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Rise of the Horde - Chapter 703 - 702

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Chapter 703: Chapter 702

Calla Westyn arrived at Millbridge on the seventh day of her second journey, and the first thing she saw when her carriage entered the market square was the Snarling Wolf banner above the market hall in exactly the position where it had been when she left.

The same banner. The same position. The army of eight thousand warriors that had been fighting a combined force of twenty-five thousand for three months was still in this valley, still holding this town, and the banner above its command position was unchanged and undiminished, the wolf’s snarl carrying the same quality it had carried on the day of the first session.

She stepped down from the carriage and looked at the banner for the moment that her professional habit required for the reading of symbols, and what the banner communicated to her on the second reading was something that the first reading had not fully captured because the first reading had occurred before twelve more weeks of the campaign’s evidence had accumulated.

The wolf was not saying it would fight forever. It was saying it had already decided to fight as long as required, which was a different thing in the same way that a professional soldier and a fanatic were different things, both willing to sustain losses but one willing for a reason that had a terminus and one willing without any terminus at all.

The wolf on the banner had a terminus. It was specific and it was stated in the proposal that Khao’khen had sent with the herald weeks ago. The wolf was not here because it wanted to be here. It was here because it had not yet obtained the reason to leave.

Khao’khen was at the table when she entered the market hall. Sakh’arran was at his right. The maps were spread in the arrangement that the first session had established. The room smelled of the campaign, of weeks of military occupation in a civilian building, of orc and iron and the particular quality of a command position that had been the center of something serious for a long time.

"Senior Diplomatic Arbiter," Khao’khen said.

"Commander," Westyn said.

She sat. She opened her document case and removed the council’s expanded mandate and placed it on the table between them.

"The council has authorized additional language," she said. "I will read you the specific authorization before we discuss its implications, because the specific language matters and I want you to hear it precisely rather than in summary."

She read. Sakh’arran translated sentence by sentence in the patient, precise way he had translated every important communication of the campaign. Khao’khen listened.

The acknowledgment was there. Not the word invasion in the treaty’s main text, which the kingdom’s legal framework genuinely could not accommodate in the liability terms that formal treaty language created. But in the preamble, in the historical acknowledgment section that Threian treaty construction used for the contextual framing that defined what the treaty was responding to, the words: the Threian kingdom acknowledges that the campaign conducted in the southern territories in the years preceding this agreement was an action that caused orcish civilian casualties, was not authorized by the current council composition, and will not be sanctioned by any future council composition that ratifies the present agreement.

Not invasion. But the facts of the invasion, stated in language that the law could hold and that the history could not deny.

The room was quiet when she finished reading.

* * * * *

Khao’khen looked at the preamble language for a long moment.

He looked at Sakh’arran, who was looking at the language with the particular attention of the commander’s analytical mind being applied to the gap between what had been asked for and what had been offered and whether that gap could be treated as the same thing.

It was not the same thing. Both of them knew it was not the same thing. The word had weight that the description of the word’s facts did not carry in the same way, and words had weight because the weight was real and not because it was merely symbolic.

But facts that could not be denied were the foundation of the word. The foundation without the structure was not the structure. It was, however, the beginning of the structure, and the beginning of the structure was something that could be built on by the people who came after, the people who would live in the agreement’s aftermath and who would do the building that the agreement made possible.

Khao’khen thought about the warriors outside the hall, the eight thousand who had crossed the highlands and fought the Threian military’s best across three months of continuous engagement and had not been broken.

He thought about the dead, the one hundred and sixty-eight at the depression, the two hundred and three in the valley engagement, and all the others going back to the Season of Damnation and before it, back to the settlements that had been burned before Yohan existed.

He thought about the families in Yohan who were waiting for the chief’s return with the thing he had left to obtain.

Not invasion in the main text. But the facts. In the preamble. In the document that would be sealed and recorded and carried north to the capital and ratified by a council that had just been told by its best general that the alternative to ratification was a campaign that the kingdom could not win.

"The frontier line," he said.

Westyn unrolled the geographic committee’s proposal. The new line was further south than the original Threian claim but further north than the orcish claim in the initial proposal. It was the kind of line that represented neither party’s first choice, which was the kind of line that represented both parties’ recognition of the other’s reality.

They worked through the frontier line’s specific points for three hours, the negotiation professional and precise, two people who had been doing this for weeks and who understood the distance between their positions well enough to identify the specific points where movement was possible and the specific points where it was not.

At the end of the third hour, the gap had closed to three specific boundary points along the line’s eastern section where the Threian geographic committee’s proposal used river features that the orcish territorial claim described differently.

"Tomorrow," Khao’khen said. "These three points. With the maps that show the specific features."

"Tomorrow," Westyn agreed.

She gathered her documents and stood. At the door she paused and looked at the wolf banner in the corner of the hall, the same look she had given it on arrival.

"The banner has not moved," she said. Not as an observation about the canvas. As a statement about what the canvas represented.

"No," Khao’khen said. "It has not."

"I think it will move," she said. "When this is done, I think it will move south, and it will not need to come back." 𝓯𝓻𝒆𝙚𝒘𝓮𝙗𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝒍.𝙘𝓸𝙢

He looked at the banner. The wolf’s snarl. The direction of the wolf’s attention, forward and fixed, the same expression it had carried from Yohan through every mile of the campaign.

"That is what it is here for," he said.

Westyn left the market hall. Outside, in the valley that had been the campaign’s center for the past weeks, the river ran south in the evening light, carrying snowmelt from the highlands toward the plains where Yohan sat and where the people who had built the first orcish city were waiting for the chief and the wolf and the eight thousand warriors who had carried the wolf this far.

Tomorrow. Three boundary points. The gap was closing.

The wolf waited with the patience that it had always waited with, the patience that was not resignation but readiness, the wolf that had been snarling at whatever stood in front of it since the day it was raised above a city that had decided to exist, snarling still, snarling because the direction it was snarling in was the direction that everything it protected was pointed.

South. Home. The work not yet finished but visible now, the end visible, the thing that the campaign had been marching toward present in the room where a diplomat with an expanded mandate and a commander who had not been beaten were working through three points on a boundary line in the knowledge that the three points were the last distance between the position they were in and the position that the whole campaign, from the Season of Damnation to the valley to the Dry Pass to the camp penetration and the singing shield wall and all of it, had been aimed at.

Tomorrow.

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