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The Battle For Lordaeron: Part VII - Exit Strategy
After picking up Soozee, Jakko flew back over to the Southern Courtyard, and not a moment too soon. The Horde was pulling back from the courtyard and was making its way through the eastern half of the city to the second rally point in the palace gardens. “Alright.” Jakko said. “We’ll just follow them from up here and-“
An arrow hit Jakko right in the wing. “BWONSAMDI FUCKS HAMSTERS FOR BREAKFAST!” he swore as he quickly lost altitude and crashed into the courtyard. The two goblins on his back tumbled across the ground as he morphed back into troll form. He looked to his shoulder to inspect the wound.
Yup. Darnassian Arrow in his shoulder. Pretty deep.
He looked around - most of the Horde had already fled, and in front of the Boomsprocket siblings was a very large, very angry Alliance army that had now spotted the three of them. Several Stormwind footmen lowered their spears and charged at them.
Oh, this is just hilarious. Jakko thought to himself. After surviving the horrors of the blight and the vengeful wrath of a paladin with a vendetta, it’s some random-ass night elf archer who got off a lucky shot that ends up killing him and his sisters. Whatever being is responsible for weaving the fate of mortals must be laughing its ass off right now.
Before the Alliance could close the distance though, someone landed between them. They screamed so loud at the soldiers that they had to cover their ears (so did Jakko and his sisters - they cursed trolls and goblins alike for having such big ears). The stranger then fired several arrows at the footmen before turning around.
It was Sylvanas Windrunner.
“Don’t just sit there! Move! Second Rally Point! Go!” the Warchief shouted at them before engaging the Alliance once more.
None of them had any trouble following that particular order, as they all ran off toward the east side of the city. Jakko spared a glance back and watched in horror and awe as Sylvanas held off the entire Alliance army more-or-less single-handed.
Damn.
She was an evil bitch, but for the briefest moment, he was glad that she was on their side.
Marbelma had finally gotten free of those damned vines and made her way down the rubble back into the courtyard. She saw Roniaar, on his hands and knees, panting next to a dead hydra. “Roniaar? What the hell happened to ye?” she asked.
“Things got hairy.” Roniaar said. “I…” he gasped for breath. “I had to ascend.”
Marbelma’s eyes widened. She didn’t know a whole lot about shamanism, but she knew that becoming an ascendent, even temporarily, was incredibly dangerous. Things must’ve really gotten bad down here if Roniaar was willing to take a risk like that.
She looked around and saw that the courtyard was largely devoid of Horde now. Save for one particular Hordie…
“Sylvanas…” Marbelma breathed as she watched the Warchief fire a seemingly endless amount of arrows into the Alliance, leaping from place to place. “What’s she doin’?!”
“Trying to cover her Horde’s retreat.” Tendalel reported.
“Gah!” Marbelma jumped. “Don’t do that!”
“Can’t help it. Void elf AND a rogue.” Ten said. “Anyway, there’s still a few Horde stragglers in the courtyard and Sylvanas is trying to cover their retreat.”
“She’s vulnerable…” Marbelma said with a grin as she unsheathed her hammer. “This is our chance!” she shouted as she ran towards the Banshee Queen.
“Marbles! Wait!” Roniaar said as he took off after her, still struggling to catch his breath so soon after ascension.
“…I’m gonna have to go with them, aren’t I?” Ten asked no one in particular. He sighed. “The things I do for guildies…” he muttered before sprinting after the two.
The three Alliance heroes didn’t get very far. Sylvanas eventually hopped on top of a large pile of rubble and aimed her last few arrows not at any Alliance troops…but at the massive vats of blight that lined the sides of the battlefield.
“…Oh, son of a bitch.” Marbelma cursed, realizing what was about to happen.
As the arrows hit the massive canisters, they detonated, blight rushing across the battlefield. The trio hit the ground, somehow believing that would shield them from the worst of it…
…And somehow, it did.
Marbelma looked up and saw, much to her own surprise, that she was surrounded not by Blight, but by a large dome of holy energy that shielded them. “Quickly!” said the priest who must’ve saved them. “Back to the other side of the battlefield! I don’t know how long I can maintain this shield!”
Marbelma nodded and stood up. “Come on, you two! On yer feet!” she barked at Roniaar and Tendalel as they stood up and walked with the priest as they, and several other priests who managed to bubble some very lucky Alliance soldiers, made their way to the western end of the courtyard where there wasn’t any blight.
The priest dropped his shield. “Thanks.” Marbelma said.
“It was an honor, hero.”
…And that’s when Marbelma realized just who, exactly, had saved her life.
The face of Anduin Wrynn smiled down on her, before the High King walked off to meet with Proudmoore and Greymane to discuss the next course of action.
It then occurred to Marbelma that hers wasn’t the first life the High King saved today. Probably wouldn’t be the last, either. Perhaps she had misjudged him - it takes stones to walk into a cloud of blight just to save a few random adventurers, after all.
The Horde’s next order from their Warchief was a surprising one - evacuate. They were to withdraw back into the Undercity, where mages were waiting to teleport the battle’s survivors to a safer place. As Baine herded the Horde’s champions out of the gardens and through the throne room, Jakko caught a glimpse of Sylvanas and Saurfang arguing about something.
The troll supposed it wasn’t all that surprising that they were pulling out. They had defended the city as best they could, but with the Alliance now completely overrunning the ruins on the surface, it was only a matter of time before they’d take it. He’d heard that Sylvanas had detonated the last of the blight bombs in the courtyard, but he knew that was just to buy the Horde more time to withdraw. It wouldn’t hold the Alliance back for long.
They took the elevator down into the center ring of the Undercity. Striding by Spritzie’s side was the only pet Spritzie brought with her to survive the battle - Angel, her wolfhawk. It whined as it sensed her mistress’s distress and tried to nuzzle the goblin to comfort her.
Soozee was fiddling with her belt, muttering curses as her void suit seemed to be sparking. “Shit.” she cursed. “Void suit’s been damaged. Must’ve happened when we took that spill after that arrow shot you down, Jakko.”
“Yeah, the arrow…” Jakko said as he eyed the bandage where a shamanistic healer took out the arrow, slapped some healing water on the wound, and called for his next patient. Orcs weren’t known for their bedside manner. Course, that wound was minor compared to what that dwarf had given him.
He rubbed at the handprint on the right side of his face. The flesh was still raw. It would probably take weeks to heal, even with trollish regeneration. Except…doesn’t fire nullify regeneration? He wondered if this scar would actually heal.
If it doesn’t, one more for the collection. Jakko looked down at the gash scar on his palm, and rubbed at the jagged scar on the side of his torso. Orcs viewed scars as badges of honor, and proof of courage and strength. Jakko didn’t really see it that way. His scars felt more like monuments to his mistakes.
They eventually found a mage with a portal. Standing beside the mage was Commander Johriah Lawrence. “Do not despair, Horde.” he said to his champions to try and lift their spirits. “Though we may have lost this battle, the war is far from over.”
As if THAT was a comfort.
Jakko and his sisters stepped through the portal.
With the blight blocking the Alliance’s path, the only way past it was with the flying machines Gelbin Mekkatorgue had brought with him through the ren’dorei’s portal. The problem was that there weren’t much of them, so only a handful of the Alliance’s champions could go with Anduin to finish this battle once and for all.
Marbelma and her group would not be among them. For her, the battle was over.
“It can’t be over!” Marbelma raged as her group marched back through the breach Jaina had created earlier and back to Brill. “I’m not done yet!”
“You are.” Vindicator Rhyliaandra firmly told her old squire. “You’ve no reason to be ashamed, Marbelma. You fought with righteous fury this day, and in doing so, inflicted a wound on the Horde they will not recover from. You have earned this respite.”
“You don’t understand!” Marbelma said. “The troll! The one who killed my parents! He was here!”
“…He was?” Rhyliaandra asked.
“I dueled him on top of the battlements!” Marbelma said.
“I DO recall her seeing dueling a troll atop the wall.” Roniaar said. “Are you sure it was him?” he asked.
“Positive.” Marbelma said. “The fucker even admitted to it.”
“How did you know it was him?” Tendalel said.
“I heard him saying ‘piksap.’” Marbelma replied. “He said the same thing the night he murdered my parents. I’d know his voice anywhere.”
“Strange.” Tendalel said. “‘Piksap’ is actually a goblin curse word. Why would a troll know it?”
Marbelma paused in thought. It WAS strange, now that she thought about it. In fact… “He didn’t really talk with a troll accent.” she realized. “He talked more like a….goblin, if anything.”
“Interesting. Did you get his name?” Ten asked.
Marbelma shook her head. “I had him dead to rights before he caught me off guard.” She reached up and touched the claw marks that dominated the left side of her face, nearly taking her eye. “Didn’t see the point in learning his name.”
“Well, without knowing his name, it’s gonna be harder to find him in the future.” Tendalel said.
“Assuming he survives this battle.” Marbelma said. As much she wanted to kill him herself, she’d settle for seeing his corpse piled among the hundred other Horde corpses that will be collected once this battle is over.
“And if he doesn’t?” the rogue asked.
Marbelma scowled at the void elf. “What business is it of yours, anyway?” she demanded.
“I’m a rogue, but more specifically, I’m a spy.” Tendalel said. “I’m less about assassination and more gathering intelligence. Wouldn’t be the first time I had to track someone down. Granted, it’d be hard without a name, but a troll with a goblin accent? Not many of those in the world. I’m pretty sure I can find a name soon enough.”
“…And what would it cost me?” Marbelma asked. She knew that rogues of all stripes never did anything for free.
“Oh, I’ll think of something.” Ten replied with a wink. “Favor for a favor.”
It was then that the group heard a series of explosions coming from the Ruins of Lordaeron. They turned around and stared, wide-eyed, as clouds of blight erupted from all the buildings...
And began to pour towards them.
“Move!” Rhyliaandra barked as the withdrawing Alliance forces all broke out in a run for Brill, away from the blight. Thankfully, they all had a decent headstart on the blight, and were able to make it to Brill safely just before the blight stopped just shy of its outskirts. After catching their breath, the Champions of the Alliance all looked up at the city and stared in horror.
Jakko really shouldn’t have been surprised by what he saw from the railings of the Horde gunship he and the others had been ported to. The Ruins of Lordaeron were completely covered in blight - Sylvanas’s final contingency, no doubt. He should’ve known that she would rather destroy her own city rather than allow it to fall into Alliance hands.
The Champions of the Horde looked on as the gunship they all managed to evacuate onto turned west and flew for Kalimdor. It was bittersweet. They had lost a strategically valuable city, and with it, most of Lordaeron. But they could at least take comfort in the fact that the Alliance wouldn’t be able to use the city as a fortress of their own, like they were likely planning.
The Forsaken had taken it the hardest. They weren’t an emotional people, but they seemed even more melancholic than usual. Jakko sympathized with them, despite himself. They had just lost their home, after all.
Just as the night elves had lost theirs.
Guess we’re even, now. he ruefully thought to himself.
Though that’s probably not how the Alliance sees it.
Right now, the Horde was en route back to Orgrimmar, where it will heal its wounded, bury its dead, and plan what its next move. The Alliance will likely do the same, sailing back to Stormwind. Jakko didn’t really know what was going to happen after that. After taking so many losses in the Battle for Lordaeron, it was hard to imagine the Horde, or the Alliance for that matter, mustering enough strength for another battle of this scale anytime soon.
But it was also hard to imagine either the High King or the Warchief giving up so easily.
Jakko knew one thing for sure, though. This wasn’t over. Not by a long shot. This wasn’t Warsong Gulch or Arathi Basin. This wasn’t some glorified slap fight over flags or resources in some box canyon in the middle of nowhere. This was it. The big one. The final showdown between Alliance and Horde.
The Battle for Azeroth.
And it was just getting started.
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Tendalel Shadestep
Race: Void Elf
Class: Rogue
Age: 556
Not much is known of Tendalel’s life before he emerged in Silvermoon’s underground as a premier information broker and occasional blade-for-hire, and Tendalel likes it that way. For centuries, he had enjoyed a life of spying on Silvermoon nobles houses on behalf of other noble houses and enjoying the material rewards that came with his work.
