IC Blog for Tumblr RP character Morollan Twilightveil, Kaldorei Druid. Character located on Hydraxis. OoC Blog is @ma-at-thought Banner by @celestial-petal
Kristin Grannas Disabled Vet Lost His House Thanks to some sketchy banking practices, we're on the verge of homelessness.Get to know us!Tomas Henderson was i
PLEASE REBLOG!
That charming one-legged man is my father-in-law, a disabled war vet. He recently lost his home; the bank foreclosed without notifying us and a 3rd party bought it.
I’m raising whatever funds I can so we can either make an offer to buy back the house, or put a down payment on another (smaller and not handicap accessible, likely) house.
If we don’t do one of those things (plus pay lawyer fees) within about 30 days, we’re on the street. Please donate if you can; otherwise, please spread the information; a wider audience can make a huge difference!
Crows normally walk. This one seems to have both legs working, so he’s not hopping out of necessity, he’s doing it for fun. Corvids can sometimes be seen doing things like this for no evident reason other than enjoyment.
This is our kind of Black Friday. Mystique the melanistic Amur leopard is a striking ambassador for her critically endangered species. Learn all about our black beauty. 🖤
Morollan sat on the edge of a kitchen chair, bouncing his knee with impatience, holding an unsipped cup of tea in one hand. The tea had little waves in it from the Druid's jitters. "We have to do something…"
"We are doing something," Laereth replied in a low growl that was not directed at his long-time friend. He stood at the kitchen table that had been abruptly turned into a war strategy center, with a large map of upper Kalimdor on it, held from rolling itself up with salt and pepper shakers. It looked so out of place in the spotless, cozy kitchen that it was absurd. "They were attempting to take Lor'danel, you said?" Morollan nodded mutely, staring down at his tea as if just realizing it was there. "There's been plenty of time for any reinforcements that could make it to be there already. Probably only the fleet from Darnassus." He tsked softly; even with the impressive fleet that the Night Elves could send out, from what he'd heard of the Horde numbers, it wouldn't be enough. They'd just board the Darnassian ships and sail back to the Great Tree. From there, if they could sack the city, the Horde would have control over Kalimdor.
The Spellbreaker had to admit that the tactics displayed so far were close to brilliant. He eyed the area of Lor'danel, lips pursed. "If I were her," he murmured, talking to himself, "I'd find a way to bring in troops from north or east." Morollan perked his long ears, listening. "Can't use a dirigible; the tree cover in Felwood and along the mountains is too dense to be able to aim well, and they have to know there are hippogryphs in the air by now. Surprise would be spoiled. Can’t come in by sea; the Night Elves will be ready for that with their fleets. So… over the mountains."
"What good does that do?" Morollan hated the crack in his voice, and he started jiggling both knees, nearly vibrating with tension. "I need to go there, to do something…" Fresh tears welled up but he brushed them irritably away with the back of his hand. Mourning could come later.
"And you're not going to go there alone." Laereth's tone was confident. Laereth himself wasn't confident at all; the plan forming in his head was extremely risky. But it was all he had; his two hundred soldiers wouldn't be able to make even a dent in the Horde forces, and doing that would make him the Horde's next target. "By now.. Morollan, you have to realize, by now Lor'danel has fallen," he said softly to his purple-haired compatriot.
Morollan bit his lower lip and reluctantly nodded, setting down the well-shaken cup of tea before he had a chance to spill it. "I know," he whispered, thinking of all the noncombatants that lived there, the shopkeepers, the craftsmen, the children. "Where.. does that leave us?" He looked up again at Laereth, hoping for some brilliant plan.
"Well… I'm going to send a page to round up Kerythian, and she's going to scry to see what sort of state Darnassus is in. If it's occupied by the full Horde forces, I'm afraid there's nothing to be done. But if the Horde hasn't made its way to the top of the tree yet, we can assist with evacuation."
"How?" Brows furrowed, Morollan peered at Laereth incredulously.
"Let that alone for a moment, until we figure out what the state of Darnassus is."
"You're part of the Horde," Morollan muttered, and Laereth crinkled his nose with a bit of distaste. The Horde had been fine under Thrall, been alright under Vol'jin, but under Sylvanas it was unacceptable. "What do you think they're going to do."
