Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.

Rise of the Horde Chapter 582 - 581-2

Novel: Rise of the Horde Author: Draejon Updated:
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 582 - 581-2 from Rise of the Horde, a Action novel by Draejon.

The first supply caravan departed the capital on a morning so clear and unremarkable that no one standing in the staging yards would have guessed it was the opening move in a ga of calculated murder.

Twelve wagons rolled through the eastern gate in a disciplined line, their canvas covers pulled taut over crates of arrows, barrels of salted at, sacks of milled grain, and bundles of replacent bowstrings still stiff with wax. The drivers were civilian contractors, hired by the crown for standard rates, their only concern the bonus they would collect upon successful delivery. The fifty soldiers riding escort wore the polished armor and bored expressions of n assigned to what they had been told was a routine supply mission through secure territory.

Captain Aldwin Hale led them, a competent but unremarkable officer whose chief qualification was his complete lack of political connections to any of the great houses. This was by design. Severus had personally recomnded Hale to Lord Marshal Cedric, praising the young captain’s "reliability and discretion" .... qualities that, in Severus’s private assessnt, translated to "too dim to ask uncomfortable questions and too junior to matter if sothing went wrong."

The caravan’s route had been ticulously planned. It would follow the Northern Highland Road for the first hundred miles, cutting through the gentle hills and farming country that ford the kingdom’s agricultural heartland. Then it would turn northeast, skirting the edge of the eastern streams before ascending into the rougher terrain that separated the kingdom’s settled lands from the contested eastern territories. From there, it was another fifty miles of increasingly hostile ground to General Snowe’s fortified camp.

Severus watched the caravan’s departure from his office window on the third floor of the Treasury Building, a cup of spiced wine warming his hands against the morning chill. Below him, the cobbled streets of the capital buzzed with the mundane rhythms of a city that believed itself at peace. rchants argued over the price of cloth in the market square. A street musician played a jaunty tune on a lute missing two strings. Children chased a stray dog between the legs of passing pedestrians, their laughter rising like birds into the clear air.

None of them knew. None of them suspected that the portly, smiling Master of Coin who waved genially at passersby from his window was orchestrating the slow destruction of two of the kingdom’s proudest armies.

Severus turned from the window and moved to his desk, where a freshly inked ssage awaited his personal seal. The seal itself was unremarkable ... the standard Treasury stamp used on hundreds of routine financial docunts every week. But the ssage was addressed not to a governnt office or a noble house, but to a man nad Garren Thatch, a forr military scout who now operated under the cover of a fur trapper along the northern trade routes.

Garren Thatch was one of eleven Arass agents embedded along the various supply routes between the capital and the eastern territories. Each agent had been positioned years ago, long before the orcish war had begun, as part of the Arass family’s patient, decades-long strategy of placing operatives in positions where they could be useful when the ti ca. So were innkeepers. Others were toll collectors, bridge wardens, or rchants who traveled the routes regularly and could report on traffic patterns without raising suspicion.

The ssage to Thatch was brief and coded in the simple cipher the Arass network used for operational communications:

"First wagon travels the highland path. Fifty blades guard it. Let this one pass unmolested. Record its timing, its stops, its route deviations. The wagon master’s habits. The guards’ alertness. Everything. This information will guide what follows."

Severus sealed the ssage and summoned his personal courier, a thin, forgettable man nad Pell who had served the Arass cause for fifteen years without ever being suspected by anyone in the governnt. Pell’s gift was invisibility ... not the magical kind, but the far more useful social variety. He was the sort of person whose face slid from mory the mont you looked away from him. People could speak to him, hand him docunts, even share als with him, and ten minutes later be unable to describe his features with any certainty.

"Deliver this personally to the northern relay point," Severus instructed. "Standard protocols. No interdiaries."

Pell took the ssage, tucked it into a concealed pocket sewn into the lining of his coat, and departed without a word. He would be at the relay point within two days, and the ssage would reach Thatch within four. Well before the caravan passed through Thatch’s territory.

