Rise of the Horde - Chapter 600 - 599

The command tent smelled of blood, sweat, and the sharp mineral tang of spent frost magic.
Countess Aliyah Winters and General Aelric Snowe sat across from each other at a battered field table, the first time these two rivals had shared a space for purposes other than exchanging cutting remarks at court functions. Between them lay a map of the Lag’ranna region, its surface marked with symbols denoting troop positions, defensive lines, and the orcish host that sat five miles to the south like a clenched fist waiting to strike again.
The tent was crowded. Sir Rhaegar Vance stood behind Aliyah, his broken arm in a sling, his face drawn with pain he refused to acknowledge. Colonel Thaddeus flanked Snowe, his armor still bearing the dust and blood of the forced march south. The Baron of Frost occupied a camp stool near the entrance, his grounded griffon tended by handlers outside, its wounded wing a constant reminder of how close the battle had come to catastrophe.
Captain Matthias, Aliyah’s chief scout, and Lieutenant Cordell, Snowe’s aide, completed the gathering …two men who had never met before today but who had already begun collaborating on the intelligence picture with the practical efficiency of professionals who understood that survival outranked politics.
“Eight thousand,” Snowe said, breaking the silence that had settled after the initial exchange of situation reports. “That’s what we have between us. Eight thousand soldiers, many wounded, all exhausted. Against an orcish force that withdrew in good order and still numbers over six thousand.”
“Their main fighting force is five thousand seven hundred by our scouts’ estimate,” Matthias corrected. “They took heavy casualties during the assault, but their withdrawal was disciplined. They didn’t leave their wounded behind. They recovered their dead where possible. This is not an enemy that will dissolve overnight.”
Aliyah leaned forward, her frost-forged armor creaking softly. The battle had drained her significantly …the 7th Circle power that made her such a devastating individual combatant was not infinite, and she had expended enormous reserves killing the Rhakaddon and maintaining frost barriers throughout the day-long engagement. She estimated she was operating at perhaps sixty percent of her full capacity. Rest would restore her, but rest required time, and time was the one resource they could not afford to spend.
“The question isn’t whether we can hold this position,” she said, her clear-blue eyes sweeping the faces around the table. “The question is whether we should. General Snowe left his northern camp with a skeleton garrison to come south. If the orcish commander learns that …and we must assume he will, his intelligence capabilities have proven far more sophisticated than we anticipated …he may send forces north to exploit the gap.”
“My camp can hold against scattered clan attacks,” Snowe replied. “The earthworks are solid, the remaining garrison is experienced, and the orcish clans in the north are disorganized. But if the main horde detaches even a thousand warriors to strike north…” He didn’t finish the sentence.
“Then your camp falls,” Rhaegar said bluntly. “And our supply line …such as it is …is cut completely.”
“Which means we need to consolidate,” Thaddeus said. “One position. One army. One unified defense.”
“Or,” Aliyah said, and every eye in the tent turned to her, “we stop thinking defensively entirely.”
The silence that followed was not confusion but calculation. Every officer in the tent understood what she was suggesting. They simply needed to hear her say it.
“We retreat,” Aliyah continued. “Not to your northern position, General. Not to any fixed defensive position in the orcish territories. We retreat west. Back through the mountain passes. Back to Threian soil.”
“That’s…” Colonel Thaddeus began.
“Strategic withdrawal,” Snowe interrupted, and the fact that he used the military term rather than the political euphemism told Aliyah more about his assessment of the situation than any formal briefing could have. “The Countess is right. We’ve been operating in hostile territory for weeks, cut off from meaningful support, fighting daily engagements that we win tactically but lose strategically because we can’t replace our losses. The orcish commander demonstrated today that he can coordinate an assault sophisticated enough to nearly overwhelm a fortified position defended by a 7th Circle mage and thousands of soldiers. He will not make the same intelligence failure twice. Next time, he’ll know about both our forces.”
He tapped the map, tracing the route from their current position westward through the Lag’ranna passes and back toward the kingdom’s eastern border.
“A combined withdrawal, executed properly, gives us several advantages. We consolidate our forces. We shorten our supply lines. We move to terrain where our fortifications and cavalry have the advantage. And most importantly, we get our wounded to proper medical facilities instead of watching them die in field hospitals that lack basic supplies.”
“The court will see it as a defeat,” Rhaegar said quietly.
