Chapter 72 Interlude_3

Adam had already led the farmers in a charge, leaving the barbarians no time to think.

Half of them wielded Stinger Hammers, and the other half long poles with lassos.

If one person caught a barbarian cavalryman with a lasso, two or three others would come to collaboratively drag the rider off the warhorse. Once a barbarian was unhorsed, he would immediately be clubbed to death.

The so-called Terdun light cavalry were not full-time fighting warriors; most of them were slaves and ordinary herders.

Relying on their warhorses to shoot arrows from a distance was something many could do.

But face-to-face, blade against blade, exchanging blows up close, that was a different matter.

Without their warhorses, the Herders were no different from the Paratu People; full of hatred, the Paratu People were braver, more ruthless, and merciless than the Herders.