Severus returned to his desk and opened a leather-bound ledger that looked, to any casual observer, like a standard financial record. In truth, its pages contained the master tiline of the Arass conspiracy’s logistical operations, encoded as fictitious trade transactions.

He made a new entry: "Delivery of twelve units of processed grain to the Northern Highland Trading Company. First shipnt of seasonal contract. Paynt terms: net thirty."

In the Arass cipher, this translated to: First caravan of twelve wagons dispatched via highland route. Expected delivery in thirty days. Operational status: green.

He set down his quill and leaned back in his chair, allowing himself a mont of satisfaction. The plan required a delicate balance ... one that Marius had outlined with characteristic precision during their last eting in the purple-lit chamber beneath the manor.

The first caravan had to succeed. This was essential. If the initial shipnt was lost, the crown would imdiately increase security on subsequent convoys, potentially assigning hundreds of additional soldiers as escorts. That would make future interference far more difficult and far more risky. But if the first caravan arrived safely, it would establish a pattern of expectation. The route works. The guards are sufficient. The orcs aren’t a serious threat to supply lines.

Confidence was the weapon. Once the crown believed the supply system was functioning, complacency would set in. Subsequent caravans would travel with the sa minimal escorts, following the sa established routes, on the sa predictable schedules.

And then, gradually, carefully, things would begin to go wrong.

A caravan delayed by a "collapsed bridge" that Arass agents had weakened the night before. A supply train that arrived with half its cargo mysteriously spoiled ... contaminated by substances slipped into the barrels during a stop at an inn whose keeper answered to the Arass network. A wagon that simply vanished on the road, its guards found dead weeks later, the scene staged to look like an orcish ambush.

Each incident would seem like bad luck. An isolated misfortune in a difficult logistical operation. No single loss would be catastrophic enough to warrant a full investigation. But the cumulative effect would be devastating. The armies in the east would receive perhaps half of what had been sent. Maybe less. Enough to prevent them from starving outright, but never enough to build the reserves they would need to withstand a sustained assault.

Severus closed the ledger and locked it in his desk drawer. Then he pulled out the legitimate Treasury records and began reviewing them, his expression transforming seamlessly from cold conspirator to diligent public servant. Within minutes, he was deeply absorbed in a genuine analysis of tariff revenues from the southern ports, his mind compartntalizing the conspiracy with the practiced ease of a man who had lived a double life for longer than most of his colleagues had held their positions.

A knock at the door interrupted his work.

"Enter," he called, and a junior clerk appeared, bearing a stack of docunts that required the Master of Coin’s signature.

"The recruitnt expense authorizations for Houses Remington, Blackwood, Fairfax, and Harring, sir," the clerk said. "Per the council’s resolution. Each house is requesting initial disbursent to begin raising their assigned troop contingents."

"Ah, yes. Set them here." Severus took the docunts and began reviewing them with appropriate thoroughness. Each house was claiming the initial costs of recruiting two thousand five hundred soldiers ... recruitnt fees, equipnt purchases, provisioning, housing during the training period.

The numbers were substantial. Even with the crown’s promised sixty percent reimbursent, each house would be spending the equivalent of a year’s revenue on this effort. Revenue that could not be directed toward their own military forces, their own territorial defenses, their own political maneuvering.

Every gold coin spent recruiting soldiers for the eastern campaign was a gold coin that wasn’t strengthening those houses’ positions at court. And that was precisely the point.

"These appear to be in order," Severus said, stamping each authorization with the Treasury seal. "Process the initial disbursents at the standard rate. Forty percent up front, with the remainder contingent upon verified troop readiness."

"And the reimbursent schedule, sir?"

"I’ll prepare the frawork this week. The houses should expect initial reimbursent within... let’s say ninety days of verified expenditure. Standard auditing procedures apply, of course. We can’t simply hand out crown funds without proper docuntation."

Ninety days. In a normal situation, this would be a reasonable administrative tiline. But in the context of four houses simultaneously draining their resources to raise ten thousand troops, it ant they would be bearing the full financial burden for months before seeing a single coin returned.

