Rise of the Horde-Chapter 621 - 620

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Chapter 621: Chapter 620

The Yohan First Horde reached home in the quiet season, when the plains turned golden and the air carried the first hints of cooler days to come.

Khao’khen led the march himself, walking at the center of the column rather than riding, his presence a steady anchor for warriors who needed to see their chieftain among them after the campaign’s painful conclusion. He had refused the Rhakaddon mount that Sakh’arran had offered him at dawn. A chieftain who rode while his warriors walked sent a message that distance existed between leader and led, and distance was the last thing the Horde needed after the losses they had sustained.

The withdrawal from the Lag’ranna Mountains had been orderly, disciplined, and carried out with the same professional precision that had defined every movement the Horde had made since its creation. Sakh’arran had managed the retreat’s logistics with his characteristic efficiency ...staggered rearguards, rotating scout screens, supply trains consolidated for maximum mobility. There had been no rout, no panic, no descent into the chaotic flight that had characterized every orcish military defeat in recorded history.

But it was a withdrawal. Not a victory march. And every warrior in the column knew the difference.

The numbers told the story in the blunt language that warriors understood. The Horde had marched north with more than six thousand warriors, plus the goblin corps, the Warg Cavalry, the Rhakaddon units, and the trolls of the 1st Kani’karr Corps. It returned with approximately four thousand eight hundred combat-effective warriors, plus diminished support elements. Nearly seventeen hundred casualties ...killed, wounded too severely to fight, or missing in the chaos of engagements that had turned against them.

The weight of those losses was visible in the gaps. Formations that had marched north in tight, disciplined blocks now moved with spaces between the files where warriors had stood a month ago. Warband masters who had commanded full units now led reduced squads. Equipment that had been fresh and well-maintained at the campaign’s start bore the marks of combat that no field repair could fully address ...dented armor hammered back into rough shape, weapons re-edged so many times their profiles had changed, shields scarred with impact marks that read like a diary of every engagement.

The Warg Cavalry, once a fearsome force that had swept across the pinkskin flanks like a storm of teeth and iron, was reduced to barely a third of its original strength. The wargs themselves bore wounds that their riders tended with the gentle care that warriors reserved for creatures they loved more fiercely than they admitted. One rider walked beside his mount, his own legs injured, refusing a litter because his warg needed his presence more than his legs needed rest.

Dhug’mhar of the Rumbling Clan was carried on a litter near the column’s center, his massive frame diminished by the devastating wound that Aliyah Winters’ frost magic had carved across his chest. The wound was healing ...orcish physiology was remarkable in its regenerative capacity, the natural 3rd to 4th Realm constitution of their species knitting bone and tissue with a speed that would have required magical intervention in a human ...but the frost damage had reached deep into muscle and bone, leaving crystalline scarring that the shamans cautioned might be permanent. The cold lingered in the wound like a memory that refused to fade.

The chieftain of the Rumbling Clan bore his injury with the same theatrical dignity that he brought to everything. He had demanded to be carried at the column’s center where the maximum number of warriors could witness his recovery, and he used the position to deliver a running commentary on his condition that was equal parts self-promotion and genuine entertainment. 𝒇𝙧𝙚𝓮𝙬𝙚𝓫𝒏𝓸𝓿𝓮𝒍.𝓬𝙤𝓶

"Perfection is wounded, not diminished!" he declared to anyone within earshot, which, given his volume, included approximately the entire column. His voice, at least, had lost none of its power, though the effort of projecting it visibly pained him. "The ice queen marked me, yes! A worthy adversary! The most powerful pinkskin mage in their kingdom, and she needed her full power just to wound Dhug’mhar! She will remember me! She will tell her grandchildren about the day she faced perfection and barely survived! She will ..."

"She will freeze you solid next time if you don’t shut up and rest," Sakh’arran interrupted, falling into step beside the litter with the ease of a commander who had long since calibrated his tolerance for Dhug’mhar’s narcissism. His own injuries were less dramatic but no less real ...a long slash across his forearm that the healers had stitched closed, bruising along his ribs where a Threian cavalryman’s lance had struck his armor with enough force to crack the metal beneath.

"Jealousy is unbecoming, Sakh’arran."

"Stupidity is worse. Rest, or I’ll have the shamans put you to sleep."

The exchange drew tired laughter from nearby warriors ...the kind of laughter that soldiers produced when they needed to find humor in darkness, because the alternative was a silence that could swallow everything. Dhug’mhar’s boasting was familiar, almost comforting in its constancy. If the chieftain of the Rumbling Clan could still proclaim himself the pinnacle of orcish achievement while being carried on a litter with frost damage in his chest, then perhaps the world hadn’t changed as much as it felt like it had.

Behind the column, the mountains that had nearly been their victory and had instead taught them the most valuable lesson of the campaign faded into the haze of distance. The Lag’ranna peaks, where the Horde had fought the combined Winters-Snowe army to a standstill before being forced to withdraw, stood against the northern sky like a wall between the past and whatever came next.

Yohan itself had changed in the Horde’s absence.

