Rise of the Horde - Chapter 541 - 541

Dawn broke over the treelines of the Lag’ranna Mountains in a pale wash of gray and gold. Mist drifted between the trunks, curling around the stumps of felled trees and the half-finished earthworks that marked the Yohan tribe’s labor. The scent of sap and smoke hung thick, mixed with sweat and damp earth. The clearing …once nothing more than wild woodland … now throbbed with the rhythm of ordered toil.
A horn sounded three short notes, clear and even. Instantly, the noise of argument and chatter ceased. Lines of orcs hefted their axes, trolls reached for sledges, and goblins hurried to stack bundles of brushwood. They moved not in chaos but in cadence… an army of laborers instead of warriors at the moment.
At the heart of it stood Droktagar, Warband Master of the 3rd Warband. His armor was scratched and dull, his cloak nothing more than a strip of wolf hide, yet when he raised his hand, hundreds watched. “Rabble Three and Four…south line! The ground there’s too soft for wall posts. Dig until the dirt runs dry, then pack with clay!” His voice carried easily; it was not a bellow but the bark of habit, a commander who expected obedience because he had earned it.
Around him, the orcs of Yohan moved with purpose. Each a proud warrior and veteran of many battles…they moved with purpose. They were not the largest tribe, but they were the most disciplined. Where others fought with overwhelming might and dominance, Yohan fought with discipline and endurance.
The axes fell in rhythm. Thud…crack. Thud…crack. The forest echoed like a heartbeat. Trees that had stood for centuries groaned and toppled, their roots torn from the ground by ropes pulled by ogres and their overwhelming strength. The logs were dragged to the central pit, where teams of goblins measured and cut them to length, their small hands quick and precise.
To the west, on a rise overlooking the camp, a crowd of onlookers gathered: orcs from the Red Fang, Ironhide, and the nomad tribe of the Broken Teeth. They had fought for Yohan’s banner but were not yet of Yohan. They watched the organized chaos below with open disbelief.
“Orcs working like ants,” muttered one Broken Tooth warrior, his tusks yellowed with age. “They’ve forgotten the song of battle.”
Another spat into the dust. “Maybe they never knew it. Look at them…stacking dirt as if it’s gold.”
Yet even as they mocked, their eyes stayed fixed on the scene. There was something hypnotic in that order…the steady rhythm, the shouted commands, the respect with which Yohan warriors helped one another lift, brace, and build. It was not weakness. It was strength made methodical.
Droktagar strode among the workers, his eyes sweeping the line. When a young goblin stumbled with a timber twice his size, the orc did not strike him as other commanders might have. Instead, he crouched, lifted the far end, and said simply, “Together.” They moved as one until the beam slid into its trench. The goblin, panting, grinned with sharpened teeth. “Thank you.”
Droktagar nodded once. “You stand for Yohan. That’s thanks enough.”
Everywhere, similar scenes repeated. Orcs sharpened stakes while trolls tamped clay with heavy clubs. Ogres, their huge frames smeared with mud, carried stones for the foundation wall. Overhead, banners of woven bark fluttered…the mark of Yohan painted in dark resin. Smoke from the cook fires drifted between them like thin clouds.
By midday the first ring of the palisade rose shoulder-high, surrounding the tower of mud and lumber. The ground trembled with the pounding of mallets. Goblin runners moved along the trenches, shouting updates. “North wall steady! South trench holds! Scouts report no movement beyond the treeline!”
Each report earned a nod from Droktagar or a curt order to adjust spacing, reinforce joints, check lashings. It was construction as campaign, every act of labor a maneuver in a greater war for survival.
Beyond the fort’s perimeter, squads rotated on watch. The Yohan orcs used a system foreign to their kind…four shifts, each with a horn signal, changing every few hours so no eye grew dull. While one warband rested, another stood sentry; while one hunted, another built. It was discipline made routine.
At the shift’s end, the relieved guards marched back in formation, shields slung, spears or blades resting on shoulders. The newcomers saluted them with clenched fists to chest, a gesture of respect that required no words. No overseer cracked a whip; no shaman shouted threats. The code of Yohan was obedience through earned trust, discipline and respect.
