Rise of the Horde - Chapter 567 - 567

From the heights of the Lag’ranna Mountains, arrows poured down in unbroken sheets. They screamed through the air, each one trailing faint traces of frost magic that hissed as they cut the wind. When they struck flesh, the cold exploded outward, freezing muscle solid before the impact force shattered bone. Orcs fell in clusters, bodies locking mid stride, faces frozen in snarls or wide eyed terror.
Below, the orcish left flank collapsed into chaos.
Warriors who had been charging only moments earlier skidded to a halt, boots slipping in mud now glazed with ice. Shields were raised too late. Arrows punched through leather, through iron, through thick orcish muscle. Some warriors screamed as frost crawled up their limbs, turning arms useless and legs brittle before they shattered beneath their own weight.
A chieftain near the front bellowed in rage, swinging his axe overhead as if he could strike the sky itself. He was massive, his armor layered with trophies taken from old enemies. He roared orders to his warriors, trying to force them back into formation.
Another volley answered him.
Three arrows struck him almost at once. One buried itself in his chest, freezing his breath in his lungs. Another punched through his thigh, snapping the bone. The third struck his raised arm and froze it solid from elbow to fingertips. His roar turned into a choking gasp as he toppled forward, crashing into the bodies at his feet.
Around him, his warriors hesitated.
That moment of hesitation was all the mountain archers needed.
The next wave of arrows did not target the mass. They targeted movement. Orcs trying to run were pinned. Orcs trying to turn back were struck in the spine. Orcs who dropped their shields were pierced through the eyes and throats.
Panic spread like fire through dry grass.
Farther back, other chieftains shouted at one another across the din. Their commands overlapped, contradicted, drowned beneath the screams of the dying. These were leaders of different clans, different tribes, warriors who had banded together not out of discipline but hunger for battle and glory. None had true authority over the others.
“Form up!” one roared, shoving a warrior back into place with the haft of his spear.
“Push forward!” another screamed at the same time, striking a different group and driving them toward the front.
The result was disaster.
Warriors surged in conflicting directions. Shields collided. Axes swung at the wrong targets. One orc struck another in the confusion, splitting his skull open by mistake. A brawl broke out among two small groups as accusations were shouted, even as arrows fell among them.
The mountain attack had done more than kill. It had shattered coherence.
From above, Sir Ferin watched the effect with grim satisfaction. He did not shout. He did not need to. His presence alone kept the archers firing in disciplined rhythm. Arms trembled from exhaustion. Fingers bled from torn skin. But none stopped.
“Loose,” he called calmly.
Another storm fell.
Down below, a chieftain near the center tried to salvage the situation. He was older, his tusks scarred and chipped, his armor battered by decades of fighting. He forced his way through the mass, striking warriors with the flat of his blade, dragging them into loose ranks.
He raised his shield overhead, motioning for others to do the same. A crude shell of protection began to form, overlapping shields angled upward.
For a heartbeat, it seemed to work.
Arrows struck wood and iron, embedding themselves instead of flesh. The sound changed from screams to dull thuds.
Then the frost magic accumulated.
Ice crept across the shields, binding them together, numbing the arms holding them. A sudden volley struck the same area again and again. The frozen shields shattered. Shards of wood and iron exploded outward, ripping through unprotected faces and throats.
The chieftain staggered, one arm frozen stiff. An arrow struck his exposed side, piercing between ribs. He dropped to one knee, coughing blood. Before he could rise, another arrow ended him.
His warriors broke.
They turned and ran.
Those behind them did not know why the front ranks suddenly surged backward. They were crushed underfoot as panic rippled through the horde. Orcs trampled orcs. Fallen warriors were stepped on until their armor collapsed inward and bones snapped.
From the left side of the orcish formation, another chieftain saw the rout beginning and roared in fury. He hurled his spear upward toward the cliffs in a futile gesture of defiance.
It fell short.
An arrow took him through the eye moments later.
Now fear took hold.
These were not the disciplined orcs that had marched under banners and war drums in previous battles. These were newcomers, many fresh from old feuds, unused to fighting under sustained magical bombardment. Their courage was real, but it was raw, undirected, brittle.
Some tried to charge the mountain path, believing they could climb and silence the archers. They were cut down almost immediately. The ascent was steep, narrow, and exposed. Arrows turned the path into a killing slope slick with blood and frozen flesh.
Others dropped flat, pressing themselves into the mud, praying the arrows would pass over them. They did not.
