"When people stop writing down their stories, the soul of the world is lost."
—Morrow, Horde, P. 149
Temporary safety in the town of Salvation is only a memory as Deuce, Fade, Stalker, and Tegan hit the road in search of a settlement that might be willing to send reinforcements to stave off the Freaks when they attack. Salvation is at the mercy of thousands of these mutants until enough towns send men to help fight the enemy, and Deuce's convoy has little time to make that happen. As Salvation's leaders feared, nearby strongholds don't take Deuce seriously, and their refusal to help is the death knell for Salvation, where Deuce's adopted parents and brother live. The town and most of its population are massacred by the Freak horde, a lucky few escaping with their lives and nothing else. Quarter for the refugees is reluctantly offered at a fortress called Soldier's Pond, but Deuce and her warrior friends are no happier here than at Salvation. They won't wait for the horde to track them down and torch the place they live a second time; the situation calls for immediate action led by a commander who isn't afraid to die, and that's Deuce. With the weight of the future world on her shoulders she departs Soldier's Pond with a small group of friends and military men to beseech neighboring settlements to throw in their lot against the Freaks, but convincing them to cooperate is an arduous undertaking.
"But wishes were empty thoughts, cast down a dark hole. They didn't come true unless you worked for them. I'd learned that about the world, if nothing more."
—Horde, P. 65
Deuce envisioned making rousing speeches to crowds who'd be ready to put their lives on the line to defend their homes against the Freaks, but what she finds is a lot more fear than bravado. Maybe the Freaks will tire of pillaging and go away if they aren't antagonized, people say; hoping for that is better than instigating war with an army of vastly superior numbers, isn't it? Deuce's skill is with knives, not words, and the results of her recruitment tour are abysmal. Even her loyal followers are beginning to doubt, until she gets back to basics by annexing a portion of forest land to defend to the death against Freak invaders. Slaying the monsters that violate this no-Freak zone lifts the soldiers' morale and gives them combat practice, but Deuce isn't sure whether to be worried or heartened when a lone Freak wanders into camp and speaks to her. Unlike the feral beasts that all Freaks recently were, this creature is capable of coherent speech. He proposes a nonaggression pact: the Freaks won't trespass on the patch of land that Deuce and her compatriots are defending, as long as the humans don't try to hunt them down. Deuce knows she'll have to abandon the place when winter comes anyway, and this treaty is something to build on.
Fade's psychological recovery from the brutalization he suffered at the Freaks' hands in the previous book, Outpost, is going slowly if at all. He cringes when touched, even by Deuce. She wonders if he'll ever welcome her closeness again, and his self-prognosis isn't encouraging. Yet she vows to wait however long it takes Fade to piece himself together; no other suitor will suffice. Stalker is frustrated by Deuce's consistent "No" to a relationship, but he carries his weight on the team by captaining the scouts, and the mission would have been sunk many times if not for his expertise. As legends spread of their vigorous land defense against the Freaks, Company D—as they're now known—is treated with respect in the region, and Deuce is seen by town elders as more than an impudent girl with deadly combat skills. Soldiers who ignored her recruiting calls are now eager to take up arms and join the war, swelling her infantry to a few hundred people. That's far less than the thousands of biting, clawing, raging Freaks that will inevitably descend on the remaining towns, but Deuce's army is the only chance humans have to not be wiped out. The battle is coming, and it's a virtual guarantee that most of Deuce's soldiers will perish even if they miraculously defeat the Freaks. Who will Deuce say goodbye to for the last time in this struggle for humanity's soul? In light of her personal losses, will she care anymore which side emerges victorious?
"Sometimes it felt as if all happiness came at a price. You could never, ever, have perfection. Life gave you beauty so you could bear the pain."
—Horde, P. 410
Horde doesn't feel any different from Enclave or Outpost. The action seems distant, the threat from the Freaks remote, and there aren't many surprises to speak of. The series isn't like other dystopian novels, which usually depend on heart-stopping action and raw emotional turmoil. Suzanne Collins's The Hunger Games, Neal Shusterman's Unwind, and James Dashner's The Maze Runner make readers feel as though the story is happening to them, as though their own lives are in jeopardy. The Razorland books don't offer dystopian thrills so much as a surprisingly quiet story about relationships. The fear that beloved characters might die is ever-present, but most of the drama comes from emotional peril. That's what Ann Aguirre seems to write best, and it rescues the series from mediocrity. There's sound social commentary here, too, built into the narrative's dystopian aspects. People revile Freaks for the atrocities they've committed, but they're not all monsters. Memories of horrors perpetrated by their kind aren't easily dislodged, but the new breed of Freak is prepared to engage in civil dialogue with the humans. Will they consent, or is their hatred of Freaks overwhelming? The scenario bears implications for the real world, where people groups are often blamed for the depravity of a few among them. When society refuses to draw those distinctions, resentment and conflict go on and on with no ending unless one side or the other is exterminated. The only avenue to peace is for people to make the effort to not hold the many accountable for the actions of an irresponsible few.
"(I)t takes more courage to heal the world's hurts than to inflict them."
—Horde, P. 394
Death is a constant companion as Deuce and her soldiers work toward the ultimate showdown with the Freaks. Indispensable members of Company D are lost even before the big day, and the heartache takes a toll on Deuce, already weary from building her forces for the last stand. But forgetting her comrades who have died would be worse, as she realizes when she thinks on one close friend who's passed away. "My heart hurt when I remembered him, but the alternative was forgetting, and that was the final kind of death—when nobody told your story anymore." Grief plagues an exhausted heart and mind, but not paying the respect of remembrance is unthinkable. It's better to remember and be in pain than to feel at ease because you're not acknowledging the loss of an irreplaceable loved one. Deuce has many discoveries to make about friendship and love; though Fade keeps her at arm's length, he can't live with the thought of Deuce dying, but he's faced with the possibility every day in the forest, and Deuce has the same concern for him. What will they do if their luck runs out and a Freak kills one of them? The dread is unrelenting, as Deuce observes. "I feared a love like this—that made us incomplete without each other. It was beautiful but treacherous, like snow that looked white and pure and lovely from the safety of your window, but when you stepped out to touch the softness, the cold first stole your breath, and then your will to move, until you could just lay down in it and let the numbness take you." Loving anyone that much is scary, but worth it for those who've had a taste of such intimacy of spirit. It's a devastating risk, but one that Deuce doesn't think twice about taking. We see her commitment when Fade asks why she promises to wait however long it takes him to beat his psychological demons so they can be close again. "Because I love you...Not just when it's easy. All the time." Much of the time it won't be easy, but you don't discard a blessing like love because it's high-maintenance. When you find the right person, nothing matters more, but will Deuce and Fade live to enjoy love for the best years of their lives?
This series isn't as great as some dystopians, but Horde won me over as Enclave and Outpost couldn't quite manage to do. Maybe it's the extra length (the first two books average out at less than three hundred pages each, and Horde is four hundred twenty-two), allowing a conclusion that doesn't feel rushed in the slightest. The emotion of those wrap-up pages is significant, a nice reward for Razorland fans. Because of all that, I'm rounding my two-and-a-half star rating up to three, and I'm sure it's the right choice. There's a fourth book, Vanguard, that continues the narrative from a new perspective, and I'm excited about it. I appreciate everything you imparted to me through Deuce's odyssey, Ann Aguirre. I'll reflect on the story, its lessons, and characters with fondness, and that's a fine way for any series to be remembered.