Rise of the Horde-Chapter 631 - 630

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Chapter 631: Chapter 630

The weeks that followed the council’s decision were consumed by the particular kind of work that was invisible from a distance but that determined, more than any battle or charge, whether an army would succeed or fail when the moment came.

Preparation was not dramatic. It was not the stuff of the war chants that the shamans sang around evening fires or the boasting that warriors exchanged over meals. It was the systematic, repetitive, often tedious process of ensuring that every warrior knew their position, every weapon functioned reliably, every supply wagon carried what it was supposed to carry, and every contingency that could be anticipated had been planned for with the thoroughness that Sakh’arran’s analytical mind demanded and Khao’khen’s authority enforced.

In the training grounds, the transformation was most visible.

Warband Master Arka’garr ran the First Horde’s warbands through their final cycle of preparation drills with the relentless precision that had made him the most feared drill master in orcish history. The drills were no longer the basic formation exercises that had characterized the early months of the rebuilding. They were integrated operations, multi-warband scenarios designed to replicate the conditions the Horde would face when it engaged the Threian Frontier Force and whatever additional strength the kingdom brought to bear.

The dispersal drill, Sakh’arran’s answer to the Blue Countess’s devastating frost magic, had evolved from a simple scatter-and-reform exercise into a sophisticated tactical doctrine that the warriors now executed with the fluid automaticity of a response drilled past conscious thought into muscle memory. Three hundred warriors would advance in shield wall formation, their steps synchronized, their shields overlapping in the tight configuration that provided maximum protection against conventional ranged attack. Then the horn would sound, two short blasts, and the formation would dissolve.

Not into chaos. Into geometry.

Each warrior moved to a predetermined position, the spacing between them calibrated to exceed the effective radius of the frost storms that Sakh’arran had modeled based on observations from the Lag’ranna engagements. The blue-painted sand that the shamans threw to simulate the area-of-effect impact swept through the space the formation had occupied moments before, marking ground that would have contained fifty warriors and now contained none. A second horn blast, one long note, and the warriors flowed back into formation, the shield wall reconstituting around the affected zone with a speed that improved with each repetition.

Arka’garr watched each iteration with the focused intensity that was his defining characteristic. His corrections were specific, targeted, delivered in the barking cadence that his warriors had learned to parse as efficiently as any tactical signal. "Third rank, seventh from the left, your dispersal angle is too narrow. You will catch the edge of the blast and die. Adjust." The warrior adjusted. The drill continued.

But the dispersal drill was only one element of the preparation.

The Roarer integration exercises consumed entire mornings. The weapon that Zul’jinn had created, and that the barrel breakthrough had elevated from a promising experiment to a reliable instrument of war, needed to be woven into the Horde’s tactical fabric in ways that complemented rather than disrupted the formations and doctrines that the warriors had spent months perfecting.

The Roarer crews operated in teams of three: one firer, one loader, one protector. The firer handled the weapon, aiming and discharging it with the focused precision that the weapon’s limited range and single-shot nature demanded. The loader carried the powder, wadding, and balls, reloading the Roarer between shots with a speed that training had reduced from forty heartbeats to twenty-five and was still improving. The protector, armed with a standard shield and blade, stood ready to defend the crew during the vulnerable reload period when the firer’s hands were occupied and the loader’s attention was on the ammunition rather than the enemy.

The crews were distributed through the warbands according to a ratio that Sakh’arran had calculated to maximize their impact without creating gaps in the melee formations. One Roarer crew per twenty warriors in the standard warbands. Double that in the 1st and 2nd Warbands, whose elite status and larger numbers could absorb the additional specialist elements without losing formation integrity.

In practice, the integration looked like this: a warband would advance in shield wall formation toward a simulated enemy position. At a range of fifty paces, the horn would signal the Roarer crews forward. The shield wall would open momentary gaps, carefully choreographed, through which the crews would step, fire their weapons in a coordinated volley, then step back through the closing gaps as the shield wall sealed behind them. The reload happened behind the protection of the formation, the protectors standing guard while loaders worked, and by the time the warband closed to melee range, the Roarers had delivered two volleys into the enemy’s formation and were being slung across their firers’ backs as the warriors drew melee weapons for close combat.