The Threian archers adjusted their aim, firing lower, angling shots to strike prone targets. Frost magic seeped into the ground itself, freezing puddles and locking bodies in place.
Behind the collapsing left flank, more orcs were still advancing, unaware of the scale of the devastation ahead. They pushed forward, shouting war cries, only to crash into walls of dead and dying bodies. Confusion mounted as orders failed to reach them.
Shouts turned into arguments.
Arguments turned into blows.
Old grudges flared. One clan accused another of cowardice. Another claimed betrayal. Iron flashed among orcs even as arrows continued to fall.
The battlefield became a slaughterhouse with no clear front.
Only then did some of the remaining chieftains begin to understand the truth.
This was not a simple prey hunt.
This was a trap.
They attempted to pull warriors back, to regroup beyond the range of the mountain fire. Horns were blown, crude signals carried on guttural notes. But the sound was swallowed by the noise of battle. Many never heard it.
Those who did hesitated, torn between instinct and pride. Some turned back, dragging wounded comrades. Others pressed forward stubbornly, convinced they could still break through if they just reached the enemy line.
Above them, the archers did not relent.
Volley after volley fell, thinning the ranks, carving gaps, breaking momentum again and again. Each death fed the chaos below. Each scream weakened resolve.
By the time the orcish leaders realized the left flank was lost, it was already too late.
The mountain had claimed it.
And the blood of thousands soaked into the earth beneath the falling frost.
*****
The horn sounded.
It was not the long wavering call of retreat that had haunted the Winters’ Army for days. It was sharp, clean, and resolute, a command carried on mountain air and iron will. It cut through the noise of battle like a blade through flesh.
Advance.
Aliyah Winters lowered her scepter from where it had been raised, the blue crystal at its head flaring once like a cold star before dimming. Her voice followed the horn, carried by runners and officers, by banners snapping into motion, by the sudden shift of thousands of bodies moving with purpose.
“No more waiting,” she said, not shouting, not needing to. “Break them.”
The words spread.
Along the Threian line, shields tilted forward. Spears lifted. Men who had braced themselves to receive death now stepped into it instead. Exhaustion was still there, wounds still burned, fear still whispered, but something else surged over it all.
Momentum.
The infantry surged forward as one, boots hammering the frozen earth. The sound rolled outward like thunder trapped between the mountains. Where moments before they had stood locked in place, now they advanced with grim precision, formation tightening as officers barked commands.
“Step. Step. Hold your spacing.”
They did not charge wildly. They pressed forward, shields overlapping, spear points steady, blades ready. Each pace reclaimed ground paid for in blood earlier that day.
Behind them, the reserve infantry moved at a run, armor clattering, breath steaming in the cold air. These were men who had stood waiting, watching comrades fight and die while they held themselves in check. Now they were unleashed. They flowed into gaps, reinforced faltering sections, and thickened the line until it became a wall of iron and resolve.
Mages followed close behind.
They no longer conserved.
Aliyah had committed them fully.
Mana flared along the line as ice magic surged in disciplined waves. The air grew colder still. Frost formed on armor and weapons. The ground cracked as sheets of ice spread outward from the mages’ hands and staves, locking orcish feet in place, freezing fallen bodies together into grotesque barricades.
One mage slammed her staff into the earth. A jagged wall of ice erupted beneath advancing orcs, lifting them screaming into the air before shattering and sending frozen shards scything through the ranks behind them. Another mage swept his hand sideways, releasing a gale of razor sharp ice that flayed exposed flesh from bone.
There were screams everywhere.
Orcs who had survived the arrow storm now found themselves facing an enemy that was no longer content to bleed them at range. The Threian advance hit them like a closing vise.
At the same moment, horns sounded again from the east.
The cavalry moved.
What remained of the Threian horse thundered forward along the left flank, banners snapping violently as hooves tore into the frozen soil. Knights lowered lances. They did not aim for the thickest mass but for the shattered remnants of the orcish right flank, almost totally broken.
They hit like a hammer striking rotten wood.
Orcs turned too late. Horses crashed into them, trampling bodies into the ground. Lances punched through torsos and hurled warriors backward. Blades rose and fell, carving through necks and shoulders. The cavalry did not linger. They cut through, wheeled, and struck again, dismantling pockets of resistance with ruthless efficiency.
