Rise of the Horde-Chapter 441 -

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The orcish horde, a force that had struck fear into the hearts of many, now found themselves on the back foot. Their usual tactics of brute force and intimidation were useless against these strange, otherworldly invaders. Explore new worlds at novelbuddy

The Yurakks, a unit of formidable warriors, known for their indespensable strength against missile attacks, and the Rakshas, known for their almost impenetrable lines, had joined forces to push back their current foes but to no avail.

Even their combined might was insufficient against the relentless Infested Ones.

As the battle raged on, the orcs' desperation grew.

Khao'khen frantically devised new strategies, hoping to find a weakness in their enemies' defenses.

They launched surprise attacks, targeting the backlines of their foes, but their efforts were still in vain. The Infested Ones, with their eerie resilience, always seemed one step ahead.

It was as if they were totally immune to the efforts of the orcs.

The orcish horde's morale was dwindling, and their wounded were mounting.

The air hung heavy with the stench of death and decay. The stench of the infested ones – those grotesque parodies of life, their bodies warped and twisted by the corruption that pulsed within them. ƒree𝑤ebnσvel.com

Khao'khen, the chieftain of the orcish horde, watched the carnage unfold before him with a heart heavy with dread. His warriors, once a fearsome tide of unstoppable muscular flesh and bloodlust, were now but a fragment of their previous glory, retreating wave, their ranks succumbing againsts the relentless assault of their foes.

"Fall back!" he roared, his voice a hoarse echo amidst the chaos of battle. "To the walls! The walls!"

His words, though delivered with the force of a storm, seemed to fall on deaf ears. The infested ones, their bodies crackling with an reeking of demonic and deathly energy, pressed forward with a fervor born not of intellect, but of a primordial hunger, the hunger to consume the warmth and life of the living.

Their numbers seemed to swell with each passing moment, pouring out of the rifts that had opened in the world – gaping wounds spewing forth grotesque abominations.

"They come from the towers!" a young orc, his face splattered with the ichor of the infested, yelled.

"The towers had become their very source!"

Khao'khen's gaze turned towards the distant magical towers, another source of headache for them.

"The towers! The crystals!" he snarled. "They've been corrupted! We have to destroy them before they unleash more of them!"

The words were barely out of his mouth when a tremor shook the earth, a sound like the grinding of tectonic plates reverberating through the air. The tremor was followed by a powerful gust of wind, and then a shockwave of an unpleasant roar, that seemed to come from the deepest of the pit.

Khao'khen staggered back, his hearing, thrown to disarray.

When everything returned to normal, the world seemed to have been rearranged, the landscape distorted by the appearance of enormousn worm-like creatures.

"What is happening?" he gasped, his voice barely a whisper with an eyebrow raised in confusion

"What are they," a voice answered, cold and metallic, seemingly coming from everywhere and nowhere at once. "They the guardians of the desert. The rightful enforcer of enforcer of the Burnng Sands"

Khao'khen felt a cold dread crawl up his spine. He knew that voice. He had heard it in the whispers of the wind, in the screams of the dying, in the nightmares that plagued his sleep.

"Worms," he breathed, his words barely audible above the roar of the encroaching gigantic creatures,. "Seems like they want to deal with the demonic swarm," he continued as his eyes trail towards the worm-like creatures, slaughtering the demonic swarm.

The air in Ereia hung heavy with the scent of ash and the lingering echo of screams. The once vibrant marketplace, where laughter and the clanging of coins once filled the air, was now a skeletal landscape of splintered wood and shattered stone.

The sun, a pale disc behind a veil of smoke, cast long shadows that danced in the stillness, reflecting the collective unease that had settled over the city.

The survivors, a patchwork of faces bearing the scars of their ordeal, moved through the ruins with a wary grace, their eyes darting between the rubble and the horizon.

Theirs was a silence born not from peace, but from the collective exhaustion of their souls. Some huddled together for warmth, seeking solace in the familiar touch of a neighbor, while others, eyes filled with an emptiness that mirrored the ruined city, wandered aimlessly, haunted by the ghosts of the fallen.

