Chapter 669 - 668
Chapter 669 - 668
The Dry Pass earned its name in the pale, weathered limestone that lined it, stone scrubbed clean of soil by centuries of runoff that had carried everything softer downhill and left behind a surface that the sun hit in shades of yellow and gray. The color of bone. The color of ground that had made its terms known to anyone who proposed to cross it and that expected those terms to be respected.
The gradient that made wheeled vehicles impossible made infantry laborious, and the warriors who entered the Pass in the predawn darkness found within the first mile that the word laborious was doing less work than it typically did.
Every warrior carried thirty to forty pounds beyond standard combat weight, the fire spheres and the Roarer ammunition and the rations distributed according to the calculation Sakh’arran had worked out before departure, the loads allocated by body mass and demonstrated carrying capacity, the lighter warriors carrying more Roarer loads and fewer spheres while the heaviest carrying the catapult bolts and the medical supplies in proportions that kept the total weight within the range that each body could sustain for four hours of sustained climbing.
The Pass was six miles long. It took four hours.
The first mile was manageable in the way that the first mile of any difficult undertaking was manageable, the gradient shallow enough that the pace held, the track wide enough for three abreast, the predawn coolness that reached even this enclosed terrain providing a physical counterbalance to the effort that would be gone by the second mile when the sun found the angles that let it reach the pass floor.
The second mile began the conversation between the body’s reserves and the demands being made of them. The gradient steepened to the point where each step required the use of the thigh and the calf in ways that flat marching did not, the muscles working in a continuous cycle of extension and contraction that was sustainable but that carried a cost which accumulated rather than diminished.
The track narrowed to two abreast and the column doubled in length, the rear elements now spread across three miles of enclosed terrain, the front elements already in the third mile’s harder ground while the rear was still entering the second mile’s beginning.
The third mile revealed the Pass’s character without any softening of the revelation. The gradient reached the ratio that the engineers had marked on Sakh’arran’s maps as the reason for the designation impassable for wheeled vehicles, and that designation, the warriors discovered, was understating the matter for infantry as well.
The loose stone that covered the track in this section moved under pressure in the specifically treacherous way that loose stone moved, offering the appearance of firm footing until the weight committed to it was sufficient to start the shift, at which point the footing was no longer firm and the weight already committed to it had no other ground to transfer to.
Three warriors fell badly enough in the first hour of the third mile to require assistance. The word passed back through the column to slow and feel each step before committing to it, an instruction that reduced the pace in this section to something that tested patience as much as it tested endurance.
Khao’khen moved through the column throughout the climb, not in any fixed direction but in the direction that his reading of the column’s condition suggested was most needed.
He appeared at the points where the effort was costing the most and remained long enough to establish that the thing being demanded was being shared rather than assigned.
He said very little.
There was nothing to say that the physical fact of his presence did not say more efficiently.
He was there, on the same stone, under the same weight, navigating the same gradient, and the warriors who saw him at the difficult sections of the third mile drew from that what warriors drew from a commander’s physical presence in the hardest parts of a march.
Arka’garr worked in the opposite direction through the same sections, his attention focused not on inspiration but on management, the warband master’s professional eye identifying the warriors who were carrying more than their bodies could sustain at the pace required and arranging the redistribution of their additional loads to the warriors around them with the unsentimental efficiency of a commander who understood that individual failure in a column became collective failure if it was not addressed before it accumulated.
The fourth and fifth miles descended with the particular difficulty of downhill movement under significant additional weight in loose terrain, the knees and the concentration taking the burden that the lungs and the thighs had carried going up.
Two more warriors fell.
Neither was seriously injured.
Both were moving again within minutes, the recovery quick in the way that recovery was quick in warriors whose physical conditioning had been built by months of training that included exactly this kind of demand.
The sixth mile returned to the gentler gradient of the entrance section, and the warriors who completed it and emerged into the open ground of the corridor’s upper section did so with the quality of endurance that concentrated physical difficulty produced: not exhilaration, not relief, but the hard, quiet satisfaction of a body that had been asked for something extraordinary and had delivered it without being broken.
* * * * *
Sakh’arran’s timing calculation proved accurate to within forty minutes, which was the kind of margin that the commander noted in the specific way he noted things that confirmed his analytical models.
The Verakh scouts at the corridor entrance reported Thaddeus’s advance elements arriving to begin site selection for the blocking position approximately two hours before the Horde’s main force cleared the final section of the Pass.
The colonel had not yet broken ground. His engineers were debating the relative merits of the ridge position to the east, which offered elevation advantage, against the lower ground to the west, which offered wider fields of fire at the cost of less natural protection.
The debate was professional and thorough and entirely irrelevant, because the force that was going to render it irrelevant was two hours away and moving.
Khao’khen ordered the double-pace for the final mile, the instruction passing back through the column with the urgency that separated adequate timing from sufficient timing, and the warriors who had just descended six miles of highland pass picked up their pace with the specific stubbornness of soldiers who had already done the hard thing and were not going to fail on the last mile because their legs were tired.
They emerged from the corridor at the run, or as close to the run as eight thousand warriors carrying additional loads could produce, and the Verakh scouts at the entrance watched the column pour out of the highland track with the particular expression of observers who had been told this was coming and still found its arrival impressive.
Thaddeus’s scouts brought the report back to the colonel in the compressed, urgent language that the situation demanded: eight thousand orcish infantry emerging from the corridor at speed, deploying into battle formation at the corridor mouth with a precision that contradicted every assumption about what a force looked like after crossing the southeastern highlands on foot through a mountain pass in four hours.
Thaddeus assessed the situation with the professional speed that his rank required. "Formation. Eastern ridge. Move."
The race between the Threian infantry running for the ridge and the Horde’s shield walls locking into position at the corridor mouth was settled in the Horde’s favor by ten minutes, which was the margin of arrival and nothing more. Ten minutes was not a military victory. It was the geometric fact that determined everything that followed.
The 1st Warband held the ridge. The Roarers assembled on the slope with the frantic precision of crews who understood that their weapons were the difference between a position that was defensible and a position that was merely occupied.
Thaddeus’s leading companies reached the ridge’s lower slope and found the shield wall already there, already formed, the Roarer barrels already leveling toward the ground between the ridge and the approaching Threian line.
The colonel ordered his companies back before the first shots fired. Running infantry uphill against a formed shield wall backed by ranged weapons was not a tactical option. It was a bill for casualties that bought no ground.
The corridor entrance was in orcish hands. The blocking position that had been intended to seal the Horde inside the province had arrived ten minutes too late to seal anything.
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