From Jiang Ding's perspective, he overlooked the entire Black Snow Prairie.
Groups of Tushan maids were active in various places, each divided into thousand and several thousand strong units, each commanded by a captain, with nine maids at the center directing nearby troops. Within the maiden group's court, they strategized over the whole situation, receiving information from all quarters, and controlling the warfare over hundreds of thousands of kilometers.
The maids were either marching, slaughtering, sieging cities, or establishing basic governance in areas that had already settled down, accepting the loyalty of local families and sects and conscripting their manpower and resources for the war.
The rule that Liudao Sect had established over ten years was being destroyed bit by bit.
At a certain moment, as orders were issued, the scattered maids began to converge toward a central point, their numbers growing more and more.