Rise of the Horde - Chapter 563 - 563

The decision did not come with drums.
There were no horns to announce it, no banners raised at first light, no orders carried by runners bearing the authority of the Great Chieftain. It came instead in whispers that hardened into resolve, in glances shared across dying campfires, in hands that lingered on weapon grips longer than necessary.
By the time the first pale light of dawn crept over the land, the choice had already been made.
They rose early, the newcomers.
Not as a single clan, not as a disciplined warband, but as a loose gathering of warriors bound by impatience, pride, hunger, and the simple orcish certainty that a wounded enemy was an enemy meant to be finished. They emerged from scattered sections of the encampment, converging without signal, drawn together by shared intent rather than command.
Some painted their faces with ash and blood. Others bore old scars freshly reopened in ritual. Many carried trophies taken from past wars, bones and teeth tied to their armor, reminders of debts unpaid and grudges unforgotten.
They did not look toward Khao’khen’s banners.
They did not seek permission.
They sought blood.
*****
They met on the northern edge of the encampment, where the land sloped gently upward before falling away toward the route the Winters’ Army had taken days before. Warriors poured in from every direction, forming clusters that slowly merged into a vast, restless mass.
Clans that had never fought side by side now stood shoulder to shoulder.
The Ash Maw hunters, lean and sharp eyed, carrying curved blades stained dark from old kills. The Iron Tusk remnants, their armor battered but their pride unbroken. The Split Fang youth packs, barely old enough to grow full tusks, eyes blazing with reckless hunger.
There were those who spoke openly of glory.
“Today we take their heads,” one roared, lifting his axe high. “Let the Great Chieftain hear our names!”
Others spoke more quietly, their voices thick with old pain.
“They burned our tribe.”
“They have slain our children.”
“They laughed when we bled.”
For them, the pinkskins were not merely prey. They were ghosts from old wounds given flesh once more.
By the time the sun crested the horizon, more than fifteen thousand orcs stood assembled.
They were not orderly.
They were not unified.
But they were many.
And they were moving.
They set off northward as the morning mist still clung to the low ground, boots and bare feet trampling dew soaked grass into mud. There was no single leader at the front, no standard bearer guiding their path. Instead, clusters surged ahead, slowed, then surged again, the mass flowing like a river without banks.
Shouts echoed.
Laughter rang out.
Blades were struck against shields in crude rhythms that lacked the measured cadence of the Yohan war drums. This was not a march born of discipline.
It was a hunt.
As they moved, more joined them. Warriors who had hesitated the night before now broke from their camps and ran to catch up, unwilling to be left behind while others claimed the kill.
The horde they left behind stirred uneasily.
Warriors of the Yohan First Horde watched in silence as the newcomers departed, expressions grim. They said nothing, but their eyes followed the growing mass until it disappeared over the rise.
They knew what this meant.
*****
Far ahead, closer to the retreating Winters’ Army, the watchers saw it first.
The Verakhs had been crouched in their usual positions, half hidden among rocks and shrubs, eyes trained on the slow moving column of pinkskins. They had mapped every campfire, every watch rotation, every stumble of exhausted soldiers. The Warg Cavalry paced the flanks and rear, their beasts sniffing the air, their riders relaxed but alert.
Then the ground began to tremble.
At first, it was subtle. A distant vibration that could have been mistaken for thunder. But the Verakhs knew better. They pressed ears to the earth, exchanged sharp gestures, and melted back toward the Warg riders.
Soon, shapes appeared on the horizon.
Too many.
Too uncoordinated.
Too loud.
A Warg rider narrowed his eyes. “That is not us.”
Another leaned forward in his saddle, squinting. “Too many banners. Too few formations.”
Confusion rippled through the shadowing forces. These were not movements ordered by the Great Chieftain. No signal had been sent. No command given.
Haguk saw it clearly from a low ridge, his scarred face unreadable as he watched the newcomers advance.
One of his riders turned to him, voice tense. “Where are they going?”
Haguk did not answer immediately. His gaze followed the marching mass northward, toward the retreating pinkskins.
