A human figure slouches in the ghostly chains, his torso bare, his head
bent, his breathing ragged. Two Val’kyr, one behind him, twirling a
whip with sharpened pieces of bone along it, the other flying back and
forth in front of him, gaze down at him in contempt. “I grow weary of
this, Knight,” the one in front says. “I command you again; swear your
fealty to him!” She pauses as he slowly raises his head, his glowing
cyan eyes glaring up at her defiantly as a low growl comes from him. The
winged woman nods to the one with the whip, and once more it is brought
down, lashing the man’s back. His back arches as he groans and snarls.
The Val’kyr in front of him suddenly bursts out, “Yield already, you
stupid mutt!!”
“Enough, Battle-Maiden,” a soft voice whispers from the shadows. The
two Val’kyr instantly stop what they’re doing and the man slouches
again, his breathing hard once more. Out of the shadows walks a tall
figure, feminine in shape, wearing a strange, leathery cloak. She kneels
down in front of him and tilts his head back as she inspects his face.
“Yes, I believe this one will do,” she purrs, and at a gesture of her
hand the chains disappear. The man collapses to the ground and the
cloaked figure tsks to the two others.
“My
dear Maidens, you shall go easier on all other Knights you are charged
with breaking; this one is near his second death!” She chastises mildly,
but a noticeable shiver travels through both the maidens. The figure
scoops the man up and walks away, pausing at the threshold of the great
flying fortress that is Acherus. “Oh, and please let dear Arthas know
that I have inspected his stock and have made my choice. He will soon
have what I promised him.” At that her cloak ruffles. Not her cloak
though; wings! Great, big, leathery, demonic wings. With a powerful beat
of them, she takes off into the diseased sky.
* * *
The
man awakes later in a big circular chamber, finding himself chained to
what seems to be a stone altar by metal shackles. His armor and clothing
are off, except for the bottom half of a robe to keep him decent. He
begins to struggle against his restraints, only to freeze when a soft
chuckle echoes out of the shadows. “W-who’s out there?” he calls out,
his voice echoing for a long time.
“You’re
doom, young man. And, in a way, your savior.” The same woman who
rescued him steps forward. Her robes are the color of old blood, and her
skin has an almost sickly green color to it.
He raises an eyebrow dubiously. “You, my doom and savior? I fail to see how that is even possible.”
He swears he hears her giggle, then she reappears in his field of
vision. “Oh Nicolus, I am going to kill you, again, and give birth to
you again, reborn into a different, even higher, form than this one. If
all goes according to plan that is.” She walks around the stone slab,
trailing a finger along the edge as she does. “I am going to grant you
an incredibly powerful gift; the gift of-“
“Freedom?” he interrupts.
She
glares at him and continues, saying, “the gift of the San’layn, which
is one you will exercise often in the service of our master.” She smiles
as the man’s eyes darken and he begins to struggle in earnest with
desperation. The woman simply laughs.
Then there is a knock and the woman’s face breaks into a wide grin.
“Ah, and just in time, too!” In walks a fellow Death Knight, escorted
by what the man can only assume is a San’layn made real. The San’layn’s
robe is less elegant than the woman’s, but it, as well as its eyes, were
the same, old-blood red. “Oh yes, little Knight, although little for
long, you won’t be.” She cackles maniacally.
“Who the fel are you?”
She smirks as she says, pride oozing from her voice, “I am Lane’thel, Blood-Queen of the San’layn!”
The
Knight being walked over wears the trappings of a Knight of Acherus,
identical to what the man had been wearing not long before, its wrists
bound behind its back, a vacantness to its eyes. Lane’thel saunters over
to the cloaked figure, smiling, revealing long, sharp fangs. She runs a
finger down the Knight’s chest slowly, then in a flash she has pulled
out a dagger from within her robes, and in that same motion, plunges it
into the newcomer’s chest. A blood-curdling scream echoes against the
walls as its eyes suddenly focus, off the ceiling and the floor. A
bluish cloud oozes from the wound, which the blade seems to absorb,
maintaining a soft, faint glow. The Knight falls, dead and spent,
nothing now but a corpse. Lane’thel twirls her dagger, licking her lips
slowly.
