Rehgar Earthfury slid off the Worg he had rode on, eyes roaming the valley. A moment later, he heard Bloodeye slide down after him, the gladiator staggering as he adjusted to dismounting for the first time.
A low whistle came from the Blackrock orc, his one eye following the path Rehgar's had just finished.
"Damn, whoever did this really had it out for 'em"
Rehgar nodded in agreement, carefully picking his way down the valley that the renegade Warsongs had once inhabited.
Now, there was massive fall of lava burning away at the opposite side of the valley, and a trench dividing it in two, leaving Rehgar undoubting of who had done this. A shaman.
"We're going down there?" Bloodeye asked, "haven't we done enough? You said we were to find them, so why don't we turn around?"
"And who would be the one to explain to the Warchief that we decided to turn around instead of finding out who did this?"
Bloodeye didn't respond, obviously accepting the point as he followed Rehgar down into the heated valley. The shaman raised his hand in a warding gesture.
"What?"
"You can't survive down there," Rehgar said, pointing down at the slowly hardening lava, "don't be tricked by stories, there isn't anything on Azeroth hotter than the raging power of a magma elemental. I can survive through my accord with the elements, you can't. Not everything can be beaten, boy."
Bloodeye snorted, dropping onto the rocks, "Then I'll be here when you get back."
"You better be," Rehgar responded, "I paid good money for you, I don't want my investment to go to waste for having to kill you."
Both master and slave were aware that Rehgar wouldn't actually do it, that if Bloodeye took off, Rehgar would do little more than a token search.
Rehgar descended into the valley, eyes scanning the destroyed camp. Burned bodies sat around, the green skin charred to black from the heat.
As Rehgar traveled further into the camp, he stretched his senses, trying to find any sign of life.
As he approached the smithy, Rehgar heard a disgruntled grunt, followed by the sound of metal on metal.
Rehgar leaned in, watching the human girl seated on a chair inside thrust a leg into the forge, before pulling it out and dropping an axe on the superheated chain.
Well, it looks like he had found their shaman.
"You," Rehgar said, drawing her attention, "what are you doing here? Humans aren't allowed in this part of Orcish territory."
The girl's head snapped up, a look of wild terror in her eyes, before she grabbed the blacksmith's hammer and threw it at him. As it left her hand, fire coiled around it.
Rehgar ducked under the flaming hammer, aware that it had seared his wolf pelt, before coming up and throwing a lance of lightning at her.
She tried to dodge it, only for the shackle around her foot to snap taunt, sending her crashing onto the ground. As that happened, Rehgar took a look around the room.
A small pile of furs sat in the corner near the bracket the chain was bound to, and a tray with meager scraps sat on the table.
"You!" Rehgar barked at the girl in Common, "how long have you been here?"
"You," she stopped, "you can talk like me?"
"What do you mean, girl?"
"They," she gestured at the outside, "they only speak that other language. I've guessed a couple of words, but nobody wanted to teach me."
"How long have you been here, girl?"
"I'm," she frowned, "I'm not sure. The days have blended together, you know?"
"Yes," Rehgar agreed as he walked over to the wall, examining the chain.
Rehgar was well aware of it, he had spent years in the gladiator pits of Highmaul, fighting other slaves for the amusement of the ogres.
"Tell me, girl, did you have something to do with the destruction of this village?"
"Why?" Rehgar saw her grab the axe, preparing to attack.
"Because if anyone has the motive to do this, it's a slave."
"I," she gripped her axe tighter, "I just want to be free again."
"Of course you do," Rehgar said, "they could only keep you bound so long as your heart was, and it wasn't, was it?"
"Wuh," the girl seemed taken aback, "what do you mean?"
"I mean that you don't want to be chained," Rehgar said, "so you would do anything to free yourself," Rehgar turned, making the wall binding the girl melt, "so I'll offer you a deal."
"What?" she said, eyes locked onto the free chain.
"Come with me," Rehgar said, "I'll teach you the way of the shaman, and when you decide you're ready to leave, you can."
"I," she looked torn, "I have someone I need to find. That's how I got captured, distracting them from her."