Of course, everything changed when Arthas and the Undead Scourge marched on Quel’thalas. The nation was devastated, the survivors cowering inside the ruins of their capital. But under the stoic leadership of Prince Kael’thas Sunstrider, they began to quietly rebuild. Tendalel did his part, of course. He fell in with some smugglers to get food, lumber and other supplies for the high elf survivors, now known as blood elves.
A few years after that, the blood elves formally joined the Horde. It was an unexpected development from Ten’s perspective, even taking into account Silvermoon’s bitterness towards the Alliance for Garithos’s treatment of their beloved Prince, but it wasn’t an unwelcome one. After all, he’d been so busy helping to rebuild Silvermoon, that he’d been out of the spy game for a while. The Horde could use his talents, and at the end of the day, their gold was as good as the Alliance’s.
Years go by, and Ten’s information network expanded. He had contacts in every major city on Azeroth, even the Alliance cities like Stormwind and Ironforge, and he was once again enjoying the material rewards that came from his work. Life was good.
That all changed one day.
It was part of a routine job. He’d recently taken up smuggling for some guy named Umbric. He’d been exiled from Silvermoon for studying the Void some years ago, and had been relying on smugglers to get supplies for himself and his followers. Tendalel didn’t think much of them - just a bunch of crazy hermits studying scrolls in the woods. He had been there, dropping off supplies and was about to collect his payment.
And that’s when the portal to the Telogrus Rift opened.
Tendalel, along with every other blood elf there, was sucked inside the strange realm. It was then that Nether-Prince Durzaan appeared, and began a spell to corrupt the elves. Tendalel could feel himself changing, mutating, whispers in his mind. Had it not been for Alleria Windrunner’s timely rescue and defeat of the Nether-Prince, he didn’t know what he would’ve turned into. Nor would he want to know.
The experience had changed the elves there. Ten looked down at his skin - no longer a healthy bright orange, but an alarmingly pale shade of purple. His hair had gone from red to purple as well, with tentacles of all things growing among the strands! Unlike the rest of the so-called ‘Ren’dorei’, Tendalel tried to return to Silvermoon, only to have a squad of sin’dorei rangers try to shoot him on sight.
With all his old Horde contacts no longer returning his calls, Tendalel realized he had no choice now but to join the Alliance. An unexpected development, but not an unwelcome one. The Alliance could use his talents, and at the end of the day, their gold was as good as the Horde’s.
Now, as the Battle for Azeroth begins, Tendalel is ready to do a few odd jobs for SI:7, build a new information network, and reap a handsome profit doing it all. The last few years had been very interesting for Tendalel - and the next few years look to be even more so.
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<The paper and ink are damp and smudged in places, with dirt smeared in others. All the notes seem to be hastily jotted down.>
Environmental Combat Training Notes
Dun Morogh is too cold and that’s bullshit. It’s all ren’dorei here besides Commander Broom. I like it. It’s good. Wall friend shares my pain in the cold. This scarf is doing nothing. My void hair is cold. I hate that.
Don’t get stranded anywhere cold or mountainous.
Dangers: -Fucking everything. (Cold, no shelter, no food, avalanches and bad footing. Everything.)
Things to eat: -Anything I can get my voidy little hands on, that’s what. Look at base of trees for plants.
Broom says always be aware of surroundings. Also valleys aren’t big, the small ones are called a “saddle” in Common. Maybe named after the mount one? Kinda looks like it. Anyway, makes for good ambush point. Duh. Also good for scouting, moving troops, and that stuff. Honestly just trap them there and freeze them to death, it’s fucking cold. Ash had the best idea, just make them jump off.
Try to be uphill of people, duh. Makes them work harder to hit you. Although if I’m fighting face to face with anyone, shit’s gone really bad and I should run.
MAYBE I SHOULD JUST RUN REGARDLESS, Tendalel threw daggers at me. At my feet. But that’s still me. Sure it was for a demonstration but I don’t like that. What if he missed?! I like my feet intact and unstabbed, thanks. He said he doesn’t accidentally murder people but that wouldn’t be murder, it’d just suck.
Watch out for trees in case someone’s spying from them. Pretty obvious but I’m writing it.
My fingers are so cold. Sunset’s pretty, though. “Alpenglow” is what happens then the snow glows in the sunset. It’s a Dwarven-Common mix word, according to Commander Broom.
Again, final note: avoid all mountain missions if possible. I don’t want to get stranded out in the cold with like eighty feet of snow and no food. It’s cold. Terrible.
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The Battle For Lordaeron: Part VI - Psychology
Spritzie slammed another trio of shells into her triple-barred shotgun before unloading another volley into the approaching Alliance. She growled in frustration - for every humans she shot down, two more took their place. There was no end to them.
Fine. Let them come. She’ll turn every single one of them into swiss cheese for what they did to her baby! She lunged at a nearby worgen, who was seemingly caught off-guard by the fact that such a tiny goblin would be brave enough to take him head-on. She relished the look on his face as she unloaded a round into his chest. She heard a rumor that only a silver bullet can kill a worgen, but the corpse before her told her that lead worked just as well. She reloaded as she scanned the battlefield for her next victim…
And spotted a very familiar-looking draenei.
Crystal and Verde’s murderer!
She whistled for her wolf, Scruffy, and her wasp, Gigi, and ordered them to charge at the draenei.
“Gah!” Roniaar gasped as a large wolf nearly tackled him to the ground, but his natural strength and tall stature allowed him to stand his ground. The wolf growled and slobbered as it gnawed on his arm. He spotted a wasp hovering overhead, stinger at the ready. The shaman had to time this right…
As the wasp lunged, he swung out the arm with the wolf hanging onto it and fired off a lightning bolt with his other arm. Bullseye! He then grabbed one of his wind-axes and brought it down onto the wolf, who whimpered as it let go and let out a death rattle.
“NOOOO!” a goblin shrieked as she charged forward, shotgun at the ready. Roniaar recognized her as the goblin from before. “STOP MURDERING MY BABIES!”
Thinking quick, Roniaar summoned a slab of earth from the ground just in time to block the incoming bullets. “I would if they’d stop trying to maul me to death!”
As he hid from the goblin’s barrage, he looked around, trying to spot Marbelma. He saw her run off toward a collapsed battlement before he lost track of her. Oh Light, please let her be-
There!
Roniaar spotted Marbelma up on the battlements, locked in a heated dual with a troll that had two large swords. It looked like she needed backup. He transformed into a ghost wolf and tried to make a break for the collapsed battlements.
It was then that he was hit by something hard, like a kodo just ran him over. It tossed him several yards, knocking him out of wolf form as he tumbled across the ground. He looked up and saw the source - a big, angry direhorn. Perched on top of it was a rylak, both heads hissing at the draenei. To the direhorn’s left was a jade quilen and to its right was a riverbeast.
And standing off to the side was a goblin with a whistle in her mouth, leering at the draenei.
How many pets does this goblin have?!
Alright, fine. If that’s the way this goblin wants to play it…
Roniaar muttered a few words in Kalimag as wind, water vapor, clumps of dirt, and embers all swirled around his hands. When he first landed here, he felt that the elements of this land were in anguish - no doubt the result of years of Forsaken polluting the land with their blight. He beseeched their aid, telling of how the Alliance sought to free this land from the Forsaken’s undead grip, and if they saw this cause as a righteous one, please, help.
The elements answered.
An air elemental swirled into being out of the very air itself. A water elemental did so as well, swirling into existence out of the water vapor in the air. A rumbling earth elemental clawed its way up from beneath the soil. And a fire elemental seemed to erupt from a simple spark. The goblin’s beasts all growled at the draenei’s elementals.
“As you can see, you’re not the only one with little friends.” Roniaar boasted.
“I RAISED my beasts for combat practically from infancy!” the goblin shouted. “All you’re doing is hiring local help to do your dirty work for you!”
“We shall see…” Roniaar said before he and his elementals charged, clashing with the goblin and her beasts.
“Ah-ha!” Soozee triumphantly cried out as he finally grabbed that slippery void elf. He tried to struggle, but it was no use - her mech’s claws could squeeze him at 2000 PSI, enough to break every bone in the elf’s body!
And that’s when the elf poofed again. “SON OF GNOMEREGAN WHORE WHERE DID YOU GO?!?!” Soozee shrieked, getting sick and tired of this cat-and-mouse bullshit.
She heard a whistle. She looked over her shoulder and saw the void elf sitting on the mech’s shoulders. “Question.” he asked as he held out a bunch of wires. “Were these important?”
That’s when the void-buster started to shake and spark. “YOU IDIOT!!!” Soozee said as she checked the mech’s readings. “THOSE WERE CONNECTED TO THE VOID BUSTER’S INTERNAL STABILIZERS!!! IT’S ABOUT TO GO INTO MELT DOWN!!!”
“That’s what I thought. Bye!” And just like that, the void elf disappeared into another spatial rift.
“SHIT!” Soozee swore as she pulled on a red lever that activated the mech’s ejector seat, activating a rocket that shot high into the air. Unable to contain the power of the void core, the mech imploded, sucked into the small black hole that had opened inside its engine compartment. The Void-Buster was no more, as though it never even existed.
It occurred to Soozee that the ejector seat might’ve had a touch too much rocket fuel, as she was now so high that she could see ALL of the Ruins of Lordaeron and the surrounding Tirisfal Glades. From up here, the battle resembled a large, very elaborate diorama.
When the parachute automatically deployed, the winds took her slightly away from the battle, which was just as well. With her Void Buster gone, she wasn’t quite as confidant in her odds of surviving a battle of this scale. Furthermore, as she squinted through her goggles, she could see that the Alliance was slowly but surely pushing the Horde out of the courtyard. The Horde was losing this battle.
That’s when Soozee remembered that she still had family down there. Jakko and Spritzie.
“…Curse my familial obligations.” Soozee muttered as she took manual control of the parachute and steered it back toward the battle. She landed on top of the far southern wall - quite a distance away from most of the fighting, but not so far that she couldn’t help out her siblings if she needed to.
“Nice landing.”
“Thank you.” Soozee replied to the void elf.
…The Void Elf!
Tendalel couldn’t resist a healthy chuckle as the goblin freaked out at his presence. He knew he shouldn’t be so far from the battle, but A: The Alliance was pushing through and at this point, it’s only a matter of time before the city falls. And B: After all the trouble this goblin had put him through, he was feeling just petty enough to come over and rub his victory in her face for a bit before going back and helping out.
“So yeah - a void-powered mech. Gotta admit, that’s a new one.” Tendalel said. “Course, leave it to a goblin to think using the void as a power source is a good idea.”
“Oh hi Pot, name’s Kettle, have we met?” the goblin replied as she stood up and glared at the elf through her goggles.
“Hey, I didn’t ask for this little dye job.” he said, pointing to his purple hair. “Hell, I wasn’t even one of Umbric’s followers. I was just in the wrong place at the wrong time. It’s kind of a long story.”
“You void elves…” the goblin growled. “I’ve been studying the Void for YEARS! I’ve had to WORK to get to where I am today! But you….you had all the secrets and power of the Void just DROPPED into your LAP!”
“Clearly, you’ve never had a crazy ethereal try to forcibly change you into a void abomination. For the record, it’s not fun.” Tendalel said. An explosion was heard in the distance, rising over the din of the battle. “As much as I’d love to stay and chat, it sounds like I’m needed elsewhere. Ciao.”
And with that, he leapt through another spatial rift…
…But was dragged back?
Tendalel turned around and saw that a void tentacle had wrapped around his ankle and pulled him back through the rift. He looked up and saw that the tentacle was attached to the goblin’s shoulder -a goblin now shrouded in shadow magic. “You are NOT escaping me again…” she growled.
“A shadow priest…” Tendalel said. “That explains a lot.”
“I am NOT a shadow priest!” the goblin shrieked. “I’m not some cultist or hack theologian! I am an Ebonologist! I do not worship or revere the Void, I study it! I harness its power and I make it mine!”
“You don’t say.” Tendalel deadpanned before swiping at the tendril with one of his daggers, cutting it off. As he stood up, he smirked underneath his mask. “Fun fact…”
Several void tendrils appeared from his own shoulder. “I can do the tentacle thing too.” he said.
