Chapter 133: (Self Edited) What the Scout Saw
Delaro Fieser was a man in a prime of life, who was appointed as the leader of the first 40-man cavalry large group under the 3rd volunteer chivalric order.
In the traditional volunteer chivalric order military system, there was a law that consolidated five cavalry units into one large group and each of the unit was made up of eight cavalrymen. On the other hand, the infantry unit consisted of ten people, and a large group of infantry units was consolidating ten infantry units. It was a remnant of the time when the cavalrymen were called aristocrats and some say it was derived from Tetragrammatron.
Delaro was in a position to be entrusted with one of the large groups of forty cavalrymen. Considering that the cost of one cavalryman wasn’t the ratio of the infantry, it could be said that a big role of the middle rank.
However, Delaro was currently heading far north with only seven horses. There were eight horses including his. Although he was in the leader position of the forty cavalrymen, he was leading only seven of them, but that didn’t mean that his men had died or he had been demoted.
This was because the large group had been reduced and reorganized in this strange landing operation. Therefore, the other 32 people were left on the front line where the large army was.
He was unwilling to divide the large group that had been trained together for more than ten years since being appointed as the leader of a 40-men group, but it was unavoidable since this was a life of a grand marshal.
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At the moment, Delaro was looking for enemies ahead of him as a scout.
His horse didn’t sped up that much and it ran at the speed of about walking at a fast pace. He was ordered to scout at full speed, but he couldn’t hurry any further.
