The southern plains of the orcish lands had always been a place that the old shamans spoke of with lowered voices and averted eyes.
It was not the terrain that frightened them. The land itself was unremarkable, a vast stretch of fertile savannah that rolled southward from the foothills of the Lag’ranna Mountains toward a horizon that shimred with heat in the warr months and lay uneven and a bit vibrant under clear skies during the sumr. The grass was green and brown, the soil rich and a bit moist, the scattered trees bent by winds that blew in from the south with a constancy that suggested the wind itself had business elsewhere and the plains were rely in its path.
What frightened the shamans was what lay beneath.
The oldest among them called it the Thinning. A place where the mbrane that separated the mortal world from what existed beyond it was not broken, not torn, but worn, the way cloth wore thin after too many seasons of use. The fabric of reality in the southern plains had been rubbed to translucence by forces that predated the orcs, predated the mountains, predated mory itself. Sothing on the other side pressed against that worn fabric with the patient, mindless persistence of water seeking a crack in stone, and periodically, when conditions aligned in ways that the shamans understood instinctively but could not articulate with precision, the fabric gave way.
Not completely. The tears were small, lasting hours or days rather than the permanent ruptures that the great arches in the mountains contained and controlled. They opened like wounds in the air itself, ragged edges of reality peeling back to reveal a space that was not space, a darkness that was not darkness, a presence that was not a single entity but a condition, a quality of existence that was fundantally incompatible with the world it was intruding upon.
The orcs called these events the Season of Damnation.
It ca irregularly, sotis years apart, sotis in consecutive seasons, its timing governed by variables that the shamans attributed to the movents of celestial bodies, the fluctuations of magical energy in the earth, or the will of forces whose intentions were as foreign to orcish understanding as orcish warfare was to the creatures that crawled through the tears. The Season had no fixed calendar, no reliable harbinger. It simply arrived, like a storm that ford from clear sky, and when it passed, the land was different. Scarred. Tainted. And populated by things that should not exist in a world where the sun rose and set and life followed the patterns that nature had established.
Through the tears ca the lesser demons first. Imps and crawlers and whispering shades, individually insignificant, their forms no larger than rats or cats, things of angles and shadow whose bodies were shifting geotries of dark planes that caught no light and cast no shadow of their own. They were, by demonic reckoning, the equivalent of insects, tiny fragnts of a vast and hungry ecology that existed on the other side of the mbrane. They scuttled and sward and spread across the land like a dark tide, their passage turning the grass black and brittle, tainting the soil beneath them, but they were not the true threat. They were the vanguard. The heralds.
The true threat ca after them.
The shamans called them the Demons of the Lower Order. In the hierarchy of the Demon Realm, they were subordinates, servants of the Greater Demons whose power could reshape continents and whose attention the mortal world was fortunate never to attract. But subordinate did not an weak. A Demon of the Lower Order possessed power that the shamans asured against the scale that human mages used for their circles of magic, placing them between the 4th and 6th Circle in arcane capability, or between the 4th and 6th Realm when their physical strength was compared to warriors. They were, by any mortal reckoning, formidable beings, each one capable of devastating a warband or razing a settlent through sheer force of power and will.
But their most dangerous quality was not their strength. It was their influence.
Unlike the lesser demons, who were mindless fragnts of demonic ecology, the Demons of the Lower Order possessed intelligence, cunning, and the capacity for domination. They could reach into the minds of living creatures and bend them, twist the natural impulses of aggression and hunger until the affected being beca a vessel for the demon’s will. The process was not the crude, radiating corruption of the lesser demons. It was targeted, deliberate, a conscious act of subjugation perford by a being that understood exactly what it was doing and took satisfaction in the doing of it. The lesser demons, without a Lower Order demon to direct them, were rely pests, a swarm of shadows that would disperse when the tear closed. But with a Lower Order demon commanding them, the lesser demons beca an army’s scouts, its foragers, its eyes and ears across the affected territory.
The creatures that fell under a Lower Order demon’s influence did not rely change in the gradual, chanical way that proximity to lesser demons might dull the senses. They were claid. Their eyes flooded with the reddish film that marked the demon’s hold, their minds were overwritten with directives that the demon imposed through a connection that operated at a level deeper than thought, and their bodies were pushed beyond their natural limits, strength enhanced, pain suppressed, self-preservation eliminated. They beca extensions of the demon’s will, weapons aid at whatever the demon desired to destroy.