“Then we shall see who handles a tentacle better!” the goblin shouted.
Tendalel snickered.
“…Wha-THAT IS NOT WHAT I MEANT AND YOU KNOW IT!”
The clang of metal against metal continually rang in Jakko’s ears as he blocked and parried the dwarf’s hammer strikes, dodging whatever he couldn’t block. He had to admit though, the dwarf was pretty good in a fight. She was likewise quick to dodge, block and parry every attack he made.
He’d probably respect her for her skill if he wasn’t getting increasingly frustrated by this dwarf’s stubborn refusal to piss off.
He crossed his blades in the air, blocking an overhead hammer strike, just like he did during their first duel on the bombing run. “Yeesh, kid.” he panted - battle fatigue was finally catching up to him. “Where’d you even learn to fight like this?”
“The paladin who saved me from you?” the dwarf asked. “She took me in. Trained me in the ways of the Light. Every day since, I’ve been training twelve hours a day, honing my body, mind and even my very soul into weapons of the Light!”
“You need to go on a date, kid.” the troll quipped.
The dwarf roared. Apparently, that made her angry. She pulled her hammer back and swung it horizontally at the troll, but he hopped back out of the way. He jumped and delivered a roundhouse kick to her face.
Spritzie loaded multi-shot ammo into her shotgun before firing another round at the elementals, looking to help her pets however she could. It faintly reminded her of a Hearthstone match - beast hunter vs. elemental shaman. Except this wasn’t a friendly card match and the stakes were much, MUCH higher than who pays for the next round.
She spotted the draenei beyond who was….trying to run away? Oh no he won’t! She clicked together her heels, activating her rocket boots and jumping forward, landing on the draenei’s back and wrapping her arms around his neck. He gagged and, using his race’s natural strength, pried her arms off and bucked her off. Not sparing her a second thought however, he continued running, towards a collapsed section of the battlements.
“Hold on, Marbles! I’m coming!” he shouted. Spritzie then noticed Jakko and some dwarf with a big hammer dueling on the battlements above, where the draenei was climbing up to. Now she understood - the dwarf must’ve been his buddy, and he’s trying to lend her a hand.
Not on her watch.
Spritzie pulled out a hand grenade, something no self-respecting goblin ever left home without, pulled the pin, and threw it up at the pile of debris the shaman was scaling. A second later, it exploded, triggering an avalanche and burying him. She grinned in satisfaction.
A grin that disappeared however, as the shaman emerged from the rubble, completely unscathed. Indeed, it was as though the rocks seemed to protect him more than-
Oh. Right. Shaman.
“Just walk away.” the draenei said. “I do not wish to fight you.”
“Well I do.” Spritzie said as she spat on the ground. “After today, they won’t find enough of you to fill the nut sack of an ant.” On that colorful note, she raised her gun and fired.
Tendalel had been on the run for several minutes, dodging void bolt after void bolt. He had leapt down from the battlements was now running through a network of overgrown alleyways, the goblin in hot pursuit.
“Stop your resisting.” the goblin said, her voice seemingly coming from everywhere. No doubt a void trick. He wondered if he could do that. “I will find you.”
“Yeah, you’re not the first clingy girl to say that, and you probably won’t be the last.” Tendalel said as he ducked around a corner.
“Damn it, stop wasting my time!” she ranted. “I’ve already wasted enough time just SHOWING UP to this pointless battle and fight in this pointless war! I’m not going home empty-handed - mama needs some ren’dorei organs!”
“Yeah, I’d rather not end up as some crazy goblin’s science experiment, so no.” Tendalel quipped. “Though I gotta ask, if this battle is pointless, why are you even here?”
“First of all, personal reasons.” the goblin said. “Secondly, I came here in the hopes of acquiring fresh ren’dorei bodies for my research. Your bodies are conduits for the Void, and yet you seem capable of resisting its whispers. I must understand why.”
“Oh, must you?” Tendalel asked. “What’s wrong? Are the whispers getting to you? Or maybe the nightmares?”
The goblin only growled in reply. “Sorry baby, but if you’re thinking that the key to your salvation lies somewhere in my small intestines or whatever, you are sorely mistaken.”
“…Let’s test that hypothesis, shall we?”
It was then that Tendalel felt multiple void tendrils wrap themselves around him and pull him through some kind of void portal - and not one that he made.
Marbelma ignored the protests of her arching arm muscles as she swung her hammer for what felt like the fiftieth time at the troll, once again to no avail. She should’ve known. She should’ve known that the monster who’d been haunting her nightmares for the last ten years wouldn’t die so easily. But she wasn’t going to give up. Not after everything she’d been through.
After catching her hammer again, the troll pushed her back and away, thought not by much. She snarled as she once again raised her hammer over her head and tried to bring it down on the troll. She missed entirely this time. She was getting tired. And judging from the smirk on the troll’s face, he knew it too.
“Think it might be time to call it a day, kid.” he said.
“Fuck you.” she spat.
The troll paused. Then sighed. “I’m sorry.” he said.
Marbelma must be getting tired. She could’ve sworn he said…. “What?” she asked.
“I’m sorry.” the troll repeated. “For killing your family. For ruining your life. Back in those days, I was a real piece of work. It’s why I became a druid. Felt like I needed to make up for all the bad I’ve done.”
Marbelma looked at him, more dumbfounded than anything. He looked back down at the courtyard below, where the skirmish raged on. He turned back to her. “Look, I can see the writing on the wall.” he said as he sheathed his swords. “The Alliance just keeps comin’ and with Jaina Proudmoore leadin’ the way, it’s only a matter of time before the Horde loses this battle. Now, I’ve still got family down there and at this point, I just wanna grab ‘em and get outta here while I still can.”
The dwarf panted. It was only now that she realized just how tired she really was. “…You’re sorry?” she asked.
The troll nodded.
The dwarf roared in fury, swinging her hammer at his torso while his guard was down, finally knocking him down. She snarled as she tossed the hammer aside and straddled him. Grabbing a fistful of hair with her right hand, she started punching him in the face with her left.
“SORRY DOESN’T BRING BACK GILNEAS!!!”
Wham.
“SORRY DOESN’T BRING BACK THERAMORE!!!”
Wham!
“SORRY DOESN’T BRING BACK TELDRASSIL!!!”
WHAM!
She paused. Her left fist opened up, fingers spread, and the hand glowed with Holy Light. “Sorry doesn’t bring back my family.” she hissed. She planted the glowing hand on the side of the troll’s face and burned him with the Light.
“Just walk away!” Roniaar shouted as he tossed another bolt of lightning at the piece of rubble the goblin was hiding behind. “I have more elemental power than you have bullets!”
The goblin wouldn’t relent though, and would occasionally blind-fire at the shaman, and come uncomfortably close to missing. He checked on the elementals and found that they were winning - without their mistress to lend them aid, the beasts stood little chance against the fury of the elements. The direhorn was being pulled beneath the earth, the rylak was being blown out of the sky, the riverbeast was being drowned and even the quilen’s stone hide was melting under the heat. “Give it up! You cannot win this fight!” he bellowed.
“I’ve still got one ace up my sleeve.” she growled before letting out a sharp whistle.
Roniaar felt the ground shake. And not from the earth elemental he summoned to his aid earlier. He turned around and saw a truly massive blue hydra galloping towards the shaman, biting and hissing as it charged towards him, trampling several Alliance soldiers underfoot. It skidded to a halt and roared at the draenei, its hide crackling with electrical energy.
“Say hello to Rilla!” Spritzie shouted. “My strongest, most feared beast!”
“Most feared beast, eh?” Roniaar asked. “I should say so. It seems downright…electrifying! Hahahahaa!”
The hyrdra roared.
“Hahaha…..ha….Oh, I’m going to die.”
The hydra lunged.
Soozee grinned maniacally as she finally had the slippery elf right where she wanted him - with her void tentacles tying him down against a wall. “You know…normally, I’ve got to buy a girl dinner before they tie me up like this…” he wheezed as he strained against his bindings.
As she pulled out her dagger, she made a mental note to start by slitting his throat.
“Normally, I do most of my dissections in my lab.” Soozee said as she pulled some plastic bags from her belt. “But I don’t mind a bit of field work from time to time…”
It was then that she noticed a void tendril wrapping itself around her arm. Followed by another around her other arm and even one around her neck, all seeming to be coming from the floor. “I can do the tentacle thing too, remember?” he wheezed.
“I can see that…” Soozee wheezed back. “It seems we’ve reached an impasse…”
The two void users spent the next several minutes staring each other down, tangled and strangled by each other’s tendrils.
Pain. That was all Jakko’s world was for a good thirty seconds - blinding, burning pain. The dwarf was searing her handprint into his face with the raw, burning fury of the Holy Light. Finally, she took his hand off his face, dismounted, and threw him to the floor hard enough to make him see spots. At least the headache he had now helped to take his mind off the burning, smoking flesh on the right side of his face.
“You’re just like the rest of the Horde, when all’s said and done.” she snarled. “You talk about redemption and atonement, thinking that cleans yer plate of all yer crimes. Well lemme tell ye a dirty little secret - nobody fucking cares about your redemption.”
She walked back over to where she dropped her hammer and picked it up. “When you commit acts of evil, you’re not the one who decides how you should be punished for it.”
“…And you are?” Jakko grunted.
“Who better?” the dwarf shot back as she walked over to the disfigured troll with murderous intent.
Welp. Guess this is it. Jakko thought to himself for the second time that day. He gave it his all, but this paladin beat him fair and square. An ‘honorable death’ as the orcs would call it. It was better than hacking up a lung in a cloud of blight, at least. Hell, this was downright poetic. A part of him always knew that it would be someone from his past that would finally kill him, but he always figured it would be someone from his old assassin’s guild, none too pleased that he left. Maybe even the guild leader…
But no. Turns out he wasn’t that important. No, the sins of his past had come in the form of someone he had well and truly hurt. Someone with fire and rage in her soul and, honestly, Jakko couldn’t very well blame her. As he heard the dwarf approach, he closed his eyes and hoped the final blow wouldn’t hurt too much.
…But then he thought about Spritzie. Lately she had been getting wilder. More rebellious. With the death of several of her beloved pets in this battle, he feared she was only gonna get worse. Who was gonna be there to keep her from doing something stupid at a critical moment?
What about Soozee? Her research was driving her to look at things no mortal should look at. Who was gonna be there to help her from diving straight into the abyss? She’s already on the edge as it is.
…And Vorz’ka. There’s a name Jakko had been trying to forget the last few weeks. His last meeting with his girlfriend didn’t end on great terms. Would she grieve? Would she miss him? Would she regret that their very last meeting ended in an argument.
The thoughts whizzed through his mind over the course of seconds. Names of old friends, estranged family, business left unfinished. He suddenly arrived at a conclusion.
I can’t die now. I still got shit to do!
He rolled out of the way, just as the dwarf’s hammer met the floor.
He quickly morphed into a tiger and, able to catch the dwarf off guard and swiped at her with his right paw, delivering a savage claw swipe right to her face. She screamed as she gripped the three gashes on her face, gushing blood. Now was his chance. He lowered his head and performed a skull bash so hard it dented her armor - Spritzie always said he had a thick head.
Morphing back into troll form, he punted the dwarf to the other end of the battlement. Using his most powerful druidic magic, he commanded the roots that had grown over the long-ruined walls to ensnare and entangle the paladin. The dwarf snarled as she struggled against the vines. “YOU MOTHERFUCKER!!!” she cursed. “WHY WON’T YOU JUST DIE?!?!”
“Because I decided I wasn’t gonna roll over and die just so you can vent your teenage angst.” Jakko replied before spitting on the ground. “I’m still sorry for what I did to your family, but I’ve got my own family to think about.” On that note, he turned around and walked away.
“THIS ISN’T OVER YOU BASTARD!!!” the dwarf shrieked. “I’LL HUNT YOU TO THE ENDS OF AZEROTH!!! DO YOU HEAR ME?!?!” Jakko couldn’t really hear, as he had already leapt off the wall.
