New Dominion (Warcraft)

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As the dust settled and the Second War drew to a close some sought to capitalize on old rivals' weakness and reclaim long lost lands, only to risk destruction by incurring the Alliance's wrath.

Forced to flee their homeland, the Frostmane Tribe travel to the one place that may provide safe haven, Zul'Drak.

Having risen from humble means to attaining the title of Frost King, Malakk and his people are drawn into the wider world by the arrival of refugees begging their aid.

Now, with a murdered Speaker and the dead rising to the West, the Drakkari Empire stirs, and the world shall never be the same.
The Winds of Change Blow (Prologue)

The Winds of Change Blow (Prologue)​


As the dust settled and the Second War drew to a close some sought to capitalize on old rivals' weakness and reclaim long lost lands, only to risk destruction by incurring the Alliance's wrath.

Forced to flee their homeland, the Frostmane Tribe travel to the one place that may provide safe haven, Zul'Drak.

Having risen from humble means to attaining the title of Frost King, Malakk and his people are drawn into the wider world by the arrival of refugees begging their aid.

Now, with a murdered Speaker and the dead rising to the West, the Drakkari Empire stirs, and the world shall never be the same.



The winds of Northrend battered their ship as harshly it did her arms; the stolen vessel rocked violently on churning waves that splashed the crowded deck with water so cold it stung.

Some hours, or perhaps days ago, she had hissed at every rise and fall of the stolen ship, saltwater burning as it splashed against her bandaged chest and burned the wound, but now healing and simple time had worn away the pain to a dull throb.

Her breaths were low, cracked spear grasped maddeningly tight in her hands as she glanced towards their lookout.

"I see them! I see the ship!" Vejrek howled, near dangling from the nest.

Arctikus wanted to collapse against the deck then and there, but even as a ragged cheer rose up, she kept her gaze locked on the horizon. With a sharp strike of the deck with her spear, her weathered voice rang out.

"Honored Shango, the Soothsayers spoke true and their prayers were answered, thank you, thank you for seeing our children to safety."

Her kin bowed their head in reverence, muttering their own prayers.

"Vejrek! Where did they land?" She bellowed.

"On a raised island Great Mother, seems there's a tower on it, and I see tents in Drakkari patterns- there's a bat rider hailing us!"

Bracing, Arctikus watched the skies as a large brown bat soared overhead, carrying on its back a blue haired troll in light aqua robes layered with gold sequins.

"Hail to thee, Great Mother Arctiku! I Speaker Malaka'raz, voice of Frost King Malakk, do greet you and yours and welcome you to Northrend as honored guests of our liege!" His voice resounded like an echo in a cave, clear and crisp to her ears despite the beat of wings, waves, and wind.

"We thank you Speaker, our children, are they well?" She called back, straining to be heard.

"Well as can be, Great Mother, and they shall be all the better for seeing you I am sure! We have the finest healers and caretakers in the empire tending to their needs and fresh meals on the boil."

He swerved his bat through the air to come hover before them, "Follow my motions to avoid any nasty bumps, this coastline is not a welcoming one, and please settle your ships near the island to come ashore. But avoid the coast for now, we are already irking our neighbors by hosting a camp here, you see!"

"Then we are not near Zul'Drak?" Murmurs of confusion rushing across the ship.

"Not at all Great Mother," The Speaker cheered, "the journey there would be a bit much this day, follow my me and I my liege shall explain!"

Arctikus nodded to her kin who answered with a heave and a ho, while Bonechiller Barafu and her students called upon the winds to guide them towards the humble island.

Awaiting them were great tents in rich blues and silver, made of a thick, near shining fur. Smokeless purple fires dotted the island and towering Drakkari stood alongside the cheering and waving young as they pulled into dock.

She did not bother looking for the face she longed to see most among them, briefly swallowing back stray tears and welcoming the brief touches of her kin before steeling herself and forcing a smile to her face.

'I am the Great Mother, all the children of the tribe are my own,' she reminded herself.

Striding off the ship she practically flung herself into the throng, embracing and ruffling wild manes of hair, paying special mind to those she knew would have no one to find them, warm words falling from her lips with practiced ease.

She was unsure how much time passed before the din abated and the children's words become more than an incompressible wave of sounds. Perhaps even that was helped by them all speaking much the same words, as a towering figure, one who loomed over even the other Drakkari approached.

"The King! Frost King! He's the Frost King Malakk mama!" Arctikus gently shooed the young ones away as she strode forward to stand before him.

He was adorned in elegant dark blue and white trimmed robes, with a flowing coat and short cape made of feathers that matched those on his icicle adorned crown. None of the finery, be it the smooth textiles or strange glowing jewels, piercings or bracers did anything to hide his sheer height or the obvious power in his tattooed frame and measured manner of his steps.

This was a warrior king, and he was the last hope for the Frostmane.

Arcticus dropped to her knees, laid her spear across her lap and grasped the jagged icy blade tip, "Frost King Malakk, I've no words that can convey my gratitude. You've aided us and I can only repay-"

Her move to bloody her own hand as an oath was stalled when his hand rested on her arm and he knelt before her.

"Please rise, you and your kin are my honored guests, and you a leader of fine and fierce people who have been done a great injustice, suffered much and risked everything to secure a bright future for your young. I would see you only as my equal, so please, stand with me, Great Mother."

His voice was strong and a faint touch rough, but oddly pleasant, like well-cut stone.

Arcticus pushed herself to her feet and offered a brief bow of acknowledgement, "The Frostmane tribe thanks its most generous hosts and their mighty liege."

"Your thanks are heard and most welcome, please rest and eat with your family and when you desire it, seek me out at the top of the tower, I would share words, but only when it suits you."

With that he offered a polite bow of his own and strode away, ruffling a few children's manes as he went.

Swallowing, Arcticus let the children guide her into the lavish tent, contained within was more wealth than she'd ever seen! Plush pillows, jeweled water basins, intricately carved stone and wooden condiments, enchanted flames that birthed no smoke and rugs so soft they could have been beds!

Awaiting her at the heart of it was a thick and hearty stew that she took without question, passing it down the line to her kin as more and more of them shuffled in to be fed and when finally, they were all served, some already on their seconds, she took her first bowl and devoured it ravenously.


It was only when the last child drifted off to sleep in her lap that Arctikus moved, slipping a pillow under their head she was joined by Vejrek and Barafu as they followed Speaker Malaka'raz to the top of the oddly square and small tower.

As if sensing her confusion at the sight of him stooping to get through the door, the Speaker glanced over his shoulder and spoke. "This tower was built by the humans who reside here, but they lost it to sea raids some years ago, so when we received a vision of your coming, we paid to make use of it for a time, to avoid irritating our neighbors."

"Are they so strong you must bribe them?" Vejrek asked, hands flexing and coming to rest on his weapons.

Arctikius quietly wondered the same, having seen trollish ruins on their way through the shallow waters.

Malaka'raz made a strange little sound and shrugged, "The humans not so much, the Taunka are mighty but small in number and as to the Furbolg, well, they did much of the damage to the last dominion some two hundred years ago. However," He hummed, "I would not disrespect them, but the old dominion was bordering on collapse back then. If we were to fight them now it would be bloody for sure, but I see no reason why we would not win. But why offend them or fight when they do us no harm?" he chuckled.

Crouching low they left the stairs and joined the Frost King on the roof, one foot resting on the low wall, as he looked out at the sea from whence, they came. His shawl like cape blew in the breeze revealing dark tattoos on his arms, matching those adorning his chin and ears, before he finally turned to face her and said, "You journeyed far, Great Mother, I imagine you have much to tell me of the South, of Rohk'aka."

"I do, though it will not take much time to tell it," she conceded bitterly, stepping away from her kin to join him in overlooking the sea.

"In your own time," he offered glancing back towards the ocean.

"I am no flower," Arctikus answered back swiftly, careful to avoid sounding sharp; one hand toying with an aged crystal necklace hanging around her neck as she took a steadying breath. "You know, of course, of the wars, that much surely came from Zandalar."

Malak nodded, "Yes, I heard of how mighty Zul'jin had re-united his empire, but also joined forces with strange new creatures from other worlds." His expression flittered between what she thought was annoyance and disappointment, but it passed in a moment. "I had looked forward to meeting a leader after my own heart, but the Loa whisper of failure and despair, so I imagine the Forest Tribes are back to feuding states now?"

Repressing an arched brow at his phrasing, she muttered, "It is true," fangs grinding. "They lost, I do not know how, but they did, Zul'jin may be dead as well." Another loss, another pain, he had been a friend of her people in days past. "As the Horde broke and was scattered, we were able to safely hunt and travel outside our old haunts but my… My son had a thought, a brave one, my brave boy…."

"He believed that so many Dwarves," she spat the word like a curse, "had died that if we retook Coldridge Valley they would not know or care, they have few young after all." She clutched the crystal tightly, nearly cutting her hand. "But they did notice, and they came for him and the settlers."

A shuddering, seething breath escaped her, "They put his head on a pike!"

Her claws dug into her palms, "I wept, I raged, I would have sworn to avenge him, but I knew, I knew this was not a war we could win and-". She choked something back, a shiver running down her spine. "They came for us with guns and cannon that belched black smog, fell upon us with spell fire and steel, as the skies filled with lightning and a gryphons cry."

Barafu's sharp tones cut through the air, "This was not to be a war but an extermination!"

Arcikus nodded, her words a hushed whisper, "We could do little but run."

A silence fell upon them, Articus could see a brief something passed between Malakk and his Speaker before the troll king spoke.

"You survived Great Mother, many of your people did, thanks to your leadership," Malakk placed a hand on her shoulder, "I cannot imagine your agony, but I am awed by your resolve."

A low, shallow breath escaped her, "We survived, but the hills are gone, our mountain holds, what little we had left." She looked up to him, "You say we are equal, but that is not true, I am reliant on your charity, Frost King Malakk, my people can only survive through you."

"So, I must ask… What is to become of us?"

The Frost King met her gaze, his expression contemplative, his words smooth when he deigned to speak.

"If it pleases the Frostmane, I would welcome them into my empire. It can be a place where you can build a new home and life for yourselves as we plan for the future."

"I… We would welcome your patronage, Frost King Malakk," she said with a swift bow, her voice growing hasty. "I know it shall be a burden, but we shall find a way to repay you."

Malakk chuckled, sounding bemused, "It is no great burden, think on your tribe and dismiss any debts, I am king, am I not? It is my duty to worry about such things."

Articus bit her tongue, 'What of food and lands, and homes, how can he be so cavalier?' But the Frost King continued to speaker, forcing her thoughts back to the moment.

"Your decision soothes my soul, Great Mother, know that I will see you ever as a leader of great renown and I shall respect your people and their ways." He clapped her on the shoulder and said, "I would ask, it is Shango you worship yes?"

Arctikus nodded, "It was the storm god that ferried us to safety, we must repay them."

"The scales must be balanced for blessings given and offerings made, such is the way of the Loa," Malakk mused, the word Loa oddly harsh on his tongue. "I would help you to build a shrine to Shango, that they might be suitably honored and bargained with. It can be at the heart of a Temple Town in which your people can live or be the center piece of a Frostmane Compound in the upper tier of Zul'Drak."

'Tier?' She wondered, but bowing her head, "We thank you, Malakk, we will of course endeavor to help in all things, whatever needs doing we can help."

"I am heartened to hear that, Zul'Drak is a mighty nation, but it only runs because our people all contribute. I do not extract gold offerings or bodies, but instead Contra, a sort of working tax that can be laid out in later days. I imagine your people will make fine hunters and miners, but you can tend to the aqueducts or find other work if it so pleases those among you."

"You are very kind, my liege…"

He waved her off gently, "Please, call me Malakk, I am scarcely so formal with any of my advisors, I will be counting on you, Great Mother, as my future advisor when it comes to Rohk'aka."

"Advisor?"

"Yes," he said, looking to the sea, "The defeat of Zul'jin and the suffering of your people make it clear the world grows ever more dangerous for our kind. I must be kept abreast of and be well informed of all that may threaten my empire, especially, if I am to ever help you extract justice from those who wronged you and yours."

"Justice… My-, Frost King Malakk, do you mean war?" She gasped.

"Perhaps I do," he said, "But that is for another time, for now your people must heal and homes need be built before we can plan for the future."

Arctikus bowed in accent, "As you say, Frost King Malakk, let us turn our minds from plans and simply see what the sunrise brings."
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NOTES:
Hi, thanks for checking out New Dominion, this is a story I wrote back in 2019/2020 and have been fiddling with ever since completing by getting feedback and working to improve it and I think its finally ready to be published.

Naturally, by its very nature and necessity, this story will be expanding on pre-existing Warcraft's worldbuilding from several era's and trying to make it cohesive and line up with the world presented to us in the games, though be it expanded to realistic scales.

Also for those interested a look at how Malakk's design and aesthetic have been envisioned for this story can be found here:

Any feedback is most welcome!

EDIT:

Why I write trolls the way I do, thanks to @backgroundnoise for suggesting this:

First and foremost, there is the matter of world building:

I tend to take the canon of the games and the world building from Blizzard with a grain of salt, both thanks to how often its retconned and how little thought seem to go into it.

To tender a none troll example, one RPG book said Harpies exclusively reproduce by hunting down other sentient species an raping them, while another said they basically just lay eggs with no external input. The former is, even ignoring the morality issue, a farcical way for a species to reproduce, hunting sentient being, keeping them around long enough for that and avoiding the constant and never ending reprisal such acts would bring about? They'd be dead in less than a generation, its simply not sustainable. Thus I ignore it and adjust it into something I deem realistic. IE, Harpies 'can' reproduce with other species and get a harpy from the end result but its not the norm or standard or necessarily that common.

Similarly, the idea that trolls or the Loa are utterly reliant on cannibalisms or constant blood sacrifices is functional unsustainable on any major level; so logically most sacrifices need to be more attainable stuff like animal hearts or craft works or a troll cutting their hand and bleeding (Which was actually a common blood sacrifice in many cultures associated with the practice)


Next stage there is the general portrayal and unfortunate implications:

On a real world level many of the societies the trolls utilized the aesthetic and trappings of were victims of intense colonialism and while we know there was truth to say, stories of human sacrifice, we also know they were drastically exaggerated, while any and all other 'civilized' or 'advanced' aspects (Many of which eclipsed anything the invaders had seen even in their own country) to the societies were downplayed in order to justify raping, pillaging and enslaving the people.

In the same vein, trolls and other mobs are always hostile for gameplay purposes and their cultures are exaggeration version of already exaggerated ideas of cultures that were created as propaganda, with roots deeply intertwined with racism and colonialism. As a result, I tend to be wary of taking stuff created with such foundations too seriously beyond the barest requirements.


Then there's the 'need' for war, which often comes up but fails to be justified in the text.

As mentioned above and elsewhere, the writers don't often think about the implications of their own writing or reflect on the logical realities of their ideas and creation.

An easy example is the fact Gnolls & Kobolds were described as 'threats humanity had to overcome to claim Lordaeron'; the writers clearly intended us to see the Gnolls and Kobolds as hostile invaders that needed a good killing. Except, the writing doesn't indicate they showed up and tried to claim the same land as the humans, it implies there were already there and humans were driving 'them' out.

This kind of stuff happens a lot with trolls, from the dwarves invasion of the Frostmane's kingdom, to Arathor forming in response to the unity of the troll empires, without any real groundwork laid for 'why' this was necessary. The writers didn't bother indicating that the Frostmane attacked the trolls, or that Forest Trolls raided humans, the simple fact they existed was deemed justification enough for the humans and Dwarves to kill them and take their stuff.

Some modern examples of this include stuff like Kobolds moving into a mine the Dwarves have already abandoned but the Dwarves sending you in to murder and mutilate them (He wans their ears) just because. One of the most blatant examples was an old quest in Durotar where-in you have an orc whine about Kul'Tiras humans showing no respect for diplomacy by building a fort on 'orc land' and sending you to fight them. Followed by by whining about how the Quillboar who long predated the Horde had their lands taken by Orcs but haven't yet been entirely driven out and sending you to burn their villages down.

No effort is made to justify the war against them, because they are mobs and thus not people, but that leaves readers with essentially big blank spots that allowed for world building. One can assume that these species are all inherently stupid and evil and unwilling to engage in diplomacy no matter how bad things get... Or one can try to inject some nuance into the situation.


Finally we hit on the Drakkari specifically:

Once again we hit on writers not really thinking through the implications of their work, some examples with the Drakkari include:
  1. Describing them as 'stupid' and 'savage', the latter already being a loaded term, but even discounting that the Drakkari have built a literally city sized country made up of four tiers in one of the most hostile places on the planet. Elaborate cities stretching across miles and miles of land and somehow massive farms dwarfing anything we see in the games.
  2. Or for example, the arena, where rather than the fighters being slave, the none trolls are explicitly described as being paid for their work and having come their willingly, with multiple species being in the audience.
  3. We also see the Drakkari engineer weapons compared in terms of potential threat to the Scourge and have it revealed they were working on a cure to the plague and see the Scourge was only able to get by their defenses thanks to multiple high level figures engaging in treason and even that didn't stop the Drakkari from driving them out.
  4. What's more we know that the Rageclaw Wolvar, a pack that specifically talks a great deal about trade, straight up lived in Zul'Drak and seemed to get along with the trolls famously. (This also means they can't be an enthostate)
There's more obviously, but these details alone indicated a society that has a very advanced understanding of construction, farming and magic, as well as stuff like disease management, diplomacy and trade, that if one wants to expand on can create a truly multifaceted society over just a place to kill trolls for gold and magic items.


Some notes on stuff I couldn't address specifically:

Hunters:
While I cast no shade on the hunter gatherer societal model, I feel its integral to keep in mind when discussing trolls, their histories are specifically rooted in having built massive, continent spanning empires. Those don't function without advanced bureaucracies, farming and infrastructure.

Slavery:
Interestingly, the world building in Chronicles said that the trolls looked down on the Mogu for using slavery, but also had the Zandalari later engage in the practice. I have taken that to mean that a common troll cultural custom treats slavery as a vile crime and that engaging in it is usuaully a sign of societal decline. NOTE: Though in contrast, stuff like torture or murder aren't viewed so negatively due to regeneration and the ability to commune with ancestors meaning death isn't seen as being 'as' big of a deal provided one handles it honorably.

Sympathy:
This is more trivia, but the first bit of world building we got about trolls was in Warcraft 2 and while long since retconned, it was extremely sympathetic. WIth Zul'jin having united his scattered people and aligned with the Horde solely because he feared the Alliance would enact a genocide against them when done with the Orcs, and the manual straight up says they have "suffered ages of attrition at the hands of the Humans, Dwarves, and Elves." So even in the most black and white version of the game, the trolls were initially framed as sympathetic.

The Loa:
The idea that the Loa are blood hungry gods is one that bounces around constantly. In the RPG they are often described as such, but they also didn't protest the Darkspear starting to offer them animals and plants in place of people. What's more, they actively loath Hakkar who go for sacrifices constantly, and on a practical level large scale sacrifice or cannibalism of people is not sustainable, especially not when many of the societies are incredibly weakened. As it is, in the games themselves their portrayals still vary but tend to be more benign and the Drakkari I confess I never saw as particularly devout given their response to the Loa failing to solve the Scourge invasion was to kill them and steal their power.

-----

Oh there was one detail I forgot but, cultural dissonance:

For example, in my eyes I don't really distinguish between executing a thief or enemy soldiers with sacrificing them, because the result is the same, only the cultural trappings and the, haha, means of execution might differ. But if one places beheads a criminal for theft and another place sacrifices someone via beheading for theft, to me they're functionally the same thing.

We see this a lot when comparing say, Alexander the Great, with the founders of say, the Aztecs or a Mongol leader, all oversaw tons of executions of captured soldiers on horrific scales, but only some are remembered for just that over their various conquests framed in heroic lights and the like. (Note and as an example, there was an island that resisted Alexander for like a year, once he got in he basically had everyone executed or enslaved out of spite)

This applies to the various cultures in WOW as well, for example there's a lot of quests that involve us using sentient creatures as ingredients, or for a more grounded example we see city's have gallows or see executions happen in stories. and of course we can and do skin stuff like dragons and Furbolgs.

A good story example would be how in the Tides of Darkness novel we're meant to hate Zul'jin for collecting elf ears, but there's literally a quest where we collect Kobold ears just cos they took over a mine the Dwarves had already left. Neither is a good thing obviously, but only one of them is framed as villainous. This might be straying into more of a case of 'what measure is none human' though.


Conclusion:
As a result of the unfortunate implications informing a lot of world building around the trolls (And other mobs to lesser degrees).

The inconsistent world building that bounces around in terms of how negatively it frames them, as well as the impracticalities of the implied societal structures.