And what the demons desired to destroy, always and without exception, was concentrated life. Population centers. Settlents. Cities. Places where the vital energy that the Demon Realm fed upon was densest, where the consumption of that energy would generate the maximum return for the demon’s investnt of power.
Each Season of Damnation brought at least one Demon of the Lower Order through the tears. Sotis two. In the worst recorded Seasons, three or even four had erged, each one claiming territory and building a host of corrupted creatures that served its will. The shamans’ oral histories stretched back to the beginning of orcish mory, and in all of those millennia of recorded Seasons, there had never been a ti when five or more Lower Order demons arrived. The tears, it seed, could sustain only so much. Even the Thinning had limits.
But one was enough. One Demon of the Lower Order, commanding a host of corrupted wildlife and twisted forr inhabitants of the southern plains, was sufficient to threaten any settlent that could not defend itself with overwhelming force.
The orcish response had always been the sa: scatter. When the tears opened and the lesser demons sward and the first signs of a Lower Order demon’s influence appeared in the behavior of the southern wildlife, the clans broke camp and fled. They abandoned territory with the pragmatic acceptance of people who understood that land could be reclaid but lives could not, and they waited until the Season passed and the demon retreated through the closing tears and the corrupted creatures died or reverted to their natural state.
But the orcish tribes of the southern plains no longer lived as scattered clans.
Many of them now lived in Yohan.
* * * * *
The first tear opened on the morning that the Yohan First Horde was scheduled to march.
It appeared seven leagues south of the city, in a stretch of grassland that the Verakh scouts used as a transit corridor between their observation posts. A Verakh scout nad Drenn was the first to report it. He had been moving through the corridor at the pace that Verakh training demanded, fast enough to cover ground, slow enough to observe, when the air thirty paces ahead of him rippled in a way that stopped him mid-stride.
He did not approach. He circled, maintaining distance, observing the tear’s dinsions and behavior with the ticulous attention that Verakh scouts applied to all phenona that might affect operational planning. The tear was approximately six feet in height and three feet in width, its edges irregular and shifting, the space within it a darkness that consud light. The air around it was cold, not with the natural cold of weather but with the particular cold that the shamans associated with dinsional energy.
The lesser demons ca first, as they always did. Small, scuttling things that spread across the grassland in an expanding circle of blackened earth. Drenn watched them erge for an hour, counting hundreds, noting their behavior, their direction, their effect on the terrain. They were a plague, yes, but a manageable one. Vermin of the worst kind, but vermin nonetheless.
Then the air around the tear changed.
The lesser demons, which had been spreading outward in their mindless, gradient-following pattern, suddenly stopped. Every one of them. Hundreds of shadow-wrought creatures freezing in place simultaneously, as if a single hand had gripped them all at once. They turned, not toward any visible stimulus but toward the tear itself, their angular bodies orienting with a uniformity that no natural swarm behavior could produce.
Sothing was coming through.
The tear widened. Not by much, perhaps a foot in each direction, but the expansion was violent, the edges of reality tearing further apart with a sound that was not a sound but a sensation, a pressure in the chest and behind the eyes that made Drenn’s vision blur and his hands clench involuntarily around the grip of his crossbow.
What erged was not small.
It stood seven feet tall, though its proportions were wrong in ways that the eye struggled to process. Its body was roughly humanoid but built with the musculature of sothing that had been designed for violence the way a blade was designed for cutting, every line of its form serving the purpose of inflicting harm. Its skin, if skin was the correct word for the surface that covered it, was the color of old blood, dark and mottled, with a texture that suggested both scales and scar tissue. Its head was crowned with a ridge of bone that swept backward like a helm grown from the skull itself, and its eyes, two points of molten amber set deep in a face that was all planes and angles and predatory geotry, burned with an intelligence that the lesser demons utterly lacked.
It carried a weapon. A curved blade of black iron, its edge lined with a faint reddish luminescence that pulsed in ti with the creature’s heartbeat, if it had a heartbeat. The blade was not decorative. It was the instrunt of a warrior, worn with the easy familiarity of a weapon that had been used often and well.
A Demon of the Lower Order.
