Rise of the Horde - Chapter 588 - 587

The Arass network felt the first tremor of unease on a third day, though it took days for that tremor to resolve into anything recognizable as alarm.
It began with Irina Ashford, the intermediary who managed the link between Corwin Brast at the raven tower and the Arass operational center in the northeastern district. Irina was a professional …trained, disciplined, and deeply experienced in the tradecraft of covert operations. She had served the Arass cause for sixteen years, recruited originally by Elena Arass from the desperate circumstances of a failed marriage and crushing debts. Elena had offered her a purpose, a salary, and the kind of clarity that came from serving something larger than oneself. Irina had accepted, and in the years since, she had proven herself one of the network’s most reliable assets.
Which was why, when she felt the subtle wrongness in the air around her, she did not dismiss it.
It was nothing she could point to specifically. No one followed her that she could see. No one watched her from windows or lingered in doorways when she passed. The streets around the Copper Anchor appeared the same as always …merchants, laborers, evening strollers, the occasional city watchman on patrol. Everything was normal.
And that was the problem.
Irina had learned long ago that true normalcy had a texture …a randomness, an imperfection, a quality of things happening without purpose or design. What she felt now was different. The normalcy around her was too… perfect. Too consistent. As if someone had studied what normal looked like and was reproducing it carefully, like a painter copying a landscape from memory.
She reported her concern to Elena during their next scheduled meeting at the manor house.
“I can’t identify a specific watcher,” she said, seated in the manor’s dim parlor with its heavy curtains drawn against the light. “But my instincts say someone is looking at me. Or looking at something near me. The pattern of foot traffic around the Copper Anchor has shifted slightly. Not enough to confirm surveillance, but enough to make me uncomfortable.”
Elena listened with the focused attention she gave to all intelligence matters. Irina was not prone to paranoia. If she felt something, there was likely something to feel.
“Could it be city watch?” Elena asked. “A routine investigation? Tavern licenses, tax enforcement?”
“Possible. But the watch doesn’t usually maintain multi-day observation of a single establishment without making their presence obvious. They want proprietors to know they’re being watched …it’s part of the intimidation.”
“What about Brast? Has his behavior changed?”
“Not that I’ve noticed. He’s still making his reports on schedule. If he’s been approached or compromised, he’s hiding it well.”
Elena considered this. In the Arass network’s operating procedures, unexplained surveillance was treated as a potential compromise, requiring immediate assessment and possible shutdown of the affected link. But shutting down the raven tower operation would blind them to the commanders’ communications at a critical moment. The altered messages had already been delivered, but they might need to intercept future correspondence …particularly if the commanders sent follow-up messages that contradicted the sanitized versions.
“Continue as normal,” Elena decided. “But alter your routine. Different tavern. Different meeting times. Vary your routes. If you’re being watched, the watchers will either adjust to follow your new pattern …confirming surveillance …or they’ll lose you, confirming it was coincidental.”
Irina nodded and departed through the side entrance she always used.
Elena sat alone in the parlor for a long moment after she left, her fingers drumming a slow rhythm on the arm of her chair. Then she rose and descended to the basement level of the manor, where the communication equipment was stored.
She composed a brief message to Marius, encoded in their standard cipher:
“Possible surveillance detected on Ashford. Unconfirmed. Recommend heightened awareness across all operational assets. Will investigate.”
*****
The investigation Elena initiated uncovered the first concrete evidence that the Arass network was not operating as freely as they believed.
She dispatched two of her own counter-surveillance operatives …skilled practitioners whose training in the dark arts included the ability to enhance their senses beyond normal human capacity. Not dramatically, not enough to constitute the kind of obvious sorcery that would attract the Church of Light’s attention, but enough to detect things that ordinary watchers would miss.
The operatives staked out the Copper Anchor on the next evening when Irina would normally have met with Brast. Irina herself was kept away, her schedule altered as Elena had instructed.
What the operatives found was subtle but unmistakable.
