archmageofazeroth:
“You might be surprised, at that. I’ve experienced more adventure in the past year than many are fortunate enough to see in a lifetime.”
Lothar is a guarded man, normally, but this night his emotions play like sunlight over his face, each shadow and highlight distinct, undiluted by anything so mundane as propriety. Not that Khadgar was one to demand such things… the smile he hadn’t felt curve his lips faded as that shadow fell over the warrior again, the memory of those fallen too close, too real, even with the insulation alcohol could offer.
“But no,” the mage agrees, drinking again with a grimace. Special reserve his glowing magical arse. If he survived the night he would have words with the Innkeeper. “Not lenient. Unyielding would be closer to the truth. They do not evolve, they do not care to look beyond their own and they do not change.” Sighing as he watched Lothar drain another tankard, he continued, hopeful if nothing else he might distract the other man for a time.
“You have noticed I left them, I presume. They certainly don’t see eye to eye with me on such matters. Tradition has its value, but turning your back to the world when it no longer fits into the box you’ve carved for it makes no sense at all.” Glancing down again, he caught a glimpse of his reflection in the dark brew and was surprised, as always, that he looked so much younger than he felt. “Now, they have no choice… change is coming, and with it a new order. There will never be another Guardian.”
“You might not be there anymore,” Anduin offers, with all the gravitas a drunk man can muster, not quite meeting Khadgar’s eyes before they return to his drink, “but some things we never really leave behind. You would not be who you are today without the Kirin Tor, yes?”
He doesn’t particularly wait around for an answer to the question, shrugging it away. His gaze is stubbornly fixed on nothing in particular on the other side of the room, away from the young mage. No, there will never be another Guardian. Medivh had been proof enough that even the best of men were vulnerable to that which none could predict, could foresee. There’s only a handful of people in the world who truly understand why there will be no successor to Medivh.
Nobody understands better than the two men sitting at this bar.
The last mouthful of the drink is drained down briskly, the tankard pushed away from himself. He waves off the barkeep, refusing - at least for now - the next in a chain of drinks that has been crossing the bar steadily all evening. He’s good and drunk now, will be worse when he stands, and maybe that’s enough.
He’s wobbling between the line of drunk enough to forget and drunk enough to care too much, to break down to tears, to scream and shout and rail against the unfairness of it all. He won’t let himself fall to that, not with Khadgar here to see him.
The younger man looks at him too much like he’s worth more than that. It’s a heavy weight to live up to, but he feels compelled.
He turns, leans his elbows onto the bar so that he’s surveying the half-empty taproom with a sort of bored indifference, gaze not wandering for long before it’s fixed back on Khadgar, thoughtful.
“Did you have friends?” The question is sudden, unsubtle. “I’ve heard you talk about a lot of books like they were lovers. But never any names, no old friends, no companions. Were you really so alone?”













