((A piece from the future, heh heh.))
Beyond the mist of myth and legend
In a place not far from here
Beneath the stones on the hill
I want to see your land
And I wonder if I’ll ever
Understand
Master Taeril'hane Ketiron stood on a coastal ridge, his cloak fluttering in the icy wind...but his gaze was not on the sea, but to the great moons in the sky above the desert of snow. The land reminded him of Northrend, in a way, without the constant aura of death that permeated the northern continent of Azeroth...but the same desolate beauty was there. Before him, his House engineers were working with goblin craftsmen and some borrowed peons from Orgrimmar to construct where he would be living in this strange place.
Where he would be living...and where his family would live with him.
Elementalist Thek'la, the exiled Darkspear he had met in Pandaria, approached from the construction site. During the Pandaria war, Ketiron had convinced the banished shaman to find a way to redeem himself in the eyes of his people. He had done just that, fighting with honor - and the savagery of the elements - against the Zandalari in Lei Shen's palace, and again against the Kor'kron betrayers during the siege of Orgrimmar. With Hellscream gone, he had received clemency from Vol'jin, now Warchief of the Horde. "Dey be here. Da mages brought 'em in wit' da last of da peons."
Ketiron nodded. "Thank you. I will be along shortly."
While he had gone ahead with the great force that had assembled under the Archmage Khadgar - an irony not lost on him - Ketiron had told his wife and their son to go to Orgrimmar and wait for his word. He had no real idea where anything was here; he remembered feeling the same way when he had first arrived in Outland, years before. But the scenery was very different this time...
He remembered the bloodbath around the portal, cannons firing from the commandeered monstrosity the enemy called "the Worldbreaker". The frenzied flight to the harbor. The voyage on the iron vessel, to the homeland of the one orcish clan not participating in this insanity; the clan of the former Warchief and World-Shaman, who had gone ahead to greet his people. Once he had words with his family, Ketiron would head to the Frostwolf camp himself.
Entering through the rudimentary gate, Ketiron was heartened to see all the races of the Horde helping to build here, just as they were for the other bases of operation for their Horde here. Tauren guardsmen, orc peons and grunts, troll shadow-hunters, goblin engineers, sin'dorei artificers, and even Forsaken magi. The chief engineer of the project, of course, was Kitrik, Ketiron's personal assassin. "We've got the basics set up, chief, but there's plenty of room for expansion," the goblin said proudly. "This'll be just as good as what old Gazlowe is putting together."
"Excellent." Ketiron looked around, not seeing them.
"Inside our temporary great hall, boss," Kitrik replied, as if reading his mind. He smiled. "Go on. I'll take care of things here."
Ketiron walked into the "great hall", which was at the moment just a structure of stakes and skins. Standing there waiting were his wife, Areinnye, and their six-year-old son, Ord'taeril. He smiled, knelt first to embrace his son, then gently kissed his wife. "The trip was not too bad, I hope?"
"Well enough," Areinnye replied. "It was odd to see Orgrimmar with a guard force so..."
"Diverse?" The Blood Knight Master grinned. "I was thinking the same thing. We have a troll Warchief in the orcish capital, with tauren guards in the streets. What next?"
Areinnye was not smiling. "Taeril'hane," she asked hesitantly, "are you sure about this?"
"Vol'jin needed our veterans to fight the Iron Horde, my love. I couldn't very well say no."
"I mean us." She indicated herself and their son. "This is a military outpost. It could well turn into a warzone. Are you sure you want our son here?"
Ketiron had to admit he had asked himself the same thing. "He sees so little of us, Ren," he said after a moment. "We've both been in the field for so long, leaving him in the care of tutors and nannies. I have a feeling a great deal of our time will be spent here, overseeing our new outpost. And besides...this is his opportunity to take in the wonders of this place." His smile faded entirely. "Before it becomes like Pandaria." Areinnye finally nodded in agreement.
He knelt and put a hand gently on Ord'taeril's shoulder. "This all may seem strange to you, my son," he said, "and there will be many new faces - from our home, and from this new world. We will be here for a while. Watch everything and everyone. Listen. Learn. Above all, behave properly, and make a good impression with them. Do you understand me?"
"Yes, Ann'da," the boy replied, his voice slightly shaky.
Ketiron smiled warmly, and hugged his son to him. "All will be well...and you will have tales to tell your own children someday."