The troll fire sphere teams added another layer of complexity. These small, wiry specialists carried bandoliers of clay spheres filled with concentrated Bufas fruit extract, each one capable of producing a burst of flame and concussive force upon impact. Their deployment was designed to complement the Roarer volleys: where the Roarers punched holes in an enemy formation at range, the fire spheres created chaos in the enemy’s rear, igniting supply dumps, scattering reserves, and forcing enemy commanders to divert attention from the Horde’s advancing front line to the fires consuming their logistics.

The trolls practiced their throws until accuracy at thirty paces was consistent enough that Sakh’arran, watching the results from the observation point, nodded once, which his subordinates had learned to interpret as the equivalent of a standing ovation from any other commander.

* * * * *

In the forge district, Zul’jinn’s workshop hummed with the controlled urgency of a production line that understood its deadline was approaching.

The new barrels, forged from properly fluxed iron that the sulfur removal process had made possible, were coming off the line at thirty-two per week now, slightly ahead of the original estimate. Each barrel underwent the same rigorous testing protocol that Zul’jinn had established after the breakthrough: visual inspection for cracks, magnetic testing with lodestones for internal flaws, and proof firing with double charges behind the stone barrier that the assistants had learned to appreciate as the most important piece of equipment in the workshop.

The anti-air crossbow platforms were the project that consumed Zul’jinn’s remaining creative energy. Six were operational. Sakh’arran wanted eight. Zul’jinn had promised eight by the march date, and Zul’jinn’s promises, while delivered through methods that made his assistants nervous and his neighbors cautious, were promises he kept.

The platforms were massive constructions by crossbow standards. Mounted on wheeled frames that four orcs could reposition across relatively flat terrain or by ogres, they used a compound tensioning system that generated enough force to launch a bolt the size of a small spear to altitudes where griffon riders operated. The bolts were fitted with carved bone fins that stabilized their flight, and their iron heads were heavy enough to penetrate the standard aerial armor that the Threian griffon knights wore.

Testing against tethered targets suspended from the training ground’s highest towers had produced results that were encouraging without being conclusive. The weapons hit what they were aimed at with acceptable consistency at the ranges and angles that simulated griffon attack runs. But the targets were static, and griffons were not. The true test would come in the field, against opponents who moved with the speed and unpredictability of living creatures ridden by experienced warriors.

"We build the weapon," Zul’jinn told his assistants, who had asked for the fourteenth time whether the platforms would work against real griffons. "The weapon is sound. Whether the crew using it has the skill to hit a moving target at altitude is a question for the training grounds, not the workshop. Zul’jinn builds tools. Warriors use tools. Each does their part."

It was, his assistants agreed, a reasonable division of responsibility. It was also the kind of statement that was easy to make in a workshop and considerably harder to maintain when griffons were diving at your position with frost-enchanted lances aimed at your chest.

* * * * *

The 2nd Horde’s preparation proceeded with a different rhythm.

Where the First Horde’s readiness was measured in the refinement of capabilities that already existed, the 2nd Horde’s preparation was measured in the creation of capabilities from scratch. Yakuh’s Skallser warriors formed the core, their clan’s martial tradition providing a foundation of discipline and cohesion that accelerated the integration of warriors from the other clans that were being assigned to the 2nd Horde’s growing warbands.

The Skallsers were warg riders by heritage, hunters and raiders whose lives had been shaped by the bond between warrior and beast that defined the mounted clans. Their discipline was different from the infantry discipline that the Yohan training program produced. It was faster, more intuitive, built on the animal responsiveness that riding a warg in combat required rather than the methodical synchronization that shield wall tactics demanded. But it was discipline nonetheless, and discipline of any kind was the raw material from which Khao’khen’s system could forge effective warriors.

Yakuh worked alongside the drill masters that Arka’garr had assigned to the 2nd Horde’s training program, his presence among the recruits serving as both motivation and example. He did not stand apart from the training, did not observe from a position of authority while others sweated and bled. He drilled with his warriors, took the same corrections from the drill masters that any recruit received, demonstrated through action rather than words that the Yohan way applied to chieftains as completely as it applied to the newest warrior in the ranks.

Ikrah assisted with the weapons training, his expertise with twin axes translating into a teaching style that was demanding but effective. Warriors who arrived at the 2nd Horde’s training grounds carrying weapons they had been using the same way since childhood found themselves learning new techniques, new angles of attack, new defensive postures that the Yohan system had developed through years of combat experience against enemies who fought with discipline and superior technology.

