Chapter 12, Torch Boy

Just to be safe, Althea had returned to her duties and was distracted from Jonathan’s latest transgression. An extra patrol would be sent out this morning. She would personally check the perimeter of the town with an escort.

Jonathan had secretly been grateful for the false alarm in the tavern. He had abandoned his coffee as soon as Gracie had started barking, and after seeing to his pistol ushered her outside. A few town guards ran past them, as Althea had ordered them to re-enforce the patrols and bring lit torches and lamp oil with them. By now the light was strong in the sky, and they were meant to be weapons.

Jonathan insisted on going on his own as usual, but took some extra oil and tinder for his lantern, as well as an extra torch. Althea was busy and took little notice of him as he quietly slipped away.

Gracie didn’t make a peep as they started their usual rounds. Usually they didn’t take this route until the mid-afternoon. Their first patrol would circle Darkshire, starting with Manor Mistmantle, then turn abruptly south to the Tranquil Gardens Cemetery.

Gracie sniffed about half-heartedly. They had already been here not too long ago. Was her Master returning to his place of repose so quickly? Her heart sank a little when she saw him closely examining the purple handkerchief. Perhaps she had upset him.

Jonathan made sure that nobody was watching them or within earshot. He thrust the bit of cloth into Gracie’s face again, his face twisted with emotion.

“Well?” He whispered. “Is it…this?”

Sometimes he would raise it to his own face, as if his human nose could also recognize the smell. She wasn’t sure he understood it the same way that she did. The smell by the tower and the scent of the cloth were not exactly the same.

But they were the same.

She didn’t like the way he shoved it at her face, and turned away silently.

Jonathan angrily stuffed it back in his pocket, muttering to himself. The dog seemed confused and out of sorts. He did not like the thoughts that were running through his head. He had kept that bit of rag for ages. It was his only keepsake of her.

But Gracie had never done that before, and the little dog had loved her just as much.
The most obvious explanation was the one he kept trying to push away as he turned them south. Gracie had detected that smell elsewhere, perhaps by the tower. No, perhaps not. They were down by the pond. It was upwind. She could not have caught that scent from there.

But if she had…

It was inevitable that people would seek him out to ask about Andorhol. They had a relative, a friend, and perhaps he had seen them? Was this shop or home or landmark still standing when you last saw it?

And the most chilling of all, and spoken with the most terror if they dared to ask at all.

Did they fall…only to rise again?

The might of the Scourge lay in its power to corrupt the land and raise the dead, both of which they would bend to their will. Was there a chance that their loved one had risen, and walked in undeath?

He would usually lie, and answer no. It was what they wanted to hear. What result would a “yes” elicit? Perhaps a holiday to Undercity was in order? A nice family reunion over the tomb of the betrayed king?

She had always been a smart girl. Too smart, and too eerie to escape the notice of the Scarlet Crusade. For a woman of that age to live and travel alone, without a family…

It had been stupid. She should have known better. It was her own fault.

And if she was roaming these woods as a Forsaken, all that would drive her now was hatred. Perhaps she was seeking him out to exact her revenge. He could not deny he had played a part in it.

His hands trembled as he checked his gun again, and his heart thudded in his chest. Even in the bright morning sunlight, where even the most hardy undead were unlikely to roam, he found himself jumping at every bird chirp and twig snap.

From Tranquil Gardens they had moved west, through the Rotting Orchard and the old farmstead. Usually he felt a sense of harmony as he passed by the Twilight Grove but it did not come today. Occasionally they would run into other members of the Night Watch, but there had been no sign of any undead lurking near the town. Only the usual mindless zombies that roamed the abandoned homes and lurked in the graveyards.

Ah well, they said, patting the unhappy Gracie gently, can’t be right all of the time then, eh?

Jonathan laughed nervously, well get to it fellas, better safe than sorry!

By the time they had been through Raven Hill and had patrolled the Darkened Bank, it was dusk. A few bright stars were peeping out, and after a day of searching and sweating, especially following a night of fitful sleep outside, Jonathan’s fatigue was getting the better of his fear. It had just been a false alarm. Even the best dog couldn’t be perfect. He turned and looked at her tenderly. She was following obediently, nose to the ground.

They were within sight of the town’s lights, but in a dark part of the road. Jonathan turned away from the city for a moment and called to the dog.

She crouched in the shadows, and did not come. In fact, she lowered her head and whined a little.

That’s rather strange, Jonathan thought to himself. Was she hurt? He took a step towards her.

And then he heard a footstep behind him. The wind turned, and the limbs of the overhanging trees shuddered.

