Rise of the Horde-Chapter 630 - 629
The seventh month of the rebuilding began with rain.
It fell in steady sheets across the plains surrounding Yohan, turning the training grounds to mud and sending rivulets cascading down the stone gutters that the goblin engineers had carved into every major thoroughfare during the city’s expansion. The forge district’s chimneys disappeared into low clouds that sat upon the rooftops like a gray crown, their smoke merging with the mist until the entire southern quarter of the city seemed to breathe with the pulse of production that never ceased regardless of weather or season or the state of the world beyond the walls.
Khao’khen stood beneath the overhang of the war council hall’s entrance, watching the rain transform the parade ground into a brown mirror that reflected the banners above the gate. The water collected in the ruts left by the Rhakaddon pens, pooled in the footprints of ten thousand warriors who had drilled on this ground since the Horde’s return from Lag’ranna, and flowed steadily toward the drainage channels that carried it to the river beyond the eastern wall. Even the rain, in Yohan, followed an organized path.
Behind him, the sound of voices carried from the hall’s interior, where the morning briefing was assembling with the regularity that had become the pulse of the Horde’s institutional life. Every ten days, Sakh’arran presented the readiness assessment. Every ten days, the gap between where they were and where they needed to be narrowed by increments that were too small to celebrate and too consistent to ignore.
But today’s briefing carried a weight that the previous ones had not.
Today, the map on the war table would include a marker that changed the strategic calculation in ways that patience alone could not resolve.
*****
The war council chamber was full.
Not the crowded, restless fullness of a gathering summoned in crisis, but the settled, purposeful presence of commanders who understood that the work they did in this room determined the fate of the work done everywhere else in the city. They stood or sat according to their preference, which in the Yohan First Horde was determined by function rather than rank, each position at the table occupied by the person whose expertise was most relevant to the section of the briefing that required their input.
Sakh’arran stood at the map table’s head, his long frame bent over the leather surface that bore the accumulated markings of months of intelligence work. The map had been redrawn three times since the Horde’s return, each version incorporating the expanding reach of the Verakh network’s surveillance and the increasingly detailed picture of Threian military disposition that the network provided.
To his left stood Trot’thar and Gur’kan, the War Chiefs of the First Horde, their presence a bridge between the strategic planning that happened at this table and the tactical execution that happened on the training grounds. To his right, the warband masters of the twelve warbands that comprised the Horde’s combat strength, Arka’garr of the 1st Warband foremost among them, his scarred arms crossed over a chest that bore the marks of every major engagement since the Horde’s founding.
The chieftains of the allied tribes filled the table’s far side. Dhug’mur of the Rock Bear Tribe sat like a boulder given consciousness, his massive arms resting on the table’s edge with the weight of a warrior who had fought many battles and lived to tell the tale of each one of his scars. Vir’khan of the Black Tree Tribe leaned forward with the predatory alertness that age had not diminished, his twin sickle-blades resting in their sheaths with the patient readiness of weapons that had never been far from their owner’s hands.
Dhug’mhar of the Rumbling Clan occupied his customary position near the center, where the maximum number of people could witness whatever he was about to say. His frost-scarred chest, the legacy of the Blue Countess’s scepter at Lag’ranna, was visible beneath armor that had been specially forged to accommodate the damage. The wound had healed as well as orcish physiology and shamanic treatment could manage, but the crystalline scarring remained, a permanent topography of what 7th Circle frost magic could do to flesh that was not protected against it.
Haguk of the Warghen Clan stood near the entrance with the quiet self-containment of a cavalry commander who preferred the periphery of rooms as naturally as he preferred the flanks of battlefields. Beside him, a space that had been occupied at previous councils by various tribal representatives was now filled by a figure whose presence at the war table was itself a statement about the Horde’s evolving structure.
Yakuh of the Skallser Clan.
The young chieftain stood with the particular stillness of someone who was acutely aware that the room they occupied contained warriors whose experience exceeded their own by decades, and who had chosen to meet that awareness not with the bluster that orcish culture traditionally used to compensate for youth, but with the focused attention that Khao’khen’s influence had begun to establish as the alternative. His shoulders, wrapped in the storm-worn wolf pelts that were the Skallser’s traditional garb, were squared but not rigid. His eyes moved between the speakers with the tracking precision of someone who was learning by observation, cataloguing not just the content of the discussion but the method by which decisions were reached.
