Warcraft - (2001) Day Of The Dragon - Book 2 Chapter 15 Part 3

 

You'll not be journeying alone, my elven lady,” objected Falstad. “I've come too far to turn back now .

. . and I'm of a mind to find a certain goblin and skin his hide for boots!”

“Ye both be daft!” Rom saw that neither would be swayed. Shrugging, he added, “But if it's a way to

Grim Batol ye want, then I'll not set that task to another. I'll take ye there myself!”

“Ye cannot go alone, Rom!” snapped Gimmel. “Not with the trolls on the move and the orcs near there!

I'll go with ye to watch ye back!”

Suddenly, the rest of the band decided that they, too, needed to go along in order to watch the backs of

their leaders. Both Rom and Gimmel tried to argue them down, but as one dwarf was generally as

stubborn as another, the leader finally came up with a better notion.

“The wounded must return home, and they need some to watch them, too—and no arguments from ye,

Narn, ye can barely stand! The best thing to do is roll the bones; the half with the high numbers comes

with! Now, who has a set?”

Vereesa hardly wanted to wait for the band to gamble in order to find out who would be traveling with

them, but saw no other choice. She and Falstad watched as various dwarves—Narn and the other

wounded excluded— set dice rolls against one another. Most of the hill dwarves used their own sets,

Rom's question having been responded to by a veritable sea of raised arms.

The last had made Falstad chuckle. “The Aerie and the hills might have their differences, but you'll find

few dwarves of any kind who don't carry the dice!” He patted a pouch on his belt. “Can see what

heathens the trolls were; they left mine on me! 'Tis said that even the orcs like to roll the bones, which

makes 'em a step up from our late captors, eh?”

After much too long a time for Vereesa's taste, Rom and Gimmel returned with seven other dwarves,

each with determined expressions on their faces. Looking at them, the elf could have sworn that they

were all brothers—although, in fact, at least two hinted at being sisters. Even female dwarves sported

strong beards, a sign of beauty among members of the race.

“Here's ye volunteers, Lady Vereesa! All strong and ready to fight! We'll lead ye to one of the cave

mouths in the base of the mountain, then ye are on ye own after that.”

“I thank you—but, do you mean that you actually have a path that lets you journey into the mountain

itself ?”

“Aye, but it's no easy one . . . and the orcs don't patrol it alone.”

“What do you mean by that?” burst Falstad.

Rom gave the other dwarf the same innocent smile that Falstad had given him earlier. “Have ye not

heard they've dragons?”

The sanctum of Krasus had been built over an ancient grove, one older than even the dragons

themselves. It had been built by an elf, later usurped by a human mage, then seized long after its

abandonment by Krasus himself. He had sensed the powers lingering underneath it and had managed to

draw from them on rare occasions, but even the draconic wizard had been surprised to one day discover

the concealed entrance in the most remote part of his citadel, the entrance that led to the glittering pool

and the single, golden gemstone set in the midst of the bottom.

Each time he entered the chamber, he felt a sense of awe so rare for one of his kind. The magic here

made him feel like a human novice just shown his first incantation. Krasus knew that he had only touched

a bare trace of the pool's potential, but that was enough to make him leery of trying to seize more. Those

who grew greedy in their need for magical power tended to eventually become consumed by it—literally.

Of course, Deathwing had somehow managed to avoid that fate so far.

Despite being so deep underground, the water was not devoid of life—or something approaching it.

Even though no clearer liquid existed in all the world, try as he might, Krasus could never completely

focus on the tiny, slim forms that darted around, especially in the vicinity of the gemstone. At times, he

had sworn they were nothing but shimmering, silver fish, yet now and then the dragon mage swore that he

saw arms, a human torso, even on a rare occasion—legs.

Today, he ignored the inhabitants of the pool. His confrontation with She of the Dreaming had given him

some hope of aid, but Krasus knew that he could not plan for it. Time swiftly approached when he would

have to commit himself.

And that had been why he had come here now, for among its properties, the pool seemed able to

rejuvenate those who drank from it, at least for a time. His use of the poison in order to reach the hidden

realms of Ysera had left Krasus drained, and if matters demanded he act quickly, then he wanted to be

able to respond.

Bending down, the wizard cupped a hand and gathered a small bit of water. He had tried a mug the first

time he had dared sip, only to discover that the pool rejected anything crafted. Krasus leaned over the

edge, wanting any drops that escaped his palm to return from whence they had come. His respect for the

power within had become that great over the years.