Combined with the vast voids left in the world building, left there because the creators didn't think violence against mobs didn't need justifying, or being rooted in the gameplay mechanics over anything realistic.

And finally, the established details of the civilization as we saw it even in a state of collapse and the implications there-of.

Leads me to write trolls the way I do.
 
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The Winds of Change Blow (Prologue P.2)
The Winds of Change Blow (Prologue P.2)

For Arctikus the next few days passed by more as a blizzard than anything else. What time she did not spend among her tribe was spent with Malakk, while they waited on transports and for his speakers to finish treating with the locals.

He was deeply interested in all she and her followers had to say both on their own ways and needs, but also of their enemies, be it their military, territory or things like culture and traditions.

Arctikus could not grasp what his intent was on the latter subjects, but she did her best to share what she knew; even if at time she found herself frustrated and floundering in her own ignorance of anything outside the mountains.

"My apologies, Frost King Mallak," she said, tracing a line on a stolen map, "But I can only be assured of this as the capital of the human alliance, I know not how far their lands extend."

"You have told me much, Great Mother, so do not burden yourself with apologies," he clicked his tongue quietly, one hand idly toying with a tusk as he looked on some Southern mountains marked as Grim Batol, bearing a scrawled, ugly little symbol she knew to mean 'Orcs'.

Whatever he was musing, it was cast from his mind as their ears twitched, and the sound of sharp footsteps and soft padding paws echoed up from the tower. "My liege, Chief Rageclaw has returned," Announced Bith'Sa, a bulky and severe looking Drakkari woman in ornate, armored leather robes, bearing an intricately crafted stone shield and hammer embedded with gems.

'His personal guard carry more wealth on them than my tribe sees in a month,' she thought, not so much with bitterness but perhaps with a shade of envy.

Envy was then cast from her mind as she was forced to look well down at this 'Chief Rageclaw' Bith'Sa had spoken of.

They were a wolf, of a sort, pale white fur, round eyes and shining fangs dressed in leather robes adorned in jewels, bone and dyed patterns.

Malakk knelt to greet them with a hug and a chuckle, meaty paws and large palms slapped the other companionably as they embraced.

"I… Apologies, but who is this one?" She asked.

Running a hand through his thick, dark lavender locks, Malakk rose to his feet and gestured grandly between them. "Forgive the late introduction. Great Mother Arctikus, this is Chief Rageclaw, leader of the Drakkari-Rageclaw tribe. They are the premiere envoys of trade and diplomacy to our neighbors. Chief Rageclaw, I introduce you to Great Mother Arctikus, leader of the Frostmane Tribe whom fought through great adversity to join us here."

The idea that the Drakkari Empire, often spoken of as deplorable savages by the Zandalari, a fact she had ignored out of desperation, not only traded with non-trolls but welcomed them into their empire was… Staggering to say the least.

Still, she hoped it did not show on her face as she leaned forward and clasped her hand around the Wolvar's arm, mimicking the tiny creatures offered gesture, "It is my honor to make your acquaintance," She said stiffly.

"The honor is mine," The lupine said, voice sharp and high, "My tribe is eager to hear of all you have to tell. First though we must ensure safe travels."

"With that in mind," Malakk hinted.

"Of course, yes!" Rageclaw said, almost hopping in place, "We can use the old road. Do not stray. Furbolg watch with humans in the woods. But the journey will be fair. The carriages and carts arrive shortly!"

"Marvelous, you and I shall join with Malaka'raz and lead the convoy then," Malakk said, motioning to the diminutive Wolvar who bowed swiftly.

Turning to face her fully, he clapped her on the arm and smiled, "Great Mother, among those overseeing this journey is my Grand Prophet, Gal'Darah and Sky Sovereign Quetz'Lith. They shall provide assistance and protection for the journey and should arrive shortly."

Mimicking the Drakkari salute, Arctikus slapped a fist against her upper chest, and said, "As you command, Frost King Malakk, I shall begin getting my tribe into order, and we shall leave on your word."


The Grand Prophet Gal'Darah cut a fierce figure.

A massive dark pink mohawk sat atop a stout, broad and sharply muscled frame of pale blue furred troll. His tusks lacked Malakk' nearly absurd size but were sharpened like daggers. Ritualistic tattoos and scars could be glimpsed through the gaps in ornate, enchanted wooden armor, that was itself covered in rich paints and faintly glowing runes. All of which was capped off by the symbol of his patron Loa, Akali the rhino carved to look like it was charging upon his form fitting chest plate.

Despite that, he turned out to be much like she found Malakk, urbane and rather cheerful, greeting her warmly and assuring the people as to the might of the Drakkari Empire and their great Frost King's protection.

With her words and his magically amplified voice, it was not long before her tribe were being carried across the bay and loaded up onto long interlinked carriages pulled by mammoth and Rhino as a select few bats flew overhead.

Now their journey to Zul'Drak would finally come to a close.


The journey itself was proving comfortable enough to Arctikus's reckoning, far easier than she was used to in truth. Malakk, his Speakers and elite guard rode at the forefront as a vanguard while the convoy followed them on a long, partially overgrown stone road.

All around her ancient forests loomed large, lights danced on the breeze, yet the woods were so thick and overgrown they looked ready to swallow one whole. Growing up in the mountains and seeing only the swamps before escaping to the North she was ill at ease, even if the chill wind was comforting in its familiarity.

'The little one's don't seem so afraid though,' she thought, smiling as she guided her raptor alongside the heavy carts to the sight of her children engaged in anything from stories, to game to simply watching the passing landscape with wide eyes, trying to pick out birds, spirits, and idols from the scenery.

'Another one?' She thought as a crumbled monument of black stone on the side of the road faded into view. Arctikus gripped her raptors reigns tighter, egging the beast forward; the crimson scaled biped was different than her old Ram, Gim'cha, but a few days riding and their shared experience made the learning curve a gentle one.

"Ah Great Mother, is everyone looking well?" Called the Grand Prophet from atop his hulking Rhino, Baku. The thundering beast dwarfing its already oversized companions and leaving Arctikus wondering how anyone could feed more than a few let alone a herd of such creatures.

Shaking off the confusion, she brought her mount up to the rhino's side and answered, "All are faring well, your people have been very accommodating."

Gal'Darah bowed his head and grinned, "It is only just, Great Mother, but all the same we thank you. Still…" He must have seen her gaze drift to the broken statue, "I imagine you have some questions?"

Was she so transparent?

Pushing that aside with a nod, she said, "I do, if you do not mind this one asking."

"Not at all! It is the duty of priest and scholars alike to learn and share knowledge after all and I would never be remiss in my duties."

Nodding, she motioned to the dark, weed strewn path and more signs of broken monuments, asking "This path, these ruins, they are of Drakkari style are they not?"

"They are indeed, their construction was ordered during the last dominion of the empire over a century ago, that they still stand speaks well of the paths worth and the skill of the crafters," He said, though something in his tone felt dusty and strange to her, lacking the lyrical hum she was growing used to.

Her gaze drifted to the woods and she squinted at a flickering flash of fur and skin that vanished just as quickly when Malakk's Sky Sovereign, Quetz'Lith, and her bat riders swooped overhead. The troll woman's red leather suit and burning orange hair standing out against the cloudy skies, as they rose high once again.

"If these paths are yours and these monuments too, why does Malakk ask permission to walk these roadways?" She looked out to the East, the Sea no longer visible to her eyes, "I saw signs of a once great city sunk beneath the waves, was that not yours as well?"

Gal'Darah clacked his fangs together before answering, "They were ours, in a sense of the word… However, our ancestors did not build them as they did Zul'Drak and Gundrak in ages past."

"Slaves?" she gasped.

"Not quite, though little better," The Grand Prophet said, glaring off into the sky. "The last dominion was a cruel and crumbling empire. One ruled by an arrogant band of emperors and empresses who sought to make all of Northrend part of Zul'Drak, to reshape the continent to their whims, not out of need or grand ambitions but rank greed."

Arctikus nodded along, wondering if this was where the Drakkari's reputation as a 'savage' tribe hailed from, even if it was no longer apt. 'Though stories say it goes back farther than that, so something is off I am thinking,' she mused, before refocusing her mind to Gal'Darah's words.

"They ordered invasions in all directions," Gal'Darah continued, arms sweeping wide, "But nowhere more than these Grizzly Hills. It was here that they fought the Furbolg, Taunka and humans, crushing their warriors and dragging them into the empire, demanding harsh tribute in the form of Contra if they wished to remain on their lands."

The troll hissed derisively, "They treated their own kind little better, embracing Zandalar's beloved caste system to try and control the people."

"Zull'Drak does not have castes?" She asked delicately, sensing the Zandalari were a… Difficult topic.

"Not as such no, my apologies if perchance, my words offended," the Grand Prophet added.

"Not at all, too few and too humble are we Frostmane for such things to hold great sway, outside of our leadership at least," She amended.

"Ah as it is with us as well, but where was I?" He asked in a gentle drawl, not sounding remotely lost but more like a storyteller trying to re-capture an audiences focus. "Ah yes, in the end all it took was a brief duel for succession for the dominions to collapse entirely. Soon enough the royal family was slaughtered, their remains entombed in a now long neglected crypt North of here."

"The crypt still stands?" She asked, ears twitching curiously.

"It does," Gal'Darah snorted, "Northrend is well known for ghosts and strong spirits, and as a royal tomb it was well enchanted and fortified. If our Frost King did not hold history in such high regard, I imagine he would order its destruction, but he knows better, let it be left dilapidated and hated, a fitting legacy for cruel leaders."

"I take it then, Frost King Malakk does not descend from that lot?" Arctikus asked, gaze drifting to the vanguard where Malakk seemed to be talking animatedly with his bodyguards and Speaker.

Gal'Darah chuckled, a low huffing sound, "Indeed he does not, but to explain our Frost King I must first convey what followed the Dominions fall and the most recent Warring States Era."

Spreading his arms wide, light danced in the air and images danced on her senses, as he spoke. "With the empire ripping itself apart those whom it had conquered rose up with a swift and brutal vengeance. Cities were laid low, temples despoiled, and many died."

"It was a tragedy," he said with a wave towards the forests, "but it is hard to fault their rage."

"None appreciate being conquered and driven off their land," She said, grip on her reigns tightening.

"Indeed so," Gal'Darah hummed. "But as I was saying, the fighting carried on for some years, but as time passed our ancestors drew ever inward. Eventually, they abandoned these hills entirely, only leaving Zul'Drak to raid and steal, like common thugs," he scowled. "It was a shameful time, but that too faded, as the war raged across Zul'Drak for control, letting us become like creatures from stories, remembered only as monsters that descended from the mountains to conquer and destroy before being chased away."

"Thus, the none too subtle escort," Arctikus mused as she scowled at the sight of a distant and rugged looking human watching the convoy through a spy glass on a tree branch.

"Quite so," Gal'Darah's tone grew lighter. "Of course, our liege seeks only camaraderie with our neighbors and the fact we can pass through this land at all is a testament to his wisdom and the skill of the Rageclaw whom bargain on our behalf."

"That…" She began gently, "Actually does beg the question. How did they come to serve the empire?" Ancestors she hoped she phrased that properly.

Gal'Darah's answered was a bemused expression, accompanied by a light clicking of his tongue, which she was beginning to associate with being a Drakkari nicety, perhaps indicating introspection or consideration?

Finally, he answered, "The Rageclaw's history is long, but if you just want to skim the tablet so to speak, they never served the old dominion directly, always wandering far abroad hunting beasts, spices and treasures. Some acted as mercenaries and the items they brought to trade were always welcome, but they were too mobile to be ruled."

He held his palm out flat, slowly balling it into a fist, "As the Empire closed in on itself, they sought to retain this profitable connection and cut deals with several rising polities, factions and tribes. Eventually, this made them so prosperous they needed to settle if they wished their many cubs to be safe, and they were given land alongside a Great lake that now bears their name by an ailing polity that would welcome a friendly neighbor."

Leaning back in his saddle, he chuckled, "As to the rest? They continued to act neutral traders for years, before Malakk brought them into the Drakkari Tribe."

It took a moment for Arctikus to properly process the other trolls' words, as she asked, "They are, deemed Drakkari then?"

"Indeed," Gal'Darah cheered, "We are Ice Trolls, you are Frost, and they are Wolvar, but in the end we are all Drakkari" He thumped his chest grandly, "And we are all united behind Frost King Malakk!"

She leaned back on her raptor as the beast rankled, patting its head, she murmured, "You think very highly of your liege."

"As do you, I would venture?" Gal'Darah answered with a massive grin.

Casting aa glance ahead of her, she nodded, "He is younger than I and impetuous, but he has done more for my people than anyone else. What of you though? By your own words it sounds as though peace in Zul'Drak is unfamiliar, I am thinking?"

"It is," He sighed, "For decades we fought for territory and influence, priests and great families, tribes and polities, all factions vying for influence and power." Shaking his head, he sighed, "It was into this never-ending series of skirmished that we were all born, Malakk as well, hailing from humble means he saw much of the fighting and it stirred him to take action!"

The trolls voice grew higher as a zealous, joyful song swelled up inside his throat.

"He trained, and studied and wandered for years, returning to us only when he knew it was time. A grand tournament, a lingering sign of unity but really just a means of preening," Gal'Darah looked to her eyes sparkling.

"He rode into the amphitheater atop a howling Elemental, having claimed his first of many titles, Conqueror of Storms! He proclaimed himself our king and neither sling not sword could touch he and his entourage."

He thumped his chest swiftly against his heart, over and over, "Never in all my years had I seen such confidence, such an aura of authority! After he left, I knew I had to find him again, and when I did, he proved his worth by rejecting my offer he take the city of Gundrak as his home base with which to conquer Zul'Drak. It was all already his after all, as was all Zul'Drak. We just failed to realize that truth."

The Grand Prophet looked up to the sky, "Instead he travelled the land, solving disputes, saving the starving, and striking down the cruel. He was not just a king, or warrior, but an arbiter of justice, and more and more people came to see the truth. Weak tribes and ailing polities at first but eventually other great factions like my own rallied behind him. Even to those who served foul and wicked trolls he showed mercy, even when it risked his life he chose the highest path and through it all I watched in awe…"

The troll relaxed into his saddle, an easy grin on his face, "Through his reign a peace I long since thought could only be brought about with raw force and draconian cruelty has reigned. I would sacrifice my life for him, without a thought or fear."

They lingered in silence for a time, before hummed, "Interesting words for a priest."

That drew a cackle from Gal'Darah, "You are not the first to say that haha, I think you shall get along just fine in Zul'Drak, and speaking of which, behold!"

Arctikus followed his gesture and felt her eyes nearly drop from her head.

It was a staircase.

Or at least is resembled a staircase.

But it was not to a building, or temple, or fort or even made of brick.

No, this staircase was carved from mountains so tall she could not see the summit, black stone shaped and sharpened, covered in ornate carving and stretching out of sight, as if into the stars above.

"This is the way into Zul'Drak, Teth'koa Pass."


The journey up Teth'koa Pass had not been gentle and while by no means harrowing, Arctikus was well pleased when they finally came to a stop at a carved plateau.

Thickening clouds of mist hovered just outside the steps as though kept away by wards, while great braziers of purple flame lit up ornately carved stone floor that was filled with layer, after layer of intricate inscriptions.

The carriages and carts had, after their 'skis' were removed, been arranged in a wide, crescent circle, leaving it a simple matter for anyone and everyone to mingle; if they were up for more walking at least. Despite that, efforts by Malakk and a troupe of illusionists touring across the camp, Arctikus could see little mingling between her people and the Drakkari when no one was there to inspire it.

'Well, we are Drakkari now, are we not?' She mused, absent mindedly rubbing at her arm as she passed her kin filling their bellies eagerly but speaking little save for the children who were a chorus of excitement and intrigue.

'My tribes silence isn't hatred, or even offence… It is shame…'

The thought sent a stab of pain through her heart like a tusk, but it was plain to see. For all the extra cloaks or equipment, they might have been using, there was no comparison between her people's worn cloth and hardy leather, to the sheer elegancy and wealth on display by even the common Drakkari escorts.

Where her people, even the children slept with weapons close at hand, the Drakkari laid out their fine armaments and gaze up at the sky fearlessly, utterly secure. Among Frostmane it would be galling but here it merely showed how assured the Drakkari were of their strength.

'Strong bodies, full bellies and comforts aplenty,' All things her ancestors might have once had, long denied them by a life scratching a living off rocks and gullies. All things they had dreamed of and fought for to no avail across six hundred years.

'All things my son wanted for us…'

A shuddering breath escaped her, and she broke the line of caravans, breathing in cold, crisp air to compose herself.

"Great Mother," A voice with a familiar twang whispered.

"I am well Barafu, return to your meal," She answered.

There was a moment of silence before the arcanist slid up behind her, "I am not hungry, and you seem very far away."

She half glanced at the slim woman and shook her head, "Eat more then, you are but skin and bones."

"I would," She chuckled, "But I almost fear falling to greed."

Grunting in response she swallowed another frosty breath and slapped her cheeks, "I am fine, I needed but a moment."

"If you say, Great Mother," Barafue bowed.

"Oh," Arctikus added as the other woman made to leave, "and give unto me a boon, when you return, try and speak with some of the… Other Drakkari, we are going to be seeing much of each other after all."

Barafu's carefully neutral expression became a touch mischievous as she flashed her small fangs, "There was a flier I had my eyes on, their leader."

Arctikus searched her skull for the name and clapped as it raced to the forefront of her mind, "Quetz'Lith, I am thinking, with the orange mane?" Not waiting for Barafu to response, she took the other troll's hand and pulled her back towards the camp, ignoring the sudden indignant sputtering, "I shall introduce you, it is time I met that one."

The Sky Riders were not hard to find, gathered around their own magic brazier they did not mingle over much. Not rejecting company but seemingly not seeking it out either. 'At least it is not just us,' she mused, as a tall, lean but muscular troll sashayed out of the camp, orange hair looking like flames in the light, jewelry made of fangs adorning her frame.

"So, our new comrade approaches," She chuckled, offering Arctikus her arm, which she gingerly took in a firmly polite grasp, "I am Quetz'Lith, Zul'Drak's Sky Sovereign and leader of the Sky Shrieker Band."

"Great Mother Arctikus, and, ah, advisor to the Frost King I am told, and my companion, Bonechiller Barafu," she said, motioning to the younger woman who bower, murmuring an appraising, "It's an honor," with a pleased grin.

"The honor is mine," Quetz'Lith chuckled rolling on the balls of her feet and watching them in seeming bemusement.

Arctikus had merely meant to make introductions, but curiosity compelled her to ask, "You said Sky Shriekers band, I take it you mean something akin to a tribe?"

"Something like," the troll said, head lolling back in a brief, sharp shriek that was answered by her kindred, "We were a force to be reckoned with even before the Frost King's rise. In Zul'Drak, no one else ruled the skies but we."

Barafu chuckled, "The spirits may contest that claim, you know."

Quetz'Lith smirked, "Our spirits are quite a breed apart from those you might find elsewhere, heh, literally."

Pocketing that for later, she pressed on, "So, then Zul'Drak's Sky Riders are only your, ah, band?" Arctikus intoned, trying to emulate the curious, almost musical, vibrations she had heard from Malakk and other Drakkari.

Quetz'Lith rolled her shoulders in a dismissive gesture, "Not anymore, my band still makes up the elite core of it, but Malakk wants an," Her tone sunk low in an imitation of the troll king. "Integrated military, founded on unity among our people."

"Do you disagree?" Barafu asked for her, sensing Arctikus's curiosity.

The Sky Sovereign ducked her head, a gesture Arctikus was beginning to think was abashed acknowledgement, as the woman answered, "It makes sense to expand the numbers now that we can, and everyone isn't trying to kill each other anymore. It is just a pain trying to ingrain a lifetime of skills into ground pounders."

"Is feeding the bats not also a trial?" Barafu asked, "If you have new members you must need new bats after all."

"Getting the numbers up is tricky," Quetz'Lith conceded with a wave, "These rodents wouldn't even learn to hunt if we didn't heckle-em and are too spoiled to feel a need to breed in great numbers. But feeding? No, even before this oh so glorious peace was declared food wasn't hard to come by for even a weak polity and now that we aren't killing one another we got food banks aplenty."

"How is that possible?" Arctikus muttered, "The snow makes crops difficult and beasts harder still."

"We have our ways," Quetz'Lith said, "Best to speak to Malakk or someone about the aqueducts and fields though, they could explain it so poetically."

"Another feather to Malakk's crown I see," Arctikus said, looking to the cheerful troll, regaling a band of enraptured children with some story.

A sharp, keening snort escaped Quetz'Lith, "If you believe Gal'Darah, he can turn tears to flame, convert the poor into kings and make every wish come true."

"I take it you disagree?" Arctikus asked, shock radiating in her tone.

