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Rise of the Horde Chapter 471

Novel: Rise of the Horde Author: Draejon Updated:
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Now reading: Chapter 471 from Rise of the Horde, a Action novel by Draejon.

471 Chapter 471

The biting wind whipped across the training grounds, carrying with it the scent of sweat, blood, and the damp earth. Three weeks. Three weeks of relentless physical and ntal exertion had carved deep lines into the faces of the Rock Bear and Black Tree warriors.

Khao'khen, the serious and strict leader of the trainers, watched them from the sidelines, a flicker of sothing akin to pride in his eyes. The initial chaos and resistance had largely subsided. The raw, untad fury that had characterized their early training sessions was now tempered with a grim determination.

He focused on Gorok, a hulking Rock Bear warrior whose initial arrogance had been thoroughly dismantled. Gorok's movents, though still powerful, were now more precise, more economical.

He no longer charged blindly into drills, but instead observed, calculated, and adapted. This change was palpable, a testant to the relentless pressure Khao'khen and his team had exerted.

The scars on Gorok's arms, a testant to his many battles and training clashes, were slowly healing. They were reminders of his failures, but more importantly they were symbols of his progress.

Nearby, Nimra, a Black Tree warrior whose slender fra belied surprising strength, sparred with another warrior. Her movents were fluid, graceful even, a stark contrast to her initial clumsy aggression.

She moved with a calculated precision, her strikes sharper, her defenses tighter. The improvent was significant. Nimra's face, usually etched with a quiet intensity, held a new confidence, a hint of satisfaction. Three weeks had carved away her insecurities, replacing them with quiet competence.

Khao'khen recalled the early days, the near-mutiny, the broken bones, the sheer defiance. He had expected casualties. He had braced himself for the possibility that so would break, that so might quit.

But no one had surrendered. The pride of the orcs, stubborn and relentless, refused to yield, even when confronted with physical and ntal exhaustion unlike anything they had ever experienced before.

"Gorok!" Khao'khen's voice cut through the wind.

Gorok stopped his sparring session with a grunt, wiping sweat from his brow. "Chief?"

"Your stance. It's improved, but still too wide. You're leaving yourself vulnerable."

Gorok nodded, a rare flicker of humility in his eyes. "I understand, Chief. I will focus on it."

"Good. Rember, it's not about brute strength alone. It's about control, precision, strategy." Khao'khen looked over at Nimra, who was now observing, learning from Gorok's correction. "Nimra. You watched Gorok. Apply his correction to your own stance. You show promise, but your reflexes are still slow. You must anticipate your opponent's moves. Think. Then act."

Nimra nodded, her gaze unwavering. "Yes, Chief."

The dialogue continued, a constant stream of instruction and correction. Khao'khen moved from one warrior to another, offering advice, identifying weaknesses, and pushing them to improve. The dialogue that flowed was punctuated by the grunts and shouts of exertion, the clash of weapons echoing across the training grounds.

"Dagmar! Your blocking technique is… lacking. You're relying too heavily on your shield. Learn to use your body, your agility, to evade attacks."

"Yes, Chief! I understand!" Dagmar replied, his voice filled with a mixture of exhaustion and determined focus.

"Zol'tan, your stamina is improving. However, you still drop your guard when exhausted. Learn to fight through the pain."

"Understood, Trainer," Zol'tan's response was a breathless whisper.

The afternoon wore on. Khao'khen had observed the resilience of these warriors. They were not like the Yohan First Horde; these warriors had seen hardship not rely as part of a warrior's life, but as a defining characteristic of it.

The majority of the recruits had not known years of structured war training; many were survivors of tribal wars and natural disasters, hardened by years of struggle. Their understanding of strategy was rudintary, their battle experience raw.

Yet, they had endured. They had learned, albeit slowly. The pride they possessed was not rely a warrior's vanity; it was the bedrock of their survival. It was this underlying pride, coupled with a brutal training regin, that had shaped their progress.

As the sun began to dip below the horizon, casting long shadows across the training grounds, Khao'khen surveyed his charges. The initial stubbornness, the resistance, the outright defiance had been replaced by a quiet focus, a grim determination.

They were far from perfect. They still had much to learn. But they were learning. And that, Khao'khen thought, was enough for now. He watched them break for their evening al, exhaustion evident on their faces, but their eyes held a glint of fierce pride. They had not broken. They had endured. They were warriors. And they were getting better.