Anya, her face pale and drawn, stared at the charred remains of her family's bakery.

The sweet scent of bread, once a beacon of comfort, now evoked only the bitter memory of the sudden, brutal attack.

Her hands, calloused and strong from years of kneading dough, now shook with the tremors of a grief that refused to be appeased. She had lost her husband, her son, and her dreams, all in the space of a few terrifying hours.

"Anya," a voice, raspy and filled with sorrow, broke through the silence. It was Pitah, her closest friend, her eyes filled with a compassion that mirrored Anya's own. "Come with me," Pitah pleaded, her hand reaching out to Anya. "Let's go to the temple. There are others there, others who are hurting."

Anya looked up at Pitah, her gaze meeting the depth of her friend's empathy. "I can't," she whispered, her voice barely audible. "I need to stay here. I need to... to find something... anything... to remind me of them."

Pitah understood the unspoken pain in Anya's eyes. She, too, had lost loved ones in the carnage. "I know, Anya," she said, her voice softening. "But you're not alone. Please, come with me. We can grieve together, and maybe, just maybe, find a spark of hope in the ashes."

Anya hesitated, her heart heavy with a weight that threatened to crush her. The sun dipped below the horizon, painting the sky in hues of orange and red, a spectacle of nature that mocked the desolate landscape.

She looked at Pitah, at the offer of shared grief, and then at the ruins that were all that remained of her life. Anya closed her eyes, the weight of her sorrow pressing down on her like a suffocating blanket. A single tear traced its way down her cheek, leaving a glistening trail in the dust. Then, with a deep breath, she took Pitah's hand.

"Alright," she whispered, her voice hoarse with emotion. "Let's go."

As they walked away from the ruins, the sun was showing its full might. But as they approached the temple, a crowd had already gathered their. Their faces clearly etched with the chaos oft he previous battle.

Within the sanctuary, a quiet hum of prayer and song filled the air, providing a fragile sense of hope in the face of overwhelming loss. The survivors, huddled together in the darkness of times, shared their grief and their stories. They were broken, but they were not defeated.

Just like anybody, present on all races, when things go down so hard, their was only one thing that they would have to fall back to, their faith. When everything seems hopeless, any and very race would turn back towards their faith, no matter how pious or unreligous they were.

The air in Ereia was still thick with the scent of ash, but a new scent had begun to weave its way through the grief, a delicate fragrance of hope. It was faint, almost imperceptible, but it was there, whispering promises of a future that would bloom from the ruins.

The orcish horde, a tide of green flesh and bone, surged back from the inner walls, the rhythmic thud of retreating boots a mournful counterpoint to the triumphant cries of the Infested Ones. The air was thick with the acrid stench of decay and the metallic tang of blood, a brutal symphony of chaos and death.

A guttural fear, primal and instinctive, pulsed through the orcish ranks. They were used to fighting men, to predictable, brute force battles. But these... these creatures were unlike anything they had ever encountered.

They were not just monstrously strong, but possessed an unnatural resilience, their flesh writhing even as blades tore through it, their bodies contorting into unnatural angles that defied the laws of physics.

The Infested Ones were not merely flesh and bone; they were a grotesque fusion of living and dead, animated by a malevolent will that defied comprehension. Their eyes glowed with an inner light, a cold, predatory fire that reflected the terrible, unseen power that drove them.

A young orc, barely more than a boy, stumbled back, clutching his arm where a set of teeth, sharp and bloody, had ripped through his flesh.

He looked at the creature that had inflicted the wound, its face a mask of unyielding, malevolent hunger. He was no longer certain he was fighting a being, but a manifestation of some ancient, terrible horror.

The orcish war-cry, once a ferocious roar, now sounded like the whimpering of scared beasts.

They were facing something that transcended the limits of their understanding, something that threatened to consume not only their bodies but also their souls.