Pelko took charge of the mounted training, working with those warriors who brought wargs or other mounts to integrate cavalry tactics with the infantry formations that would surround them during operations. His spearwork, renowned among the mounted clans for its precision at full gallop, became the standard by which the 2nd Horde’s cavalry element measured its progress.

The integration was not smooth. It never was.

Warriors from clans with ancient rivalries found themselves assigned to the same warbands, eating from the same cook pots, drilling in the same formations. The friction was constant and occasionally violent. Two warriors from feuding clans came to blows during a morning drill, their personal grudge erupting into a brawl that Yakuh ended by stepping between them, taking a blow meant for one combatant, and then knocking both unconscious with a speed that surprised everyone including himself.

"You fight each other, you weaken all of us," he told them when they woke up. "You want to prove you’re stronger? Prove it against the pinkskins. They don’t care what clan you’re from. They’ll kill you just the same."

The words were simple. Their effect was cumulative. Over weeks, the brawls decreased. Not because the rivalries disappeared, but because the warriors began to understand, through the daily reality of training and eating and sleeping beside former enemies, that the bonds formed by shared purpose were stronger than the feuds inherited from a world that no longer existed.

By the seventh month’s end, the 2nd Horde stood at four thousand warriors, the additional eight hundred transferred from the First Horde’s reserves having been integrated into Yakuh’s command structure with the efficiency that the Yohan training system had been designed to produce. They were not the First Horde. They did not move with the same fluid precision, the same instinctive coordination that years of shared experience had given Arka’garr’s veterans. But they could hold a wall. They could maintain a formation under pressure. They could respond to horn signals with acceptable speed and reform after dispersal with acceptable cohesion.

They were ready to defend Yohan. And that was what they had been built to do.

* * * * *

As the eighth month approached, the First Horde’s preparations reached their final phase.

The logistics train was assembled in the staging area north of the city: three hundred wagons carrying ammunition, food, medical supplies, replacement equipment, and the specialized materials that the Roarer crews and fire sphere teams required to sustain operations beyond the range of Yohan’s forges. The wagons were organized according to a system that Sakh’arran had designed to ensure that any given supply could be located and distributed within fifteen minutes of the request, because supply that could not reach the warrior who needed it within fifteen minutes of the need arising was supply that existed in theory but not in practice.

The route through the southeastern highlands had been scouted and marked by Verakh teams who had been operating in the corridor for months. Water sources were identified. Camping positions were selected for defensibility and concealment. The Warg Cavalry would precede the main column by half a day, clearing the path and confirming the intelligence that the Verakh network had provided.

And every night, as the preparations continued and the city hummed with the particular energy of a civilization about to commit its strength to the most ambitious military operation in orcish history, Khao’khen walked the streets of Yohan.

He walked through the forge district, where the hammers rang and the furnaces glowed and Zul’jinn’s assistants worked through the night to complete the eighth anti-air platform. He walked through the training grounds, where warriors drilled by torchlight because the march date did not wait for daylight hours. He walked through the residential quarters, where families lived in houses built from stone and timber, where children slept in beds rather than on bare ground, where the sounds of ordinary life continued alongside the sounds of war preparation because that was what Yohan was: not merely an army, but a civilization, a place where people lived as well as fought.

He walked past the northern wall and looked toward the Tekarr Mountains, invisible in the darkness but present in his mind as the constant variable that every plan had to account for. Somewhere in those mountains, the ice queen sat beside her ancient arch, guarding a barrier against something that Khao’khen did not fully understand but that he recognized as a force that existed on a scale beyond anything his warriors could face.

He did not intend to face it. He intended to march past it, through the southeastern corridor that bypassed the mountains entirely, and strike at the Threian frontier before the kingdom’s forces could concentrate against him. Let the ice queen guard her arch. Let the 2nd Horde guard Yohan. The First Horde had a different destination and a different purpose.

He returned to the war council hall and stood before the map table one final time. The markers were all in place. The routes were drawn. The timelines were calculated. Eight months of preparation, compressed into positions on a leather map that represented the most careful, most thorough, most methodically planned military operation that any orc had ever conceived.

It was not perfect. It could not be. War did not permit perfection. But it was sound. It was prepared. It was ready.