Yet as he drank, a rippling in the surface caught his eye. Krasus glanced down at what should have been

the perfect reflection of his human form—but, instead, turned out to be something much different.

Rhonin's youthful visage gazed up at him . . . or so the wizard first thought. Then he realized that his

pawn's eyes were closed and the head lolled slightly to the side as if . . . as if dead.

Across Rhonin's face appeared the thick, green hand of an orc.

Krasus reacted instinctively, reaching into the water to pull the foul hand away. Instead, he scattered the

image and, when the ripples had finally subsided, saw only his own reflection again.

“By the Great Mother . . .” The pool had never shown this ability before. Why now?

Only then did Krasus recall the parting words of Ysera.And do not undervalue those you think only

pawns . . .

What had she meant by that, and why had he now seen Rhonin's face? Judging by the glimpse the senior

wizard had just had, his young counterpart had either been captured or killed by the orcs. If so, it was

too late for Rhonin to be of any more value to Krasus—although having apparently reached the mountain

fortress, he had fulfilled the true mission on which his patron had sent him.

Combined with other bits of evidence that Krasus had let the orcs in Grim Batol discover over the past

several months, the dragon mage had hoped to stir up the commanders there, make them think that a

second invasion, a more subtle one, would be slipping in from the west. While quite a force still remained

based in the mountain fortress, its true power lay in the dragons bred and trained there . . . and those

grew fewer with each passing week. Worse for the orcs in the mountain, the few they had were more

and more being sent north to help the bulk of the Horde, leaving Grim Batol bereft of almost all its

defenses. Against a determined army comparable in size to that now fighting in the vicinity of Dun Algaz,

even the well-positioned orcs in the mountain would eventually succumb, thereby losing the chance to

raise any more dragons for the war effort.

And without more dragons to harry the Alliance forces in the north, the remnants of the Horde would at

last crumble under the continual onslaught.

Such a force could have been raised and sent in from the west if not for the general lack of cooperation

on the part of the leaders of the Alliance. Most felt that Khaz Modan would fall in its own time; why risk

more on such a mission? Krasus could not believe that they would not use a two-pronged assault to

finally rid the world of the orc threat, but that proved once again the shortsighted thinking of the younger

races. Originally, he had tried to persuade the Kirin Tor to push the course of action to Dalaran's

neighbors, but as their influence over King Terenas had begun to slip, his own comrades on the council

had turned instead to salvaging what remained of their position in the Alliance.

And so Krasus had decided to play a desperate bluff, counting on the devious thinking and paranoia

inherent in the orc command. Let them believe the invasionwason its way. Let them even have physical

proof to go along with the rumors he and his agents had spread. Surely then they would do the

unthinkable.

Surely then they would abandon their mountain fortress and, with Alexstrasza under careful watch, move

the dragon breeding operation north.

The plan had started as a wild hope, but to even Krasus's surprise, he noted astonishing results. The orc

in command of Grim Batol, one Nekros Skullcrusher, had, of late, grown more and more certain that the

mountain's days of use were numbered, and numbered low. The wizard's wild rumors had even taken on

a life of their own, growing beyond his expectations.

And now . . . and now the orcs had proof in the person of Rhonin. The young spellcaster had played his

part. He had shown Nekros that the seemingly impervious fortress could readily be infiltrated, especially

through magic. Surely now the orc commander would give the word to abandon Grim Batol.

Yes, Rhonin had played his part well . . . and Krasus knew that he would never forgive himself for using

the human so.

What would his beloved queen even think of him when she found out the truth? Of all the dragons,

Alexstrasza most cared for the lesser races. They were the children of the future, she had once said.

“It had to be done,” he hissed.

Yet, if the vision in the pool had been meant to remind him of the fate of his pawn, it had also served to

incite the wizard. He had to know more.

Bowing before the pool, Krasus closed his eyes and concentrated. It had been quite some time since he

had contacted one of his most useful agents. If that one still lived, then surely he had some knowledge of

the activities presently going on in the mountain. The dragon mage pictured the one with whom he sought

to speak, then reached out with his thoughts, with all his strength, to open the link the two shared.

“Hear me now . . . hear my voice . . . it is urgent that we talk . . . the day may be on us at last, my

patient friend, the day of freedom and redemption . . . hear me . . . Rom . . .”

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