Spritzie watched in delight as Rilla threw the draenei around like a big rag doll, her acidic saliva melting parts of his armor. “Spritz!” she heard Jakko cry as he sprinted over in tiger form. “You okay?”
“Watching my babies’ murderer get used as a chew toy? Never better!” Spritzie replied. She winced as she looked at Jakko. “Shit, Jakko. What happened to your face?”
Jakko pawed the right side of his face, where there seemed to be a hand print literally burned into his skin like a brand. “Close encounter with a paladin.” he briefly explained.
Meanwhile, Rilla had finally let the draenei go, sending him flying into a wall. He hit the stone wall hard and collapsed on the ground, spitting out some blue blood. Spritzie giggled evilly as she approached the draenei with murderous intent. “Spritz, we don’t have time for this, we need to find Soo-“
“Shut it!” Spritzie snapped. “This’ll only take a minute anyways…” she said as she lined up her shotgun on the draenei’s head, getting ready for the execution shot. The draenei was on all fours, muttering something the goblin couldn’t quite hear. “Pray all you want - your Naa’ru ain’t gonna save you from a bunch of lead pellets tearing through your flesh.”
That’s when his body started to crackle with electrical energy. “Spritz…I don’t think he’s prayin’ to the naa’ru….” Jakko said.
In a flash of light, a bolt of lightning had seemingly struck the draenei from the sky, and enveloping him in a tornado. His form began to change. His flesh gave way to raw, elemental energy. Spritzie tried to unload her ammo on him, but it the lead seemed to just bounce off of some electrical barrier that now surrounded the shaman. “What’s happening?!” Spritzie demanded.
“He ascended!” Jakko said.
“What the fuck does THAT mean?!” Spritzie asked.
“COWER BEFORE THE TEMPEST STORM!” the no-longer-draenei shouted as it conjured a massive bolt of lightning that nearly missed the two of them.
“We need to get out of here!” Jakko said before grabbing Spritzie by the collar of her shirt in his mouth, like an unruly cub, and throwing her onto his back and running off. She cursed before whistling for Rilla to follow them, which the every-loyal hydra did. The ascendant gave chase however, as a literal tornado chased the two of them across the courtyard.
“Where’s Soozee?!” Jakko yelled.
“I saw her eject before her mech blew up!” Spritzie shouted. “I think she landed somewhere on the Southern Wall!”
“WINDS! OBEY MY COMMANDS!” the ascendent shouted and suddenly the winds around them shifted. The wind was blowing Jakko, Spritzie and Rilla away from the Southern Wall they had been running to, and towards the ascendent’s electrifying grasp.
As they struggled against the winds pulling them towards certain doom, one of Rilla’s heads turned to Spritzie and made eye contact with her. It flicked out her tongue, and nodded. Spritzie gasped.
“Rilla! No!” she shouted too late, as the hydra turned on its heels and lunged at the ascendent. The panicked elemental flew up into his tornado with the hydra hanging on, bolts of lightning flying from both of them. It had distracted the elemental enough that the winds were no longer pulling Jakko and Spritzie towards it.
“Come on!” Jakko said as he morphed into a bat and carried Spritzie over the wall. “We gotta find Soozee!”
“But what about Rilla?!” Spritzie asked. “Jakko, all my other pets died in this battle! Rilla’s all I got left!”
“…Rilla attacked that thing to give us a chance to get away.” Jakko said. “Best way to honor that sacrifice is to take that chance.”
Spritzie had to fight back tears. She couldn’t cry. Not yet, at least. The battle wasn’t over.
But as the Alliance continued to push against the Horde, it sure as hell looked like the battle was over.
“Okay.” Tendalel wheezed, the tentacle still having a firm grip on his neck. His own tentacles, however, were still wrapped around the goblin’s throat and arms. “We both agree this is stupid, right? I mean, if we snap each other’s necks at the same time, than nobody gains anything.”
“Correct.” the goblin said.
“Okay then. So on the count of three, we both let go. Ready?”
“Ready.”
“One….Two…..Three!”
Neither of them let go of the other.
“…Okay, see? Now I’m just disappointed in both of us.”
“You were trying to trick me!” the goblin shrieked.
“So were you!”
“No, I was trying to counter-trick your trick!”
“Counter-tricking is not a real term!”
“Well, it SHOULD BE!”
Tendalel and the goblin stared each other down for a few seconds. “…You know, I just realized. This situation is a perfect micro-chasm of the Horde and Alliance’s current conundrum.” the goblin said.
“How’s that?” the rogue asked.
“We are two opposing forces, ready to kill each other in a heartbeat.” she elaborated. “Neither of us are willing to lower our guard, for fear of destruction from the other. Thus, we are locked in an eternal struggle that will likely end with both of our deaths.”
“Are you seriously giving me that age-old ‘Alliance and Horde aren’t so different’ speech?” Tendalel asked. “Cuz A: I’ve heard it before. And B: It’s kind of inaccurate.”
“What are you talking about?”
“The Horde is WAY worse than the Alliance.”
“You’re invading one of our cities!”
“Only because you literally burned down one of ours!”
“What about Camp Tau-“
“I will snap your neck if you bring up Camp Taurajo.” Tendalel threatened. “Raiding a dinky little tauren village in the middle of nowhere is NOT the same as destroying cities and razing kingdoms.”
“Oh, why all the patriotic fervor anyway?” the goblin demanded. “Just a year ago, you were a blood elf! You were as Horde as I am! Why the sudden Alliance enthusiasm?”
“Because I kinda have to!” Tendalel replied.
“What are you talking about now?” the goblin groaned.
“Look, before I went Void, yeah, I was a regular old blood elf.” Tendalel said. “And like most blood elves, I wasn’t exactly an Alliance fan boy back then. But I knew that if things didn’t work out Horde-side, all I had to do was pop in some blue contact lenses and voila - I’m a High Elf! Yes, High King, I’ve been with the Silver Covenant all my life, never sided with those dirty blood elves, no sir. And if shit hits the fan in Stormwind? Out come the lenses and back to the Horde I go!”
He paused for a breath, which the tentacle only barely allowed him. “But after I started growing tentacles in places I shouldn’t, all of a sudden, I’m exiled from the Horde and I can’t exactly put in green contact lenses and blend in. Thanks to Umbric and his pack of crazies, I actually have a dog in this fight now! If the Horde wins this war, I’m screwed.”
“What are you expecting? Sympathy?” the goblin demanded. “I’ve got a lab back in Kalimdor that contains crucial research on the Old Gods, the ones we should REALLY be fighting! But if the Alliance get their way, the entirety of the Horde will be ejected from Kalimdor and my lab would be! If the Alliance wins this war, I’M screwed!”
That’s when another goblin showed up, riding atop a large bat. “Soozee!” the bat said. That bat talks now? “There you are! We gotta get outta here!”
“I’d love to, but I’m a little pre-occupied at the moment!” the goblin, Soozee was apparently her name, shouted back.
“On it!” the goblin on top of the bat said as she pointed her shotgun at Tendalel.
“Woah there!” Ten shouted. “Lower the shotgun or I snap your friend’s neck!” Just to prove he wasn’t joking around, his tentacle tightened its grip on Soozee’s throat.
“Lower your gun, Spritz!” Soozee wheezed and gouged.
“But-“
“Just do it!”
The other goblin, Spritzie obeyed and lowered her shotgun, giving the void elf a withering look.
“Okay…so here’s what’s gonna happen.” Ten said. “It sounds like you guys just wanna get outta here. So do I. So on the count of three, both me and…Soozee, was it? We let go of each other. Okay….one…..two…..three!”
Tendalel let Soozee go - a risky move on his part, but he didn’t have much of a choice. He had to meet the goblin half-way at least, otherwise they’d still be stuck in this stalemate and nothing gets accomplished. It was a calculated risk.
And as he let go of Soozee, he realized that he wasn’t too good at math, because while he let her go, she didn’t return the favor. “Okay….Soozee…..we had a deal….” Ten wheezed.
“A deal that I never officially agreed to.” Soozee said. “You just said you were gonna let me go, did so, and foolishly presumed I would reciprocate when I’d have no reason to.”
She calmly approached the void elf and removed a dagger from her belt. “Now…give me a reason why I shouldn’t dissect you right here and now…”
“RETREAT!”
All ears turned to the Southern Courtyard, where the unmistakable booming voice of High Chieftain Baine Bloodhoof echoed through the halls of the city. “RETREAT!”
“…Because you’re out of time.” Ten wheezed. “You’ve got two choices now - stay here and torture little old me until the Alliance overrun the city, find you here, and they probably won’t take too kindly to you chopping up one of their top guys. Or, you can do the smart thing, and follow the rest of your Horde to fight another day. Your call.”
Even though Ten couldn’t see Soozee’s eyes through those ridiculous goggles, he could FEEL her hateful gaze punch through them. Finally, her tentacles allowed Ten to drop to the ground. “Good choice, Soo.” Ten said before he disappeared into a spatial rift.
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The Battle For Lordaeron: Part V - Momentum
By the time Jakko and Spritzie made it to the Southern Courtyard, there were plenty of Horde, but no Alliance. Jakko tapped a random dreadguard on the shoulder. “Yo - where’s the Alliance?” he asked.
“They haven’t reached us yet.” the dreadguard replied. “Last I heard, Windseeker Durja and his forces managed to intercept them. They’re buying us time to prepare.
Jakko nodded and jogged over to where Spritzie was - chatting up with Soozee as the latter powered up her void-buster mech.
“There you are.” Spritzie said as she twirled her rifle. “You ready?”
“Ready as I’ll ever be, I guess.” Jakko said as he withdrew his swords. He spied Johriah riding up and down the line atop his deathcharger, addressing his troops.
“Stand ready! The Alliance will be here any minute now!” he shouted.
It was then that a pair of large bats flew towards Johriah on the battle lines, morphing back into troll druids. “Da Alliance be comin’!” one of them shouted.
“Where’s Durja?” Johriah asked.
“Dead. His entire force got wiped out.” the druid said. “We da only ones who got away.”
“He held ‘em back as long as he could.” the other druid said. “But…Lady Proudmoore is wit’ dem! She be powerful and she be pissed and she be comin’ our way!” the other druid panicked. The death knight slapped him with the flat of his sword.
“Get a hold of yourself, man!” Johriah barked. He turned to the rest of his platoon. “Do not lose heart! We still have the advantage here! This is where we shall stand our ground! For the Horde!”
“FOR THE HORDE!” the crowd echoed.
The Horde army waited nervously for the Alliance to arrive, checking and rechecking their weapons. Then, the Alliance poured into the courtyard, charging into the Horde lines. The Horde charged right back. The two armies clashed hard in the middle of the courtyard.
Spritzie was in the thick of it, cutting down Alliance troops with her shotgun, howling in fury. Her riverbeast, Bruce, was impaled by Alliance pikes - a death that did not go unavenged. She spared the animal’s body a brief glance before whirling around on the Alliance and firing more. Sorry, Bruce, but I don’t have time to grieve you. Right now, mama’s got a battle to win…
Elsewhere along the front, Soozee laughed maniacally as her void buster decimated the Alliance soldiers. Humans and dwarves fled before her as the mech hounded them with bullets and void bolts. Soozee paused in her megalomania to check her mech’s readings - the Void Buster had never been pushed this far before, so she worried it might overload. But according to the readings, everything was operating within acceptable parameters. Satisfied that there was no immediate danger of that, she resumed her maniacal cackling.
As Jakko disemboweled a particularly unlucky kaldorei ranger, he paused and looked around, taking stock of the battle. He could see massive explosions of fire and ice on the other side of the courtyard - Jaina Proudmoore, no doubt. Jakko had no intention of getting that close to the legendary mage - she was someone else’s problem as far as he was concerned. Despite Proudmoore’s presence, the Horde was holding the line surprisingly well. Maybe this battle could still be won, but Jakko remembered what happened last time he got his hopes up. He was still ready to grab his sisters and make a break for it the moment things go tits up.
And it seemed that moment was upon them, as a large, dark portal suddenly appeared on the Alliance’s side of the battle, elves leaping out and joining the fray, along with several gnomish war machines. “Oh fuck, are those what I think they are…?” he muttered to himself. And sure enough, the way they ‘glowed’ black, as oxymoronic as that sounds, made it impossible to mistake the newcomers for anything else.