And in three days, it would begin.

Khao’khen placed his hand flat on the map, feeling the leather beneath his palm, the markers pressing against his fingers. Each marker was a warband. Each warband was five hundred or a thousand warriors. Each warrior was a life that he was responsible for, a life that would be risked because he had decided that the risk was necessary.

The weight of that responsibility was not something he had grown accustomed to. He had learned to carry it. But carrying was not the same as not feeling, and he felt it now, in the quiet of the empty hall, with the rain finally stopped and the stars visible through the windows, cold and distant and utterly indifferent to the decisions that the creatures beneath them made.

He felt it. He carried it. And in three days, he would lead it into the field.

Because that was what chieftains did. Not from thrones or from safety, but from the front of the column, where the weight of every decision was measured in the lives of the people who followed you into whatever came next.

On the training grounds, Arka’garr conducted the final night drill of the preparation cycle. Three warbands moved through a simulated engagement in darkness, their only illumination the scattered torches that marked boundary positions and the faint glow of the shamans’ medicinal fires at the casualty collection points. The exercise was designed to replicate the conditions of a dawn assault, where the attacking force moved into position during the hours of darkness and launched its attack as the first light provided enough visibility to distinguish friend from foe.

The warriors moved with the careful, measured steps of soldiers who had learned that noise in the dark was the enemy of surprise. Shields were carried rather than worn, their surfaces muffled with cloth wrapping that prevented the metallic clatter that would carry across the still night air. Weapons were secured with leather ties that kept them silent against armor. Even breathing was controlled, each warrior having been trained to exhale slowly through the nose rather than through the mouth, because the mouth’s exhalation produced visible vapor in cold air and audible sound in still conditions.

Arka’garr moved among them like a shadow among shadows, his corrections delivered in whispers that carried the same authority as his battlefield bellows. The warriors listened. Not because the drill master’s voice was soft, but because the lessons it carried had been proven in engagements where the difference between a warrior who moved silently and one who did not was the difference between a warrior who reached the enemy’s position and one who died twenty paces short of it.

The Roarer crews practiced their night deployment protocols separately, the firers learning to load and prime their weapons by touch alone, their fingers memorizing the sequence of powder, wadding, ball, and ram with a tactile fluency that did not require vision. The fire was the problem. The Roarer’s discharge produced a flash that was visible for hundreds of paces in darkness, a beacon that announced the firer’s position with the definitiveness of a signal flare. Sakh’arran’s solution was rotation: each crew fired once, then displaced to a predetermined position before the enemy could respond to the flash. The discipline required was extreme. The crews practiced until the sequence of fire, displace, reload, and re-aim became a rhythm that their bodies could execute while their minds managed the chaos of the engagement around them.

And through it all, the city continued to live.

In the residential quarters, families went about the business of existence that was not directly connected to the approaching campaign but that was, in a deeper sense, the reason the campaign existed at all. Women and men who were not warriors tended the forges, the farms, the administrative systems that kept the city fed and supplied and functioning. Children attended the structured learning programs that Khao’khen had established during the first year of Yohan’s founding, programs that taught literacy, numeracy, and the principles of cooperation that the Horde’s military success had demonstrated were transferable to every other domain of orcish life.

These children would not march with the First Horde. They would remain in Yohan, under the protection of Yakuh’s 2nd Horde, continuing to grow into the next generation of a civilization that was still young enough to be shaped by the choices of its founders and old enough to have developed the momentum that would carry it forward even if those founders did not return.

That was the thought that Khao’khen carried with him as he made his final circuit of the city before the march. Not the tactical calculations or the strategic assessments or the weapons inventories, though all of those occupied their proper place in his mind. The thought that accompanied him through the quiet streets, past the sleeping houses and the glowing forges and the training grounds where warriors drilled in the darkness, was simpler and more essential than any of those things.

Yohan would endure. Whatever happened in the field, whatever the campaign produced, the city and the idea it represented would survive. Because Yakuh and his Skallsers would hold the walls. Because the 2nd Horde, though incomplete, was strong enough to defend what mattered. Because the children who slept in those houses would grow up and build upon what their parents had started.

That was worth marching for. That was worth everything.

The stars turned overhead. The city slept. And the First Horde waited for the dawn that would begin the march.