The
rain pours down on Gilneas, a small city surrounded by a circular wall.
There were four districts that made up the great city. The Military
District, Merchant Square, Greymane Court, and Cathedral Quarter. The
Military District was where the Gilneans kept their weapons, and trained
their soldiers, as well as where their prison and barracks were built.
The Merchant Square was made of houses and vendor stalls, where commerce
and trade happened. The Cathedral Quarter was set up right in front of
the massive cathedral located directly in the center of the city. It had
plenty of comfortable grass for a person to enjoy a pleasant afternoon
on. The Greymane Court was a sort of commons, where fellow Gilneans
could gather and chat or meet new people. It was named after their
dearly loved and honored King, Genn Greymane.
Nicolus
crouches on top of Light’s Dawn Cathedral, overlooking the ruins of the
once beautiful city he had called home. He grimaces as tears slowly run
down his face. I would never have guessed it would happen. Who would have? he thinks. And it happened so fast, too ...
King
Greymane was an amazing man, who had ruled justly and fairly throughout
his kingdom. He was kind, smart, wise, and a fierce believer in
loyalty. All Gilneans loved him, with no exception. He had had a son
named Liam, a prince that was loved and adored just as much, if not more
so, than his father.
Nick closes his eyes in grief. It all happened on a night so like this.
It is raining heavily, dark clouds obscuring the sky. The memories
suddenly swell up and slam into him like a maelstrom, and through his
mind, he is hurled into the past.
* * *
Nicolus
Ryder walks through the rain, his hooded cloak his only protection
against the relentless torrent of rain. He reaches a building with a
sign over the entrance in the shape of a cross. He opens it and quickly
steps inside with an appreciative sigh as he shuts the door. He hangs
his cloak on the pegs near the door, and walking through the waiting
room, heads into the back room, where he gets a candle and strikes up a
flame.
He
holds the candle as he goes to the others on the walls, lighting them
too. There were four in the waiting room in the front, and a set of six
in a chandelier in the back room, where he kept the tools of his trade.
He was a doctor, a medicine man, a scholar, and a teacher. In the back
was a chalkboard up against the wall. There was a desk with a chair near
it, where a pile of papers and a pile of books rested. Inside the desk
drawers were his medical tools; scalpals, scissors, tweazers, needles of
different sorts. There was a cabinet where he kept the actual medicines
he made out of local herbs and the like. And in the center of all this
was a table long enough for a full grown man to be able to lay
comfortably on. He sits himself at his desk and opens one of the books
as he begins reading.
The candle is burning low when suddenly he hears a loud BANG. He shoots to his feet. That was a gunshot I heard,
he thinks. He quickly picks up his bag he keeps by the door, containing
powerful types of medicine and other emergency triage equipment, throws
on his cloak, and hurries out into the storm.
He
runs through the rain, heading in the direction he had heard the
gunshot. He reaches a house with the basement door open, light pouring
out of it. He hurries down inside, and stops short as he sees a heap of
fur lying on the ground with a very humanoid shape. No, oh no no no,
he thinks. He approaches slowly and on closer inspection, his suspicion
is confirmed; it is a Worgen. However, it is wearing human clothes,
oddly enough. Then he remembers how Worgen could somehow transform
ordinary people into one of them. “Well, maybe if I can study you, I can
find a way to cure you,”he thinks aloud. He nods, and grabbing the huge
monster under the arms, begins dragging it back to his office.
He
bursts through the door, dragging the now-soaking wet mass of fur
inside, hauling it to the back where he heaves it onto the central
table. He doubles over as he catches his breath. Then he goes to the
door, shuts and bolts it, and walks back to the back room. He sets the
Worgen on its back, and looks it over.
It
is larger than any human, and it wears the clothes of a man known as
Crowley. “Poor fellow,” Nick mutters. He finds the bullet wound and he
goes to his desk, opening drawers and withdrawing the tools he will
need. Using his skills in medicine, he takes the bullet out and sews up
the wound with deft experienced fingers. He goes to his cupboard, and
grabs a medicine bag. He returns and sprinkles a leafy-green powder on
the wound. The Worgen suddenly growls, squirming a little. He puts the
bag back and returns to the desk, taking out a syringe. He walks back to
the Worgen and is about to stick it in when its eyes fly open.
