Looking back on these episodes, I fear that I am being unfair to the
Orsisi. Their once-fearsome
warrior culture is only now emerging from the lean centuries. The kings of Orsis City had never
managed to completely consolidate their rule over the nomadic bands, and
marginalized or persecuted those they could not control. The Ramkaheni encouraged the urban
Orsisi in this persecution, though it must be remembered that the nomadic
Orsisi had once terrorized Ramkahen.
I could not listen Somhet’s gloating satisfaction without also hearing
the self-righteous resentment voiced by Garrosh and his followers. There are numerous parallels between
the Orsisi and the orcs. That may
be why it was so easy for the elusive Uzmal to win the Ptath Band’s loyalty.
I traveled with the Ptath for a while longer, observing their daily
lives. I will admit that I began
to try and avoid Somhet. This was
poor behavior on my part; whatever his opinions, he had been very tolerant and
welcoming towards me.
Like other bands, the Ptath are too few in number to have much
individual specialization. Each
Ptath must be a herder, a hunter, a parent, and innumerable other roles. As such, there is more gender equity than
is found in Ramkahen. The only
exception is in battle against other tol’vir; women are seen as too vital to
risk in conflict. Nonetheless,
women are still trained in combat, and are ready to participate should the
situation turn grim.
The chieftain of a band is usually an experienced warrior or hunter who
has reached at least 40 years of age (due to the high status of warriors,
chieftains are usually men, though female chieftains are not rare). The Orsisi believe that long-lasting
power tends to stagnate, and for this reason choose leaders from among the
older of their number. This
strikes me as a wise decision.
The chieftain acts as a first among equals. While their word carries influence, it is not final. Decisions are made in meetings that
include all adult members of a band.
The chieftain attempts to lead the band from disagreement into a broad
consensus. Minority opinions are
allowed to speak during debates, but must stay silent once the issue has been
decided.
Interestingly, no unified consensus had been achieved regarding the
creation of Orsis City; Simatep had simply taken those loyal to him and
accepted Ramkahen’s offer. This,
claimed Somhet, had doomed the city to failure.
The entire community works together to raise children, though a child’s
father enjoys particular authority.
The consensus-based politics of a band mean that it is rare for the
father and community to be at odds.
Marriage is exclusively exogamous, a fact that actually ties into the
resentment many Orsisi feel for the old city.
Somhet told me that in ancient times, the different bands would
periodically meet at the Cradle of the Ancients or the Vir’sar Oasis in order
to trade, exchange news, and marry.
Orsis City eventually replaced these locales as the preferred
trademeet.
Not long after, the Neferseti seized the Cradle of the Ancients in the
hope that its water supply would make up for the loss created by the Vir’naal
Dam. In so doing, the Orsisi were
prohibited from entering. Instead
of sending a force to reclaim the Cradle of the Ancients, the Orsisi king (who
likely desired to strengthen his grip over the nomads) decreed that his people
no longer needed the southern oases.
While this may have been true in a technical sense, it exposed the rift
between the urban and nomadic Orsisi, the latter of which regarded the Cradle
of the Ancients as sacred. Several
bands tried to retake the land.
Fewer in number than in the Orsis Host’s glory days, the Neferseti repelled
them after several bloody battles.
The handful of surviving bands had to make do with less formal gatherings
along the Vir’naal River Valley, where they were made to pay taxes (in the form
of animals) to Ramkahen. It was
during such times that the Orsisi bands truly learned to hate the concept of
the city.
The northern Orsisi around the Vir’sar Oasis fared somewhat better,
though their isolation proved to be their undoing. The mercenaries who so recently tried to plunder Uldum
killed many of them, and their future is in doubt.
It is not entirely clear whether or not Orsis will pose a real threat to
Ramkahen. Hatred cannot make up
for a lack of numbers. Thanks to
Uzmal and others, the Orsisi possess a variety of modern weapons, and are
proficient in their usage (though obviously not their manufacture).
I suspect that the Orsisi (in their current state) are quite capable of
raiding and inflicting serious damage on Ramkahen, whose army is still
archaic. However, the Orsisi will
not be able to win a sustained campaign against their neighbors. They may be used as a bargaining chip
by the Horde, though the Horde’s control over them might not be as complete as
they imagine.
I encountered firsthand Uldum’s political volatility towards the end of
my second (and last) week among the Orsisi. The journey had been interesting; with Somhet’s help, I had
been able to talk with some of the other tol’vir, and even speak a little bit
of Virtic (though my accent renders me nearly incomprehensible).
The Ptath Band had made camp one night on the rocky bluffs overlooking
the border between Ramkahen and Neferset.
