Rise of the Horde - Chapter 575 - 575

Deep within the mountain heart of Khaz-Dorum, where the air thrummed with the eternal song of hammers on anvils, Thane Borin Ironbeard stood before the great forge of his ancestors. The chamber was vast, carved from living stone over the course of three thousand years, its ceiling lost in shadows fifty feet above. Rivers of molten metal flowed through channels cut into the floor, their light painting everything in shades of orange and gold.
The Thane was an imposing figure even by dwarven standards. Broad as an oak barrel, his shoulders bore the weight of armor that had been worn by seventeen Thanes before him. His beard, a magnificent cascade of iron-gray that reached past his belt, was woven with platinum rings inscribed with the deeds of his lineage. His eyes, the color of storm-dark granite, surveyed the forge with the practiced gaze of one who had spent two hundred years mastering the craft of war.
Around him, the forge-masters of Khaz-Dorum worked with furious intensity. This was no ordinary production day. This was preparation for war.
“Thane Borin!” called Rurik Ironhand, the master of the thundermaker foundries, approaching with a ledger blackened by soot and oil. “The production numbers ye requested, as of the last count.”
Borin took the ledger, his thick fingers surprisingly gentle as he turned the pages. “Speak ’em aloud, Rurik. The others should hear.”
Rurik cleared his throat, his voice carrying over the clang of hammers. “Aye, Thane. Since we cut off trade with the manlings, we’ve produced one hundred and forty-seven heavy thundermakers, three hundred and twenty-two field pieces, and near six hundred of the small bore wall-mounted guns. That’s not countin’ the personal boomsticks… we’ve got forges turnin’ those out by the hundreds daily.”
“And the powder?” Borin asked, his eyes never leaving the ledger.
“Powder stores are at capacity, Thane. We’ve filled every magazine in the deep halls and started excavatin’ new ones. At current production, we’ll have enough to wage war for ten years without stoppin’ for resupply.” Rurik’s expression was grim with satisfaction. “No manling army could withstand what we’ve stockpiled.”
“Good,” Borin rumbled. “But it’s not enough. Double the shifts on the heavy pieces. I want every mountain pass covered with enough firepower to turn an army into a memory.”
Another dwarf approached, this one wearing the insignia of the Guild of Engineers. Grimni Cogsworth was ancient even by dwarven standards, his beard so long it had to be wrapped around his belt three times. But his mind remained sharp as the finest blade.
“Thane,” Grimni wheezed, “the new defensive installations are ready for yer inspection. We’ve finished mountin’ the thunder batteries on the eastern approaches.”
“Show me,” Borin commanded.
They walked through corridors carved so precisely that not even a knife blade could fit between the stones, past chambers where generations of dwarves had lived and worked and died. Every hundred paces, they passed guard stations now reinforced with fresh troops, each warrior armed with the finest weapons the forges could produce.
The defensive batteries were a marvel even by dwarven standards. Twenty massive thundermakers, each barrel capable of hurling an iron ball the size of a dwarf’s head over a mile with devastating accuracy. They were mounted on intricate swivel mechanisms that allowed them to target any point on the approach road.
“By Grungni’s hammer,” Borin murmured, genuine appreciation in his voice. “Ye’ve outdone yerself, Grimni.”
“Aye, well, had to make sure we could give the backstabbin’ manlings a proper greetin’ if they show their faces again.” Grimni spat on the stone floor. “Three generations of honest trade, thrown away the moment they got a better offer from those tree-huggin’ elgi. Shows what their word is worth, don’t it?”
Borin’s expression darkened. “It shows exactly what I’ve been sayin’ all along. The manlings have no honor. No memory. They’ll trade with anyone who offers ’em a shiny coin or a pretty promise, regardless of who they betray in the process.”
He turned to face both master craftsmen, his voice dropping but losing none of its intensity.
“Let me tell ye both somethin’. The elgi, for all their faults… and Valaya knows they’ve got plenty… at least they’re predictable. They’ll stab ye in the back, sure, but ye know it’s comin’. They’re so full of their own pride and arrogance that ye can see their betrayals a league away.”
“But the manlings? They betray without even realizin’ it. They make oaths they forget by the next sunrise. They sign treaties with one hand while reachin’ for a different deal with the other. And when ye call ’em on it, they look at ye like YE’RE the unreasonable one!”
Rurik nodded vigorously. “Aye, Thane. My cousin trades with the manlings in the eastern settlements. Says they’ll promise ye one price, then claim they ‘misunderstood’ when it comes time to pay. Says they treat contracts like… like suggestions, not bindin’ agreements.”