“Mmmmm,
but now I need the essences of a San’layn …” she slowly looks to the
one who had escorted the poor doomed Knight in, and although he had been
grinning, he quickly stops and starts backing away.
“M-my
Queen … surely you do not mean …” he asks, his voice trembling in fear.
The Queen raises her hand and beckons for him. He turns, obviously
planning on running, and in a blur of red and leathery green, she is
atop him, the man on his back and her sitting astride him. “No, please. I
beg you!”
“Silence!”
she screams, and he falls silent. “You should know by now; if your
Queen desires something, she is to have it, when she wants it.” Without
hesitation, she plunges the dagger into his chest. He, too, screams and
thrashes as a similar thing happens to him, except the cloud is red
rather than blue. After a long moment, his screams finally cease. She
stands, brushing off her robes, and the man in shackles thrashes and
struggles with all his might. She lazily makes her way toward him, and
as she does a second blade extends out the base of the hilt.
He snarls up at her as she looms over him. “I will never serve him! Never!” he roars.
She chuckles darkly, and murmurs quietly, “Oh, we’ll see about that.”
She then sets the second blade’s tip to his chest and starts drawing
Runes on his chest, murmuring in a dark language with hisses and clicks,
all the while the man screams, worse than the other two. The clouds
along the blade travel down and pool in his wounds, making them glow a
soft purple. She finishes the ritual, and suddenly his body convulses,
his screams silent. His body is overcome by shadow, and he grows in
size, his Worgen Form emerging. He breaks out of the shackles as if they
were mere dirt and he stands, breathing heavily, the purple Runes on
his chest glowing with a dull, cool light. His lupine fangs elongate
slightly, sharpening, and his eyes turn from blue, to red.
“Yes,
my pet.” Lane’thel coos to him. She pulls at the neckline of her robe,
baring her neck and shoulder. “Come, have a taste, and feel your hunger
awaken.” His eyes are immediately trained on her, and with a snarl he
dashes in a blur of black fur to her, pouncing on her and sinking his
fangs into her. As he feeds, big, black feathered wings form on his
back. All the while the Queen’s triumphant laughter echoes through the
halls.
* * *
Lane’thel
sits in a chair at a table. A chill begins to enter the room, heralding
the arrival of the great figure that throws the doors open a moment
later. The dark armor has skulls on the boots, pauldrons, and wears a
combination of a helm and a crown. His eyes are like blue fire, both
chilling and eerie. “Why did you summon me, Lane’thel?” he asks. There
is an echo to his voice, as if he is not the only one speaking, and his
voice is cold enough to chill a skeleton deeper than the bone. She
laughs softly, then slowly stands.
“Oh dear, dear Arthas. Were you always this straight forward with business?” she asks.
“I am not here out of sentimentality, Blood-Queen.” Arthas says coldly.
“Pity.”
“You should be working on the task I gave you, not calling for social visits.” He says. He turns to exit the room.
“Oh
Arthas, you are absolutely no fun whatsoever. And incidentally, I have
completed your little task.” He stops at the last words and slowly turns
back to her.
“You have done it?” he asks.
She
nods. “The blending of the essences of San’layn and Death Knight went
perfectly. You now have your weapon.” She raises a hand and a pair of
glowing eyes appears in the darker recesses of the room, glowing blue,
like the armored figure. “He is completely obedient, and will serve you
faithfully, my king.”
The
Lich King eyes the pair of eyes in the darkness, then suddenly, through
the doors, enters a man in similar armor to the king, a great sword
slung across his back. “All that’s left now is to test it,”Arthas says
softly. “Mograine, slay it.” The Knight beside the King leaps forward
and slices where the eyes were. They disappear, and when they next
appear, they are many meters away. Mograine chases them in pursuit.
“This is my test: if Mograine can slay it, then it is worthless. If it
is able to defeat my Death Knight though …” He doesn’t finish, the
implication clear, as he watches Mograine impassively as he chases the
eyes, a seemingly futile pursuit.
