Rise of the Horde-Chapter 634 - 633

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Chapter 634: Chapter 633

Night fell on Yohan like a second siege.

The first wave of the corrupted host had been broken at midday, the southern perimeter holding through the disciplined application of shield walls, Roarer volleys, fire spheres, and the Rhakaddon charge that had brought down the two corrupted ogres. But broken was not the same as defeated. The corrupted creatures that had scattered from the midday assault did not flee. They circled. They gathered in the darkness beyond the torchlight’s reach, their red eyes visible as scattered constellations of malice hovering above the blackened grassland, and they waited for the signal that their distant masters would provide.

The three Lower Order demons still lived. Their will still reached across the leagues of corrupted territory, threading through the minds of every claimed creature, directing, adjusting, learning. The midday assault had been a probe. The demons had tested the city’s defenses through their proxies and had found them strong but finite. Ammunition was consumed. Warriors were wounded. Energy was spent. Each wave that the defenders repelled cost them resources that could not be immediately replaced, while the corrupted host drew from a pool of creatures that the demons’ expanding influence replenished with every hour the tears remained open.

Arka’garr understood this arithmetic as clearly as Sakh’arran would have stated it. The warband master stood on the southern wall beside Yakuh, the two commanders surveying the darkness with the grim attention of men who knew that what they could not see was more dangerous than what they could.

"They will come again before dawn," Arka’garr said. It was not a prediction. It was a certainty drawn from the tactical logic that the Lower Order demons were applying through their corrupted instruments. Night favored the attackers. The corrupted creatures did not need light to find their targets; the demons’ will guided them more precisely than any eye could in darkness. The defenders, however, needed to see what they were fighting, and torchlight was a resource as finite as Roarer ammunition.

"I have the 4th and 5th Warbands rotating to the perimeter," Yakuh reported. "The 3rd and 6th are resting. Six-hour shifts. The 2nd Horde holds the walls with crossbow teams at every tower."

"Good. Double the torch lines along the southern face. I want overlapping light for sixty paces beyond the stakes. And move the Roarer crews to elevated positions on the wall. They fire downward when the host reaches the base. Gravity adds to the ball’s impact."

Yakuh nodded and moved to relay the orders, his boots crunching on stone that was still stained with the dark residue of the afternoon’s fighting. The shamans had burned what they could, but the perimeter smelled of ash and corruption and the particular metallic tang that orcish blood produced when it mixed with the ichor of demonic flesh.

The quiet lasted until the third hour past midnight.

* * * * *

The corrupted wolves came first, as they always did.

They emerged from the darkness in a low, silent rush, thirty of them this time, their blackened forms nearly invisible against the corrupted grassland that had become an extension of the terrain they moved through. The sentries on the wall spotted them only when the first wolf crossed into the torchlight’s outermost ring, its red eyes catching the flame and reflecting it back like twin coals suspended in shadow.

"Contact! Southern face, sector three!" The sentry’s shout broke the night’s brittle silence.

The shield wall along sector three locked instantly, shields overlapping with the metallic clatter that had become as familiar as breathing. The front-rank warriors braced, their spears angled downward at forty-five degrees, the points positioned to catch charging creatures at chest height. Behind them, the Roarer crews on the wall’s elevated positions adjusted their aim, the firers squinting along their weapons’ short barrels, waiting for the targets to enter the optimal range of thirty to fifty paces where the Roarer’s accuracy was highest and its penetration most reliable.

The wolves did not charge in a straight line.

They split. Fifteen went left, angling toward the junction where the shield wall met the earthen embankment. Fifteen went right, curving toward the opposite junction. The center remained empty, a gap that invited the defenders to shift their attention to the flanks and weaken the middle.

"It’s a pincer," Arka’garr growled from his position behind the 4th Warband. "The demon learns from every assault. It remembers where we are strongest and probes where we are weakest. Do not shift the center. Hold formation. Flanks deal with the wolves. Center watches for what comes after."

What came after was the boars.

Six of them, corrupted to the point where their natural bulk had been enhanced into something that resembled battering rams wrapped in bark-like armor. They burst from the darkness behind the wolf screen, their charge aimed directly at the center of the shield wall where Arka’garr had predicted the followup would come. They moved in a wedge formation, the largest at the point, the others staggered behind it, their combined mass producing a ground-tremor that the front-rank warriors felt through the soles of their boots.

"Roarers! Center targets! Fire!"

Eight Roarers discharged from the wall’s elevated position. The balls struck the lead boar from above, the downward angle adding velocity to projectiles that were already moving at speeds sufficient to punch through iron plate at close range. Two balls hit the boar’s spine, cracking the corrupted bone beneath the bark-like hide. A third struck its skull, the bone denting but not shattering, the boar’s charge slowing but not stopping. The creature’s legs continued to drive it forward, the demon’s will overriding the damage that would have dropped any natural animal dead in its tracks.