"Then I'll help you find her, if that's what you want," Rehgar held out his hand, "my name is Rehgar Earthfury, will you come with me?"
"I- Yes," she nodded, picking herself up, "I'm Ruby Rose."
---
Ruby sat next to Rehgar, doing her best to radiate her disapproval of the contents of their wagon.
"Ruby-" Rehgar started.
"I'm not talking to you," Ruby said in Orcish, turning her head away from him like Weiss used to do.
"Ruby," Rehgar repeated, "don't be petulant."
"I'm not being petulant," Ruby muttered petulantly.
"You never complained this much about Bloodeye."
"That's different," Ruby said, "Bloodeye wasn't really a slave, you paid him, half the time you paid him more than you pay me. Definitely more than you've paid Broll."
"Leave me out of this," the night elf called from his spot in the cage.
"Even Broll choose slavery," Ruby stopped, "ok, that sounded weird. But she's a teen, she'll be chewed up in the ring."
"What are they saying?" the young blood elf asked Broll.
"Be quiet," Broll snapped at her.
"Behave," Ruby called in Common, "you're going to have to cooperate if you want to survive."
"Oh, so now you decide to talk to us," Valeera complained, "who are you? What's a human doing with an orcish slaver?"
"Maybe she took a lesson out of your kind's book and turned traitor?" Broll responded.
Ruby snorted, "You know why I'm here, Broll," she said in Orcish.
"Yes," he agreed, "but that doesn't mean she needs to. How long until we reach Orgrimmar?"
"Another day, give or take," Ruby scratched her arm, "don't get too comfortable, Rehgar is probably gonna drag us off to another auction so we can have a team ready before Dire Maul."
"Of course I am," Rehgar said, "we won't survive another year if we don't have a team ready. Unless you'd go into the ring?"
"Not on your life," Ruby said, "I've still got things I need to do."
Rehgar grunted, "still hoping you'll find her?"
"I'm not giving up until I find out where she is," Ruby said, "I got a lead back there, they said someone carrying her weapon and Crescent Rose was heading towards Darnassus."
Ruby heard Broll sit up straight at the mention of the night elven city.
"Can you all stop with the whole 'talking in Orcish' thing? You know I don't speak it," Valeera complained, "actually, does the orc speak common?"
"So when are you leaving?" Rehgar asked, ignoring Valeera. Even the older shaman knew that Crescent Rose was too much of a red flag, neither of them had seen anything that could compare to the mech-shift scythe in the past three years.
"I'll stay until you finish your team, then I'm gone. If you're gonna start ramping up the slavery, I don't want anything to do with it."
Rehgar nodded, stopping the cart.
"What?"
"Do you hear that?"
Ruby strained her ears, catching the noise of a struggle.
"I'll go check," Ruby slid off the cart, grabbing the wooden scythe handle and pulling it from behind the cage.
She missed Crescent Rose.
As Ruby picked her way through the brush, she called for the wind to assist her in her search, the scent of whatever was fighting being carried right to her nose.
It didn't take much for the Elements to be willing to help Ruby, her and them having found an easy accord.
Stopping before the swamp, Ruby watched the human man struggling with a crocolisk for a moment, before throwing a ball of air at the six legged reptile, forcing it into the air as lightning tore through it on the back swing.
Ruby walked over to the man, helping him up.
"You alright?" she asked, "I'm Ruby, what's your name?"
"My name?" he said, clutching his head, "I, uh, I don't remember."
"Amnesia?"
"What?"
"You don't remember your name? What about anything else?"
"I-" he shook his head, "I don't remember anything."
"I- Ruby frowned, "I can get you to Orgrimmar, but you'll have to figure the rest out yourself. Come on, I've got a cart we can take."
---
Valeera snapped her eyes open as a hand planted on her shoulder, trying to lunge forward.
Broll kept his hand on her, pressing a finger to his lips and pointing outside, where several people talking in Orcish.
"What's going on?" she asked.
"We're at Orgrimmar, we'll be at the arena in an hour."
