Rise of the Horde - Chapter 558 - 558

The Orcish Plains stretched in waves of churned mud and clotted blood, the aftermath of the initial skirmishes turning the soil into a paste that clung to boots, hooves, and the edges of armor. Heat hung heavy in the tropical air, sweat dripping into eyes, mixing with the dust, blood, and grime of battle. Yet even amidst this oppressive atmosphere, the orcish Horde held its discipline.
The horn of Sakh’arran cut sharply across the plains. Its tone was not a call to panic, not a shout of fury, but a command of unyielding authority. Every Yurakk soldier in the retreating warbands recognized it and obeyed instantly.
“Third! Fifth through eighth!” Sakh’arran ordered. “Fall back to the Rakshas! Maintain formation! Step lightly! Shields forward! Blades at the ready!”
The retreat began with terrifying precision. The Yurakks, trained warriors, moved backward like a river of polished muscle and iron. Their rectangular shields overlapped, forming a moving wall that braced against both incoming projectiles and the uneven, blood-slick mud beneath their boots. In their free hands, short stabbing blades, perfected for thrusting rather than slashing…were held at the ready. Every step was deliberate; every backward motion coordinated with the man beside him.
The first skirmishes erupted almost immediately as the Threians pursued. Human spearmen thrust recklessly at exposed flanks, but the Yurakks rotated shields and angled blades with incredible precision. A lucky strike pierced the side of one orc, eliciting a groan of pain, but two comrades immediately pressed in, overlapping shields, stabbing backward with their blades, leaving the human impaled before he could retract. Another human soldier lunged over a muddy pool to strike at a Yurakk, but a well-placed shield jab sent him sprawling into the mud, shield slammed, sword flashing to his chest in response. Blood sprayed across mud and armor, but the line held perfectly.
*****
Step by step, the Yurakks fell back toward the massive, immovable center of the battleline, the Rakshas. The spear-wielding warriors braced in the center, their huge round shields towering over their heads, tips pressing outward in a bristling wall of defense. Spears, ridiculously long, extended like stakes from the front row, forming a forest of deadly points. Every step the Rakshas took was deliberate; they advanced slowly to meet the retreating Yurakks, ready to anchor them and form a cohesive battle line.
As the Yurakks approached, the warbands split naturally along the flanks. The 3rd and 5th Warbands took the left, shields overlapping, blades at the ready, pivoting smoothly as a unit. The 6th through 8th Warbands moved to the right, maintaining the same discipline. Behind them, Sakh’arran watched with cold calculation. The line was now anchored at the center by the Rakshas, flanked by the flexible Yurakks, a combination of immovable strength and adaptive flexibility that was terrifying in its simplicity and precision.
Aliyah Winters’ forces surged forward, eager to capitalize on the apparent retreat. Boots splashed through mud, armor rattled, and spears thrust forward, hungry for the orcs’ flesh. The humans pressed relentlessly, but the disciplined fallback of the Yurakks left them at a disadvantage. Each step forward was met with careful backward adjustment. Shields rotated to deflect arrows and spears, their blades stabbed at overzealous pursuers, catching armor gaps and carving red lines across flesh.
One human captain lunged forward, aiming for a Yurakk’s head, but the orcish warrior sidestepped, shield clanging against his attacker’s, and thrust his blade with deadly precision into the captain’s side. Blood sprayed as the captain fell, screaming, yet the surrounding soldiers pressed on. Another Threian spearman was skewered through the chest by a stabbing blade as he attempted to strike a backward-moving Yurakk. The mud swallowed screams, blood, and boots in a sticky, suffocating mess.
The pursuit was bloody, chaotic, yet methodical. The Yurakks never lost cohesion. Even when wounded, they continued moving backward, blades stabbing, shields overlapping, stepping carefully to maintain the integrity of the formation. The Threians pressed, but each overextension was punished with brutal efficiency.