With
a snarl it leaps to its feet. Nick shouts, nearly dropping the needle
to the ground. He runs to the cupboard, and loads a yellow vial into the
syringe. He turns and barely raises an arm in time as the Worgen leaps
at him. Its teeth sink into his arm and he cries out in pain. He brings
the other hand, holding the shot, down on the back of its neck and
delivers the sedative. The creature’s eyes go wide, then they flutter
closed and it collapses.
Nick
gets up, holding his wounded arm tenderly. “Argh,” he mutters. “That
sure stings a lot. Wretched mongrels...” He quickly heads to the desk
and pulling open another drawer withdraws a towel, which he presses to
the wound. He grabs a strand of cloth from the same drawer and ties it
tight over the towel. He then heads to the closet and throws it open
where a large cage is. He grabs the Worgen and hauls it into the cage,
shutting and locking it firmly. He grimaces in pain, and heads over to
the cupboard again, grabbing a set of vials from it. He heads over to
the table and after a couple minutes has the wound disinfected, properly
wrapped up, and the bleeding already slowing down.
Suddenly
a knock sounds at the door, startling him. He walks over, pulling his
sleeve down lower to hide the bandages. He opens it to see a man with a
neatly trimmed white beard standing there with a pair of spectacles and a
top hat.
“Mr. Nicolus Ryder, I’m glad you’re here. Your house’s district has already been overrun.”
“Nick, please, but who are you?”
“Lord
Godfrey, and by King Greymane’s request, he wishes for you to join him
and the others at the Cathedral. The Worgen have overrun our city.”
Nick’s face pales. “Oh, I had no idea the situation was so dire!”
“There
are many wounded that could benefit from your experienced hands, Dr.
Ryder,” Godfrey adds. “Many will die without your help.”
“I’ll
come immediately!” he says and quickly hurries inside. He assembles the
bag, packing extra supplies, and he quickly grabs his fencing foil from
the back. On his way to the door, he pauses by the cage, then opens it.
He hurries back to see Godfrey still waiting for him. He glances at the weapon in Nick’s hand. “You know how to use that?”
Without
a word, Nick brings it up, deftly plucking Godfrey’s hat off his head
with the tip. He flicks it upward and the hat lands back on Godfrey’s
head. Nick smirks, but Godfrey doesn’t so much as smile.
“I’m
glad you can do parlor tricks, Nicolus, but now’s not the time for
them.” Without another word he turns and starts walking. Nick shrugs and
follows him.
The
rain has only gotten heavier since he had dragged the Worgen inside.
They hop on the horse Godfrey had come on, and they speed through the
storm. Lightning flashes, and as Nick looks off into the gloom, he sees a
multitude of yellow eyes watching him.
“What of the other sections of the city?” he asks over the pounding of rain, the horse’s hooves, and his own heart.
“All
fallen by now,” Godfrey shouts back to him. “The mongrels are
relentless in their assault. We had enough ammunition to wipe out
Gilneas five times over and we used it all on them. They just keep
coming!” Just then, a chilling howl pierces the air. The two men look
back, and Godfrey urges the horse on faster.
They
arrive at the Cathedral, the entire courtyard surrounded by Worgens. At
the steps leading inside the massive structure are great canons, firing
into the masses. They come to a stop, dismount, and run inside.
The
inside of the Cathedral is spacious. All around men and women lie,
wounded, fewer others remain upright with guns pointed at the entrance.
Nick quickly assesses the situation and moves to the first group of
victims and begins healing them.
He
has just finished patching another up when suddenly one of the ones
still standing doubles over and drops to his hands and knees. He pants
and heaves, then black fur begins sprouting from his skin, his figure
grows bigger, and his mouth begins to elongate. Oh no, please no,
he thinks. Then the man rears up and howls. Everyone turns to him at
the same time, just as Worgen pour in from every entrance. Nick quickly
grabs his sword, only to find it falling from his grasp. A terrible pain
appears in his chest and he groans as he doubles over onto his hands
and knees. He gasps for breath, feeling like his lungs can’t expand
enough. An itch appears all over his body, and he watches in fascination
as fur begins to sprout from himself as well. By the Light, please, no!