“The court,” Aliyah replied with an edge that could have frosted glass, “has been lying to us for weeks. The messages we sent were altered. The reinforcements we received were deliberately insufficient. Someone in the capital wants us to die here. I have no intention of obliging them.”
She looked at Snowe. “You received the same altered messages. You reached the same conclusion.”
“I did. Which is why I marched south instead of waiting for answers from a capital that has been feeding us carefully crafted lies.” Snowe’s weathered face was grim but resolute. “The Countess and I have compared our original correspondence with what the king apparently received. The discrepancies are absolute. Someone rewrote our messages to make our desperate situation sound like a routine border operation.”
“Who?” Thaddeus asked.
“We don’t know yet,” Snowe admitted. “But my courier, a man named Cole Mercer, is en route from the capital with intelligence from Lord Fairfax, who has been investigating the conspiracy from the council’s side. When Mercer arrives, we should have a clearer picture.”
“Then we plan the withdrawal now,” Aliyah decided, her tone shifting from discussion to command. “Three phases. Phase one: consolidation. We combine both forces into a single formation, integrate our command structures, and establish a unified chain of authority.”
She looked at Snowe, and what passed between them was the unspoken acknowledgment of something that would have been unthinkable a month ago: one of them had to be in overall command, and the choice had to be made on merit rather than politics.
“You should command,” Aliyah said, and the words cost her pride but came from genuine assessment. “You have more experience with open-field operations and large-formation maneuver. My strengths are in fixed-position defense and concentrated magic. For a fighting withdrawal through mountain terrain against a pursuing enemy, your skills are more relevant.”
Snowe’s eyebrows rose by a fraction …perhaps the first time in their long rivalry that Aliyah Winters had conceded anything to him voluntarily. “And you’ll accept orders from a Snowe?”
“I’ll accept orders from a competent general who is trying to keep our soldiers alive. Your family name is irrelevant. The feud is irrelevant. Nothing matters except getting these people home.”
Snowe nodded, a gesture of acknowledgment that carried more weight than any formal salute. “Then I accept command of the combined force. Countess Winters commands the rear guard …your frost magic and personal combat capability make you the ideal choice for holding the enemy at bay while the main body moves. Baron, your griffons provide aerial reconnaissance and harassment of any pursuing force.”
“What’s left of them,” the Baron muttered, but without real complaint. His remaining griffons, combined with the other mounts that could still fly, gave them perhaps ten or eleven aerial assets. Enough to see what was coming, if not enough to stop it.
“Phase two,” Snowe continued, warming to the task of operational planning with the focused energy of a man finally doing what he was trained for. “The withdrawal itself. We move west through the Lag’ranna passes in a single column, with advance scouts clearing the route, the main body in the center, and the rear guard maintaining contact with any pursuing force. Speed is essential …we need to put distance between us and the orcish horde before their commander can reorganize for a pursuit.”
“He’ll pursue,” Aliyah said with certainty. “This isn’t a chieftain who lets enemies walk away. He’ll hit our rear guard every chance he gets.”
“Which is why phase three is critical,” Snowe replied. “Fighting withdrawal. We prepare defensive positions at every significant chokepoint along the route. When the orcish advance catches up, the rear guard holds the chokepoint while the main body continues moving. Then the rear guard disengages and leapfrogs to the next prepared position.”
“A cascading withdrawal,” Thaddeus said, nodding. “Standard doctrine for retreating through mountainous terrain against a superior pursuing force.”
“Standard doctrine that requires exceptional discipline from the rear guard,” Rhaegar pointed out. “Holding a position just long enough, then disengaging cleanly without being overrun. If the rear guard breaks at any point…”
“It won’t,” Aliyah said flatly. “I’ll be there personally.”
No one argued. A 7th Circle mage anchoring a defensive position at a mountain chokepoint was worth a thousand ordinary soldiers. Aliyah’s frost magic could seal passes, create barriers, and devastate massed formations. Combined with whatever troops she was given, the rear guard would be the most formidable defensive unit on the field.
“How long before we can move?” Snowe asked Matthias.
“The wounded need at least half a day before they can be transported safely. The walking wounded can march immediately, but the stretcher cases…” Matthias shook his head. “We lost most of our medical wagons in the battle. We’ll need to improvise transport.”
“Strip the camp,” Snowe ordered. “Tent poles become stretcher frames. Canvas becomes carrying slings. Every able-bodied soldier not assigned to a combat role carries supplies or assists with wounded transport. We move at dawn.”