"Eh.. with the Horde, there are two options. Burn it or put spikes on it. I'm guessing spikes; they'll want to occupy the city to have full control over Kalimdor and disrupt trade and travel for Alliance vessels. There will probably be a good deal of death, my friend… but they'll also take prisoners. Under other circumstances I would hope that they wouldn't harm children, but it appears they've harmed plenty already. So much for Orcish "honor."
"So what will we do?" Morollan got out of the chair he'd been jittering in, walking over to look sadly down at a map that would need to be redrawn.
Laereth rolled broad shoulders in a slow shrug. "We put together a small strike-team of stealthy sorts --I employ a good number of those-- and we go in, try to rescue who we can, and get out as quickly as possible."
"We're not going to be able to save Darnassus, are we?" It wasn't really a question anymore. But the Druid still needed to actually hear it.
A shake of his head made sleep-mussed crimson hair slide along his shoulders. "If they got reinforcements over the mountains, no. We might be able to evacuate those two little towns you told me about; the Horde might not care about them… hell, know about them yet." Morollan nodded slowly; at least there was that little hope of saving someone. "I'll be right back; I have to find a runner to fetch the mage."
With that, Laereth turned and headed outside through the kitchen door, peering around until he spotted one of the youths in crimson robes. A gesture brought the boy over, a young lad just entering adolescence. A few quick words and the youth was running off in search of the mage that Laereth employed as a sort of secretary. Like much of what was in Laereth's life, there was far more than what was shown on the surface with his "secretary."
When he came back in, Morollan was slumped in a chair at the kitchen table, staring forlornly at the map. The Druid looked up at Laereth, but no emotion besides deep sorrow was in his eyes. The Spellbreaker made no effort to console him; there was nothing he could say and he knew it. This grief would simply have to run its course.
After about ten minutes of miserable quiet and staring at a map, a woman breezed into the kitchen with a small smile, black hair done up neatly in a bun, gray and white robes elegant and wrinkle-free. Kerythian liked to be tidy. Her smile faded as she saw the map, and she glided over to peer down at it. "Are we invading Darkshore?" It was light-hearted, meant as a joke, but the two men gave her grim looks. "..wait. Seriously, we're invading Darkshore?"
"The Horde is. Or rather, it has." Laereth poured a cup of tea and handed it to the slender mage. "I didn't hear about it until now. Guess House Bloodhawk wasn't invited to the party," he said with a droll smirk; the most likely reason he wasn't invited was because the Blood Elves of authority knew full well that he would heartily disapprove of such an action. Perhaps a change in leadership was required… Laereth pushed that thought to the back of his mind, to be pondered later. "Can you scry on Darnassus so we can figure out what the situation is?" He frowned a little, tilting his head. "And could you make a portal there? Because if you can't, this is all pointless."
Kerythian's dark green eyes widened. "You want to go to Darnassus." At Laereth's simple nod, she shook her head. "Seems like a terrible idea. Let's get started."
Laereth awoke with a start, squinting into the darkness of his room as though he'd expected to wake somewhere else. His heartbeat was slowing down from the rapid thudding it had raced along at while he dreamed, and now a frown creased his face as he tried to recall what he had seen in sleep. There was nothing, dreams already turned to wisps that faded from memory. Nothing but the sense of restlessness, of low-key anxiety.
He was… unsettled. Something was wrong, but he couldn't figure out what. The Spellbreaker rolled out of bed and stretched for a moment, brow furrowing at the mild ache in old scars that had become more frequent of late, then tugged on snug leather pants of a deep wine red and stuffed his feet into plated boots. He grabbed his chainmail and pauldrons by their straps and hastened his noisy way downstairs.
Nothing seemed wrong in the house. Glancing outside, all he saw were the shadows of long, low buildings that acted as barracks for his not-quite-sanctioned army. No invasion, no battle, no fires. Everything was peaceful and that irritated him even more. Something is wrong, every instinct insisted, and yet he couldn't find it. Muttering direly under his breath, he shrugged on the light chainmail half-shirt, wide brown straps making an X across his bare chest, then fastened the pauldrons to the latches on those straps. Gauntlets were tugged on. With every donning of a piece of armor, that fluttering trepidation seemed to grow stronger until he had to resist the urge to pace.
