Rise of the Horde - Chapter 680 - 679

The kingdom refused.
The response arrived at Millbridge on the third day after Khao’khen’s counter-proposal, carried by the same courier rider who had brought the Lord Marshal’s initial communication, the return journey accomplished with the speed that the rider’s professional pride required when the message he carried was of the kind that both parties knew was going to produce a significant reaction.
The diplomatic representative that the council had authorized would not travel to a town currently occupied by an orcish military force. The diplomatic office’s letter explained the reasoning in the careful language of people who had spent their careers managing the appearance of things alongside the reality of them.
A representative who met with the opposing party in a town that the opposing party’s army occupied was a representative who was negotiating under duress, and the appearance of negotiating under duress was inseparable from the political damage it caused to the council’s authority to govern the agreement that any such negotiation might produce.
If the agreement was seen to have been made while the kingdom’s representatives were effectively prisoners of the party they were negotiating with, the agreement’s authority was compromised before it was ratified.
Sakh’arran read the refusal to Khao’khen and offered no editorial comment. He did not need to. The logic of the position was clear and the logic of its problems was equally clear.
“They are more concerned about what it looks like than what it produces,” Khao’khen said.
“Yes.”
“Then they are not yet at the point where what it looks like matters less than what it costs.”
“Not yet.”
He stood at Millbridge’s northern dock and looked at the river, at the water moving steadily south in the morning light, carrying the snowmelt from the highlands that fed this valley and through this valley fed a significant portion of the kingdom’s northern supply.
The water did not care what decisions the council made. The grain in the granaries behind him did not care. The farms along both banks, planted by people whose families had worked this land for generations, did not care.
These things existed in a relationship to the land and to the labor that had shaped the land, and the political decisions of councils and the military campaigns of armies moved around them the way weather moved around mountains, shaping its path to the geography rather than the other way around.
He thought about the orcish settlements that had been burned in the campaign that had preceded this one. He thought about the families that had been killed and the survivors who had walked toward Yohan because Yohan was the only place that existed to walk toward. He thought about the council that had authorized the burning and the generations of assumption that had produced a council capable of authorizing it without significant dissent.
The assumptions were still there, beneath the council’s current position. The refusal to meet in a town the Horde occupied was not primarily a diplomatic calculation. It was the expression of an assumption so deep and so old that it presented itself as practical reasoning: that the orcish party to any negotiation was inherently less legitimate than the human party and therefore required to accommodate the human party’s preferences as a prerequisite to being taken seriously.
That assumption was what the campaign was fighting. Not Snowe. Not the fourteen thousand soldiers camped north of the valley. The assumption.
* * * * *
He called the council. Not the full war council of chieftains and warband masters, but the smaller council of the people whose thinking about the campaign’s direction was closest to his own: Sakh’arran and Vir’khan and Arka’garr.
“The diplomatic process has returned to where it started,” he said. “The kingdom is willing to talk but not to move. They want us to accept conditions that cost us our position and offer us nothing certain in return. The conditions are the same as the first rejection, wrapped in softer language.”
Vir’khan did not look surprised. At his age and with his experience, surprise was a reaction he reserved for outcomes that genuine analysis had not anticipated. “The Reserve Corps is three weeks closer to arrival than it was when we sent the proposal.”
“Yes.”
“The diplomatic process has consumed time that the military mobilization has also consumed. We have less time now than we did when the process began, and the process has produced no substantive progress.”
“Which means,” Arka’garr said, completing the analysis with the directness that the warband master applied to operational conclusions, “that if we continue in the current posture, we will face the Reserve Corps in a worse supply position than we face them now, having spent the intervening time in diplomacy rather than in operations that change the campaign’s strategic reality.”
“Yes,” Khao’khen said. “So we resume operations. But we resume them in a way that reaches the specific people whose minds need to change in order for the council’s calculation to change. The valley disruption reaches the economic administrators and the merchant class and the estate managers. What we have not yet reached is the class of people who own the kingdom’s political decisions most directly.”
“The council members themselves,” Sakh’arran said.
“Their households. Their properties. Not with force, not with the kind of occupation that the Lettra barony demonstrated and that produces the right political effect at the wrong cost. With presence. An orcish military force conducting itself as a military force has a presence on the landscape that affects property values, merchant activity, administrative confidence, and noble quality of life in ways that council members experience directly when the force is operating near the things they personally own and depend on.”
“We move toward the council’s constituency,” Vir’khan said.
“We demonstrate that the war they are choosing to continue is a war that will not stay on the frontier while they conduct it from the capital. We demonstrate it without burning anything. We demonstrate it simply by being there.”
He looked at the map. At the roads that ran north from the Meren valley toward the districts where the council’s members had their estates and their administrative offices and the lives they were conducting at a comfortable distance from the eastern province campaign.
“We make them feel close to it.”
* * * * *
Arka garr looked at the map with the warband master s calculation visible in the stillness of his assessment. Three warbands in the valley at Millbridge. Trot thar s force reconstituted after the corridor engagement, back at operational capacity. The Warg Cavalry already moving. The full force was sufficient for what was being proposed, if the movement was managed correctly.
He made the observation that the warband master always made when the operational concept was sound but the execution variables required naming. How close is close enough to change the vote without triggering an engagement we are not resourced for at that distance from the corridor.
Close enough that they can see the Snarling Wolf from their estate walls, Khao khen said. Close enough that the dispatches they send to the council arrive with the quality of dispatches written by men who have seen the army rather than read about it. An army you have read about is an abstraction. An army visible from your estate walls is a different category of problem.
He looked around the table at Sakh arran and Vir khan and Arka garr, at the three commanders who had been the campaign s thinking through every engagement and every maneuver since the day the column marched north from Yohan.
Dhug mhar is going to want to lead the advance element, Vir khan said.
Dhug mhar always wants to lead the advance element, Arka garr said.
He is usually correct that he should, Khao khen said. Send for him.
Dhug mhar arrived in the market hall six minutes later, which was either the fastest response to a council summons in the campaign s history or evidence that the Rumbling Clan chieftain had been standing outside the door waiting for exactly this kind of conversation. His expression when he heard the proposal was the expression of a warrior who had been given permission to do something he had already been planning.
Perfection will conduct the approach with appropriate discretion, he said.
Arka garr s expression indicated that this was a commitment whose specific meaning he would need to verify with a follow-up conversation before dawn.
The Horde moved north from Millbridge before the following morning s light reached the valley, the advance element under Dhug mhar pressing toward the council s northern estates while the main body held the valley position and the Snarling Wolf banner waited at the market hall for the outcome that movement would produce.


