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Rise of the Horde - Chapter 690 - 689

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Chapter 690: Chapter 689

Aldrath and Snowe jointly composed a dispatch to the Lord Marshal that night, the two generals writing by candlelight at the command post table while their armies rested and the Horde held the ground south of the depression with the quiet, organized permanence it brought to every piece of ground it had occupied in the campaign.

The dispatch was honest in the way that field reports had to be honest when the situation they described would be independently verified by the testimony of every officer who had been in the engagement and every soldier who was going to talk to their comrades about what they had seen.

There was no advantage to managing the narrative when the narrative was already circulating in every tent in the camp in the version that the soldiers who had been inside it were telling.

"The combined force engaged the orcish army today at the prepared position south of Millbridge," the dispatch read. "The engagement produced results that this command was not prepared for and that the briefing record of the campaign did not adequately predict. The orcish force, previously characterized as a disciplined but bounded military organization, has undergone a doctrinal shift that is not fully analyzable from the present engagement’s data but whose outline is clear. The orcish soldiers fight with a physical intensity and aggression that significantly exceeds the parameters of the previous engagements’ record. The combination of formation discipline and individual ferocity is a combat profile that Threian military doctrine has no established response to, because the two qualities have not previously been observed in the same force at the same time."

Snowe wrote the next paragraph. "Threian doctrine assumes that orcish ferocity and orcish formation capability are inversely related, the assumption being that the conditions that produce one preclude the production of the other. This engagement’s evidence contradicts the assumption. The orcish force applied formation discipline as the organizing structure of an engagement in which the individual warriors were operating at a physical output that no Threian infantry or cavalry formation is trained or equipped to resist at close range. The result was casualties at a ratio that this command cannot accept as sustainable."

Aldrath read Snowe’s paragraph, made one addition to the final sentence, and moved to the conclusion.

* * * * *

In the Horde’s position south of the depression, the war council met with the casualty reports spread across the map table.

One hundred and sixty-eight dead. Three hundred and seven wounded. Against eleven hundred and forty Threian dead from a force three times the Horde’s size. The numbers were better than any engagement of the campaign had produced and they came with a clarity about what had changed.

"The formation held," Arka’garr said. The report was delivered in the flat factual language the warband master used for things that were objectively true. "The rotating front held. The discipline held. And the output was what we discussed."

"Yes," Khao’khen said.

"The warriors know. They have spent seven weeks at a specific level and they now know what the difference feels like. The performance cannot be unwound. Once you have given a warrior permission to operate at full capacity, the question of whether you take it back is a question with only one correct answer."

"We do not take it back," Khao’khen said.

"No. We do not."

Sakh’arran spread the supply assessment alongside the casualty report. "Eight days of fire sphere inventory at current consumption rates. Twelve days of Roarer ammunition. The corridor is open and the Verakh convoy runs are keeping the supply stable. We can sustain another engagement at today’s scale within the eight-day window."

Vir’khan spoke with the deliberate weight of a warrior who had been around long enough to know that good news from a battle was never only good news. "Aldrath adjusts. He has been adjusting throughout the campaign alongside Snowe. The two of them together are not the same as either alone. The meeting engagement worked because they did not expect it. They will expect it next time."

"Yes," Khao’khen said. "So we do not do it next time."

The council waited.

"We have demonstrated what the Horde is in daylight, in formation, in a ground engagement on the kind of terrain that formation engagements prefer. What we have not demonstrated is what the Horde is in darkness, in small numbers, in the spaces that a large army considers secure and therefore does not defend with the attention it gives to the ground where it expects contact."

He looked around the table. "Aldrath has twenty-three thousand eight hundred soldiers in a camp seven miles north of here. The camp is protected by the standard Threian picket rotation, which the Verakhs have mapped over the past four days while the combined force recovered from the depression engagement and we appeared to be recovering alongside them."

"A camp penetration," Trot’thar said, and the phrase carried neither enthusiasm nor objection, only the assessment of an operational concept that a professional commander was placing into the framework of his own experience.

"Four simultaneous operations. Four specific objectives. None of them require the force of a warband. All of them require the skills that the Verakhs have been developing and that the assault teams have been training for since before the campaign crossed the frontier, the skills that we have used for surveillance and never yet for direct action inside an enemy’s secure position."

He let the concept sit with the council for a moment before continuing.

"The objective is not casualties. It is not destruction. The objective is demonstration. We demonstrate that their camp is not a sanctuary. We demonstrate it in four simultaneous ways that each reach a different part of the combined force’s command and capability structure. We do it without killing anyone that does not require killing. And in the morning when they wake and find what we have left them, they spend the day managing the damage and recalculating what they are dealing with instead of preparing the next engagement."

"And we prepare," Arka’garr said.

"And we prepare. Four days. Four days of Verakh mapping and team training and the specific preparation that each objective requires. Then we go into the camp and we come back out, and the day after that, Aldrath and Snowe sit in the same camp that we were inside and they write their dispatches to the Lord Marshal and those dispatches describe a situation that neither of them has language for yet because the language does not exist for an enemy that fights them in formation during the day and walks through their camp at night and does not kill anyone."

Dhug’mhar looked like a man who had been told he could go somewhere he was not supposed to go and who was professionally managing the expression that this produced. "Perfection notes that the no killing instruction is more constraining than the camp penetration instruction."

"Perfection may find that some killing becomes unavoidable," Khao’khen said. "Perfection is authorized to respond to unavoidable killing with the appropriate response. Perfection is not authorized to create the conditions that make killing unavoidable."

"Perfection understands the distinction," Dhug’mhar said, and his tone suggested that the distinction was clearly drawn and that he would be working with great creativity to identify the location of its boundary.

Vir’khan looked at the old chieftain with the gaze of fifty years of experience reading the younger generations of warriors, a look that was not disapproval and was not encouragement but was the look of a person who understood exactly what was going to happen and had decided in advance where he stood on it.

"The team assignments," Khao’khen said, and the council moved from concept to execution.

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