“To battle,” another rider said grimly.
Haguk snorted softly. “They seek death,” he said. Then, after a pause, “Let them be.”
He raised a clenched fist, signaling restraint.
None of his riders moved to join.
*****
As the unbound host marched, the flaws in their unity became apparent almost immediately.
Arguments broke out over pace. Faster warriors surged ahead, only to slow when they realized others could not keep up. Clans argued over who would strike first, who would claim the enemy banners, who would take prisoners.
A fight nearly erupted when two groups disputed the route northward, each claiming their scouts knew a shorter path. Blades were drawn. Shouts rose. Only the looming presence of the enemy ahead kept the conflict from turning violent.
Food was scarce. Many had marched without provisions, assuming victory would provide what they needed. Hunger sharpened tempers further.
Yet still they marched.
Driven by momentum, by the fear of missing out, by the intoxicating idea of being the ones to finish the pinkskins while the Great Chieftain watched from behind.
They did not know that they were being watched as well.
The news reached Khao’khen before the unbound host had marched half a day.
A Verakh runner arrived breathless, dropping to one knee before speaking.
“They march without order,” he said. “More than fifteen thousand. Newcomers only. They head north.”
Silence fell in the council.
Sakh’arran’s eyes hardened. “Fools.”
Trot’thar slammed a fist against his knee. “They will ruin everything.”
Gur’kan growled low in his throat. “Or force our hand.”
Khao’khen remained still, his face carved from stone.
“They were not commanded,” he said.
“No,” the runner replied. “They move on their own.”
For a long moment, no one spoke.
This was the danger they had feared.
Not rebellion.
But impatience.
Uncontrolled violence.
If the unbound host attacked and failed, they would harden the Winters’ Army, perhaps even give it the resolve to stand and fight desperately. If they succeeded, they would fracture the authority of the horde, proving that victory could be claimed without discipline or command.
Either outcome threatened everything Khao’khen was building.
Yet ordering them back was impossible. They had already gone too far, and many would see such an order as weakness or jealousy.
Khao’khen finally spoke.
“We watch,” he said.
“And if they die?” Sakh’arran asked.
Khao’khen’s gaze remained fixed northward. “Then they die knowing why discipline matters.”
*****
As the unbound host pressed northward, the land bore witness.
Dust clouds rose high enough to be seen for miles. Birds fled. Herd animals scattered. The sound of thousands of feet echoed across the plains like distant thunder.
Ahead, the Winters’ Army marched on, unaware of the storm gathering behind it.
The Warg Cavalry and Verakhs continued their shadowing, maintaining their distance, careful not to be drawn into the madness of the newcomers. Haguk’s riders watched with a mixture of contempt and grim curiosity.
“They will run headlong into prepared defenses,” one muttered.
“Or into nothing at all,” another replied. “The pinkskins may flee faster when they see them coming.”
Haguk shook his head. “They do not understand,” he said. “War is not only teeth and claws.”
The unbound host marched through the morning, through the heat of midday, through the first signs of fatigue. Already, cracks formed. Already, stragglers lagged behind. Already, tempers flared.
Yet still, the desire for battle drove them onward.
They believed themselves unstoppable.
They believed numbers were enough.
They believed the enemy broken.
Behind them, the disciplined horde waited.
Ahead of them, fate sharpened its blade.
And somewhere between the two, the retreating Winters’ Army marched on, unaware that a force born not of strategy but of raw orcish impulse now sought to decide the war on its own terms.
*****
The first sign was not the orcs themselves, but the land.
Scouts riding far behind of the Winters’ Army began to notice disturbances that did not fit the pattern of the disciplined shadowing they had grown accustomed to. The Warg riders and Verakhs who had haunted them for days moved with an eerie consistency. They stayed just outside engagement range, left deliberate tracks meant to be seen, vanished when pressed, and reappeared elsewhere with unnerving precision. What the scouts saw now was different.