The foul stench of rotting flesh filled his nostrils. He shivered, and turned, slowly, moving his hand carefully towards his pistol as he did so.

It was standing in the road, slightly concealed by the moving shadows. Its bright eyes were glimmering. He saw no demon, and it wore cloth. Definitely no mindless husk or wandering ghoul, or even an apothecary that had wandered further away from his lab than usual.

A mage or a priest, still reeking of blood from its last kill. It still had blood on its lips.

No, not a priest. It drew its weapon, a one-handed sword, and planted it decisively in the ground. Then it stepped forward slowly, keeping its hands raised. It was not threatening him.

He did not want to see its face, but at the same time he couldn’t tear his eyes away.

Without taking his eyes from the undead creature, he opened the lantern and used it to light one of the torches. It blazed black smoke with the oil and wool cloth.

Gracie started to whine quietly. Why was she not barking? Jonathan thought angrily. They were so close to Darkshire. Members of the night watch could not be far away.

What was wrong with her?

The creature stopped, and then slowly reached towards its belt. He bit his lip and waved the torch threateningly. His fingers clutched the barrel of his gun. It did not seem threatened by any of this. In fact, it’s sickening grin seemed to widen as if it found the whole thing rather funny.

Jonathan then realized it was carrying a herb pouch, and from this it drew a few small, pungent branches, which it tossed on the ground in front of his feet.

Kingsblood, he thought incredulously. A herb of some repute and value. Could it be trying to trade?

Without moving any closer, it crouched on the ground, and wrote a word in the dirt in front of him with a gloved hand. It was a bit messy, as it was writing upside-down so he could read it. But it clearly said, “Andorhol.”

Joanthan’s hands started to shake. He had tried to avoid the obvious conclusion. But now that he could get a better look, he could determine that the creature was most definitely female. There was something familiar about its face. The high cheekbones and wide jaw. And still, Gracie did not bark, but continued to crouch close to the ground and whine softly as if wounded.

As of to answer the unspoken question, the creature raised herself to her full height and opened the front of her robe, exposing her rent and mutilated chest to him.

Jonathan cried out in convulsive terror. He threw the torch towards her in panic and stumbled backward, trying to twist his face away from that terrible vision, cramming the sides of his forearms against his eyes. Gracie started barking, raising a noise that all in the town would hear.

It only took seconds for the Night Watch to appear. Some followed the creature east in a futile but heated pursuit. The others found Jonathan crouched by the side of the road, the palms of his hands still pressed against his eyes, weeping and shaking his head in fierce disbelief.

Chapter 11, The Blue Child

Rik had always liked Booty Bay. It was gritty and filthy and oozing with character. Virtually every kind of creature in Azeroth that could count gold and tip a mug had wandered over its crooked boardwalks. Even a creature like his friend Eucalypto could find enthusiastic and non-judgmental business partners.

Rogues were generally well off anyway, but Eucalypto was richer than most. He was a talented rogue and leather worker, obsessed with perfection. He knew exactly which ore held the most precious stones and always seemed to know exactly how much the blacksmiths would need.

So it did not surprise Rik when he got word from Eucalypto in Booty Bay. He had enough capital to start to the guild, after only a few days in Stranglethorn. He explained nothing in his letter, which was typical of his cryptic friend. Something that he preferred not be written down, no doubt.

And so, Rik walked cheerily into the Salty Sailor tavern expecting to see a happy wave from his friend, sitting behind a pile of gold and jewels, perhaps. Instead, he found him sitting quietly at a dark little table with his scraggy head in his leather hands. His tankard, sitting sadly next to an unlit candle, was empty.

“Good evening, friend! So nice to see you again!” The Tauren raised one of his massive hands in greeting, hoping to rouse the unhappy creature out of his stupor. But Eucalypto’s head seemed to sink even deeper into his hands, and he remained silent.

“Ahem…what news?” The Tauren asked, as he squeezed himself into the smaller seat and nodded to the barmaid, a plucky little goblin who launched herself in their direction.

“Welcome, friend!” She proudly displayed her sharp little teeth in a sincere smile, but her eyes also regarded his sombre companion as if to say, Are you sure you’re at the right table?

“Greetings! Refill my friend’s mug and I’ll have one of the same, and…” he pointed suggestively at the unlit candle.

“Leave it,” croaked Eucalypto. The goblin widened her eyes and scurried back to the bar with his empty glass.

“Does something ail you, Eucalypto?” Rik felt silly asking a zombie such a question but he felt like he was at a loss.