*****

The sun, a harsh, unforgiving eye in the pale sky, beat down on the trainees, their exertions painting the landscape with a grim tableau of orcish endurance. But today, on the start of the fourth week of their training, sothing changed.

Drae'ghanna, her face impassive, stood before four figures: Dhug'mur, her father; Vir'khan, her grandfather; and her two brothers, their faces etched with a mixture of confusion and apprehension.

The initial surprise at being singled out quickly morphed into a grim understanding. They had assud their familial ties would grant them so asure of leniency, a softer path through the crucible. They were profoundly wrong.

"Dhug'mur," Drae'ghanna's voice cut through the air, sharp and unwavering, "prepare for the assault course. Complete it within the allotted ti, or face the consequences."

Dhug'mur, a seasoned warrior in his own right, nodded curtly. His eyes, however, betrayed a flicker of unease. He knew this was no ordinary training exercise.

This was retribution, carefully calculated and ruthlessly delivered. The mory of Drae'ghanna's youth, the relentless drills, the unwavering demand for perfection – it all ca flooding back. He had been harsh, unyielding, demanding more from her than perhaps even he had realized. Now, the price was being exacted.

Vir'khan, observing from a short distance, mirrored his son-in-law's apprehension. His heart ached, knowing the source of Drae'ghanna's fury, yet also understanding the necessity of her actions.

His own training had been brutal, a forging in the fires of battle, and he had passed that tradition down. But Drae'ghanna's pain, the resentnt simring beneath her steely gaze, had been a price he hadn't fully accounted for.

"Brothers," Drae'ghanna addressed the two younger n, their shoulders slumping under the weight of her gaze. "You will spar with each other, relentlessly, until exhaustion claims you. Then, you will continue."

The brothers exchanged a quick, fearful glance. They knew Drae'ghanna's training style – rciless, uncompromising, designed to push them to their absolute limits. They had witnessed her thods inflicted upon others, but they had never imagined they would be subjected to the sa.

"This," Drae'ghanna stated, her voice low and nacing, "is not rely training. It is atonent."

The ensuing hours were a brutal testant to Drae'ghanna's unwavering resolve. The assault course, already challenging, was intensified with added obstacles and ti constraints.

Dhug'mur, despite his skill, found himself pushed to the brink of collapse, his body screaming in protest. His sons, locked in a brutal, unrelenting sparring match, bled and bruised, their stamina tested to its absolute breaking point. Vir'khan, observing their ordeal, felt a pang of guilt, knowing that he had played a part in their suffering.

"This is not cruelty," Drae'ghanna explained to Khao'khen, later that day, "This is refinent. By pushing them beyond their limits, I forge them into weapons sharper than any other."

Khao'khen, a seasoned warrior of legendary skill, nodded slowly. "Their familial connection offers a unique opportunity. The bond they share, the understanding, the implicit trust - these can be harnessed. Your rigorous training, while harsh, will only strengthen their resolve and refine their synergy."

The next few days blurred into a relentless cycle of pain and exertion. The four were not simply being pushed; they were being shattered and reforged.

The intensity of their training attracted the attention of others. Their endurance, their determination to persevere in the face of unimaginable hardship, earned them the respect and admiration of their fellow trainees.

"I… I don't understand," Dhug'mur rasped, his voice rough with exhaustion, as he struggled to rise after another grueling session. "Why this… this hatred?"

Drae'ghanna paused, her eyes cold, but a hint of sothing akin to sorrow flickered within them. "Hatred? No, Father. This… this is… discipline. Forged in the fires of your own making. You taught resilience, yes, but at what cost?"

"The cost… the cost of what?" Dhug'mur was barely able to articulate the question.

"The cost of my childhood," she replied, her voice barely a whisper. "The cost of my joy, of my innocence, stolen by the relentless pursuit of perfection."

Several days later, a select group of warriors joined Drae'ghanna's father, grandfather, and brothers in their advanced training. These were the leaders, chosen for their resilience and potential by Khao'khen while others volunteered to join.

They had witnessed the brutal intensity of the family's training, and understood the potential for leadership forged in such an ordeal. This was not simply a test of physical prowess; it was a testant to the unshakeable bond of family, twisted and refined in the fires of a daughter's justified vengeance.

The outco was predictable: the four would erge stronger, more disciplined, and far better leaders than they could ever have beco had their training been less demanding. It was a harsh lesson, but one that would shape their futures, and the fate of their warriors, for years to co.

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