After a minute, the cart shuddered back into motion, carrying the group forward. Valeera watched as they entered the fortress city.
Orgrimmar was built into a long valley, metal walkways lining it to allow people to access several of the natural caves that had been converted into buildings, while more building sat in the valley proper.
After ten minutes the human woman jumped off the wagon, sharing a brief conversation with the orc, who threw her a coin purse and pair of letters as they continued past a market.
"What were they saying?" she asked Broll.
"Ruby's going to pick up some supplies for a trip she'll be making later, and Rehgar asked her to stop by the butchery and make a delivery."
"Ah," Valeera said, watching as the human disappeared into a throng of Orcs, Trolls, and Tauren. The other human, the one they had found on the road, looked like he wanted to follow her, before Rehgar suddenly spoke in slightly stilted Common.
"So, Crocbait. Ruby said you don't remember anything?"
"You can speak Common?" Valeera blurted out.
"Clearly," Rehgar said sarcastically, "Crocbait?"
"Crocbai-? No, I don't remember anything."
"Mh… Any sort of identifying thing on you?" Rehgar speech stumbled slightly as he said that, "a badge, locket, something like that?"
"No, I don't think so," the man said, patting himself down.
"How long do you think you'd been fighting that Crocolisk when Ruby found you?"
"I don't know? A few minutes maybe? Why?"
"Most humans wouldn't survive a minute, there are plenty of orcs that couldn't either. Think you would have won?"
"Maybe?" Crocbait asked, "I had caught sight of a broken plank, I figured if I could worm it under the thing, it's own weight would have impaled it."
"That could work," Rehgar agreed, "do you think you were a fighter, a soldier maybe?"
"I don't know, why?"
"I've got have an opening at my home, Ruby's headin' toward Darnassus, I also need a third member for my gladiator team. How about I hire you on? It'll be dangerous work, but the pay will be good and you'll have a roof over your head."
"Oh, come on-" Broll slapped a hand over Valeera's mouth, pressing his finger against his own again.
"That does sound nice," Crocbait agreed, "do I have to give my answer now?"
"No, you have a few days, but I do need it soon. I need to know if I have to get another gladiator so I can have the team ready for Dire Maul. Think about, would you? I'm good at guessing how good people are," Rehgar stumbled again, "and you seem like you could go far."
---
Ruby walked away from the Orgrimmar rookery, approaching Grommash Hold. As she approached the seat of the Warchief, two Kor'kron guards stepped in front of her. The bigger of the two sneered at her, exposing his gold ringed tusks.
"What do you want, human?" he asked in rough Common.
"I'm delivering a message to the Warchief."
The sneer grew wider, and the orc turned to the other, "the pinkskin thinks she's going to meet with the Warchief," he said in Orcish, electing a sniggering laugh from the other.
Ruby sucked her teeth, clenching her fist behind her back. The first thing she was doing when she met Blake again was retroactively agreeing with her on every matter of Faunus rights she had ever mentioned. She had lived in Orgrimmar for three years, why did so many people act like she was a second class citizen?
"What's the message?" he asked in common.
"A letter from Rehgar Earthfury," Ruby said, raising the letter, "I'm also supposed to speak with Farseer Drek'thar."
Ruby saw the Kor'korn's eyes widen at the reference to Rehgar, and he reached out for the letter, only for Ruby to store it away.
"I'll be going in now," she said, sidestepping him.
"I didn't say you were allowed in, pinkskin," he growled.
"I didn't know you chose who met with the Warchief, I'll be sure to pass that fact along to him," Ruby said, watching the Kor'korn's grip on his axe tighten.
She understood why Blake did this to Weiss, it was really fun annoying people like this.
"You aren't going in," he repeated.
"Sir," Ruby called out to a passing undead with red eyes, "were you aware that the Warchief isn't informed of messengers sent to deliver important letters?"
Duck.
Ruby fell slightly as an axe attempted to take her head off, turning towards the orc.
"Ignore the pinkskin," he barked in orcish, "she doesn't kno-"
"What would the Warchief think," Ruby asked loudly in orcish, "if he knew that his guards believed that they were more knowledgeable about wha-"
Left, right, left, right, right.
