Rise of the Horde - Chapter 576 - 576

Dawn broke over the Winters camp with the sound of war horns.
For the ninth consecutive day, the orcs came.
Countess Aliyah Winters stood atop the command platform, her frostforged armor gleaming in the early light, her eyes tracking the mass of green-skinned warriors emerging from the tree line two hundred yards distant. Behind her, officers relayed orders in calm, practiced voices. Below, soldiers moved to their positions with the disciplined efficiency of veterans who had performed this same routine every morning for over a week.
“Numbers?” she asked, her voice carrying just enough to reach her senior officers.
Captain Matthias, her chief scout, squinted through a brass spyglass. “Estimate three to four hundred this time, my lady. Mixed clans by the look of their banners. No unified formation.”
“Same as yesterday, then,” Sir Rhaegar Vance commented, moving to stand beside the countess. His armor bore fresh dents from the previous day’s fighting, but he wore them like badges of honor. “They learn nothing.”
“They learn,” Aliyah corrected quietly. “Just not fast enough. And there are always more willing to try.”
She was right. Word had spread across the orcish territories that the mighty Winters army, the force that had crushed their clans and tribes, was now isolated and vulnerable. To the scattered clans and ambitious chieftains, it was an irresistible temptation. Here was a chance for glory, for revenge, for proving one’s strength against an enemy that had humiliated so many of their kind.
What they failed to understand was that the Winters army was not vulnerable.
It was fortified.
“Archers to the ready!” bellowed Captain Lysa of the Frostguard, her voice cutting through the morning air. Along the defensive line, two hundred archers nocked arrows, their bows already enchanted with frost magic that would freeze flesh on impact.
“Infantry, shields!” The command rippled down the line as five hundred soldiers locked their shields together, creating an unbroken wall of wood and iron reinforced with runic wards.
“Mages, maintain the barrier!” Six frost-weavers stood at intervals behind the shield wall, their hands already glowing with pale blue light. Between them, a shimmering barrier of ice crystals hung in the air, ready to solidify at a moment’s notice.
The orcs charged.
They came in a ragged wave, each warrior running at their own pace, shouting their own war cries, following no common banner or unified command. Some carried crude axes, others spiked clubs or jagged swords. A few wore scraps of armor looted from previous battles. Most wore only hide and rage.
“Hold,” Aliyah commanded, her voice steady. “Let them close.”
The orcs crossed one hundred and fifty yards. One hundred. Seventy-five.
“Archers… loose!”
Two hundred arrows shrieked through the air, their frost-enchanted heads leaving trails of crystalline vapor. They fell among the charging orcs like a deadly rain, and where they struck, the results were devastating.
An arrow punched through the shoulder of a massive orc in the front rank. The impact spun him sideways, but it was the frost that killed him. Ice exploded outward from the wound, spreading through muscle and bone in seconds. His arm froze solid, then shattered as he fell, hitting the ground in pieces.
Another orc took an arrow to the chest. He managed three more steps before the cold reached his heart. He stopped mid-stride, his body locking up as frost crawled across his skin, turning him into a grotesque statue that toppled and broke apart on impact.
Twenty orcs fell in that first volley. Then another twenty as the archers loosed their second wave. Then a third.
But the orcs kept coming.
They crashed into the shield wall with the force of a battering ram, axes and clubs hammering against wood and metal. The Winters infantry held firm, boots planted, shoulders braced, shields locked together so tightly that even the massive strength of the orcish warriors couldn’t force them apart.
“Push!” roared a Winters sergeant, and the front rank surged forward in unison, throwing back the orcs who had pressed against them. Spears thrust through the gaps in the shield wall, finding exposed bellies and unarmored throats. Orcs fell, and the soldiers stepped over their bodies, reforming the line instantly.
An particularly large orc, his face a mass of scars and fury, swung a massive two-handed axe at the shield wall. The blade bit deep into a shield, splitting the wood and nearly tearing it from the soldier’s grip. But before the orc could strike again, a frost-weaver’s spell caught him square in the chest.
The orc’s roar turned to a strangled gasp as ice erupted across his torso, spreading from his chest to his shoulders to his face. His axe fell from frozen fingers. He stood there for a moment, a perfect ice sculpture of rage and pain, before a spear thrust shattered him into a thousand glittering fragments.
The battle lasted less than fifteen minutes.