“Exactly!” Borin’s fist slammed against the stone wall hard enough to send echoes bouncing through the corridor. “And now they’ve proven it on the grandest scale possible. They made a deal with the elgi… the ELGI! Our oldest enemies! The bastards who stole our secrets and broke their oaths at the Battle of Howling Peak! And the manlings think we should just… what? Smile and keep sellin’ them weapons?”
“Weapons they could turn on US,” Grimni added darkly. “That’s what nobody’s sayin’ out loud, but we’re all thinkin’ it. Ye don’t arm folk who’ve already shown they’ll betray their allies the moment it’s convenient.”
“Exactly so,” Borin agreed. “The elgi betrayal… aye, that’s in the Book of Grudges, and rightly so. But it’s also the perfect excuse, ain’t it? We cut ’em off for breakin’ with tradition, for dealin’ with our enemies. No one can question that. It’s proper dwarf logic.”
He lowered his voice further, though there were no manlings within a hundred miles to overhear.
“But between us? The real reason is simpler. We’ve seen how the manlings operate. They befriended us when they needed our weapons to secure their borders. Now they’re befriending the elgi because the elgi offered ’em something else… magic, maybe, or trade routes, or who knows what. And when someone else offers ’em something even better? When some enemy of ours whispers the right promises in their ears?”
“They’ll turn those same thundermakers and boomsticks we sold ’em against the Iron Hills,” Rurik finished grimly. “Usin’ our own weapons to attack us.”
“Aye,” Borin said. “And I’ll not have that on my conscience or in my clan’s history. Better to cut ’em off now, while we still have the advantage. Let ’em go beggin’ to their new elgi friends for weapons. See how that works out for ’em.”
*****
The Great Hall of Khaz-Dorum was a testament to dwarven engineering and artistry. Pillars of solid granite rose from floor to ceiling, each one carved with the history of the Ironbeard Clan going back thousands of years. The ceiling itself was a masterwork of stone carving, depicting the great battles and accomplishments of the dawi race.
Here, at the massive stone table that could seat fifty dwarves comfortably, Thane Borin held council with his clan elders, guild masters, and war leaders. Ale flowed freely… dwarves did all their best thinking with a proper brew in hand… and the air was thick with pipe smoke and serious discussion.
“The question before us,” Borin announced, his voice carrying through the hall, “is not whether we were right to cut off the manlings. We all know we were. The question is what we do next.”
Thorgrim Oathkeeper, eldest of the clan elders, stroked his white beard thoughtfully. “They’ll come again, ye know. Not just messengers, but armies eventually. The manlings have built their military strength on our weapons for three generations. They’ll not give that up easily.”
“Let ’em come!” shouted Durin Ironhelm, commander of the hold’s garrison. “We’ve got enough firepower to turn ten armies into paste! The passes are narrow, the approaches are covered, and we’ve got the high ground. Any manling army stupid enough to march on the Iron Hills will learn what it means to face the dawi in our own mountains!”
A chorus of approval met this declaration, fists slamming on the table in agreement.
But Thorgrim raised a cautioning hand. “Aye, we can defend ourselves, no question. But defense ain’t the same as strategy. We need to think long-term. What happens after we repel ’em? What happens to our trade? Our relationships with the other kingdoms?”
“Bugger the other kingdoms,” muttered Grimli Goldseeker, master of the merchant’s guild. “Though I’ll admit, cuttin’ off Threia does hurt our coin purse. They were our largest trading partner for weapons and powder. Losin’ that revenue…”
“Is worth it,” Borin interrupted firmly. “Gold is important, aye. But survival is more important. And I’ll not trade our long-term survival for short-term profit. We’ve seen what happens when ye arm folk who can’t be trusted. Ask the holds that sold weapons to the greenskins thinkin’ they could control where those weapons were pointed.”
“Aye, all dead now,” someone muttered from further down the table.
“Exactly,” Borin said. “The manlings have proven themselves untrustworthy. They betrayed us… oh, they’ll claim they didn’t, that it was just ‘expanding trade relationships’ or some such nonsense. But we know better. They chose the elgi over us. And anyone who makes that choice once will make it again.”
Rurik leaned forward. “Thane, if I may… we’ve been producin’ weapons at war-time pace for two months now. The stockpiles are massive. Every dwarf in the hold is armed better than the kings of old. But we can’t keep this up forever. Eventually, we’ll need to either use these weapons or find somewhere else to sell ’em.”