Quetz'Lith shrugged, "His renown is not totally unearned but too many, especially priests and the like tend to forget he neither started alone nor took the crown alone." Nodding in Malakk's direction she continued, "His core group of supporters were called the noble fifteen, skilled shamans and scholars, kindly speakers and clever bureaucrats worked with warriors and priest. But barring, Prophet Moorabi, Malaka'raz and his two elite guards..." she threw back her drink, one finger sliding across her throat.

"Dead?" Barafu guessed.

Pulling the mug away, Quetz'Lith nodded, "Felled on his path to kingship; they gave their lives to hoist him higher that he could reach the crown. I don't doubt it stung, but they needed a legend come to life to make a true king and those around him, especially Gal'Darah, forget too quickly that no king was born alone"

"You saw us talking," Arctikue mused, having noted the frequent jabs at Malakk's own Grand Prophet.

"I would know even if I had not, he's a good troll in his way but his passion and zeal run deep and as a spiritual type it is easy for him to shrug off loss. What does he need mourn for, he can commune with the honored dead and glimpse into their resting place?" The Bat Rider snorted, "Death comes for us all, but people like us who must train replacements and are not so enamored with the world beyond feel it different, we don't lose sight of what was lost, we can't."

"We cannot…" Arctikus said slowly.

Quetz'Lith groaned, "I said something foolish did I not?"

"No, no, nothing you said sounds hollow, it merely left me with some thoughts of home," she said.

Hiding her fangs, Quetz'Lith clapped her on the arm, "I'm not one for sentimentality, but I would wish for Zul'Drak to be your home, not to say forget the past but… If there is nothing good out there, why suffer it?"

"I will think on your words," The prospect of forgetting thousands of generations of ancestor's blood sweat and tears stung but she would not be rude. "Thank you for this meeting and your assistance Quetz'Lith. Oh, and Barafu has something she'd like to ask of you," Quetz'Lith said, turning to hide her mirth as she gently shoved the shocked troll towards the taller one and quickly got out of spell range.


When the next morning came the light was still dim and clouded, but just as it had the night before, whatever Loa or spirits blessed Teth'koa Pass ensured that no snow or howling winds struck the convoy as they entered the last leg of their journey.

With the Grizzly Hills far behind them, the guard force grew completely lax and Malakk fell back with his elites to march with the rest of them, using his long purposeful strides to keep pace with the greater beasts. His regal robes exchanged for a tough leather kilt, matching bracers, anklets, and shoulder pads.

"I was visiting Har'koa's temple for some hunting games when I heard word of your arrival," he mentioned offhandedly as they made their way up the steps.

That had led to a brief digression, -mostly handled by a now more composed and scholarly Gal'Darah- on the specifics of Zukl'Drak's pantheon. It had proven interesting, if somewhat sordid and bloody if Malakk's few rejoinders about divine rivalries were to be believed. It had also led them to discussing Shango.

"I do hope collecting offerings shall not cause a strain on resources. Let alone offend the other Loa," Arctikus said.

"The empires Loa shall not protest this request for the Storming One to be counted amongst their number," Gal'Darah assured.

"We shall take no offering from other temples, but merely procure more," Malakk said airily, "The Loa might moan but that will mean little in the end. Some still mutter so bitterly about the competition of old allies' temples being restored after all, but they do not halt it."

"And after what the Storm God did for your tribe, none would contest their worthiness as a part of the empires pantheon," Gal'Darah added.

"I am thankful," Arctikus assured, desperately trying to read between the layers of their words, as she added, "I received word from my Soothsayers that Shango seeks copper idols with which to commune more easily with the temple."

"That should be easy enough, are there any other preferences, food, gems, that sort of thing…" Malakk said, before suddenly grinning widely as booming voices began to echo around them, "Take heart my friends, the city of Zul'Drak beckons!"

At those words alone, the beasts began to croon and Drakkari cheered and hooted.

Arctikus hastened her mount to keep pace, her words quiet and rushed, "I thought you said Zul'Drak was your nation?"

"I did, and yet it is a city and a nation," Malakk grinned widely, as the final steps began to give way as trolls guarding the peaks chanted, incense burst into the air with colored smoke and Arctikus's jaw fell open as she took in the sight before her.

First it was the snow, but not lumpy and chaotic like home, instead it dusted the grounds like a fine powder and leaving stone streets utterly untouched.

Then it was the lights, because everywhere she looked glowing idols and pillars of magic flames shone with no clear source, each bound to ornately decorated obelisks that would have taken months to carve.

Next it was the buildings. She had thought the grand steps and high walls either side had prepared her for scale, but fortresses, temples, towers and what could only be described as apartments jutted out from the earth, massive monuments of dark stone, each looking as if it could disgorge an army on a whim!

And of course, there was the trolls, more than she had ever seen, more than she thought possible! Towering and strong, bedecked in robes and crisply cut leathers. They lined the streets, an organized host standing behind a leopard styled priests who hollered a grandiose greeting that was met with cheers as petals and sparking dust were thrown from the highest windows and falling like rain.

But above all it was that Zul'Drak, "Stretches on forever," She gasped. Seeing no end to the eternally flat planes wherever she looked, there were monuments, well-tended parks of strangely colored trees, decorated with talismans while streets never seemed to end!

Malakk clapped her on the back, "Not quite, but you will find the city of Zul'Drak to be as large as any nation, its four tiers carved from mountains over millennia by our ancestors." With that he strode forward, arms raised high as he embraced the priest and led the crowd in a song.

"They are saying welcome," Gal'Darah chimed in, motioning for her to follow his hand to star East as he spoke, "Far beyond sight is Gundrak, the city-temple, capital and heart of our empire and it is where your tribe shall be staying as we arrange your new home here, but for now, let us enjoy the parade I think."

Swallowing, Arctikus tightened her grip on her mount and blinked away the shock and stray tears, 'This is what we always could have had,' echoed in her mind.

As she rode forward, bowing and waving to crowd, voice rising high in song as she led her tribe through the streets of Zul'Drak, the totality of their new future truly striking her as she looked upon the proud and healthy people with gleaming tusks and grand homes.

'This is our future!'
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With the tears to fire line, I was referencing this song (Xan Griffin - Capricorn (feat. WOLFE) Which was on my "Writing this fic" playlist XD
 
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The Winds of Change Blow (Prologue P.3)
The Winds of Change Blow (Prologue P.3)

The festivities greeting had been equal parts staggering and heartening, in Arctikus's mind.

Staggering, for seeing so many trolls in such grand environs; such massive apartments, wide streets lined with stone monoliths topped with fires that seemed to burn eternally.

It was, in of itself, intimidating.

But so too was it heartening, for even if it was perhaps rooted in pity or even ignorance of what their seeming acceptance into the empire would bring… To know that they would not be greeted with suspicion and hostility, at least not on the surface was a grand thing.

The children deserved to know such warmth if nothing else.

'There was still no need for Vejrek to become so flamboyant,' she had mused, thinking of the tough and sprightly troll doing all but kissing every mountainous Drakkari woman he encountered.

Still, while her fellow tribesman had been stunned it had not been difficult to get swept up in the welcoming even as they hurried through the hustle and bustle of the city. Along the way, Arctikus found herself spying theaters, grounds of well-tended grass and trees for play, monuments, communal cooking halls and more!

But they dared not tarry for long and the journey had continued across the 'Royal Road' that cut straight through the heart of the city. It apparently travelled upbroken East, West, North and South across Zul'Drak, with smaller roads and pathways branching off it, leading to smaller settlements dotting the empire.

'Such numbers, such size, how can one manage it all? Even at our peak we could not have matched this,' Arctikus mused, head tilting towards the cloudy sky, snowfall gently wafting down but somehow never finding the dark stone streets.

She cast a glance to Barafu, the woman had been shuffling closer to her since their next destination had been announced and she looked… ill at ease.

"What troubles you, sister," Arctikus said, drawing the attention of Malakk and Gal'Darah.

Barafu ducked her head and tightened her hold on the reigns of her raptor, "This place is strange to me and the others, Great Mother. I see a land so high no lizard should walk it safely and yet they do. I see snow fall with the delicate touch of an artist so it never obscures our path. I feel the spirits, but they are quiet, humble things."

Arctikus chose to click her tongue and looked towards their hosts, voice rising over the din. "We were told the spirits of this land were of a different breed, but still I do share your confusion, lore tells us only the Zandalari were so blessed by the Loa."

Malakk's answer is a sharp, hissing snort of disgust, "Zandalari, pretty pets to the Loa who cannot stand to be outshone."

Gal'Darah sent them a sympathetic look and added, "More than once, Zul'Drak has fallen into civil war and not all of these times has it been natural, the hands of the God King reach far and jealousy is a most vile thing that can taint even the most holy."

"That is…" It was treason, it was sinful, and yet Arctikus would not force herself to feel offence in the name of such a distant king. "An interesting stance. I confess to know little of them, my ancestors never received even the token aid the Amani once did."

"Not surprising, even the mighty Amani were left in the lurch the moment all did not go as planned, or so I hear," Malakk answered, massive shoulders rolling. "Still, we can answer your questions well enough, though a more… Detailed reading will likely be warranted later, especially for your Shamans."

Glancing at a wide eyed Barafu, Arcticus nodded, "We would welcome your words, the journey is far from done after all."

"Not far off now," Gal'Darah said, glancing across the snowy planes, decorated as they were with temple towns and open forts.

"We have time," Malakk said idly after a quick glance at his bodyguards. Slowing down his strides to match their pace, Malakk began grandly, arms open wide as if to embrace his kingdom.

"What you must understand is that, ere the breaking of the world by elven witchery, Northrend went from a merely rough land to a cruel one. Pockets like the Grizzly Hills remained safe havens for the meek, but Storm Peaks, Icecrown, Dragonblight and of course the mountains that would become Zul'Drak were cursed."

"Not, literally," he specified, as Barafu looked to speak. "But the spirits became capricious and cruel, seeking dominion and death wherever they could. Our ancestors pleaded for aid, to travel South and were ignored or denied," he rasped.

"Some, of course, did escape," Arctikus mused, running a hand along her arm, brushing down the hackled fur.

"Indeed, some did, and I must commend their skill to have avoided an untimely end," Malakk said genially. "But those of our ancestors that remained learned to struggle against the spirits, not by dealing with them, but by but dueling and driving them off from our safe havens or destroying them for power. This is something the mighty Taunka do as well," He added.

'Another people to learn of, if he thinks highly of them,' Arctikus mused, as Barafu looked stunned.

"You, fought, spirits, you killed them? Would that not have terrible ramifications?" The horror tinging her tone was not subtle.

"In fact it did," Malakk answered, his tone lyrical rather than ominous or concerned. "For despite founding Gundrak, our people struggled to feed themselves and survive as the spirits were kept at bay, nothing could live, until, well…" He stalled as a black dot appeared in the distance, looming high into the sky.

"Well," he shrugged helplessly, "To end this long story, I shall merely glance over the discovery of Saronite, the Founding heroes and more to say that, with time… We discovered ways to… Create our own spirits, through blood and blessings from the Loa and a shade of Saronite in the earliest of days."

"Create… Spirits," Barafue thought, tongue clicking, "Akin to elementals?"

"Akin, but not the same," Gal'Darah chimed in, "Blessed as these are by the Loa, these are purified, and thus while born from the broken remnants of dead spirits, or even from our own breath and tears, they could grow strong when given life."

"It is as he said, the processes vary," Malakk said with a wave, "But the result is much the same, we birthed new spirits into this world, one's of even temperament and amicable to fair deals. The fires that burn iron trees for years on end without smoke are an example. They keep our streets warm and lit while being fed with no effort or fear of extinguishment."

"The clouds and winds as well, all of it?" Barafu asked, breathlessly.

"All save the stone we walk upon," Malakk cheered, "The earth has remained fair and just and thus we honored it even as we reshaped it. But as to the rest, yes, we drove out the evil old spirits into the Storm Peaks and beyond or destroyed them and replaced them with our own creations, refining, strengthening, and improving them over generations. Now the miracle of Zandalar has been recreated on a grand scale, not through Loa charity, but our own efforts as much as the Loa."

'I can see why the Zandalari call them arrogant, and yet,' Arctikus cast her gaze around at the towering cities in the distance, the controlled weather and she felt a shiver of both excitement and wariness at the power the Drakkari held.

However, before Barafu could ask anything else, Arctikus found herself eyeing a great edifice of black stone in the distance as the city's buildings began to fade away into the delicately snow-capped planes.

'Its taller than I imagined,' she mused, troll like visages carved in gargantuan stone sat atop sharply angled, squared off ornamentation, sitting atop level after level of an ever-widening tower. That itself sat on a raised dais as large as any city, surrounded by ornate pillared walls., all adorned with rich paintings and jewels. Vibrant trees breaking from the snowy planes.

She looked to Malakk and then back to the distance structure, "I fear I may be wrong. But is what I see in the distance Gundrak?"

Malakk's laugh was booming but not unfriendly, or more he did not mean it to be unfriendly she thought. "Not at all Great Mother, laid before you is the Altar of Har'Koa the leopard. If we were to walk across Zul'Drak it would take us days before we would arrive in Gundrak."

Arching her brow at the king, she said, "Your words imply we shall be taking some other means?"

Malakk's chest swelled as he motioned towards the planes, "Zul'Drak is far too large of a place for people to simple walk everywhere without spending their entire lives cloistered within a few hexagons of lands. Thus, we have other means of travelling the kingdom, especially across large swathes of territory that are not so reliant on Wagonway, howdah."

"And those means are?" She pressed, drawing a sort of bemused blink from the king.

Thankfully Malaka'raz cut in, "A manifold of ways, Great Mother. Across the Aqueducts you will find Narrowboats ferrying supplies as well as blessed water. Between the tiers we have newly build gondola," He saw her confusion and added, "Metal boxes run along wires pushed and pulled by spirits in an eternal dance."

"So, we shall be taking one of these, Godola?" Barafu asked, testing the word out with a click of her fangs and tongue.

"Actually," Malakk added, sounding speculative, "it shall be the Cable_railway, we have smaller one's within cities, push and pulled much like the Gondola, but I have seen fit to try and make the journey to the capital efficient, and so running beneath the earth are great car of metal that shall carry us home."

"I… See," Articus said slowly, trying to put their words into pictures but finding her imagination failing. "Are these akin to the Dwarves… Oh what did they call the?" A scowl spreading across her face. "Mine carts? Powered by their hands?"

Malakk and Malaka'raz sent one another a bemused look before the Frost King spoke, "Not quite Great Mother, though I know some are fiddling with such an idea, you must share what you know if it if you should meet a subject of the Juj'tulak." His ears twitched and he added, "I am surprised you have not heard of such things?"

"We are quite diminished," She said slowly, tone brushing against chastising and the king nodded, ducking his head.

"Of course, I apologize for my presumption Great Mother."

"We hear precious little from our Southern cousins," Gal'Darah cut in swiftly, "It leaves us rather ill prepared to know what is known only to us and only to you."

Her answer was a low click and a nod, that seemed to assuage the Grand Prophets gaze as the looming temple and its surrounding towers cast shadows across their party. Across the sparse grounds, large leopards prowled freely as any ram and trolls in the hundreds strode across the clean-cut stone streets, while a host in leopard print robes marched towards them.

They were quick to welcome their Prophet, racing ahead on his magnificent leopard mount and turning to face them as they approached at a more leisurely place.

"Frost King Malakk, honored kin, Great Mother Arctikus, I Prophet Loque'Koa of Har'Koa's majesty do welcome you to her temple town and invite you across our threshold to warm meals and comfortable lodging!"

"That would be most welcome my friend," Malakk cheered.

Offering a sharp salute from atop her mount, Arctikus added, "We are most humbled by your generosity holy one, I do hope we shall not stretch your supplies." She had seen little in the ways of prey to hunt or fields to tend, despite outcroppings of trees and lakes that refused to freeze over, all of them were contained in neat patterns of stone, sacred perhaps she wondered.

The prophet brushed back his white mohawk and grinned, "Worry not Great Mother, for Har'koa's a pack loving goddess, who would never turn kin out in the cold. Three levels of the temple, usually held for festival and pilgrims shall house you and your kin this night and you shall enjoy the bounty of Zul'Drak's food banks!"

He glanced back at the temple with a pleased grin, something rustled on the edges of her senses before he spoke, "I am sure the young one's will enjoy the cubs, a new generation of litters was born this very week, so we are all in fine spirits. Please, follow me, honored guests!"


The temple was grand in size and scope and yet apparently among the humblest of its kin, Har'Koa preferring expansive wilds to monuments of stone. Its high walls and broad chambers, with smoke-less flames casting light from enchanted cradles that warmed the dark stone with welcome ease.

Grand tapestries of leather, woven silk, cloth, and bark adorned the walls, standing just as proud as glinting weapons, jewels, and carved totems. Comfortable pillows and deep lounges were quickly made home upon as communal cooking pits flared to life and filled the chambers with an array of scents, from hearty meats to tangy spices.

As expected, the children and the cubs took to each other with the ease flames did to oiled leaves, all under the watchful eye of contented looking sabers and doting priests.

Arctikus's own people contributed to the cooking where they could, the few remaining skilled chefs among them eager to both learn and give something back, while others found themselves rivetted by priestly story tellers.

Arctikus herself was curious as to how the tale of Din'Zal, They Who Walk Without Fear would end, but she had other matters to attend to. Barafu had managed to link with Quetz'Lith again, which implicitly invited her into the Frost King's circle of advisors. Not that the leader of the Sky Shriekers seemed terribly interested in the discussion, instead leaning back against plush pillows, and enjoying the Hookah on the low, ornate table they gathered around.

Barafu, however seemed to be focused entirely on the discussion taking place and looking distinctly disquieted in her own subtle way.

"Grik'nir," She said to the hefty shaman trailing at her back, "Keep an eye on the family, I must tend to this."

"As you wish, Great Mother," he answered with a very Drakkari like salute. Verjek and Battok sent her confused glances as she strode away from her kin, but a simple flick of her hand was enough for them to return to watching over their fellows.

As she approached, she could hear Prophet Loque'Koa speaking emphatically to the Frost King. "I am merely thinking, thinking that is, that Zul'Drak and all her glory is a world unto itself. Should we leave it so easily, and travel so far to lands not our own?"

Seeing an empty space, around her size near Barafu and Chieftan Rageclaw; the latter happily sitting on a cushioned stool rather than a pillow and tapping their legs as if overflowing with energy, she sat, a quiet greeting coming from the Wolvar which she bowed her head to.

"You presume much, Prophet Loque'Koa," countered Gal'Darah with a sharp tilt to his tone.

"I try to presume little, Grand Prophet, but I am merely questioning the necessity of marching to war against these 'Dwarves'," Said the Leopard Priest and Arctikus wanted to break stone on her fangs!

"Tap table," Rageclaw whispered, so low it was an almost keening whine, but Arctikus did so, jagged nail clacking against the stone and Malakk sent her a nod, before taking a puff on the Hookah.

"If I may, honorable Prophet," She said slowly, hauntingly, ensuring she could speak without interruption, "What would you do if it were your home that suffered such assaults?"

"A fair point, Great Mother," he ducked his head, leopard cowl bobbing, "And yet, rather my point, as such a thing simply cannot happen in Zul'Drak. Do we not invite danger by seeking bloodshed?"

Malakk let out a low, amused rumble, scented smoke like tingling sweetness spilling from his maw in a wave of blue tinged smoke, "Bold of you to assume my future proclamations."

That brought a start to the table, as all but Gal'Darah stared in some degree of restrained shock.

"Frost King Malakk," she murmured, Loque'Koa's questioning tone mere seconds after her own.

Malakk held up a single, large hand, "I have promised the Frostmane tribe a home, and a measure of justice, but," he added sharply. "That I can promise as Frost King because they are my subjects who were done wrong. That does not however mean I can bald facedly declare war, not without more details, not without conferring with my chief advisors and while Gal'Darah is present, but Warlord Zol'Maz is not."

He tapped a ringed finger against the table, leaning forward on the item he barely fit under, "Maybe we shall need not use force at all to drag reparations out of these Dwarves."

Arctikus held back her scoff, Barafu did not, earning a smirk from Quetz'Lith who waved, "The pretty magus disagrees."

"As she has a right to, given the nature of this matter," Malakk said gamely. "And yet, I will not declare war so brazenly as without calling this empires overseers' and my council together, that we might debate the matter. And I most certainly will not discount resolving this peacefully."

Arctikus shuddered and it must have shown because he hastily added.

"I do not mean to disrespect your tribes suffering, Great Mother and noble Barafu. However, it may be proven that a simple show of force is enough to make these Dwarves see the error of their ways and ensure they offer you reparations."

"How can one repay blood without blood?" She asked quietly.

