Winds of the North
Like many times in their long undeath, when they finally ran into each other, it was surrounded by the dead.
Aegnas walked back and forth through the small graveyard outside of Darkshire, running his hand over the name on each headstone. He peered to look at each name after the dirt was dislodged from the stone. He was looking for a particular name, but he had no idea which of the many graveyards in Duskwood held the mage...or whether he was elsewhere entirely. There were also a great many graves outside of Karazhan itself that would have held those important to the sorcerer Medivh...
Jairius didn't bother hiding his approach. Bane's armor and reins jingled, Jairius's armor made a heavy noise as he dismounted, and his heavy footfalls approached Aegnas directly. It was like approaching a spectre of his past. There, looking over tombstones as if it were an afternoon shopping in Stormwind, was the elf who'd pushed him sometimes harder than Instructor Razuvious himself. The one whose body he'd seen crushed and broken at the foot of the citadel amidst the bones of the frostwyrm he'd been riding. The one whose blades Jairius's brother Aradrius now possessed. He reached up to grasp the hilt of his sword, then forced himself to let go. Perhaps Aegnas would be reasonable.
Aegnas's ear twitched and he looked behind him as Jairius grew closer. Then his eyes narrowed. "You know better than to pursue me alone, Jairius, even on the Master's orders. Don't think I won't send you back to him in pieces if you interfere."
In response, Jairius tapped the tabard he wore over his armor, black with a golden tree, the same symbol Aely wore over her armor. "I'm not here on his orders, Aegnas. He's been dead here a long time. The Helm has been destroyed now for years, so I don't even answer to his successor."
Aegnas stopped short at that, looking Jairius over again more closely at that. Unlike the energy he'd felt from a distance from the blades that were unmistakably his but not, the blade Jairius bore was well fed...better even than the one Jairius bore in his own timeline, where living opponents were becoming more and more rare as time went on. The armor was new, ornate, but it accentuated how much wider and more physically powerful the human was than his elven counterpart. There were lines on Jairius's face that didn't exist on the one from his timeline, lines of worry, of stress, that the knight dedicated to Arthas's domination didn't face. Aegnas narrowed his eyes. This was Jairius, but not. "I...see. If you're not here on his order, then whose order are you here on? I know you, Jairius. I can't believe even an alternate version of you would live without serving someone."
"I help protect Duskwood, Aegnas. Among other places. The world is a different place than it was when the Master lost in Northrend. We have no shortage of enemies." Jairius eyed Aegnas carefully. The elf paced back and forth in front of him like a hungry tiger, and Jairius realized that was exactly what he was. Hungry, caged, like a beast. Behaving for now, but barely, as his appetite and boredom grew. "That's something I thought you would have figured out by now."
"Perhaps I did. But with your own people so lost and pathetic, do you expect me to hunt the dregs that they should be feeding from when I don't require such frequent engagements? Besides, I want a meal, not the pathetic things sneaking about here. I want to fight. I want to watch someone fight for their life and think they've won, only to realize their life is spilling out onto the cold ground as the Plague ravages their body."
Jairius looked beyond him to the cluster of graves. "I know you didn't come to a graveyard for that, Aegnas. What are you doing here?"
Aegnas looked over his shoulder at the graves. Each name cleaned off and visible. None of them the correct one. "I'm looking for someone. I need a time rift sealed, and I can't find the dragon who was doing it. I know there were powerful sorcerers around here, attracted to Medivh and his father. I have names from records in the town hall. I just need to find them. And force them to help. I'm not going back, Jairius. Given the choice...I like not being a puppet. It's been a very, very long time since I was alone with my thoughts, without his voice spurring me on in the back off my mind, and I find I love the silence."
Jairius eyed the elf carefully. Aegnas was as serious as he'd ever seen him. And different. Something was... "The Torch has freed your mind, at least for the time being. Is that it?"
"I think so. That's what Sascha said. I should be angry, but I didn't even know that was possible. I suppose I should have been paying better attention when Lord Uther told us all things were possible with the Light." He smirked. Typical of him. He also drew his runeblades and raised them to a ready position. Not defensive, no. Ready to attack, pure offense. Just as he did in that long ago time when they both served the Lich King.
Jairius didn't draw his blade, no matter how much all of his instincts demanded he answer the unspoken challenge. "I suppose we'll find out how genuine you are, then. Know this, Aegnas. If you betray anyone in Duskwood, I will not rest until I rip out your heart. And I think you understand now, based on Duskwood's unique characteristics, just how much I mean that threat."
Aegnas just raised an eyebrow and smirked. "Frostsworn. Do you still go by that name?"
Jairius froze. "...yes. Yes I do."
"And do you mean it? Would you take orders, if they were given genuinely?"
Jairius sighed. "I'm very different, now, Aegnas. But yes. As long as you mean no harm to those under my protection, I will be content to follow your lead. I'm sure Adahlissa will be happy to have you at our hearth."
Aegnas smirked. "Very well. Help me find this mage. I want this time rift sealed before he sends someone for me for real. But we also have a tournament to attend. I don't wish the locals to think me ungrateful."