He feels his bones elongating, his muscles swelling beneath his skin.
Then a presence of some sort, a dark shadow falls across his thoughts.
He can no longer control himself. His primal side is there instead. He
stands up slowly and howls as the other Worgen with him do. Then Nick is
forced to watch in silent, helpless horror as he begins slaughtering
his friends.
* * *
It
has been many months. He is the alpha of the Worgen pack. His knowledge
of how the body works seems to be at the disposal of Nick’s primal
side. He has gotten used to knowing without doing. He experiences
everything his body goes through, he just can’t control it. He comes to a
stop, as does the rest of his pack. The smell of the dead wafts to him.
He barks to the rest of the pack, “Circle around. Flee. I will hold
them off.” He is their best hunter and fighter. He crouches down, and
waits.
They
emerge like some horrible fog out of the woods. Corpses, dead bodies
everywhere. He bears his teeth, and with a snarl, launches himself into
their midst. He rips them apart, crippling and mauling the monstrous
creatures. He downs an abomination, when suddenly he is lifted and
thrown into a tree. He looks to see a normal looking elf in black armor
marching toward him, a big sword with glowing figures along the blade
drawn, with dark tendrils linking from his outstretched hand to Nick’s
neck, and its eyes are glowing a soft blue.
“My, my, what a feisty monster!” he says contemptuously.
Nick
bares his teeth, and howls loudly as the man approaches, his distance
making the high decibels really hurt his pointed ears. He covers them,
dropping Nick to the ground,who immediately pounces the elf. They roll
and tumble, trying to get the better of one another. The elf gets clawed
and bitten many times over, while Nick gets bumped and bruised.
Finally, Nick ends on top of the elf, snarling, his claws going for the
throat, when suddenly he is yanked through the air, landing at the feet
of another man in identical dark armor. He looks down at Nick in a way
that would suggest he was looking at a pile of droppings.
“Really Koltira, is it so difficult to kill a common Worgen?” the man asks with disdain.
“You
weren’t the one fighting it,” the one called Koltira gasps as he gets
to his feet. “He is a vicious fighter. I’d like to see you take him on,
Orbaz.”
“Perhaps
I will spare him just to show you,” Orbaz mused aloud. Nick struggles
to get back to his feet, only to have a metal boot smash him across the
face, knocking him to the ground.
Stay down, Nick despairingly thinks, but he starts to get back up.
“Hmph,you’re right, this is
a stubborn one.” Orbaz appraised. Koltira comes over and a sharp blow
to the head sends Nick to the ground once more. “Wait a second! Don’t
kill it...I wonder ...” Nick rolls over, just in time for the sword to
impale him through the heart. He doesn’t die, oddly enough. Through his
teeth, Nick snarls at Orbaz, who grins down at him like he just found a
cache of gold, or something along those lines. “I say we make it a Death
Knight!”
“Orbaz, I knew you were insane, but that is almost a statement worthy of a second death.”
“Listen Koltira; if this is how vicious this mongrel is now, and how stubborn, imagine what a powerful Death Knight he will be!”
Koltira
crosses his arms, pondering this, while Nick lies impaled by Orbaz’s
sword. “Alright, fine; resurrect him. But don’t come crying to me when
he rips your throat out.”
Suddenly, a chill fills Nick. He gasps and whimpers, feeling the cold down to his very soul. Suddenly this dark something
goes into his brain, and he feels the Worgen suppressed for the moment.
He quickly reaches out and seizes control of his body once again. He
starts getting smaller, the fur falling off of him, his claws shrinking
back into his fingers, his snout shortening. Finally, he sat up, in
control of himself. He looks at his chest, where a large, ugly scar is.
He looks up at the shocked faces of Koltira and Orbaz.
“Orbaz,
you have made one of those transformed Worgen into a Death Knight; good
going.” Koltira pats the other on his shoulder and walks off.