Malakk sent a glance to Rageclaw who clacked their claws along the table, "In trade, travel my tribe can be endangered. Death is old companion. Sometimes vengeance is needed, in others, only discourse. But if blood is shed when words suffice, that blood was wasted."

"So, you to council peace, then?" Loque'Koa asked, sounding pleased, only to earn a guttural growl.

"I counsel no such thing," Rageclaw's fangs clacked together. "We know too little. Need to talk more. Learn more. Hasty plans in ignorance are doomed."

Before the prophet could rear up in counter as he looked ready to, Malakk clapped his hand om the table, "A solution will not be found at this table on this night. Your concerns have been heard, Prophet Loque'Koa, but so too must the Great Mother be heeded, as will my servants across the Empire. But know I shall not let the suffering of the Frostmane be ignored," he stressed.

Taking another puff of the Hookah, the Frost King pressed on, "Now, let us turn to more joyful things. On the morrow, we shall be making for Gundrak. However, mornings are times for warm surroundings and comfortable beds, especially with the children having been put through so much. Thus, if it would be welcomed, I would seek to go on my hunt in the Hara Forest and would invite the Great Mother and any others who wish to attend to join me."

Biting back bile and bitter tones, Arctikus bowed her shoulders in gratitude, "I would be most honored, Frost King Malakk, to join you on this hunt."


The morning air was familiarly crisp and chill, it seemed even manageable spirits couldn't quite offset the cold in the air, but it did little to slow any among their hunting party down.

Beyond herself and Malakk, his personal bodyguards were accompanying them, along with Verjek and Quetz'Lith who had led their procession of flying bats into the Hara Forest.

As with most things in Zul'Drak it was somewhat artificial, at least on the outside. Situated some ways North of the aqueduct, the fields of Drakkari industry could be seen everywhere. Be it from eternally flat landscape, the long intertwining roads to the massive store houses of food and wares, or the surrounding small settlements they had passed over.

Even the forest was managed.

For all the trees of blistering blue and almost pink tinged red leaves with uniformly greyed and dark bark, lined with spikes, coiling vines and thorny bushes loomed like something ancient and primeval…

It was all contained in a neat hexagon, larger than village, so large she could not see the other side of it, and yet the plants had not even attempted to grow passed the runic, patterned boundary and the massive monolithic markers that stood tall at each pointed tip.

There had been trees outside of course, but they had been widely spread, carefully managed and easy to walk and build homes between. This place had the feel of what Arctikus imagined a jungle from the old stories might be like.

Arctikus brushed her free hand over a troll-head shaped totem, its eyes glowing with a dark green metal and gently pulsing runes and found it warm to touch, and faintly slick.

"These control the weather then?" She asked, drawing her attention back to the spread out hunting party, her old spear still gripped tightly in hand.

"Aye," Bith'Sa said, flicking at her furred robes, "They draw in the moisture, warming it and the land to make it a might bit humid."

Kutube'sa scoffed, "You want humid? Try the Drak'Sotra Fields, idols ten times that size billowing steam into the air and making it muggy as a sweaty…" She sent the fiery troll a look and he chuckled, "Well you get this one's message, yes?"

"Great Mother, a Rok," Verjek whispered, pulling down his spyglass.

"Oh, good eye," Malakk chuckled, "You want the kill?"

Verjek sent her an almost pleading look and Arcticus thought to click her tongue before sending him a nod.

The young hunter, festooned in dark leathers that let him blend into the woods fell into a throwing stance and whistled.

The Rok, a tall, sharp, and powerfully built bird cawed and flared its wings, tilting to fly North, but as it beats its wings once and took off-

Verjek let loose his spear, knowing full well where his quarry was aiming, now knowing the timing of the flaps and the spear struck true, piercing right through the mighty birds' neck, nailing it to a tree.

Verjek was too well practiced to cheer, but he did let out a pleased hiss, pumping his fists close to his chest and striking one in pride and glee.

"Quite a throw," Quetz'Lith said from her tree top perch, "You used to such quiet hunting then?"

Verjek slapped his chest, "Back home I could nail a ram from a Dwarven herd without the ankle biters even seeing the glint of steel, let alone hearing it."

"Impressive," Malakk hummed as they let Verjek gather his kill and place it in a in a whicker basket.

As he worked, the party remained on guard, relatively speaking, at least, mostly just keeping a hand on their weapons and half watching the tangled, overgrown forest.

Malakk was lifting up a thick sheet of vines with his foot, "The beasties are lured here, as they are either stupider or more vicious than the tamer fair that we let roam the lands outside. It is why they are used for ritualistic hunting, you see."

"I do see," Arctikus answered seriously, but before she could probe the Frost King on the last nights discussion, he clapped his knee and grinned widely.

"Well, I'll be, Icethorn out here? Lucky me," He sang song, letting Kutube'sa use his massive broad sword to hold back the bush as he knelt near an icy, thorny vine that curled in on itself sprouting from the ground.

As he revealed a trowel and a delicate looking instrument which he used to gently pierce the ground around the plant, Artikus spoke, brow arched.

"I did not know you had studied the ways of herb and concoction?"

Malakk let out a keening hum, head rocking from side to side, even as steady hands guided a trowel into the earth. "I would say compared to the true masters of potions and magic I am but a bumbling novice."

With the ground suitably loosened he prepared a carrying kit and continued to speak. "I studied the art under the tutelage of a wise Drakkari_Oracle in my youth and thanks to her tutelage I can still ritualize some rather worthwhile physical enchantments. However..."

He freed the plant, a look of intense concentration on his face as he did so before continuing, "However, I can do little else, and know full well any Hexxar worth their name surpasses me in every way. Still, I can follow a conversation on the matter well enough."

"And knows enough to tell if he's been poisoned," Quetz'Lith chuckled, throwing back a sip of her canteen.

"You tried," Verjek gasped, while Arctikus's gaze fell on Malakks guards who sent the woman a sour look.

If she noticed, she either did not care or didn't show it, lackadaisical on her chosen branch, "I did, awhile ago now, and just to see how damned brazen the would be king might be."

"We would have cut you up for the antidote," Kutube'sa said, fangs clicking.

"Now, now, such grudges should be like water, flowing through an aqueduct and out of mind," Malakk said, rising to his feet with a lazy stretch.

Tapping her spear on the dull, reddish grass, Arctikus spoke, "With talk of grudges, Frost King Malakk; this one does not wish to sound ungrateful, I hoped we could discuss-"

"Why I was so ambivalent about the prospect of war?" He cut in, smirking, as he motioned for them to follow, keeping his voice low.

"I take it you desire to return to your taken home, drive a spear through the heart of every soldier who forced you out and behead the leaders for your fallen kin for all to see, so that everyone knows that actions, have consequences."

Arcticus forced a relaxed roll to her shoulders, "Yes…"

"Fair, and just," Malakk said lightly, pushing passed a thick branch.

"Then why- May I ask," Verjek cut in haltingly, fingers running nervously along the whicker basket.

"Let me answer your question with one of my own," He glanced back, "Tell me, how would you define passion?"

Verjek shrugged, "Something one cares about a great deal and relishes?"

Malakk's gaze fell to her and Arctikus frowned, before she answered, "I think, passion is what drives us, motivates us… It is what matters to us in our core and it buoys our spirits through trials and tribulations."

"Respectable perspective, I do not disagree, and yet I would offer my own," Malakk said, gaze rising to the forest canopy. "Passions can be as you said, a strong desire, or a quiet thing that suffuses us through life and gives us meaning and will. But to me, passions are more… Dominant than that, they are rare and pure things that go beyond the day-to-day business of living and can lead one to greatness or… Utter disaster."

Motioning for them to crouch he pressed on, "I too am a child of war, we all are, to an extent," Malakk said, usual cheer dimmed. "War can sound like a small thing for one in my position, at the head of a mighty empire and resplendent legions of mighty hosts. I have seen and lived the cost of war, not one so dire as yourself, but enough to see the mark it leaves on the victors as well as the defeated."

Arctikus's fangs clacked, "Please, reach your point, Frost King Malakk."

Despite her manner, the troll simply nodded, "The barbarian warrior in me roars at the injustice you face and would relish the chance to join you at the forefront of our legions and grind your foe to dust. But." he said sharply, "I am Frost King Malakk of the Drakkari Empire, I have to be more than my or anyone else's passions, no matter how deep or justified."

He looked back upon her grimly, "The era of tyrants is over, I cannot, will not lead my people into war without first consulting them, without first seeing if I can spare the loss of more of my subjects' lives. Because that is the passion of a monarch, and before I am Malakk, I am the Frost King; but fear not, your people will be protected and I will support you to the hilt, Great Mother."

He turned his attention to the lake before them and grinned, "Now, let us enjoy the hunt," He revealed a golden 'egg' of ice that hummed with magic, "A strength potion frozen and shaped. Think if I put some of that Furbolg honey concoction on it and throw, I can get it into the polar bears mouth?"

"You want to make it stronger?" Verjek asked, gaping as he looked at the mass of hulking muscle and claws, thick pelt like armor as it had so easily broken the branches of Iron Trees in its passage.

"They're only eight feet, they never want to fight me properly," Malakk sighed, toying with the magical item that to Arctikus's mind should have been a rarity, rather than a novelty to make a hunt more fun.

"I bet you, you cannot make the shot," Quetz'Lith smirked, from her branch side vantage point.

"I will if you don't scare it off," Malakk said, in a tone that told her this was a familiar exchange.

Arctikus stayed back and watched, not contented, but aware pressing further would only weaken her position.

Thus, she instead focused on enjoying the hunt as well as she could an ended up snagging a rather fetching leopard skin for her efforts before the morning was over.

Finally, Malakk declared, "Come, we'd best make haste to the temple if we wish to wash up before leaving for Gundrak. The cable railway awaits, and I am eager to hear your thoughts on it?"

"I will be sure to share them," Arctikus said arching her brow. What else did he think could surprise her at this point?


Breakfast was a hearty affair, and as was becoming custom, the children ate until they could barely move, thought fortunately not to the point of sickness.

A priest had walked Arctikus through the appropriate rituals for skinning her kill and offering back the heart and mind to its mother that its spirit might rest with her and be reborn.

Then, a mere hour later, with new cloak draped over her shoulders, Arctikus joined Malakk at the head of their procession from the temple and… Back into the city.

More specifically, he led them towards a large stone structure that on the surface appeared to be little more than a large auditorium with no stage, seats, decorations, food were all present. But all they surrounded was a large stairwell that led into the earth.

What greeted them down below was hard to describe, a grand chamber, great in scale and length, lit up by humming crystals of lavender magic, brightening the dull but intricate stonework.

The massive, platform as Malakk called it sat alongside a sharp dip, like the aqueducts, but no water flowed and it led into a great tunnel, while long ropes of metal ran along rows of steel bolted to the ground.

In the distance she could hear a faint clicking, below her she could see the cable turning and at the cables base she could see spirits of water intertwined in a dance that moved the circlet that drove the cable and….

"Frost King Malakk, what is this?" She intoned, as the approaching sound grew louder.

"This, my friend, is a new invocation, the Cable Railway," He intoned proudly, "A creation of my Juj'tulak, the great artisans of Zul'Drak."

The sound was growing louder, and, in the distance, she could see it.

A gargantuan carriage of steel rolling down the tunnel towards them, looming larger than any Dwarven tanks or tower, the sharp angled frame and carved walls making it resemble a moving fortress.

"My Empire is too large and too populace for the people to remain locked in singular cities all their lives, not if I want it to be truly united and honestly efficient. So, just like the Aqueducts and the gondola, only on a grander scale, hundreds of trolls a carriage and driven by the ever fed and ever dancing spirits of water!"

The spirts grew quiet and the massive carriage lolled to a stop before them, each one easily twice the size of any troll present and she could see stairs within as large iron tree doors were pulled aside by guards who bowed deferentially.

"Frostmane of the Dakari Empire, Gundrak beckons and your chariot awaits, follow me aboard!" Cheered the Frost King, striding forward and across the slim divide in grand easy steps, beckoning for them to follow.

Soon enough they had found seats, strong and smooth, to the last and their 'carriage' began to thrum as the spirits turned and the cabled flowed, drawing them along the seemingly endless tunnel towards Gundrak.

Towards, salvation.
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NOTES:
So this harkens the end of the Prologue, after this there shall be a short interlude to establish a time skip, followed by the beginning of the first major story arc.

Some world building info:

In terms of societal structure and function, I was heavily inspired by the Inkan Empire, for the Drakkari.

I should note, the Drakkari are pretty biased against the Zandalari, and via versa, so neither side should really be trusted in their opinion on the other.

Some great, though be it not entirely accurate, pics of Zul'Drak by an official artist. (In many ways they give me the vibe of the Frostmane nation before the Dwarves)

Aside, but a good example of what Zul'Drak looks like for the average person, 'miniature cos game', can be seen here and here. Its depressingly hard to get a good picture of Zul'Drak outside the top tier cos so much was in war/collapse when we got there so it didn't like like it should. I'd have loved to see Jintha'kalar before the Scourge for instance.

The cable railways are a flourish I'll admit, but given the design of Zul'Drak and the necessities of navigation I felt it necessary. I would note there Drakkari don't use steam or engines or anything like that; its literally a series of cables connected to a turning windmill like structure, pushed along by some water spirits that get offerings to do the spinning.

A good comparison, living standards wise, would be places like Dalaran or Silvermoon. Notice how they have enchanted brooms and the like running around? Drakkari (& Zandalari) have similar stuff, just via spirits. Also, while not strictly canon (Yet) A fun comparison/insight to how common Drakkari live would be to Howls Moving Castle, with a little Fire Spirit ever burning and being part of the home and family, its hearth you might say.

The nature of the spirits in Zul'Drak is inspired by a mixture between canon, the Travelogue and my own conceptions. Basically, we know Northrend has fairly hostile spirits in most places, frozen mountains aren't easy places to live at the best of times, but the Drakkari have a city the size of a country and places like the Drak'Sotra fields that are massive and also defy the environment. We also see clear roadways despite the snow and other stuff mentioned. Thus the idea was born that the essence of defeated spirits was given new and less temperamental life through a myriad of ways and this along with how the Drakkari built Zul'Drak informs a lot about how they interact with the world.
 
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Interlude: Gundrak
Interlude: Gundrak

Perhaps one who had walked the golden halls of Dazar'alor would have at least the faintest idea what it was like to stand within Gundrak. Where every stretch of wall was dominated by sigils, art or gems, statues and carvings of gargantuan proportions watching on as if alive. Ritual fires and glowing crystals filled the dark stone with warmth and light as well as any hearth-fire.

As was popular in nearly every city troll city Arctikus had heard tell of, running water was a constant. The sound never far from one's ears and proving both strange but oddly soothing in Arctikus's mind.

The king, his entourage and her tribe were welcomed with hearty fanfare. Great feasts with a startling variety of meats and even greater surplus of hearty vegetables harvested from the Drak'Sotra Fields that were said to stretch on for days.

Guides had proven a necessity from the first day, as many-a Frostmane had discovered.

The buildings of Gundrak, be they residential, studies, smiths, barracks, or armories were woven into the mighty temple. One could find steps leading everywhere, they wound about one another like a nest, or bush. Each street and stairway flowing into the next; shaped stone melded together with magic and alchemy, giving the sense of almost being alive.

But then a moment would take her and she'd look for her son only to find the space where he should stand empty and the majestic halls were left looking sullen and harsh.

It was easy, almost too easy to forget there was a world outside Gundrak, Arctikus found.

Loque'Koa had spoken of Zul'Drak as though its own world, but if so then Gundrak felt like a universe unto itself, a hidden realm for which the outside was something to be glimpsed through windows and scrying pools.

When one did take to a window and embrace the breeze, it could never be mistaken for their home. The changes in land aside, there was no scent of pine to the air, no chance of knowing the enlightening tangy aroma of the Shimmering Sage .

Baths the size of small lakes billowed steam into the air of cleansing halls that had swiftly filled with the cheers of excited children and relieved sighs from ancient elders as warmth and balms soothed aching bodies.

No matter the chamber, one could find their walls bedecked in jewels, furs and weapons, grand pictographs, some dating back to before even Gudnrak's founding. Vivid pictographs showing disparate tribes came together to do battle against hateful spirits and erect a home that would honor the gods and shield them from the element's wrath.

In moments like this, a part of her wondered if the Dwarves had left anything behind. The art, the tents, enchanted to withstand a hundred winters, medallions and spiritual markers. Did the mountain winds and rumbling stone mourn the absence of their last adherents?

The capital still held to the Drakkari's seemingly near uniform taste and preference for darker minerals, but the multitude of dyed furs, woven rugs and plush silks did much to offset what might otherwise have felt like a harsh and claustrophobic city.

As night turned to days and that soon become weeks, plans were drawn up for the new settlement and resources were gathered. Always the matter of Rohk'Aka dancing on the tips of clever tongues as priests, generals and bureaucrats flittered in and out of Malakk's mighty throne chamber and filled his boisterous dining hall.

Petty though it was, and full though they were. Arctikus knew some among her tribe were silently missing the sweet taste of apple, the strength of barley and richly salted pork, all once staples, now consigned to memory.

Arctikus often found herself wandering the halls late at night. Instincts to patrol and memorize the lay of the land driving every step as she mulled over the comings and goings of the Drakkari Court or simply marveling at the city, and relishing memories of her tribes buoyed spirits.

'The time is coming, soon there will be a decision made and I pray it is the right one.'
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NOTES:
The description for Gundrak was inspired by the RPG's though the overall design blurs that & what we saw in game.

This chapter marks the end of the prologue, a shift in perspectives, time and serves as the transition into the main storyline.

Its also the last chapter that will be spent focusing so heavily on world building Zul'Drak as I hope I've done enough to establish what it looks and feels like, as well as what can be expected of it.

I got some feedback I hadn't spent enough time developing the Frostmane's culture and while I am wary of narration turning into pure world building over keeping the story going, I do think they had a point so I've tried to weave some of that in here. Cos yeah, materially they are better off currently, but they've still lost everything familiar, a thousand generations of history and more, that will hurt.
 
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War of the Dead: Part 1 (The Winds of War Howl)
War of the Dead: Part 1 (The Winds of War Howl)
With the Frostmane settled into their guest quarters, Malakk finds himself caught between old advisors and new, obligation and honor as he seeks a means to fulfill his every duty as an honorable king.

Malakk rarely handled his kingly duties in his throne room, lest it was an emergency, a feast, or he was receiving a guest.

Today was no different.

Rather than hearing his advisors in the grand and ornate throne room with flowing water running in carved streams and reclining in a throne as his muscles grew slack and weak…

He was instead sitting upon a thick strip of hide that adorned a solid, slim bench, heavy steel weights sitting around him as he looked over at the wide-open center of his training hall.

Great Mother Arctikus had been sparring with Kutube'sa, the Frost Troll proving a fair sparring partner for Malakk's fiery elite guard, her new spear striking against his burning blade to the sounds of crackling ice and hissing flames.

His other advisors had not remained idle, some meditating or tending to their bodies own needs, but always conversation was free flowing between them as energy spent and blood rushing through veins warmed the soul as it did the body.

The mood had been amicable, even pleasant. But as muscles grew weary and the da grew longer, most turned to talk alone; the previous calm and friendly air of the brightly lit stone chamber fading.

"I must protest this suggestion, Frost King Malakk," Arctikus insisted, tone frantic, "The Dwarves and their allies cannot be trusted!"

"You would have us go to war without even a declaration?" Zol'Maz ground out from his own work bench.

"I would not throw a crew of trolls into the hands of butchers," she countered, squeezing her empty clay cup so hard, hairline fracture were beginning to crack along the smoothly patterned surface.

Zol'Mas scoffed, "Al the more reason to leave the South to them, we should not send our own into the maw of our enemy."

Gal'darah clicked his tongue from the mat upon which he had been meditating, "You speak in fear Zol'Maz, but," he added hastily. "Entering a war without the proper conduct is a bad omen though to be sure."

Quetz'Lith pushed herself from the wall, her sharp tone echoing; as was to be expected for the leader of his air forces, who often needed to shout her commands. "The humans and Dwarves are mighty foes, by announcing ourselves we put them on guard and my soldiers would pay the price but move subtly and we can up-end them."

Malakk sent half a glance to Moorabi, his old friend had been feigning sleep since Bith'Sa had up-ended him in a sparring match, but the white furred troll could not cloak his interest in the discourse for long.

Rolling to sit up, the prophet of Mam'toth picked up his fallen practice daggers, spinning them between his fingers, "I'm not the most inclined to agree with Quetz'Lith on anything but I think she and the Great Mother speak some wisdom. These Southern folks may not share our sensibilities, and if nothing else they cannot be weak, I am thinking."

"So, you agree then?" Arctikus said, a flash of relief washing over her features.