Grasslands trampled in wide, uneven swathes. Broken brush snapped without care for concealment. Columns of dust rising too high, too broad, visible even from distant ridges. The air itself seemed restless, carrying with it the low murmur of many voices shouting, laughing, arguing.
Too loud.
Too reckless.
A Threian scout captain reined in his horse atop a low hill and squinted his eyes.. What he saw made his breath catch.
Orcs.
Thousands of them.
Not in ordered blocks. Not in layered formations. They surged forward in clumps and loose ranks, banners flapping wildly, some bearing symbols he did not recognize at all. There was no sign of the Snarling Wolf. No Melting Wings. No disciplined shield lines or spear walls.
This was something else.
“By the gods,” one of his riders whispered. “They’re running at us.”
The captain did not waste time.
“Ride,” he snapped. “Now.”
Messengers broke away from the scouting screen at a gallop, horses driven hard, foam already gathering at their mouths as they raced back toward the main column. Dust streamed behind them as if the land itself urged them onward.
*****
The first messenger reached the army before noon.
He burst through the outer pickets, his horse lathered, eyes wild, nearly collapsing as it was brought to a halt. Guards hauled him down, and he stumbled forward, barely pausing to catch his breath before demanding to see the Blue Countess.
Aliyah Winters was in the midst of overseeing the reorganization of the rear guard when the messenger was brought before her. She took one look at his face and felt a familiar chill settle in her chest.
“Speak,” she commanded.
The messenger swallowed hard. “My lady… the orcs are moving with haste. Thousands. They are coming straight for us. A battle will break out soon.”
The words hit like a hammer blow.
Around Aliyah, officers stiffened. Some exchanged grim looks. Others clenched fists unconsciously. The memory of the previous battles was still raw. The image of disciplined orcish formations advancing relentlessly, mocking them as they tore through Threian lines, had not faded.
Aliyah did not show fear, but inside, her mind raced.
“So soon,” she murmured.
She raised her scepter slightly, signaling for calm, and turned to Rhaegar Vance.
“Summon the commanders,” she said. “Now.”
Horns sounded. Runners scattered. Within minutes, the senior officers of the Winters’ Army were gathered in a hastily erected command circle, maps spread on crates and shields, markers hastily placed to represent their battered formations.
Aliyah stood at the center, her expression controlled but tense.
“We expected pursuit,” Sir Helwain said carefully. “But not a full engagement so soon. Our troops are still shaken.”
“That is an understatement,” Sir Ferin Luthen added. “The men still whisper about those orcs and their spear walls. Many believe the orcs who broke us cannot be beaten.”
Sir Loric Avelle, leaning heavily on his staff, spoke next. “If this is the same force that defeated us, then meeting them again so soon would be… ill advised.”
Aliyah knew they were right.
The army was wounded, exhausted, its morale hanging by a thread. Facing the same disciplined horde that had shattered them could very well finish what the previous battles had started.
She pressed her lips together, weighing grim possibilities.
Hold and fight, risking annihilation.
Attempt another retreat, risking collapse.
Or attempt something far more dangerous.
Before she could speak, hurried footsteps approached.
******
A second messenger burst into the command circle, nearly stumbling as he dropped to one knee. His face was flushed with exertion, but there was something else there as well.
Confusion.
And… something like cautious relief.
“My lady,” he said quickly. “There is more. The orcs chasing us… they are not the same ones.”
Aliyah’s eyes snapped to him. “Explain.”
The messenger took a breath. “They bear different banners. We saw no Snarling Wolf. No Melting Wings. Their standards are crude, mismatched. Many carry none at all. They are not moving like the horde that fought us before.”
Silence fell.
Aliyah felt her pulse quicken, not with fear this time, but with something dangerously close to hope.
“You are certain,” she said.
“Yes, my lady. Our scouts are certain.”
Rhaegar leaned forward. “Then these are not the same warbands.”
“No,” the messenger said. “They look like… the old kind of orcs.”
Murmurs rippled through the gathered commanders.
Sir Ferin frowned. “You mean undisciplined?”
“Disorganized,” the messenger confirmed. “Loud. Reckless. Many banners. No clear command structure.”