“Hello
there,” Orbaz says as he crouches down in front of Nick. The urge to
kill him is sudden and powerful, the desire to lunge forward and rip his
throat out with his bare hands. Coupled with the beating Nick just
received, he doesn’t resist all that much. Nick roars as he hurls
himself at the Death Knight. A blow to his jaw so fast he doesn’t even
see it sends Nick back to the ground with a grunt of pain. “Well, at
least I know that wasn’t a waste. Usually it takes awhile for the desire
to kill to set in. You must have a thirst for blood that is almost as
great as mine.” He grins evilly. “Welcome to the Scourge!”
***
Nick wakes up from the memory, shaking his head. When I became a Worgen ... How I became a Death Knight...
He sighs and starts walking through Gilneas. He lets his mind wander as
he looks around the desolate, abandoned city. Next thing he knows, he’s
at the Gilnean cemetery. He searches about, and finally finds the grave
of Liam Greymane. Oh Liam, you deserved a better death than what was given to you. He places a hand on the grave, and again, he finds himself in the past once more.
***
He
walks into Stormwind Keep, his dark armor covered in rotted fruits and
the like. The people of Stormwind had done everything in their power to
make him feel unwelcomed. But he hadn’t come this far only to be made an
outcast, and he was not one to give up easily. The guards in the
corridor all draw their weapons as he walks in, eyeing him as if he were
a filthy, dangerous animal. Nick stoically refuses to make eye contact
though. He reaches the throne room, a huge circular room, in the back of
which was the throne, where King Varian Wrynn sat with his son, Anduin.
To the left, a great archway where sunlight shone through, and to the
right, another that lead into a different room.
He slowly approaches the throne, where not only King Wrynn and Anduin look down at him, but King Genn Greymane as well. Well, so far so good. Now if they’ll just refrain from killing me yet, maybe I can actually walk out with my head.
He stops at the foot of the stairs to the throne and looks up at King
Wrynn. Then, with deliberate slowness, he draws his sword, the Runes
glowing mutely, and lays it on the floor at his feet, before kneeling
before it and the Kings.
“You
have a lot of nerve coming into my Keep, Knight. The only reason you
are not dead yet is idle curiosity.” King Wrynn slowly gets up from his
throne and walks down the steps until he is standing over Nick. “Remove
your helm, Death Knight-”
“Lich
Knight, your highness,” Nick corrects him. There is a sharp intake of
breath all around the room, but Nick ignores it. Then, very slowly, he
reaches up and removes his helm, setting it by his sword. Then he looks
up, his short brown hair and glowing blue eyes finally meeting Varian’s
blue ones.
“Nicolus!” Genn Greymane says, a kind of confused happiness on his face.
“Please,
Genn, let me handle this,” Varian says. Then, turning to Nick, “Speak
quickly, Knight, for it may be the last words you ever say.” Nick
silently takes off a glove and traces a blue Rune onto the back of his
hand. A blue flame flares above his palm, and then the flame disappears,
along with the Rune, and leaving behind a crisp letter with a golden
seal. He offers it to Varian. The King takes the letter and opens it,
scanning it quickly. He then glances at Nick.
“Were
this letter from anyone else, I would’ve discarded it and beheaded you
at once. But it has the seal of the Light on the envelope, and Tirion
has a very peculiar way he signs his name.” He slowly ascends back to
his throne, gesturing to the guards, who, albeit grudgingly, put away
their swords. As Varian sits, he continues to regard Nick, who remains
kneeling. “Tirion wrote that you have somehow been cleansed of the Lich
King’s influences, and that a sect of the Death Knights of the Scourge
have broken away, calling themselves ‘Knights of the Ebon Blade.’ He
says you are to be trusted.” He pauses, letting the words sink in. “I
trust Tirion’s judgement. I don’t trust you, but him. And he says that
you should receive a full pardon, and set to aiding the Alliance in
anyway you can.” Again, a pause. Then, “Nicolus Ryder, as King of the
Alliance, I hereby grant you full pardon of your crimes during your
servitude to the Scourge. Aid the Alliance as you can.” He then says
quietly, “Do not make me regret what I have done.”