In the afternoon heat, the work slowed. Dust hung in the air, glowing gold where sunbeams cut through the canopy. Gur’kan called for a halt, and horns answered. Instantly the din fell to murmurs. The laborers sank to their knees, drinking water from leather skins passed hand to hand. Even the ogres sat heavy and quiet, their massive chests heaving.
A murmur spread through the watching tribes. “They stop together,” one Ironhide warrior said softly. “Even the big ones listen.”
Another shook his head. “Not listen…believe. Look how they look to that skinny orc. Like cubs to a sire.”
For the first time in generations, the orcs saw unity not as a chain but as a choice.
Gur’kan stood on a stump at the center of the clearing. “Hear me!” he called. The camp quieted instantly. “This fort will stand by dusk tomorrow. Not because I command it, but because Yohan wills it. Every log you set, every trench you dig…each is a stone in the wall that will keep our kin from hunger and our enemies from sleep. Work for yourselves, not for me.”
A rumble of approval rolled through the crowd. Axes lifted again, stronger, faster. The sound of their work became music…rough, honest, relentless.
From the ridge, the chieftains of the other tribes exchanged glances. The Red Fang warlord, scarred and weary, spat into the grass. “Maybe there’s a new way after all,” he muttered. “Maybe war can build instead of burn.”
By nightfall, torches blazed along the growing walls. Shadows moved against the firelight…massive, purposeful, unafraid. In the flicker of flame, the Yohan orcs looked less like beasts and more like builders of empires.
And high above the clearing, unseen in the dark canopy, an owl turned its head and watched as the age of savage chaos began to shift toward something new.
*****
When the second dawn broke, the clearing was already awake.
Drums beat…not the wild war drums of war, but a steady cadence that marked the rhythm of labor. It was the heartbeat of the Yohan tribe. Smoke coiled from the forges where goblins hammered nails from scavenged iron; the clang of hammers carried across the valley, mingling with the rasp of saws and the creak of ropes.
In the center of the growing fort, Gur’kan stood before a wide pit that would become the inner yard. He watched the orcs set the corner posts for the main gate…great timbers sunk deep into the ground and lashed with bands of hammered iron. Nearby, two ogres strained to lift the gatebeam into place while a troll directed them with gestures and guttural commands. For all their size and roughness, they moved with coordination.
The system worked.
Every orc knew his task; every goblin knew his measure. They had divided the camp into quadrants, each led by a foreman chosen for skill rather than birth. The ogres hauled the heavy stone from the riverbed; trolls mixed the clay and straw for the ramparts; goblins handled joinery, lashings, and repairs. The orcs oversaw it all, shifting between work crews, lending muscle where needed and lending words when strength alone could not.
The air was alive with effort.
Voices shouted across the yard…warnings, measurements, encouragements. The smell of cut wood and wet earth filled the nostrils. Sweat slicked every back and arm, but none complained. They worked with the same single-minded purpose they once reserved for battle.
Gur’kan moved among them, pausing to adjust a brace or to steady a ladder. Where others might have barked insults, he offered praise. “Good cut,” he told one young orc, examining a notch carved into a log. “You’ve the hand of a builder, not a butcher.” The youth grinned, pride shining brighter than his sweat.
Respect spread faster than fear ever had.
*****
On the outer perimeter, the rotating warbands changed guard. The horns sounded, short and sharp. The night watch, weary-eyed but alert, handed their posts to the fresh warriors from the east barracks. Each exchange ended with the same ritual…clasped wrists, a bow of heads, and the words: “For the Horde.” The phrase had begun as a rallying cry in battle; now it was becoming something greater, a creed.
The new guards took their stations along the wooden towers that ringed the fort’s edge. Each tower was little more than a high platform of planks and stakes, yet from up there they could see the entire plains. To the north stretched the rolling hills where the Red Fang tribe still camped, their banners drooping in the wind. Beyond that lay the broken plains and the dew-lined mountains that guarded the northern passes. Somewhere out there, the Threian army still marched.
But for now, the fort was their world.
*****
By midday, the work reached a fever pitch. The palisade ring was closed; the ditches deepened and filled with sharpened stakes. The inner yard bustled with purpose….piles of quarried stone for the smiths, racks of drying timber for roof beams. Even the trolls, creatures once thought incapable of patience, learned to work in rhythm. They hummed deep in their throats as they tamped the ramparts, a sound that vibrated in the soil like the purr of mountains.
