Rise of the Horde - Chapter 542 - 542

By the time Major Gresham’s column sighted the banners of the Blue Countess, the air itself seemed weary of them.
The Threian line trudged through the orcish lands like ghosts of an army long since spent. Their banners hung limp and torn, the proud sigil of the Snowe family…the usually pristine banner now covered in burnt marks and dirt…some parts of it were even covered in dried blood. Boots sank ankle-deep into the thawing mud, each step marked by a wet squelch. The wind carried the stench of sweat, steel, and old blood…signs of too many skirmishes, too few victories.
The Griffon Knights, once a sight of awe, were shadows of their former splendor. Their armor, once mirror-bright with frost enchantments, now bore blackened streaks from demonic fire and acid. The griffons themselves limped on bandaged claws, their feathers dulled by travel and ash. At the head of them rode the Baron of Frost, his helm hanging at his side, his pale hair streaked with soot, his eyes burning with a tired coldness that mirrored the snowfields of the frigid cold of his former training grounds.
Beside him marched Major Gresham, shoulders hunched under the weight of duty and despair. His men…those who remained…numbered barely a thousand of the original who had marched north after being saved by the Baron. They moved in silence, their weapons tied to their backs not out of discipline but fatigue. Even the camp followers trudged with hollow eyes, pushing broken carts laden with the wounded and dying.
Then, as if stepping from another world, the camp of the Blue Countess rose before them.
****
The contrast was almost painful.
Where the Threians carried the stench of war, the Winters’ host smelled of lavender oil and conjured ozone. Their camp spread like a perfect tapestry across the rolling hills…tidy rows of azure tents, each marked with the sigil of a snowflake encircling a crescent moon. Silk banners rippled in the wind, clean and untorn. Even the campfires burned in neat, symmetrical circles, the smoke trailing upward in pale blue plumes.
The soldiers of the Winters host were arrayed with effortless grace. Their armor gleamed in the morning sun, untouched by battle grime. The infantry stood at polished ease, their lines crisp as parade drill. But what drew the Threians’ attention most were the mages…hundreds of them. Cloaked in deep blue, they moved like dancers among the ranks, their hands tracing idle sigils in the air. Arcane sparks followed their gestures like dust motes in sunlight.
Above them, towers of conjured ice rose from the earth…temporary watch spires, their walls glinting with magical wards. Around them, archers practiced their craft, loosing arrows tipped with faint frostlight. Each shaft struck its target dead center with mechanical precision. Even their laughter was soft and civilized, utterly alien to men who had spent the last month crawling through mud and blood.
Major Gresham’s men slowed as they entered the perimeter, eyes darting in disbelief. They were surrounded not by fellow soldiers, but by a spectacle.
A company of Winters cavalry trotted past…riders in sapphire-trimmed armor mounted on white destriers whose hooves glowed faintly with enchantment. The air shimmered with magic as they moved, faint streams of frost trailing from their capes. One of them nodded politely to the Baron of Frost, though his smile carried the smug edge of superiority.
Even their banners seemed alive, fluttering with contained spellwork that kept them clean and bright despite the wind.
Gresham muttered under his breath, “Heavens damn it all, they look ready for a parade.”
The Baron’s lips twitched, but his voice stayed flat. “They always are.”
*****
The Threian column was directed toward the lower field, far from the center of the Winters camp. Servants in pristine blue tabards gestured curtly, as though wary of being dirtied by proximity. There, the Threians dismounted and began to tend to their wounded. Every motion was sluggish…bandages were replaced, armor unbuckled, fires built not from conjured flame but by striking flint against steel.
Across the way, Winters’ soldiers watched with a mixture of pity and disdain. Their laughter carried easily over the wind. “Look at them,” one young arcanist whispered to another, “filthy as goblins. That’s the Snowe breed for you…born of frost, living in mud.”
Another chuckled, “Their soldiers smell like burnt meat. Must be the scent of valor.”
Gresham ignored them, jaw clenched tight. His men were too broken to react, too grateful simply to stop marching. They dropped their gear and collapsed where they stood, some falling asleep before their heads hit the ground.
The Baron of Frost stood apart, his gaze fixed on the highest tent at the camp’s heart…the pavilion of the Blue Countess. The fabric shimmered with layered spells, each thread alive with runes of protection and comfort. It was a palace among tents. Beyond it, the banners of House Winters rippled, each one enchanted to leave a faint trail of frost-light in the air.
*****
As dusk settled, word came that the Blue Countess Aliyah Winters would receive the Baron and Major Gresham at dawn.
