Faerran
[ original ]
Faerran braced himself against the gust, batting away at loose leaves and twigs as they caught in his hair. His latest experiment was wilting before his eyes, shedding the foliage that had given him so much hope over the last week.
He watched as another trail of leaves fell from the stalks and vines and were scattered to the wind. He could only sigh at the sight. For the third time in the month he had been there, he watched all of his work literally die right in front of him. He couldn’t bear it any longer.
Dropping to his knees, his fingers gripped the earth, clawing into the dirt as if to clutch at someone’s shirt. Why? The only word in his mind was that same constant, burning question.
Why had all of his efforts been for naught? Why was he able to do absolutely nothing? Why could he not bring life back to this place the way it had meant to be?
It was nothing like the other places he had heard of. The Plaguelands of the Eastern Kingdoms this was not. There was no rot or scourge to fight and steal away life from the land. Nor was this the Barrens, where far more stubborn druids than himself were seeking to supplant desert with life.
But this was Ashenvale. Here there was still so much life around him. There was nothing to stop it, nothing to fight it. But here the simple rules he learned in his youth, the very things he had known to be immutable were somehow not true. That life would always find a way.
The ground shifted under his hands, sinking away from him. His heart sunk as his eyes burned. The dirt was unstable. He could feel the whispers course through his fingers, the voice of the forest as it rejected something against the natural order.
He hated to admit it but he knew it was true. He had cheated. He had rushed, used whatever he could call on to move dirt and coil vines to keep it there. Despite everything he knew would fight it, he had his ideas still to shape the land how he saw it.
How he remembered it.
Surely this was how it should be. He had seen it with his own eyes. He had walked it in the Emerald Dream. It had to be true. It was the only memory he had. How else could it be? What else could be right but that perfect image he had dreamt?
In the corner of his eyes, he saw a wisp appear from behind a tree. It almost seemed lost at first, seeming to examine everything around it before taking off in a flash of light towards him. As it flew past, the ground under him shook once more. Getting to his feet, he quickly backed away, understanding all at once.
It was his answer, though one he didn’t want to admit to himself. It never would have worked. The plants there would never have everything they needed, struggling to eke out an existence on uneven ground where the water would not naturally flow. Even if the ground settled, everything else around it would suffer trying to keep the balance.
The wisp knew. It was restoring that balance.
Standing with his shoulders low, he brought his eyes to the spirit and nodded. “I thought it was worth trying.”
The breeze carried the faintest sound to his ears, that of distant chimes. Even without words, he heard. The wisp seemed to nod back before disappearing, flying with the wind as quick as it came.
Looking around, his vision was double. Even as he saw the holes, the gaps, the scars left behind by the cataclysm the Destroyer; he could still see that dream. The visage he spent so many years within still lingered, taunting him with glimpses and pulling at him with regret.
And that was the answer. He could guide and tend life, but he couldn’t move the earth, he couldn’t add what simply would not be there again. What he knew was how things should have been, but not how they would ever be again.
The hole in his heart ached as the countless years spent in the dream flooded back, his vision now showing a cruel reflection of himself. The gaps and holes were at once so familiar, resonating with his own past, with time that could never be reclaimed or filled. So much time spent looking at something that would never be…
The land itself whispered a harsh lesson to him, but true for more than just the earth beneath his feet. There was no going back.
To mend his beloved Kalimdor, and himself, he could not just fill. The things he sought to fix could not be undone. All he could do was hope to cultivate something new.
All at once the weight of everything pulled at him at once. Letting out a heavy sigh, he rolled his shoulders and wondered. Maybe there was another way. A better way to weave life back into the world.
At that moment, he didn’t know what that way was or where he could learn it, but he knew it was out there. It had taken hold in some untouched part of his heart and tugged.
And faintly, it pulled him forward.