Moorabi clicked his tongue, "Mostly, but…" His gaze shifted to Malakk who sat up straighter, as his friend continued. "We have had some success, as well as some failures in the past with diplomacy and through a Speaker we may avoid a war… Thus, I am caught between dual considerations," He finished with a lazy shrug.

Just as it looked like his advisors were going to start speaking over each other, Malakk cut in, stern but gentle, "I think you are all making fair points."

Arctikus looked to him imploringly "My liege, you said I was to be an advisor, then please heed me, no good will come of speaking with the Alliance."

"You are seen and heard, Great Mother and I have not yet made a decision," he held out one hand to his right. "If we are to be honorable and there is a chance to avoid a war, then naturally some talk is needed, however," he held out his left hand. "This Alliance is hardly a friend to trolls and may use this as a chance to brace against us, bringing needless death to the Drakkari. Much depends on their reaction which we cannot wholly predict."

"I can," Arctikus said, "And I can assure you, whatever crew you send to them will be massacred on sight."

Malakk frowned, "It is a risk and rather unfair to order my subjects into danger like that, yet I am sorry, Great Mother, some part of me still questions."

That was when Malaka'raz signaled to speak, his delicate fingers dancing across his stave in a rhythmic, tap, tap, tap.

Malakk nodded, listening intently, as his Speaker said. "If this one may, I would volunteer myself for this mission. I would take only a small guard, themselves volunteers, and arrive under the banner of truce. At first merely to give greetings from one king to another, and with that, use it as a chance to broach a… diplomatic, resolution to this bloodshed that will ensure no other trolls need die for justice to be done."

"Blood can only be repaid in blood," Malakk countered, knowing he needed to ply all angles, "But I would not see us rush into war against such a foe carelessly either, and much depends on their honor… Or lack there-of," He conceded with a look to Arctkus.

"If they prove as ruthless as the Great Mother says, then so long as the Speaker watches his tongue, we may not lose the element of surprise shoukd it come to war," Quen'Lith intoned.

"So mercenary," Kutube'sa muttered.

Malakk ignored their minor feuding, tilting his head to Malaka'raz he spoke softly, "I would not order you to go, in fact I would rather go myself."

"As your speaker I am your voice," Malaka'raz thumped his chest, "Allow me to go with but a few, we will be careful all the while and leave if pressed. Still," He chuckled, "As I am a Speaker, I doubt they would dare harm me."

"I would not be so sure of that," Arctikus said, looking Malakk dead in the eye, "But I will not try to give orders to brave Malaka'raz, Speaker of the Frost King."

"I thank you," he said, "if I could talk with your scholars and scouts regarding their tongue?"

"I will arrange it," she said tightly.

"Very well then," Malakk said, slapping his knees as he rose to his feet, stretching as he did so. "The matter is settled for now, though I'll let you debate it as you please while preparations are made. Now, let us sojourn to the sauna and turn our attention to other matters. Such as Frostmane Temple-Compound."

He waved his hands towards the North-West as they strode from the chamber, "I was thinking it best be across from Zol'Heb, in the foothills, it would be similar to your traditional home and finally even up the Topmost Tier."

With that the conversation turned to more mundane fair, securing supplies, the construction style, and the creation of new spirits to be housed within the temple and surrounding homes.

It was pleasant, it was comfortable, it was not to last.


Terenas_Menethil was have a trying if productive day. For the first time in what felt like weeks he had not only managed to summon the entire Alliance council together, but so far not one argument had broken out.

Though not for lack of trying and perhaps that luck was merely because the internment camps and taxes had not come up yet?

Whatever the case, he appreciated the less raucous din, as kings and diplomats talked in minutia of trade, travel, and construction plans. All the while gentle golden light streamed in from the grand windows to shine down upon the oaken oval table.

'The High Elven and Wildhammer representative remain cagey though, it has been a trial keeping the borders so much as open, the threat of the dragons holds them to us for now, but with the loss of the expedition…' He dismissed the thought as he heard the clapping of steel on stone and glanced towards a servant passing him a scroll and scurrying away.

His gaze turned to the parchment and his brow furrowed, the conversation grew quiet and he waved his hand, "Enter, Royal Interrogator Wroth." The silence grew deafening as his guards opened the door to reveal a lean, smartly dressed man with smooth dark hair and soft features, but as was to be expected for a man often dubbed 'High torturer' in back rooms and alleys. The mere gait of his step and subtle motions of his eyes elicited discomfort and discontent.

"I thank you for permitting me entrance, my great king," the man said, kneeling before him.

"It struck me as relevant, given you thought to interrupt this meeting, what has rattled you so?" he asked, offering an apologetic smile to those across the room at the interruption.

"Please forgive me my liege, but a new prisoner has left me… Unsure of how to proceed…" the man said, his hair obscuring his features.

"Get to the point man, before we die of old age!" Genn snapped.

Teneranas waved Wroth on and the man began to speak, his tone growing clearer and more clipped, even as his expression grew more furrowed in reflection of Teranas's own.

"A ship of strange design was seen landing on the coast, some ways away from the docks of North-Port. The local garrison sent forth knights and managed to track down those who had disembarked and discovered several trolls."

The elven ambassador hissed, "You expect me to believe the Amani bypassed our navy?"

"No, no, honored representative, I can assure you that is not what happened," Wroth said, idly motioning to the oversized and ornate dagger on his hip.

"Why do some captured savages warrant our attention?" Trollbane muttered, looking bored as he leaned on his meaty fist.

"They claimed to have come here not to raid or attack, but to treat with my liege and the Alliance-"

"Absurd! After what they did to our lands!? I demand their execution at once!" The High elf roared.

"Hear, hear," Genn murmured, "This should have been taken of straight away; what did the trolls spook you with their hoodoo magic?"

"May-haps if our honored allies would let him finish speaking, we would learn more," Teranes said gently.

"I must correct one thing, my liege, these trolls were not of the forests, but from the north," Wroth said.

This time it was Muradin who spoke up, spitting, "More Frost Trolls? We just dealt with the last batch of those barbarians a year back!?"

"That, ah, is actually why I thought this was of note, your grace," Wroth said. Looking to Teranes he added, "They claimed to be representatives of one, Frost King Malakk, ruler of the Drakkari Empire and allies of the Frostmane Tribe. They wish to discuss the returning of the tribes land to them or reparations for harm done to the-"

"This is absurd, those wretches killed my brother's wife, they are mongrels who do nothing but steal and pilfer!" Muradin roared.

"And to try and speak to us like equals, the gall of these animals," the High Elven representative murmured, "Why not just kill them and be done with it? I doubt these "Drakkari" are anything of note."

Wroth gulped, "Well, honored one's, you see, they are… Rather a bit bigger than even the Forest Trolls, I'd compare some to large Ogres, covered in thick fur like wolves, and where most trolls look, well, shabby at best." He held up the richly patterned and gem studded dagger, "These one wore fine armor and robes of gold, thus I thought they may be more, ah, dangerous than the usual beasts."

Teranas hummed in thought, tapping his chair, "I take it you interrogated them?"

"Yes, my liege, they seemed quite offended and implied their king would take to it poorly if they were "Further mistreated" as they put it."

"Threatening folk, how typical of a troll," Falstad murmured, somehow drawing the first genuine smile from the high elven diplomatic Teranas had seen all day.

"Did they commit horrors upon our people, or those sent to apprehend them?" Teranas asked, already feeling discontent.

"Not as far as I am aware."

Several voices rose.

"You cannot mean to treat with them!"

"They are animals!"

"The only reason we didn't wipe them out is because the High Elves won't let us!"

"You only want to spy on us, Greymane!"

"My friends, please, enough, I was simply seeking all the pertinent information," Teranas called.

A gentle cough hit his ears and he glanced to Lord Prestor, "You wish to speak lad?"

"If it pleases my king, I may have some insights into these Drakkari, as traders from my fiefdom went to the North some years ago seeking wealth and came back with much to say of these 'Drakkari' Ice Trolls." The normally gentle man looked haunted and near vicious for but a flash.

"The Drakkari are a feuding tribal society with many self-proclaimed kings. They are greedy and savage beyond compared, even other trolls hate them. They love bloodshed but fear those with great power; if they have come to make demands of you it is a sign of your strength and not their honor. As I see it, the only way to make them understand whose land this is, would be a… Greater, show of force than what they have presented you with."

"You mean for me to execute their diplomat then?" Teranes said evenly.

Prestor bowed, as several murmurs to the effect of, "Finally some sense" rang out across the room.

"The Drakkari sent you one who speaks with their kings voice, by striking him down you show you do not fear their king, but he will fear you, or so it was rumored," Prestor said.

Those who had already been calling for the matter to be done with were further emboldened by the man's stance, and Terenes could see the brewing of excuses for more reasons to fight and chastise were arising.

He glanced at Daelin, Wyrnn and Antonidas who all shrugged and bowed their heads in acquiescence to his leadership and Teranas sighed.

"It is not in my nature to spill blood without having been struck, but it appears the trolls came her to lay claim to land that is not their own, cite grievances not theirs to bear and seek payment from those they had made to suffer. Now that this has been established and the Alliance council is certainly, vocally in agreement, I will support the execution order for the kings stand in."

"What of the other trolls?" the high elf asked with a none too subtle scowl.

"Corpses cannot carry messages, my friend," Teranes said gently.

"Besides, by slaying their 'king' and leaving his guards alive the message will be stronger, you fear nothing, while he did not even appear before you, a wise decision my liege," Prestor said.

"Then let the matter be done with?" Terenas said, waiting for anyone else to debate him.

Seeing all accenting with a nod he turned to Wroth, "Finish the execution efficiently and be done with it. Take extra guards with you if need be, but I want them out of our lands by the next sunrise."

"As you will it my king," he said eagerly, before disappearing out the door.

Watching him go, Terenas did not let the discordant sensations flickering through his mind show on his features,. Instead smiling and returning his attention to the council. "Now then, my friends, I believe we were discussing the tram system?"


Malaka'raz could feel it coming.

'This will be remembered. It will be understood.'

He uttered words of power, shadow, and blood swirling, his nails inscribing sigils into his skin.

"Take heart," he said, looking to his guards, "You performed your duties with honor, and have done your liege proud."

"But-"

I-"

"I am the voice of his majesty. What I say is truth above all others," Malaka'raz cut off.

Then the stomping grew closer, and guards began pouring into the room, led by the too pleased looking Wroth, a vicious little man without honor or worth.

The human gestured to Malaka'raz's guards, "You two will be carrying a message home to your barbarian king. This land, all of it, is Alliance land, and we will not broke your savages demands or incursions upon it."

Angry snarls and bloody curses spilled from his guard's lips.

"I am to die then," Malaka'raz cut in.

"I am afraid so," Wroth said cheerfully, "we believe it will convey that we do not fear your master."

Malaka'raz looked up from where he inscribed the last scrap of holy text into his flesh and smirked, "You should though."

His gaze burned into the petty little man and Malaka'raz took heart in seeing him lurch back and yelp, "Kill him, get it done, now!"

His guards thrashed against their chains and cages, knights and mages keeping them from breaking through as the knights closed in around him.

"My king will know this, and he will never forgive it."

That was a promise.

One made in blood.


The throne room, usually warm and even lively was cold and near empty.

Malakk sat alone save for his bodyguards, chin heavily resting on his hand as he watched Malaka'raz's guards slink before him, heads low, locked in anguished frowns as they placed an ornate stone container before him.

"Let me see him…" He uttered, mist escaping his maw.

They bowed their heads and obediently removed the lid.

Malakk forced himself to his feet and marched towards the container, hands coming to rest along the sharp edges as he looked within to see his speakers head resting upon his stomach, eyes empty, his skin taught and bones stiff.

Malakk did not wallow, or gasp or make a sound. He just reached down and gently laid a hand upon his friends' body and whispered, "Raka-Zen."

In a burst, emotions washed over him, pain, blood, fear, confusion, anguish, utter rage, and a quiet sort of confidence born in a form of resignation to his fate and a promise he knew would be fulfilled.

He saw faces flash, he heard the words, he saw the blades swing, every sensation searing its way into his mind and memories until finally with a final glint of steel.

It was over.

Malakk draw his hand away, chest sinking deep as he took in a deep breath and sighed.

The guards threw themselves to the floor, "We failed, Frost King Malakk, we-"

"Enough."

They looked up to him and he spoke, "You did your duty, obeyed my voice and heeded Malaka'raz's words at every turn, you are not at fault for the actions of others."

He turned to his guards, "Bith'sa, get Gal'darah to tend to Malaka'raz's funerary arrangements. Kutube'sa, send words to those who survive him and my sympathies, they will be offered succor in this time of trial. In fact, all sent on this mission shall be awarded reparations for indignities suffered in our name," he added, looking to the two guards.

"We are unworthy," one said.

"We… Frost King may we…"

"You will have the chance to avenge him," Malakk growled, "We all will. For now, leave us, return to your kin and speak of this quietly or not at all. For now."

"At your command, Frost King Malakk," they answered as one.

Chest beginning to heave, Malakk kept his gaze locked upon Malaka'raz's fallen form.

He wanted to roar, to curse, to shatter something with his fist and feel his bones ache!

He wanted his cries to echo from the peak of Gundrak and shake the stone city to its foundations.

But he would not surrender to such cathartic things, not now, not yet.

He cast his gaze to the south and muttered, "I will not forget what they did to you, Malaka'raz, and I will fulfill your bloody promise."

"I swear it."

He waited there until Gal'Darak came, silent and reverent of Malaka'raz as he took the body away, that he might be treated and be made presentable to his kin, rather than forcing them to stare upon his mutilated remains.

"We will speak later," Malakk uttered, as his Grand Prophet left the throne room.

"What of, Frost King Malakk?"

"War."
____________________________________

Notes:
Raka-Zen: This gets brought up in more detail in different stages, but long story short the Drakkari have a sort of self-made spell language based on fusing Old God script with holy prayers to utilize Saronite safely. This is primarily used by their Word Priests, others deemed skilled or strong willed enough to study this art but not master it usually only know like one or two phrases, enough to trigger an enchantment, nothing more.

Ra & Ka are both used in old god words in variations on Gaze, while Zen means life. Thus, Malakk is basically uttering a code word "Gaze-Life" to see his friends last moments and thoughts

I do hope I justified Terenas's decision here, it was basically a compound of political pressure, his desire to keep the Alliance united while its fracturing and the fact pretty much everyone there is socialized to view trolls as 'primitive barbarians' at best and monsters at worst.

If he'd been alone, or the make up of the meeting had been different then things might have gone differently, at least insofar as the initial reception was concerned, but I doubt even the more progressive Alliance leaders would view the Frostmane's claims to their lands as legitimate given past and present circumstances.

To be honest part of me desperately wanted to divide this chapter up into the first scene and then the ensuing scenes, and maybe I should have made the decision here part of the interlude? Ah well, it is what it is.
 
War of the Dead: Part 2 (Making Ready)
War of the Dead: Part 2 (Making Ready)

The completion of the Frostmane Compound was a welcome bit of good news for all concerned. It was a sign of safety, security, and success.

Arching off the Royal Road, the compound was built below mighty mountains of the Storm Peaks. A fitting place for trolls whom worship Shango, the Storm Loa.

Sharply cut Black stone had been used for much of the buildings, but one could see the Frostmane's own more circular affections as well as large igloo scattered around the compound, beautiful dyes etching patterns into the snow.

The rocks had been taken from the mountains themselves, meaning the more traditionally minded outdoorsy Ice Trolls had taken the time to flatten them into humble tiers. Leaving newly arrived Frostmane to build homes on them or to burrow into the mountain itself, while others tiers would act as quarries.

Spreading out from the center of the settlement were large communal halls, apartments and food banks as was to be expected.

At the compounds heart was a massive squared off, open air temple, enchanted braziers and pulsing crystals created an impenetrable barrier against the cold and in the middle of the grey roof, was a sharply cut hole, through which stood a bronze idol. With each strike of lightning, Shango's power suffused it and they would receive offerings, give out blessings or offer advice.

Naturally to commemorate the occasion, Malakk declared a day of celebration; wine flowed, rare meats and spices were broken out across Zul'Drak. And nowhere was busier than the newly anointed Frostmane Compound.

Gathered near the alter was every High Prophet from across the Empire, some chatting amicably, others boasting or glaring, old rivalries not quite forgotten. But all were respectfully giving the most focus to the Frostmane Seers of Shango and the Loa's newly anointed Great Prophet, Grik'nir, to whom the other prophets were eager to doll out advice and offers to.

Meanwhile across the magically warmed streets and ziggurats music placed and Drakkari tricksters performed spectacular displays of enchanting magic and recounted epic tales for the young and their families.

Hunters and warriors were carousing everywhere one looked, sparring rings quickly drawn up in snow that they might show off, while farmers, laborers and traders sang songs or cheered on the fights and stories.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, many Shamans, Word Priests and Water-Binders were congregating around the mysterious Bonechiller_Barafu. She was easily the strongest among the Frostmane's few arcanists and what was more, the only mage of note in the empire. Thus, it was no wonder those who had mastered spirit magics and words of power were intrigued by a natural philosophy so usually associated with the Nerubians and Blue Flights, as well as for what it said about the future of the empire.

Naturally, one could find a Rageclaw amongst every group, usually several.

And of course, Malakk was in attendance, his guards and favored advisors never hovering far from his sight, even as they talked and caroused with their kin, leaving way for the Great Mother Arctikus herself to direct the affair, as was fitting.

'She takes to this well, it makes sense, after managing dozens of children I am thinking,' Malakk mused, half watching the silver haired woman charm her fellow chiefs, overseers, and the various representatives from Great Families.

He sensed Bith'sa shuffling up behind him, the winds cloaking her words as they slipped into his ears.

"Will you not be announcing what is to come?"

"No, this is their night, let them enjoy this well-earned peace for a moment, I can always announce what is to come tomorrow," He said, before gulping down the remnants of his wine from an ornate glass.

"As you order it, my Frost King Malakk."

Malakk looked to his people, his subjects, his kin and repressed a growl at the painful absence gnawing at his gut.

'Malaka'raz, you will be avenged. I swear it!'
___________________________________________________

Malakk sat upon his throne, the wide and ornate hall of black stone & jewels had been cleared of the usual feasting tables and replaced with an intricate magical map and cushions for his prophets, chieftains, and advisors.

Along the wall's crystals and eternal flames of many hews shone, illuminating the grandly carved walls of stone that bore the faces of bejeweled trolls, spirits, and Loa.

Surrounding the monuments were reliefs of monumental moments in their history, such as the raising of Gundrak itself and splashed across the walls were runes in the holy language of Zul'Drak.

And of course, all around it flowed crystalline waters, traveling across the aqueducts and stone carved streams that swirled throughout the temple city.

The richly detailed doors that bore sigils of powers and images trollish royalty flew open to reveal his advisors. First among them Gal'Darah, Zol'Maz, Quetz'Lith, Chief Rageclaw, and of course, the Great Mother herself.

'She already knows,' he thought, seeing her face, one of resigned empathy and frustrated fury. He had no doubt it was dawning on the others, but this was not new to her, and somehow, he imagined that made it hurt more in a way.

More and more Drakkari filled the chamber, hailing from as far as the distant city, Jintha'kalar; the array of accents echoing and sigils displayed proudly would have been dizzying for the uninitiated, but Malakk merely watched and waited as his council took to their places, awaiting his word.

Finally, when the lasts set of eyes turned to the throne, he began.

His voice rang out, cold and firm, "Advisors, prophets, priests and leaders of our people, I welcome you to my hall this day to share news of a crime most vile. My Speaker, noble Malaka'raz was captured, tortured and executed by the Alliance leaders."

The shockwave went through the room instantly, within seconds gasps and bloody curses were splitting from his fellow's lips as others stared slack jawed in disgust, confusion, and horror. Such an inversion of hospitality, such a dishonorable measure, how could it be, who could be so foolish!?

"I warned of this, we should not have revealed ourselves to the South!" Zol'Maz snapped.

"That is where your mind goes? How craven!" Quetz'Lith snarled.

"These humans must pay!" Moorabi bellowed, hands on his daggers.

"War is one thing, but a Speaker?! Such conduct must be punished," hissed Slad'ran.

"You think we should rush into war? Foolishness, they cannot touch us here, why expose ourselves?" Han'jin snapped.

The chorus grew louder, overseers and family heads joining the fray until the din grew to a fever pitch and-

"Your king commands silence." The storms rumbled and roared alongside him, and thus he did not need to yell, his voice simply 'was' thunderous, drowning at the brewing rage and turning all eyes to him as deathly silence befell the chamber.

Arctikus spoke up next, hand over her heart, "I am sorry for your loss my liege."

Malakk leaned back against his throne and answered, "You warned me of this, I will take better heed of your wisdom in the coming days, Great Mother."