Ruby dodged the flurry of axe swings, the impression warning her seconds before each strike came.
"Sir," Ruby said as loudly as possible, "I apologize, Rehgar didn't inform me that the true power of the Horde was the man guarding the Warchief. Allow me leave, and I'll go inform him that he should contact you next time he wishes to speak with the Warchi-"
Block!
Ruby threw up a barrier of rock, before uncoiling the chain whip she had long taken to carrying in Orgrimmar out from under one sleeve and lashing out with it, flames following in its wake as it struck the axe.
"What!?" the orc growled.
"What's going on here?" a familiar voice demanded, allowing an old, blind orc out of the hold, "why are you fighting a Kor'kron, Ruby?"
"He wasn't letting me in Drek'thar," she shrugged, "I came to let you know that I would be leaving soon, and to deliver a message to Thrall."
---
Thrall looked over from where he had been quietly conversing with Vol'jin about the war brewing near the gates of Sithilus, eyebrows raising slightly as Drek'thar walked in with a pair of bowed head Kor'kron and Ruby Rose.
"What happened?" Thrall asked, slightly resigned.
"These two," Drek'thar gestured to the orcs, "decided to take it upon themselves to keep Ruby from entering."
"Called me pinkskin, too!" Ruby piped up, a slightly forced grin on her face.
Thrall winced, well aware of how the former slave hated to be called pinkskin, since it was the only thing her masters had referred to her as.
"Saurfang? Would you take these two back to the Valley of Trials? They clearly haven't learned enough."
The guards shared a look of horror. Being sent back to the Valley of Trials was a heavy punishment, a way of declaring that their mentors had failed to instill enough knowledge in them.
"Warchief!" one yelled, "you're not taking this pinkskin's sid-"
"Don't call her that. What if she had been an envoy from Theramore, or Stormwind? You would have caused an incident. Go," Thrall watched them be escorted out, turning to Ruby, "I'm sorry about that."
"It's not your fault, Warchief."
"I've told you before, you don't need to call me that. You aren't a sworn member of the Horde, but you are my friend."
"Then you should hurry up and find your name, I'm not calling you slave, ever."
Thrall laughed slightly, "but if I don't know it, is it truly my name?"
"That's a question best left to the philosophers of my profession, Warchief."
Thrall nodded, "What did you need, my friend?"
"I'm delivering a pair of letters, one from Jaina that she asks for you to read alone, and the other from Rehgar."
Thrall took the letter, storing the one with the seal of Theramore emblazoned on the front in wax, before opening the one from Rehgar.
"What's it say?" Vol'jin asked.
"He says that he plans to retire from managing his gladiators if they win at Dire Maul, and is offering his services as an advisor in the place of Nazgrel," Thrall said as his eyes scanned the rough orcish words, testimony to the fact that his people had once held even other orcs as slaves, that some, including Rehgar, still did. A part of their history that Thrall wished to put an end to once and for all.
Putting the letter away, and resolving to think about it later, Thrall turned his attention back to Ruby.
"Anything else?"
"Yes," Ruby was examining Doomhammer, picking it up from its place on the pedestal next to Thrall, practically fondling the warhammer, "I'm leaving soon."
"Rehgar running you ragged again?" Thrall asked.
"No," Ruby shook her head, "I'm leaving for Darnassus, I got a lead. I came here to thank Drek'thar for his help teaching me these last few years."
Thrall saw Drek'thar frown, the older orc stepping forward, "You shouldn't get your hopes up, it's been six years."
"She had Crescent Rose, even if it isn't her, I want my baby back."
"And if is her? What will you do?"
"I don't know," Ruby said, placing the hammer down, "but it doesn't matter. I'll just happy to see her again."
"You could return to Orgrimmar, you will always be welcome here," Thall threw out, trying to find some way to help his friend, "you could do mercenary work, or assist us."
"Maybe. Do you know a quick way to Darnassus? I'd like to head out as soon as I can."