The Threians set about their meager camp…muddy fires, broken tents, thin stew boiled from what rations remained. Across the hill, the Winters army dined under lantern light and string music, their tables laid with silver platters and conjured fruits. It was as though two worlds had collided…the weary and the untouched, the real and the ideal.
That night, the Baron stood by the edge of their camp, watching frost gather on his gauntlet. His griffon, scarred and bandaged, rested nearby. The beast stirred, as if sensing its master’s thoughts.
“They look at us like we’re beasts,” Gresham said quietly, coming to stand beside him.
“They always have,” the Baron replied.
Gresham gave a low grunt. “If not for orders from the capital, I’d rather keep marching north and freeze with honor than bow before silk.”
The Baron’s eyes reflected the moonlight, cold and resolute. “Hold your tongue, Major. Politics are colder than frost, and sharper than steel. Remember that.”
Gresham looked toward the luminous tents of the Winters host, where laughter and harp music drifted on the air. “And yet, they call this war.”
The Baron’s gaze hardened. “Let them have their illusions. When the real war finds them, it will not be their spells that save them.”
The wind stirred, carrying the scent of lavender and perfumed smoke from the Winters camp…so clean, so alien to the mud-caked Threians that it seemed almost mocking.
The Baron turned away, murmuring to himself, “Tomorrow, the frost meets the blue.”
*****
The dawn broke pale and thin, a ribbon of gold threading through a sky heavy with mist.
In the heart of the Winters encampment, bells chimed softly … not the harsh clang of a watch alarm, but a delicate melody that woke the mages and officers in gentle rhythm. From above, it must have looked like an awakening garden; blue tents unfurling in the sunlight, white-cloaked soldiers stretching, laughter blooming like spring. A world away from the grim silence of the Threian camp on the plain below.
Major Gresham stood in his patched uniform, straight-backed but hollow-eyed, watching the glow of the Winters’ banners from afar. His men were already stirring, tending to their wounded and cleaning their weapons with quiet efficiency. The Threians moved like men half-dead, driven only by habit. No music, no laughter … just the steady clatter of iron and coughs.
The Baron of Frost approached, his armor cleaned as best as could be managed. His griffon was tethered nearby, wings folded, the beast’s feathers still ragged from battle.
“Are we ready?” the Baron asked, voice low but even.
“As we’ll ever be,” Gresham replied. “If they kept us waiting any longer, I’d think it was deliberate.”
The Baron gave a faint smirk. “With the Winters, everything is deliberate.”
A messenger arrived then … a young mage in azure robes, his face pale with practiced indifference. He bowed slightly, as if afraid to bend too far before mud-stained soldiers. “The Blue Countess will receive you now,” he said, his tone perfectly polite, perfectly empty.
The Baron inclined his head. “Lead the way.”
*****
They walked through the camp of the Winters host, and every step deepened the contrast between the two armies.
The Winters soldiers watched them pass in orderly ranks, each man and woman immaculate in uniform, cloaks shimmering with faint enchantment. Their faces were smooth, untouched by soot or blood, and their eyes followed the newcomers with thinly veiled disdain.
Magic hummed faintly in the air … wards, glamours, gentle temperature charms. The scent of perfume replaced the acrid tang of sweat and iron. To men like Gresham, it felt wrong … war should not smell like flowers.
He muttered under his breath, “They’ve never slept in a trench a day in their lives.”
The Baron’s gaze swept the camp. “No. But they’ve killed with elegance, and that’s worse.”
Ahead rose the grand pavilion of Aliyah Winters … a vast structure of white silk and blue velvet, its canopy held aloft by carved ice pillars that did not melt even under the sun. Runes shimmered faintly along its edges, diffusing the light into a soft radiance. It was beautiful, undeniably so, but it felt less like a war tent and more like a temple.
The guards at the entrance wore breastplates that gleamed like mirrors. One stepped forward, his tone formal but edged. “Major Gresham of Threia, and the Baron of Frost, of House Snowe.”
The way he said “Snowe” carried the faintest twist of contempt.
Inside, the air was cool and scented with lilac. The floor was layered with carpets, the walls adorned with banners woven from spell-silk that rippled with faint, living light. Maps floated midair, projected by illusion … each line precise, every sightings marked in perfect detail.
At the far end of the chamber, seated on a chair of sculpted frostglass, was the Blue Countess Aliyah Winters.
****
She was the picture of cold nobility.