She bowed and said, "Mayhaps, Frost King, but for what it may be worth, you and noble Malaka'raz conducted yourselves with honor. I've no doubt he was brave in the face of the cowards who stole his life away."

"He was," Malakk said, pushing himself from his seat, hands brushing his twin axes as he rose. "He was brave until the last moment, assured of his honor and secure in the knowledge I would not let such an injustice go ignored."

He clutched the handles of Frost and Gale, the wind began writhe and Malakk howled, "He was sent to the Alliance openly, he did them no harm, but was captured, tortured and mercilessly executed!"

His chest heaved, his eyes wide and fierce, "We were prepared to meet them honorably, but the Alliance answered with treachery and blood. They are unworthy of honor or fairness!"

Raising his weapons high her struck the enchanted steel, lightning crackling high above his head, "If war is all the Alliance understands, then I shall give it to them! I will paint their streets red with the blood of their soldiers, bury their kings beneath a mountain of his minions' corpses and tear out Teranas's heart!"

He slashed the air, blade of wind and ice howling in a raging chorus, "Then I will march South, to crack Ironforge open and we will split their king in two!"

Draw each blade across his shoulders he cut deep into the skin, his body and soul screamed, the council gasped as he roared, "This I swear in my own blood! We will have justice!"

The swell was immediate, starting with the guards lining in every hall and bleeding into the council. Vicious hoots and chants of justice and vengeance, of blood and bones echoed in the hall rising high and making the walls of Gundrak reverberate with their shared fury.

He slashed it through the air and the crowd silenced. "I hunger for justice as much as thee, but though they are honor-less curs, this Alliance is neither weak or foolish; they won't fall in a day or a night, we will have to be prepared."

Taking his seat upon his throne and watching as his advisors rushed to take their spots as he continued. "Our shipwrights must expand their knowledge and number, for I want an armada that makes Rastakhan's Might and the Golden_Fleet look like children's toys. I want armor, priests, and weapons to make a mockery of their holy light. I want enough Sky Riders to block out the sun but above all!"

He gestured to Arctikus, "I wish to understand how our enemy fights and thinks, that we might shattered them in a few fell blows. Great Mother Arctikus, you have spent a lifetime fighting the land thieving Dwarves, saw their conquest by the Horde and the Horde's harried retreat from the Alliance and defeat in the Burning Lands. In this war, you and your people's advice will be paramount."

Hand over her heart, Arctikus answered, "In this and all things, the Frostmane will serve you to the utmost Frost King Malakk. We will not fail you."

Accepting her words with a nod, Malakk motioned to the map, intent to carry the momentum forward before any thought to rally and cast doubt he said, "Then let us begin."

______________________________________________

Quetz'Lit clung to the back of her mount as the wind rushed through her mohawk and wafted over her frame, bone chillingly cold but tinged with unfamiliar scents like salt. Kaz'la shrieked, she could 'feel' its muscles straining and she gave her bat a gentle pat on the head as they continued their flight.

"Almost over, then you can rest," she cooed, glancing back at her fellow Sky Riders to make sure they were keeping up and shouting, "The keep is another twenty minutes away, hold formation!"

"At your command, Sky Sovereign!" They shouted back.

Nodding, she returned her attention to the flight itself, mind turning over the next order of tasks they had to complete upon completing their mission at Utgarde Keep.

It was an odd experience to be so busy again. During Zul'Drak's warring era there had scarcely been a dull moment for her band. The Shrieking Sky Riders could have hardly been called a tribe, or a polity and while she worshipped her name-sake Loa her band had no ties to the temple.

They had just been mercenaries for going on a century, using times of peace to raid Furbolg and their fellow trolls. But as the only fighting force left with any noteworthy number of aerial warriors, they had been popular mercenaries and damned good at their job too.

'Then the Frost King came and changed everything…' She mused. Quetz'Lit and her kin hadn't been invited to the amphitheater where Malakk had announced, not his candidacy but his 'reality' as king.

The story of how he rode into the midst of a tournament atop a conquered storm had spread far and wide fast.

At first it might have been nothing but a showy performance, but then Gal'Darah had offered him Gundrak. And rather than take up residence there to begin the usual games of war and sabotage, Malakk and his noble fifteen had instead wandered the lands fighting monsters, resolving disputes, and debating or dueling challengers to his claims.

When Zol'Maz surrendered his crown that meant two of the most secure territories were under his wings along with dozens of smaller polities, and after the Rageclaw signed on….

Well, it hadn't taken long for the future to become clear to Quetz'Lith.

Zul'Drak had two pathways, in one, she sided with the steadily forming coalition against Malakk, it would have been profitable for her, she might have even become a queen of a whole tier! But no matter who won, Zul'Drak would be torn apart and its population devastated. In the other, she joined Malakk, secured herself a spot as the leader of his sky legions and the forming coalition would fragment and be absorbed in short order.

'I do not regret my choice,' she thought, smiling ruefully.

But despite that truth, there was no denying the reputation and honor of her wing-mates and herself had… Diminished, as peace rose. They were raiders, soldiers, killers to the last and with no fighting left to do they mostly patrolled and occasionally went relic hunting or performed search and rescue.

Respectable pass times but ultimately minor faire.

Now though they had more work than ever and the promise of even more that they could genuinely enjoy. War. A just war, a great war, one that would echo across the world and burn their names into the tomes of history!

She'd be liar to claim they weren't looking forward to it.

The Breeders would need to bring about enough bats to carry not just their own growing number but that of several more legions than ever expected. What was more she had all her forces performing training for new recruits, out scouting for Saronite veins or running supplies and patrols from Zul'Drak to the Fjord.

It was proving taxing to say the least.

'Maybe we should recruit the harpies,' she thought with a chuckle.

Kaz'la rumbled as Utgarde and she signaled her followers to begin landing.

Cries of affirmative echoed on the air and their mounts flared their wings as they dipped into the 'Great Bite' that housed the keep and their new settlements.

Waiting to receive them was a host of Drakkari builders, Rageclaw Wolvar and a smattering of the local Tuskarr and Howling Wolvar. At the head of the crowd was Chief_Rageclaw themself.
___________________________________________________________________________

With the supplies already being distributed to the bustling camp, their mounts tucked away in an abandoned alcove for a nap and her wing mates off to feast and drink Quetz'Lit opted to get her other task done sooner rather than later.

Falling in with Chief Rageclaw as they trundled towards the towering keep, ocean spray filling the air she asked, "How are things progressing?

"Fast enough," Rageclaw answered, "Builders keep whining about tents instead of stone homes," the Wolvar chuckled.

"Ground Pounders are so used to more solid home-steads," She mused, looking at the large tent city that had sprung up around the keep, intermingled with Wolvar mounds and the steadily growing infrastructure for a quarry, lumber mill and docks. "But what do you mean by fast enough?"

Rageclaw shrugged, "I mean as fast as can be, we need more wood and builders before things can go fast. The Tuskarr have good ideas, your builders too. All want to meet these Amani you talk of."

"They are considered some of the premier shipbuilders of our people, so hopefully the Frost King's new Speaker is able to organize a deal soon."

"We shall see, slow going till then," Rageclaw growled.

They lingered in silence for a time as they marched along the ancient path, laid down by slaves of the Vyrkul in ages past and maintained to the modern day by lingering Saronite enchantments.

'It's all well and good to declare war; but this is unlike a traditional war, with honor and ritual. The kind of war Malakk called for, that is demanded for, is an honor-less war.' She shook her head at the thought. Such things were rare among trolls, it was total war, all-out war, the kind of war where the enemy's army was gutted and their leadership killed because they had proven themselves too dishonorable and untrustworthy to be met with anything but absolute force.

But for such things even the Five Hundred Legions of Zul'Drak needed to prepare. War-leaders were already working to forge new weapons and soldiers to counter the 'Paladins' that visions and the Frostmane spoke of.

The Alliance mages posed a threat too, Barafu was leading an expedition to Crystalsong for wizard lore.

Quetz'Lit was inordinately miffed at not being able to serve as her escort.

Then there was finding a counter to the canons or make their own, she knew the Juj'tulak were intrigued by the prospect of such things. But even with all that done there was still building the fleet, finding more Saronite and of course, getting more fliers.

'Even my bat breeders can only do so much, and these Gryphons sound sturdy, we need a hidden blade and I best hope this is it,' she thought as they passed the remnants of a Vrykul Village, already plundered for anything of worth.

"Trees here are plenty," Rageclaw said with a lazy wave of their paw, "Not as strong as back home, but no Furbolg to complain if we build and log here. A worthy trade."

"Still think this place can be used for the fleet?" She asked.

Rageclaw's bulky form shrugged, "Tukarr think so, your other ships get in here fine, so can work for some at least. Found a good spot of Eastern Coast. Need to talk to the Tuskarr there though."

"We will be relying on your skills and thanks you for your work thus far," She said diplomatically, as the shadow of the keep eclipsed their frames, and they reached the tip of the island it sat upon.

Rageclaw huffed, "Hope so, much clout and favors called in to make all this happen."

"Do not forget, you and yours were holding secrets from us too," She countered, drawing an offended snap from the chieftain.

"We hide nothing so selfishly," they argued, "Utgarde is dangerous, even for us, sneaking out relics is risky work, even we never travelled too far in and can only carry so much anyway."

"Yes, yes, and rare items yield better rewards too, but I am sure that is just luck," She countered.

Rageclaw threw up their head in a low, feigned dramatic howl, "See how much I help and my reward? Rudeness!"

"Forgive me," she offered dully as they approached the keep and were greeted by the sight of several eggs and a twin pair of bronze looking lizards with rocky backs gnawing on a bear carcass under the watchful eyes of a Wolvar beast master and Drakkari bat handler.

The little beasts saw them approach and let out rictus, hissing snarls, little bundles of light spilling out of their maws, only to stop at the insistent growling of the Wolvar as the bat handler patted down on their heads.

"Proto Dragons, I thought they were extinct," She Quetz'Lit uttered.

"We found some hidden eggs mistress, preserved in ice and magic," The breeder said.

"Such fierce little things! Hungry too, so much food they need, would eat three Wolvar families out of dinners and dens!"

"Can we harness them?" she asked, drawing an awkward shrug from the pair of experts.

"They are strong mistress, and will grow stronger, but they may take years to grow, maybe too long to be of help. Magic can help but then they'd be dumb and ill," he added quickly.

Humming unhappily, her ears twitched as someone shouted, "Is that the Sky Sovereign!? Get her here now, the chief to, we- We found-em, we found just what we need, hahahaha!"

"Has another curse been tripped making one of yours go crazy?" Rageclaw muttered.

"You'd know better than me," she answered, racing off with the Wolvar running on all fours at her side. In short order they were stepping into the massive tower that was something of a match for Gundrak, certainly an impressive city.

A chill washed over Quetz'Lit as they stepped into the grand halls and looked upon the towering, bulky forms of the legendary Vyrkul. Slavers and raiders from ancient times, best consigned to horror stories of what an evil life will bring. They lined the walls like statues, each with their own little alcove, and yet they did not move, or breath, or anything, for they were trapped in ice that thrummed with Saronite magic.

"Tread light, we disarmed many curses, but some may linger. Dangerous," Rageclaw said, motioning to a scar not totally hidden by their thick fur.

Quetz'Lit nodded and fell in behind the more experienced treasure hunter, keeping herself low as she followed the sound of chattering and cheering trolls towards a hidden tunnel that led to a sort of cellar.

"Mistress Quetz'Lit, we found-em, we found the treasure trove!" They cheered at her arrival.

Just as her eyes adjusted to the dim lighting, they flew wide.

Dragons.

Rows and rows of dragons!

So many were full grown, some younger, some still eggs, the adults hulking forms easily twice that of a troll and lined with armored plating. Each was sealed in ice and the cellar stretched beyond where her eyes could see!

"So- So many!"

"Hidden behind a wall. I see why we did not find it. But the eggs, what of them?" Rageclaw murmured.

A grinning Frost Warden answered, "Those came from the throne-room, definitely of import I am thinking, but this, this is what we been looking or isn't it?"

Quetz'Lit covered her eyes and began to chuckle, lowly at first and then so loudly it echoed across the halls, "This is perfect!"

"Contact Frost King Malakk! Tell him we have our Sky Legionaries!"

_____________________________________

NOTES:

My reasoning behind the idea of trolls having honorable VS honor-less wars is inspired by some reading I have done on certain pre colonial societies wars in 'South America'. I think it also fits with the world building of trolls as it pertains to lore, because:

Zul'jin managed to unite dozens of rival tribes and states, many of which hated each other and he did this through debate, overcoming trials, challenges and duels. This indicates a certain amount of ingrained diplomacy regardless of rivalries.
Plus, among the Jungle Tribes, their prelude to war against Stormwind was the death of a singular tribes leader, but despite rivalries they all teamed up against Stormwind with ease.

Thus the idea was born that when fighting amongst themselves or foes they deem honorable, trollish warfare tends to be more structured, akin to war games though be it bloodier, but not nearly as much 'winner take all' as real battles. This is further aided by their regeneration.

This isn't well known outside trollish custom though given most in the East view all their neighbors with such hostility that, that kind of thinking has faded for anyone but others trolls. But it hadn't for the Drakkari who have only really ever been threatened by themselves and the Nerubians in living memory.

Outside of that:

Canon Howling Fjord basically being uninhabited save for some Tuskar on the coast and one pack of Wolvar is really, really weird, but it was convenient.

So I went with the idea that before freezing themselves, the Vyrkul layered curse after curse on everything and with Saronite boosting them the land and memories of their wicked armies and thus fear of waking them up, most Northrend natives left the majority of it alone, locked in time.

This is also why the Furbolg and humans don't strictly mind the Drakkari trying to settle there, figuring the curses might chase them out and not having any hold on the territory that is realistically very far away. This attitude may not last however.
 
War of the Dead: Part 3 (A New Threat on the Horizon)
War of the Dead: Part 3 (A New Threat on the Horizon)

A gentle autumn sun cut through the grand trees looming over Zul'aman, shining their golden radiance on what could be charitably called the open-air palace of the Warlord.

Zul'jin sat on a throne of stone, his legs crossed and his posture meditative; he could hear the approach of his Hex Lord before spying it. All thanks to the chattering echoing on the streets that echoed over the sound of running water that surrounded the massive dais.

His good eye remained trained on the Drakkari Speaker, a youthful and pale furred creature named Zala'Raz, before forcefully stamping down his suspicions. 'They are guests, I owe them courtesy.'

His heart thumped in his chest when he saw the look on Hex Lord Malacrass's face as they strode up the stairs to stand before him and his advisors, runic stave in hand and a massive grin on their face. They were accompanied by two Drakkari priests and their shared escorts, all were brimming with excitement and pride.

"I take it the test was a success then?" He intoned from his aged throne.

"A grand success, my Emperor! With the right words and through a strong will we bypassed the elves Runestones completely!" He cheered, drawing a wave of shock and adulation from the gathered priests and commanders, some even rising from their weaved cushions in shock.

"As promised," The Speaker of the Drakkari intoned, "Our Saronite weapons can be of much use to your empire, just as you shipwrights and cannons can be of use to ours."

"If we…" He started to seethe beneath his scarf, "If we had, had these during the war," He wanted to shout; but no, he snapped his fanged maw shut.

'It isn't the Drakkari's fault I never sought them out, that was my error, one of many.'

Turning to the Drakkari, he said, "You have done it young Speaker, consider this a good omen for your future, for you have succeeded in securing this trade. Zul'Aman will send your Frost King shipwrights, cannons, powder and my finest crafters to oversee them all."

The Drakkari's golden-aqua robe flowed as they bowed low, long hair in tassels waving with every motion, "We are honored by your approval Emperor, and will in return send to you Saronite ore and the necessary crafters and Word Priests to make use of it."

"All that is left is to discuss the specific amounts," Zul'jin added, watching for any odd reaction given the Drakkari's previous evasiveness but that was gone now as they nodded and grinned openly.

"Too right you are emperor, and this one is happy to announce that with the claiming of Utgarde Keep we have secured many Saronite relics and tools that will make for fine trade, and thus can offer most generous terms in short order."

"Let us begin detailing the specifics then, Hex Lord, warriors, Word Priests," He added with some uncertainty, "We thank you for your work."

Each bowed and grinned, eager for what was to come, as was Zul'jin.

'We may have lost the last battle, but the war is not over!'


Barafu was a mage, she grew up around magic, was suffused with it when she cast and knew it as well as her own body.

Barafu was also a Frostmane, the chill of a harsh winter, the cold itself was as familiar to her as air, she was used to the cold.

But despite Crystalsong Forest being suffused with magic and freezing compared to the magically controlled temperatures of Zul'Drak, the place left her unsettled.

She glanced at Drek'Maz and mused, 'Not just me either,' at the sight of the young warrior hunched over some ruined steps looking miserable as their camp stirred around them.

In truth she could not say what it was about the forest that disturbed her so, but the fur on her frame stood on end, the tinkling humming never abated, her bones feel fragile like glass and there always seemed to be something drifting just out of mind and sight.

'The locals make it no easier, either,' she mused, thinking of the sparse raids by crystal skinned goat-creatures that shattered when they died but felt no pain, only glee.

She shook the memory off and returned to her task, alienatingly bright and odd or not, the land was magical and had relics aplenty. The crystals alone were of interest, but the ruined elven homes had trinkets, staves, and tomes as well.

'Provided one can get passed the accursed ghosts!'

They were haunting figments, fittingly; pink tinged skin and bedecked in robes that looked to cling to starved frames. The semi-translucent elves wandered the lands endlessly, some spoke with one another, others cast spells, or simply drifted, but all could turn violent when their malaise was disrupted.

So far, their Priests and Shamans were doing a good job keeping the Elves from seeking out their stolen things that were being sealed away in blessed vessels, but there had been more than a few close calls.

"Don't like this place," Drek'Maz grumbled, appointed as the chief of Barafu's security by his Warlord father. The boy cut an intimidating figure, but Barafu could tell he'd scarcely seen combat and was put out by the level of battle already withstood.

"Few do, I imagine that's why so few live here still," Barafu said idly, as she skimmed through a waterlogged but still legible tome, tracing her mind's eye along the arcane script.

"Not that," he snapped, "Its different, getting worse, I don't like to sleep, I see things, cold and dreadful. Calling to me."

Ziz'zen the Fire Weaver and Baraf's advisor on this mission, idly waved her burning staff, "Ghosts and magic can play tricks on the mind."

"Not tricks, its-"

"I see humans!" The lookout snapped.

Barafu instantly drew her stave close, ice dancing on her fingertips.

"Easy, Bonechiller, the humans here ain't no threat to us," Ziz'zen said, "Strange for them to be out here though, too superstitious for it."

Not one to trust like that, Barafu snapped, "Are they armed, and how far!?"

The lookout leaned into their spyglass from atop their tents watch post and winced, "Don't look armed, I think, kinda clumsy, they're just… Ambling…"

"Ambling?" Drek'Maz ground out, hand on his spiked war hammer.

"Yeah, it is like… They look off to me, like a sickness or spirit has taken them, I think, not moving right, and… They're gone..." He drew back, "oh don't like that, not at all," the muttered.

"How did you lose them?" Barafu called.

"Snow blast, storms coming in, one second there, next second gone, something is off!" the Lookout groused, eyeing the land intently, as guards grew every more wary and ready.

Ziz'Zen tapped her stave, "Maybe Nerubians scheming something? They have strong mind powers."

"Whatever it is, we don't wanna be here for it, the humans are gone, I say we go to before the cold hand catches us!" Drek'maz said, before drawing back, brow furrowing, "Cold hand?" as though it was not he who had said it.

Barafu frowned as the camps disquiet began to grow, Ziz'Zen looked to her and shrugged.

Snapping the book shut, Barafu said, "We have enough for now, we can return to Zul'Drak successful and study, then come back fresh later."

The sigh of relief was audible, especially from the warriors, many of whom were rubbing their heads.

"Frost Warden," she whispered to her personal escort who nodded, as Ziz'Zen joined them, "Make the wards stronger, talk to the prophets and Word Priests, this has me feeling off now too and I wanna be careful, not reckless."

"As you say, Bonechiller," The Frost Warden nodded.

"I'll keep the fires high and bright, set up some warding flames too, good for drowning out the strangeness," Ziz'Zen offered.

"Good, very good, come, let us go, not hasty, but quickly."

Something cold was touching her senses.

Something predatory on the edges of her mind.

She didn't like it.


The air in the throne room was tense, the echoing sounds of work through the capital and soothing sounds of running water doing nothing to dispel the mood of its occupants.

"The human raiders were driven off, but when we questioned a captive, they said their people had been disappearing and dying cos of troll magic," Quetz'Lit hissed.

Malakk frowned, toying with the tip of one of his tusks as he looked upon the leader of his Sky Legions and Chief Rageclaw.

