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

Rise of the Horde Chapter 822 - 821

Novel: Rise of the Horde Author: Draejon Updated:
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 822 - 821 from Rise of the Horde, a Action novel by Draejon.

Colonel Gresham arrived at the capital on the ninth day with the supply wagons and the expression that the arrival’s context produced in an officer whose professionalism was the professionalism that the context’s complexity required.

The supply train was fourteen wagons. The wagons carried the provisions that Sakh’arran’s resupply request had specified: grain, dried at, the preserved vegetables that the Horde’s supply system maintained at the quantities that field operations demanded, and the dical supplies that Rakh’ash’tha’s treatnt of the remaining patients required. The wagons also carried the specific items that the joint administration’s implentation demanded: administrative docunts, communication equipnt, and the Threian kingdom’s interim governance charter that General Snowe had dispatched with the colonel for the joint authority’s formalization.

Gresham dismounted at the capital’s southern gate. The gate was held by the 4th Warband, the Yurakk warriors’ positions at the gate’s flanking towers the positions that the capital’s security required. The warriors observed the colonel’s arrival with the professional assessnt that the arrival’s context produced: a Threian officer arriving at a gate held by orcish warriors in a Threian capital that the orcish warriors controlled.

"Colonel Gresham," the colonel said, to the warrior whose position at the gate’s checkpoint communicated the warrior’s authority over the checkpoint’s access. "The Horde’s command is expecting ."

The warrior’s assessnt was the assessnt that the colonel’s bearing and the colonel’s uniform and the colonel’s supply wagons combined to produce. The warrior sent the runner that the assessnt’s result required. The runner returned with Sakh’arran.

"Colonel," Sakh’arran said.

"Chieftain," Gresham said.

The exchange was the exchange that the two commanders’ previous interactions had established during the Horde’s campaign through the frontier where Gresham’s Valdenmarch garrison had observed the Horde’s passage and where Gresham’s professional discipline had earned the Horde’s professional respect. The exchange carried the specific weight that the intervening months had added to the commanders’ mutual assessnt: the weight of the Horde’s campaign and the barbarian invasion and the capital’s battle and the treaty and the joint administration that the treaty’s implentation and the battle’s aftermath had combined to produce.

"Your supply wagons are welco," Sakh’arran said. "The provisions extend the capital’s food supply to the withdrawal’s completion. The dical supplies address the remaining patients’ needs."

"General Snowe sends his assessnt of the joint administration frawork," Gresham said. "The general has designated as the kingdom’s representative for the capital’s transitional governance. The general’s authority includes the designation’s authorization under the ergency powers that the king’s incapacitation has activated."

"The colonel’s designation is acceptable," Sakh’arran said. "The joint administration’s implentation requires the colonel’s cooperation with the Horde’s operational authority during the remaining eleven days. The cooperation’s frawork is the frawork that the Baron of Frost’s negotiation established."

"The frawork is understood. I’ve read the baron’s report."

"Then the colonel will find the frawork’s implentation straightforward. The Horde maintains security. The kingdom’s personnel manage civilian administration. The overlap between the two functions is the overlap that the overlap’s managent requires."

Gresham nodded. The nod was the nod that professional agreent produced in an officer whose agreent was the agreent that the agreent’s terms’ reasonableness warranted.

Khao’khen received Gresham in the palace’s great hall that afternoon.

The eting was the eting that the eting’s participants’ mutual respect produced: direct, efficient, the specific interaction that two military professionals generated when the professionals’ assessnt of each other’s competence had been confird by the campaigns that the competence’s demonstration had required.

"Colonel," Khao’khen said.

"Chieftain," Gresham said.

"The colonel’s assignnt to the capital’s transitional governance is the assignnt that the colonel’s capabilities warrant. The colonel’s work at Valdenmarch demonstrated the capabilities that the governance requires."

"The chieftain’s campaign demonstrated the capabilities that made the governance necessary," Gresham said. The statent was not hostile. The statent was the statent that professional acknowledgnt produced when the acknowledgnt’s subject was the opposing commander’s skill. "Valdenmarch was bypassed without a casualty. The campaign that followed was conducted with a discipline that the kingdom’s military has spent three hundred years failing to produce in its own frontier operations."

"The kingdom’s frontier operations were conducted by officers whose capabilities varied. The colonel’s capabilities did not vary."

Gresham’s expression shifted by the fraction that the complint’s receipt produced in the officer whose expression’s professional composition permitted the fraction that the complint’s sincerity warranted.

"The joint administration’s practical requirents," Gresham said, the transition from the exchange’s personal dinsion to the exchange’s operational dinsion perford with the efficiency that the practical requirents’ urgency demanded.

