Rise of the Horde - Chapter 704 - 703
The herald arrived at Millbridge on the morning that Westyn was expected and the herald was not Westyn.
The rider came under a flag that was not the diplomatic standard but the kingdom’s military courier pennant, the narrow red streamer that indicated the message was from the council’s war office rather than the foreign affairs bureau. The rider was young, professionally composed, and carried a sealed case that he presented to the Verakh escort at the valley’s northern approach with the formal stiffness of a man performing a duty whose content he had not been told but whose weight he could feel in the way the case had been handed to him.
Sakh’arran received the case at the market hall’s entrance and broke the seal and read the document inside with the focused silence of the campaign’s analytical officer encountering information that the analysis had identified as possible but had not placed at the top of the probability distribution.
He read it twice. Then he brought it to Khao’khen.
"The council has rejected the expanded mandate," he said. "The vote was fourteen to eleven. The Baron of Lettra reversed his position after receiving a private communication from the capital’s merchant guild, whose trade interests in the southern territories depend on the current boundary arrangements. Three other members who voted for the diplomatic authorization in the first round changed their votes in response to the Lord Marshal’s intelligence briefing, which informed the council that the Second Reserve Corps of twenty-two thousand soldiers can be mobilized within six weeks."
Khao’khen took the document and read it himself, the Threian script that he had learned to parse over the campaign’s months of diplomatic correspondence now serving the purpose of delivering the specific information that the campaign’s diplomatic phase had been designed to avoid.
The rejection was not phrased as a rejection. It was phrased as a conditional deferral, the diplomatic language stating that the council would reconsider the diplomatic authorization after a period of military consolidation during which the kingdom’s full defensive capacity would be positioned to ensure that negotiations, when resumed, would proceed from a position of strategic balance rather than perceived coercion.
"They are buying time," Khao’khen said.
"They are buying six weeks. The Second Reserve Corps changes the arithmetic from twenty-five thousand to forty-seven thousand. At that strength, Aldrath can conduct the kind of campaign that the current force structure could not sustain."
"And Westyn?"
"Recalled. The foreign affairs bureau’s mandate has been suspended pending the military consolidation’s completion."
The market hall was quiet. The maps were still on the table, the frontier line still drawn in the ink that Westyn and Khao’khen had adjusted together over weeks of negotiation, the three boundary points still marked with the annotations that represented the closest the two sides had come to the thing the campaign existed to obtain.
Khao’khen looked at the map for a long time.
Then he looked at the Snarling Wolf banner in the corner of the hall.
"Sakh’arran."
"Chief."
"Call the council. All chieftains. All warband masters. Everyone."
* * * * *
The war council assembled in the market hall within the hour, the chieftains arriving with the speed that the chief’s summons produced when the summons carried the tone that this one carried.
Khao’khen stood at the head of the table and placed the council’s rejection on the surface where the diplomatic documents had been.
"The peace is dead," he said. "The council has rejected the agreement. They are mobilizing twenty-two thousand additional soldiers. We have six weeks before those soldiers arrive. In six weeks, we face forty-seven thousand instead of twenty-five thousand."
The room processed the information in the specific silence that orcish warriors produced when the information was bad and the warriors were calculating rather than reacting.
Dhug’mhar broke the silence first.
"Grak’thar," he said. The word was quiet for Dhug’mhar, which meant it was the volume of a normal warrior’s speaking voice. "Then Perfection stops waiting. Perfection has been waiting since the diplomat arrived and Perfection’s patience, which is limited by design because patience is the enemy of magnificence, has reached its natural conclusion."
"Six weeks," Arka’garr said. Not the word of a warrior expressing frustration. The word of a tactician defining the operational window.
"Six weeks to do what forty-seven thousand makes impossible afterward," Khao’khen said. "We do not survive the Second Reserve Corps by fighting it. We survive by making its arrival irrelevant. By the time those soldiers reach the eastern province, the kingdom’s war-making capacity in this theater must be degraded to the point where twenty-two thousand additional soldiers are twenty-two thousand additional mouths to feed in a province that cannot feed them."
He placed his hands on the table.
"The ceiling does not come off. The ceiling burns. Everything we have held back, everything the restraint doctrine required us to contain, everything that the diplomatic possibility asked us to suppress. It ends tonight. From this moment, the Yohan First Horde fights the way orcs fight when the alternative is extinction. Not with discipline alone. With discipline and fury combined into something that the Threian military has never seen and that the military histories they study have no Chapter for."
Dhug’mhar’s grin was the grin of a warrior hearing the words he had been waiting to hear since the campaign crossed the frontier.
"Vraak duum," Dhug’mhar said.
The war council answered. Every voice. Every chieftain. Every warband master.
"VRAAK DUUM."
No retreat. The words settled into the market hall’s walls the way blades settled into sheaths, the natural resting position of something that had been made for a specific purpose and was now being used for it.
Khao’khen looked at each chieftain individually. The look was the briefing. The look said: everything I have asked you to hold back since the campaign began, the ferocity that the restraint doctrine required you to contain, the physical joy of combat that the diplomatic possibility asked you to suppress, the thing that makes an orc an orc when the orc is no longer being asked to be something less than what an orc is. That thing is now the campaign’s primary weapon.
"Arka’garr. The 1st Warband fights at full release. No controlled engagement tempo. No measured response. The 1st Warband’s warriors are the best fighters in this army and they have been fighting at eighty percent because the diplomatic process required the distinction between military demonstration and military destruction. The distinction is over. One hundred percent."
Arka’garr’s acknowledgment was a single nod, which was the most emotion the 1st Warband’s master had displayed since the campaign began.
"Dhug’mhar. The Rumbling Clan operates without recall orders. When you hit something, you hit it until it stops existing. Then you hit the thing behind it."
Dhug’mhar’s grin was the grin of a warrior hearing the words he had been waiting to hear since the campaign crossed the frontier.
"Nak’rosh!" Dhug’mhar said.
"Haguk. Pursuit doctrine is unlimited. Broken units are pursued until they cannot reform. The warg cavalry’s operational range extends to wherever the broken units go."
Haguk received the instruction with the quiet precision that characterized the Warghen chieftain’s approach to every operational order, the acknowledgment that conveyed understanding without wasting the time that understanding required.
The war council answered. Every voice. Every chieftain. Every warband master. The sound filled the market hall and spilled through its windows into the valley where the formation waited, and the formation heard the sound and understood what the sound meant.
"DRAK’ UL VOSH!"
Death before surrender. The wolf above the market hall held its position in the evening light, its snarl unchanged, its direction unchanged. But the thing behind the snarl was different now. The wolf was no longer waiting. The wolf was hunting.
Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.