Goblins scurried everywhere, their small forms darting between legs and ladders. Some wore belts heavy with chisels and saws, others carried baskets of nails on their backs. They spoke in quick, clicking tongues, passing measurements and counts. Once despised as scavengers, they now moved with confidence, knowing that in Yohan’s order they had purpose.
“Stone-line steady!” one shouted up a scaffold.
“Hold!” came the answer from above. A dozen orcs leaned into the ropes, guiding a beam into its socket with the slow precision of men who had learned patience the hard way.
When it settled, the foreman called, “Lock it!” Mallets rained down. The sound was thunder, rhythmic and sure.
From the ridge to the west, the visiting chieftains of other tribes watched again. They no longer mocked. The fort was taking shape…real, undeniable, formidable. Its walls gleamed with resin where the goblins had sealed the seams. The outer trench shone with water diverted from the nearby creek. Even the scent of sap and clay smelled of permanence.
The Red Fang warlord, who had once laughed at the idea of orcs building anything that wasn’t meant to burn, scratched his beard in silence. “They’ll hold that ground through even winter,” he muttered.
Beside him, a goblin shaman from the Black Teeth squinted. “Not just hold it. Breed it. See how they mix the clay with straw? That wall will not fall even when fire comes.”
“And what will they do when it’s done?” asked another, uneasy. “A tribe that can build can conquer.”
None answered.
****
By the third day, the fort had a name: Yohan’s Watch. The words were carved above the gate by Khao’khen’s own hand, deep strokes in fresh wood. Around the yard, voices echoed the name with reverence. “Yohan Watches.” “Yohan endures.”
That evening, when the last light faded, the entire camp gathered inside the walls. Torches ringed the yard, their flames mirrored in the eyes of a thousand warriors and workers. Gur’kan climbed the unfinished tower above the gate. His voice rolled out over the crowd, rough and full of pride.
“Brothers in battle, kin of Yohan! Look around you. Three days past, this was wild ground. Today it is ours. Not taken by the sword, but forged by our hands. This fort is proof that we are more than just warriors. We are builders. We are a tribe that remembers and a tribe that endures.”
A roar answered him, deep and layered…the voices of orcs, goblins, trolls, even the ogres rumbling like thunder. The noise shook the timbers, but Gur’kan only grinned.
“We fought long for scraps,” he went on, “and we died as beasts. No more. The world beyond these walls will learn that Yohan does not bow, and Yohan does not break. When our children ask what kept them safe, they will say…it was us. Our hands. Our will.”
He raised his fist. “For the Horde!”
“FOR THE HORDE!” came the thunderous answer, echoing through the forest.
*****
Long after the chant faded, the camp returned to its rhythm. Sentries took their posts, fires were banked, and the sounds of work gave way to the murmur of evening talk. The air smelled of pine smoke and cooked meat. Orcs shared bowls of stew with goblins; trolls leaned against walls they had built, rumbling contentedly.
From the ridge, the visiting tribes still lingered. The Red Fang warlord turned to his captains. “Mark what you’ve seen. The Yohan way is not madness…it is power. We will watch, and we will learn.”
Below, Droktagar walked the inner yard one last time before sleep. He paused by the main gate, resting his hand against the fresh wood. It was rough beneath his palm, but solid. Built to last. He thought of the generations of orcs who had lived and died in endless bloodshed and chaos. For the first time, he imagined a future that was more than survival.
From beyond the walls came the faint howl of wolves, and he smiled. Let the wild watch. The Yohan tribe had learned to build its own dawn.
****
When morning returned, the sunlight caught on the palisades of Yohan’s Watch, turning the sharpened stakes to gold. Smoke drifted from the forges, and banners snapped in the breeze. The fort stood as a scar of purpose against the wilderness…a promise that the orcs could be more than what the world believed of them.
And from the surrounding hills, where the other tribes still camped, messengers rode out. Some rode to join Yohan. Others rode to warn their chieftains. But all knew the same truth:
the world had changed.
In the north, amid the scent of pine and smoke, the first stronghold of orcish offensive against Threia had been born.
Yohan’s Watch stood.