“We’ll use ’em if we have to,” Borin replied. “And if not… well, there are other kingdoms. Kingdoms that haven’t betrayed us. The northern realms, perhaps. Or the mountain clans to the east. Folk who remember the value of keepin’ their word.”
“And the manlings fighting the tusked warmongers?” asked Morgrim Steelfist, a younger but respected warrior. “We’ve heard reports of orc movements in their territories. If the manlings fall to the orcs because they lack our weapons…”
“Then they fall,” Borin said coldly. “Not our problem. They made their choice when they chose the elgi. Let the pointy-ears save ’em with magic and pretty words. We owe the manlings nothing.”
Thorgrim nodded slowly. “Harsh, but fair. The grudge is recorded. The oath is broken. We’re under no obligation to help those who’ve wronged us.”
“Still,” Grimli ventured carefully, “if the greenskins overrun the manling kingdoms, they’ll be at OUR borders eventually. Might be in our interest to…”
“To fight ’em ourselves rather than arm untrustworthy allies,” Borin finished. “Aye, I’ve thought of that. And ye know what? I’d rather face an orc horde knowin’ they DON’T have dwarven weapons than worry about when the manlings will turn those same weapons on us.”
He stood, placing both hands flat on the table.
“Here’s how it is, and I’ll make it clear for everyone. We cut off Threia. Completely. No weapons, no powder, no trade of any kind until they break with the elgi and make proper restitution. And even then… EVEN THEN… we’ll think long and hard about whether we can trust ’em again.”
“We prepare for war. Not because we want it, but because the manlings might be stupid enough to try forcin’ us to trade with ’em. We arm every dwarf, fortify every entrance, and make it crystal clear that Khaz-Dorum is not to be trifled with.”
“And we make sure the other kingdoms know why we did this. Send emissaries to the holds. Let ’em know that Threia broke faith, chose the elgi over honest dawi craft, and can no longer be trusted. If other kingdoms want to keep tradin’ with the manlings, that’s their business. But they should know what kind of folk they’re dealin’ with.”
Murmurs of agreement rippled through the council.
“All in favor?” Borin called out.
Every hand rose. Every voice called out “Aye!”
The decision was made. Ratified by the council. Recorded in the official records of the hold.
Threia was cut off.
And Khaz-Dorum prepared for war.
*****
In the lower halls, where the common folk of Khaz-Dorum lived and worked, life continued with the steady rhythm that had sustained dwarven civilization for millennia.
Brunhild Ironforge worked at her father’s smithy, her hammer ringing against the anvil in a pattern learned over forty years of practice. She was crafting helmet fittings… small work, but necessary. Every dwarf in the hold needed proper armor, and proper armor required hundreds of small, precisely made components.
“Heard the Thane’s makin’ preparations,” her apprentice, young Thorin, said between hammer strikes. “War preparations.”
“Aye,” Brunhild replied, not breaking her rhythm. “And high time too. Can’t trust the manlings. Never could.”
“But they paid good coin,” Thorin ventured. “My uncle made a fortune sellin’ boomsticks to their merchants.”
Brunhild finally paused, setting down her hammer and fixing the young dwarf with a stern look.
“Listen well, lad. Coin is important, aye. But honor is more important. The manlings broke faith. They traded with our enemies. And more than that… they’re unreliable. Untrustworthy. Ye can’t build a relationship on gold alone. Ye need trust. And the manlings have proven they don’t understand the meaning of the word.”
She picked up her hammer again, but her voice continued, taking on the tone of a teacher imparting wisdom.
“I’ll tell ye what my father told me, and his father told him. The dawi live by oaths. When we say we’ll do somethin’, we do it. When we make a promise, we keep it. When we record a grudge, we settle it. That’s what makes us dawi. That’s what separates us from the elgi and the manlings and all the other short-lived folk who change their minds with the seasons.”
“The manlings don’t understand that. They think oaths are… flexible. They think loyalty is a matter of convenience. They’ll swear friendship one day and stab ye in the back the next if someone offers ’em a better deal.”
Thorin absorbed this, his young face serious. “So we prepare for war because we think they’ll attack us?”
“We prepare for war because it’s the only language the manlings understand,” Brunhild corrected. “Strength. Power. The ability to hurt ’em back if they try hurtin’ us. If we show weakness, they’ll take advantage. If we show strength, they’ll think twice.”
She resumed hammering, and Thorin followed suit, the two of them falling into the comfortable rhythm of master and apprentice.