An orc chieftain tried to rally his warriors against the horsemen, raising his axe and bellowing defiance. A knight rode him down, the impact crushing him beneath iron shod hooves. The cavalry surged past, already seeking the next cluster of enemies.
From the heights, Sir Ferin’s archers saw the signal banners change.
They adjusted without hesitation.
Arrows now fell deeper into the orcish mass, targeting leaders, clusters of resistance, any attempt at regrouping. Frost magic layered upon frost magic until the battlefield itself became hostile to the orcs. Every step risked slipping. Every wound froze instead of bleeding, locking muscles useless.
Below, the orcish horde began to come apart.
There was no single front anymore. No clear command. Groups fought independently, some pressing forward stubbornly, others trying to pull back, many simply trying to survive.
The Threian infantry crashed into them.
Shields slammed into orcish chests. Spears punched into bellies and throats. Blades hacked at limbs already slowed by cold. No Threian fought alone. They moved in small knots, three or four at a time, drawing orcs in, surrounding them, striking from multiple angles.
An orc would grab a shield and roar in triumph, only for a spear to punch through his side. He would turn, swinging wildly, and a blade would take his leg. Another strike would follow, then another, until even orcish vitality could not endure the accumulation of wounds.
The ground disappeared beneath bodies.
Blood froze where it spilled, turning dark and brittle. Steam rose from shattered corpses. The sounds were overwhelming. Metal on metal. Bone snapping. Men shouting orders. Orcs screaming in rage and fear.
Aliyah rode forward with the advancing line, her scepter glowing brightly now. She did not cast wildly. Every spell was measured, placed where it would do the most damage. A blast of ice would slam into a dense knot of orcs about to countercharge. A sudden frost surge would seal a breach before it could widen.
She saw the battle as a living thing, shifting and straining.
She fed it force where it needed it.
On the orcish side, surviving leaders tried desperately to impose order. They shouted themselves hoarse, striking warriors to force them back into ranks, forming crude shield walls in pockets. Some succeeded briefly, only to be shattered by cavalry charges or crushed beneath the advancing infantry.
Others simply died.
One chieftain climbed atop a mound of bodies, roaring for his warriors to stand. A Threian mage froze the ground beneath him. He slipped, fell backward, and vanished beneath a wave of advancing shields.
The horde that had marched with confidence now reeled.
Those at the rear saw the press of bodies surging toward them and did not understand why. Those at the front were already locked in brutal close combat. Messages did not travel. Signals were lost. Panic spread unevenly, unpredictably.
Some orcs tried to flee south, only to be cut down by archers or run down by cavalry. Others turned on rival clans nearby, old grudges exploding into violence even as the Threians closed in.
The battlefield became a maelstrom.
Through it all, the Winters’ Army pressed forward.
Step by step.
Shield by shield.
Blade by blade.
They had chosen this ground. They had chosen this moment. And now they committed everything they had left to breaking this orcish host apart before it could recover.
The mountains watched in silence as the tide turned red beneath their ancient stone ribs.
*****
The breaking did not come all at once.
It began as a tremor that ran through the orcish horde, subtle at first, almost invisible amid the noise and slaughter. A clan banner dipped and did not rise again. A knot of warriors disengaged, backing away step by step, axes held high not in challenge but in warning as they searched for a path out. Another group surged forward recklessly, screaming defiance, only to be swallowed by the advancing Threian line and vanish beneath shields and blades.
The horde was no longer a single thing.
It was fragments.
At the center, where bodies lay stacked three and four deep, the press was unbearable. Orcs found themselves trapped between their own kin and the relentless push of the Threian infantry. Those at the front could not retreat even if they wanted to. Those behind shoved forward blindly, driven by fear of being crushed or cut down by their own.
Men screamed as axes bit through armor. Orcs roared as spears punched into lungs and bellies. The air was thick with iron and frost. Breath came out in ragged white clouds that mingled with the steam rising from hot blood spilled onto cold ground.
Then one clan broke.
It was a banner of cracked bone and black hide, carried by a towering warrior whose armor was already rimed with ice. An arrow from the heights struck him through the throat. He fell without a sound, banner tumbling into the mud. For a heartbeat, his warriors stared at him in disbelief.
Then they turned.
Not as one, not in order, but in instinctive terror. They shoved past other clans, snarling and striking as they went, trying to carve a path southward. Their flight tore a ragged hole through the horde, and through that hole poured panic.
“Back” someone bellowed in the orcish tongue, though no one knew who had shouted it.