The creature stepped fully through the tear and planted its feet on the mortal earth, and the ground beneath it blackened in a circle that spread outward for ten paces, the grass dying, the soil turning to sothing that was not quite ash and not quite stone. It raised its head and inhaled, the motion deliberate, almost ceremonial, as if tasting the air of a world it had visited before and found to its liking.
Then it extended its will.
Drenn felt it. Not as a command, not as a voice in his mind, but as a pressure, a weight that settled on his consciousness like a hand pressing against his forehead. His training held. The Verakh conditioning, designed to resist ntal manipulation from shamanic opponents, provided enough resistance that the pressure registered as uncomfortable rather than overwhelming. But he understood, with the cold clarity that survival instilled, that the distance between him and the demon was the reason he remained himself. Closer, and the pressure would beco irresistible. Closer, and his eyes would go red and his will would beco the demon’s will and he would march north toward Yohan with the sa chanical purpose as every other creature that fell within the demon’s reach.
Around the tear, the lesser demons responded to their master’s arrival. They oriented toward it, their angular bodies pointing like compass needles toward a magnetic north, and then they moved, not randomly but with direction, spreading outward in patterns that suggested reconnaissance rather than simple expansion. They were being directed now. Given purpose. The mindless swarm had beco an intelligence network, and the intelligence that directed it was scanning the surrounding territory with the practiced efficiency of a commander surveying a new theater of operations.
Drenn watched as the demon turned its burning gaze toward a pack of wild dogs that had been investigating the corrupted grassland from a cautious distance. The demon’s attention fixed on the alpha, and the effect was imdiate. The dog stopped mid-step, its body going rigid, every muscle locking as the demon’s influence reached into its mind and rewrote its purpose. The reddish film flooded the alpha’s eyes. Its posture changed, the cautious stance of a predator becoming the rigid, purposeful gait of a creature that no longer owned its own will.
The rest of the pack followed within monts, each one claid by the demon’s expanding field of influence, each one turning north with the chanical precision of weapons being aid at a target.
The demon watched its new servants depart, then turned its attention outward, its burning eyes scanning the horizon with the patient assessnt of a being that had perford this operation many tis before and understood that the first hours were for gathering, for building, for accumulating the host that would carry out the directive that was the only purpose a Lower Order demon brought to the mortal world: find life, consu it, and carry the energy back through the tear before it closed.
Drenn did not wait to see more. He turned and ran north, toward Yohan, carrying the report that would change the First Horde’s plans before the march had taken its first step. The report contained three words that the shamans would understand imdiately and that the chieftains would understand monts after: a Lower Order demon had arrived. Not just the lesser swarm. Not just the corrupted wildlife. A being of intelligence and power, between the 4th and 6th Circle of magical capability, was now establishing itself seven leagues south of their city.
And if the Season followed its historical patterns, it would not be alone for long.
* * * * *
The report reached Khao’khen at the seventh hour of morning.
He was at the northern gate, the gate through which the First Horde was to march within the hour, his Rhakaddon mount saddled and his war council assembled in the final formation review that preceded any major deploynt. The warbands were arrayed in their marching order, the 1st Warband under Arka’garr at the vanguard, the supply train organized behind the 6th Warband, the Warg Cavalry already dispatched to screen the route. Eight thousand four hundred warriors, the product of eight months of rebuilding and preparation, stood ready to march north toward the Threian frontier.
Sakh’arran received the Verakh scout’s ssage first, as all field intelligence passed through the commander’s hands before reaching the chieftain. His face, usually a mask of controlled analysis, showed sothing that the officers nearby had never seen on it before: genuine surprise.
He crossed to Khao’khen with the scroll in his hand and the particular stride that Khao’khen had learned to associate with information that changed everything.
"Chief. We have a problem that is not on the map."
Khao’khen took the scroll, read it, and felt the careful architecture of eight months of planning shift beneath him like ground that had been solid and was suddenly not.
"The Season of Damnation," he said.
The words carried through the morning air and reached the ears of the nearby chieftains, and the effect was imdiate. Every orc who had grown up in the southern territories knew what the Season ant. Every warrior whose tribe had been forced to scatter before the corruption’s advance understood the implications with a directness that no strategic briefing could have produced.
Dhug’mur’s face hardened into the granite expression he wore when the problem before him was not an enemy to be fought but a force to be endured. Vir’khan’s twin sickle-blades shifted in their sheaths, an unconscious movent that spoke of a warrior whose body prepared for combat before his mind had finished processing the threat. Dhug’mhar, for the first ti in anyone’s mory, said nothing.