Behind Yakuh stood two of his most trusted warriors. Ikrah, grim-faced and lean, his twin axes secured at his belt with the casual familiarity of weapons that had become extensions of their wielder’s body. And Pelko, broader and more powerfully built, his favored spear resting against his shoulder, the weapon’s shaft worn smooth by years of mounted combat. These three represented the core of what the Skallser Clan brought to the Horde’s expansion, and what they brought was not merely warriors but a tradition of warg cavalry that complemented Haguk’s Warghen riders with a tactical depth that a single clan could not provide alone.
Khao’khen entered last, as was his habit, having spent the time before the briefing walking the city and observing its state with the direct, personal attention that he believed no report could fully replace. He took his position at the table’s center and nodded once to Sakh’arran.
The briefing began.
*****
Sakh’arran’s assessment covered the five areas that had structured every readiness review since the rebuilding began: personnel, weapons and equipment, intelligence, logistics, and tactical doctrine. The first four proceeded with the steady, incremental progress that the council had come to expect, each metric advancing toward its target at rates that reflected hard work and realistic timelines rather than wishful thinking.
Personnel stood at nine thousand two hundred combat-effective warriors across the First Horde’s twelve warbands. The 1st and 2nd Warbands, the Horde’s elite formations, each maintained their full complement of one thousand warriors, the 1st under Warband Master Arka’garr and the 2nd drawing increasingly from the veterans of the Lag’ranna campaign who had been reassigned to strengthen the Horde’s core. The 3rd through 12th Warbands each held five hundred warriors, a mix of veterans and the newer recruits who had been integrated through the training program that Arka’garr’s drill masters ran with the relentless precision that had become the Horde’s defining characteristic.
The Warg Cavalry reported four hundred and sixty riders between Haguk’s Warghen and Yakuh’s Skallser clans. The Rhakaddon corps maintained sixty operational beasts with trained crews. The troll specialist corps numbered seven hundred, divided between engineering, the Roarer crews, fire sphere teams, and the tunneling corps that represented one of the Horde’s newest and most promising tactical capabilities. The 1st Kani’karr Corps, the troll-operated siege element, maintained its catapults and ballistae at full operational readiness.
The weapons briefing reflected Zul’jinn’s breakthrough with the barrel metallurgy. Fourteen hundred Roarers were in service, with the new barrels being phased into production at a rate that would replace the entire existing stock within two months. The fire sphere inventory stood at six thousand units with production continuing at ninety per day. The six anti-air crossbow platforms were operational and crewed.
The intelligence picture, delivered by Sakh’arran with the visible satisfaction of a strategist whose information architecture was performing as designed, covered the Threian Frontier Force’s disposition, the garrison strengths at border fortifications, and the patrol timing that the Verakh network had been mapping for months.
Then Sakh’arran placed a new marker on the map, and the room’s attention shifted.
"The Tekarr Arch," he said.
The marker sat in the Tekarr Mountains, north of Yohan, close enough that the distance between the city and the Threian garrison at the arch could be measured in days rather than weeks. The mountains that rose between Yohan and the northern passes were the same mountains through which the Horde had marched to fight the Lag’ranna campaign, the same mountains where the Threians had established fortified positions, and now the same mountains where the most powerful frost mage in the Threian kingdom maintained a permanent garrison dedicated to the protection of an ancient structure whose purpose was beyond the Horde’s complete understanding but whose strategic significance was not.
"Countess Aliyah Winters," Sakh’arran continued, "has established permanent headquarters at the Tekarr Arch. The Verakh network confirms a garrison of five hundred soldiers and approximately twenty practitioners of various capability levels. The garrison is being expanded into a permanent installation with stone buildings, defensive walls, and supply lines that connect to the Threian heartland through the northern mountain passes."
He looked up from the map, meeting Khao’khen’s eyes with the steady gaze of a commander delivering an assessment that his chieftain needed to hear without softening.
"The ice queen sits less than eight days’ march from Yohan. Her garrison is small, but her personal combat capability is not. A 7th Circle mage with a fully restored magic, supported by trained practitioners and a fortified position in mountain terrain that favors defense, represents a threat that cannot be ignored regardless of the garrison’s numerical weakness."
The room absorbed this in the particular silence that followed the identification of a problem that had no simple solution.
Dhug’mhar, characteristically, was the first to speak. "Perfection has already tested the ice queen’s power." He tapped the frost scarring on his chest. "She is formidable. But she bleeds like any other. Strike fast, strike hard, and she falls."