The orcs, lacking any coordination or tactical sense, simply threw themselves at the Winters defenses until enough of them were dead that the survivors lost their nerve. They broke and ran, leaving behind nearly a hundred corpses frozen in various states of violent death.
“Casualties?” Aliyah asked as the last of the orcs disappeared into the tree line.
“Three wounded, my lady. None dead. Healer Carys says all three will be back on duty by tomorrow.”
Aliyah nodded, but her expression remained troubled. “And our supplies?”
The quartermaster, a grizzled veteran named Osric, consulted his ledger. “Arrows depleted by six hundred today. Magical reserves down by approximately eight percent. Food stores… adequate for another two weeks, perhaps three if we ration carefully.”
“No word from the capital?” she asked, though she already knew the answer.
“None, my lady.”
She turned to gaze out over the battlefield, watching as work parties began the grim task of stripping the orcish dead of anything useful. Weapons, armor, food… in their isolated position, every resource mattered.
“We’re winning,” Rhaegar said quietly, joining her at the platform’s edge. “Every attack, we throw them back with minimal losses. At this rate…”
“At this rate, we slowly bleed to death,” Aliyah interrupted. “We win every battle, yes. But we can’t replace our arrows. We can’t replenish our magical reserves beyond what our mages can naturally regenerate. We can’t resupply our food. Every day, we grow a little weaker. And the orcs…”
She gestured toward the tree line where fresh movement could already be seen.
“There are always more orcs.”
*****
Day twelve brought a more serious challenge.
The attack came just after noon, when the sun was high and the defenders were rotating shifts. This time, the orcish force was larger… over a thousand warriors from at least six different clans. They had no unified command, but they had numbers.
And they had learned, at least a little.
Instead of charging straight at the fortified center, the orcs split into three groups. One hit the center as expected, drawing the defenders’ attention. The other two swept wide, attempting to flank the Winters position from both sides simultaneously.
“They’re trying to surround us!” Captain Matthias shouted from his observation post.
“I see them,” Aliyah replied calmly. She had anticipated this. Sooner or later, even the most disorganized enemy would stumble onto basic flanking tactics. “Captain Lysa, take one hundred archers to the left flank. Captain Darius, the same to the right. Focus on their leading elements. Break their momentum before they can close.”
The officers moved instantly, and the camp erupted into controlled chaos as units redeployed. The Winters army had drilled for exactly this scenario, and it showed in the speed and precision of their movements.
On the left flank, the orcs crashed through underbrush and over rocky ground, their war cries echoing off the mountain slopes. There were perhaps three hundred of them, a mix of clans identified by their crude banners and war paint. They moved with the confidence of warriors who believed they had found a weakness.
They were wrong.
Captain Lysa had positioned her archers behind a hastily erected barrier of sharpened stakes. As the orcs closed to within seventy yards, she gave the order.
“Volley fire! Loose!”
A hundred frost-enchanted arrows screamed downrange. The leading orcs went down in a tangle of frozen limbs and shattered bone. But these orcs were more determined than the previous attackers. They leaped over their fallen comrades and kept coming.
“Again! Loose!”
Another volley. Another dozen orcs fell, their bodies freezing mid-charge, creating obstacles for those behind them.
“Again!”
The third volley broke them. The orcs faltered, their charge losing momentum as they saw more than fifty of their number already dead or dying. Without central leadership to drive them forward, individual survival instincts took over. They scattered, some continuing forward in small groups, others breaking and running for the cover of the trees.
Those who continued forward met the Winters infantry. Lysa had positioned two companies of spearmen behind the archers, and they stepped forward now, forming a bristling wall of steel points.
An orc with a massive war hammer crashed into the spear line, his weapon caving in one soldier’s shield with devastating force. But before he could strike again, three spears punched through his chest from different angles. He died still standing, held upright by the weapons impaling him.
Another orc, faster and more cunning than his fellows, managed to slip past a spear thrust and drove his axe into a soldier’s shoulder. The man screamed and fell, but his companions were already responding. A shield bash knocked the orc off balance. A sword thrust found the gap in his ribs. He collapsed, drowning in his own blood.
The fight on the left flank lasted perhaps twenty minutes before the surviving orcs broke and fled, leaving over a hundred dead behind them.
The right flank told a similar story. Captain Darius had chosen to meet the orcish charge head-on rather than relying purely on archery. He positioned his infantry in a wedge formation, with the point aimed directly at the oncoming orcs.