“Void elves…” Soozee growled as her mech stomped up to Jakko’s side, confirming the druid’s fear. Her machine’s wrists twirled and its claws flexed, ready to grab something. “The Alliance must be getting desperate if they’re calling in THEM. Damn the High King, he doesn’t realize he’s playing with fire!”
This was bad - between the gnomish ordinance and the void elves’ unnatural powers, the Horde forces were getting torn to shreds. If somebody didn’t do something about them and soon, it wouldn’t be long before the Alliance breaks through the defenses and wins.
Jakko had to do something.
“Keep those void suckers away from Spritzie! I got an idea!” Jakko said as he morphed into a bat and flew off.
“Roger that!” Soozee said as her void-buster’s engines revved up. She’d been meaning to study the ren’dorei for months now, and this was the perfect opportunity to ‘collect some samples.’
“Peekaboo!” Tendalel shouted as he appeared behind a tauren that Marbelma had been locked in melee with, thrusting both daggers into the massive creature’s spine before it fell over like a great felled tree. “Hey kid - miss me?”
“Tendalel?” Marbelma asked. “What are you doin’ here? I thought SI:7 was done with this battle.”
“SI:7 was, but not the ren’dorei.” Ten answered. “After you guys started assaulting the main gate, Alleria herself rallied the void elves together to form a cavalry force, should things go tits up.” He then looked around the courtyard. “Which evidently, they have.”
Indeed, even with Proudmoore by their side, the Horde wasn’t budging an inch. The Alliance was beginning to run out of steam and the attack would’ve failed. But with the timely arrival of the ren’dorei, the Alliance forces had been granted a second wind. They’ll yet win this fight!
It was then that Tendalel noticed a large, modified goblin shredder charing into the ren’dorei forces, trying to grab someone in its claws. He patted the young dwarf on the head. “Keep your head down, kid.” he said as he disappeared into shadow - he’d always had a talent for stealth as a blood elf, but the talent was taken to new heights by his recently-granted powers over darkness.
He leapt onto the mech’s back and ripped off a panel, looking inside at all the internal circuitry. “Okay, uh…..This looks important!” he said as he grabbed a red wire and ripped it out. The mech didn’t cease its assault, but the canopy DID open to reveal its goblin pilot. Awesome, now he just needed to climb inside, kill the pilot, and presto - no more mech. He climbed up the mech’s back…
Only to get hit by a void bolt its pilot had somehow conjured. The force of the impact knocked him off the mech and tumbling across the ground, but the rogue was quick to recover. The goblin turned her mech around to stare him down.
“You, my friend, have just volunteered to be my new test subject!” the pilot shouted. Tendalel didn’t know what that meant, but it probably wasn’t anything good. This was confirmed by the machine gun on the mech’s wrist unloading on him - he ripped open a spatial rift to get out of the way and into cover behind a fallen pillar.
“You think your void powers will save you?!” the goblin shrieked. “Well, you void elves aren’t the only ones with power over the Void!” she fired a round of missiles at the pillar, obliterating it. Ten leapt just before the missiles detonated, but he felt the blast area tinged with an energy that he was, by now, intimately familiar with.
“Were those VOID missiles?” he shouted back.
“Yes!” the goblin replied.
“I didn’t even know you could MAKE missiles with Void!” Tendalel shouted.
“Of course you don’t!” the goblin replied. “I’ve been studying the Void for YEARS! I had to WORK for my power over it, while you were just HANDED your power on a SILVER PLATTER!”
“I sense a bit of jealousy.” Tendalel said.
“You void elves are like children with guns!” Soozee replied. “You’ve no true RESPECT for the Void’s powers!”
“I respect it enough to know how to do this.” Ten quipped before disappearing into another spatial rift.
“Hey! Stop doing that!” the goblin demanded.
While Soozee was keeping the void elves busy, Jakko flew up to the bastion where Stoneheart landed. The hippogryph was still there, and even still had those five bombs attached! Perfect! He morphed back into his troll form and mounted the beast and snapped the reigns. The feathermane cried before hopping off his perch and flying back to the courtyard.
Jakko flew over a crowd of void elves firing void bolts at the Horde forces where he dropped one of the bombs. The bomb detonated in a shower of fire, shrapnel, and bits of purple goo that used to be ren’dorei. The druid cheered. “Take that, shadow-suckers!”
Satisfied with having taken a good chunk out of the ren’dorei’s numbers, Jakko flew over to rest of the Alliance front, dropping another bomb, this time on the regular Alliance infantry that were coming in Spritzie’s direction. Another detonation and bits of armor and gore erupted into the air. “Spritzie! Get outta there!” Jakko shouted.
“No!” Spritzie shouted back. “If I run now, they all died for nothing! I’m seeing this through to the end!”
The ground shook with the force of the explosions that killed the ren’dorei and Stormwind footmen. “Up there!” someone shouted, pointing to a hippogryph up above them. It dropped a third bomb on top of a dwarven steam tank, destroying it. “Is that friendly fire from one of the Teldrassil riders?”
“That’s no night elf…” Marbelma growled. It was that troll that escaped her during the bombing run. The one that killed Cinderwing. Seems like he decided to finish what he started. She looked around, looking for an elevated position - she spotted a wall that was partially collapsed. Perfect!
She ran for the collapsed wall and started hopping up. One wouldn’t think of dwarves as being particularly agile climbers, but one doesn’t survive long in the mountains without being sure-footed. The dwarf hopped, skipped, and jumped her way up the pile of rubble onto the battlements, where a squadron of undead archers were giving the Horde covering fire.
Marbelma swung her hammer in a wide, horizontal arc, blasting a wave of fiery light at the archers, reducing them to ash before they even realized she was there. She stood on top of the bastions and watched the hippogryph. “Come on…come on…” she muttered as she conjured a hammer of light in her hand.
…Now!
She tossed the hammer at the hippogryph.
Jakko’s little bombing campaign was going well enough. He only had two bombs left though, so he had to choose his targets-
CLANG!
A glowing hammer flew out of nowhere and struck Stoneheart right on the head. The unconscious hippogryph began falling like a brick, towards one of the walls that separated the southern courtyard from the rest of the city. The hippogryph landed on the wall with a crash, skidding across the floor until finally slowing to a stop halfway along the wall.
Jakko growled out a few choice curses in goblin. He took he landing hard and nearly everything hurt. He rolled sat up and rolled his shoulders trying to soothe his aching muscles. He checked on his hippogryph. “Stoneheart?” he asked. “You okay?”
He wasn’t okay.
Stoneheart’s beak hung open while his eyes fogged. He checked his neck for a pulse, only to find the neck was broken. The flying hammer didn’t knock him out. It killed him. It killed a noble beast that had been serving him since the Cataclysm.
“Sorry, buddy.” he said as he closed the beast’s eyes.
Piksap. Marbelma heard that word before. The first time she heard this troll said it, she thought it couldn’t possibly be him. But after hearing it again, clearer this time without the din of battle to drown it out, it was unmistakable.
For the first time in years, her blood ran cold.
The troll stood up and looked over his shoulder, staring down the dwarf paladin, who now had her hammer out. “…Okay.” the troll said in decent common In a goblin accent, no less. No doubts now, he was definitely the one. “I get it. I kill your hippogryph, you kill mine. So, we even?”
“Not even close!” Marbelma shouted. “Ten years ago, you ruined my life! And now, as a reward for my faithful service to honor and duty, the Light has blessed me with this - my chance for revenge.”
“…The fuck are you talking about?” the troll asked.
Marbelma forcefully removed her helmet and tossed it aside, staring down the troll with a hate-filled glare.
As soon as the dwarf removed her helmet and revealed her face, his mind suddenly flooded with memories. Memories of a far more evil life.
It was back when he was a rogue, long before he heard Shirvallah’s call. He’d been hired to assassinate a captain of the Ironforge Mountaineers. He infiltrated his cabin in Dun Morogh and killed him. Two more dwarves bore witness though, so Jakko had to kill them too.
…And there was one more dwarf. A girl. Couldn’t have been older than twelve years old. Scared out of her mind, seeing the big scary troll standing over the corpses of her family. Paladin came in out of fucking nowhere, and Jakko bailed. It was one of his messier jobs.
…It was her. That same girl. Ten years older and clad in armor, but there she was.
“Just my luck.” Jakko commented aloud. He pulled down his hood and face mask, figuring that he should return the dwarf’s courtesy and reveal his own face. “I always figured one of my previous mistakes would come back to bite my ass one day. Gotta admit though, this isn’t quite how I pictured it.”
“Funny, because it’s exactly how I pictured it.” the dwarf replied. “You and I, meeting on the field of battle where you and your damned Horde finally meet your end by MY hands…”
“…Have you been practicing that speech in front of a mirror?” Jakko asked as he pulled out his swords.
“I’ve been practicin’ it for ten damn years…” the dwarf snarled before charging.
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The Battle For Lordaeron: Part II - Strategic Bombing
Marbelma had been polishing her hammer for the last ten minutes. Until the order for battle came, there wasn’t much else to do save for nervously watching the walls of Lordaeron, wondering when the Horde would finally get tired of waiting for the Alliance to attack and pour out all at once.
The atmosphere in Brill was one of tension. More and more heroes of the Alliance poured into Brill, the hour to launch the final assault growing nearer and nearer. Engineers, mostly gnomes, were running to and fro, tinkering with war machines of all shapes. Not just Ironforge siege tanks, but also Darnassus glaive throwers and even Auchenai ballistas. Not only that, but the engineers had been busy building up the all-important siege towers, which would be crucial in assaulting the city of the dead.
Marbelma’s gaze eventually drifted away from the Undercity gates and over to a building that was heavily guarded by several knights. The building was half bombed-out, so Marbelma could easily see the two kings. King Greymane, the leader of the worgen and the King of Gilneas, and King Wrynn, High King of the Alliance. The two of them were hovering over a map of the area, no doubt planning their attack.
Treasonous as it might’ve been to even think such a thing, Marbelma wasn’t so sure about the Alliance’s new High King. Anduin had always been too much of a softie, too eager to choose peace over war. Now, credit where it’s due, he’s trying. He ordered this siege to begin with, after all, and is even wearing a fancy new set of armor so he could join his troops in battle.
But Marbelma wasn’t fooled. She doubted many within the Alliance were. It was all one big tough guy act, meant to hide his weakness. Unlike his father, Anduin didn’t have the stomach for war, a flaw that the Horde are sure to exploit somewhere down the road.
“Ah - I was wondering when I’d find you.” said a very familiar voice, snapping the dwarf from her thoughts. Marbelma looked up and was starstruck. Clad in plate armor adorned with gems, and even wielding one such larger gem as her hammer, was a warm face smiling down on her - Rhyliaandra. Her mentor. Her hero.
“Rhyliaandra.” Marbelma breathed as she stood up rigidly. “I thought you were injured at the Battle of Darkshore.”
“She was.” Roniaar said as he appeared by his sister’s side. “You’ve still got a bit of a limp, Rhyli.”
Rhyliaandra scoffed. “The final battle between Alliance and Horde? After all these years? It will take far more than a limp to keep me from this fight.
She turned to Marbles with a small smile. “So how have you been? I have not seen your face since the Tomb of Sargeras.”
“I’ve been great!” Marbelma said. “I’ve joined me own guild, made some friends, and best of all - I’m a full paladin now like you!” she paused. “Hey - this is the first time we’ll be heading into battle as equals!” Marbelma was finding it difficult not to completely revert back to being twelve-years-old, she was so excited to fight by Rhyliaandra’s side.
“Not exactly.” the vindicator said. It was at that moment that a human scout trotted up to her and saluted.
“Commander, Siege Tower Foxtrot is almost done!” he reported.
“Ah, that brings us to six. Thank you, soldier. As you were.” Rhyliaandra replied. As the human trotted off, the draenei smirked at her old squire. “I’ve been promoted to Field Commander. I now have an entire army at my beck and call.”
Marbelma chuckled. “Well, it’s about bloody time. Light knows you’ve seen enough action to have earned a promotion.”
