Rise of the Horde - Chapter 570 - 570

The first light of dawn touched the Lag’ranna Mountains with cold, merciless clarity.
Countess Aliyah Winters stood at the edge of the rocky outcrop overlooking the killing field below, her frostforged armor gleaming pale in the early sun. The battlefield stretched before her like a canvas painted in blood and ash. Thousands of bodies lay frozen in death… orcs crumpled where they had fallen, their dark blood pooled and hardened into black ice. The ground itself bore the scars of battle: churned earth, shattered weapons, broken shields emblazoned with crude symbols now half-buried in mud and snow.
Behind her, the camp stirred with controlled activity. Healers moved between the wounded, their hands glowing faintly with restorative magic. Soldiers cleaned weapons and counted arrows. Engineers worked to repair broken sections of the defensive line. The mountain pass, which had nearly been their grave days before, now stood as testament to their resilience.
Sir Rhaegar Vance approached from behind, his footsteps measured but heavy. His armor bore fresh dents, and a new scar traced a thin line across his jaw. He stopped beside her, following her gaze down to the carnage below.
“They won’t return,” he said quietly. “Not after this.”
Aliyah did not answer immediately. Her clear-blue eyes tracked the distant movement at the far edge of the plain, where the last stragglers of the orcish retreat disappeared into the southern horizon like shadows fleeing from light.
“They will,” she said at last, her voice calm but edged with certainty. “Not tomorrow. Not next week. But they will return.”
Rhaegar frowned. “My lady, we shattered them. Thousands dead. Their chieftain fell by your magic. What army returns from such a defeat?”
“One that is filled with rage and hungers for vengeance,” Aliyah replied. She turned to face him, and in her expression there was no triumph, only the cold calculation of a commander who understood the nature of war. “We won the battle, Rhaegar. But we did not break their will. We taught them respect. And respect… respect is more dangerous than fear.”
She gestured toward the battlefield. “Look carefully. The ones who fled… they did not scatter in all directions like panicked cattle. Most ran south. Toward their main camp. Toward their remaining forces. They retreat to regroup, not to abandon the war.”
Rhaegar’s jaw tightened. “Then we pursue. Strike them while they are broken.”
“No.”
The word was absolute.
Aliyah turned back to the mountains, folding her arms across her chest. “We won here because we fought on our terms. High ground. Narrow approaches. Magic concentrated on a single front. The moment we step onto the open plains, we lose every advantage. And if their main force is as large as the scouts report…”
She let the implication hang in the air.
Rhaegar exhaled slowly, frustration flickering across his face. “So we wait. We let them lick their wounds and grow stronger.”
“We hold,” Aliyah corrected. “There is a difference. Waiting implies passivity. Holding means we fortify. We heal. We prepare for what comes next.”
She glanced at him, her expression softening just slightly. “You fought well, Rhaegar. You and the others. Without your stand in the center, the line would have broken. But valor alone does not win wars. Strategy does. Patience does.”
Rhaegar nodded slowly, though the tension in his shoulders did not fully ease. “What are your orders, my lady?”
“Send messengers to the capital. Inform the crown of our victory and request reinforcements. We need more mages… frost-weavers specifically. The orcs learned to fear our ice, but if they return in greater numbers, we will need more than arrows to hold them.”
She turned fully now, her gaze sweeping across the camp. “Double the sentries. Rotate the patrols. I want scouts on every approach to the mountains, day and night. If they send raiders or advance parties, I want to know before they get within a league of our position.”
“And the wounded?”
“Priority to those who can return to the line. The others…” Aliyah paused, her voice quieter. “The others we honor. They held when it mattered most.”
Rhaegar saluted, fist over heart, then turned to carry out her commands.
Aliyah remained on the outcrop for a long moment after he left, her eyes still fixed on the southern horizon. The wind picked up, carrying with it the faint scent of smoke and blood. Somewhere in the distance, a raven cried out, its call sharp and lonely against the vast sky.
She thought of the chieftain she had killed. The massive orc who had carved through her lines with terrifying strength. Even in death, his face had not shown fear. Only rage. Only defiance.
That was the part that worried her most.
The orcs had not broken in spirit. They had broken in body, yes. In formation, yes. But their will… their hunger for battle… that had not been extinguished. It had been tempered.
And tempered steel, she knew, was far more dangerous than raw iron.
*****
Far to the south, in the camp of the Yohan First Horde, the mood was not one of defeat.
It was one of reckoning.
Khao’khen stood in the center of the command circle, surrounded by his chieftains and war leaders. The fire before them burned low and steady, its light casting long shadows across their scarred faces. The recent arrivals… the defeated warriors who had returned from the failed assault… sat or stood at the outer edges of the gathering, silent and grim.
No one spoke.
The silence was not uncomfortable. It was the silence of warriors who had learned hard truths and were now digesting them.
Finally, Khao’khen broke it.