"She does not fall," Sakh’arran replied, his tone carrying no judgment but considerable precision. "She was engaged by the combined force of multiple warbands at Lag’ranna and withdrew in good order after inflicting casualties that exceeded our own by a significant margin. Her frost magic froze entire formations. Her scepter’s focused beams cut through warriors whose natural 4th Realm constitution should have provided meaningful resistance. You yourself was incapacitated by a single sustained application of her power."
Dhug’mhar’s jaw tightened, but he did not dispute the assessment. The frost scarring on his chest was its own argument.
"The strategic problem," Sakh’arran continued, moving markers on the map with the deliberate precision that characterized his analytical process, "is not whether we can defeat the Tekarr garrison. With the First Horde at full strength, we could overwhelm five hundred soldiers regardless of the mage’s capability, though the cost would be severe and the time required would compromise our primary objective."
He placed a second set of markers along the northern approach to Threian territory.
"The problem is positioning. If the First Horde marches north toward Threia, the Tekarr garrison sits on our eastern flank. The ice queen could strike at our supply lines, harass our rear formations, or, most dangerously, march south and attack Yohan itself while our main force is committed in Threian territory."
The implication settled over the council like a cold wind.
Yohan. The city they had built from nothing. The forges, the training grounds, the fields, the children who played in streets that previous generations of orcs could not have imagined existing. Everything the Horde was fighting to protect would be left vulnerable if the entire First Horde marched north without accounting for the threat that sat in the mountains to their west.
"We cannot leave Yohan undefended," Khao’khen said. His voice carried the flat certainty that his chieftains had learned to recognize as the sound of a decision being assembled from its components. "And we cannot march with a 7th Circle mage at our backs."
"No," Sakh’arran agreed. "Which is why the 2nd Horde matters."
*****
The 2nd Horde.
The concept had been part of Khao’khen’s long-term vision since before the Lag’ranna campaign, spoken of in councils and planning sessions as the next phase of the Horde’s military evolution. A single Horde, regardless of its quality, was a single point of failure. Two Hordes meant redundancy, flexibility, the ability to hold one position while striking at another, to defend while simultaneously attacking.
The design specifications were identical to the First Horde’s structure. Seven thousand warriors as the core. The 1st and 2nd Warbands containing one thousand warriors each, the elite formations that would anchor the Horde’s center in any engagement. The 3rd through 12th Warbands at five hundred warriors each, providing the depth and breadth that large-scale operations required.
Seven thousand warriors was the target.
The reality was less than half that number.
Sakh’arran delivered the assessment with the unflinching honesty that the council had come to expect from him. "The 2nd Horde currently stands at approximately three thousand two hundred warriors. Less than half the intended strength. The core warbands are being formed around warriors drawn from the new arrivals who have completed integration training, supplemented by transfers from the First Horde’s experienced ranks."
He gestured toward Yakuh, who straightened slightly at the attention.
"The Skallser Clan under Clan Chief Yakuh provides the largest single contribution to the 2nd Horde’s formation. Yakuh’s warriors, supported by his trusted clansmen Ikrah and Pelko, form the nucleus around which the 2nd Horde’s initial warbands are being built. The Skallser bring not only numbers but a martial tradition and a cohesion that accelerates the integration of warriors from other clans who are assigned to their formations."
Yakuh spoke then, his voice carrying the measured tone of a young leader who had learned that volume was not authority. "My Skallsers are warriors born to the saddle and the hunt. We are not yet what the 1st Warband of the First Horde is. We know this. But we are learning the Yohan way, and we are learning it faster than some expect because the Yohan way makes sense to warriors who have spent their lives coordinating with their packmates and their wargs."
He paused, then added with a directness that Khao’khen appreciated for its lack of false modesty: "Give us a purpose, and we will meet it. We are not ready for open battle against the pinkskins’ best. But we are ready to hold a wall and guard what matters."
The statement hung in the air, and its implications were clear to everyone in the room.
The 2nd Horde, though incomplete, could serve as Yohan’s garrison. Three thousand two hundred warriors, supported by the city’s fortifications, its forges, and the defensive advantages that a prepared position provided, would be sufficient to deter all but the most determined assault. And if the Tekarr garrison’s five hundred soldiers and their frost mage chose to march on Yohan rather than hold their position at the arch, three thousand defenders behind stone walls represented a challenge that even a 7th Circle mage could not resolve quickly or without cost.
Khao’khen looked at Yakuh for a long moment, seeing in the younger orc’s steady gaze the same quality that he had recognized in Sakh’arran years ago, in Arka’garr, in every leader he had chosen for positions that required not merely strength but judgment. Yakuh was not ready to lead a Horde into battle against the Threian kingdom’s best. But he was ready to defend a city against a threat that he understood, in terrain that he knew, with warriors whose loyalty was personal as well as institutional.
