“ You would know better than I if there were. ”
A raised eyebrow accompanies the passing glance, but if he is inclined to more than that, the motivation never quite crosses his features, the same careful disposition held in place.
It’s a strange conclusion to reach, considering, but Arator expects nothing less than an attempt to displace the bitter seeds sown between their orders.
“ On the contrary. I’ll leave the nefarious plans to you. ”
Without missing a beat, he gestures ahead to the teleportation module, those gathering around sporting regalia for every organization to stand in defiance of the Legion’s pursuit. Would that it could be like this always, this unity. “ We could trade theories, but I think our time is best spent preparing to leave. ”
Her smile widens sharply at his own little jab and she rolls her eyes skyward before dutifully turning on her heel and skulking toward the module, its crowd. Some of the faces she recognizes, and there’s a hollow weight in her chest as she notes the ones she does not, sees the spaces they have filled that had once belonged to people she knew.
So many lost. So much unnecessary destruction. And so many more will be lost here - so many of those faces, those gazes which linger too long upon the looming brilliance of Azeroth - shall never again breathe her air, touch her soil. They’re going to die, bloody and broken and ruined, on this shattered husk of a slaughtered world, and there’s still so great a chance that their (our?) sacrifices shall be for naught.
She dwells on it a moment too long, realizes only after she opens her mouth to bite back at the paladin that it’s too late to say anything along that vein without seeming... strange. The plans would have to remain hers for the time being.
“You telling me you can’t walk and talk at the same time?” It’s a weak response, she knows, but perhaps less weak than total silence. “The hell kinda operation is your Highlord running?”