The spot is in sight of the southern Vir’naal winding thin and sluggish
through the green plains. Terraced
Mount Orum, crowned by the Titan edifice known as the Obelisk of the Sun,
sprawls across the dusty southern horizon.
Titan vaults riddle the interior of Mount Orum, and the place had been
the site of pitched battles between the Explorer’s League and mercenary
looters. The mountain is sacred to
all tol’vir, and especially to the Orsisi. To them, it is a reminder of that which only the Titans may
build.
I listened to the groaning chants of the elders as the Ptath settled
down for the night, their voices quieting as light faded from the sky. I fell asleep on a weathered camel-hide
blanket, my dead skin suffused with the musty smell of smoke and tired herds.
I awoke to the sharp growling of angry Virtic, the tones quickly taking
on the qualities of outrage and disbelief. Shadows stirred at the other side of the tent, Somhet’s wife
Bastei rising from her bed.
Venturing to step outside, I found the campsite in an uproar, families
roused to action in the dead of night.
Only when I ran into Somhet, standing next to a pair of tol’vir nomads not
of the Ptath, did I learn what had happened.
“Destron! The Alliance is
stealing from the Obelisk of the Sun!
These two are from the Japh Band, who are traveling east below the
slopes of Mount Orum, and they saw the ones you call dwarves preparing to
invade the holy places.”
“The Explorer’s League?”
Somhet repeated my question to the Japh warrior, who made a noncommittal
gesture.
“They are Alliance. We
cannot allow them to steal from the homes of the gods. Alone, the Japh Band is too few, but with
our help they may kill the interlopers.”
“Wait, attacking the Alliance will be no easy task,” I stalled, my mind
racing for a solution.
“Uzmal said that the Horde will stand by us in a war.”
“And we will. But you must
remember that the Horde has few warriors in Uldum. It will be some time before they can send any real force to
fight alongside the Orsisi. This
is not the right time to fight the Alliance.”
“There is no right time when it comes to sins like these! The gods made this place, Destron. We cannot let outsiders taint it.”
“The Alliance has been in the Obelisk of the Sun before, in order to
repel the bandits during the Neferset War. Surely that was not a problem?”
“How can you say that? That
which the Titans built is holy. We
fought the bandits, but they pushed us away. The gods did not see us as worthy of defending their gifts
because the sins of our leaders had not yet been expunged.
“Now, the gods favor us, as can be seen in the Horde weapons. Just because foreigners drove out the
bandits does not give them the right to take our holy lands. All the fallen Ramkaheni and Neferseti
cities are for you to do with as you please, but that made by the Titans is
sacred.”
“I understand. You have
every right to be outraged. Yet if
you start this battle and lose, it will encourage the Alliance to plunder even
more holy sites! If you fight, it
must be from a position of strength.”
“The gods will favor us. If
they do not, than nothing we do matters.
It has been decided.”
“The faith of the Orsisi is strong indeed. I wish my own people believed with such fervor. What if I could convince the Alliance
to leave? I can speak their
language.”
“Do you think you can do this?” he asked, after a pause.
“I understand the Alliance as well as anyone in the Horde. At least let me try. I have no doubt you will beat them in
battle, but it would be better for the Orsisi to grow in strength before committing
their forces.”
“Stay here, I will tell this to the others.”
Somhet jogged over to a gathering of tol’vir, the moonlight dancing on
their furred bodies. I realized
that my presence might well indicate official Horde involvement in the attack. The Orsisi using Horde weapons was
problematic enough without a Forsaken agent tagging along for the ride.
Neither the Alliance nor the Horde has a significant presence in
Uldum. However, the Explorer’s
League is closely tied with the highest levels of Alliance government, and they
would surely send troops in the event of an attack. The Horde could try to deny involvement, but my faction
lacks even a shred of diplomatic credibility. The dwarves also revere the Titans, and will likely want to
punish the Orsisi who interfered with their excavations.
In fact, I could not even be sure that the Horde would attempt to
distance itself from a potential skirmish. It struck me as entirely plausible that Garrosh might
welcome it as an excuse to open up a new front. With him, it is impossible to tell. I finally resolved to try and stop the
conflict if at all possible. I
could only work to ensure that my efforts would not worsen the affair.
Somhet returned, saying that the Ptath would march to the Japh
encampment. Chieftain Teldes saw
merit in my words, but needed to discuss it with the warriors of both bands.
The camp dispersed with remarkable swiftness, mothers and the aged
staying behind to protect the vulnerable with sturdy bows and sharp eyes. All fighting adults stormed to the south, the clouds of sand
in their wake making no secret of their coming. My camel glided over the soft dunes, cold desert winds
whipping around us, the stars bright.