The reunion was interrupted, however, by the sound of bells. The bell towers from the church was one of the few buildings that hadn’t been bombed out. “Incoming Horde! Incoming Horde!”
All eyes turned to the Undercity, but saw no soldiers charging out of the gates. Instead, they saw an aerial threat heading towards them. Wyverns and proto-drakes and of course, bats of every size. Rhyliaandra took a telescope out of her satchel and took a closer look. “Those are bombs strapped to their saddles!” she looked around. “It’s a bombing run! Gryphon riders, to your beasts! Everyone else, take cover!”
As Alliance forces scrambled, Marbelma rushed over to her hippogryph and mounted it, getting ready to take off and engage the Horde in aerial combat. It wasn’t something she hadn’t really done before, fought from the air, but she damned sure wasn’t going to do nothing. “Marbelma! Wait!”
“I’m not a little kid anymore, Rhyliaandra!” Marbelma shouted, preemptively cutting off whatever lecture her old mentor had planned. “I’m ready! I’m gonna take those bastards-“
“You should wear this.” the vindicator said as she tossed Marbelma a red plated helmet. The dwarf weighed the helmet in her hand and looked up to the elder paladin, who only smirked knowingly. Marbelma smirked back and nodded before putting it on.
“Roniaar?” Rhyliaandra asked.
“Don’t worry.” The shaman said as he mounted his own flying mount, a wind drake. “She won’t be flying alone.”
“Good.” the vindicator replied. “Burn them, Marbelma.”
“It’s what I’m good at…” Marbelma growled. She kicked her hippogryph, prompting it to take to the air, Roniaar’s wind drake not far behind.
“Here comes the welcoming committee!” cried a Highmountain tauren riding an eagle. Sure enough, an air force about the same size as theirs was heading right towards them - mostly gryphons, but a splash of drakes, hippogryphs, and other flying creatures as well.
“Shit…” Jakko muttered under his breath. Yeah, there’s some hippogryphs in that group. Here’s hoping one of these undead assholes doesn’t mistake him for a night elf and take a swing at him. In fact, just to make sure that doesn’t happen, he reached into his bag and pulled out a Horde banner, which he tied to Stoneheart’s saddle. Jakko’s way of telling any murder-happy orcs or forsaken ‘I’m on your side, assholes.’
As the Horde air force drew closer, Marbelma tied an Alliance banner to the saddle of her hippogryph. It was made of ember silk - any other kind of fabric would get burned up by Cinderwing’s flames. She withdrew her hammer and twirled it around. She’d been waiting all day for this…
And then, the clash. Talons raked against enemy wings as riders took shots at each other, firing arrows or fireballs, or failing that, getting up close and personal. Either flying by or, more rarely, the mounts getting into a scrap.
Like Marbelma, whose hippogryph just got into a scrape with a Horde hippogryph. An aerial duel to the death! Marbelma couldn’t believe her good luck!
Jakko couldn’t believe his shit luck. Of COURSE one of the Alliance hippogryphs would choose to tango with his own. A FLAMING hippogryph, no less. The two hippogryphs cawed and scratched each other with their talons as they hovered in the air, Stoneheart being at a slight disadvantage on account of the other one being on fire. The other hippogryph’s rider, a dwarf, raised her hammer over her head and tried to bring it down on Jakko’s head.
“Pikskap!” he cursed in goblin as he took out his swords and crossed them, blocking the hammer blow before it made contact with his skull. Is the hammer on fire too? Really? Did this paladin seriously have a theme going on?
‘Pikskap?’ Why did that phrase sound so familiar…..no! Focus!
Marbelma growled as the troll caught her hammer mid-swing with his blades. She growled more as she tried to push down, putting all her weight onto the hammer. She smiled as she felt the troll’s strength getting overwhelmed by her own.
Okay, the dwarf is stronger than he is. This isn’t good. The hammer is getting closer to his face. He kicked Stoneheart, who broke off from the other hippogryph by dipping down and flying underneath the flaming bird.
“Oi!” Marbelma shouted as she chased the troll through the air. “Get back here!”
“Bite me!” Jakko shouted back as he directed his hippogryph towards one of the siege towers. As he passed, he pulled the pin on one of the bombs and dropped it. He looked over his shoulder to confirm the kill…
Only to see one of the gnomes toss the bomb off the tower before it detonated. It exploded in mid-air, singing the tower but otherwise not doing much damage. He cursed again, realizing he’d have to make another go around.
“They’re targeting the siege towers!” Rhyliaandra shouted. “Riflemen! Archers! Shoot those monsters out of the sky!”
On the vindicator’s orders, the air was filled with arrows, bullets and crossbow bolts of every conceivable length and calibre, desperate to shoot the Horde flyers down before they could do any real damage.
“Yipe!” Spritzie yiped as her cloud serpent, Spritzie Jr., narrowly avoided a particularly large arrow. With a whistle, she directed the serpent to actually fly over a squad of archers. She pulled the pin on one of her bombs and dropped it.
Boom! It detonated and meaty chunks of former archer flew all over the battlefield, earning an archetypically goblin cackle from the hunter. She flew over another archer and dropped another bomb. Followed by another!
After bombing three squads of archers, she flew for a siege tower and dropped a bomb right down the chute into the interior. With a fiery explosion near the bottom of it, the tower collapsed in on itself, gnomes near the top jumping off, desperately trying to save themselves. Only a few succeeded.
“There! The big one!” Rhyliaandra shouted as she pointed her hammer to a large jade cloud serpent raining hell on her troops. “Shoot it down!”
The crew of the auchenai ballista loaded the massive crystal-tipped spear into the launcher. The gunner took careful aim. The cloud serpent was proving a difficult target, on account of the way it twisted to and fro through the air in an unpredictable pattern. Though it WAS heading in the general direction of another siege tower, so maybe if she lead the shot a bit…
The gunner pulled the lever and fired. A moment later, she cheered. “Direct hit!”
With a jolt, Spritzie Jr. suddenly stopped in mid-air. Spritzie pulled on the reins, but for some reason, the serpent wasn’t responding. In fact, it was suddenly falling fast, unresponsive to Spritzie’s whistles. She let out a different whistle.
Spritzie and Spritzie Jr. hadn’t flown into the battle alone. Angel, Spritzie’s wolfhawk, wasn’t far behind. Spritzie jumped from the serpent onto the wolfhawk, then watched in mute horror as her cloud serpent crashed into a patch of forest just outside Brill.
“Spritzie Jr.!” she shouted, instructing the wolfhawk to fly towards the downed serpent. She found her under the shade of a tree, surrounded by thick bushes, sheltered from the rest of the battle. She rushed over with her first aid kit. “It’s okay baby, Mama’s here…” she cooed as she petted the serpent’s mane.
But the serpent didn’t respond. At all. Not even a whine of pain. She checked her eyes - clouded. She checked her chest and listened for breath. None.
And that’s when she saw it.
The massive javelin impaled in Spritzie Jr.’s chest.
The young goblin was in shock. Her Cloud Serpent. The one she had raised herself since she was an egg. With beautiful jade scales and a red mane, not unlike her own green skin and red hair. The creature who had been her noble flying steed for the better half of a decade.
Spritzie Jr. was dead. Slain.
She broke down. Not since Rikko’s death in the first wave of Legion invasions had she cried this much.
Jakko started to panic. He had seen Spritzie successfully destroy a siege tower, but he also saw her cloud serpent get shot down. She was able to save herself with a backup flying mount (only she would have a backup flying mount), but she was now in the brush where he couldn’t see her. Were there Alliance down there? Had she been captured? Worse?
He wasn’t going to find the answers to these questions with this damn dwarf up his ass though.
He grabbed one of the bombs and, pulling the pin, chucked it at the dwarf.
Marbelma yiped as she swatted the bomb away with her hammer, the explosive detonating behind her. The troll must’ve been getting desperate to shake her off, if he was wasting his payload just to get rid of her.
“PISS OFF ALREADY!” the troll shouted in common (surprising - how would a troll know common?) as he chuckled another bomb at the dwarf, who once again swatted it out of the air. She grinned a mad grin as her hippogryph got closer.
Jakko wasn’t sure what was scarier. Spritzie’s possible fate, or the fact that this dwarf looked like she was about to EAT him. Chucking bombs at her barely even phased her, so he didn’t know how the hell he was going to shake her off. He supposed it was time to do something stupid. He leaned into Stoneheart’s ear. “Find Spritzie, get her back to the city.” he instructed. The hippogryph nodded in understanding. He then stood up on his saddle…
Marbelma was a bit surprised by the way the troll was starting to stand up on his saddle as she closed in on him. What was he doing?
Marbelma was even MORE surprised when he leapt off the saddle, turned into a large tiger in mid-air, and latched onto Cinderwing’s body, sinking his claws into her feathery mane. “Oi! Get off!” Marbelma tried to swing her hammer at the tiger, but the tiger snarled and slashed at her face - she would’ve lost an eye if it weren’t for the helmet.
Before she could think of a new plan, that’s when the troll-tiger-thing plunged its huge fangs into Cinderwing’s neck, the hippogryph’s pained cry turning into a gurgle. “No!” the dwarf shrieked as she tried to use her own fists to beat the tiger that was killing the beast she had raised from an egg.
But it was too late - the hippogryph’s wings went limp as the creature was quickly losing blood, oxygen, and consciousness. The tiger then leapt off, and morphed into a bat in mid-air. Marbelma didn’t see where the druid went before she and Cinderwing crashed in the forest.
“Fucking finally.” Jakko muttered as he flew into the patch of forest where Spritzie crashed, morphing back into his troll form as he landed. With that paladin finally off his back, he can make sure Spritzie was okay. “Spritzie? You here?” he called out. He knew it was dangerous to shout this far behind enemy lines, but he needed to find her ASAP.
Thankfully, finding her didn’t take too long. He found her with her two mounts, the cloud serpent and the wolfhawk. His hippogryph was there too, looking at Spritzie in a concerned way. Was she…crying? “Spritz? What’s goin’ on?” Jakko asked as he approached. He saw the answer to his question as he approached, though - there was a javelin impaled through the cloud serpent’s chest. “Oh shit…Spritz…”
“She was my baby…” she sniffed. “I raised her from an egg and….and they killed her! They killed my baby!”
“Okay, come on.” Jakko said as he tried to help his little sister to her feet. “Cryin’ won’t fix nuthin’, and we can’t stay here.”
“Wait….wait, the bombs!” Spritzie said as she started frantically unhooking the bombs from her serpent’s saddle. “We gotta finish the bombing run!”
“Forget it - we’re not goin’ out there a second time.” Jakko replied. “Those Alliance assholes are out for blood. I wasted two of my own bombs just trying to get some psycho dwarf off my ass. We’re heading back to the city where it’s safer.”
“We HAVE to finish!” Spritzie shouted. “Otherwise Spritzie Jr. died for nothing!”
“She DIDN’T die for nuthin’! You and her took out a whole siege tower, didn’t ya?!” Jakko argued. “I’d call that a point for Team Horde!”
He grabbed the two remaining bombs from Spritzie and affixed them to his hippogryph’s saddle, effectively replacing the two he tossed at the dwarf earlier. “We’re both gonna fly back to the city - I’ll drop bombs on whatever targets of opportunity we fly over.”
“But I can-“
“Don’t argue, Spritz!” Jakko snapped. “Just do it!”
The goblin shot Jakko a hateful glare before hopping atop her wolfhawk and flying back toward the Undercity.
Marbelma groaned as she tried to sit up, then immediately regretted it as she gripped her arm. She must’ve landed on it when she and Cinderwing crashed.
She then gasped. Cinderwing! “Cinder! Where are you, girl?” Marbelma called out. She groaned as she got up - nearly everything hurt. After few minutes of searching, she eventually found her hippogryph.
She wished she hadn’t.
Cinderwing laid on the ground, motionless. Her wings bent at unnatural angles, blood leaking freely from her neck. Marbelma had seen enough corpses in her day to know when something was dead, and as she gazed into the feathermane’s glazed eyes, she knew that Cinderwing was dead.