“I will not, your majesty,” Nick says.
Genn Greymane asks, “Vairian, would you mind if I spoke to Nicolus here for a moment?”
“Go
ahead,” he replies, not taking his eyes off Nick. King Greymane stands
and walks down as Nicolus puts back on his helm and sheathes his sword
across his back again.
“Come
with me Ryder, we have much to talk about.” The two exit through the
arch that has sunlight pouring in. They enter a courtyard outside, a
raised area a garden of sorts in the center. They walk around its
perimeter. Nick glances at the King, who seems perfectly at ease.
“King Greymane-”
“Please, call me Genn.”
Nick blinks, then says, “Nick. Call me Nick.”
Genn nods. “Alright.”
Nick
starts again, “Genn, when I turned ... well, what happened to Gilneas?”
He moves in front of Genn, stopping him. “Why are you here?”
Genn
sighs heavily. “Oh Nick ... after the battle at Light’s Dawn, the
Worgen completely over ran Gilneas. We left and Aranas was able to make a
potion to restore the minds of our people turned Worgen.” He pauses and
leads them into the garden itself. “The Forsaken became a problem then.
They attacked us mercilessly, trying to seize Gilneas from us. We
fought hard back, along with our then Worgen allies ... but it wasn’t
until the Druids came to help as that we were able to make a play for
Gilneas city.
“We
fought tooth, nail, and claw, and we were able to push them out ... but
then I found Sylvanas ... and I attacked her.” He looks at Nick. “I’m
one too, you know. A Worgen. Have been for quite a few years now. But
finally she knocked me down, and time froze for us. I saw her knock an
arrow, saw her draw back on her bow, but then ...” Nick watches as
Genn’s eyes fill with tears. “Then ... my son ... my pride and joy, Liam
... he jumped in front of her ... he saved my life, at the cost of
his.” Tears start to trickle down Genn’s kind face.
“I’m sorry, Genn,” Nick says softly.
“It’s
alright. He is in a better place now.” Genn looks skyward. “He is
buried at the Gilnean cemetery now ... buried with his ancestors. We had
to leave Gilneas, as the Forsaken filled the area with their fel-born
Plague.” He balls his fists in anger. “They forced us out of our home
... but the Night Elves were kind enough to take us in. The Gilneans
live there now.” He looks at Nick. “Perhaps, we will be able to return
someday ... but until then, all we can do is help do our part to
eliminate mutual enemies so we can focus on the Horde.” He turns to
Nick.
“I
heard that you were one of the best doctors and scholars we had in
Gilneas. I hope you can be as helpful now as you were then.”
“Your highness, if anything, I can be more helpful.” Nick replies.
“Good!” Genn places a hand on his shoulder. “Good luck, Nick. May your blade stay sharp.”
“And
your mind,” Nick replies, placing his hand on Genn’s shoulder in turn.
They shake hands, and Nick whistles, summoning his Scourge Gryphon. He
mounts it, waves to Genn, and takes off into the skies.
***
He
emerges back in the present. He looks down at the grave of Liam, the
rain still pouring as heavily as before. Suddenly, there is a zoooooommm
behind him, along with a flash of azure light. He whirls around,
drawing his blade and stopping just shy and decapitating a blonde woman
in white and light violet robes.
“Good
evening,” she says in a soft voice. She is in her mid twenties by the
looks of it, but her eyes say she has lived many lifetimes. “I’m Lady
Jaina Proudmoore. King Wrynn said I could find you here.”
“He was right,” Nick replies. “Is there a reason you came here to find me?”
“Word
is that you were a member of the Scourge once, and that you now hunger
for vengeance.” She says softly. “I have come to give you that
opportunity.” Nick tilts his head at her. “We recently have cornered the
Lich King and the Scourge in Northrend. If you are willing to help, you
could help us crush the Scourge once and for all.” She smiles hopefully
at him. “Will you join us?”
Nick looks around the cemetery. There is nothing left for me here, he thinks. And this is my chance to redeem myself in the eyes of all who know me. I can end the Lich King’s reign of terror. Finally, he says, “Tell me what to do.”
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