The undead rogue exhaled heavily, wheezing, and whispered something that Rik couldn’t understand. He seemed to be speaking a strange language.

“Whaddayasai?” Rik snickered and made a face as the goblin lass returned with two foaming tankards. Only her thick hoop earrings and the tips of her ears were visible as she waddled up to them. She didn’t look at Eucalypto before taking the gold Rik was holding out and bolting to another table.

“I…she’s…I can’t find her.” Eucalypto muttered into the table. “She’s gone, she’s been gone…”

“Oh, well,” Rik coughed, wondering who he was going on about this time. That Felstone girl, perhaps. “They…uh… sometimes they come back…”

“No, NO…” Eucalypto waved his hands helplessly, “She’s gone. They took her. We won’t ever see her again. Ever.”

“The Warlock?” The Druid asked. “Hyzanthlay?” She had earned herself some notable enemies, but it was difficult to imagine her being taken anywhere by anyone against her will.

“Your people spoke of her…”

“Our…our people..?”

“I used to watch her, too, but they took her away….”

“Took who, Eucalypto?”

“The Blue Child,” Eucalypto said said, raising his head. For a moment his eyes filled the table with a sickly yellow light before fading again. “They took her…she’s gone. She’s gone forever.”

Rik sighed as Eucalypto took a generous swig from the full tankard. The Blue Child was an old story from his childhood.

Once upon a time, Azeroth had two moons. The bright, white moon and another smaller moon that gave off little light and only appeared on occasion. They nicknamed her the Blue Child. But hadn’t it been a story? Had he really seen the moon in his childhood, or was he remembering an old dream from the fireside?

“Oh, Eucalypto,” Rik sighed and dug his flint and tinder out of his pack, “how do you expect to find anything at this dark little table? No wonder you keep losing things.”

As he spoke, he opened his tinderbox and began to strike a small spark.

“The Blue Child was pleasant enough, as the stories say,” he continued in his gruff but pleasant Tauren tone. “But she gives no light, so perhaps you need some of your own.”

The little spark caught on the bit of tinder that Rik was holding. How many rainy, windy nights in Mulgore had the light of a small fire been a beacon of hope for his whole family? These days he could light a simple candle in his sleep.

“There now,” the little spark clung to the wick and happily grew, “we can have light whenever we want it.”

Eucalypto blinked at the little flame, as if he had never seen fire before. He sighed again, and dropped his head.

“I’ll never see her again,” he mumbled.

Rik sighed and sipped his mead. Perhaps he had left his friend alone for too long. Any discussions about money or the guild would have to wait until morning.

* * *

Hyzanthlay crouched rather miserably in the dark shadows near the Swamp of Sorrows. The air reeked of dragons and herbs. Quite a pleasant place to stop and catch her figurative breath. The first few rosy fingers of dawn were creeping in from the misty ocean, and as soon as she was sure her pursuers had given up the chase did she turn and make her way to Stonard.

The previous several hours had not been very productive. They had begun well with the meeting in the tower but things had degenerated from there.

The three undead talked well into the afternoon. The small, narrow tower was soon clouded with smoke and hoarse whispers, punctuated with the usual laugh or angry outburst. Hyzanthlay didn’t always agree with her hosts, but it was refreshing to speak to like-minded undead, aware of their state, unashamed and unrepentant. They went on at length about the Royal Apothecary Society, the Forsaken, and the Dark Lady herself. Eventually, the conversation turned to more casual matters; namely, herbalism and her personal reasons for being in Duskwood.

“So, no recollection at all?” Zraedus said, rubbing the bit of flesh left on his chin.
“Not so unusual. It has been known to happen. It might be better to forget. But you think this human can help you?”

“I’ve seen these two, this man and the dog that the Troll spoke of,” Faustin said.
“They are fairly well-known. This man, he comes to the graveyard outside of the Tower sometimes. Some humans do, to pay their respects. Many died here during the first war. But he only comes and drinks and then falls asleep.”

“Careless fool,” snarled Zraedus. “If it wasn’t for the stink the damn dog would raise every time we move, we would have eaten him by now.”

This prompted a hearty laugh among the small gathering. Hyzanthlay grinned, but inside she was distraught. So far, he just sounded like an average human who had gotten lucky in escaping from Andorhal. If he even saw her, he would probably run and hide. And as for the dog, at best she would make a nice pair of leather boots for some young rogue. A promising lead was starting to feel like a dead end.

Even if she managed to meet him, and he did not run away, what could he tell her?

She thanked them for their gracious hospitality, and they apologized profusely for their humble offerings and invited her to return. When she stepped out into the night she did not have a clear plan. Destruction Warlocks were by nature poor planners, losing interest in anything that took more than three minutes.