*****
Above, Threian archers loosed volleys at the retreating warbands, while mages hovered behind human lines, weaving ice and fire spells in preparation. Arrows struck shields with a metallic clang, some finding gaps and piercing armor or flesh. Sharp blades stabbed through openings, impaling human soldiers who had overextended or misjudged the movement. Ice shards and fire bursts scoured the mud, catching unlucky humans but never breaking the orderly retreat of the Yurakks.
The battlefield was alive with chaos, yet underneath it ran an underlying precision. Every retreat, every step backward, every thrust of a blade, every overlapping shield edge, every minor engagement was a part of the orcs’ larger orchestration.
Step by step, the retreating Yurakks met the Rakshas. The battleline’s center remained immovable, shields overlapping like an iron wall, spears bristling outward. The left and right flanks of Yurakks merged perfectly with the center, creating a continuous line from end to end. Each man knew his exact position relative to the others.
The flanks, formed by the 3rd–8th Warbands, were flexible yet deadly. Spears and blades jutted outward, angled to protect the sides and rear of the central formation. Wounded comrades were shielded by others as the line moved, preventing gaps and maintaining cohesion.
From a distance, Aliyah could see the full form of the orcish line. The center was a mountain of muscle and iron, the flanks a moving wall of flexible warriors, retreating only to advance later in perfect coordination. The Threians, eager and aggressive, realized too late the danger: advancing into this perfectly consolidated formation would invite catastrophic losses.
*****
Even before the first full engagement, the battlefield was soaked with blood. Human infantry who overstepped were skewered by blades, knocked down by shields, or impaled on long Rakshas spears from the center. Screams echoed across the plains as mud soaked with blood and sweat. Horses slipped in the mud, their riders thrown into the chaos, sometimes crushed beneath boots, spears, and shields.
Arrows peppered the ground and soldiers alike. Lucky Threian archers found gaps, piercing the throat or shoulder of an advancing orc. The Yurakks rotated their shields to catch the next volley, blades stabbing backward to punish the first man who got too close.
Each minor clash left corpses and blood in the mud. But the formation remained intact. Every warrior knew his place, every blade thrust was measured, every shield pivoted with mechanical precision. Discipline carried the orcs, allowing them to move backward, regroup, and prepare for the inevitable clash with the pursuing humans.
The Orcish Plains trembled not from the first collision, but from the tense anticipation of it. The Threians pressed forward with eagerness, chasing retreating foes they believed were vulnerable. The orcs’ consolidation created a mix of tension, dread, and awe.
Younger orcs whispered among themselves. “They move like water,” one said. “Every step is a weapon.” Another replied, voice low, “The humans will regret chasing them. One misstep, and they’ll be pierced before they can react.”
Sakh’arran remained silent, observing, calculating. The retreat had not been weakness…it had been preparation. The human pursuit, though aggressive, was exactly what the Horde needed to form a coherent, deadly line.
Aliyah Winters knew the moment she had lost control of the battle.
It came not with screams, nor with the clash of steel, but with a sight she had not expected to see so soon…orcish order, hard and deliberate, reasserting itself amid blood and chaos.
From her vantage point behind the Threian advance, she saw it clearly.
The Yurakks were no longer scattering.
They were no longer exposed.
They were falling back cleanly, shield to shield, blade to blade, their withdrawal measured and precise. No tripping. No crushing of comrades. No panic. Every step was deliberate, bought with stabbing counterthrusts and shield bashes that punished any Threian who pressed too close.
And beyond them…
The Rakshas.
Aliyah’s breath caught.
The orcish center had finished forming.
Huge rounded shields overlapped like stone blocks in a fortress wall. Ridiculously long spears angled forward in bristling ranks, their iron tips already darkened with blood. The Rakshas did not rush. They did not shout. They waited, ranks deep, posture perfect, absorbing the falling-back Yurakks into their flanks like a living structure knitting itself together.
Her plan…to trap the advanced warbands, to crush them before the main horde could consolidate…was gone.
Negated.
They’ve done it, she realized grimly. They reformed faster than we could kill them.
