Rise of the Horde - Chapter 543 - 543

At first light, the camp of Major Gresham’s survivors began to stir. The mists crept low across the grasslands, veiling torn banners and makeshift tents in pale gloom. The smell of blood and boiled roots hung thick over the slope … the smell of survival.
Men coughed in their bedrolls. Medics moved between the cots, washing bandages dark with rot and grime. Griffons wheezed where they lay tethered, their wings bound tight with rope and canvas. It was the quiet of exhaustion, of soldiers too tired to even curse the cold.
Then the colors of House Winters broke through the mist.
Carriages drawn by white horses descended from the ridge, bearing the azure-and-silver banner of the Blue Countess. Behind them came a column of healers and quartermasters, their robes clean, their posture unbent by hardship. They moved like a procession … careful, deliberate … bringing with them the scent of lavender oil and parchment.
The Threians turned to watch, silent. The healers fanned out across the wounded rows, their palms glowing faintly as they worked. Where a Threian medic might have poured liquor into a wound and prayed the man lived, these healers whispered incantations that sealed flesh and cooled fevers. The scent of burning herbs filled the air. Some of the wounded groaned in shock as pain fled their limbs for the first time in days.
The quartermasters brought carts of bread, salted meat, and dried fruits … luxuries no soldier of under the command of the Major had tasted in weeks. The air thickened with the smell of food, and for a moment, the broken camp stirred to life again. Laughter cracked like ice on thawing river water … thin, hesitant, but real.
Major Gresham stood watching, arms crossed, his scarred face unreadable. He didn’t like the feeling of gratitude crawling into his chest. Aid was necessary, yes … but he had led men once proud enough to feed others, not beg for scraps.
Beside him, the Baron of Frost watched in silence. Frost gathered faintly at his boots, though the day was mild. His expression was as cold as ever, yet there was something harder beneath it … pride warring with pragmatism.
A young Threian sergeant limped up beside them.
“They’re good,” he muttered, watching a healer close a wound that would’ve taken days to heal by hand. “Too good. Makes us look like savages.”
Gresham grunted. “We are savages compared to them. But they’ve never seen the mud we’ve slept in, have they?”
From the ridge above, the Blue Countess’s camp gleamed like a dream. Silk banners fluttered, crystal lanterns hung from polished poles, and laughter floated down like music. Even the soldiers there carried themselves differently … their armor polished, their hair washed, their hands clean. They lived as though the war was something that happened to other men.
Between the two camps, a road of trampled grass now ran … and with it came tension. Every time a healer passed a Threian sentry, heads turned. Every exchange of bread for thanks was measured, wary, heavy with unspoken judgment.
That night, when the mists thickened again, Gresham’s men sat by low fires, murmuring among themselves.
“They don’t fight like us,” one soldier said. “Too clean. Too quiet. I heard they cast spells that make their blades sing.”
“Better singing than dying,” another grunted.
A laugh broke out, but it ended when the Baron walked past, his cloak brushing frost from the grass. The men lowered their voices again.
*****
The next morning, the camp saw the approach of the Blue Countess’s officers.
The delegation arrived in perfect order … five officers mounted, banners fluttering, and before them rode the Countess’s oldest mage, Sir Loric Avelle. His beard was white, his armor old but polished to a mirror’s sheen. Behind him rode Captain Rhaegar Vance, who hated the Snowe’s House to his guts and firmly believe that some words could cut deeper than fine iron, if used well.
They dismounted before the central fire, where Major Gresham and the Baron of Frost waited. Gresham gave a curt salute. The Baron inclined his head just enough to acknowledge nobility without bowing to it.
“Major Gresham. Baron Snowe,” said Sir Avelle. His voice carried the even weight of age and habit. “The Countess extends her aid and her hospitality. Her healers speak well of your men’s fortitude.”
“Our thanks,” Gresham said stiffly. “We owe them much. Many of ours would’ve died without their hands.”
The Baron said nothing, though his gaze flicked to Rahegar … the known hater of the Snowe family who was studying the Snowe’s camp with thinly veiled disdain.
“Hospitality is a noble thing,” Rhaegar said suddenly, his tone sharp. “But it’s rarer to see dogs of the Snowe family accept it so easily.”
The air went still.