She froze where she stood. Her brain was having trouble believing what she was seeing. Cinderwing? Dead? It didn’t…feel right. It didn’t seem real. It couldn’t be real. It couldn’t…be….
That’s when she collapsed onto her knees and cried. She hadn’t cried this much since that night…
“Marbles?!” called a voice that came through the brush. “Marbles, are you - “ Roniaar’s voice paused as Marbelma heard the shaman stop next to him. “Oh….Marbles…” he said as he saw the dead hippogryph. He gently wrapped his giant arms around the dwarf, trying his best to comfort her. She didn’t fight it.
When Marbelma ran out of tears, Roniaar went to work mending her wounds. Though Wind was Roniaar’s preferred element, he was adept enough with Water to be able to heal her arm. “Come on - let’s head back to Brill.” Roniaar said as he helped Marbelma up.
“Right.” Marbelma said, taking a breath to try and steady herself. “Regroup with the others. Battle’s not over yet.”
“Maybe it should-“
“No!” Marbelma snapped. She turned back to Cinderwing’s body, but only for a moment, as she looked back up to Roniaar. “I’m finishing what I started! I’ve been waitin’ for this day all my life! It’s what I was made for! I’m not going anywhere!”
Roniaar backed off from the dwarf as the fire within her soul was suddenly reignited. “…Alright, Marbelma.” Roniaar conceded. “But we need to stay together.”
“Fine.” Marbelma conceded as she forged her way out of the forest. “Now which way’s Brill?”
It was then that they heard it - marching. The two adventurers headed towards the sound, eventually emerging out of the forest back into the open field. That’s when they saw nearly the entire Alliance army marching as one towards the gates of the Undercity.
“Looks like we’re not going back to Brill.” Roniaar said. Marbelma took off like a shot towards the army to join in the assault. “Marbles! Wait for me!” the draenei called as he gave chase. How was that dwarf so fast? Her legs were so short!
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The Battle For Lordaeron: Part I - Battleplans
War horns echoed through Orgrimmar for the umpteenth time, summoning every able-bodied champion, adventurer, hero, mercenary, or miscellaneous within earshot to Grommash Hold. An ocean away, the Undercity was under attack. In retaliation for the burning of Teldrassil, a massive Alliance fleet had landed on Lordaeron’s northern shores, deadset on dethroning the Banshee Queen once and for all. Thus, Sylvanas is calling on every champion of the Horde to rush to the Undercity’s defense, for it is not only her seat of power and a crucial Horde foothold in the Eastern Kingdoms, it is the home to the Forsaken - a pillar of the Horde for years.
The line outside Grommash Hold was long. Everyone had a different reason for answering the warchief’s call. Some were genuinely loyal to Sylvanas, seeing her as worthy of the mantle. Others were loyal to the Forsaken, if not Sylvanas herself - the Forsaken had proven their commitment to the Horde time and time again, so many viewed it as only honorable to return the favor. And some were just happy to finally have an excuse to do away with all this “greater good” nonsense and just smash some Alliance skulls.
It was in this line that Jakko, Spritzie and Soozee Boomsprocket found themselves standing. Being champions of the Horde themselves (seems like the word “champion” has a loose definition these days), they too answered the call.
“Still can’t believe this is actually happening.” the goblin-raised troll druid (yeah, it’s a long story) muttered to himself as he looked up and down the line of Horde volunteers, which seemed to extend all the way into the Drag. “First Teldrassil burns down, now this.”
“You sound surprised that Alliance and Horde are fighting again.” Soozee observed.
“Well yeah, but usually it’s just a glorified slapfight over resources in some box canyon in the middle of nowhere, or somethin’ stupid like that.” Jakko explained. “But this? A capital city burns down and another one is under a massive attack? Shit hasn’t gotten this bad since the Siege of Orgrimmar.”
“Worse, actually.” Soozee replied matter-of-factly. “After the Siege, the Alliance allowed us to keep our city. I doubt they’re going to show us that kindness a second time.”
Jakko scoffed. “Fuck, man. We didn’t even wait for the Legion’s corpses to get cold before we started going at each other’s throats again. Then again, I should’ve seen this comin’, with Queen Bitch as our warchief.” Jakko commented.
“Hey!” said a Forsaken in front of the siblings. “Show a little respect to your warchief, dog!”
“Bite me, deader!” Jakko snarled. The Forsaken stomped over to the troll, but a tauren stepped in.
“Alright, break it up!” he said. “Save it for the Alliance.” With that, tenuous order returned to the line.
“Hey Jakko - if you hate Sylvanas so much, why you even in this line?” Spritzie asked. “I mean, technically, everyone here is a volunteer. You don’t really HAVE to rush to Lordaeron’s defense, yanno.”
“I’m not stupid, Spritz.” Jakko replied. “I know I’ve got a dog in this fight. If the Horde goes down, we go down.” He was at the Siege, all those years ago. He remembered Varian’s promise - that if the Horde failed to uphold honor, the Alliance would end them. After Teldrassil, he had no doubt that Anduin was planning to make good on his father’s promise.
He smirked at his baby sister. “Besides, you’re goin’. And someone’s gotta watch your back.”
A few years ago, Spritzie would’ve smiled at that. But not this time. She gave Jakko an oddly neutral look, then turned her eyes back toward the front of the line, barely even acknowledging the troll. Spritzie had been like this for a while now, ever since the Legion War started. She’d grown more distant, more prone to running off on her own, rather than faithfully stick by Jakko’s side like she used to. He wondered if it had something to do with Rikko’s death. He remembered that it hit her hard.
Slowly but surely, the line would move forward. Each volunteer champion was quickly assessed for battle readiness before being let through the portal to Undercity. The three siblings were well-equipped for battle. Jakko was wearing his usual leather gear, decorated with tiger’s claws and teeth, his two druidic swords strapped to his back. He sat atop his hippogryph, Stoneheart, who stoically kept its eyes facing forward.
Spritzie was dressed in her tight mail gear (which showed way too much skin in Jakko’s opinion) and was carrying her shotgun that she’d been using since Argus, as well as a small army of beasts, which took up a large portion of the line, much to the chagrin of other Horde champions in the line. The largest of which was her jade cloud serpent, Spritzie Jr., who she raised herself from an egg during her time in Pandaria.
Finally, Soozee was dressed in her signature “Void Suit”, and armed with a dagger/taser/thingy strapped to her belt as well as her void detector. She sat in the driver’s seat of a large mech that she had dubbed “The Void Buster.” Yet another product of her mad experiments with the Void. Speaking of which…
“You sure you’re gonna need that void detector, Soo?” Jakko asked. “Don’t see how much good it’ll do in the middle of a battle.”
“If certain rumors are to be believed, then trust me, this detector will DEFINITELY come in handy.” Soozee cryptically replied.
Jakko sighed as the line moved, Grommash Hold getting closer and closer. He didn’t really know how this day was going to end, but he knew one thing for sure - he wasn’t going to let anything happen to his sisters.
The first thing that Marbelma noticed was the smoke, which hit her nostrils like a steam tank. Tirisfal’s shoreline defenses fell quickly, and it was easy to see why - the beach was littered with black, smoking craters, as was much of the land further inland. As the Alliance landing force marched towards Brill, she looked up to Roniaar, her adopted uncle (yeah, it’s a long story), who was riding by her side.
“So, we came here to liberate Lordaeron, yes?” he asked.
“Aye.” Marbelma replied. A nearby farmhouse, ruined by bombardment, suddenly collapsed into a massive pile of bricks and wood.
“Then why does it look like we’re destroying Lordaeron more than anything?” the draenei asked.
“Lordaeron was destroyed a long time ago.” Marbelma argued. “It’s a rotten old house that needs to be torn down before we can build something new.”
“Hm.” Roniaar hummed. Tygoon, the wind drake he rode, huffed as it made its away across the ruined land, anxious from something brewing in the air. Marbelma’s hippogryph, Cinderwing, ruffled its feathers, scattering embers to the wind, as it got nervous. All of the mounts knew that battle was drawing near.
They eventually arrived in Brill. The Forsaken Town was almost entirely bombed out, the landing force having made a command post out of the town’s ruins. The statue of Sylvanas Windrunner that once stood proudly in the town square was now in pieces all over the ground. “We move out in twenty!” a worgen commander cried out. The group split up to make their final, last-minute preparations. Marbelma and Roniaar spotted a familiar face in the crowd, standing near a table filled with weapons, rations and other supplies, and directed their mounts towards him.
“Hey kids.” the void elf greeted as his two fellow Servitors approached. He was dressed in purple leather armor, bone-like spikes mounted on his shoulder pads and the lower half of his face obscured by a mask made from shal’dorei silk - a souvenir from his time on the Broken Isles, no doubt. Strapped to his belt was a pair of evil-looking daggers - straight edged with tips at the end, making the blades effective at both stabbing and chopping. But what really made the blades unnerving was they constantly exuded a strange, purple mist.
“Tendalel.” Marbelma curtly agreed. “How did the recon mission go?”
“Not great.” Tendalel said as he spilled out the contents of a sack on the table - the severed head of a night elf. “I tried to tell him. I told him ‘Look, buddy, I used to be a blood elf, I used to make business trips to the Undercity every other weekend, so I KNOW FOR A FACT that the Apothecarium is THIS WAY.’ But no, he told me to shut up, called me a void-addled abomination, and then lead the entire team into the Magic Quarter where Horde reinforcements were portaling in by the hundreds, and got himself decapitated by a big angry orc.”
He picked up the severed head and looked into its dead eyes. “You see what happens? You see what happens when you don’t listen to your good friend Ten?”
“Wow. Guess you could say he lost his head in there.” Roniaar quipped.
“Roniaar, a man died.” Marbelma deadpanned.
“Basically, that operation is officially FUBAR.” Tendalel said as he casually tossed the head over his shoulder. “Undercity is crawling with Horde now. Sending anymore SI:7 down there would be suicide.”
“Were you at least able to sabotage anything?” Marbelma asked.
The rogue shrugged. “I smashed a few important-looking bottles on my way out, but that’s about it.”
“So it seems we’ll have to win this fight on the surface, then.” Roniaar concluded. “Storm the ruins of Capital City.”
“What about the sewers?” Marbelma asked. “Can’t we get into the Undercity that way? It’s how Varian got in last time the Alliance was here.”
“No dice.” Tendalel said. “The Forsaken collapsed the entrance to the sewer tunnel long before we even got here. It would take days to dig through all that. Days we don’t have.” he turned and pointed to the Ruins of Lordaeron. “Everything that’s gonna happen today is gonna happen within THOSE walls.”
The void elf then walked away. He climbed atop his sable ruin strider, a purple talbuk courtesy of the Argussian Reach. “Where are you goin’?” Marbelma asked.
“Debriefing and hopefully heading back home - SI:7’s done all it can do for this battle. Good luck, kids! You’re gonna need it!” Tendalel called before he snapped the reins and the talbuk trotted forward.
“Take care of yourself, Shadestep.” Marbelma said. “It’s what you’re good at.”
“I’m VERY good at it, thank you for noticing!” Tendalel replied, choosing to take the insult as a complement as the talbuk disappeared into the crowd.
Marbelma turned her angry gaze to the ruins of Lordaeron City, where the Horde was holed up. She then looked around and watched as the Alliance constructed siege towers, tuned up the steam tanks, and sharpened their blades. She heard her shaman companion sigh. “After Pandaria, I had hoped that Alliance and Horde would never again clash like this.” he opined.
“The peace was never destined to last.” Marbelma opined right back. “Don’t let your feelings cloud your judgement, Roniaar.”
“My feelings aren’t-“
“Bullshit.” Marbelma cussed. “I know about your old orc girlfriend.”
Roniaar looked at Marbelma, shocked. “How did-“
“Rhyliaandra told me a while back.” Marbelma said.
Roniaar grimaced at the dwarf. “You don’t know the whole story.”
“You and some Shadowmoon shaman start shaggin’ back when you were a Rangari, she disappears one day, and the Horde start their war with the draenei not long after.” Marbelma said. “I miss anything?”
Roniaar had no response. He just turned his gaze to the gates to the Undercity. “Aw, what’s wrong? Afraid ye might have to fight yer old girlfriend today?” Marbelma taunted.
