To clear the blocked retreat by Duncan, Torismund dispatched nearly ten thousand men from the Île-de-France back to the Central District, attempting to reestablish logistics supplies.
However, they never expected that this force of nearly ten thousand would be attacked by Duncan at dawn, resulting in a devastating defeat and retreat.
The battle left thousands dead or wounded, and the routed soldiers only reported seeing a sky full of cavalry.
It was only until this moment.
Besieging Paris, Torismund suddenly realized that the cavalry led by Duncan was not a small unit, but a legion of more than two thousand cavalrymen.
Such a formidable force of elite cavalry could charge directly at a force of even tens of thousands.
Now the retreat was cut off, and the Western Gothic army besieging Paris began to falter in morale.
East of Verden.