Every Threian nearby froze. The Griffon Knights who stood behind the Baron shifted, their gauntlets creaking softly. A few rose to their feet.
Major Gresham’s voice came low, like gravel grinding underfoot. “Watch your tongue, Captain.”
Rhaegar smirked. “Why? It’s common talk in Winter’s Court, isn’t it? That Snowe’s dogs guard their master’s pride better than their own honor.”
The Baron’s expression did not change, but the frost under his boots began to spread, a thin sheen of white snaking across the grass. His voice, when it came, was calm … deadly calm.
“You mock the men who bled to hold an army at bay that your army has never seen, Captain. You wear clean armor because others drowned in mud for you.”
The temperature dropped. A Griffon Knight’s hand went to his sword. One of Rhaegar’s aides did the same.
“Enough!” barked Sir Avelle, stepping forward between them. “This is not the Countess’s way!”
But Gresham was already moving … stepping forward, his scarred face lit by the fire.
“You want to talk about dogs?” he growled. “You sit in silk while we burn. You wouldn’t know loyalty if it froze your veins.”
Rhaegar’s smirk faltered. “Careful, Major. You’re a guest here.”
The Baron’s tone was colder still. “No. We are not your guests, Captain. We are allies … for now. There is a difference.”
A whisper ran through the watching soldiers … Threians on both sides, Snowe’s men on one side, Winters’ men on the other. The line between the two camps had suddenly turned into a front.
For a heartbeat, it seemed blood might spill. The Baron’s hand hovered near his blade; Rhaegar’s men tensed.
Then Sir Avelle struck the ground with his staff, the sound of cracking like thunder resounded.
“That is enough!” he thundered. “Captain Rhaegar, stand down! Baron Snowe, Major Gresham … your courage is not in question. But this… he gestured to the crowd, “…is folly. The enemy is the orcs to the south, not here among ourselves.”
The silence that followed was brittle.
At last, Rhaegar sheathed his sword with a sneer. “As you wish, old man. But I’ll not bow to them.”
The Baron stepped closer, his breath misting in the cold. “No one asked you to,” he said softly. “We bow only to honor … not names.”
Sir Avelle sighed deeply. “Then let that honor guide you both,” he said. “The Countess wishes peace, not pride.”
When the delegation withdrew, the tension lingered like smoke. The Snowe’s soldiers stood by their fires again, quiet and brooding, while up the slope the Blue Countess’s camp shimmered as if nothing had happened … laughter, song, and the glint of crystal wine.
Major Gresham turned to the Baron at last. “You think they’ll ever understand us?”
The Baron’s eyes drifted toward the stars. “No,” he said. “But they’ll remember us … when the north is caught in a blaze again, and they need men who can bleed.”
He walked away into the frost, leaving his words to hang between the two worlds …
the weary and the unscarred,
the frost and the silk.
*****
By the next morning, the valley had become two worlds again.
The Threian camp woke under a film of frost, every tent and blade of grass silvered by the Baron’s lingering magic. The wounded lay bundled in their blankets, steam rising from their breaths. The cold bit deep, but it was honest … the sort of cold that reminded them they were still alive.
Across the slope, the Blue Countess’s camp shimmered like a painting in motion. The tents were bright with morning light, the banners rippling lazily in the wind. Magic kept their fires warm and their water hot. Servants in blue and white tunics carried trays of breakfast and wine. From afar, they looked like a festival gathering rather than an army waiting for war.
The road between the two camps remained open, but few crossed it now.
The healers still came … quiet, dutiful, careful not to meet the eyes of Snowe’s soldiers unless spoken to. Their magic continued to close wounds and cool fevers, but the warmth in their manner was gone. The brawl that hadn’t happened had changed everything.
Major Gresham watched from the edge of his camp as a pair of healers treated a wounded griffon. The creature lay still, its flank heaving weakly as the spell light pulsed across its skin. One of the healers bowed slightly when she saw him, but her companion merely nodded, face pale and stiff.
“They’re doing their duty,” came the Baron’s voice from behind him. “That’s more than I expected.”
Gresham turned. The Baron looked worn, dark circles under his eyes, his pale hair unkempt. Yet his armor was polished, his cloak clasped neatly. Frost still followed his steps, as though the world refused to forget who he was.
“They’ve done more than we could,” Gresham admitted. “I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t grateful. But every time I look up that hill… he nodded toward the Countess’s camp “…I wonder if they know what it costs to fight those orcs as we do.”