Months during which the war in the east would either end in victory ... unlikely, given the deliberate inadequacy of the support being provided ... or in disaster, at which point the question of reimbursent would beco moot.

The clerk departed, and Severus returned to his work, the rhythm of governance absorbing him as naturally as breathing.

*****

In a townhouse across the capital, Lord Fairfax sat in his private study and stared at the notes he had taken during the council session. The fire in the hearth had burned low, and the evening shadows lengthened across the shelves of leather-bound books that lined the walls. His wife had called him to dinner twice. Both tis, he had answered that he would be along shortly. Both tis, he had not moved.

The journal lay open on his desk, the page filled with his careful handwriting. He had transcribed the exact words of both ssages as the Royal Secretary had read them aloud. Every phrase. Every comma. Every formal closing.

And there it was.

Both ssages concluded with the phrase "maintain our position indefinitely." Both used the word "stable" to describe the situation. Both requested "approximately five hundred" additional troops. Both described casualties as either "acceptable" or "light."

The similarity went beyond coincidence. Fairfax had served alongside military commanders for twenty years. He knew that every officer had their own voice, their own habits of expression, their own way of framing reports. Countess Winters was known for her precise, almost poetic prose ... she had been educated by the finest tutors the Winters fortune could buy, and it showed in everything she wrote. General Snowe, by contrast, was blunt and economical with words, a career soldier who considered anything beyond operational facts to be wasted ink.

Yet both ssages read identically. Not just in content, but in tone. In structure. In the specific vocabulary used.

It was as if soone had written a template and then made minor adjustnts to fit each commander’s na and position.

Fairfax closed his eyes and pressed his fingers to his temples. He was treading dangerous ground. Accusations of ssage tampering ... particularly tampering that involved communications between military commanders and the crown ... were tantamount to accusations of treason. If he was wrong, he would destroy his reputation and his house’s standing at court. If he was right...

If he was right, then soone with access to the royal communications network was deliberately misleading the king about the status of two armies in the field. Which ant those armies were in far greater danger than anyone in the capital believed.

Which ant soldiers were dying because soone wanted them to die.

Fairfax opened his eyes and reached for a fresh sheet of parchnt. He could not use official channels ... the council session had demonstrated that the official apparatus was compromised, or at least being manipulated by forces he couldn’t yet identify. He needed to find answers outside the system.

He thought of a man nad Cole rcer.

Cole was a retired army scout who had served under Fairfax’s father during the Borderlands Campaign twenty-five years ago. After his military career, he had beco a private courier, carrying ssages for rchants and minor nobles who needed reliable delivery through difficult terrain. He was now in his fifties, his body scarred and weathered by decades of hard travel, but his skills remained sharp. More importantly, he owed the Fairfax family a debt that went beyond money ... Fairfax’s father had saved Cole’s life during an ambush, carrying the wounded scout three miles through hostile territory to reach friendly lines.

Cole lived on the outskirts of the capital, in a modest cottage surrounded by a small garden that he tended with the sa ticulous attention he had once devoted to tracking enemy movents through dense forest.

Fairfax wrote carefully, aware that even this private correspondence could be dangerous if intercepted.

"Cole, I need your particular skills for a task of so urgency. A journey east, through difficult terrain, to deliver a ssage to military commanders in the field. The route will be hazardous. The nature of the ssage is sensitive. I cannot say more in writing. Co to my townhouse at your earliest convenience. Co alone, and co quietly. -F."

He sealed the letter with his personal signet, not the house seal, and summoned his most trusted servant ... an older man nad Gareth who had served the Fairfax household for thirty years.

"Deliver this personally to Cole rcer’s cottage on the Southwalk Road. No one else is to handle it. Wait for an acknowledgnt, then return directly."

Gareth took the letter without question, accustod to his lord’s occasional need for discretion.

After the servant departed, Fairfax pulled out a second sheet of parchnt and began composing the ssage he intended to send east. Not through ravens. Not through the official post. Through Cole rcer, on foot if necessary, delivered hand-to-hand to either Countess Winters or General Snowe.

