[RP] Just Another War
Tuesday August 9 Bladefist Bay
Taz shuffled aboard the landing craft, shouldering his way to the head of the green and gold tabarded contingent that was this vessel’s vanguard. Three days ago, the thought of being near the ocean—of being on a ship—would have been unspeakably terrifying, but as it was, that was quite low indeed on the list of things that were currently loosening his bowels.
Perhaps first on the list were the voices and faces behind him—so many, and so many that were so very, very young. And so many that wouldn’t be coming home; that would scream their lives out in agony, begging for their mothers, on the loa-forsaken rock ahead of them.
He knew that sound well. And he knew hearing it again would break him.
I beg you Papa Samdi, please…if you do nothing else this day, please, please, please, give me no more ghosts to carry today. They’re so heavy, and I can’t bear any more of them.
He reached above him, snagging a handhold as the vessel crashed through another wave. They must be getting close now. He glanced to his side, and shared a quick smile and nod with an old, long bearded orc beside him. He knows, Taz thought. Her too, seeing the large elderly tauren looming over his other shoulder. In fact, he noted with grim satisfaction, all the soldiers around him were near his age, or even older; all of them had slowly, quietly migrated towards the front of the vessel and stood together in a steadfast, silent agreement: when the ship’s door dropped, and the charge onto the beach began, it would not be the young ones behind them that would take those first initial, deadly volleys.
Almost as if the thought had conjured the event, the vessel slammed to a halt. There was a moment of abject, absolute silence, and then light flooded into the troop compartment, and the world exploded. The orc kept pace as Taz drew his glaive and leapt off the ship, bypassing the ramp entirely. He cried out, hitting the ground behind a small berm as a fireball roared by him, singing his arm and nearly causing him to drop his weapon. “GOR’WATHA! BRAH BRAH OI OI OI!”
And yes! There they were—Juzmik leading the river of green and gold that began flooding out of the ship. There was no plan, no time to communicate, no time even to count heads or mourn the noble, elderly tauren lying at the base of landing craft, fel fire still sizzling where her head had once been. There was only time to run, sprint, to follow the Warchief as he charged forward, and to pray to every loa he knew in the hopes that Vol’jin would spend their lives dearly, and well.
A shove from behind, and a wild, gesture filled shout from Juzmik, and Taz was charging up the ridgeline, cutting his way through demons and things worse than demons (I didn’t think there could be things worse than demons…) to try and prevent the swarm of fel beings from encircling the Wathans that had moved higher up. He flew between the flanking creatures, stepping through shadows from one to another in a silent dance of steel and loa’s magic.
“GET BACK! GET BACK GET BACK FALL—“
An arrow slammed into Taz’s back and he fell to a knee—demon arrow, Horde arrow, Alliance arrow, it didn’t matter. Is this where I stop? he wondered, almost outside of himself. Is this where I can lay down and—
“Warchief!”
The icy, terrifying voice startled him back into himself, and the word jerked his attention to the top of the ridge. Sylvanas had called for the Warchief. But he wasn’t there. Why wasn’t Vol’jin—
And then he saw him, half blind, tusk cracked, sprawled limp on the ground—the only father he had ever needed or wanted.
“WARCHIEEEEEEEEF!” the scream tore from his throat, and it burned far brighter than the fire on his arm or the arrow in his back. He started back up the hill without thinking, slashing demons aside, punching, kicking, casting—anything that would make them move move MOVE GET OUT OF MY WAY!
Sylvanas had him now—she had Vol’jin! She was going to—
Taz stumbled towards them with a roar that was lost in the cacophony of the battle, vaguely intending to—what? Slay the Banshee Queen? Far better than him had tried, but it didn’t matter; all that mattered was Vol’jin, all that mattered was that she had her hands on him—!
A horn pierced the air—a retreat! He whirled wildly, looking for Gor’Watha, looking for his boys—
And Juzmik’s voice cut through his desperation, as the young man screamed across the field. “I GOT DIS! I GOT DEM! GO!”
It was like releasing the chain of a rabid, slavering dog. Taz turned, and sprinted—damn the arrow, damn his arm, damn the Alliance and damn the demons—he sprinted after the horse that had taken his Warchief away. Ghostly things were around him suddenly; terrible, chilling things lifting the bodies of the dead and dying—but he was used to ghosts; he was used to ignoring them. And nothing, no thing dead and no thing living, would stop him from reaching Vol’jin. Nothing.
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The ride back was a nightmare. He was in the right ship, he knew that much, but the Elite Headhunters wouldn’t let him out of the hold that was carrying the wounded, and no amount of credentials from the Spear would convince them to let him pass. So he waited in the darkness, pacing when pain allowed and lying when it didn’t, listening to the cries and moans of children who wouldn’t live to see the shores of their homeland again.
He was first off the ship when it docked, stumbling down the pier and towards the city. They wouldn’t take the Warchief to the clinic, not the public one; too dangerous; Vol’jin wasn’t stupid and neither was Sylvanas. There was only one impenetrable place in the city, designed to keep out anything and everything that might attempt to breach it—and that was the Hold itself.
He threw on the tabard of Vol’jin’s Spear, the one he wore almost as proudly as Gor’Watha’s; blood soaked through almost instantly, but he was far beyond caring. He joined the throng outside of the Hold, shoving his way through the mob of people clamoring to be let in, clamming to know, clamoring for protection, and just clamoring.
The poor guards trying to sort through the mess never had a chance. Between the blood and his tabard, Taz disappeared—not with shadows or with the loa’s magic this time, but in the way that only a uniformed man in a crowd of uniformed men can. He entered the Hold between two other far more important looking soldiers, and immediately melted into a dark corner, watching, and listening.
Vol’jin was dying.
Taz had seen death enough to know when it would be claiming someone—and Bwonsamdi’s presence permeated the room. Though always fearful, the loa’s presence was secondary; all Taz could do was stare at the Warchief’s face…into Vol’jin’s blind right eye, and shattered tusk.
He’s going to leave us, The thought occurred to him a split second before the Warchief announced it himself, and it was all Taz could do to remain silent and motionless and he lurked in the shadows. He wanted to rage, to scream, to cling to the Warchief’s knee and beg him not to go, to draw his glaive on Bwonsamdi himself if it would buy Vol’jin another hour, another minute, just one more breath. But the loa’s amused laughter, echoing in his head suddenly and with more finality than a thunderclap, quashed such thoughts instantly.
Vol’jin was dying. And there was nothing in this world or the other, no battle, no deal and no sacrifice, that could stop it.
The Warchief’s words washed over him like a warm embrace, and it wasn’t the weakness, or the coughing, or even the words themselves he was really hearing…it was his voice, the voice, the voice of his beloved leader’s son, who had grown into the greatest leader Taz had ever known in his own right; the voice of a troll who, if Taz could be a fraction, just one small piece, of what Vol’jin was, someday, he would enter the spirit world with no regrets left behind him.
And then the spark that was the life of his Warchief went out.
He felt it go, tried to cling to it as it extinguished, as the room around him erupted into chaos. But he couldn’t. He couldn’t.
He stared at the throne, now empty, for a long time, finally sinking to the ground when his knees would no longer hold. He wasn’t the only one, of course; he couldn’t help but be aware of the icy chill of her presence as she too stared at the throne that was now hers. She turned on her heels abruptly, and walked out of the room with features frozen and head high. And if the Banshee Queen—if his Warchief — spared the troll quietly sobbing in the shadows a glance on her way out, neither of them remembered.