Well, if he did business with Trolls and Tauren, maybe it was time he meet another illustrious Horde race. If he had survived Andorhol intact, how squeamish could he be?

Hyzanthlay took her time exploring the area near the tower. She saw signs of dog and man, enough to know that they came here often and had been here recently. There was no rush, as the hillsides were dark and quiet. She found dog tracks, clearly from a domesticated creature that didn’t think about leaving prints in a familiar place.

A human had rested here the night before, and Hyzanthlay could still smell the blood in his veins as much as the booze that had tainted his breath. There was no trace of smoke in the air. She touched her herb pouch and hoped he would appreciate their exchange.

Chapter 10, Gracie

Gracie was everyone’s favorite dog. She had four white feet, a brindle coat, and a dark, tapered face crowned by a very expressive pair of big brown eyes. Not only was she adorable, obedient and charming, but she was also quiet. The only thing that could rouse her was the sickly scent of the undead, and the people of Darkshire were grateful for such a creature.

Many believed the murder of the town’s nobles in nearby Karazhan had put a curse on them. Others said the taint had first begun when the town had been razed to the ground during the First War.

Her owner enjoyed his anonymity and appreciated that Gracie got most of the attention. Nobody in town knew him that well. He did not have a home in the town but enjoyed a semi-permanent room at the inn. It was well known that he would go wandering in Duskwood for days, hunting undead on behalf of the Night Watch. Gracie looked forward to their long treks and the adventures they brought.

The river that snaked along the northern border was quiet and gloomy, but Gracie could smell the clear air of humans and wildlife that roamed the opposite shore. Stormwind was not far away. The west recalled the smell of tilled earth and grain. Sometimes they walked south, where the scent of thick desert ferns and trolls would waft across an old covered bridge. Her master would commonly meet with a Troll or Tauren here to buy herb. Gracie had no quarrel with these creatures and did not raise her voice to them. All strangers were put at ease by the friendly animal’s innocent demeanor, and they spoke freely of their travels and the news they heard.

To the east, they did not go. The road wound from Darkshire to a crumbled tower known as Beggar’s Haunt. Beyond that the haunted winds of Deadwind Pass. Beggar’s Haunt had once been more than a lonely ruin. Only the tower was mostly intact, but part of a high garden wall and a few tombs were still visible above the tall grasses. A cemetery for nobles and princes, old and unkempt since the days of the first war. Being careful not to rouse the tower’s current inhabitants, sometimes Gracie would follow her Master here, where he would take some time to repose next to a small pond, once tended and filled with koi fish, now grown green with algae.

They were here one day when Gracie wandered away from her Master. He was a drinking man, and when he came here, he would take a flask out of his side pocket. It was always wrapped in a worn purple handkerchief. He never wept, but the way he clutched the cloth in one hand, and drank in labored sips, he seemed to be in pain. Gracie was always a bit worried for him during these times, but then he would fall into a peaceful sleep. She usually stayed by him, but those in the tower were different from the mindless undead in most of Duskwood.

Today, it was a curious new scent drew her away from his side, towards the dreaded tower.

* * *

I only want to know where Darkshire is. No, I don’t want any company. Yes, I will meet you in Booty Bay. No, I don’t know when.

This was part of the conversation that took place between Hyzanthlay and Eucalypto at the zeppelin landing at Grom Gol. The rogue was rather dejected; he wanted to take her to Duskwood personally.

“Not to say the area is dangerous, my dear, but…”

“You want to hunt humans, go ahead,” Hyzanthlay snarled.

“But you also hunt a human, do you not?”

Hyzanthlay whirled around swiftly, and in her sudden rage she might have struck Eucalypto had he not already disappeared, by far one of a rogue’s most annoying talents.

“You mind your business,” she snarled into the humid air. Without another word, she summoned her felsteed and galloped north into the jungle. She thought she saw Tiponi wave to her as she did, but she didn’t look back.

The Horde generally spoke more openly of what had happened in Andorhol. The Alliance forces, especially the human race, were still choked by the horror of the plague and the terrible betrayal of Prince Arthas. This was partly what drove the humans of Azeroth so fiercely against the undead.

Every race had been tainted by the Scourge, but no other kingdom except Lordaeron had suffered the same horrifying fate. Their lands corrupted and sour, the earth filled with fungus and putrid insects.

Their own bodies rotted and rent, unable to live and unable to die.

Like Hyzanthlay, and the residents of Beggar’s Haunt.