Two more Roarers fired. One ball missed entirely, sailing over the boar’s lowered head and burying itself in the corrupted earth beyond. The other struck the creature’s right foreleg at the knee joint, the impact shattering the corrupted bone and causing the leg to fold. The boar stumbled, its forward momentum converting into a rolling crash that plowed a furrow through the ground and stopped three paces from the shield wall, its massive body twitching as the last of the demon’s commands fired through a nervous system that could no longer execute them.

The remaining five boars hit the shields.

The impact was the sound of the world breaking. Wood splintered. Iron buckled. Two shield bearers were thrown backward, their bodies leaving the ground entirely, landing in the second rank with a crash of armor on armor. The boar that had struck their shields continued through the gap, its tusks, corrupted and hardened to a density that exceeded natural bone by several orders of magnitude, sweeping in an arc that caught a Roarer loader across the midsection.

The orc folded around the tusk, his body lifted and flung sideways, blood spraying in an arc that caught the torchlight and turned it briefly crimson. He hit the wall’s base and did not move again.

"Close the gap! Close it NOW!" Arka’garr was already moving, his massive frame shouldering between warriors, his own shield slamming into the breaching boar’s snout with a force that rocked the creature back on its haunches. The warband master did not fight with the finesse of a swordsman. He fought with the calculated brutality of a warrior who understood that in the chaos of a breached formation, the fastest solution was usually the most violent one.

His sword, a broad-bladed weapon designed for cutting rather than thrusting, came down on the boar’s neck in a two-handed strike that bit through the corrupted hide and into the meat beneath. Dark ichor sprayed. The boar screamed, a corrupted parody of the sound a natural animal would make, and its legs buckled as the demon’s connection to its fading consciousness weakened.

"Fire spheres! On the breach!"

Two clay spheres arced through the torchlit air and struck the dying boar’s flanks. The Bufas extract ignited on contact, the orange-red fire spreading across the corrupted hide with a voracity that natural flame could not match. The boar’s body convulsed as the fire reached the corruption’s core, the dark tissue beneath the hide combusting from within, producing a column of black smoke and a heat that forced the nearest warriors to shield their faces.

The gap sealed. Fresh shields locked into position. The front rank reformed.

But the night was far from over.

* * * * *

The corrupted trolls arrived an hour before dawn.

There were a hundred of them, each one a wild troll from the southern grasslands whose solitary existence had left it exposed to the Scorcher’s or the Pale Lord’s influence without any community to provide warning or resistance. Their natural bulk, already formidable, had been enhanced by the corruption until each one stood ten feet tall, their muscles swollen beneath skin that had darkened to the color of bruised iron, their eyes burning with the flat red light that marked every claimed creature.

They did not charge. They walked. Slowly, deliberately, each step placed with the controlled weight of beings that understood their own mass and the damage it could produce. The lesser demons scuttled at their feet, dozens of the shadow-wrought imps moving in the trolls’ shadows like pilot fish attending sharks, their angular forms oriented toward the city walls with the concentrated attention of creatures receiving instructions from a master that could see through their collective perception.

"Trolls incoming," a sentry called, and the word spread along the wall with a quality of dread that the wolves and boars had not produced. The defenders had fought corrupted trolls at midday and knew what they could do. A single corrupted troll had torn a section of the shield wall apart with its bare hands, killing three warriors before concentrated Roarer fire and fire spheres brought it down. Three trolls approaching simultaneously meant three points of catastrophic pressure on a defensive line that had already been tested twice tonight.

Arka’garr made his decision quickly. "1st Warband. Forward positions. Full complement. And bring the fire sphere reserves. We end these before they reach the wall."

One thousand warriors of the Yohan First Horde’s premier formation moved from their reserve positions behind the perimeter with the synchronized precision that years of training had made instinctive. They did not march in the traditional sense. They flowed, a river of iron and discipline that poured around the fixed positions of the perimeter defenders and formed a new line beyond the stakes, three hundred paces from the approaching trolls. Behind them, troll fire sphere teams carried every remaining sphere that the reserves could provide.

The 1st Warband’s shield wall was different from the standard formations. It was deeper, eight ranks instead of four, with Roarer crews distributed through the ranks at intervals calculated to produce overlapping fields of fire. The front rank’s shields were reinforced with iron bands specifically designed to absorb impacts that would shatter standard wooden shields, and the warriors who carried them were selected for mass and strength rather than speed, orcs whose physical presence behind the shield was itself a defensive asset.

"Hold until twenty paces," Arka’garr commanded. "Roarers fire at forty. Fire spheres at fifteen. No one breaks rank. No one pursues. We receive them and we destroy them."

The trolls continued their approach. Their footsteps produced tremors that the 1st Warband’s front rank could feel through the earth, a rhythm that grew stronger with each pace closed. The lesser demons at their feet spread outward, a carpet of shadow-wrought malice that covered the ground between the trolls and the shield wall, their small forms creating a field of corruption that blackened the grass and tainted the soil.

Forty paces.