The ssage would contain everything Fairfax suspected. The identical phrasing. The suspicious timing. The way Severus and Castellan had steered the council toward burdening specific houses with recruitnt costs. The overall pattern that suggested not bureaucratic incompetence but deliberate manipulation.

And it would contain a question ... the question that Fairfax believed would unlock the truth:

"What did your original ssages to the crown actually say?"

If the answer matched what the Secretary had read aloud in the council chamber, then Fairfax was wrong, and his suspicions were nothing more than the paranoia of an old political hand who had spent too many years looking for conspiracies. He would accept that, apologize privately to whoever needed apologizing to, and move on.

But if the answer was different ... if the commanders’ original words bore no resemblance to the sanitized reports that had been presented to the king ... then the kingdom faced a threat far more dangerous than any orcish horde.

A threat from within.

Fairfax worked late into the night, drafting and redrafting the ssage, choosing each word with the care of a man who understood that the wrong phrasing could an the difference between saving an army and starting a civil war. The fire burned down to embers. The candles guttered and had to be replaced. His untouched dinner grew cold on the tray that his wife had eventually brought to his study door.

By the ti he finished, the first gray light of dawn was creeping through the windows. He sealed the ssage, placed it in a locked box that only he could open, and finally allowed himself to lean back in his chair, close his eyes and allow himself so much needed rest.

Sleep ca fitfully, haunted by the faces of soldiers he had never t, fighting in camps he had never seen, waiting for help that might never truly arrive.

Sowhere, soone was playing a ga with their lives.

And Lord Fairfax, minor noble and junior mber of the military council, had just decided to find out who.

*****

Duke Remington received no such flash of insight that night. But he slept poorly nonetheless, troubled by dreams in which he stood before an enormous ga board, watching pieces move by themselves while unseen hands laughed in the darkness.

He woke before dawn, summoned his steward, and began the grim work of raising two thousand five hundred soldiers from his provinces. The cost would be staggering and would hurt his treasury but he had to comply. The timing was terrible ... harvest season was approaching, and pulling able-bodied n from the fields would reduce crop yields across his entire territory.

But the king had spoken. The council had voted. And Duke Remington, whatever his suspicions, was not yet ready to defy the crown.

Not yet.

But as he reviewed the recruitnt schedules and expenditure projections his steward had prepared, he kept returning to the sa thought that had plagued him since leaving the council chamber:

"We’re pieces being moved on soone else’s board."

The question was whose board.

And how many pieces would be sacrificed before the ga was over.

You are reading Rise of the Horde Chapter 582 - 581-2 on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Timeless Assassin cover
Trending now

Timeless Assassin

RajShah7152 ·Action

Leoawakensinaworldhedoesn’trecognize,withnomemoryofwhoheisorwhyhe’sthere.Allheknowsisthatsurvivalisn’tjustanecessity—it’shisonlychancetouncoverthet...

I Have a Golden Crow cover
Trending now

I Have a Golden Crow

Great Yu ·Eastern

DuYuhasnoclueabouthowhehastransmigratedtoaworldofdemontaming.HeisalsoinastateofconfusionwhenhecontractstheGoldenCrowthatwasliterallyasun.“Areyoufro...

The Lucky Farmgirl cover
Trending now

The Lucky Farmgirl

Bamboo Rain ·Romance

TheFourthBrotherhadsquanderedhiswealththroughgambling,leavingtheirmotherinacriticalstate.Tomakemattersworse,thecreditorsevenaskedthemtosellManbaoto...

I'm the Culinary God cover
Trending now

I'm the Culinary God

Greedy kitten ·Fantasy

LinXu,whoisabouttograduatefromuniversity,suddenlygetsboundtotheCookingGodsystemandhasbecometheownerofarestaurant.Totastehishandmadenoodles,customer...

Supreme Vision Master cover
Trending now

Supreme Vision Master

Mo Yan ·Fantasy

Cultivationdestroyed,eyespoisonedblindandrobbedofherstatusinthehousehold? LuoQingtongnarrowshereyesandsneers,“Bringiton!Letmeteachyoualesson!” A24t...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.