The road from Grom Gol snaked north through the jungle. Hyzanthlay avoided it. Dodging the wild animals in the jungle proved difficult, and a few times Hyzanthlay had to dismount and fight them off. She took note of some of the better fishing spots and resolved to return fairly soon. The insects and heat had no other affect on the Warlock, and she rode through the night.

There was a small Alliance outpost at the northern end of Stranglethorn Vale. Hyzanthlay was careful to cross the border in the dead of night and give it a wide berth, even though the outpost was too small even to have an inn and was no real threat to her. It crossed her mind that this human she was looking for might show his face anywhere between there or even in Booty Bay.

The border between Duskwood and Stranglethorn Vale was a deep ravine. An old covered bridge, covered with moss and vines, was the only passage across. Hyzanthlay could smell the rank odor of Dreadmist Ravine to the east. Not exactly displeasing. She paused for a moment before driving her demonic mount across the thick wooden planks that made up the quiet, mossy bridge.

Hyzanthlay found Duskwood to be quite pleasant. It was dark and dreary like Tirisfal Glades, but more forested and dotted with orchards and graveyards. The garrison from Stormwind did not patrol this far, and she roamed the woods and back roads with relative freedom. In its very heart glowed a strange green light that stank of Night Elf and something else.

Darkshire was more to the east, and she approached it carefully. There were a few citizen militias that patrolled the dark roads, but as she watched them quietly from the dark shadows she saw no-one with a dog. It only took a few hours to profile every inch of the small city. Hyzanthlay then moved on to the closest thing Duskwood had to a Horde sanctuary; Beggar’s Haunt.

Within spitting distance of the entrance to Dreadmist Ravine, easily within sight of the last few criminals that had been hung at the shadowy crossroads, the Forsaken were relatively safe here. But they were also isolated, and it had been some time since anyone had stopped by. They were quite taken by their new guest for a variety of reasons.

“And no less the warlock who slew Arugal!” Deathstalker Faustin saluted her with a flourish when she appeared and introduced herself. “Apothecary Zraedus will be delighted!”

The bottom floor of the ruined tower had been converted to a makeshift lab, where a proud member of the Royal Apothecary Society did most of his research. He greeted his guest with the usually formalities but did not hide his surprise.

“My dear lady, Hyzanthlay,” his orbs glittered with shock, and he lowered them with a bow, composing himself. “What brings you to Duskwood? We would think after your triumph in Shadowfang Keep and your recruitment into the Clan you would be serving the Dark Lady personally.”

“I admit, Strellabelle has aligned me with the Clan of the Fallen and I have all but accepted. But,” and she raised her hand dismissively, “I do not take their orders. My will is my own.”

“Oh, is it?” Zraedus seemed to take a keen interest in this. “Not even the Dark Lady herself, then, can bend you to her will?”

Hyzanthlay laughed quietly, sensing that the Apothecary was testing her loyalty. She had heard rumors about Zraedus’ self-imposed exile from the Undercity. He was a notable member of the Royal Apothecary Society but his allegiance to the Dark Lady was a tenuous one.

“If I have a guild, it is the Forsaken, and my guild mistress is Sylvanas. You, yourself, Zraedus, could have a place in Undercity next to Putress herself. And yet here you are, in this ruined tower, many miles hence.”

“Ah, Putress,” Zraedus smiled rather fondly. “So long since I’ve seen her dear rotted face! The Royal Apothecary Society has become a powerful force under her strict and relentless guidance. And you are also an alchemist with…shall we say, an independent spirit?”

Faustin and Zraedus nodded to each other silently, and Hyzanthlay sensed that something else had just happened.

“Come, the sun will be coming up soon. It doesn’t make much of a difference in Duskwood, but the shade in the tower is preferable. We have much more to discuss.”

* * *

Gracie sniffed along the overgrown path as the sun started to rise. She resisted the urge to charge along the path yelping at the top of her lungs. The air was thick with the smell of the undead. Normally the tower only had two inhabitants, but a third was among them and was staying for longer than just to ask directions. She could hear the rustle of excited whispers behind the heavy slate walls.

But there was something else that drew her; a soft, intricate kind of smell that was distinctly familiar. She couldn’t quite place it and that was a source of bitter consternation.

Carefully staying close to the ground, she raised her snout and took in as much air as she could. Her ears strained forward to catch any note that flitted by.

A sharp whistle startled her. The light was creeping over the dewy grass; her Master had arisen. In a flash, she had covered the distance between the tower and the path and was standing attentively by his side, her bright eyes and bushy tail a stark contrast to her rumpled master.