Her hair, pale as glacier ice, framed a face untouched by fatigue. Her robes flowed like liquid sapphire, their hems embroidered with runes that pulsed in time with her heartbeat. Around her throat shimmered a choker of frost-crystal that refracted every motion into light. To look at her was to look upon a sculpture … something beautiful and unyielding.
When the Baron and Gresham entered, she rose gracefully. “Baron. Major. You arrived later than expected.”
The Baron bowed slightly, neither subservient nor disrespectful. “We were delayed, Countess. The roads were… contested.”
Aliyah’s eyes flicked over them, pausing on the grime that marred their armor, the exhaustion in their faces. Her lips curved faintly. “So I see. I had heard the Snowe lines encountered resistance. I hadn’t realized you were routed.”
Gresham stiffened, but the Baron only inclined his head slightly. “Loss teaches more than victory, my lady.”
“Indeed,” she said, voice like silk across glass. “Though some lessons are… better learned from others.”
Behind her, several Winters officers stood at attention … mages, archers, and one armored knight with a face like carved marble. He bore a captain’s crest on his pauldron, his armor burnished silver with blue trim. His eyes were the color of pale steel, and they fixed on the Baron with undisguised hostility.
This was Captain Rhaegar Vance, one of Aliyah’s oldest retainers … and a known hater of House Snowe.
When the Countess turned to speak with her aides, Rhaegar stepped forward slightly, just enough that his words could be heard by all.
“So these are the vaunted Frost Dogs,” he said, voice sharp as drawn steel. “I was told they froze orcs with their breath and shattered mountains with their hooves. But they look more like beggars now. Tell me, Baron…do the hounds of House Snowe still bite, or have you traded your teeth for excuses?”
The words hung in the air, venomous and deliberate.
Gresham’s hand twitched toward his sword, but the Baron’s gauntlet lifted, halting him.
The Baron turned his gaze on Rhaegar … calm, measured, and infinitely colder than the countess’s elegance. “Careful, Captain. Frost bites deeper than you think.”
Rhaegar smirked. “Only if the frost is pure. Yours seems… stained.”
The Countess’s voice cut through before the tension could shatter. “Enough.”
She didn’t raise her tone, yet the command froze the air. Even Rhaegar inclined his head in curt acknowledgment.
Aliyah’s eyes moved between the two sides … between the battered pragmatists of Snowe and her own glittering ranks. “We are all servants of the Crown,” she said, though her tone suggested the words were more obligation than belief. “Our duty is the same, though our methods differ.”
The Baron met her gaze evenly. “Duty is the one thing that doesn’t differ, my lady.”
“Perhaps,” she replied, faintly amused. “Though your men seem… less acquainted with comfort.”
Gresham couldn’t stop himself. “Comfort’s a luxury on the field, Countess. We were busy dying while your mages painted sigils.”
Her blue eyes sharpened. “Watch your tone, Major. I do not tolerate insolence.”
The Baron stepped forward then, voice calm but edged with frost. “He speaks the truth. The Threian line held the orcish advance for many weeks while you stay in the comfort of your camp.”
For a moment, the two noble houses faced one another … frost and silk, iron and beauty. The chamber seemed to grow colder, the air brittle with tension.
Then Aliyah smiled. It was the kind of smile that promised daggers in the dark.
“Then we shall make it to you now. My healers will tend to your wounded. My quartermasters will see your men fed. But, Baron, Major, understand this…your command is yours no longer. From this moment, the Threian survivors fall under my coordination. We march under one banner, and it is not Snowe.”
The Baron bowed his head slightly, though his voice carried the weight of a glacier. “Our men will not fall under your command. We are just passing by, to warn you of the orcish army that will advance northwards after us. We will continue our journey after our men are rested enough.”
“So be it,” the Countess shortly replied.
*****
Outside, as the two men left the pavilion, Gresham exhaled sharply. “I should’ve struck that bastard down when he called us dogs.”
The Baron adjusted his gloves, his expression unreadable. “No. That’s what he wanted. The Winters feed on reaction … they live for it.”
“She means to humiliate us,” Gresham said. “To strip us of command right in front of our faces.”
“She means to measure us,” the Baron replied. “Let her try. Frost doesn’t melt beneath blue silk.”
They reached the edge of the Winters camp then, where the sunlight broke across banners of sapphire and white. Behind them, the music of laughter rose again. Before them, their own men waited … wounded, weary, but loyal.
The Baron looked toward them and spoke softly.
“Let them mock. Let them smile. When the next storm comes, it won’t be their beauty that holds the line.”
And for a moment, the wind itself seemed to answer him … a cold breath whispering across the plain, stirring the edges of the Snowe banner.