A woman, mid-thirties, working-class appearance, had been positioned at a flower cart approximately forty yards from the tavern’s entrance. She sold chrysanthemums to passing pedestrians with the easy manner of someone who had been doing it for years. Her cart was well-stocked, her prices reasonable, her interactions with customers naturally warm.
She was also watching the tavern with the methodical attention of a trained observer.
The Arass operative recognized the technique because it was essentially the same approach their own network used …the unremarkable presence, the mundane cover story, the observation conducted through the peripheral vision while the direct attention appeared focused elsewhere.
“Professional,” the operative reported to Elena. “Not city watch …they’re too obvious. Not military intelligence …they would use a team, not a single agent. This is someone’s private network.”
“Can you identify her?” Elena asked.
“I followed her after she closed her cart for the evening. She went to a modest house in the western residential district. Based on the quality of the neighborhood and the maintenance of the house, she lives comfortably but not lavishly. Consistent with someone who earns a supplementary income that they can’t explain.”
“A private intelligence operative,” Elena said. “Working for one of the noble houses.”
“That would be my assessment.”
This was deeply concerning. Private intelligence networks were not uncommon among the great houses …most maintained some level of informal observation to protect their interests. But a private operative specifically watching the Copper Anchor, specifically during the window when Arass meetings took place, suggested that someone had identified the tavern as a point of interest.
Which meant someone was investigating the Arass network.
Elena reported this to Marius immediately. The lord’s response was characteristically measured but carried an undercurrent of intensity that reflected the gravity of the situation.
“Identify the operative’s employer,” Marius instructed. “Trace the chain upward. I want to know which house is looking at us, how much they know, and how they became aware of our operations.”
“And if they’re getting close?”
“Then we deal with it. As we’ve always dealt with threats.”
The implication was clear, and Elena accepted it without comment. But as she departed to organize the counter-investigation, she felt a disquiet that had nothing to do with the investigation itself.
For thirty years, the Arass network had operated in perfect secrecy. No leaks. No discoveries. No close calls. They had moved through the kingdom’s power structures like ghosts, invisible and untouchable.
Now, for the first time, someone was looking for them.
And that meant something had changed.
*****
Marius Arass received the full report in his private study, the purple candles casting their familiar shadows across walls that had witnessed decades of conspiracy. He read Elena’s assessment twice, his expression revealing nothing, his mind working through the implications with the cold efficiency that had sustained the family through its long years of hiding.
Someone was investigating.
The question was who. The question was how much they knew. The question was whether this was a targeted investigation or a fortunate accident …an intelligence operative who had stumbled onto something unusual while looking for something else entirely.
The Arass family had contingency plans for this scenario. They had been developed years ago, during the early stages of the conspiracy, when the risk of discovery was assessed and mitigation strategies were designed.
Option one was elimination. Identify the investigator and their employer, and remove both through whatever means were appropriate …assassination disguised as accident, financial ruin, political destruction, or some combination thereof.
Option two was misdirection. Feed the investigators false information that would lead them away from the Arass network and toward an innocent explanation for whatever they had observed. A romantic affair conducted at the Copper Anchor. A minor smuggling operation. Something illegal enough to explain the secrecy but mundane enough to divert attention from the true conspiracy.
Option three was acceleration. If the investigation threatened to expose the conspiracy before its objectives were achieved, then the timeline would be advanced. Supply disruptions would be increased. The army puppet project would be deployed ahead of schedule. Political maneuvering at court would be intensified.
Marius considered each option against the current situation.
Elimination was premature. They didn’t yet know who was investigating or how much they knew. Killing the wrong person could attract more attention rather than less. And if the investigation was being conducted by a significant house, the disappearance of their operative would raise exactly the kind of alarm the Arass family needed to avoid.
Misdirection was viable but risky. It required understanding what the investigators had already seen, which they didn’t yet know. A poorly targeted misdirection could inadvertently confirm suspicions rather than deflect them.
Acceleration was the most dangerous option but might become necessary if the investigation progressed quickly.
For now, Marius chose a fourth path: observation. Mirror the investigators’ approach. Watch them watching. Learn what they knew, how they operated, who they reported to. Build a complete picture of the threat before deciding how to respond.