The city ...and it was a city now, not merely a camp or a settlement ...had continued to grow under the governance of the administrators Khao’khen had left behind. When the column crested the final rise and the walls of Yohan appeared in the afternoon light, several warriors stopped mid-stride, their mouths falling open. The settlement they had left was recognizable but transformed, like a child who had grown while the parent was away.

New buildings had been erected along streets that followed the grid pattern Khao’khen had established at the city’s founding. Stone and timber structures, built with increasing sophistication as the builders learned from each project, replaced the temporary shelters that had housed the first generation of residents. The forge district, where orcish smiths worked alongside the techniques that Zul’jinn and his engineers had developed, had expanded to occupy an entire quarter of the city, its chimneys producing a haze of productive smoke that spoke of weapons and tools being created at a rate that outpaced anything in orcish history.

Agricultural lands had been expanded beyond the original plots, new fields carved from the surrounding grasslands by orcs who had learned that planting and harvesting required the same discipline as warfare. Irrigation channels, crude but functional, carried water from the river to crops that would have seemed impossibly organized to any previous generation of orcs. The concept of farming ...of planting seeds in the ground and waiting patiently for them to grow rather than simply taking what the land offered ...had been one of Khao’khen’s hardest sells to a species that had historically measured time between meals rather than between harvests.

But it was working.

Khao’khen walked the streets of his city in the evening light, observing the changes with the quiet satisfaction of a builder surveying work that had progressed in his absence. Orcish children ...a generation that had been born or raised in Yohan rather than in scattered tribal camps ...played in organized groups, their games supervised by elders whose approach to childcare reflected the Horde’s emphasis on cooperation over individual competition. These children would grow up knowing Yohan as home in a way their parents never had. They would take the city’s existence for granted, which was perhaps the most revolutionary thing about them.

The city was alive. Growing. Becoming something that transcended the military force that had created it.

This was what they were fighting for. Not revenge. Not territory. Not the abstract concept of victory that had driven orcish chieftains to throw their warriors against fortified positions since time immemorial. They were fighting for the right of this experiment ...this unprecedented attempt to build an orcish civilization ...to continue existing.

The war council convened three days after the Horde’s return, in the stone meeting hall that served as Yohan’s center of governance. The hall had been built during the Horde’s absence ...a proper stone structure with a vaulted ceiling, designed to hold the full complement of chieftains and war chiefs that the growing nation required. The familiar map table occupied the center of the room, its surface scarred by knife marks from a hundred planning sessions, the leather map overlaid with the stone and bone markers that Sakh’arran used to represent troop dispositions.

The chieftains and war chiefs gathered around the table, their expressions ranging from grim to determined to, in Dhug’mhar’s case, impatiently eager despite his litter-bound condition. He had insisted on being carried to the council, and no one had been willing to tell the chieftain of the Rumbling Clan that he could not attend a war council while he could still breathe and speak.

Trot’thar and Gur’kan, the War Chiefs of the First Horde, stood shoulder to shoulder in their customary positions. Dhug’mur of the Rock Bear Tribe sat like a mountain himself, his massive arms crossed, his scarred face unreadable. Vir’khan of the Black Tree Tribe leaned forward with the sharp-eyed alertness of a predator assessing terrain. The Warg Cavalry’s remaining captains, diminished in number but not in spirit, stood near the hall’s entrance.

"We lost," Khao’khen said, beginning with the fact that no one wanted to voice but everyone needed to hear. His voice was calm, carrying neither anger nor apology, just the steady clarity that his warriors had learned to trust more than any battle cry. "Not the war ...the campaign. The assault on the Lag’ranna Passes was a strategic failure. We inflicted heavy casualties on the pinkskins, yes. We demonstrated capabilities that they did not expect. But we did not achieve our objective, and we suffered losses that will take months to replace."

He let the statement settle, watching it land on faces that were still processing the taste of retreat. Some chieftains bristled ...the instinct to reframe defeat as partial victory was powerful in a culture that had historically measured success in enemy dead rather than objectives achieved. But the discipline that Khao’khen had instilled in his Horde over years of training held firm. They listened.

"The failure had specific causes," he continued, moving to the map table and placing his hands flat on its surface. "First: intelligence. We did not know about the second pinkskin army until it hit our rear. The Snowe force was approaching from the north while we were fully committed against the Winters position. That is a failure of scouting, of planning, of the assumption that our intelligence picture was complete when it was not. We saw what was in front of us and did not look behind."

Sakh’arran nodded, his expression tight with self-criticism. The intelligence failure was, in part, his responsibility, and he accepted the assessment without deflection.

"Second: aerial vulnerability. The pinkskin flying beasts and their mage riders consistently disrupted our operations at critical moments. The griffon knights broke formations, scattered supply lines, and provided the pinkskins with reconnaissance that we could not counter. Our crossbow teams were effective in static defense but insufficient for a mobile campaign. We need solutions for aerial threats that don’t require us to stand still and wait for them to come to us."

