The Behemoth. The ship boasted rows upon rows of massive cannons along its hull, but its most terrifying features were the twin Railgun muzzles at its prow, equipped with an experimental automated reload system. Though it lacked the sophisticated thermal seekers of the Sudraths, the sheer volume of its junk-rockets and conventional shells was enough to bury the entirety of Northveil under a rain of fire in a single, coordinated salvo. It was a fortress of coal and iron, moving with the inevitability of a glacier.

On the freezing, shadowed command bridge, General Rudigor stood like a statue of iron. His massive frame was made even more imposing by the mechanical respiratory mask that covered the lower half of his face, emitting a rhythmic, metallic hiss with every breath he took. He crushed his electronic cigar against the digital map of Northveil, leaving a scorched mark on the display.

"The first wave has performed its duty as a measuring tool," Rudigor’s voice was heavy, raspy, and disturbingly mechanical, filtered through the speech synthesizer of his mask. "The Sudraths possess interesting fangs, but those fangs are about to be broken by the weight of their own arrogance." 𝚏𝐫𝚎𝗲𝕨𝐞𝐛𝕟𝚘𝐯𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝗺

He peered through his mechanical binoculars at the distant, flickering lights of the Northveil harbor. "Activate all weapon compartments. Every battery, every rocket pod, every railgun. Leave not a single stone standing upon that soil. The Era of Steam will not be halted by a handful of traitors playing with mana-toys."

The monster of steel accelerated, its wake turning the sea into a frothing, white grave. The peace of Northveil was about to be shattered once more, and this time, there would be no miracles.

———————————————————–

Author’s Note:

Yo! We finally hit Chapter 100! Volume 2 is officially a wrap.

Massive thanks to my top supporters: Ayda_Amare, woodhome, Dozo_Bigga, Mysterybl, and Lyrina, and to the one who gave me that "standing ovation" in the comments—you guys are the real ones! Your support keeps me hyped to type every single day.

Since it’s our 100th Chapter "birthday," if you guys are feeling the vibe, feel free to drop some Power Stones or a Gift to celebrate this milestone! It really helps the novel stay on the rankings.

Volume 3 is coming. The real war starts now.

Spoiler for Vol 3:

"The Rose of the North will bloom again, but she will never dance with the wind ever again."

See you in the next volume!

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