"A portal from here to Theramore, and then from Theramore to Darnassus," Thrall said instantly, it was what he did on diplomatic meeting with the night elves, "just say the word and I can have one opened."
"I'll think about it," Ruby said, "I need to head out now, there's things I need to buy before the shops close down."
---
Ruby walked through the halls of the Ring of Valor, a torch held aloft, the only light in the dark pits. At each of the grates, Ruby briefly leaned down, checking the people in each oubliette.
After a while, Ruby found who she was looking for, placing the torch in a holder. The shamaness dropped the sack in her hand, unlocked the grate with her copy of the key, and then dropped down, grabbing her sack as she did.
"Wake up," Ruby hissed, nudging Valeera with her foot. After a moment, the blood elf snapped up, looking around bleary eyed.
"Wuzzit?" she asked.
Ruby reached into the sack, throwing a cooling loaf of bread at her. Valeera caught it, looking down at it.
"Bread?"
"Yeah," Ruby said, waking Broll too, passing another loaf to him. Then she pulled out a knife and a glass jar with strawberry jam.
Ruby unscrewed the top, grabbing Valeera's bread, cutting it, and adding a generous amount of jam to it before giving it back.
"Eat," Ruby insisted, "you'll need plenty of energy tomorrow, training starts then."
"Why do you care? We're your slaves."
"You're Rehgar's slave, I'm not having anything to do with the slave trade," Ruby said, perhaps a bit too sharp.
The trio sat in uncomfortable silence, the two gladiators eating their food in silence, before Ruby sighed.
"Sorry," she said, "I just, I have a bad history with slavery."
"How?" Valeera asked.
"I spent three years a slave," Ruby said, "you two have it lucky, Rehgar's a good guy, despite what you might think, he normally gives slaves a cut of the profit, they'll keep you fed enough so you don't get weak, and you'll always have a way out if you decide to take it in the arena. That's more than I had."
It had taken months to regain the weight she had lost, longer still to get back into shape.
"What did you do?" Valeera asked, her food gone, "they didn't-?"
Ruby blinked in confusion. Didn't? Didn't wh- ewww.
"No!" Ruby let put a full body shudder, "Dust and Spirits, no! Why would you assume that?"
"Well," Valeera tugged at her sleeve, "you're a pretty human."
Pretty? Ruby wasn't pretty. Yang was pretty, Blake was pretty, Pyrrha was pretty.
"Most orcs would sooner jump off a cliff than lay with a pinkskin," Ruby stood, dusting off her lap, "I need to go, Rehgar's still waiting for meats for dinner."
The house Rehgar owned wasn't far from the arena, the gladiator pit having been central to the two shamans and their deceased friend's lives.
Ruby walked into the house walking into the kitchen. As she did, Rehgar looked up from where he was teaching their houseguest how to play Hearthstone.
"About time you got here," Rehgar stood up, storing his cards and taking the bag. Ruby slid into the chair, pulling out her deck as Crocbait grabbed his cards and started to shuffle them.
"Sorry, got sidetracked," Ruby finished shuffling her deck, playing a card. A miniature illusion of an air elemental burst from the card, dust whipping around it.
Rehgar grunted, grabbing a knife and starting to trim the fat, "stew sound good to you?"
"Yeah. What about you?" Ruby asked the other human, who was squinting at one of his cards, before he placed it.
A guard clad in plate mail appeared on the card, Ready for action!
"That's fine," Crocbait said as Ruby put down a totem token, which launched a fireball at the guard as she ended her turn.
They continued in relative silence, only the simulated sounds of battle breaking them from it, when Crocbait played a card.
Behold! The might of Stormwind! the man cried, lifting a battle standard up. At the same moment, Crocbait's eyes bugged out and his elbow slipped off the table. This sent the man's chin crashing into the table, knocking several pieces off.
"Woah!" Ruby cried, running about the table to check him for an injury, "are you alright?"
"Yes," he said around the fat lip he had given himself. Ruby ran a finger along it, the healing water circling around her outstretched finger and sealing the injury, "I'm sorry about the table."
"It's fine," Ruby said, "I'm pretty sure the stew is almost done, anyways."
