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Rise of the Horde Chapter 659 - 658

Novel: Rise of the Horde Author: Draejon Updated:
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Now reading: Chapter 659 - 658 from Rise of the Horde, a Action novel by Draejon.

The provincial capital of Irenre was different from anything else in the campaign, and the difference was not military.

The walls, such as they were, had been designed more for civic ceremony than defensive function, a statent of the city's importance rather than a calculation of its security requirents. Two centuries of unbroken peace within the provincial interior had convinced the administrators who commissioned improvents to Irenre's fortifications that substantial military walls were an admission of vulnerability, an acknowledgnt that the settled heartland was not as secure as the administrative structure built upon it assud.

The result was a circuit of stone that was impressive in its breadth and its architectural detailing and that a competent military engineer could assess in one look as insufficient to resist a force the size of the one now encamped two miles from its southern gate.

But Irenre's significance was never its defensibility. It was administrative, judicial, and symbolic, the seat of a provincial governor whose authority touched the lives of every person within two hundred miles, whose correspondence connected the province's settlents to the kingdom's central governnt, whose administrative records represented the accumulated legal and fiscal docuntation of decades of provincial governance.

A city's walls could fall and the city could continue as a city. A city's administration, if it survived intact and cooperative, could be the bridge between an occupying force and a population that the occupying force could not govern directly without becoming sothing other than an army.

Governor Harwick understood this, and he sent his delegation to Khao'khen before the Horde's vanguard had finished positioning its forward elents.

The delegation was formal in the way that civilian delegations were formal, well-dressed, composed, and visibly frightened beneath the composure in the specific way that people were frightened when the gap between their administrative training and their current circumstances was so large that their professional competence could not bridge it.

They carried a letter in the governor's hand that Sakh'arran translated with his characteristic precision, stripping the elaborate diplomatic register of the formal Threian to its operational content: the governor would open the gates, surrender the administrative functions of the provincial capital, and cooperate fully with whatever arrangents the Horde's commander considered appropriate.

In return, he asked three things. That the civilian population be protected from harm. That the administrative records be preserved and not destroyed. That the city's civic institutions, its courts, its markets, its healers' halls, be permitted to continue operating.

Khao'khen read the translation twice. The second reading was slower, more careful, the reading of a commander extracting from a docunt the information about the man who had written it that the docunt itself was not saying explicitly.

"He is a practical man," Sakh'arran observed. "He has made a rational calculation. The city's walls cannot hold us, and he knows it. Colonel Cedric's fall beca known the mont the first refugee from Greywater reached the capital. He is not surrendering from cowardice. He is preventing a fight that he cannot win in order to preserve the things that the fight would destroy."

"Then we et his terms." Khao'khen set the letter down. "Every one of them. Civilian protection is not conditional on the governor's cooperation, it applies regardless. The records are preserved. The institutions function. In return, the provincial administration will provide accurate information about any military forces operating within the province and will cooperate fully with the logistical requirents of an army that intends to feed itself without taking from the civilian population."

The delegation returned with the Horde's terms. At noon, the gates of Irenre opened.

Khao'khen rode through them at the head of a formation chosen for its bearing rather than its size, two hundred of the 1st Warband's veterans, their armor cleaned of the Greywater fighting's residue, their shields bearing the formation insignia that identified them as the Horde's premier unit, their bearing carrying the ssage that the entry was as important as the battle had been. Not a sack. An occupation, conducted with the organized authority of a force that understood the difference between taking a city and entering one.

The Snarling Wolf banner moved through the gate first, its standard-bearer carrying the pole at the precise angle that march protocol specified, the wolf's profile visible above the arch's keystones as the column passed beneath stone that had stood for a hundred and forty years over the comings and goings of a city that had never imagined this particular passage.

Citizens who had chosen to remain, many had fled north toward the kingdom's interior, more had stayed, finding in the governor's decision to negotiate a permission to trust that the restraint the orcish army had demonstrated throughout the campaign was not tactical performance but consistent policy, watched from doorways and upper windows with the complicated attention of people confronted with a reality that their previous experience had not prepared them for.

The orcs who entered their city walked in formation. They did not break ranks to loot. They did not shout. The wolf banner above them depicted an animal whose expression the citizens of Irenre found, upon reflection, less threatening than they had expected, because the snarl of the wolf on the banner was directed ahead, always ahead, not downward at the people beneath its passage.

Governor Harwick t Khao'khen in the central administrative square with the composed dignity of a man who had decided that the circumstances required composure and had committed to it completely. He was compact, gray-haired, with the precise posture of soone who had conducted difficult etings for two decades and understood that posture communicated competence before a word was spoken. He offered his hand rather than a sword because he did not carry a sword, and Khao'khen took it because the gesture was exactly as honest as it appeared.

"My city is yours," Harwick said in Threian that carried the formal register of his office.

Sakh'arran translated. Khao'khen responded in the Orcish that Sakh'arran would carry across to the governor with the sa precision he applied to everything.

"Your city remains your city. My army passes through it."

The distinction was the campaign's operating principle stated in its simplest form, and Harwick understood it in the way that capable administrators understood things, not just the surface statent but the structural intention beneath it, the recognition that an army which burned what it passed through was an army that fought every population it had passed through for the rest of its existence, and that an army which left things intact created the possibility of sothing that burning never could.

Sakh'arran established the logistics arrangents within the hour, the supply wagons allocated to the city's warehouses with the system that the campaign had refined through every engagent since Thornfield. The Verakh network extended its surveillance further north, toward the kingdom's heartland and the forces that were moving toward the Horde from directions that the Verakhs were still mapping.

Two days. Perhaps two days before Snowe arrived with his reford force and whatever reinforcents the kingdom had been able to assemble and redirect since the campaign crossed the river.

Two days to prepare for the battle that would determine whether the Horde's campaign ended in a negotiated position or a military reversal.

The wolf flew above Irenre's administrative square, visible from the walls in every direction, marking the city's changed condition with a clarity that no proclamation could have matched.

The capital of the eastern province was in orcish hands. And the governor of that province was sitting across a table from Sakh'arran, answering questions about Threian force dispositions with the cooperative precision of a practical man who had decided that practical cooperation was the most useful thing he could offer the situation.

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