The word spread faster than any command.
On the eastern flank, the cavalry saw it first. The mass before them shuddered, then buckled. Orcs began to peel away in clumps, some throwing down wounded comrades, others dragging them until exhaustion forced them to let go.
The knights did not give them time to recover.
“Forward” came the call.
Horses surged again, hooves crushing fallen bodies, blades flashing as they cut into exposed backs. Every fleeing orc became a signal to another that survival lay only in running.
At the center, Aliyah felt it before she saw it.
The resistance ahead of her softened. The push against the shields weakened. The roar of orcish fury gave way to something higher pitched, fractured, afraid.
She raised her scepter and pointed forward.
“Press them. Do not let them reform.”
The order rippled outward.
The Threian infantry leaned into their advance, shields slamming harder, spear points driving deeper. They stepped over corpses without breaking stride. Where an orc stumbled, three blades found him. Where one tried to stand and fight alone, he was surrounded and pulled down.
The mages shifted their focus.
No longer were they shaping wide fields of destruction. Now they picked targets of opportunity. A frozen path appeared suddenly in front of a fleeing group, sending them sprawling. A burst of ice shattered a knot of warriors trying to rally around a surviving chieftain.
That chieftain fought like a beast cornered. He killed two men and wounded a third before a spear took him through the back and another pierced his eye. He died choking on blood and frost, his clan scattering the moment he fell.
The orcish horde began to unravel from the edges inward.
Some clans fled south in disorganized mobs, weapons discarded, wounded abandoned. Others turned east and west, slamming into the mountain walls or the foothills, only to find no escape there. Those who still tried to fight did so in isolated pockets, surrounded by enemies on all sides.
From the heights, the archers continued to rain death. They no longer aimed for formations, only for movement. Any group that tried to regroup was answered with a storm of arrows that pinned them in place until infantry arrived to finish the work.
The ground was slick now, treacherous with frozen blood and crushed bodies. Men slipped and fell, sometimes to be trampled, sometimes to be dragged back up by comrades. Orcs fell and did not rise, buried beneath the weight of their own retreating kin.
A horn sounded again, deeper and slower.
The Threian advance did not stop.
They had learned the cost of hesitation.
At last, the rout became complete.
The center collapsed entirely. Orcs turned and ran in earnest, screaming curses and prayers to forgotten spirits. Some dropped their weapons to run faster. Others were cut down from behind, backs split open by swords or punctured by spears.
The Threian line surged forward into open ground, no longer meeting organized resistance. Officers shouted to keep cohesion, to prevent reckless pursuit, but even discipline bent beneath the weight of victory and vengeance.
Still, Aliyah kept them in check.
“Horns,” she ordered. “Signal consolidation.”
The calls rang out, sharp and commanding.
The infantry slowed, then halted, forming a new line amid the carnage. Cavalry pulled back from pursuit, wheeling to cover the flanks. Archers ceased fire one rank at a time, lowering bows with shaking hands.
Ahead of them, the orcish horde fled.
Not marched. Not withdrew.
Fled.
The survivors streamed southward in broken lines, scattering into the foothills, abandoning banners, wounded, and dead alike. The sound of battle faded into distant, panicked cries and the thunder of retreating feet.
Silence crept back onto the battlefield, broken only by groans of the dying and the crackle of ice forming over blood soaked earth.
Aliyah reined in her horse and surveyed the field.
Bodies lay everywhere, Threian and orc alike, tangled together in grotesque stillness. Frost coated armor and flesh, turning the fallen into pale statues. Steam rose in slow curls where magic still lingered.
A banner was raised near the center of the field.
The colors of her family, stained dark but unbroken.
The Winters’ Army stood among the dead, battered, bloodied, exhausted beyond measure.
But standing.
Officers moved through the ranks, counting heads, calling names, pulling wounded men to their feet. Healers rushed forward, slipping on frozen gore as they worked. Mages slumped where they stood, drained but alive.
Slowly, realization spread.
They had not been overrun.
They had not been destroyed.
They had won.
A cheer rose, hesitant at first, then stronger as it rolled down the line. It was not wild. It was heavy, burdened by loss, but unmistakably triumphant.
Aliyah closed her eyes for a moment and let out a breath she had been holding since the horn of advance had sounded.
Against the mountains, against the horde, against despair itself, the Winters’ Army had held.
And this time, the orcs were the ones who ran.