It
is a while before Lane’thel says softly, “Nicolus, enough toying with
him. Take him down, but leave him alive.” She smirks, and in that
instant the eyes are suddenly glowing scarlet.
Mograine
comes at them again, but he isn’t even close when suddenly he is lifted
in the air by purple and black tendrils. He holds his sword in one hand
while he grasps at his neck. Then a dark shadow darts out of the
darkness. It grabs the Knight by his neck and slams him into the ground,
using his other to rip the sword from his hands. It clatters across the
ground, the winged Worgen’s claws around the Knight’s neck,
immobilizing him completely.
In
the room there is only silence. Then Arthas says softly, “Release him.”
The Worgen leaps off of the Knight as he sits up, gasping and massaging
his throat. The creature wore only a black robe, blue Runes glowing
faintly along the hem and cuffs of his sleeves. “Kneel before your
master,” Arthas commands. It sinks down onto both knees, its head bowed.
Smiling smugly, Lane’thel says, “See? Obedient. It will serve you well, no?”
Arthas
steps toward the bowed figure and draws his sword, placing it on one
shoulder of the supplicant thing. “You are indeed powerful. Once, you
were a Death Knight, one of my elite soldiers; now, you will rise a Lich
Knight, for I am the Lich King, and you will bow to no other besides
me. I Knight you,” and he moves the sword to the other shoulder, “in the
name of the Death schools, Blood, Frost, and Unholy. Rise, my champion.
It is time you were taught of your legacy. And when you have been
educated, you shall teach the whole of Azeroth the true meaning of
fear.”
* * *
A
shadows flits through the treetops, leaping from branch to branch.
Nicolus has been a Lich Knight for many months now. He wears armor
reserved for only the best of the Death Knights, and a great sword is
slung across his back, the red, green, blue, and purple Runes seeming to
glow softly with an inner light. He stops on the outskirts of a
clearing, gazing down at a wall erected around his target. There is only
one entrance, with two guards patrolling it. And over the wall, he sees
the tip of the Chapel peeking over. Light’s Hope Chapel. After this, the Scourge will be unstoppable.
He reaches toward one of the guards, and he draws his sword, the Runes
glowing brighter, the red brightest of them. The guard suddenly doubles
over, lets out a scream, and collapses as his blood literally begins to
boil. His companion runs to his side, but with a gesture from Nicolus,
shadowy tendrils of Unholy energy shoots out, grabbing the other, and
yanks her through the air into the branches. He impales her with his
weapon. She gasps, and the blade soaks the blood up like a sponge with
water. The light leaves her eyes and he lets her corpse drop into the
bushes.
He
jumps across the clearing, using his big, black wings to glide to the
incapacitated one, ending his life with a swift stab to the chest. He
stalks into the area, gazing about at the boxes, tents and supplies, in
the center of which stands the chapel. Raising his face to the sky he
calls out, “Crusaders! Your doom is upon you! Come and face your fate!”
At first, nothing stirs. Then, out of the chapel walks a man. He has
white hair, and a beard. He wears the golden glowing armor traditionally
worn by the Paladins. But what catches Nicolus’ attention is the large
sword slung across his back, a sword said to be able to destroy the
Undead easily, and one that hurt him to simply look at: the Ashbringer.
“Tirion Fordring,” Nicolus says softly, his voice the whisper of death.
“I did not expect to find myself faced against you so quickly.”
The
man draws the Ashbringer, leveling it at his opposite. “You should have
known I would hunt you down, Lich Knight. I simply chose sooner rather
than later, before you enjoyed another slaughter.”
The
Knight laughs, his voice bouncing off the walls surrounding them, and
echoing in itself. “Is that so? Once I have disposed of you, I will
forever be known as the one who destroyed the High Paladin, and the
people will fall ever quicker. You have only succeeded in speeding on
the demise of the forces that oppose the Scourge.” He, too, levels his
sword at the man. “Come, Fordring. Let’s see if those legends about the
wielder of the Ashbringer are true.” And with that, they meet, their
swords clashing together.