"Roarers!"

The volley was devastating. Fourteen Roarers fired simultaneously from positions distributed across the 1st Warband’s depth, each one aimed at the lead troll. The balls struck in a pattern that covered the creature’s torso from shoulder to hip, each impact punching through the corrupted skin and into the enhanced muscle beneath. Dark ichor erupted from a dozen wounds. The troll staggered, its forward momentum checked by the accumulated force of fourteen simultaneous impacts, its massive body swaying like a tree hit by a gale.

It did not fall. The corruption sealed the wounds as fast as the balls produced them, the dark tissue regenerating with a speed that was visible to the naked eye, the holes in the troll’s skin closing like mouths swallowing the evidence of injury. Within heartbeats, the troll straightened and resumed its advance, the damage undone, the demon’s will driving it forward as if the volley had been no more than a gust of wind.

"Second volley!"

Fourteen more balls struck. Fourteen more wounds opened and sealed. The corruption’s regeneration was absolute against conventional projectiles. The balls damaged the flesh, yes, but the flesh healed faster than it could be damaged, the demonic energy that sustained the corruption providing a reservoir of restorative power that the Roarers could not exhaust.

Twenty paces.

"Fire spheres! Everything we have!"

Thirty clay spheres arced through the predawn air, their trajectories converging on the three trolls with the accuracy that weeks of practice had instilled. They struck in a storm of shattering clay and igniting Bufas extract, the orange-red fire blooming across the trolls’ corrupted bodies in patterns that covered them from head to foot.

The effect was immediate.

Where the Roarers had failed, the fire succeeded. The corruption could regenerate through steel wounds and lead impacts, but it could not regenerate through fire. The Bufas compound burned the corrupted tissue with a chemical hunger that the demon’s restorative energy could not match, each flame eating deeper into the flesh with a persistence that was almost alive, consuming the dark tissue and leaving behind charred, crumbling ash that would not regrow. 𝘧𝘳𝘦ℯ𝓌𝘦𝒷𝘯𝑜𝑣𝘦𝓁.𝒸𝘰𝓂

The lead troll screamed. The sound was enormous, a bass roar that vibrated the shields of the 1st Warband and rattled teeth in jaws clenched against the instinct to flinch. The troll’s arms flailed, its burning hands sweeping through the air in desperate arcs, the flames spreading with each movement rather than being extinguished by it. It staggered sideways, crashed into the second troll, and the fire leapt between them, the Bufas compound igniting the fresh corruption on the second creature’s body.

Two trolls burning. The third, hit by fewer spheres, was still advancing, its legs wreathed in flame but its upper body less affected, its arms reaching toward the shield wall with the single-minded purpose that the demon’s will imposed.

"Spears! Brace!"

The 1st Warband’s front rank lowered their weapons. Eight spears, each held by a warrior whose strength had been tested in the killing grounds of Lag’ranna and proven sufficient for the demands of the Horde’s most elite formation, caught the burning troll at chest height. The points punched through corrupted flesh that the fire had weakened, the shafts bowing under the strain as the troll’s mass pressed against them, its momentum carrying it forward despite the eight shafts of iron-tipped that now transfixed its torso.

The troll reached for the shields. Its burning fingers, each one as thick as a warrior’s wrist, closed on the top edge of the front-rank’s center shield. The warrior behind the shield, a scarred veteran named Thokk who had held this position through every major engagement since the Horde’s founding, did not give ground. He leaned into the shield, his boots digging trenches in the earth, his entire body a brace against the troll’s corrupted strength.

Fire sphere teams threw their remaining spheres at point-blank range. The clay vessels shattered against the troll’s exposed back, the Bufas compound igniting, and the combined fire, fed by the accelerant already coating the creature’s body, reached the critical intensity that overwhelmed the corruption’s last reserves of regenerative energy.

The troll collapsed. Its body hit the ground with a shudder that the 1st Warband felt through the earth, and the flames consumed what remained, the corrupted tissue dissolving into the dark residue that all corrupted flesh became when the fire completed its work.

The other trolls were already down, their burning bodies producing twin pyres that lit the predawn plain in a hellish orange glow. The lesser demons that had accompanied them scattered as their masters fell, the imps’ angular forms dissolving into shadow as the Lower Order demon’s direct attention was pulled away from this sector of the battle to address whatever other threats were demanding its awareness.

Arka’garr surveyed the scene. The 1st Warband’s line was intact. No warriors lost. The fire sphere reserves were depleted, but the trolls were dead, and the path to the wall was cleared.

"Reform," he ordered. "Back to reserve positions. And someone wake Zul’jinn. Tell him we need more fire spheres by midmorning or I will personally carry him to the forge and operate the bellows with his head."

Dawn broke over a perimeter that smelled of smoke, corruption, and the exhaustion of warriors who had been fighting all night. But the line held. The wall held. Yohan held.

And somewhere to the south, three strike teams moved through the corrupted darkness toward their targets.