after an hour.

Brzezina's handsome young face looked ferocious and twisted at this moment. A cigarette rod was inserted directly into his eye socket, and red and white liquid was seeping out from the wound.

Brzezina's eyes were wide open, full of doubt, unwillingness and fear. His pistol and boots had long since become the trophies of someone unknown, and someone would later take away his clothes and pants.

After all, serfs may have never touched such high-end goods in their lives.

The serfs were searching everywhere for the remaining defeated soldiers of the Polish Restoration Army, and even the corpses had to be patched up with a few stabs.

The king's division, which was so arrogant a moment ago, has now become a frightened beast, running around everywhere, but no one will pity them.

Because the Polish nobles have done too many things on this land, one of them is a guessing game, which is to gather a group of peasant women together.

Ask them to turn around, cover their upper bodies with a row of wooden boards, and then ask their husbands to guess which one is their daughter-in-law.

If the guess is wrong, the man will be whipped and the woman will be the fun of the day.

Others such as asking serfs to dig out bird's nests, and then a group of nobles will shoot them with guns. If the serfs can dig out the bird's nest before being killed, they will survive. If they can't, they will die.

The gypsy and the wild boar are imprisoned together. If the latter can persuade the former not to eat him, it will prove that he is a believer of the devil and will be burned to death. If he cannot, he will directly become food for the wild boar.

Put the serfs into the forest and enjoy hunting.

In short, these serfs had no sense of guilt when slaughtering these nobles. The dull farm tools felt very strong when they penetrated the flesh, and they tore the enemy's flesh with hatred.

And Brzezina was not the only team to be destroyed. Bloody massacres continued throughout Galicia.

Under the overwhelming hatred of the serfs, the massacre quickly expanded, and they began to target the nobles who had dealings with the Polish Restoration Army.

The serfs rushed into the nobles' manor and began to kill, rob, and burn as many as they could, hoping to change their status as serfs.

But what they didn't know was that the nobles had already registered the status of the serfs. Even if they turned Galicia into a sea of ​​​​fire, they still had a final backup in Vienna.

But at this time, the final backup was already in Franz's hands. Sitting in the train, he was a little depressed because the engineering team was sent to inspect and repair all the way but no damage was found.

However, in order to prevent the other party from using bomb attacks by luring the enemy in depth, the train still stopped and went. For safety reasons, a large number of cavalry were sent out to conduct carpet searches at intervals, but nothing was found.

The soldiers were bored to death. They were here to counter the rebellion, but there was a quiet and peaceful scene everywhere along the way, and Austrian flags were planted on many manor houses.

This made the soldiers feel that this place must be particularly loyal. They bet that even Vienna did not have so many flags, and many of them were newly made.

In the train, Albrecht was closing his eyes and concentrating. Franz couldn't help but be curious, because the former was the son of Archduke Karl, and his obsessive-compulsive disorder was no joke.

Before every war, Albrecht would repeatedly deduce all possibilities and try to be as perfect as possible. The same was true for Friedrich. Archduke Karl had produced hundreds of battle plans in Switzerland in the past few years.

In fact, Franz also studied with Archduke Karl for a period of time, and was evaluated as "he will be a competent colonel".

This was mainly because Franz's strategy was a bit ahead of his time, and with the communication methods at the time, that kind of micro-management could be applied to the regiment level at most. No matter how large the scale, no one could be found.

"Uncle Albrecht, why didn't you engage in military chess exercises?"

Albrecht rolled his eyes at Franz angrily, and then sat up helplessly.

“We have 300,000 people, and it is unknown whether there are 200,000 people in the entire city of Krakow.

What to deduce? I really can't figure out how to lose? "

"What if the other party carries out a beheading operation on us?"

Albrecht was somewhat dismissive of Franz's statement.

"Franz, I'm not talking about you. You are too superstitious about your so-called special operations. Let's not talk about whether they can break into this military formation composed of hundreds of thousands of troops. Even if they break in, can they find us? Still a problem.

Rather than worrying about this kind of thing, it would be more realistic to consider Prussia's reaction. They have already mobilized in the three new provinces. "

The three new provinces refer to the three territories of West Prussia, South Prussia, and New Prussia that were carved up from Poland.

In fact, Prussia's reaction was normal. After all, the 300,000-strong army was very stressful for Prussia, which had only 200,000 standing troops, and the gathering place was still the three new provinces where they were weak.

William IV immediately sent an envoy to Vienna to inquire about sending troops, but Austria's answer was simply "counterinsurgency."

In a region with a total population of only 200,000, 300,000 people are sent to suppress the rebellion. What a lie!

William IV was so angry that he smashed the table, and War Minister Hermann von Poyn even said that he should take the opportunity to attack Vienna as a preemptive strike like Frederick the Great.

But leaving aside the restrictions of the Holy Alliance, just attacking Vienna is very troublesome. Austria and Prussia have different track gauges. If you want to sneak attack by train, you must first capture Saxony.

Saxony has never stopped being wary of Prussia, and only 20,000 troops are stationed on the Pusa border.

It is unrealistic to make a surprise attack by train, because the Saxon railway station is like a prison surrounded by fortresses to prevent Prussia from doing this.

At the same time, Bohemia and Vienna are both densely populated areas, and coupled with the role of railway lines, the Austrians can quickly mobilize hundreds of thousands more troops as long as they have enough weapons.

As for the secret weapon, the technology is not yet mature and cannot be installed in every army. Insufficient training makes it impossible to guarantee that it will be as effective as it should be.

And taking the initiative to attack allies, what kind of thing is this? I am afraid that it will not be immediately besieged by other powers and the princes in Germany.

Even if they want to launch a surprise attack, it is impossible for such large-scale military preparations not to leak some news. At that time, the Austrians may be able to legitimately weaken Prussia, the second brother of the German Confederation.

In short, this battle cannot be fought, but William IV does not think that the Austrians really want to fight, but they cannot just sit back and die, so it can only be strategic defense.

Franz just found it funny and felt that the Prussians were more nervous than the Poles because he learned from the recent intelligence that,

That Landry Prome was actually going to be the king, and he was going to hold a coronation ceremony, and he didn't know if he would have time to visit it.

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