“And the dead?” Rhaegar asked quietly.
A heavy silence settled over the tent. Thousands of Threian soldiers had died in the battle and in the weeks of fighting that preceded it. Their bodies lay in the fortifications, in the trenches, in the no-man’s-land between the walls and the orcish positions. Taking them was impossible …the logistics of transporting thousands of corpses through mountain terrain while under pursuit was simply not feasible.
“We burn them,” Snowe said, and the words were gentle despite their terrible practicality. “Tonight. Before we march. A proper pyre, with proper rites. We will not leave our dead to be desecrated, but neither can we carry them.”
Aliyah’s jaw tightened, but she nodded. “The Church’s rites. Full ceremony. Every name recorded for the memorial at home.”
“Every name,” Snowe agreed. “They deserve that much.”
The planning continued for another two hours, every detail of the withdrawal hammered out with the meticulous thoroughness of commanders who understood that in a fighting retreat, a single logistics failure could cascade into a catastrophe. Routes were selected. Supply allocations were calculated. Command assignments were finalized. Communication protocols were established for coordinating between the advance scouts, the main body, and the rear guard.
By the time the meeting concluded, the plan was solid. Not perfect …no military plan survived contact with reality perfectly …but solid. A framework that could absorb setbacks and adapt to changing conditions while maintaining the overall objective: get eight thousand soldiers and their wounded through the mountain passes and back to Threian territory alive.
*****
The funeral pyres burned through the night.
They were massive …towers of timber and salvaged wood, stacked high enough to be seen from miles away. The bodies were laid with care, each soldier positioned by their comrades with whatever dignity the circumstances allowed. Weapons were placed in their hands. Eyes were closed. Prayers were spoken by the camp’s chaplains, their voices hoarse from hours of constant recitation.
The fires lit the sky in shades of orange and gold, turning the mountain passes into a cathedral of flame. Soldiers from both the Winters and Snowe forces stood together at the perimeter, their differences forgotten in the shared grief of watching friends burn. Some wept openly. Others stood in rigid silence, their faces carved from stone, their tears running internally where no one could see.
Aliyah walked among them, not as a commander but as a mourner. She knew many of the dead by name …soldiers who had served with her for years, who had followed her into the orcish territories with trust and determination, who had held the walls and fought the daily battles and died believing that their kingdom would remember their sacrifice.
She stopped beside a pyre where Captain Lysa of the Frostguard was being cremated. Lysa had fallen during the final phase of the battle, struck down by a crossbow bolt while directing arrow fire from the inner wall. She had been a young woman, barely thirty, with a talent for frost-enhanced archery that had made her one of the most effective officers in Aliyah’s command.
“I’m sorry,” Aliyah whispered. “I’m sorry I couldn’t protect you. I’m sorry I brought you here. I’m sorry the kingdom that should have supported us abandoned us instead.”
The flames crackled, sending sparks spiraling into the night sky like souls ascending.
Snowe found her there, standing before the pyre with the reflected firelight painting her frost-forged armor in warm colors that seemed at odds with the cold power she embodied.
“We saved who we could,” he said, standing beside her without touching.
“We saved five thousand out of twelve. Eight if we count your forces. But twelve thousand started this campaign, General. Twelve thousand soldiers who trusted their kingdom to supply them, support them, and bring them home. Four thousand are dead. And the kingdom didn’t even know they were dying.”
“The kingdom was lied to,” Snowe corrected. “The king was lied to. There’s a difference. When we return, the truth will come out. And whoever orchestrated those lies will answer for every name on that memorial.”
Aliyah looked at him, and in the firelight, the decades of rivalry between their families seemed very small against the enormity of what they had endured.
“You really believe we’ll make it back?” she asked, and the question was not rhetorical. It was a genuine inquiry from one professional to another, seeking an honest assessment.
Snowe considered carefully before answering. “The orcish commander is skilled. The most skilled I’ve ever faced. His army maintained formation during a retreat under pressure …I’ve never seen orcs do that. He’ll pursue us. He’ll hit our rear guard at every opportunity. He’ll try to delay us, wear us down, catch us in a disadvantageous position.”
He paused.
“But he also lost eight hundred warriors today, with another thousand wounded. His siege engines are destroyed. His crossbow teams were mauled by our griffons. And he’s now facing a combined force that’s larger and more diverse than what he planned for. He’ll be cautious. He’ll probe before committing. And that caution will buy us the time we need.”