"Humans blaming us for everything! Refuse to trade with kin! Furbolg will use it as a pretense to make trouble," The Wolvar growled.

Kutube'sa grumbled behind the throne, "Everyone blame us for everything, well the Nerubians too I guess, but still."

"Our ancestors did have a habit of invading them," Bith'sa noted.

"Yeah, as though they haven't-"

Malakk forestalled the debate with a well-placed click of his fangs and leaned forward, "Do we know what is causing the disappearances? This seems more Nerubians fare than ours, but I am loathed to assume."

Quetz'Lit shrugged, "Not seen much from the skies, my liege, but I can check with my riders."

Rageclaw tapped their little paws together, "Taunka we trade with have been having the same problem, or more… They almost did."

"Meaning?" Malakk asked, brow arched.

"Dreams," The Wovlar said, "Glorious visions that turn horrible. Shining beacons and many people gathered in unity. Only for them to be rotting and worshipping hollow masks."

"A disturbing image, but hardly familiar, something to do with the sleeper below perhaps?" Malakk wondered aloud. As usual that sent an awkward wave across the chamber, the sleeping old one was a familiar evil but also something most preferred to just ignore when not extracting its blood from the ground.

Seeing no suggestions, he pushed forward, "Still, this gives us some clues, I will need to investigate whether we have had any similar problems, Gal'darah and the priests say something has been brewing a way away, but their vision is hazy…" A disturbing prospect to be sure, and ill omens would surely impact morale.

Shaking his head, he rose to his feet and proclaimed, "For now, we will put more troops on the ground, we can live without trade from the obstinate one's and they'll not risk our wrath a second time. Ragelcaw, have you and yours begin scouting for more information and keep our remaining trade allies close, be generous if you must, I will make it up to you. Quetz'Lit, take extra precautions with supply drops."

The pair saluted, "As you command, Frost King Malakk."

Dismissing them his thoughts turned to the next petitioners, but in the back of his mind, the mystery ate at him.

'What is going on?'


Heb'Jin bristled against the cold of Icecrown, his bat whining unhappily at the never-ending blizzard. "I know, I know, Braka'Ta" he murmured, patting their head. Even the inside of a rocky valley that rose up on all sides around their camp wasn't enough to shield them from the cold!

'Even the peaks of Zul'Drak bear no comparison!' He thought, dearly regretting underestimating the cold of the glacier.

This was a miserable mission to be sure, but things were finally looking up on the Saronite hunt. Early on the raiding of the keep and nearby veins had been enough of a boost to their stores. However, the prospect of a flagship equipped with Saronite was too powerful to turn down. They needed more.

The natural place to look had been Storm Peaks, and as Second in command of the Sky Riders, it was natural to send him.

'That was a fucking disaster,' he mused, kicking some of the snow away from the cave mouth and revealing the crystal blue ice beneath. It had not even made for an interesting failure that he might tell by the firelight, just messy and unpleasant.

Another baleful wind whipped across his back and Heb'jin hissed, "I hate this place." Waving for his mount, "Let's go for a warmup ride, ey?" Braka'Ta shrieked happily and launched themselves from the cave.

Saddling up, Heb'Jin waved his escorts off and took to the sky as his kin continued to watch over the Word Priests and miners as they inspected the uncovered cavern.

As they surged into the air, snow swirling around them, Heb'Jin could not help but be reminded again of Storm Peaks. Always a bloody land with Earthen and Giant feuding, Harpies and Frost Dwarves massacring each other, Only the local Taunka and Wolvar had ever been all that reasonable and they were rarely seen save for the occasional nomad of adventurer passing through Zul'Drak.

It had often been brutal, but the violence flared up sporadically and had been manageable if one was passing through.

'Now it's a bloody mess,' he thought, recalling the cracking explosions of lightning as Iron Dwarf came screaming at them, eyes shining like twisted stars. The whole affair could have sparked a war if not for their wings making it easy to outrun the Ground Pounders, but the Iron Dwarves territorial-ness was but half of the problem when combined with their effect on the much older local conflicts.

What had once been rare flare ups of Giants and Earthen, Harpy or Frost Dwarf, Wolvar and Taunka, had become near constant steam of shattered stone and mangled steel across the slopes and any who got caught in-between were left charred and ruined at best.

If they had found Saronite there they may well have gotten involved in the conflict, but despite the land's proximity to the sleeper, Saronite little seemed to materialize so high, or may haps had long been harvested? And with the their Frost King loathed to meddle with their neighbors, everyone decided it was best to just watch and wait.

A shudder ran through his mount and into Heb'Jin's mind as something cold strayed across their brain and he shook it off, chanting words of prayer and power beneath his breath as they soared through the air, trinkets humming with life and strength that drove off the cold.

"Want to head back already?" He asked, at his mounts whiny trill.

There was another tremor, different now, of something large and frightful on the edges of his partners senses. Heb'Jin nodded, they swerved around and ducked low, hoping to get out of sight of what must have been a dragon.

Another trill, a flicker on his senses. Bodies. Several. Moving.

'What can live out here!?'

They swooped lower and he saw them… Whatever they were.

Slow shambling things that pulsed with blue light and wielding metal and glowing magic were surrounded by Nerubians, their desiccated frames trapped in webs as the spiders magic tore them to shreds.

'Undead? I-'

The sky roared and Heb'Jin craned his neck to see what his bond was telling him was there, a dragon, a giant, fully grown dragon was diving down upon the Nerubians and like their victims was Undead. Not even skin and rot, it was just bone and a swirling blue storm in the chest.

The Nerubian tried to dive back underground but a stream of torrential winds and ice scoured the lands and sealed their escapes as the beast lands and began tearing and gnashing at their bodies.

Any thought of a subtle escape fled his mind when it looked up at them with eyes of gleaming ice and let loose a blast of burning cold ice.

Snatching a bottled bomb from his hip, Heb'Jin hurled the concoction over his shoulder and heard it clash with the cold flames as they extinguished each other, a burst of force battering the air in its wake, but Braka'Ta rode the blast wave with familiar ease.

Distant shrieks echoed in his ears as new presences danced on his mind, 'Gargoyles!?'

"Push your strength, Braka'Ta, we cannot be caught!" His mount shrieked and magic surged around them as their pace increased.

Taking from his hip a flare bomb, Heb'Jin shook the container and as it began to bubble and fizzle; lobbed it with all his strength into the sky. Within a second the glass was turned to sparkling particles as a cascading array of slashing fire and color filled the air.'

Then there was silence, all but for the howling winds.

'We didn't travel that far, where is the return signal-'

A flash of a firebomb burst distantly in the skies, accompanied by the shrieks of Gargoyles and furious magic.

Grasping his amplification amulet, he roared. "To me, Sky Riders! The enemy may hound us, but it will never outfly the Shrieking Sky Riders, show them the pride of Zul'Drak and leave them choking on snow!"

His bellow was answered by a scattered array of shouts, too few, the camp had fallen, not everyone had made it out. Heb'Jin turned to where he knew Zul'Drak would be, bracing with one strap on his mount and un-latching potions with the other. At his back something screamed and battered at his mind.

'Come to me!'

He did not yield to it, every Drakkari knew better than to heed strange voices, the whispers in the metal were but one horror they were taught to guard against young and while this cold presence was unfamiliar, it was undoubtedly hostile.

"Wing Leader! Dragon incoming!" Voice called out from afar, their forms lost in the blizzard.

Heb'Jin could feel it, hear the flap of ethereal wings and a rumbling roar more like a scream than a dragon's mighty bellow.

"I sense it, form up with your wing mates and divide, encircle and bombard if it gets close and never forget, we must survive!"

"Yes, Wing Leader!" They roared.

As the dragon swooped in on them, Heb'Jin and Braka'Ta angled low, feeling its icy presence near clipping them as it surged over head, but the flames missing by a wide margin.

'Not as smart as dragons at least,' he thought, lobbing a firebomb at the monster's tail, and smirking as it got lodged into the bone before exploding in an array of fire and white shrapnel!

A few cheers rang out and Heb'Jin roared, "If we can hurt it, then we can kill it; turn this monster to dust!"

The dragon angled and reared around, flying backwards to try and aim on him before twin explosions crashed upon its back as a pair of wing-mates soared by.

"That's the way, and never stop moving, we gotta get home before anything else!"

"Hail Wing Leader!"

The dragon shrieked, letting loose gale force winds upon them as they swerved and road through them.

"Jang-Sk'tek'vwahs-Sang!" The Word Priest called, their voice calm as a runic symbol flared in the air and an invisible force smacked the dragon's skull sideways, leaving it bracing to control itself in the skies as another round of bombs soared down from overhead as they passed the beast.

"That's the way!" Heb'jin cackled, even as he tossed a pulsing fruit into Braka'Ta's waiting maw that left their frame pulsing with writhing energies, swelling their muscles and bolsters their speed.

"It's rallying, War Leader!"

"No one ever said this would be easy!" He snapped back, "Brace yourselves for another wave and be ready for anything- Watch your back!" A Sky Rider was tackled from the sky their mouth shrieking its last as their rider vanished into the swirling winds in the claws of a winged creature that looked like a giant human.

"Dammit, don't lose focus!"

"Hail Wing Leader!" Fewer again bellowed back.

Steeling his nerves, Heb'jin readied another bomb.

'This will not stop me from getting home, nothing will!'

A spell flew over his head, looking like a swarm of shrieking bats that rounded on them again but was easily avoided yet again as its crackling, shrieking mass began to fade.

'Hah, whatever you may be, you are not smart if you think you can outplay my Braka'Ta's senses!'

Now they just had to survive all the way out of Icecrown and back home.

Heb'Jin threw back a warding potion and grimaced.

'This is going to be a nightmare.'
________________________________


Originally the word priest said Znat'Bis, but I cannot for the life of me recall how I came up with that so I had to rewrite it to: sk = your, tek = skul, vwah = Fall, for the old god words and Sang = Deflect, & Jang = Protect for the holy words used to contain to the Voids powers.

Making:

Jang-Sk'tek'vwah-Sang, or Protect, your skull falls, Deflect. Its basically invoking protection and then imposing an instruction, before directing the energies, which is how a lot of Saronite magic works, imposing one's will on something through the powers of the Abyss.

Beyond that, I hope I conveyed that time is passing well, I considered drawing out this war preparation arc, but stuff like the trip to Storm Peaks didn't add much to the plot and I wanted to avoid unnecessary digressions.

Also for reference, even at their peak Saronite, the Drakkari won't have nearly as much as the Scourge did, or be able to use it as casually. Its also mostly as useful as it is due to be outside of context as opposed to eternally OP, hence why it can be controlled at all.

Technically the Storm Peaks had Gnolls & not Wolvar, but I legitimately don't get why and an Ice Troll who spends little time with either isn't going to distinguish much between one canid type and another, so its up to you if there are Frost Gnolls or merely Wolvar.
 
War of the Dead: Part 4 (Who is the Enemy)
War of the Dead: Part 4 (Who is the Enemy)
Ranvin's fairly tedious guard duty upon the jagged mountain that divided the West and South-West staircases -Both so distant he could make out neither from which his own Winterfang_tribe got their name- that he quickly zeroed in on the first interesting sight.

Namely a dark, shuddering dot in the sky quickly growing larger and larger as he spied it through the telescope and saw a bleeding bat and barely conscious troll clinging to its back.

"We got incoming wounded! Call the Shamans and Priests do not let them fall!" he bellowed, before putting horn to his lips and blowing out the same message in code as his soldiers were already racing to obey.

Questions like 'what happened' and 'where are their Wing-Mates' ran through his mind even as he followed the trolls confused, agonized flight. A sigh of relief escaping his lips as he saw two more flyers from the local training squad tear into the sky to catch them.

They got there just in time, or so it felt. As the moment the bat got sight of its kin they began to glide and then dropped like a stone the moment its riders was snagged from its back. Swooping in for a landing in the crystal trees where it collapsed limp on a giant branch, some guards and a shaman jogging out for the beast as its master was hefted between two bat riders and flown down and out of sight.

"Kril," he snapped at the lean, scholarly looking troll, "Go down and see what you can learn and ask Shakor about arranging a search party!"

"Yes cousin!" The nimble troll answered, bouncing down the hills on what was to be a long trip as Ranvin returned his gaze back to the skies, seeking any other survivors of what must have been a brutal attack.


Kril'fon could barely even see into the crowded temple where the healers tended to the fallen Sky Rider, but he'd seen enough through the telescope when they brought the wounded wretch in.

'That one should have died too, they all should have, the master will not be pleased by this,' he thought, foreign magic thrumming in his bones, numbing his fingers as he debated his next act.

'No, it's best to wait, I won't get anything by being hasty and his arrival tells more than enough, killing him would garner nothing but a loss for the master, and for me.' He perked up seeing his cousin and their 'chief', Shakor marching out of the temple fort with his escorts.

Kril'fon raced to catch up to him, "Cousin, did the Drakkari survive?"

Shakor gave him a warning look before speaking, "The Sky Rider lives, he told me of undead nightmares at war with Nerubians who ambushed his forces, only he survived."

"Will they come after him?"

The chief shivered, gnarled hand clutching his walking staff tightly before he shook his head, "Not likely. Their numbers were small from what he saw, if there were enough to invade Zul'Drak they would have done so by now. Still, the Frost King must know, and the Sky Riders who fell be avenged!"

Shakor allowed himself a weak smile, "Still, saving him will be good for us, a reminder of our worth and loyalty."

Kril'fon failed to hide his furrowed frown, "How do we know that Malakk's little expeditions aren't bringing this threat to our doorstep? Maybe they are stronger than even he-"

He was cut off by a snarl, as his cousin looked half ready to slap him, "Kril'fon." He stressed. "We are of Zul'Drak; the Drakkari are the mightiest empire of Northrend. Legions guard the borders and more will come when word of this threat reaches our Frost King. Your bitter egotism has been noted and rejected soundly by the Winterfang; a fact you accepted when you donned that nonsense title of 'fon' so stop it."

Kril'fon bowed, "Of course cousin, I will return to Ranvin after a night's rest and tell him of this. Shall we arrange search parties?"

"I already sent a messenger bat, get some sleep and return to your post, then don't trouble me again," The elder groused before disappearing into the stables.

'Unambitious coward, we should rule Zul'Drak, and despite your weakness, I will,' Kril'fon assured himself, a soothing echo of coldness in his mind as he turned his attention to other, more important matters.

Like spying on the Legionary guards'.


Malakk had to call or attend meetings with overseers, be they priests, great families, or appointed bureaucrats on the regular.

However, he was not coming to enjoy the seeming increase in which all of those same souls had to be called to Gundrak in the wake of some calamity in recent days. First it was the Frostmane's arrival, then the War declaration and the ensuing waves of strategy sessions surrounding that. Followed by what to do about the bloodshed in Storm Peaks.

'And now this,' he thought, glowering at the modelled map of Northrend and the cluster of dangers gathering around Icecrown.

The chamber was alight with conversations, offerings were being laid out at temples and effigies, bones and chants were being cast throughout Gundrak, all seeking guidance from ancestors and deities alike.

'At least the Loa pulled their weight,' Malakk mused, apparently offence at the loss of their worshipper's soul was enough to drive them to action. Ensuring that blessings and insights spilled forth from temple hearts or flooded the minds of prophets.

"This 'Scourge' must be wiped out, justice demands nothing lesss!" Slad'dran hissed.

"Agreed!" Shakor of the Winterfang called, "What's more, Crystalsong is vulnerable, the vast planes would be easy to march an army across and to our doorstep!"

Jintha'Kalar's Family head motioned their agreement, no doubt fearing much the same about Dragonblight only far worse.

Warlord Zol'maz huffed, "Religious fervor and personal interest motivate you, not good thinking! The threat must be slain but why today? Common knowledge is to let one's foes bloody themselves on each other before striking."

Great Mother Arctikus cut in, "That is easy to say from on high, Honored Zol'Maz, but can we risk these Nerubians being added to the dead's army?"

Moorabi scoffed, "You don't know the half of what those spider bastards are capable of, let them fight alone I say, no reason to galivanting off to aid an enemy against another!" His hand traced across leather that covered scars and Malakk repressed a wince of sympathy at his friend's discomfort.

"Especially when we are already preparing for another war," Zol'maz added with a scowl.

Gal'darah clicked his tongue in thought but before he could so much as speak, Quetz'Lith slammed her fist against the map, shaking the figurines. Her voice hoarse and savage, "You expect me to leave my Wing-Mates unavenged and their souls in bondage!? Then what is the empire but a self-serving lie!?"

Malakk raised his hand and spoke firmly, "Peace, my kin, you all speak your hearts well, but I would not think to leave our kin enslaved and an enemy marshalling at our doorstep."

He raised a finger, "But, I will not rush this either, war is a deliberate thing, we need to know more first. So, I will order Warlord Zim'bo and two Legions to march West and secure the edges of the Crysalsong Forest, that we might observe this threat before acting in haste."

It wasn't what anyone wanted specifically, but it was a workable compromise that left them better able to address any oncoming threat than before and hopefully spared him being contested. All of which meant it was probably the best decision he could make.

'I just hope I'm right in making it,' Malakk thought.


Arctikus had been making her way to the Cable-Railway when she sensed the presence of a servant shuffling up at her back.

"Can I be of assistance?" she asked, half turning and staring up at the larger troll.

Bowing they subtly slipped a scroll to her, "This one merely wishes to know if you will be staying this night, honored Chieftain?"

Slipping the script away, Arctikus shook her head, "I have some matters to attend to, but I do not know yet if I need a room readied for me."

Hands disappearing into their sleeves, the troll grinned and bowed again before disappearing down the halls, "As you say, chieftain. Zil'il is only a call away if you wish for my services."

Cutting down a new more roundabout path to the stations of Gundrak, Arctikus pulled open the scroll, brow arching as she read its contents.

'Well. This is unexpected.'

It seems she had a royal appointment.


Malakk's quarters were as large and grandiose as everything else in Zul'Drak, but perhaps not quite as ostentatious as she'd expect for the monarch of such an empire.

Still monstrously large of course both by design and necessity of his size. With a high ceiling inlaid with intricate runic script; great gold touched statues in the visage of trolls marked the entryway and served as load bearers.

Pristine water flowed through and gathered in artfully arranged pools that divided the sleeping quarters and a lounged area surrounded by books and art. Large magic fires in ornate braziers, weapons, and art, along with a finely craved table stacked with scripts and records completed the set.

Though Arctikus knew for a fact he also had a large private bathing chamber, exercise room and presumably his vast array of clothes and armor were stored somewhere.

Malakk himself was browsing his books and scrolls when she entered, fingers tracing down bark spines and leather hide.

'Allowed in but left alone by even his elite guards?' She thought, hastily reworking her expectations. This spoke of something more than she could have guessed, but if it was a sign of trust or terrible, she could not yet be sure.

The towering troll glanced back and was holding several scrolls under his arms as he said, "Greetings, Great Mother, welcome again to my abode."

"I am honored to be so invited, though I must confess some confusion as to the means of invitation." Seeing the Drakkari's ears twitch in embarrassment, she smirked and added, "I hope this is not the part of this play where you ask me to help you sire an heir."

The jest landed and Malakk let out a sharp cackle, "Oh no, any heir of mine will need to earn their rank as I did. No spoiled princelings like the Zandalari have."

Amused but also very much not wanting to press on the subject, Arctikus rolled her shoulders and clicked her tongue, "How then can this one be of service to the empire?"

"You are learning well, Great Mother," hummed the larger troll, before sending her a speculative glance. "I take it you intended to return home, inform your tribe and perhaps discuss means of offering aid in this time without straining your number?"

"You read my intentions well, Frost King Malakk," She conceded, "We are too few for but a small number to serve in the legions, so I thought to discuss what else we might contribute."

Malakk nodded, motioning for her to sit on the cushioned seat across from his own with a large, ornate table between them which he was laying scrolls and books across.

"I believe I have something, something that I can only trust to the Frostmane with and that must be kept in the strictest silence until the matter is dealt with." His tone was not grim, so much as pensive, eyes and brow furrowed.

Taking her seat, Arctikus simply said, "What is it you would ask of us?"

A brief flash of a crooked smile greeted her as he placed a large tome across from her, alien to the styles and textiles of the Drakkari, it was bound in scales and lined with carapace ornamentation, the symbol at its heart that made her head hurt to gaze upon.

"Tell me Great Mother, what are your thoughts on spiders?"
__________________________________________________________________
NOTES:
Updating early cos this is a short chapter and I'm entering a 3D modelling contest so I need to focus on that and making two videos so my usually weekend schedule is shot.

Those who played or have skimmed the RPG Wiki may recognize Kril'Fon; I figured that while Malakk is popular he and or the idea of a united Zul'Drak doesn't make everybody smile and while some critics are fairly reasonable, you're always gonna get haters.