“You went north seeking glory,” he said, his voice low and steady. “And you found death waiting for you instead.”
No one argued.
“You fought without plan. Without coordination. Without understanding what you faced.” Khao’khen’s gaze swept across the gathered orcs, not with anger, but with something harder to bear: disappointment. “And now you return, bloodied and broken, having learned what the enemy is capable of.”
One of the defeated chieftains, a scarred veteran with one arm wrapped in bloodied bandages, stepped forward. His voice was rough, but steady.
“We underestimated them,” he admitted. “The pinkskins… they are not weak prey. They fight with discipline. With magic we have never seen. Their arrows freeze flesh. Their lines do not easily break.”
Another warrior spoke up, younger, his tusks still white and unmarked by battle scars. “Their leader… the woman in ice-armor. She killed Gralthar. Cut him down like he was nothing.”
A murmur rippled through the gathering. Gralthar had been a legend among the clans. A chieftain who had carved his name into the bones of countless enemies. To hear that he had fallen…
Khao’khen let the murmur die before speaking again.
“Gralthar was strong,” he said. “But strength without strategy is just noise. Courage without discipline is just waste.” He gestured toward the defeated warriors. “You have paid the price for that lesson. Thousands dead. Pride shattered. But you returned. And that… that matters.”
He stepped closer to the fire, the flames reflecting in his dark eyes.
“The war is not over. The enemy still holds the mountains. They still think they can stop us with walls of ice and arrows dipped in frost. But now we know what we face. Now we understand.”
Khao’khen raised his fist, and every eye in the circle turned to him.
“We do not charge blindly. We do not waste our warriors on pride. When we march north… we march as one horde. United. Coordinated. And we will not stop until the mountains are ours and the pinkskins are broken beneath our feet.”
A low growl of approval rose from the gathered warriors. Not loud. Not triumphant. But determined.
One of the elder chieftains, a grizzled orc whose scars told stories of a hundred battles, leaned forward.
“When do we march?”
Khao’khen did not answer immediately. He looked around the circle, measuring the readiness of his warriors, the supplies that had just arrived, the morale that was slowly being rebuilt.
“Soon,” he said finally. “But not yet. We rest. We train. We integrate the newcomers into our ranks. And when we march… we march ready.”
He turned his gaze northward, toward the distant mountains that loomed like jagged teeth against the horizon.
“The pinkskins think they have won. Let them believe it. Let them grow comfortable in their victory. And when they least expect it…”
He let the sentence trail off, but the implication was clear.
The fire crackled. The wind carried the scent of meat roasting over distant cook fires. And in the silence that followed, every warrior in that circle understood.
The war had only just begun.
*****
In the mountains, as the sun climbed higher and the camp below bustled with renewed purpose, Countess Aliyah Winters walked among her soldiers.
She stopped at the healers’ tents, speaking quietly with the wounded. She inspected the defenses, noting where improvements could be made. She watched the mages practice their frost-weaving, their hands glowing with pale blue light as they shaped ice into deadly forms.
And everywhere she went, the soldiers straightened. They nodded. They whispered her name with something close to reverence.
Because they had stood against the orcish horde. They had held when it mattered most. And they had survived.
But Aliyah knew the truth.
Survival was not victory.
It was only the beginning.
She returned to the command tent as evening approached, the sky above the mountains turning shades of purple and gold. Inside, maps were spread across a wooden table, marked with symbols denoting troop positions, supply routes, and potential attack vectors.
Rhaegar was already there, along with three other senior officers. They looked up as she entered.
“The messengers have been sent,” Rhaegar reported. “Reinforcements should arrive within the week if the weather holds.”
“Good.” Aliyah leaned over the map, her fingers tracing the outline of the mountain passes. “And the scouts?”
“No movement from the south yet,” one of the officers replied. “But they’re out there. Watching. Waiting.”
Aliyah nodded slowly. “They will come again. And when they do, they will be smarter. More coordinated. They have learned from their mistakes, just as we have learned from ours.”
She straightened, her gaze sweeping across the faces of her officers.
“We won the battle. But this war is far from over. The orcs are not mindless beasts. They are warriors with leaders who think, who plan, who adapt. If we underestimate them again, we will pay for it in blood.”
Rhaegar met her eyes. “What do we do?”
Aliyah placed both hands on the table, leaning forward.
“We prepare. We train. We fortify every inch of this position. And when they come…” She paused, her voice dropping to a tone of absolute certainty. “We make sure they regret it.”
The officers nodded, and one by one they returned to their tasks.
Aliyah remained at the table long after they left, studying the maps, calculating angles and distances, imagining the next assault and how she would meet it.
Outside, night fell fully over the Lag’ranna Mountains. The fires in the camp burned bright against the darkness. Sentries walked their posts with weapons ready. And somewhere in the distance, carried on the cold mountain wind, the faint howl of a wolf echoed through the peaks.
The war was not over.
It had only just begun.