“Elena,” he said, summoning his cousin back to the study. “I want our people watching the flower seller. Discreetly. Find out who she reports to. Follow the chain upward. And begin preparing contingencies for the Copper Anchor operation. If we need to shut it down, I want an alternative communication channel ready to activate immediately.”
“The raven tower operation?”
“Brast continues for now. But vary his interception schedule. If the investigators are watching for a pattern, give them inconsistency. And have our people sweep the area around the tower for additional surveillance.”
“And the council? Severus? Castellan?”
“Tell Severus to proceed normally. No changes to his routine, his behavior, or his operations. If the investigators are watching the lower links of our network, the worst thing we can do is let the higher links show signs of awareness. Severus continues to be the jovial, efficient Master of Coin that everyone knows. Castellan continues to be the reliable, slightly corrupt Lord Castellan. Nothing changes until we understand what we’re dealing with.”
Elena nodded, but her expression carried a note of concern that she rarely displayed. “Marius… in thirty years, we’ve never been looked at. Not once. Someone finding us now, at this stage of the plan, is not random chance. Someone became suspicious because of something we did. Something that created a visible pattern.”
“I know,” Marius said. “And I’ve been thinking about what that might be.”
He moved to his desk, where the records of recent operations were laid out. His finger traced the timeline of events leading to the council session …the message interceptions, the forgeries, the political maneuvering.
“The council session,” he said. “The vote to burden four specific houses. It was too clean. Too targeted. We achieved our objectives, but in doing so, we created a pattern that an observant opponent could detect.”
“Severus was too aggressive?”
“Perhaps. Or perhaps the opposition was more observant than we anticipated. Lord Fairfax questioned the messages during the session. We dismissed him as a minor annoyance. We planned to send him away on an inspection tour.”
His eyes narrowed.
“Has the inspection tour been arranged?”
Elena checked her notes. “Severus was to coordinate it through the council’s administrative office. I’ll verify the status.”
“Do it now.”
She departed, and Marius sat alone with the unsettling realization that his thirty-year-old conspiracy, for the first time, might be facing a competent adversary.
Not the Winters or Snowe families, who were trapped in their camps and too busy fighting orcs to ask questions. Not the king, who remained blissfully ignorant. Not the Church, which had long since forgotten about the purged Arass family.
But someone else. Someone in the capital. Someone with the resources to conduct surveillance, the intelligence to identify patterns, and the motivation to investigate.
When Elena returned twenty minutes later, her expression confirmed his fears.
“The inspection tour was never arranged,” she said. “Severus submitted the paperwork, but it was rejected by the council’s administrative office as ‘non-essential during current military operations.’ Lord Fairfax remains in the capital. And according to our watcher at the council offices, Fairfax has been requesting access to the archives of the Royal Communications Office.”
“The communications archives.”
“Where copies of all official correspondence are stored. Including the messages from the eastern territories.”
Marius closed his eyes. The communications archives. If Fairfax gained access to those records …if he obtained copies of the original messages that had been filed before the Arass agents could alter them …he would have proof of forgery. Physical, documented, irrefutable proof.
“How much time do we have?” Marius asked.
“The archives are controlled by the Royal Secretary’s office. Access requires a formal petition, which is processed through the council’s administrative committee. Normally, it takes two to three weeks.”
“Can we block it?”
“Castellan sits on the administrative committee. He can delay the petition. But an outright block would require justification, and Fairfax’s stated reason …routine oversight of military communications …is perfectly legitimate. Blocking it would draw attention.”
“Then we delay it. Tell Castellan to find every bureaucratic obstacle available. Lost forms. Misfiled requests. Scheduling conflicts. I want that petition buried in procedural delays for as long as possible.”
“And Fairfax himself?”
Marius was quiet for a long moment. The original plan had been simple: send him away on a tour, and if he refused, arrange an accident. But the flower seller at the Copper Anchor changed the equation. If Fairfax was conducting surveillance through a private network, then his death or disappearance would not end the investigation …it would escalate it. His allies, whoever they were, would know that his death was connected to his inquiries, and they would redouble their efforts.