When the orcs crashed into the wedge, they found themselves channeled into a killing zone where every angle was covered by Winters’ iron. The wedge held firm, shields locked, spears thrusting, while the flanking companies wheeled inward, crushing the orcs between three walls of disciplined infantry.
A chieftain led the orcish assault personally, his presence driving his warriors to greater fury. He was enormous, standing nearly eight feet tall, his body covered in ritual scars and trophy bones. His axe claimed three Winters soldiers in as many swings, each blow shattering shields and armor alike.
But size and fury could not overcome tactics and discipline.
Captain Darius himself stepped forward to meet the chieftain. Their weapons clashed once, twice, three times. The chieftain’s strength was superior, but Darius was faster and better trained. On the fourth exchange, he ducked under a massive overhead swing and drove his sword up through the orc’s armpit, finding the gap in the crude armor.
The chieftain roared in pain and rage, backhanding Darius with such force that the captain flew ten feet and landed in a heap. But the wound was mortal. The chieftain staggered, blood pouring from the severed artery, and collapsed to his knees.
With their leader down, the orcish assault on the right flank dissolved into chaos. Warriors who moments before had been fighting with suicidal courage suddenly found reasons to retreat. They broke and ran, trampling their own wounded in their haste to escape.
In the center, the main orcish force had fared no better. They had charged directly into the strongest point of the Winters defense, where the full concentration of frost-weavers waited. The mages had unleashed devastating barrages of ice magic, creating a killing field where orcs froze solid mid-stride or shattered into crystalline fragments.
When the flanking attacks collapsed, the center lost heart entirely. The orcs withdrew in disorder, leaving over three hundred dead scattered across the battlefield.
Aliyah walked among the wounded after the battle, offering words of encouragement and ensuring the healers had what they needed. The casualties had been heavier this time. Seventeen dead. Forty-three wounded, though most would recover.
“They’re learning,” she said to Rhaegar as they surveyed the battlefield. “Slowly, but they’re learning. That flanking maneuver was crude, but it was tactical thinking. And that chieftain on the right flank… he knew how to leverage his personal strength.”
“We still won,” Rhaegar pointed out.
“Yes,” Aliyah agreed. “But at what cost? We’ve been here two weeks. In that time, we’ve faced… what, twenty separate attacks? We’ve killed thousands of orcs and lost fewer than fifty of our own. By any military measure, that’s a stunning success.”
“But?”
“But we can’t sustain it. Our arrows are running low despite recovering what we can from the battlefield. Our mages are exhausted from constant use of magic. Our food supplies dwindle daily. And still, no word from the capital. No reinforcements. No resupply. Nothing.”
She turned to face him directly.
“We’re winning every battle, Rhaegar. But we’re losing the war.”
*****
Day seventeen saw the largest attack yet.
Nearly two thousand orcs had gathered from clans across the region. Word had spread that the Winters army was weakening, that their supplies were low, that victory was within reach. Chieftains who had never spoken to each other, who might have been blood enemies under different circumstances, found common cause in the desire to crush the hated pinkskins.
But they still had no unified command. No overall strategy. Each clan fought for its own glory, its own revenge, its own reasons.
And that made all the difference.
The battle began before dawn. The orcs came in waves, one clan after another launching assaults on different parts of the Winters perimeter. They had no coordination between clans, no synchronized timing. Each attack was essentially independent, which meant the Winters defenders could shift forces to meet each threat as it developed.
The first wave hit the eastern defenses. Five hundred orcs of the Redfang Clan, distinguishable by the crimson war paint on their faces. They charged with savage fury, axes and clubs held high, war cries echoing off the mountains.
They met a wall of frost and iron.
The Winters mages had been carefully conserving their power, and now they unleashed it in devastating concentrations. Barriers of ice materialized in front of the charging orcs, forcing them to slow or dodge. Those who crashed into the barriers found them sharp as razors, cutting flesh and shattering bone.
Behind the magical barriers, the archers worked with mechanical precision. Volley after volley of frost-enchanted arrows fell among the orcs, each impact creating a small explosion of ice that could cripple or kill.
The Redfang assault broke against the defenses like waves against a cliff. After thirty minutes of brutal fighting that left over two hundred of their warriors dead, they withdrew in defeat.
The second wave came from the west. The Skullcracker Clan, six hundred strong, waited until the Redfang were retreating before launching their own attack. But the pause gave the Winters defenders time to reposition.