"Third: the 7th Circle mage." He said it flatly, without the awe or resentment that lesser leaders might have allowed to color the assessment. "A single practitioner of that power level fundamentally altered every engagement we fought. Her frost magic froze entire formations. Her scepter’s focused beams cut through our best warriors like a blade through grass. We have no equivalent capability. Our shamans operate at levels that can support and heal, but they cannot match a 7th Circle mage in direct combat, and no orcish warrior, regardless of Realm, has the ability to close the distance before that kind of power kills him."

He looked around the table, meeting each chieftain’s eyes in turn.

"These are problems. They are not reasons for despair. They are engineering challenges ...things that can be studied, understood, and solved. And solving them is exactly what we are going to do."

Sakh’arran laid out the analysis he had been preparing during the march home, his methodical mind already converting the campaign’s failures into the campaign’s curriculum.

The intelligence failure would be addressed by expanding the Verakh scouting network to cover not just the immediate area of operations but the entire region ...a web of scouts, informants, and observation posts that would ensure the Horde never again committed to an engagement without knowing what was approaching from every direction. The Verakhs had proven their worth repeatedly throughout the campaign. What they needed was not better training but broader deployment.

The aerial vulnerability would be addressed through a combination of improved crossbow technology ...heavier draw weights, enchanted bolts developed with input from the shamans, dedicated anti-air formations trained specifically to counter griffon-mounted mages ...and, most ambitiously, the development of orcish aerial capabilities. Warg riders equipped with specially designed harnesses that would allow them to attack from elevated positions, using the wargs’ natural agility on cliff faces and steep terrain to create a mobile anti-air force that didn’t require the Horde to produce flying mounts it didn’t have.

The 7th Circle mage problem was the most difficult. No orcish warrior or shaman operated at a level that could directly counter a mage of that power. The highest natural Realm among orcish warriors was the 4th, and even the most enhanced orcs in the Horde barely reached the equivalent of a 5th Realm human warrior. The gap between that and 7th Circle magic was not a gap that could be bridged by courage or numbers alone.

"A 7th Circle mage without soldiers is still formidable," Sakh’arran said, his tactical mind working the problem from angles that brute force couldn’t reach. "But a 7th Circle mage without soldiers, without supplies, without communication, and without rest is mortal. We don’t fight the mage. We fight everything around the mage, and let attrition do what direct assault cannot. Isolate her from her army. Cut her supply lines. Force her to expend energy on defense rather than offense. Deny her sleep. Deny her food. Deny her the support structure that allows her to bring that power to bear."

Dhug’mhar, from his litter, raised one massive, bandaged fist. The gesture was slower than usual, the frost damage in his chest visibly restraining the theatrical energy that normally characterized his every movement.

"Perfection requires patience," he said, and the fact that Dhug’mhar, of all orcs, was advocating patience told everyone in the room how thoroughly the campaign had transformed them. The chieftain who had charged headlong into the Winters’ frost barrier, who had bellowed challenges while ice shattered his warriors’ armor, who had personally confronted the Blue Countess and been cut down by the focused beam of her scepter ...that chieftain was saying that patience, not fury, was the path forward.

Khao’khen nodded. "But there is something larger to address."

The table fell silent. Every eye turned to their chieftain.

"The pinkskins are weakened. Their armies are depleted. Their kingdom is in political turmoil ...their own internal conflicts have damaged them as much as our attacks. Reports from the Verakhs who remained behind suggest that the pinkskin capital is consumed with investigation and restructuring. Their attention is turned inward."

He placed markers on the map. "This is an opportunity. But it is also a trap. The temptation is to strike now, while they are weak. To throw everything we have at a damaged enemy before they can recover."

Several chieftains straightened, their instincts pulling them toward exactly the course of action Khao’khen was about to reject.

"We resist that temptation. We tried rushing. It cost us seventeen hundred warriors. Instead, we rebuild. We train. We integrate the lessons of this campaign into our doctrine. We expand the Horde ...not just in numbers but in capability. New warbands. New weapons. New tactics. Better intelligence. Solutions for every problem we identified."

He looked at his chieftains, and in his eyes was the same steady fire that had sustained the Yohan First Horde from its creation through every trial it had faced.

"When we march again ...and we will march again ...we march with a force that is prepared for everything the pinkskins can field. Not a force that hopes for the best. A force that has planned for the worst."

"The pinkskins think this is over. Let them think that. Let them rebuild their walls and restore their magic and celebrate their survival. Every day they spend looking inward is a day we spend growing stronger."

"And when we are ready ...truly ready, not just eager ...we will show them what the Yohan Horde has become."

The council ended with assignments. Training schedules. Resource allocations. Intelligence priorities. The machinery of a civilization at war, grinding into motion with the steady, patient rhythm that Khao’khen had taught his people to value above the flashy, unsustainable fury that had defined orcish warfare for generations.

Outside the meeting hall, the sun set over Yohan, painting the city’s growing skyline in shades of amber and gold. In the streets, warriors returning from the campaign embraced families they had been uncertain they would see again. In the forges, smiths began the work of replacing lost equipment. In the training grounds, drill masters prepared for the next generation of warriors who would learn the new way of war.

The Horde was home.

And home, for the first time in orcish history, was not just a campfire in the wilderness.

It was a city. A nation. A future.

And Khao’khen intended to defend it with everything he had.