Warcraft - (2001) Day Of The Dragon - Book 2 Chapter 12 Part 1


 Lord Prestor's ascension seems almost inevitable,” the shadowy form in the emerald sphere informed

Krasus. “He has an almost amazing gift of persuasion. You are correct; hemustbe a wizard.”

Seated in the midst of his sanctum, Krasus eyed the globe. “Convincing the monarchs will require much

evidence. Their mistrust of the Kirin Tor grows with each day . . . and that can only also be the work of

this wouldbe king.”

The other speaker, the elder woman from the inner council, nodded back. “We've begun watching. The

only trouble is, this Prestor proves very elusive. He seems able to enter and leave his abode without us

knowing.”

Krasus pretended slight surprise. “How is that possible?”

“We don't know. Worse, his chateau is surrounded by some very nasty spellwork. We almost lost

Drenden to one of those surprises.”

That Drenden, the baritoned and bearded mage, had nearly fallen victim to one of Deathwing's traps

momentarily dismayed Krasus. Despite the man's bluster, the dragon respected the other mage's abilities.

Losing Drenden at a time like this could have proven costly.

“We must move with caution,” he urged. “I will speak with you again soon.”

“What are you planning, Krasus?”

“A search into this young noble's past.”

“You think you'll find anything?”

The hooded wizard shrugged. “We can only hope.”

He dismissed her image, then leaned back to consider. Krasus regretted that he had to lead his

associates astray, if only for their own good. At least their intrusions into Deathwing's “mortal” affairs

would have the result of distracting the black. That would give Krasus a bit more time. He only prayed

that no one else would risk themselves as Drenden had done. The Kirin Tor would need their strength

intact if the other kingdoms turned on them.

His own excursion to visit Malygos had ended with little-sense of satisfaction. Malygos had promised

only to consider his request. Krasus suspected that the great dragon believed he could deal with

Deathwing in his own sweet time. Little did the silver-blue leviathan realize that time no longer remained

for any of the dragons. If Deathwing could not be stopped now, he might never be.

Which left Krasus with one much undesired choice now.

“I must do it. . . .” He had to seek out the other great ones, the other Aspects. Convince one of them,

and he might still gain Malygos's sworn aid.

Yet, She of the Dreaming ever proved a most elusive figure . . . which meant that Krasus's best bet lay in

contacting the Lord of Time—whose servants had already rejected the wizard's requests more than

once.

Still, what else could he do but try again?

Krasus rose, hurrying to a bench upon which many of the items of his calling stood arranged in vials and

flasks. He scanned row upon row of jars, eyes quickly passing chemicals and magical items that would

have left his counterparts in the Kirin Tor greatly envious, and more than a little curious as to how he

could have obtained many of the articles in question. If they ever realized just how long he had been 

practicing the arts . . .

There! A small flask containing a single withered flower caused him to pause.

The Eon Rose. Found only in one place in all the world. Plucked by Krasus himself to give to his

mistress, his love. Saved by Krasus when the orcs stormed the lair and, to his disbelief, took her and the

others prisoner.

The Eon Rose. Five petals of astonishingly different hues surrounding a golden sphere in the center. As

Krasus lifted the top of the flask, a faint scent that suddenly recalled his adolescence wafted under his

nose. With some hesitation, he reached in, took hold of the faded bloom—

—and marveled as it suddenly returned to its legendary brilliance the moment his tapering fingers

touched it.

Fiery red. Emerald green. Snowy silver. Deep-sea blue. Midnight black. Each petal radiated such

beauty as artists only dreamed of. No other object could surpass its inherent beauty, no other flower

could match its wondrous scent.

Holding his breath for a moment, Krasuscrushedthe wondrous bloom.

He let the fragments fall into his other hand. A tingle spread from his palms to his fingers, but the dragon

mage ignored it. Holding the remnants up high over his head, the wizard muttered words of power—then

threw what was left of the fabled rose to the floor.

But as the crushed pieces touched the stone, they turned suddenly to sand, sand that spread across the

chamber floor, overwhelmed the chamber itself,washedacross the chamber, covering everything, eating

away everything . . .

. . . and leaving Krasus abruptly standing in the midst of an endless, swirling desert.

Yet, no desert such as this had any mortal—or even Krasus himself, for that matter—ever witnessed, for

here lay scattered, as far as the eye could see, fragments of walls, cracked and scoured statues, rusted

weapons, and—the mage gaped—even the half-buried bones of some gargantuan beast that, in life, had

dwarfed even dragons. There were buildings, too, and although at first one might have thought they and

the relics around them all part of one vast civilization, a closer look revealed that no one structure truly

belonged with another. A teetering tower such as might have been built by humans in Lordaeron

overshadowed a domed building that surely had come from the dwarves. Some distance farther, an

arched temple, its roof caved in, hinted of the lost kingdom of Azeroth. Nearer to Krasus himself stood a

more dour domicile, the quarters of some orc chieftain.

A ship large enough to carry a dozen men stood propped on a dune, the latter half of it buried under

sand. Armor from the reign of the first king of Stromgarde littered another smaller dune. The leaning

statue of an elven cleric seemed to say final prayers over both vessel and armor.

An astonishing, improbable display that gave even Krasus pause. In truth, the sights before the wizard

resembled nothing more than some gargantuan deity's macabre collection of antiquities . . . a point not far

from fact.

None of these artifacts were native to this realm; in fact, no race, no civilization, had ever been spawned

here. All the wonders that stood before the wizard had been gathered quite meticulously and over a

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