The Baron’s gaze followed his. The laughter of the Blue Countess’s troops carried faintly on the wind. A line of cavalry rode drills along the ridge, their armor flashing blue light with every turn … each lance tipped with magical energy. It was beautiful, almost mesmerizing, like an artist’s choreography rather than a soldier’s drill.
“They fight differently,” the Baron said. “They always have. They believe war can be shaped, refined. Controlled.”
He looked down at his gloved hands, flexed them. “But the truth is simpler. War doesn’t care for grace.”
A silence stretched between them. The Baron broke it first.
“You handled yourself well yesterday,” he said. “I thought you might hit the Captain.”
Gresham snorted. “Would’ve, if you hadn’t started freezing the ground. Couldn’t risk slipping on my way to break his nose.”
For the first time in days, the Baron allowed himself a faint smile. “You’d have done it too.”
“Damn right.”
They stood there for a moment, sharing that quiet, rough camaraderie that only survivors understood … the kind that required no thanks, no ceremony.
Behind them, a few Snowe soldiers worked to rebuild a wagon, hammering boards in rhythm. The sound of the hammering mingled with distant music from the Countess’s camp … harp strings, flute, and laughter. The two worlds kept their distance, but sound traveled freely, carrying reminders of what each had become.
*****
Later that day, a messenger came from the Blue Countess’s tent. She requested a private report from the Baron of Frost … and “an update on the state of the wounded under Major Gresham’s care.”
The Baron declined to go at once. Instead, he sent word through Sir Avelle that the report would come after midday. He needed time, he said, to gather details. In truth, he needed time to think.
In his tent, the Baron removed his armor piece by piece, setting each cold plate on the wooden table. The metal bore scars of battle … deep gouges from orc blades, splintered marks from claws. His reflection in the steel was ghostly.
Outside, a cold breeze swept through camp. He could hear Gresham’s men laughing faintly near the cookfires, could hear the faint cries of griffons as their wings were tended. The sounds were rough but real … a far cry from the measured calm of the Countess’s ranks above.
He remembered the Captain’s words from the day before … dogs of the Snowe family.
He had been called worse in his life, but not often in front of his men. And not while his people bled to protect nobles who thought themselves untouchable.
He wondered, not for the first time, how much longer the Snowe name would carry any weight.
The wars of the north had burned half the noble houses already. Winters and Snowe though point to the same cold, could not coexist forever … one would have to melt.
A soft voice interrupted his thoughts. “My lord?”
It was one of his knights … young, gaunt, eyes still bright despite the fatigue.
“The healers from the Countess’s camp have finished with the griffons. They say the beasts will fly again within a day.”
The Baron nodded. “Tell them my thanks,” he said. “And see that the healers are given food before they leave. Bread, meat … not rations.”
The knight blinked, surprised. “Yes, my lord.”
When the man left, the Baron let out a slow breath. Courtesy was another kind of strength, he reminded himself. To act with dignity even when others denied it … that was the creed of the Griffon Knights.
He stepped out of his tent and looked toward the horizon. The clouds over the north had begun to gather … dark, heavy, clouds. Somewhere beyond those clouds waited the next battle, and whatever remnants of the Threian host still had the strength to fight it.
Behind him, Major Gresham approached, chewing on a piece of hard bread.
“We will be moving north tomorrow,” he said. “But the Countess wants us to march south with her mages, keep the supply line open.”
The Baron didn’t turn. “And she still wants command of our men, no doubt.”
Gresham smirked. “Oh, she does. Her aides asked again this morning. I told them we have orders from our House.”
“Good.” The Baron’s eyes remained on the clouds. “Because if she commands, we die for her pride. If I command, we die for ours.”
Gresham said nothing to that. The two men stood in silence as the first flakes of snow began to drift down … light, almost playful, settling on armor and ash alike.
Around them, the camp stirred. Snowe soldiers gathered near the fires, warming hands, speaking in low voices. Across the slope, the mages of the Blue Countess began lighting their lamps again …. tiny orbs of blue and gold that floated like stars above their tents. Beauty and ruin, frost and silk, side by side under the same cold wind.
For now, peace held. Fragile, uneasy, but real.
Tomorrow, they would go on their separate ways.