"The 2nd Horde holds Yohan," Khao’khen said. "Yakuh commands the defense. His Skallsers anchor the garrison, supported by whatever formations can be spared from the First Horde’s reserves."
He looked at Sakh’arran. "How many can we spare without compromising the campaign force?" 𝚏𝗿𝗲𝐞𝐰𝚎𝕓𝐧𝚘𝘃𝗲𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝕞
Sakh’arran had already calculated this, because Sakh’arran calculated everything before it was asked. "If the 2nd Horde receives an additional eight hundred warriors from the First Horde’s training reserves, the garrison stands at four thousand. That reduces the First Horde’s deployable strength to approximately eight thousand four hundred. Still the largest and most capable orcish force in history. And the garrison is sufficient to hold Yohan against anything short of a full Threian army."
"The ice queen alone?" Dhug’mur asked, his deep voice rumbling through the chamber like distant thunder.
Sakh’arran considered the question with the seriousness it deserved. "Countess Winters with her garrison of five hundred, attacking Yohan defended by four thousand behind fortifications, would face a siege she cannot win by conventional means. Her frost magic is devastating in the field, but against prepared defenses with dispersed formations trained specifically to minimize area-of-effect casualties, her advantage diminishes significantly. She would need to sustain a prolonged assault that would drain her magical reserves far faster than our walls would crumble."
He paused. "She is not stupid. She would not attack Yohan with five hundred soldiers. The more likely scenario is that she holds the Tekarr Arch, denies us the northern passes, and waits for reinforcement from the Threian heartland. The garrison exists to ensure that if she does something unexpected, Yohan survives it."
Khao’khen nodded. The arithmetic was clear, the risks identified, the mitigation designed. It was not perfect. War never was. But it was sound, and sound was what the Horde required.
"Then we plan for both," he said. "The First Horde marches north. The 2nd Horde holds Yohan. And the Verakhs watch the ice queen every moment of every day."
*****
The decision made, the council turned to the operational details that would transform the decision into reality.
The conversation continued for three hours, covering logistics, timing, supply calculations, route planning, and the thousand specific questions that separated a strategic concept from an executable operation. Sakh’arran’s methodical mind drove the process, each question answered with data, each uncertainty acknowledged and addressed with contingency planning that reflected the hard lessons of the Lag’ranna campaign.
When the council ended, the chieftains and warband masters filed out into the rain-soaked streets of Yohan, each carrying their portion of the preparation work that would consume the remaining weeks before the march.
Yakuh lingered near the door, his two trusted warriors flanking him. When the room had cleared, he approached Khao’khen, who remained at the map table with Sakh’arran, studying the route that the First Horde would take through the southeastern highlands.
"Chief," Yakuh said. "I will not fail you."
Khao’khen looked at the young Skallser chieftain and saw something that reminded him of himself in the early days, when the weight of what he was building had felt impossible and the only response that made sense was to carry it anyway.
"I know," he said. "That is why I chose you."
Yakuh bowed his head once, the gesture carrying the particular quality of respect that was not subservience but recognition, the acknowledgment of trust given and accepted. Then he turned and walked into the rain, Ikrah and Pelko falling into step beside him, the three Skallsers heading toward the section of the city where their clan’s warriors were quartered and where the work of building the 2nd Horde’s strength would continue with the urgency that the council’s decision now demanded.
Khao’khen watched them go, then turned back to the map.
The Tekarr Mountains rose from the leather surface like a wall between his people and their future. Somewhere in those mountains, a woman with a scepter of frost sat beside an ancient arch and felt the pressure of something vast and patient pressing against a barrier that she had dedicated her life to maintaining.
He did not understand the arch. He did not need to. What he understood was that the woman who guarded it was the most dangerous individual combatant his forces had ever faced, and that her proximity to Yohan was a variable that every plan had to account for.
The rain continued to fall outside the hall’s windows, steady and persistent, turning the world gray and soft. In the forge district, hammers rang against anvils in rhythms that had not ceased since the rebuilding began. In the training grounds, warriors drilled in the mud because mud was what battlefields were made of and warriors who could not fight in it were warriors who could not fight. In the fields beyond the eastern wall, crops grew in rows that would have seemed impossibly organized to any previous generation of orcs.
The city lived. The Horde prepared. And the rain fell on everything equally, washing the dust of the old world away and leaving behind the clean, hard surface of whatever was coming next.
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