“She’s gone.” Roniaar darkly replied. “I’ve looked. In Kalimdor, in Outland, no one knows what happened to her since those dark days. She probably died a long time ago.”
Roniaar turned his gaze back on Marbelma and gave her a withering look that surprised her. All her life, she had known Roniaar as nothing but happy-go-lucky, so the sight of him angry like this was…unnerving. “Do not mistake my lamentations for hesitation…or weakness.”
With that, he puled the reins on his drake, and the two parted ways for the moment. Marbelma scoffed. “Whatever.” Roniaar’s problem was that he was an idealist - someone who still believed, despite all the atrocities that happened, that peace could still exist between Alliance and Horde.
Daelin Proudmoore said it best. Peace is like a dream. Beautiful. Ephemeral. Unobtainable.
And eventually, you gotta wake the hell up.
One portal jump later, the Boomsprockets found themselves in the Undercity. They were immediately hit by the stench of death - not the regular, slightly undeath that was the Undercity’s usual scent, but rather fresh death. The death of the living. The floors were stained with freshly-spilled blood. “They already got into the Undercity?” Jakko asked.
“SI:7 did.” one of the death guards replied. “The majority of them have already been routed. Undercity is secure for now, but the bulk of the Alliance forces are still above us.”
“They’ve taken Brill.” another death guard added. “They’ll be moving on the city soon.”
“Damn…” Jakko breathed. They were really walking into the heat of battle here.
The Boomsprockets stood in a crowd of Horde volunteers in the magic quarter, champions who answered the Dark Lady’s call, and were separated into different battle groups. A Forsaken death knight stood before the assembled group.
“Greetings.” he began, his death charger huffing. “I am Commander Johriah Lawrence. On behalf of the Dark Lady Sylvanas Windrunner, I thank you all for coming in the Forsaken’s hour of need. Your bravery today will neither go forgotten or unrewarded.”
He dismounted and motioned for a pair of death guards to bring over a table. He placed a map on the table, a map of the Ruins of Lordaeron and the surrounding Tirisfal Glades, the Boomsprockets realized as they gathered around for a closer look.
“Alright.” Commander Lawrence began. “You’ll all be on the first line of defense. Here, in front of the main gate. You’ll be meeting the Alliance head-on.” he said, pointing to the spot on the map. Several Horde soldiers smiled and chuckled at the notion of spilling human blood. “Should the line fall, you’ll withdraw back into the city.”
“Won’t the Alliance pursue us?” one tauren archer, Highmountain judging by his antlers, asked.
“That’s what the blight’s for.” Lawrence answered. “We’ll bombard the Alliance lines with blight to cover your retreat. We won’t have enough gas masks to go around though, so we strongly advise keeping your faces covered once we start blighting the area.”
An agonized scream echoed through the halls of the Undercity. “What was that?” a nightborne warmage asked.
“Just another SI:7 that got caught, pay no mind to it.” Lawrence casually answered. “Now, the hope is that the blight alone will deter the Alliance enough to call off their siege, but in the unlikely event they somehow get past the blight, we’re looking at two possibilities.”
He gestured to the entire northern wall. “First scenario, they try to break through the main gate, seeking the most direct route to the Banshee Queen’s throne. This would be foolish of them, of course, because the palace gardens is where the bulk of our forces will be gathering. More likely, they’ll seek to punch a hole in the walls on either side of the gate, entering into either the west or the east sides of the city. In either case, they would have to pass through here…”
He pointed to a large open space on the south side of the ruins. “The Southern Courtyard. Should the Alliance breach our defenses, that will be our first rally point. That is where we will make our stand.”
“And if we get overwhelmed there?” Spritzie asked, speaking up for the first time since the Boomsprockets arrived.
“Same as the front line - we fall back, blighting the area as we go.” Lawrence answered. He pointed to the fountain area, just in front of the Lordaereon Palace. “Second rally point here.”
“And then?” Jakko asked.
“…I don’t know.” Lawrence said. “All I was told was that we’re to wait there for further orders.”
“Which is code for ‘you’re fucked, good luck.’” Jakko huffed. This notion generated a few worried murmurs among the other Horde soldiers present. “This plan is bullshit.”
“Hey.” replied an offended tauren.
“You know what I mean!” Jakko snapped. “With all these back-up plans, it almost sounds like Sylvanas is EXPECTIN’ us to lose!”
“Fair point.” Lawrence said. “Change of plans, everyone. We’re all going to abandon our numerous contingencies and defensible positions and instead charge head-first into the waiting jaws of the invading forces all at once. Nothing could go wrong.” The death knight’s roasting earned some chuckles and even a few laughs at Jakko’s expense, which left the druid fuming.
“In all seriousness, I will concede that this battle plan is a risky one.” Lawrence said once the laughter died down. “Should the line fall, which it hopefully won’t, we would have to blight the area surrounding the city, effectively trapping ourselves. And if they somehow make it past the blight, which they hopefully won’t, our plan would then be to essentially invite the Alliance into our midst. A lot can go wrong. All of that said, we do have one advantage.”
Dramatic pause. “We are the Horde.” he simply said. Those words were enough to elicit an eruption of cheers from the unit. Nodding with satisfaction, Lawrence rolled up the map. “You all know where the elevators are. Make for the palace garden and wait for your cues there. For the Horde.”
“FOR THE HORDE!”
As the crowd of Horde began making for the center ring where the elevators were, they passed several Alliance corpses on the way. Jakko pulled on Stoneheart’s reigns as he noticed the nature of one of the corpses. The purple skin and long ears made it obvious that she was a night elf, but what really surprised him was her garb - long robes made of wood and leather. She was a druid.
A druid much like him. She was even a feral druid like he was, judging by the daggers still clutched in her hands.
Lawrence trotted up to Jakko’s side and nodded to the corpse. “Friend of yours?” he asked. Apparently, he could tell that Jakko was a druid.
“…Maybe.” Jakko replied. The night elf didn’t really look that familiar, but it was entirely possible that, just a year prior, they were fighting side-by-side against the Legion.
“Well, I hope you don’t have any other night elf friends. We can’t have you hesitating today.” the death knight said. “The Burning Legion is defeated and the truce is over. It’s back to basics.”
“…Guess so” Jakko said as the commander walked off. He considered the corpse for only a few more seconds before following the rest of the crowd.
He was able to catch up with his two sisters and board the same elevator as them. They soon emerged into the courtyard of Lordaeron, the harsh sunlight above nearly blinding them after they were underground just a little too long. The courtyard teemed with activity, crawling with Horde soldiers and mercenaries of every race and creed.
And off to the side, on top of a ledge, Jakko caught a glimpse of them. The leaders of the Horde. Saurfang, Bloodhoof, Theron, all surrounding the ‘Warchief’ Sylvanas, most likely discussing where to best place their defenses.
Jakko was skeptical of Sylvanas, to say the least. He’d been skeptical of her since the Cataclysm, when she first started raising her army of undead. Why Vol’jin used his dying breath to name HER of all people his successor was still one of the great unsolved mysteries of the Horde. Something about a vision from the spirits.
It made him wonder if maybe the Drakkari had the right idea - eating their gods and all.
Off on the other side of the courtyard was a mechanical monstrosity. It vaguely resembled a Horde Demolisher, but was much bigger, much more heavily armored, and seemed to somehow exude power. Jakko knew that power almost immediately - enough to make him pull his reigns on his hippogryph and stop. He had been in Silithus long enough to know that power very well.
“Is there azerite in that thing?” Jakko asked.
“Yes. You can feel the power from here, can’t you?” Johriah asked in turn. “It’s a prototype - a war machine unlike any that has come before. And according to the engineers, it’s just a small taste of what we can do with azerite…”
Something on the side of the war machine sparked and exploded, sending the goblins crewing the machine into a tizzy. One of them tried to put out a blue fire with a fire extinguisher. “Behold, the future of war.” Jakko deadpanned.
“…Growing pains.” was the only excuse Johriah could offer. “Are there any engineers among-“
The death knight didn’t even finish his sentence before Soozee hopped out of her mech and stomped over to the war machine. “You idiots! You misaligned the internal circuitry! Haven’t you ever worked on a demolisher before?!”
The goblins all shrugged. Soozee groaned and immediately started barking orders, which the other goblins took to following. “Ah, I see she’s on top of things.” Johriah observed. “The Dark Lady wants the war machine ready for combat within the hour!” he shouted. Soozee gave him a silent thumbs up before going back to work.
Jakko remembered how Soozee used to be before the Twilight Highlands - how she had once been a tough-talking engineer and leader of a tank crew. It was rare to catch a glimpse of the old Soozee like this. Even better, working on the war machine should keep Soozee off the front lines - at least for now.
“Joe!” cried a female voice. Jakko looked and saw a female Forsaken wearing leather gear and goggles came running over to the death knight. “I haven’t seen you since Stormheim! Good to see ya!”
“Ah, Dread-Rider Cullen. Likewise.” the death knight replied. “Any updates from the Alliance?”
“Nothing yet.” Cullen replied. “Outside of the occasional scout, they’re all still in Brill.”
“Curious. Thought they would’ve made their move by now.”
“That’s the good news - it doesn’t look like they’re ready to begin their siege yet, so we’ve still got time to set up our defenses.”
“And the bad?”
“We spotted more ships landing on the northern shore - hundreds of Alliance soldiers are still funneling in. When they finally decide to hit us, it’s gonna hurt.”
“So that’s why they haven’t attacked yet. They’re STILL gathering strength…” Johriah opined. “Can’t be helped. At least we still have home field advantage.”
Cullen looked over Lawrence’s group of volunteers. “I see some of your guys have flying mounts. We’re about to make a bombing run on Brill - don’t suppose you’d be willing to spare a few flyers?”
“Of course, my lady.” the death knight said with a bow.
“Aw, you’re still a charmer, Joe.” Cullen replied with a raspy chuckle.
“Horde!” Johriah Lawrence barked. “The good lady is requesting volunteers with flying mounts to join in her bombing run. Who among you will join her?”
Several Horde volunteers stepped forward, sporting mounts ranging from wyverns to drakes to cloud serpents.
Like the one Spritzie was riding, as she was one of those who volunteered. “Spritz, what are you doing?” Jakko asked.
“Volunteering for the bombing run.” Spritzie asked. “Duh.”
“You’re gonna be a target out there!” Jakko hissed. “You think the Alliance don’t have AA guns?”
“I was gonna be a target today no matter what.” Spritzie replied. “Come on, Jakko - if I can handle the Burning Legion, I’m pretty sure I can handle a bunch of drunk dwarves.”
Jakko growled in frustration with his sister’s inability to properly calculate the risks. He stepped forward, volunteering for the bombing run as well. Someone had to watch Spritzie’s back up there.
“Alrighty, looks like you’re all under MY command now!” Cullen shouted as she whistled for her bat. “Don’t worry, Joe. I’ll bring most of them back in one piece.”
Once Cullen hopped aboard her bat, she flew up to one of the higher towers of Lordaeron City, the volunteer bombers flying close behind. There, combat engineers, again mostly goblins, were attaching bombs to flying mounts, some of them being less than cooperative. A Forsaken engineer began affixing the bombs to Jakko’s hippogryph, about a half-dozen or so iron balls with pull-pins. “Alright, to drop the bombs you just pull this-“
“I know how bombs work, pal.” Jakko said. Having been raised by goblins, Jakko knew explosives far more intimately than most trolls. “Surprised these are just regular bombs though - ain’t we using blight?”
The engineer scoffed. “Damn apothecaries are being stingy with the stuff. Says they need it for one of their ‘contingency plans.’ So you’ll be bombing the Alliance the old fashioned way.”
“Works for me.” Jakko said. He trusted good old seaforium more than the green stuff any day of the week.
“Alright - once we’re all geared up, we’re gonna make a bombing run over Brill!” Cullen called out. “The Alliance have been spotted building siege towers, so aim for those!”
Spritzie’s cloud serpent was now laden with bombs, along with Jakko’s hippogryph. “Okay, everybody ready? One, two, three, for the Horde!”
“FOR THE HORDE!”
With that, the riders poured out of the tower like a nightmare, making a beeline for Brill.
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