Jonathan had emerged from his drunken stupor slowly and achingly. He rubbed his neck and groaned. Sighing sadly, he replaced the cap on the now empty flask and carefully wrapped it up again. It occurred to him, as he slowly rose to his feet, that Gracie had wandered off. That was not so unusual, but he always hoped that she would not wander any closer to the tower. A quick whistle brought her back.

“Hm,” he exhaled and put a hand on her head, “you weren’t over by the tower, were you?”

Gracie’s only reply was filled with a dewy eyed and thoroughly innocent silence.

Jonathan sighed and stroked her fondly before pocketing the flask and strolling down the hill. Gracie tagged along behind, and he couldn’t help but notice she seemed preoccupied. He was a bit distracted himself. Althea would be asking where he had been.

It was still fairly early and not many of the villagers were awake. Jonathan thought he had crept successfully into the inn unseen, but he was just starting on his first cup of coffee when the Commander of the Night Watch marched into the inn and parked herself decisively across from him. Gracie sank to the floor, ears pressed against the sides of her face, anticipating what was about to happen.

“Where were you last night?” Althea asked angrily.

Jonathan sipped his coffee and lowered his eyes.

“Well, I…” He started to say, but was cut off.

“You were at the Tower again, weren’t you?” She said, her voice quiet but bitter.

“No, not…” Jonathan shifted uncomfortably and tried to hide behind the rim of his coffee cup, “not the whole night.”

Althea stared at him, her arms crossed tightly in front of her chest. After a few moments of angry silence she spoke again.

“All night you were up there alone? Do you really expect me to believe that?”

“No, of course not,” he laughed, oblivious to the anger in her voice, “Gracie was with me.”

“And so was she. Your true best friend!” Althea snarled and her hand thrust forward into the inside breast pocket of his jacket. She clutched the flask and yanked it out. The purple cloth fell to the floor between Gracie’s paws and the silver flashed in the morning light.

“Empty,” Althea sneered. “So, this is what you spend your nights with? Rather with this, instead of with me?”

Jonathan opened his mouth to answer but he was cut off again, this time by Gracie. She had started barking, and this usually meant only one thing. Althea dropped the flask and drew her sword. Two city guards who had been watching the scene with interest now lept to their feet. Althea signalled them outside. Jonathan had drawn a pistol from his side and was checking the powder, but then he took note of Gracie.

Yes, she was making enough noise to wake the dead in case there weren’t any walking around already. But her hackles were not raised, her tail was not erect and waving stiffly. She was not squinting or growling as she typically did when danger was nearby, but instead her eyes were wide open and filled with playful joy.

“Gracie?” Jonathan leaned closer, and the little dog spun and crouched as if to play. Her bark sounded like a laugh.

“Gracie!” He said again, this time more severely. “What is wrong with you?”

The dog abruptly stopped, but continued to fitfully wag her tail. She whimpered at him as if in apology, and then lay down. And that was when Jonathan saw the purple handkerchief lying on the floor in front of her.

She thrust her snout into it, looked at him imploringly, and barked once more.

Chapter 3, The Pools of Vision

Thus Hyzanthlay’s first voyage to Kalimdor began. On the whole, it was relatively brief but memorable. As her sarcastic friend had predicted, the bright sun and dry heat were not to her liking. In spite of this, she was pleasantly surprised to find that the harsh Barrens had a few isolated, dirty secrets that she could enjoy.

Refuge for an overworked Forsaken could be found in the leafy oases that surrounded the Crossroads. Every so often the pungent odor of centaur swept over the slimy, still water, driving away the more faint of heart. She gleefully hacked away at their numbers to prove her worth to the local Tauren.

After an entire camp had been raided and slaughtered, and her boots were sticky with horse blood, she boldly settled in an open, grassy, but shady vantage spot to fish. Her mere presence made the near feral horse-people nicker and gallop away in fear. But when the wind turned to a cool northern breeze, the reek of night elf wafted across the grass.

There were few undead here, but a fellow Forsaken and apothecary in the Crossroads had asked her to find him some fungal spores in the local wilderness and while she was at it, he recommended she try her hand at fishing.

“Not that you need to eat…food,” Apothecary Helbrim had explained, when she grimaced at him, “but cooking might suit you as well. And what sinks to the bottom can prove to be quite…useful.”

What drives away a night elf with disgust will lure the undead with fierce curiosity. The mire that covered the Forgotten Pools did indeed contain a myriad of useful junk, and Hyzanthlay was not too proud to trade even the most meager items for a few copper before heading to Thunder Bluff. Many vendors here were too happy to give her anything just to make her go away. She offered the friendly apothecary in the Crossroads her catch, thinking he could use it, but he recommended she keep it; “especially since you are an alchemist yourself.”