Aliyah straightened.
For the first time since the retreat began, the crushing weight on her chest eased, if only slightly.
The orcs who had beaten them were terrifying precisely because they were not what the Threians had expected. They had fought with discipline, formations, and coordination that rivaled any human army. They had adapted, maneuvered, and punished every mistake.
But the old orcs?
Those were enemies the Threians understood.
Those were enemies they had fought for generations.
Aliyah looked around the command circle, meeting each commander’s gaze in turn.
“Hope is not lost,” she said quietly.
Orders went out almost immediately.
Status reports were demanded from every unit. Infantry captains were summoned. Cavalry officers were ordered to assess mounts and readiness. Archers were instructed to count arrows, check bowstrings, and report exhaustion levels. Mages were asked, quietly but urgently, about remaining mana reserves and the condition of their magic circuits.
The officers receiving these orders were confused.
No general alarm had been sounded.
No announcement of an enemy approach had been made.
“Why now?” one infantry captain asked a runner. “We are still retreating. What battle are we preparing for?”
The runner only shook his head. “Orders from the Countess. Report immediately.”
Confusion spread, but discipline held.
Aliyah deliberately withheld the full truth for the moment. She knew her soldiers too well. If word spread that another orcish army was approaching, panic could take hold before she had a chance to shape the response.
She needed clarity first.
One by one, reports came in.
Infantry numbers were down but not broken. The men were exhausted, many wounded, but still capable of forming solid lines if given time and purpose.
Archers were low on arrows but not yet desperate. Their morale was fragile, but the promise of fighting an enemy they understood could stiffen their resolve.
The cavalry was battered but still mobile. Horses were tired, some injured, but enough remained to perform decisive maneuvers.
The mages were the greatest concern. Many were drained. Some permanently damaged. But enough remained capable of casting if mana gems were used sparingly.
Aliyah listened, committing every detail to memory.
This would not be a battle of annihilation.
It would be a battle of survival.
And possibly, redemption.
*****
When the commanders finally understood what Aliyah had learned, the change in the atmosphere was palpable.
“They are not from the previous horde?” Sir Helwain asked slowly.
“No,” Aliyah confirmed. “At least, not the core of it.”
Sir Ferin let out a breath he did not realize he had been holding. “Then they bleed like the orcs we know.”
“They bleed,” Rhaegar said firmly. “And they break when pressed.”
Sir Loric nodded. “They will charge without thought. They will seek glory over coordination.”
Aliyah allowed herself a thin smile.
“Which means,” she said, “they can be baited. Divided. Punished.”
She tapped the map with her scepter, indicating a stretch of terrain ahead where low hills and shallow ravines cut across the plain.
“We choose the ground,” she continued. “We do not run blindly. We let them come, and we make them pay.”
For the first time in days, the commanders leaned forward instead of back.
The army was still wounded.
Still tired.
Still afraid.
But now, fear had an enemy it could face.
Aliyah finally gave the order for the truth to be shared, but carefully.
Company by company, officers informed their men that an orcish force was approaching. Not the disciplined horde that had defeated them. Not the spear walls and shield fortresses of the previous orcish warriors.
“These are raiders,” one captain told his unit. “Clans without unity. Orcs who think numbers are enough.”
The effect was immediate.
Whispers spread, but not of despair.
Of anger.
Of grim determination.
“They ran us down,” one veteran muttered. “Let us return the favor.”
“We know how to fight these ones,” another said, tightening his grip on his spear.
Aliyah rode through the ranks, her scepter glowing faintly as she passed, her presence a steadying force.
“We will not chase glory,” she called out. “We will not charge blindly. We will fight as an army.”
Her voice carried, calm and firm.
“They think us broken,” she continued. “We will show them they are wrong.”
As the Winters’ Army began to shift from retreat to preparation, the approaching unbound orcs marched on, unaware that the prey they sought had finally turned to bare its teeth.
The outcome was still uncertain.
But for the first time in a week, the Blue Countess was no longer merely fleeing.
She was planning to fight.