"Ah," he said, "Ruby, are you good at fights?"
Ruby's eyebrows met, "I'd say so, yeah."
"Do you want to spar after dinner? I want to see how well I can myself."
"Sure."
---
The human currently going by the name of 'Crocbait' was standing across from Ruby, a blunted sword in his hand. Ruby had a hand scythe in each hand, deftly spinning one around her left wrist.
"Sinister?" He asked, a lesson from Anduin rising up.
"Come on, up you go," a large hand gently wrapped around his upper arm, lifting him to his feet, "try again!"
"I don't get it," he complained, reaching down and grabbing the training sword in his right hand, only to drop it with a stifled yelp as Anduin's blade struck him across the hand.
"Left hand, again."
"This doesn't feel natural," Crocbait complained, but did as he was told, "I don't get how anyone could fight like this."
"There are those who it comes to naturally, and if you ask a priest, or a lord who has never stepped onto the battlefield, they'll tell you that it is a sign of cravens and those consorting with spirits and demons."
"You don't think that?"
"Would I be teaching you to fight with it if I did? No, I don't know how the idea rooted itself into the faith, but those lords think that way because they hate to fight against them in duels and tourneys, what good is armor on your left side if the blade comes from the right?"
Crocbait tried to deflect the blade, feeling his arm protest even though Anduin was holding back.
"Then why teach me it?"
"Because what good is armor on their left side if your blade comes from the right? And if they wear armor on their right, well, you still know how to fight with your right hand, eh? Those are the really dangerous ones, boy, those that can fight with both hands. There's a probably a word for that, it's probably a long one, too. I don't know, never cared for fancy words myself, best leave that to the scholars and bards."
"What if they're wearing armor on both sides?"
"Kick 'em over, then find a chink in their armor and kill them before they get up. Armor's heavy, that's something a soldier can tell you better than any bard."
Crocbait's lips pulled into a frown. Who was Anduin?
"Huh?" Ruby asked, stopping her trick, "what's sinister?"
"Left handed?"
"Ambidextrous," Ruby said.
"What?"
"I can use both equally well," Ruby said, proving it by doing the trick with both hands at once, "always have."
"Just in fights?"
If Anduin had liked people who were 'ambidextrous' as much as that one memory implied he did, he would have probably killed a man to be born like that.
"Everything," Ruby said, "writing, cooking. Rehgar!" Ruby switched to Orcish briefly, looking to the door.
As she quieted down, Rehgar walked out of the house, settling in a chair on the porch, and leaning forward, "alright, Crocbait, let's see what you can do. Ruby, don't go to hard on him."
Too hard on him? What was that supposed to-
Crocbait ducked as one of the scythes flew at him, feeling the displaced air send his hair dancing. Looking up, he brought his sword up to parry her other scythe several times, feeling static form with each attack as he did so.
Finally Ruby hooked her scythe around his blade, locking them into place, and drove her fist into his gut.
Crocbait gritted his teeth as a burning tore through his stomach and down his legs, leaving him numb even as his body was screaming at him to move. Left with no choice, the amnesiac human did the only thing that made sense.
He dropped his sword, reaching behind him with his other hand.
Ruby's eyes widened, the sudden lack of tension caused he to stagger forward as the bizarre wind carried her other scythe right into Crocbait's hand.
Doing a half spin so he was behind Ruby, Crocbait reached down, scooping up his sword while he finished his turn.
He got a blast of cold wind to his face for his troubles, leaving him batting his stinging eyes as he used both weapons to deflect Ruby's one.
Eventually, Ruby's right arm lashed out, wrapping tightly around Crocbait's left, and pulled it tight, forcing him to drop her scythe.
Tightening his grip on his sword, Crocbait smashed the hilt into Ruby's skull until she let go.
Crocbait charged forward, stopping his sword before Ruby's throat as one scythe looped around the back of his neck and the outer edge of the other pressed against the front.
Crocbait panted, trying to keep the grin off his face as they stood their for a moment, neither one wanting to be the one who lowered their blade first.
