There was no peace any longer for Marennia Sputterspark.
By day, she lashed out in frustration at any foe she could find, be they wooden training dummies or giant beasts. By night, she drank herself into a stupor, trying to blind out the rage, the pain, the hate. Trying to blur the smug, smirking elf face burned into her brain - the face of the scum who murdered her brother. In the morning, the cycle would begin again, the pain of her hangover driving her to even higher reaches of fury.
So it was after her...overly dramatic display at the Feathers of Iron open tavern held in Booty Bay the previous evening. She had lashed out against the draenei in the Feathers wait staff, as well as their organization's leader (though she had thought of Franziskah as maybe just a bouncer), spitting racist insults and condemning them for being complicit, given Battlelord Velenkayn's part in running Rakeri out of Shadowgarde, which then led to his demise at the hands of Taeril'hane Ketiron. She had been out cold on a piece of floating debris in Booty Bay this morning, and preserved what little dignity she had left by using her hearthstone to leave.
Now she was back in Stormwind, back searching for a fight. As she passed the ruins of the old barracks near the entrance to the harbor, she...felt more than heard a voice: It's not going to do you any good, you know.
Marennia looked around at that, her matching lightning-steel greatswords in her hand. "Show yourself, trickster. I have no time for games."
"Alright then." The figure revealed himself - her mentor, Wilbert Blunderwitz. The mechpriest wore richly-patterned robes and carried a tol'vir staff he had found in Uldum. "You waste your talents here, Marennia. Drinking yourself stupid, making scenes in public...spitting out hate and anger with every word. And for what? Because Rakeri is dead? I see no reason to work yourself up about that."
"And why the hell not? He was my brother, Wil, not some --"
"Because," the gnome priest interrupted, "not too long before, you were debating doing so yourself. Is it truly grief for his death that motivates you now, or are you just mad that Ketiron beat you to it? If so, that's petty and stupid, and you should be ashamed of yourself."
"How dare you belittle my pain!"
"Life is pain, Marennia. The real test is how you choose to cope with it. I ease my pain by easing the pain of others, which does more good than muttering vengeful oaths and washing away all vestiges of dignity in cheap dwarven booze." Blunderwitz's stern demeanor melted for a moment, and he smiled. "I know of a better way, though."
"Another treatise on how the Light loves us and will provide? No thank you."
"Surprisingly, no. I had something else in mind. I have a friend, you see - someone who can help you. He probably won't be able to bring Rakeri back, but he can give you a way to make your pain bearable. He is powerful in his own right, but recognizes the need for a good blade."
Skeptical but attentive, Marennia sheathed her swords and folded her arms across her chest. "And when do I meet this friend of yours?"
"Tomorrow, in the gazebo behind the Cathedral. The one that Miss Stoneheardt uses on this day of the week; tomorrow, it should be quieter." Blunderwitz put a hand on her shoulder. "Trust in me again, Marennia; I have never steered you false."
The Gnomeregan militia captain sighed. "No, I suppose you haven't...alright, Wil. I'll meet your friend. But it had better not be a waste of my time." She walked off, looking for the nearest tavern.
Blunderwitz watched her go, and with a smile and a voice that was not his own, said to himself, "It certainly will not be a waste of mine."
By day, she lashed out in frustration at any foe she could find, be they wooden training dummies or giant beasts. By night, she drank herself into a stupor, trying to blind out the rage, the pain, the hate. Trying to blur the smug, smirking elf face burned into her brain - the face of the scum who murdered her brother. In the morning, the cycle would begin again, the pain of her hangover driving her to even higher reaches of fury.
So it was after her...overly dramatic display at the Feathers of Iron open tavern held in Booty Bay the previous evening. She had lashed out against the draenei in the Feathers wait staff, as well as their organization's leader (though she had thought of Franziskah as maybe just a bouncer), spitting racist insults and condemning them for being complicit, given Battlelord Velenkayn's part in running Rakeri out of Shadowgarde, which then led to his demise at the hands of Taeril'hane Ketiron. She had been out cold on a piece of floating debris in Booty Bay this morning, and preserved what little dignity she had left by using her hearthstone to leave.
Now she was back in Stormwind, back searching for a fight. As she passed the ruins of the old barracks near the entrance to the harbor, she...felt more than heard a voice: It's not going to do you any good, you know.
Marennia looked around at that, her matching lightning-steel greatswords in her hand. "Show yourself, trickster. I have no time for games."
"Alright then." The figure revealed himself - her mentor, Wilbert Blunderwitz. The mechpriest wore richly-patterned robes and carried a tol'vir staff he had found in Uldum. "You waste your talents here, Marennia. Drinking yourself stupid, making scenes in public...spitting out hate and anger with every word. And for what? Because Rakeri is dead? I see no reason to work yourself up about that."
"And why the hell not? He was my brother, Wil, not some --"
"Because," the gnome priest interrupted, "not too long before, you were debating doing so yourself. Is it truly grief for his death that motivates you now, or are you just mad that Ketiron beat you to it? If so, that's petty and stupid, and you should be ashamed of yourself."
"How dare you belittle my pain!"
"Life is pain, Marennia. The real test is how you choose to cope with it. I ease my pain by easing the pain of others, which does more good than muttering vengeful oaths and washing away all vestiges of dignity in cheap dwarven booze." Blunderwitz's stern demeanor melted for a moment, and he smiled. "I know of a better way, though."
"Another treatise on how the Light loves us and will provide? No thank you."
"Surprisingly, no. I had something else in mind. I have a friend, you see - someone who can help you. He probably won't be able to bring Rakeri back, but he can give you a way to make your pain bearable. He is powerful in his own right, but recognizes the need for a good blade."
Skeptical but attentive, Marennia sheathed her swords and folded her arms across her chest. "And when do I meet this friend of yours?"
"Tomorrow, in the gazebo behind the Cathedral. The one that Miss Stoneheardt uses on this day of the week; tomorrow, it should be quieter." Blunderwitz put a hand on her shoulder. "Trust in me again, Marennia; I have never steered you false."
The Gnomeregan militia captain sighed. "No, I suppose you haven't...alright, Wil. I'll meet your friend. But it had better not be a waste of my time." She walked off, looking for the nearest tavern.
Blunderwitz watched her go, and with a smile and a voice that was not his own, said to himself, "It certainly will not be a waste of mine."