FREE USE in Primitive World - Chapter 333: Iron Wall

Chapter 333: Chapter 333: Iron Wall
But they were met by a wall of desperate, unyielding iron.
The warriors stationed on the walls… the archers who had run out of arrows, the wounded who had refused to retreat, and the reserve guards… didn’t break. They dropped their bows and drew their bone-swords and heavy hand-axes.
It was brutal, hyper-close-quarters combat. The Hook-Claw Stalkers lunged, tearing through leather armor and flesh. Veynar defenders screamed, tackling the massive beast, using their own body weight to pin the beasts down while their comrades drove spears directly into their skulls.
Blood… both human and beast… spilled across the ancient, polished wood of the ramparts, raining down on the gates below. The defenders fought with the frantic, cornered fury of men and women who knew that if they failed, their children sleeping in the inner rings would be eaten alive.
Sol risked a glance upward as he crushed the throat of an attacking wolf.
He saw a Veynar archer get tackled over the edge of the parapet by a Stalker, the two of them plummeting to their deaths in the mud below, the archer’s dagger still buried in the beast’s eye. He saw a squad of reserve spearmen successfully box in two of the stalkers, stabbing them to death in a frantic, bloody melee.
The defenders were dying, but they were holding the line. They were killing the breachers.
The system was working. The tribe was fighting as a single, desperate organism.
…
But alas! The sheer, mathematical impossibility of the battlefield began to tell its grim tale. The Veynar warriors were fighting with the kind of manic, desperate heroism that only came when homes and families were at stake, but heroism didn’t stop a charging five-ton monstrosity.
Sol watched from the corner of his eye as a seasoned spearman was thrown twenty feet into the air, his chest caved in by a stray boulder. Further down the line, a young huntress was dragged screaming into the swirling, yellow-tinged dust by a pack of Shadow-Wolves, her comrades unable to reach her in time.
The casualties were mounting. The air smelled of ozone, blood, and ruptured bowels.
The Elders, realizing the younger warriors were breaking, had retreated from the absolute front. They moved with terrifying, seasoned efficiency. Sol watched Elder Thorne… the same man who had coward behind politics in the High Hall… decapitate three Razor-Boars with a single sweep of his heavy bone-axe.
Soon with the help of a few elders, all the Hook-Claw Stalkers were eliminated.
…
Sol watched Veylara. She stood at the center of the line, her spear a blur. She was killing effortlessly, her strikes precise and lethal, but Sol’s newly enhanced instincts, honed over the last five days of slaughter, recognized the restraint. Her White Tiger phantom was barely a flicker over her shoulder.
She wasn’t using her full strength. In fact, none of the Elders were.
His rational mind understood the brutal calculus instantly: They are pacing themselves. They know Layer 3 and maybe Layer 4 assets are waiting in the dark. If they burn their cores now on fodder, the tribe dies later.
But understanding the logic didn’t stop the cold, rising fury in his chest as he heard another tribesman scream in agony. The blood-soaked reality of the Great Orrath wasn’t a game of resource management, it was a meat grinder.
Sol let out a guttural, furious roar. If they had to conserve their strength, he would simply have to spend his.
He kicked his muscles into overdrive, his Sun Core flaring like a miniature star in his stomach. He abandoned defensive formations entirely, plunging deep into the thickest cluster of Omen Blood beasts.
The dreadwing blade became an arc of continuous, blinding sapphire light.He carved through Iron-Tusk Elephants, severed the heads of towering Ursids, and crushed the skulls of leaping predators with the sheer kinetic weight of his Badger-enhanced fists.
His fury was a localized natural disaster. He thinned the center of the horde so drastically that, for a few precious seconds, the Vanguard warriors actually had room to breathe.
Then, cutting through the chaos of the battlefield, Veylara’s voice boomed, amplified by her essence so that every single warrior heard it clearly over the roars of the beasts.
“You have broken their momentum! Excellent work!” Veylara commanded, her voice steady and absolute. “But the lines are stretching! It is time to fall back! All Vanguard units, execute a fighting retreat to the walls! Move!”
Sol also agreed with her descion. The warriors were exhausted. The adrenaline was wearing off, replaced by the heavy, leaden weight of fatigue after hours of continuous, high-stress combat. The casualties were increasing exponentially not because the beasts were suddenly stronger, but because human reflexes were slowing down.
He intensified his slaughter, acting as the bloody fulcrum of the retreat. He covered the rear, his blade creating a lethal perimeter that no beast dared to cross, buying the exhausted spearmen and archers the time they needed to scramble back through the gates.
Slowly, methodically, the Veynar forces fell back behind the imposing, petrified walls of the settlement. The heavy gates slammed shut with a deafening, final BOOM, the heavy wooden locking bars sliding into place.
Inside the walls, the scene was one of grim relief.
Warriors collapsed against the petrified wood, gasping for air, their weapons dropping from exhausted fingers. Medics darted frantically between the wounded, the smell of burning herbs and blood hanging heavy in the air.
The atmosphere was chaotic but organized. Veylara immediately began barking orders.
“Rotate the lines! Those who fought outside, to the back and rest. Reserves, take your place upon the walls!” she commanded, her armor streaked with black blood. “We need to hold the high ground now. Use this moment to rest and cycle your cores. The tide is far from over.”
The weather seemed to reflect the desperate, grim reality of the siege. Heavy, bruised storm clouds had rolled in over the Great Orrath, pressing down on the settlement. The air was thick and humid, crackling with atmospheric tension. Occasional flashes of jagged lightning illuminated the swirling, massive dust cloud outside the walls, followed by the deep, ominous rumble of thunder.
Sol sat heavily on a wooden crate near the armory, his breath finally coming in ragged gasps. His Badger armor was entirely painted in black, green, and red viscera. Dreadwing Blade rested across his knees, the sapphire blade completely clean and glowing with a hungry light.
He pulled a leather flask of water from his belt and drank deeply, washing the taste of ozone and blood from his mouth.
A heavy, chitin-clad hand rested firmly on his shoulder.
Sol looked up to see Warchief Veylara standing over him. She looked exhausted, the lines on her face etched deep by the burden of command and the loss of her people, but her storm-colored eyes held a profound, genuine respect.
“You defied a direct order,,” Veylara said, her voice low.
“I told you,” Sol replied, his voice a tired rasp. “You don’t get to dictate where I bleed.”
Veylara’s mouth twitched into the ghost of a proud smile. “No. I suppose I don’t.” She squeezed his shoulder. “Your courage out there… it inspired the Vanguard. You held the center when it should have broken. You saved more lives tonight than any man in this tribe. For that… the Veynar owe you a debt.”
Before Sol could reply, the ground beneath the settlement shuddered violently.
BWOOOOOOOM.
The Behemoth Horns on the watchtowers screamed again, their sound nearly drowned out by a deafening clap of thunder from the storm clouds above.
“Warchief!” a scout shrieked from the highest parapet, pointing frantically into the dark. “Third wave! They’ve breached the clearing!”