“So yes,” he concluded. “I believe we’ll make it back. Not all of us. Not without cost. But enough. Enough to carry the truth home and demand answers.”
They stood together in silence, watching the pyres burn, until the first gray light of dawn crept over the mountains and the horns sounded for the march.
*****
Cole Mercer arrived at the combined camp precisely as the withdrawal was beginning.
He came from the west, through the mountain passes that the army was preparing to retreat through, riding a horse that was barely alive and looking not much better himself. Forty days of hard travel through hostile territory, sleeping in ditches and abandoned barns, eating whatever he could forage or kill, avoiding orcish patrols and suspicious travelers and one memorable encounter with a Laughing Wolf pack that had cost him his second horse and very nearly his life.
But he had made it.
In his coat, sealed in waterproof wrapping, he carried Lord Fairfax’s letter.
The sentries nearly turned him away …a ragged, exhausted civilian on a dying horse had no obvious place in a military camp preparing for a fighting withdrawal. But Mercer produced Fairfax’s sealed letter of introduction, and the name carried enough weight that an officer was summoned, who summoned a lieutenant, who summoned Colonel Thaddeus, who brought Mercer directly to General Snowe.
Snowe read Fairfax’s letter in the saddle, the column already moving around him. His expression progressed through surprise, anger, cold calculation, and finally settled into the grim satisfaction of a man whose worst suspicions had been confirmed.
“Countess,” he called, and Aliyah rode forward from her position with the rear guard, her frost-forged armor catching the morning light.
He handed her the letter without a word.
Aliyah read it. Then read it again. Then folded it carefully and placed it inside her armor, against her heart, where it would be protected by frost-enchanted steel and the magical energy of a 7th Circle mage.
“The Arass family,” she said.
“The Arass family,” Snowe confirmed. “Remnants of the purged house. Operating in the shadows for thirty years. Controlling the Master of Coin, Lord Castellan, and possibly others on the council. Intercepting and rewriting our correspondence. Sabotaging the equipment being sent to the reinforcement troops. All to destroy our families as revenge for the purge.”
“And Lord Fairfax discovered this.”
“Fairfax, Duke Remington, Lord Blackwood, Lord Harring. Four houses, working together, investigating the conspiracy from the capital’s end. They’ve found financial trails, surveillance networks, forged armory marks on counterfeit equipment. They’re building a case to present directly to the king.”
Aliyah’s expression hardened with a fury that made the temperature around her drop by ten degrees. Frost crackled along her armor’s surface. The horse beneath her shifted nervously.
“Then we make it home,” she said, each word precisely placed like stones in a fortress wall. “We make it home, we present our evidence alongside theirs, and we tear the Arass conspiracy out of the kingdom’s body like the plague it is.”
She looked at Cole Mercer, who sat on his dying horse with the vacant expression of someone who had pushed far beyond the limits of ordinary endurance and was running on nothing but stubborn refusal to fall.
“You,” she said. “You carried this through hostile territory. Alone. For forty days.”
“Thirty-eight, my lady,” Mercer corrected, with the automatic precision of a scout who tracked distances even in his sleep.
“What is your name?”
“Cole Mercer, my lady. Retired scout. Currently employed by Lord Fairfax for courier services.”
“Mister Mercer, you have just delivered the most important piece of intelligence this army has received since we entered these lands. When we return to the capital, I will personally ensure that your service is recognized.” She paused. “Can you ride further? We’re marching west. Fighting withdrawal. It will be dangerous.”
“My lady, I’ve been riding through hostile territory for five weeks. A military column with eight thousand soldiers and a 7th Circle mage is the safest place I’ve been since I left home.”
Despite everything …the dead, the wounded, the looming pursuit, the conspiracy that had nearly destroyed them …Aliyah Winters laughed. A genuine, surprised laugh that startled the soldiers nearest to her and sent a ripple of astonished murmurs through the ranks.
The Countess was laughing.
If the Countess could laugh, maybe things weren’t as bad as they seemed.
Maybe they would actually make it home.
The column continued westward, into the mountain passes, leaving behind the fortifications that had held against an army and the ashes of four thousand soldiers who would never see Threia again.
The retreat had begun.
And behind them, five miles to the south, the Yohan First Horde watched them go …and began to follow.