When the Skullcrackers hit the western line, they found it reinforced by troops shifted from the now-quiet eastern sector. The battle was fierce but short. The orcs managed to reach the shield wall, and hand-to-hand fighting erupted all along the line.
A massive orc wielding a hammer the size of a barrel crashed into the line, his weapon crushing shields and breaking arms with each swing. He killed four soldiers before a frost-weaver caught him with a spell that froze his legs solid. Unable to move, he was quickly surrounded and brought down by spear thrusts from all sides.
Another group of orcs tried to scale the defensive stakes using crude grappling hooks. They made it halfway up before archers turned their attention to them, picking them off one by one. Those who fell from the stakes landed on the sharpened points below, impaling themselves.
The Skullcrackers lasted longer than the Redfang, nearly an hour of brutal combat. But they too eventually broke, leaving over two hundred fifty dead behind them.
The third wave should have been the decisive blow. The remaining clans… nearly eight hundred warriors… should have attacked together, overwhelming the exhausted defenders through sheer weight of numbers.
Instead, they argued.
From the command platform, Aliyah could see it happening. The orcish forces milling around beyond arrow range, chieftains shouting at each other, warriors from different clans shoving and posturing. Without unified leadership, each chieftain wanted the glory of leading the final assault. Each one believed their clan should strike first, should claim the victory.
The argument lasted nearly two hours. Long enough for the Winters defenders to rest, reorganize, and prepare. Long enough for the healers to tend the wounded and the mages to recover some of their strength.
When the orcs finally attacked, they came in three separate groups, each clan refusing to coordinate with the others. They hit the Winters defenses from multiple angles simultaneously, which should have been effective.
But the attacks were poorly timed, each clan reaching the defensive line at slightly different moments. This allowed the defenders to focus their full strength on each group in sequence, destroying them one after another.
The battle raged through the afternoon and into the evening. The Winters defenders fought with desperate determination, knowing that if they broke now, they would be overwhelmed. Soldiers fought until their arms ached and their legs trembled with exhaustion. Mages pushed their power to the limit and beyond, several collapsing from magical exhaustion. Healers worked frantically to keep the wounded fighting.
But the line held.
As darkness fell, the surviving orcs finally withdrew, leaving over seven hundred dead scattered across the battlefield. The Winters army had lost thirty-four soldiers killed and over a hundred wounded, many seriously.
Aliyah stood among her exhausted troops, her armor splattered with orcish blood, her frostforged blade still gleaming with residual magic. She had fought personally when the orcs had broken through at one point, cutting down three warriors before the breach could be sealed.
“My lady,” Osric the quartermaster approached, his face grim. “The supply situation…”
“I know,” she said quietly. “How long?”
“Arrows… three days, maybe four if we’re very careful about recovering them from the battlefield. Food… a week, less if we maintain full rations. The mages are exhausted. We’ve lost half our healing supplies.”
“And still no word from the capital?”
“None, my lady. It’s as if our messages are simply… disappearing.”
Aliyah looked out over the battlefield, at the hundreds of orcish corpses slowly freezing in the mountain cold. A stunning victory by any measure. They had faced nearly two thousand enemies and driven them off with relatively light casualties.
But tomorrow, there would be more orcs.
There were always more orcs.
And each victory brought them one step closer to having nothing left to fight with.
“Rhaegar,” she said quietly.
“My lady?”
“Tomorrow, send a final message to the capital. Make it clear that without reinforcements or resupply within the week, we will be forced to withdraw.”
“You mean…”
“I mean we’re running out of options,” she said. “We’ve held this position magnificently. We’ve inflicted devastating casualties on the enemy. We’ve proven that Winters troops are the finest in the kingdom. But we cannot hold forever on pride and discipline alone. We need support. And if it doesn’t come…”
She let the sentence hang unfinished.
They both knew what it meant.
Retreat. Abandonment of their position. A strategic withdrawal that would be seen as defeat no matter how it was spun.
But the alternative was worse.
The alternative was dying here, surrounded and overwhelmed, when supplies finally ran out and the endless waves of orcs finally found them unable to respond.
Aliyah Winters had not survived this long by being stupid or stubborn. She knew when to fight and when to preserve her forces for another day.
She just hoped that day wouldn’t come.
That somewhere, somehow, the crown would finally respond to their desperate pleas for help.
That they weren’t truly as abandoned as they were beginning to fear.