He decided to turn that restless energy into action; a foot patrol of the manor grounds wouldn't hurt. Perhaps he'd even find what was bothering him so much. Laereth stalked toward the door, picking up his round shield by one of the grips on the edge. Were it not for his supreme reflexes that told him to back up a step, that door would have bashed into him when it was flung open with excessive force to bang against the wall like a gunshot.
Laereth found himself staggering backward further, shocked, as Morollan half-stalked, half-stumbled through the doorway, shoving hard at the Blood Elf's chest, forcing him back into the entryway. He was too stunned to even put up a fight, though the claws that currently tipped his Night Elf friend's fingers were drawing blood where the chainmail didn't protect. "Morollan, what the-"
"Did you know?! Did you know and just decided not to tell me? DID YOU KNOW?" Morollans voice hummed with a growl, though with nearly every other word, it was cracked by grief. Silver eyes glistened with unshed tears, though by the glinting tracks down his cheeks, several had been shed already. Just a detail glimpsed between each hard shove until his back was against the wall.
Lacking his voice for the moment, Laereth just shook his head, sending crimson hair swaying down his back. Never had he seen Morollan like this, not in battle against enemies, not in horror at war-torn earth, not at witnessing the goblin-fueled destruction of pristine wilderness. He was the calm of spring rain, the nurturing of summer sun, the playfulness of falling autumn leaves. Not this…tear-streaked tragedy. The look in those silver cat-like eyes was beyond sane grief.
He managed to catch his breath and drop the shield with a clang so he'd have both hands free. It wouldn't be long before soldiers came to see what all the ruckus was, and he wanted a calmer companion when they arrived. With the next shaky shove, he grabbed Morollan's wrists tightly enough to grind the small bones together, using pain to make light appear in the Night Elf's eyes. "Morollan. What happened."
It was as though Morollan were one of Ji's puppets and the strings were suddenly cut. He dropped to his knees and sagged, shoulders rocking with silent sobs. He gasped for air as though he'd forgotten to breathe since the moment he'd slammed the door open, shuddering and placing his hands in front of his knees for balance, to keep himself from simply falling over.
Ignoring the blood that dripped down his chest --those unsheathed claws were sharp!-- Laereth dropped to one knee, kneeling in front of his friend, and pushed at his shoulders to try and get him a little more upright, a little more stable. Whatever was going on, this was what made instinct wake him. "Morollan. I need you to talk so I can help. What happened?"
Drawing a shuddering breath, Morollan slowly looked up from under strands of disheveled purple hair, appearing helpless as a child. It made Laereth wince a little, to see his confident and playful friend in such condition, and he squeezed the Night Elf's shoulders firmly, needing him to explain what happened. Laereth was not about to let whatever put his friend in this state go without ample payback.
"Y-you.. you swear you d-didn't know?" He stared up at Laereth with hopeful, earnest eyes, needing to believe that has friend had nothing to do with.. with it. He let out a heavy sigh when the Blood Elf slowly shook his head, sincerity showing in his emerald gaze. Sincerity and a certain restlessness, a need to take some sort of action.
"The Horde.. Sylvanas…" Morollan trained off, choking up for a moment.
Laereth stared at Morollan, emerald eyes narrowing to mere slits at the mention of the very loathed "Warchief". "Sylvanas… what?"
"Astranaar… it started in Astranaar…" Morollan took a shuddering breath, then started to speak with a false calmness that left silvery eyes staring at nothing. "Astranaar is gone. Everyone was killed. Even the children."
Laereth blinked, for a moment unable to wrap his mind around the idea. Also unable to be comfortable with that blank look in Morollan's eyes. He opened his mouth to say something --though he wasn't certain what-- when the Night Elf spoke again.
"Then they marched through Darkshore… they just kept coming. Shan-do brought a wall of wisps to buy time, but they managed to get through it. When I left, they were about to take Lor'danel…"
Laereth frowned, brow furrowing as he considered this information with his ever-running tactical mind. Mentally, he made a map of northern Kalimdor and followed the line of the Horde's apparent march. "Lor'danel.. that sounds famil- Fuck, it's a port city." Suddenly all the pieces crashed home, and Morollan looked up at Laereth with defeated eyes, knowing that Laereth had figured out what the plan of the Horde was. The Spellbreaker spoke with quiet trepidation. "They're going to take Darnassus…"