Beyond the mist of myth and legend
In a place not far from here
Beneath the stones on the hill
I want to see your land
And I wonder if I’ll ever
Understand
Master Taeril'hane Ketiron stood on a coastal ridge, his cloak fluttering in the icy wind...but his gaze was not on the sea, but to the great moons in the sky above the desert of snow. The land reminded him of Northrend, in a way, without the constant aura of death that permeated the northern continent of Azeroth...but the same desolate beauty was there. Before him, his House engineers were working with goblin craftsmen and some borrowed peons from Orgrimmar to construct where he would be living in this strange place.
Where he would be living...and where his family would live with him.
Elementalist Thek'la, the exiled Darkspear he had met in Pandaria, approached from the construction site. During the Pandaria war, Ketiron had convinced the banished shaman to find a way to redeem himself in the eyes of his people. He had done just that, fighting with honor - and the savagery of the elements - against the Zandalari in Lei Shen's palace, and again against the Kor'kron betrayers during the siege of Orgrimmar. With Hellscream gone, he had received clemency from Vol'jin, now Warchief of the Horde. "Dey be here. Da mages brought 'em in wit' da last of da peons."
Ketiron nodded. "Thank you. I will be along shortly."
While he had gone ahead with the great force that had assembled under the Archmage Khadgar - an irony not lost on him - Ketiron had told his wife and their son to go to Orgrimmar and wait for his word. He had no real idea where anything was here; he remembered feeling the same way when he had first arrived in Outland, years before. But the scenery was very different this time...
He remembered the bloodbath around the portal, cannons firing from the commandeered monstrosity the enemy called "the Worldbreaker". The frenzied flight to the harbor. The voyage on the iron vessel, to the homeland of the one orcish clan not participating in this insanity; the clan of the former Warchief and World-Shaman, who had gone ahead to greet his people. Once he had words with his family, Ketiron would head to the Frostwolf camp himself.
Entering through the rudimentary gate, Ketiron was heartened to see all the races of the Horde helping to build here, just as they were for the other bases of operation for their Horde here. Tauren guardsmen, orc peons and grunts, troll shadow-hunters, goblin engineers, sin'dorei artificers, and even Forsaken magi. The chief engineer of the project, of course, was Kitrik, Ketiron's personal assassin. "We've got the basics set up, chief, but there's plenty of room for expansion," the goblin said proudly. "This'll be just as good as what old Gazlowe is putting together."
"Excellent." Ketiron looked around, not seeing them.
"Inside our temporary great hall, boss," Kitrik replied, as if reading his mind. He smiled. "Go on. I'll take care of things here."
Ketiron walked into the "great hall", which was at the moment just a structure of stakes and skins. Standing there waiting were his wife, Areinnye, and their six-year-old son, Ord'taeril. He smiled, knelt first to embrace his son, then gently kissed his wife. "The trip was not too bad, I hope?"
"Well enough," Areinnye replied. "It was odd to see Orgrimmar with a guard force so..."
"Diverse?" The Blood Knight Master grinned. "I was thinking the same thing. We have a troll Warchief in the orcish capital, with tauren guards in the streets. What next?"
Areinnye was not smiling. "Taeril'hane," she asked hesitantly, "are you sure about this?"
"Vol'jin needed our veterans to fight the Iron Horde, my love. I couldn't very well say no."
"I mean us." She indicated herself and their son. "This is a military outpost. It could well turn into a warzone. Are you sure you want our son here?"
Ketiron had to admit he had asked himself the same thing. "He sees so little of us, Ren," he said after a moment. "We've both been in the field for so long, leaving him in the care of tutors and nannies. I have a feeling a great deal of our time will be spent here, overseeing our new outpost. And besides...this is his opportunity to take in the wonders of this place." His smile faded entirely. "Before it becomes like Pandaria." Areinnye finally nodded in agreement.
He knelt and put a hand gently on Ord'taeril's shoulder. "This all may seem strange to you, my son," he said, "and there will be many new faces - from our home, and from this new world. We will be here for a while. Watch everything and everyone. Listen. Learn. Above all, behave properly, and make a good impression with them. Do you understand me?"
"Yes, Ann'da," the boy replied, his voice slightly shaky.
Ketiron smiled warmly, and hugged his son to him. "All will be well...and you will have tales to tell your own children someday."