“We don’t touch Fairfax,” Marius decided. “Not yet. Not until we know who else is involved and how much they’ve already learned. Removing one piece from the board means nothing if there are others we haven’t identified.”
He stood, moving to the window that looked out over the manor’s overgrown gardens.
“For thirty years, we have operated in secrecy. We have never been challenged. Never been questioned. Never been forced to defend ourselves against a competent adversary.” He turned back to face Elena. “That era is over. From this moment forward, we operate as if we are being watched. Every movement, every communication, every decision …all conducted with the assumption that hostile eyes are searching for us.”
“That will slow our operations significantly.”
“It will keep us alive,” Marius replied. “And alive is the only state from which we can achieve our goals.”
He returned to his desk, already restructuring his mental map of the conspiracy’s operations to account for this new threat.
“Begin implementing enhanced security protocols across the entire network. New communication channels. New meeting locations. New procedures for agent contact. And Elena?”
“Yes?”
“The four houses burdened by the council vote. Remington, Blackwood, Fairfax, Harring. I want a full assessment of each. Their capabilities. Their networks. Their vulnerabilities. Their relationships with each other.”
“You think they’re working together?”
Marius’s smile was cold and thin.
“If I were in their position, I would be. And we must assume our enemies are at least as intelligent as we are. Perhaps more so, given that they’ve found us while we didn’t know they existed.”
The purple candles flickered as if in agreement.
And deep within the Arass manor, the machinery of conspiracy adjusted its gears to account for a new reality: they were no longer hunting in darkness.
Someone was hunting them back.
*****
The counter-investigation that Elena initiated moved with the quiet urgency of a predator that had suddenly realized it was being stalked.
Over the following days, Arass operatives fanned out across the capital, their assignments carefully compartmentalized to prevent any single agent from understanding the full picture. Some were tasked with identifying the flower seller and tracing her movements. Others were assigned to monitor the four burdened houses …Remington, Blackwood, Fairfax, and Harring …for any signs of coordinated activity.
The results came in piecemeal, fragments of a picture that Elena assembled with growing concern.
The flower seller …Sera, though Elena did not yet know her name …proved frustratingly elusive. She appeared at different locations on different days, never using the same cart twice, never approaching the Copper Anchor again after the initial surveillance was detected. Elena’s operatives tracked her to three different addresses on three different evenings, only to discover that each was a temporary lodging rented under a different name. The woman was a professional. Experienced. Operating with counter-surveillance protocols that suggested training well beyond what an ordinary private intelligence operative would possess.
“She’s been doing this for years,” Elena reported to Marius. “This isn’t someone who was recently hired to watch us. This is a long-term operative who knows exactly how to avoid being followed.”
More troubling were the reports from the watchers assigned to the four houses.
Lord Fairfax’s schedule showed no obvious deviation from routine …council sessions, social engagements, management of his household. But his evening hours had become unusually private. Lights burned late in his study. Visitors arrived and departed through the servants’ entrance rather than the main door. His personal servant, an older man named Gareth, had been observed making trips to locations outside the Fairfax household’s normal pattern …a bookshop in the merchant quarter, a retired soldier’s cottage on the Southwalk Road.
Duke Remington had expanded his social calendar in ways that seemed innocuous on the surface but, when mapped against the political landscape, revealed a systematic approach to building relationships with specific minor lords and guild masters. None of his new dining companions were aligned with the Arass faction. All occupied positions that, collectively, represented a significant block of council votes.
Lord Blackwood …the quiet one …was the most concerning of all. He had made no visible changes to his routine. His public appearances remained minimal. His household showed no unusual activity. His finances showed no unusual expenditures.
Which meant either he was doing nothing, or he was so skilled at concealing his activities that the Arass watchers couldn’t detect them.
Elena strongly suspected the latter.
Lord Harring, the youngest, had been spending extended periods at the recruitment camps. This was easily explained by his responsibilities as a recruiting lord, but the frequency and duration of his visits exceeded what was strictly necessary. And one of the Arass watchers had noted something peculiar: during his most recent visit, Harring had been accompanied by a civilian whose build and bearing suggested a craftsman or tradesman, not a military advisor. The civilian had been seen examining equipment in the quartermaster’s stores.