This scene was repeated throughout Khaz-Dorum. In the breweries, where master brewers worked their age-old recipes while discussing the manling betrayal. In the gem-cutting halls, where artisans shaped precious stones while speculating on what might come. In the barracks, where warriors drilled and trained with renewed intensity.
Everywhere, the message was the same: the manlings could not be trusted, and the dawi would be ready.
*****
In the Hall of Records, where the history of the Ironbeard Clan was meticulously maintained, Runesmith Gotri Farsight made a new entry in the Book of Grudges.
The book itself was ancient, its pages made from specially treated hide that would last ten thousand years. Each entry was written in the traditional manner, using inks made from crushed minerals mixed with the blood of the one recording the grudge. This ensured that every grievance was personal, every wrong remembered with the full weight of dwarven determination.
Gotri’s quill moved across the page with practiced precision:
In the year 1247 by the reckoning of the Ironbeard Clan, the Kingdom of Threia did break faith with the dawi of Khaz-Dorum. After three generations of honest trade, wherein the Ironbeard Clan provided weapons and powder of the finest quality, the manlings chose to ally themselves with the elgi of the Kasha’norah Forest.
This betrayal is recorded as a grudge against the Kingdom of Threia, its crown, and all who supported this decision. The grudge shall stand until such time as the manlings break all ties with the elgi, make proper restitution to the Ironbeard Clan, and prove through deed and time that their word can once again be trusted.
Until that day, no dwarf of Khaz-Dorum shall trade with, aid, or provide succor to any citizen of Threia. This is the word of Thane Borin Ironbeard, ratified by the Council of Elders, and recorded in blood and stone.
Gotri set down his quill and carefully blotted the entry. The ink would dry, the blood would set, and the grudge would become permanent. A grievance that might stand for centuries, passed down from generation to generation until it was properly settled.
“There,” he muttered to himself. “Let the manlings try talkin’ their way out of that.”
*****
As evening fell over the Iron Hills, the forges burned brighter. The dwarves worked in shifts now, ensuring that production never stopped. Hammers rang through the night. Furnaces roared. Molten metal flowed like rivers of liquid sunlight.
Thane Borin stood once more at the great forge, watching his people work with quiet pride. They were preparing for a war that might never come. Building weapons that might never be used. Stockpiling powder that might sit in magazines for decades.
But better that than be caught unprepared when the manlings inevitably revealed their true nature.
“Thane,” Rurik approached, his face blackened with soot from a long day’s work. “The eastern batteries are complete. The western approaches will be finished by week’s end. Every entrance to Khaz-Dorum will be covered with enough firepower to stop ten armies.”
“Good,” Borin replied. “And the scout reports?”
“No manling movements toward the hills. They’re focused on their orcish problem to the east. Seems the orcs are givin’ ’em more trouble than they expected.”
“Good,” Borin said again. “Let the orcs soften ’em up. Teach ’em what happens when ye go into battle without proper dwarven steel.”
He turned to look at Rurik, his expression serious.
“Ye think I’m bein’ too harsh? Cuttin’ ’em off when they’re facin’ a huge problem?”
Rurik didn’t hesitate. “No, Thane. Ye’re bein’ wise. The manlings made their choice. Now they live with the consequences. That’s how the world works. Actions have results. Betrayal has costs.”
“Aye,” Borin agreed. “And if they fall to the orcs because they lack our weapons… well, maybe that’ll teach the next generation of manlings to think twice before betrayin’ their allies.”
He placed a heavy hand on Rurik’s shoulder.
“Keep up the good work. I want this hold armed and ready. Because mark my words… the manlings won’t stay focused on the orcs forever. Eventually, they’ll remember we have what they want. And when that day comes, I want ’em to look at the Iron Hills and know… know with absolute certainty… that attackin’ us would be the last mistake they ever make.”
Rurik grinned, his teeth white against his soot-blackened face. “Aye, Thane. They’ll know. By stone and steel, they’ll know.”
The two dwarves stood together, watching the forges burn and listening to the eternal song of creation and preparation. Around them, Khaz-Dorum worked tirelessly, a fortress city of stone and iron and unbreakable will.
The manlings had made their choice.
The dawi had made theirs.
And in the halls beneath the mountains, where dwarven memory stretched back through millennia of grudges kept and oaths honored, the Ironbeard Clan prepared to teach the world a lesson about the price of betrayal.
Whatever came next, they would be ready.
By stone and steel, they would always be ready.