Zim'Bo was picked due to proximity, power and cos he and the forces at Drak'Tharon have some of the most experience fighting outside Zul'Drak either from raids by or against Furbolgs and into Dragonblight in the old days.
 
War of the Dead Part 5 (Treason & Treaties)
War of the Dead Part 5 (Treason & Treaties)
Dragonblight was a depressing and ominous place in Barafu's considered opinion. There never seemed to be enough snow to cover the darkened, rocky planes, leaving bones jutting up everywhere, piled atop one another in a macabre display.

'Though may-haps it is made worse by the ominous thoughts of death dabblers?' She mused from the safe perch of she and her escorts little camp. They sat on a raised outcropping, akin to a small 'island' in the vast 'sea' of Dragonblight. It had sturdy trees clinging to life in which their bats perched as they rested beneath a tent, feasting on week old rations that were still better than what she was used to back home.

Vejrek tossed back a strip of meat and hummed contentedly, looking very comfortable in his dark, blessed leathers. "Think we should move camps, maybe? Make ourselves more a sight to see?"

Barafu closed the book her eyes had been glazing over for the last half hour and shook her head, "If all I have been told and read is right, they will find us."

"The Nerubians are masters of mind magics and intensely territorial, do not wander too close, lest you befall a trap. Merely find your way to one of these markers and reflect on seeking them out, on the dead, and I promise, they will come, for better or worse."

It was an ominous message, fitting given the grim nature of their new foe and from what she had read, the Nerubians themselves.

Not that the Frost King had made no effort to be charitable, it would not do to offend after all, and thus the texts gifted to the Great Mother for she and Vejrek's study were some of the more… Nuanced sources.

'What must be understood to all scholars, is that the Nerubians are not like us, but this does not make them evil or wicked, merely different, and as strange to us as we to them. They are not a hive, but they have a hive mind, they can perceive themselves in way we cannot and thus to them, all are outsiders.'

"You do recall your role, yes?" She pressed, needing something to fill the time with and further study was merely making her mind travel in circles.

Vejrek nodded stiffly, "Nerubians only bow to a king in war, they will not see our Great Mother as a leader, but an arrogant foe. The true masters of the race, or so they say, are the arcanists and Queen Mothers." He smirked and patted the enchanted spear resting along his lap, "And they are always in company of an escort, yes? That is my role here, to be a reflection of them."

"It is," She nodded, arching her brow at her cousin, "Which means you must be-"

"Silent," He huffed, leaning out of the way of her careless swipe. "You think this will work? Some of the other fighters I spar with tell horror stories ya know?"

Barafu shrugged, "Is that different to any other foe?"

"Point, but we don't usually go trying to make friends with them," He countered.

Casting her gaze northward, Barafu shivered, "The Nerubians are not mad or stupid, they will want the dead to stay dead as we do."

"If you say so," Vejrek, said, clicking his tongue.

'Nerubians are called callous, cold and cruel and this is all true. But they are not irrational or twisted by some evil god, merely that is how they are. When they steal someone away, it is because they see a threat or test subject.

We may not like their reasoning, but it is reason.

When they warred upon our ancestors, it was their loathing and fear of Saronite that drove them. Though they did not stop us from mastering the cursed metal, their caution is to be commended, and in fact, their raids may have served to cull those who would be twisted by the tainted whispers.

Perhaps this, their scholars saw?'


Something like a nettle, touches on her mind again and Barafu sees Vejrek scrunching up his nose like he smelled something awful.

"I think they are coming," She hummed, rushing to her feet.

She can practically see him repress a 'that's what you said last time', as he rises and takes a guard position at her side, spear blades pointing up and to the side, with the flat of the blade outward to convey a willingness to fight and defend, but not hostility.

That message may not have been well conveyed, given one moment the breeze is howling, the snow is drifting and there is nothing to see.

And the next, she feels a web-like spell work bleed into the air around her as Nerubians, like some alien fusion of horse, spider and person burst from the snow drift, large glaives levelled at them as each of the shiny carapaced creatures crawled up the mound to surround them.

She couldn't move her feet, Vejrek was snarling, trying, and failing to move even his arms.

Steeling herself, Barafu tried to align her thoughts and mind.

'We represent the Drakkari Empire, we would treat with you, as our ancestors did, the centuries past!'

"We represent the Drakkari Empire, we would treat with you, as our ancestors did, the centuries past!"

The wind has stilled, the snowfall has ceased and Barafu can sense but neither hear nor feel heavy prong-falls behind her as clicking fills the air and a cold voice resounds in her mind.

"We know no treaty with your tribes."

She tries to glance behind her but can see 'nothing'; though judging by Vejrek's expression he can and his knuckles scream as he tries to move.

"Eight hundred and sixty-seven years ago-"

"Not us, not you, that was then, this is now," Rasped the voice.

Her mind shuttered for a moment, a pure disregard for history and treaties so alien to her that-

"Then, there is no war between us, Frost King Malakk regards your Spider Lord as a worthy rival but has never sought war with your people."

Something like amusement, or maybe pleasure tickles her brain and she almost laughs, hysterically, before the voice presses.

"There is no war, but there is no peace, there is no need to treat with interlopers."

That makes her snort, "There is a war, one where the dead rise and slaughter your kin. We would fight them. With, or without you." She is finally able to crane her neck backwards enough to look on the Nerubian. Its carapace is pale, it stretches up rather than forward, massive prong like hands folded against a chest, as its mandibles click, click, click.

"You will fail, you will die, not immune, not wise, not prepared-"

They stiffen, and she can see their guards lower their weapons, each stiff, their black eyes widening as the silence lingers.

Then, the spell snaps off like nothing, Vejrek flings himself between her and what she can only assume is a Vizier, trying to shuffle her back towards a large rock to protect against a backstab when the Nerubian speaks.

"The Spider Lord…" It sounds almost pained, "Would speak with you. I will be your guide."

Hand resting against Vejrek's quaking shoulders she can feel his heart racing as he bites back a snarl, even as he steps behind her, allowing her to face the Nerubian face to face.

"I am Bonechiller Barafu, this is my guard, Vejrek, what shall we call you?"

Eight black voids stare down at her, and the Nerubian answer touches her mind, more gently now, "Seer_Ixit."


An ill wind blew around them, the singing crystals had grown silent as their fires strained against the heavy darkness and growing mist.

Warlord_Zim'bo stood at the heart of his camp, great tents and yurts were scattered around him. Hasty fortifications of stone, iron-wood and ice were invisible in the distance and his warriors clustered around magical fires, eyes warily on the barriers they had erected. He resisted the urge to hold his spiked club, a leader needed to radiate confidence even in dire times.

His aid slid up behind him, "If all goes well, we should have reinforcements in a day or two yeah?"

"If all is well," He answered, hand briefly running through his three-piece mohawk. "The Priests and Casters?"

His aid shook her head, "Most still sick, some will make it, but others…"

"Put them down when they go and burn them quickly that their ashes can be returned home. Is the triple watch still holding?" He added.

"Last I saw, this is gonna wear on us though," she said.

"Better to be worn on than surprised, we just need to hold out for reinforcements." The hawks had left, the messengers and priests, someone had to get back home in time.

"And the traitor?" She spat, hands resting on her axes.

"Bring him forward," Zim'bo sighed, "His masters magic has made sure we won't get anything else from him, might as well enact some justice before he causes more trouble," he rumbled, finally drawing his club.

Low thumping began to resound throughout the camp as the way was cleared and those resting watched with hate in their eyes and bile on their lips as a struggling troll was brought forward, wounded, and bound, he still struggled as he was forced to his knees.

"Kril… Fon, yes?" Zim'bo growled, tapping his club against the troll's unbroken tusk as they growled and feebly spat.

"You know my name, sniveling wretch, and one day you, all of you will call me master!"

"To think you'd betray your own people for petty ambition-"

"You are not my people! I am Winterfang and Winterfang alone! Zul'Drak is a lie built by a fool! You are all of you beneath me!"

"Shut up traitor!" A guard bellow, striking the smaller troll.

Zim'bo sighed, "Enough of this, you are accused of poisoning the meal pots of our priests, shamans and arcanists to sabotage and weaken our defenses. Thanks to the testimony of one, Drakuru we caught you in the act and-"

"Drakuru… Betrayed me? No, no, no! This wasn't the plan you traitor!"

Those words rolled through his mind in but a moment and Zim'Ro snarled.

He slashed through the air and with a crash sent the traitors head flying through the camp in a hundred pieces, a roar on his lips, "Find me Drakuru! Now!"

Then in the distance he heard a scream.

The ill wind became a hurricane.

Fires began to shrivel and die.

More screams followed.

'They're here.'


Just because they'd been invited, that did not mean the Nerubians were of good manners, or perhaps, they were merely paranoid. Because rather than let them see where they were going, their escorts blindfolded them with spun silk threads -Against Vejrek's judgement-.

Their path to the city itself was carried by way of portal that even seeing cast was deemed too much of a risk, with any efforts by her to analyze the ebb and flow of magic promising an 'efficient, but agonizing death'.

Barafu was a sensible troll, so she listened, but refused to show fear because she was also a proud one. Decades of fighting the interlopers and being chased from her people's sovereign land had not led her to bend, let alone break and nor would the Nerubians intimidating manner.

'Or their mind powers,' a part of her whispered, even as her skull felt like it was going to rupture from the bulbous, aching pressure of thousands of voices screaming to get out made her want to just go home and die.

Vejrek was wincing in pain but hiding his headache well as was expected of a warrior. Barafu had no say in whether being able to parse and organize the growing chorus of the mental web that flooded Azjol-Nerub was better or worse than just letting it wash over oneself.

Such thoughts, any thoughts were peeled away along with the threads of silk as they were marched out of a hallway and beheld the Nerubians home in all its dark majesty, an unearthly jewel of shadowy magnificence.

A Cavern could not describe it, for she could see no end, merely an eternally stretching metropolis that vanished into darkness, with glistening webbed walkways and shining crystals connecting towers of dark stone and bronze, spiked edifices. Granite, mixed igneous stone, born of ancient magma from deep beneath bubbled up long ago seemed to make up 'everything'.

The scripts spoke of the Nerubians magic and their mystery, of their might and their malice, but it did not tell of their artistry. They had left nary a corner untouched — every edge is smooth and faceted, every corridor planned and polished; odd angles created by nature were straightened and widened with tunnels turned into corridors with vaulted ceilings.

That was when she stilled, ever so briefly and Barafu frowned, glancing to Ixit.

"I know nothing of ingots or lava flows, you told me these things, did you not?"

Vejrek twitched violently and she glared, "Warrior," and he forcefully righted himself back into neutrality.

A clattering of clicks that reeked of amusement echoes on her senses but Ixit remain composed as it answered, "This kingdom is vast and old, even the Upper Kingdom is ancient beyond measure. Its skein is a mind unto itself and carries its history with it."

That was the most poetic thing she has heard the Nerubians utter thus far, but it did make her mind whirl with intrigue as she looked across the vast expanses, staff clenched tightly in her hands, books and scrolls at her side, trying to absorb what the city had to teach.

But what she found was ancient, hidden, cold and frantic, not the panic of warm-blooded creatures, but the sharp terror of predators become prey. The echoes and stains of war and cold press against the walls making the city feel like a tomb and-

'This city feels more like a war camp than a place of living,' She thought, stilling that thought as Ixit shot her a look she could only read as offended.

Whether he was or not, would remain a mystery, for she and Vejrek now found themselves on a massive, octagonal flat plane that seemed to rest in the very heart of the city. Sharp, heavy thumps echoed across the reinforced stone and the guards and even Ixit were retreating as a truly callosal creature lumbered into view.

'The Spider King! It can be none other!' Massive beyond its kin, the multi-armored creature bore large clear wings on its back, a sunken face buried in layers of bone like armor shaped into the stile of a bladed battering ram, hat did little to conceal roes of fangs or faintly glowing eyes.

Vejrek was glancing around furtively, even as he grudgingly stepped back as well, though not as far as the other escorts. Barafu was intimately aware of not just the Spider Lords eyes on her, but those of hundreds, potentially thousands or maybe hundreds of thousands of Nerubians watching from across towered edifices and layered web works.

Seeing the gargantuan creature before her did not speak, she bowed curtly, not lowering her head into range of his pincers. "Hail and well met, Spider Lord Anu-Barak, mighty leader of great Azjol'Nerub and honored rival to our Frost King Malakk."

Several of the Spider Lords pronged legs struck the ground, not hard or heavy but his sheer size meant she felt the vibrations as it reared back and answered in a twin layered voice.

"I am the Spider Lord of this war, and the dead grow numerous, I have dueled with your Malakk but know him only as a foe who has not died or struck me low. State your intents before the Court, of the kingdom."

Trying to rely on etiquette was evidently a waste, so Barafu nodded and spoke plainly, her thoughts lining with her words as she said.

"We come to you and offer an alliance, a concept not unheard of to either of our people's respective histories." Granted those tails sometimes had rather sordid endings and were rarely if ever of such a scale as this, but the precedence was there!

Chittering like a chorus filled the air and her head screamed, before Anu'Barak let out a low, humming like roar that made the caverns grow more silent than she had felt them, the sudden absence of noise somehow 'worse'!

"Drakkari who dig deep into the earth for cursed blood now stumble into the maws of the Lich King and his masters, your leaders have not the wit to aid us in this war and offering you such aid does not serve our interests."

Biting back a hissed snarl, Barafu countered, "Our Frost King has already marshalled a mighty host to study this foe, and more shall soon follow. Would it not be… Wiser for the Nerubians self-interest to collaborate with us in this much at least?"

Anu'Barak lumbered forward, and Barafu had to resist the urge to throw herself back, she could practically feel Vejrek's barely restrained terror as the Nerubian lord leaned forward, chilled, rasping breaths that looked like labors in of themselves brushing against her skin.

"Your advanced for has already been felled."

'Impossible!'

"It is done, and traitors lie in your midst. Should your Malakk remove them… Then we shall see, but traitors and fools will not aid us in this war."

"I… I can inform the Frost King of this traitor."

Anu'Barak had already turned and began striding away, "If it is told it is not learned, and he is unworthy," They stilled long enough to add, "And a reckless demise of your empire would serve our interests as well."

And with that, Anu'Barak strode off the platform and slowly the chittering grew loud and baleful again as Ixit and Vejrek came to her sides and the Nerubian spoke.

"The Spider Lord orders you be given… Accommodations, and access to the lesser libraries. Rest. Learn. And do not betray this welcome."

Nails digging into her pals, she nodded, "We accept your lieges most gracious hospitality."


"Two legions and even mighty Zim'bo… All but one soldier lost to ambush and twisted magic…" the kings sigh was deep and the mingling of shock and fear upon his face evident to Drakuru even as the troll tried to obscure it.

Kneeling before the king he forced a guttural weep from his chest, "I know I shoulda stayed and fought Frost King Malakk, but I was one of the last standing as we tried to retreat. Even now I do not know how I outran them once they began pursuing we survivors, I… l I-"

"Be at peace," Gal'darah murmured from his perch at the Frost King's left.

"This knowledge was more useful than a valiant death," Zol'maz concurred.

The Frost King fell into deep thought, chin resting on his knuckles.

Seeing the troll needed more, Drakuru spoke up, "There was another detail, I had nearly forgotten, but one of the enemies said we would all serve the Lich King, they called him the one true King of Northrend."

Malakk did not react, even as the trolls across the chamber hissed and bristled, the Frost Kings eyes remained sharp and focused as he murmured. "This Scourge, as the Loa call them, is too dangerous to be left to the Nerubians."

"My liege, we just lost two legions!" Zol'maz growled.

"And we will lose more than that if we do not wipe this threat from this world now!" Malakk snapped.

Drakuru wanted to cheer, this was exactly as he had hoped, the proud fool would lead himself to his doom and through it deliver Zul'Drak into Drkauru and Drakuru's hands alone!

Malakk strode forward, leaving his throne behind, axes drawn he roared. "Twice they have attacked my people and twice has but one survived! No longer, not a moment longer will these wretches infest my lands or trouble my people!" The winds around him began to wail and the stone of Gundrak rumbled, "I Frost King Malakk will lead the next assault, I shall take the ten legions of Gundrak and strike this enemy down!"

Drakuru threw himself down before the troll, "I beg of you, let me redeem my cowardice and aid you Frost King Malakk, I have learnt much from fighting them once, I will better see them coming than any!"

The giant troll patted his bac, beckoning him to rise, "Fear not, Drakuru, you will have the chance to avenge your comrades, standing at my side as we lay waste to Icecrown."

'Well, maybe a step or so behind with a dagger,' he thought grinning madly, as he loudly announced his gratitude for the court to hear.

'Zul'Drak will be mine you fool!'


Shakor raced to catch up to the Frost Kings mighty strides, Malakk's bodyguards leering at him suspiciously as they went deep into the depths of Gundrak's royal weapons hall.

"My Frost King, I- I have no words of apology that can undo my failure. I should have dealt with Kril-"

They came to a stop outside a sharp angled idol bearing the snarling visage of a mighty troll, who in place of hair had hissing snakes with warped hydra heads for hair.

'This is where he keeps Zerat! But why let me so close unless…' A chill ran through his spine as his mind reached the one logical conclusion.

He was going to die.

Malakk cut his hand on the troll heads tusks and its snarl became a roar that sent even the Frost Kings elite guard snapping back with pained hisses. Shakor was driven to his knees, bones quaking, eardrums felt like they were bursting in his skull; clutching his cloak around his shoulders his cry was subsumed by the totems call.

The Frost King was unmoved as he reached inside and drew forth the blade, animated stone hissing at him as he clutched the emerald scales around the solidified stone handle.

The hilt and cross guards matched the hissing tendrils perfectly each sharpened to resemble a hydra like snake ready to gobble up its prey, their open maws glowing with a Saronite touched emerald green.

At the heart of the cross guard sat a pulsating orb of green that shone like glass and rippled like water but was stronger than metal, it thrummed and emanated with its own light, as if rejecting that of the world and was surrounded by runic symbols and sharply pointed spikes.

Bursting forth into the blade itself were three tiers of elegantly formed stone that served as a bedrock for the blade itself. Three layers, the inner layer was a burnt orange that swirled like tiger's eye surrounded it was the dark stone of Zul'Drak sharped into a sharply coiled rune that governed the powers of the blade. And finally, the blade itself, a thick golden bronze nightmare of squared, sharp angles capable of cutting through even Saronite.

It was Zerat, Malakk's Soulburning Greatsword.

Shakor gulped, 'So this is how I die… with my soul aflame for the actions of my cousin…'

With blade in hand the idols power waned, and the snakes lost their life, the troll heads roar quietened and Malak gave an experimental swing of the hallowed and horrifying blade, searing the air and making the spirits coil away in fright before he turned to face Shakor.

"Get. Up." He rumbled.

Shakor rose to his feet, staring up at the Frost King, eyes wide, knees wobbling as words failed to form.

"You chieftain, knew of Kril'fon's traitorous thoughts, and ignored them for familial loyalty," his tone grew gentle, "That I could happily ignore, a king must have his critics after all."

His gaze sharpened, "But you let him go with the legions, you let a traitor walk amongst our troops. Their deaths are on your heads as much as his, for so too must the master atone for the sins of his subjects."

Shakor nodded, swallowing as he lowered his white and blue cloak-hood to meet his death as a chieftain should, with dignity.

"If I may, my brother Ranvin knew Kril'fon's treason to be dangerous and protested his presence. He would be a more able leader than I."

"I'll think about it," Malakk said, before swinging the blade.

Shakor stilled, eyes closing as he felt-

A sharp cut that left him hissing, something deep and burning scorching his senses as he instinctively drew away as if burned to see Malakk had but cut his cheek.

"That wound will not fade, Shakor, bear it, look upon it and remember both this mistake, and your loyalty and bravery in the face of death." The Frost King clapped him on the shoulder, "I will leave the matter of whether to retire to you, as well as the appointment of your heir, for now, I have a war to win."

Perhaps the deepest sigh of relief in his life escaped Shakor as Malakk marched out of the chamber.
_____________________________________
NOTES:
So, we officially meet the Nerubians, I hope they made a good impression. I took some inspiration from Travelogue, with the self interest lines, the idea of Spiderlords being specially engineered for wars and the heavy emphasis on telepathy and being rather... Predatory, but not irrational.

Aside, the reason the Nerubians didn't beat the Drakari in their early wars is cos the Sundering messed them up too and the two empires wars have mostly been raiding, assassin and sabotage, as neither can realistically invade the other's home territory in mass.

The Gundraki Legions are the elite of the elite, serving a similar role to the Aman'Ashi among the Forest Trolls, they guard Gundrak and deploy only under the Frost King order.

I removed Shakor's, 'Maybe I should retire, this is too stressful.' line cos I felt it undermined the weighty tone, but I did enjoy it so here it is.
 
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