Elena compiled these observations into a comprehensive report and presented them to Marius at their next meeting.
“They’re organized,” she said. “This isn’t four separate lords with individual concerns. They’re operating as a unit. Different assignments. Parallel investigations. Coordinated but independently functional.”
Marius absorbed this with the stillness that his cousins had learned to recognize as intense cognitive processing. His mind was working through scenarios, assessing threats, calculating responses.
“The craftsman with Harring,” he said. “That concerns me most.”
“Why? Fairfax’s investigation of the communications archives seems more immediately dangerous.”
“Castellan can delay the archives petition. Bureaucratic obstacles are our strongest tool against that kind of inquiry. But the equipment…” Marius paused, choosing his words carefully. “If Harring has brought a metallurgist or weapons specialist to the recruitment camps, and if that specialist examines the equipment we supplied through Severus’s procurement channels…”
“They’ll find the substitutions,” Elena finished.
“Physical evidence, Elena. Not suspicion. Not pattern analysis. Physical, testable, undeniable evidence of sabotage conducted through official government channels. Evidence that points directly at the procurement process controlled by the Master of Coin.”
The silence that followed was heavy with implications.
“We could replace the equipment,” Elena suggested. “Switch the substandard supplies back to standard quality before Harring can document the deficiencies.”
“Too late. If he’s brought a specialist, he’s already collected samples. Replacing the remaining stock would only confirm that someone with inside knowledge responded to his inspection …which would narrow the list of suspects to those aware of both the sabotage and Harring’s investigation.”
“Then what?”
Marius moved to his desk and pulled out the ledger that tracked the conspiracy’s operational timeline. His fingers traced the entries with deliberate care.
“We accelerate,” he said. “Not the full plan. But specific elements. The supply caravans to the east …begin the disruptions now. Not all at once, but enough to ensure that the armies’ supply situation deteriorates faster than expected. If the armies collapse before our investigators can present their case, the evidence becomes moot. You can’t prove a conspiracy to destroy armies that were already destroyed by the orcs.”
“And the four lords?”
“Isolate them. Discredit them. Make their investigation appear to be a political vendetta rather than a legitimate inquiry. Spread rumors at court that the burdened houses are seeking to avoid their recruitment obligations by manufacturing conspiracy theories. Undermine their credibility before they can use it.”
Elena nodded. It was a familiar playbook …the Arass family had used similar tactics during their thirty-year reconstruction, neutralizing potential threats through reputation destruction rather than physical violence whenever possible.
“I’ll begin immediately,” she said. “Court gossip can be seeded through Lady Thornbury. She loves nothing more than spreading scandalous whispers about houses she considers beneath her station.”
“Good. And Elena …have our watchers increase their coverage of all four houses. I want to know the moment any of them makes a move toward the king. If they attempt to present their case before we’re ready to counter it, we’ll need to act… more directly.”
The implication hung in the air like smoke from the purple candles.
“Understood,” Elena said, and departed to begin the work of defending a conspiracy that, for the first time in its three-decade existence, was under genuine threat.
Marius remained at his desk, staring at the operational timeline. The careful, patient plan that had taken thirty years to build was now being compressed by circumstances he hadn’t anticipated. Enemies he hadn’t expected were forcing him to react rather than act, to defend rather than attack.
It was, he reflected, an unfamiliar and deeply uncomfortable position.
But the Arass family had survived the purge. Had survived thirty years of hiding. Had survived by adapting to circumstances that would have destroyed lesser conspirators.
They would survive this too.
They had to.
Because the alternative …exposure, arrest, execution …was not something Marius was willing to consider. Not after thirty years. Not when they were so close to achieving everything the fallen had died for.
He closed the ledger and began drafting new orders for the network, his quill moving across the parchment with the steady determination of a man who had chosen his course and would not be turned from it.
The game was evolving.
And Marius Arass intended to be the last one standing when the final piece fell.