"Alright" Rehgar called, "that's enough! I don't need to clean one of your bodies off the ground!"
Crocbait lowered his sword, looking over to the orc, "is that position still open?"
"Why? You want in?"
"Yeah," Crocbait grinned, "that was fun."
"Wait," Ruby was looking between them, "what position?"
"On the team," Rehgar said, standing, "I offered it to him while you were out, figured that if we could get someone quick, you wouldn't have to wait for long before heading out."
"Are you sure?" Ruby asked Crocbait, "it won't be like this, you could die out there. What if you have a wife or kids?"
"I'll," Crocbait stopped, "I'll deal with that when I come to it, you should go, if you've got something to do."
"But-"
"Go," Crocbait insisted, "I'll be fine, I'll have something to do, until I remember what's going on."
"I-" Ruby stopped, "Ok. I'll go, see you at some point."
As Ruby turned away from them, Rehgar suddenly called out to her, "Girl!"
"What?"
"I don't care how this turns out, I want to see you back here before Dire Maul, you hear? This is your house as much as it is mine!"
"I'll-" Ruby lowered her head, switching to orcish again as an almost musical string of words escaped from her lips.
Rehgar responded in kind, before Ruby walked over to the cart, grabbing a full sized scythe, and heading down the path.
"What was that?"
"An old orcish thing, I don't know how to say it in Common, so don't ask me. It's traditionally said from a child to the clan head and farseer at the end of a fostering. Before they go to return to their family."
Rehgar stood on the deck for a bit longer, head facing the end of the street, until Ruby turned disappeared through the gates. The orc pushed himself off, pulling open the door.
"Come on, Crocbait, I'll teach you how to play another game, maybe one with gambling."
---
"I'll take a couple of tuna," Blake said, handing over a bag of copper gryphs.
"That all today?" James, the fishmonger, asked, grabbing the bag, taking out a few coins, and handing it back to Blake.
"Yeah," Blake took the rolled up fish, storing them in her pack. She would be glad to to return to the apartment she had been renting in Darnassus.
"Blake," James said suddenly, "someone came by the docks the other day, was looking for you."
"Who?"
"A human, probably around your age. She was asking for you by name too. I said I'd tell you she was looking for you if I saw you," the immigrant said, "she gave me the address of the inn she was staying, wrote it down, too. Didn't know you'd moved so far up into the world that you had people who can write lookin' for ya. Ya want it?"
"Sure," Blake held out her hand, taking the note.
"Give me a second," James crouched, fiddling with his lockbox, "she said she'd been looking for you for a couple of days, seemed relieved when I said I knew ya. Dressed weird."
"How weird?"
"She was wearing a big red cloak, fur lined, with black clothes. Here you go," James held out the note, letting Blake grab it.
Opening it, Blake felt her eyes widen at the familiar scrawl, eyes scanning the address.
"You alright?" James asked.
"Fine," Blake said, fighting to keep the look off her face as she picked the tunas back up, "I'll see you later."
Blake turned, rushing quickly back to her house, dropped the fish in the cooler, grabbing Crescent Rose, and heading further into the city.
It took Blake the better part of two hours to find the large inn, built from white marble in traditional night elven style.
Breathing in, Blake steeled herself, and walked in, looking around for the innkeeper. People were seated at chairs around the room, playing games and drinking.
"Can I help you?" an elf called from the bar, "If you're looking for a room, we're all out at the moment."
"No- I mean… I'm look for someone who's staying here. In room," Blake checked the paper , "ten."
"Left side," he said, pointing towards the place, "end of the hall."
Blake headed that way, before stopping before the door. Taking a deep breath, Blake lifted her hand, knocking on the door.
"One moment!" the voice on the other side called, "I'll be right there!"
Blake held her breath, waiting for the foot fall to approach, before the door swung open.
"Sorry I just- Blake?" Ruby's voice cracked at the end of her question.
"Ruby?" Blake asked in return, "Is this- you're really here?"
"Yeah," Ruby suddenly exploded forward, wrapping Blake into a Yang-esque hug, "I missed you. Come in, we need to talk."