The sun was unbearable, and the meager shelter of the Crossroads offered little relief. The humble hamlet was little more than a transit point in the vast, rocky plain that stood between Kalimdor and Mulgore. Hyzanthlay’s natural undead hunch actually seemed to increase as she turned her head away from the blazing afternoon heat.

The inn, if it could even be called that, was a round, fat clay hut with a grass roof, identical to most of the buildings in town except slightly bigger. It was cool and dark inside, reminiscent of the Shallow Grave. Hyzanthlay wondered how soon she could return to Tirisfal Glades. Strellabelle had mentioned a place that needed more immediate attention, at the personal request of the Dark Lady and the Dreadlord Varimathras himself. They would meet again in a place called the Sepulcher, a Forsaken outpost near the lake. But that was some days away yet. She moved toward the smoking grill near the bar, which seemed to be the most active area at the moment.

The flames licked hungrily around the meat on the barbeque. The grizzle bubbled in angry protest. A troll customer licked her bright green lips and waved her tankard in the air as she spoke to the chef.

The Orc cook wielded a huge knife that he would occasionally turn on its side to use as a tenderizer. Bits of meat and bone would constantly fly from the cutting board to the ground, only to be quickly snapped up by the crocodile curled up on the rough floor. It looked upward constantly for the next morsel to fall, alternatively staring at its troll mistress for scraps. Sometimes she would grab a large bone, horn or hoof from the cutting table and carelessly let him have it. She cooed with adoration and bragged to the other patrons about her pet’s nasty disposition and boundless appetite.

Hyzanthlay felt a strange emptiness as she stared at the Hunter and her pet, and wished her imp wasn’t such a snivelling coward. She was comforted by the thought of summoning more powerful entities from the nether as her demonic knowledge increased.
She asked the cook, in her best Orcish, if he had fish on his menu, and if he didn’t, would he like add it?

“You keep the fish,” the Orc replied, regarding her with no surprise or disgust. “You buy this from me. I have good recipes.” He waved his bloody cleaver in the direction of the bar, where a disorganized shelf of supplies stood, including some scrolls. A few drops of gore dripped from the knife onto the crocodile’s face. It twitched happily in response.

The troll slammed down her mug. The she laughed and said;

“Don’t you hear what he say, that one good, this one bettah.” She reached into her bag and pulled out a scroll that didn’t look any different than the few the cook had tucked away behind the bar.

Hyanthlay respected the strength of the Orcs, but saw disdain in their eyes when she drew near to them. It was not so much a fear as a primal apprehension. Tauren’s regarded her in much the same way, but their dignified manner also hid deep pity and unspeakable horror. It was only when she spoke to Trolls that she found more of a profound understanding. Their deeply set eyes and yellow fangs make them more like demons themselves. They fearlessly worshipped the gods that Hyzanthlay and the rest of the Forsaken had met personally in the Land of the Dead.

“This has strong medicine,” she reached into Hyzanthlay’s pile of fish and grabbed a certain one. It looked a normal fish; its skin was dull grey and it was barely big enough to keep, but a dusting of small red flecks distinguished it. Turned to the light, it shone gold. The troll grabbed it and split it open with a little knife before tossing it on the fire with some herbs.

“They call it Deviate Fish,” the troll said. “This one priest from my village, they say he have powah, they say he strong medicine. And I go to his temple where he be. And he split me open and he eat me, eat me like a fish! How fierce be the troll gods when they hungry!”

The other patrons roared with approval at her sordid story. The trolls were famous for their lechery and lack of shame. The raw flesh spat and fizzled on the grill. Hyzanthlay curled her lip, appreciative of the tale in spirit but now dead inside to such longings.

The Troll laughed, and scooped up the barely seared fish. Another patron, also a Troll, boldly asked what she was taught in return for the offering of her body. In response, she picked the burning meat and gulped it down. In a puff of sparkling smoke, the troll was gone and in her place stood a human pirate! She smiled and laughed, sounding every bit like any comely lass in Goldshire. A roar of approval flooded the little inn, which had become more crowded as the afternoon waned. Hyzanthlay also enjoyed a long, husky laugh and clapped with appreciation. The disguise was a simple one that did not mask smell or fool animals, but the Alliance was a gullible lot and it would still have limited use.

“Now you be so ugly, you never learn no new recipe again,” another Troll jeered, a female with a yellow mohawk and a ring in her nose, clearly not impressed with her compatriot’s new appearance.