They
battle back and forth across the compound. Holy Light flies from the
Paladin, healing and restoring himself, while also lashing out at the
Knight, who is likewise sending clouds of black and green Unholy magic
at him. They block them with their swords, the Lich Knight snarling as
it tries to push back his opponent. A cold wind whips through the camp,
while Holy fire sets things ablaze. It is a great battle; the champion
of darkness against the champion of light.
The
battle rages on for a long time. They begin to fatigue, albeit slowly.
Their blades lock, their eyes meeting, each a resolve harder than
saronite. They disengage, both breathing heavily. A golden figure,
seeming to be made of Light appears next to Tirion, and the Knight
falters. They are both on him in an instant. The battle continues,
Nicolus slowly being worn down. He leaps away, and quickly inscribes a
Rune on the ground. Scourge monsters, skeletons, ghouls, corpses and the
like rise up and begin attacking the Paladin. The figure of Light
disappears, and as the Ashbringer slices through Scourge, they are
disintegrated, turning to ash.
Suddenly,
an opening appears and Nicolus grins, leaping forward to deliver the
final blow. Tirion sees him coming just in time and points at him,
shouting, “Light take thee!” A blast of Light shoots out and hits him
square in the chest, knocking him to the ground. He rolls and screams,
howling as the Holy flames consume him, black smoke rising from him. The
man slowly walks over, limping slightly. The flames begin to dissipate
and he looks down at not a black winged Worgen, but a tan one, wearing
the Knight armor. He is then shrouded in light, and then he is not a
Worgen anymore, but a man. He looks up slowly, his eyes no longer red,
but blue.
Tirion
walks forward slowly, kneeling down beside the man as Nicolus looks up
at him. There is a softer expression upon his face, and after a moment
he says softly, “I ... couldn’t stop myself ... the horrors ... the
nightmares ...” his voice is weak, the whisper of death. His eyes begin
to close, and he mutters softly,”By ... the Light ... what have ... I
done?” He goes still, and the man checks him for a pulse. He thinks for a
moment, then throws the one who had been his enemy only moments before
over his shoulder, and begins the long trek across the Plaguelands.
* * *
Nicolus
wakes later, inside a tent, Tirion sitting by the bed. He tries to
rise, only to have the other man’s hand on his shoulder, keeping him
down. “Easy, Knight.” he says softly. “You have just endured a great
ordeal. You deserve some rest.”
The
Knight shakes his head. “The things I have done ... the only rest I
deserve is the eternal one.” Nevertheless, he sinks back down into the
bed. “What ... what happened to me?” he asks.
“I
believe the Ashbringer gave you a gift.” the Paladin says with a smile.
“I don’t know how or why, but when it struck you with the Light, it
removed the influence of the Lich King, and took your Worgen self and
subdued him. It has granted you a second chance at life.” He nods to a
corner, where the Knight’s armor and weapon are. “I know not if they
will serve you as well as before, but if not, you are welcome to help
yourself to our armory.” The man stands up, and turns to leave, pausing
at the tent flap. “You have a chance at redemption, Ryder. I would not
waste it if I were you. And, personally, I would want to destroy
whatever it was that was controlling me.” And with that, he leaves.
Nicolus
sits up, his head in his hands. After a while he slowly lowers them and
rises from the bed. He sways, but he steadies himself quickly. He draws
a Rune onto his shoulder that glows red, and it fades, healing him. He
takes a deep breath and begins putting the armor on.
He hesitates before taking up his sword. The Runes no longer glow along the blade. Will they still serve me? Do I still possess their power? he
thinks. Then he narrows his eyes and grasps the hilt firmly. The Runes
blaze into being along the blade, glowing brightly, ready for use. He
slowly grins and says softly, “I will not
waste this chance. I’m going to make things right.” He sheathes his
sword across his back, and as he leaves the tent, entering the world
anew, he mutters, “Prepare yourself, Arthas. Your champion is no longer
enslaved, and he hungers for retribution.”
I actually really liked it.. I love playing WOW but didnt really get into the story line. It reminds me of Edgar Allen Poe in away, dark but light hearted and well written. Seriously, good job.
ReplyDeleteCool! I thought no one was going to read it. I will post the other chapters so you can read them as well.
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