*****
“Signal the infantry to slow their advance,” one of her aides urged, voice tight with strain.
Aliyah opened her mouth…
And stopped.
Her eyes followed the Threian infantry.
They were still moving forward.
Hot with bloodlust. Breathing hard. Shields dented. Blades red. Men shouted triumphantly as they stabbed retreating Yurakks in the back, dragged down stragglers, trampled the wounded underfoot.
They believed the orcs were breaking.
They were wrong.
Aliyah knew it.
And worse…she knew she could not correct it.
If she sounded the retreat now, the Threian infantry would have to turn their backs within striking distance of a fully reformed orcish line. The Yurakks were already close enough to lunge. The Rakshas’ spears were already leveled.
A tactical withdrawal would not remain tactical.
It would become a rout.
Men would stumble. Officers would shout conflicting orders. Units would collide with one another. And the moment the orcs charged…
Aliyah swallowed.
“They would carve our rear apart,” she murmured.
The aide did not argue. He could see it too.
The Threian infantry were committed, whether she wished it or not.
*****
Across the killing ground, Sakh’arran watched the Threians continue their pursuit.
His lips curled slightly….not in a smile, but in acknowledgment.
They had taken the bait.
Not because he had tricked them, but because momentum is a weapon all its own.
The Rakshas locked shields.
The Yurakks slid into position on either flank, blades held low, stabbing weapons ready. Blood ran in streams between their boots. Bodies….human and orc alike…were crushed underfoot as the line finalized its shape.
This was no longer maneuver.
This was decision.
The First Horde stood whole.
*****
Aliyah clenched her scepter so tightly her knuckles whitened.
She ran through her options in a heartbeat.
Pull back now? Impossible.
Pause the advance? The front ranks would still collide.
Commit reserves? They would be fed into the same grinder.
There was only one path left.
“Fully engage,” she said quietly.
The words tasted like iron.
Her commanders stared at her.
“No withdrawal,” she continued. “All units press forward. Lock shields. Rotate ranks. We break them here…or we die here.”
The messengers ran.
The signal horns sounded, not retreat, not regroup…
ATTACK!!!
The Threian infantry surged.
The last Yurakks completed their withdrawal, sliding behind Rakshas shields with mechanical precision. A few wounded were left behind, stabbed, finished, or crushed as the line closed.
Then…
The Horde moved.
Not charging.
Advancing.
The Rakshas stepped forward as one.
Shields slammed together. Spears angled. The earth seemed to tremble beneath their synchronized march. Their silence was more terrifying than any roar.
The Threians realized too late that the orcs were not fleeing.
They were ready.
*****
The collision was apocalyptic.
Human shields smashed into orcish shields with bone-crushing force. Men screamed as ribs cracked, as breath was driven from lungs. The Rakshas did not give ground.
They thrust.
Long spears punched through the first Threian ranks, impaling men who had not even finished raising their shields. One soldier was skewered through the chest and lifted off his feet and another took a spear through the throat, blood spraying across the shield of the man beside him.
Alongside them, the Yurakks surged.
Short stabbing blades flashed.
A Yurakk drove his shield into a Threian’s face, collapsing the man’s skull, then stabbed twice into the belly of the next. Another hooked a human’s shield aside and plunged his blade under the arm, twisting until organs spilled.
The Threians fought back savagely.
Shields slammed. Swords chopped. Spears jabbed over shield rims. An orc fell grunting in pain as a blade split his thigh open to the bone while another had his jaw shattered by a precise shield bash.
The ground vanished beneath them.
There was only mud, blood, and bodies.
*****
Aliyah stood rigid as the infantry lines fully locked.
There was no pulling them back now.
The orcs had achieved exactly what disciplined armies strive for…forcing the enemy to fight on their terms.
Her infantry was brave.
But bravery alone would not break a wall of shields and spears.
“Hold,” she whispered, more to herself than anyone else. “Just… hold.”
The battle roared on.
And the Orcish Plains drank deeply of blood.