The warlock agreed. Humans, especially females, were so repulsive.

Hyzanthlay could see the tall grasses moving like waves in the moonlight as the zeppelin floated towards the Tauren capital city. Thunder Bluff hovered on four tall mesas above the windblown plains of Mulgore, starry and quiet in the night. The high mesas seemed to be even closer to the moon and stars, and shone just as brightly in the clear night.

From a distance, the Tauren capital of Mulgore might have been mistaken for a gnome or goblin city. The skyline was dotted with totems, the peaks of teepees and longhouses, but most prominent were the high towers and moving windmills. The lack of black smoke and mechanical noise in the air confirmed the difference.

The breezy wooden yurts and steady winds were ideal for the Tauren, but the Undead preferred the confinement of cold stone and stale air. Hyzanthlay had but a few errands to run before her return and she meant to be quick about it. The white light in the sky bore down on her like an unblinking eye and gave her no peace.

“I know he’s asleep,” Hyzanthlay said coldly to the young brave. “Wake him up.”

“I will not,” The Tauren warrior remained unmoved. “The Master rises early, and you will not wait long. You may find repose in The Pools of Vision, so your presence does not disturb our people.”

Hyzanthlay snarled in frustration, but there was little that could be done. She missed the sleepless denizens of Undercity, but they could only teach her so much. One thing she had already learned about the Tauren was they were well aware of their size and capacity for strength. They would not be moved, either from sentry duty or sleep.

There were few Undead in Thunder Bluff, much fewer than Orgrimmar, but a common interest in alchemy and herbalism was a common thread between the two races. Few Tauren ventured to the ravaged Tirisfal, but they knew of it, and saw the echoes of the Scourge appear in their own sacred lands, even a continent away. Hence Apothecary Zamah was allowed to carry out certain experiments and train the Forsaken that did find their way to Thunder Bluff; as long as they remained in the Pools of Vision, out of sight.

A brief chat with Zamah made Hyzanthlay forget her discomfort for the moment. The Pools of Vision were dark and eerie, and Hyzanthlay lingered for a while with her fellow Forsaken. Every one of them was there to train or research, with one notable exception, a rather sour creature named Clarice.

“It was my name in life,” she said, and Hyzanthlay was surprised. Here was yet another undead creature who had greeted her by referring to their former life. She certainly could not remember her own human name and was rather glad of it. She asked for an explanation regarding her clothing; her robes were untarnished, unstained, but faded with age and decorated with regalia of the Scarlet Crusade.

“As I’ve heard of you, Hyzanthlay, and what you did to the Crusade in Tirisfal Glades, I am honored to tell you.”

With no small amount of bitterness and animosity, Clarice recounted her last few weeks of life.

She described the depth of her faith, her adherence to the strict tenets of the Crusade, and her loyalty as a wife to a well known crusader. Most of her time had been spent serving the Crusade and learning only their wisdom.

When her husband left her to fight the Scourge, she ignored the pain in her heart and the feelings of anger and regret. She described her burial rites after succumbing to plague shortly after his war-torn body was interred in a nearby family plot, each funeral a feast of white flowers and frightened, drawn faces. Even snickering as she described how she had to lie still while they dressed her and laid her in a stone coffin, waited patiently until the mourners had left, before rising from her family crypt to the modest plot where her husband lay.

“I only stopped long enough to desecrate the headstone,” she snarled. “I heard his platoon reached the outskirts of Loaderon before they were cut down. Such a devoted fool in life, the both of us, Yuriv and I!”

Stillness fell over the Pools at the end of Clarice’s story. The dawn was coming.
“Always second,” she muttered angrily, “always second to his blasted duty and that bitch Abbendis. You have business in the Sepulcher, the site of my family’s tomb. Yuriv’s tomb is a modest one, closer to the cemetery entrance. I cannot bear to return; the thought of the place enrages me. Return this to his tomb.”

Clarice pressed a humble silver locket into the warlock’s hand, and said, “Do not think on your former life. Humans are the true scourge, Hyzanthlay, and it is evident that your hate for the Crusade runs as deep as mine.”

Hyzanthlay thanked the fellow Forsaken for her wisdom before returning to the Weapons Master. As she stood before the tent, waiting for the old bull to rouse himself, the dead woman’s words rang in her head.

That bitch Abbendis.
Your hate for the Crusade.
Do not think on your former life.

Hyzanthlay smiled, feeling her resolve strengthen. Clarice had certainly given her good advice. But she would not be able to take it.