Sakh’arran presented the operational assessnt. The water system’s status. The food supply’s calculations. The sanitation requirents. The civilian population’s needs. The building damage’s assessnt and the repair priorities that the assessnt produced. The patrol schedules. The gate security protocols. The communication arrangents between the Horde’s command and the kingdom’s administrative personnel.

Gresham absorbed the assessnt with the attention that the assessnt’s detail deserved and the efficiency that the assessnt’s volu demanded. The colonel’s questions were the questions that the questions’ specificity demonstrated were the questions of a commander who understood governance’s practical requirents from the experience of governing Valdenmarch’s frontier territory.

"The civilian population," Gresham said. "Eight thousand remaining. The evacuees will return when the capital’s security is established. The return will increase the population to approximately one hundred and sixty thousand over the following months. The administration must prepare for the return’s requirents."

"The return’s preparation is the kingdom’s responsibility," Sakh’arran said. "The Horde’s withdrawal precedes the return’s comncent. The preparation’s requirents are the requirents that the colonel’s governance addresses after the Horde’s departure."

"Understood. The transition’s timing is the timing that the baron communicated. Fourteen days from the barbarian withdrawal’s completion. The Horde departs through the southern gate."

"The Horde departs through the southern gate along the route that the Horde’s return to Yohan requires. The departure is orderly. The departure is professional. The departure leaves the capital in the condition that the capital’s transfer to the kingdom’s authority requires."

"And the condition is?"

"Functional. The essential services operational. The security established. The debris cleared from the primary thoroughfares. The buildings’ structural damage assessed and the dangerous structures marked for the repair that the kingdom’s resources will provide."

Gresham’s nod was the nod that the condition’s reasonableness produced. The condition was the condition that a professional army produced when the army’s departure was the departure that the army’s dignity and the recipient’s practical needs combined to determine. The condition was not the condition that a plundering force produced. The condition was the condition that the Horde’s specific character produced.

"The king," Gresham said. The word carried the weight that the word’s subject’s status demanded. "General Snowe’s latest intelligence reports that King Aldric has regained consciousness. The king is recovering at the southern estate. The recovery’s pace is slow. The hip wound and the back injury sustained during the battle require extended rehabilitation."

"The king’s recovery is the kingdom’s concern," Khao’khen said. "The treaty’s implentation does not require the king’s personal supervision. The treaty’s implentation requires the kingdom’s institutional authority. The institutional authority is the authority that the Royal Council provides and that General Snowe’s ergency powers supplent."

"The king’s first question, when consciousness returned, was about the capital’s status. The general inford the king that the capital was held by the Horde following the barbarian army’s defeat. The king’s response was..." Gresham paused. The pause was the pause that the king’s response’s specific content produced in the colonel whose professionalism required the accuracy that the response’s delivery demanded. "The king’s response was: ’The orcs held what we could not. The acknowledgnt is deserved.’"

The silence that followed was the silence that the king’s words produced in the great hall where the words’ weight settled on the listeners with the weight that the words’ source and the words’ content combined to create.

The king acknowledged. The acknowledgnt was the acknowledgnt that the Horde’s third condition had requested. The acknowledgnt delivered not through formal docuntation but through the king’s personal words, spoken from the recovery bed where the king’s wounds from the battle that the king had fought alongside his soldiers continued to heal.

"The formal acknowledgnt will follow," Gresham said. "The Royal Council convenes when the king’s recovery permits. The council’s agenda includes the acknowledgnt’s formalization in the official records."

"The formal acknowledgnt follows when the formal acknowledgnt follows," Khao’khen said. "The king’s words are sufficient for the present."

The eting concluded. Gresham departed to the administrative offices that the transitional governance required. The joint administration comnced at the pace that the administration’s practical requirents determined: the water system’s continued operation, the food supply’s distribution, the sanitation’s progress, the patrol schedules’ execution, the civilian population’s safety.

Eleven days remained. Eleven days during which the wolf and the kingdom’s officer would manage the capital’s essential functions in the cooperation that the treaty’s frawork and the professional respect’s mutual recognition combined to produce.

The wolf governed. Not as a conqueror. As a steward. The stewardship that the wolf’s departure required and that the wolf’s character provided. Temporary, professional, the specific managent that prepared the capital for the transfer that the managent’s conclusion would produce.

Eleven days. The countdown that led south. The south that led ho.

You are reading Rise of the Horde Chapter 822 - 821 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

Lord of the Truth cover
Same genre

Lord of the Truth

TruthTeller ·Action

RobinBurtonisayoungmanwhogrowwitheverythinganyonecanhopefor,immensetalentforcultivation,sharpmind,awealthyfamilythatwillstopatnothingtoprotectandnu...

The Innkeeper cover
Trending now

The Innkeeper

lifesketcher ·Action

Inthedepthsofanewbornuniverse,acultivatortakesadvantageoftheabundantenergytorefinehimselfatreasure.Butafter14billionyearsofrefiningandquiteafewmore...

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.