Sakh’arran spoke into the silence. "One tear confird, seven leagues south. Active. Producing lesser demons in significant numbers. And..." he paused, the weight of the next words requiring the pause, "...a Demon of the Lower Order has erged. The Verakh scout confird visual identification. Approximately 4th to 6th Realm equivalent. Ard. Intelligent. Already influencing wildlife in the surrounding area."
The chamber went still in a way that even the announcent of the Season itself had not produced. Lesser demons were a plague. A Lower Order demon was a war.
"One tear," Khao’khen said. "There are usually more. And where there are more tears..."
"More demons," Rakh’ash’tha finished, the chief shaman having entered the chamber during the report, his staff striking the stone floor with each step. "The Lower Order demons are drawn to the tears the way predators are drawn to water. Each tear that opens is a gateway, and each gateway invites a master through it. One tear, one demon, that is the common pattern. But if the Season produces three or four tears, as the worst Seasons have..."
"Three or four demons," Khao’khen said. "Each one building its own host. Each one directing its corrupted creatures toward the nearest source of concentrated life."
"Yes."
"Halt the march," Khao’khen said.
The order rippled through the assembled Horde like a shock wave through water. Eight thousand warriors who had been poised to step through the northern gate stopped, the sudden cessation of movent producing a silence that was louder than any war cry.
"Chief?" Arka’garr’s voice ca from the vanguard, the warband master’s question carrying the professional restraint of a soldier who trusted his commander’s judgnt even when the command contradicted everything the morning’s preparations had built toward.
"The Season of Damnation has co," Khao’khen announced. "A Lower Order demon has erged south of Yohan. The march is postponed. All warbands are to return to staging positions and await new orders."
He turned to Sakh’arran. "Get every Verakh scout we have into the southern plains. I want the number and locations of every tear within a day. I need to know how many demons we are facing. Have the shamans prepare the old wards. And send word to Yakuh. The 2nd Horde’s defense of Yohan just beca real."
He looked at Rakh’ash’tha. "Can a Lower Order demon be killed?"
The shaman t his eyes. "They can be killed. They are powerful, yes, between the 4th and 6th Realm, so stronger, so weaker. A warrior of the 5th Realm might match a weaker one in direct combat. A stronger demon would require multiple warriors of exceptional ability, or a mage of equivalent circle, or..." he gestured vaguely, "...overwhelming force. Fire hurts them. Steel hurts them if the wielder has enough strength behind it. They are not invincible. They are simply far more powerful than anything this land produces naturally."
"Then we kill them," Khao’khen said, and the statent carried the flat certainty that his chieftains had learned to recognize as the sound of a decision that would not be revisited. "We kill the demons, and the corrupted host loses its direction. Without the Lower Order demon’s will guiding them, the corrupted creatures revert to mindless aggression, uncoordinated, manageable. The demons are the command structure. We break the command structure, we break the threat."
Sakh’arran was already calculating. "A strike force. Small, fast, powerful enough to engage a 4th to 6th Realm opponent. The Verakhs for reconnaissance. A team of our strongest warriors for the engagent itself. Supported by Roarer crews and fire sphere teams for the corrupted host that will be protecting the demon."
"Assemble them," Khao’khen said. "And Sakh’arran, I will lead the strike force personally."
The room shifted. Every chieftain understood what the statent ant. The chieftain of the Yohan First Horde, the architect of orcish civilization, was going to march south and fight a demon himself.
Dhug’mhar found his voice at last. "Perfection insists on accompanying the chieftain. The ice queen wounded . She did not finish . A demon will find equally difficult to destroy."
Despite everything, Khao’khen almost smiled.
"Then we march south," he said. "Not toward Threia. Toward the tear. We find the demon. We kill it. And then we deal with whatever the Season brings next."
The irony was not lost on him. He had spent months preparing his Horde to fight the most sophisticated military force the pinkskins had ever fielded. And now his first engagent would be against a being from another dinsion whose power could match the mages that the Threians fielded.
But the Roarers would still fire. The shield walls would still hold. The fire spheres would still burn. And the discipline that the Horde had developed for one war would serve it in another.
The Season would pass. The demons would die. And when it was over, the Horde would still be standing.
The Threians could wait. The demons could not.
And Yohan stood in its path.
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