Several days passed. The siege was lifted, and Deathwing had met his well-deserved fate. With the Elemental War over, the soldiers who fought it went home. Taeril'hane Ketiron and Smeet Spiritgrinder had returned to Northrend after delivering their injured comrades to safety; after the Destroyer's fall, Smeet had gone back to the Whitehair estate in the Court of the Sun in Silvermoon, while Ketiron had returned to Wyrmrest for a time before doing likewise. The red dragon Zaranastrasz delivered him to the great Elfgate at the entrance of the Ghostlands, where his guard escort awaited him, and Ketiron had rode the rest of the way.
As Ketiron arrived at his home, the goblin shaman - who had returned to tending his patient when he left the Maelstrom - looked up at the entrance of the Whitehair patriarch, too exhausted to offer much consolation. "Sunwalker Eaglespear is dead, Lord Ketiron."
Ketiron sat down heavily next to the dead tauren, his face a mask of rage and grief. Along with Nor'taeron Sunblade, Telek Eaglespear had been one of his favored apprentices. He remembered when the lad had come to him in the wake of Baine's ascension and the formation of the Sunwalker order, seeking to learn more about the Light - making him the obvious polar opposite of his corrupted elder brother, Ublaz, who had been one of the Lich King's death knights - "Deathspear" he had become, as a result.
Areinnye Scourgebane, Ketiron's wife and ranger-general of his House Guard, brought the blanket over Eaglespear's face. "Light and elements grant him his rest. At least...he lived long enough for the end."
The man in the rune-and-skull saronite armor nodded. "Aye...the Destroyer will plague us no more. It's too bad, though - we could have used him in the world beyond. You know what the Aspects said, Taeril'hane...first Medivh, now the dragons, leaving us to do the work without some immortals hovering over our shoulders."
Ketiron nodded, wiping a tear from his eye. "Aye..." He looked up. "What of Packleader Zherron?" He indicated the badly-injured worgen, his breathing quiet and slow.
"He will need plenty of rest, but with the Light and our ministrations, he will recover in time. He was lucky - a bit more to the left, and the scythe-blade would have hit the heart. He'd have been dead the moment we found him."
"I heard from a few pals in the Crusade he's not exactly popular," Smeet said; he had worked with his teacher, the draenei farseer Jaeden'laek, during the war against the Lich King. "Those Pia Presidium guys that work out of Hearthglen threw him outta town for attackin' two of their people under the Corruptor's brand, and sendin' his 'Ghost' out to kill a couple more..."
"The Ghost is no issue," the man in the cowled armor replied firmly. "I dealt with that myself. He will not be killing any innocents."
"What will become of him, then?" Areinnye wondered. "He has made far too many enemies now. The Ocheliad, the Presidium...even the City Watch in Stormwind."
"Eidan Zherron's fate is what he makes of it - I cannot say for certain, nor decide his fate. I can only be a voice of counsel, as Light knows there are plenty who have lost faith and need such a voice." He smiled and sat down, removing his helm. "When he is ready, we will depart."
"So soon? There is still much we need to talk about - like how you're here at all."
He laughed. "Come now, Taeril'hane. You can't expect me to give everything up in one sitting."
As Ketiron arrived at his home, the goblin shaman - who had returned to tending his patient when he left the Maelstrom - looked up at the entrance of the Whitehair patriarch, too exhausted to offer much consolation. "Sunwalker Eaglespear is dead, Lord Ketiron."
Ketiron sat down heavily next to the dead tauren, his face a mask of rage and grief. Along with Nor'taeron Sunblade, Telek Eaglespear had been one of his favored apprentices. He remembered when the lad had come to him in the wake of Baine's ascension and the formation of the Sunwalker order, seeking to learn more about the Light - making him the obvious polar opposite of his corrupted elder brother, Ublaz, who had been one of the Lich King's death knights - "Deathspear" he had become, as a result.
Areinnye Scourgebane, Ketiron's wife and ranger-general of his House Guard, brought the blanket over Eaglespear's face. "Light and elements grant him his rest. At least...he lived long enough for the end."
The man in the rune-and-skull saronite armor nodded. "Aye...the Destroyer will plague us no more. It's too bad, though - we could have used him in the world beyond. You know what the Aspects said, Taeril'hane...first Medivh, now the dragons, leaving us to do the work without some immortals hovering over our shoulders."
Ketiron nodded, wiping a tear from his eye. "Aye..." He looked up. "What of Packleader Zherron?" He indicated the badly-injured worgen, his breathing quiet and slow.
"He will need plenty of rest, but with the Light and our ministrations, he will recover in time. He was lucky - a bit more to the left, and the scythe-blade would have hit the heart. He'd have been dead the moment we found him."
"I heard from a few pals in the Crusade he's not exactly popular," Smeet said; he had worked with his teacher, the draenei farseer Jaeden'laek, during the war against the Lich King. "Those Pia Presidium guys that work out of Hearthglen threw him outta town for attackin' two of their people under the Corruptor's brand, and sendin' his 'Ghost' out to kill a couple more..."
"The Ghost is no issue," the man in the cowled armor replied firmly. "I dealt with that myself. He will not be killing any innocents."
"What will become of him, then?" Areinnye wondered. "He has made far too many enemies now. The Ocheliad, the Presidium...even the City Watch in Stormwind."
"Eidan Zherron's fate is what he makes of it - I cannot say for certain, nor decide his fate. I can only be a voice of counsel, as Light knows there are plenty who have lost faith and need such a voice." He smiled and sat down, removing his helm. "When he is ready, we will depart."
"So soon? There is still much we need to talk about - like how you're here at all."
He laughed. "Come now, Taeril'hane. You can't expect me to give everything up in one sitting."