The desert soon flushed pink with the dawn’s brilliant light. Sudden heat seared our sides, the
harbinger of burning noon not yet strong enough to drive out the night’s
chill. Looking to the east, the
lush river valley sleeping in shadow beneath the blazing disc, I gave a prayer
of thanks that I could see such wonder.
Mount Orum drew closer, a burnished fortress in the morning light. Ancient turrets line the highest
slopes, seamlessly melded into the living rock. Ptath and Japh rendezvoused below a dusty ridge embedded in
the foothills, big enough to shield them from attack. Because the Explorer’s League controlled the high ground,
the Orsisi would have no chance to repel them in a frontal assault. Instead, they would wait for night and
then split and move to the eastern and western slopes to attack the encampment
from behind, an extremely risky maneuver.
I waited as the warriors discussed their options. At last, Somhet summoned me to their
council, a bristling mass of spears and rifles.
“Destron, it is the decision of both our peoples that you be given a
chance to talk to the invaders. We
did not come to this easily; it is our way to punish without mercy those who
tread on the work of the gods. Yet
we are not yet at full strength, and the gods frown on careless pride. If heaven wills it, you will persuade
them.”
“Thank you.”
Breath echoed hollow in my dry lungs as I dismounted the camel, my feet
sinking into the sand. I put all
thought of consequence out of my mind: I had no choice but to succeed.
Struggling up the rocky foothills I could see rifle barrels jutting out
from sandbag barricades on the mountain’s upper reaches, fewer than I had
expected. The dwarves clearly knew
something was the matter. I raised
my arms, palms facing back, and hoped they would not shoot.
“I seek parley!” I shouted in Common, my voice echoing.
Long minutes passed under sun, their rifles steady. I tensed, expecting a bullet to burst
through my skull. Intermittent
gusts whispered through the sand and loose rocks.
“I seek parley!”
“Stay where you are!” barked a voice from above.
I finally saw movement along a winding earthen ramp chiseled into the
mountainside, three dwarves and a gnome hurrying down, each carrying a gun. They rapidly closed the distance, their
eyes set in hatred. The lead
dwarf, a powerfully built specimen wearing a braided yellow beard, carried a
set of anti-magic bracers with him.
“Lower your hands, keep your palms pointed up.”
I obeyed without a word. The
lead dwarf raised his arm and shouted back to the summit. He then backed away, his gun at the
ready. A gnome stepped forward,
his green hair incongruous in the desert.
Bright eyes appraised me, seeing all the sins of my countrymen.
“All right, who are you?”
“Destron Allicant. I come
here on behalf of the Orsisi.”
“I’m Lindwick Spastodril, and don’t lie; you’re here for the Horde.”
“You are correct, but I also wish to help the Orsisi.”
“I can’t say we’re happy to see you here. What does the Horde want?”
“This does not involve the Horde directly; I am here to inform you of an
unfortunate situation. The Orsisi
bands are extremely agitated; they fear that outlanders in this place, however
well-intentioned, will offend their gods.”
“The Titans are the dwarves’ gods too.”
“Of course. I think that,
if anything, the Orsisi and the dwarves have common cause. Yet the Orsisi see themselves as the
protectors of the Titan constructions.
For them to see foreign archaeologists on sacred ground is an insult.”
“The Explorer’s League has permission from Ramkahen.”
“The Orsisi do not recognize Ramkahen’s authority. I think the key here is communication;
the Explorer’s League should let the Orsisi know their intentions. Perhaps if the Orsisi are involved,
they will be willing to allow you to investigate.”
“Except the Orsisi are already with the Horde.”
“Certainly the Orsisi respect the Horde, but they are hardly members of
it. The Orsisi demand only that
their faith be respected. Given
the chaos that has engulfed Uldum, they can hardly be blamed for fearing that
the Explorer’s League is simply another group of bandits.
“I will be blunt; the Orsisi will attack your encampment if you do not
leave. Even if you are victorious,
your expedition will be crippled.
Behind me await the warriors of the Ptath and Japh; even if they fall,
news of the defeat will spread and the entire Orsis Host will surround these
foothills.”
“An impressive threat.”
“This is a concerned warning, not a threat. I am also a scholar, and it is my sincere desire for the
knowledge in these ancient places to be spread to the world. I believe this would be possible, but
you must speak with the Orsisi first.
Talk to the local bands; inconvenient, to be sure, but far less so than
fighting every single desert warrior.”
“The Explorer’s League is willing to fight. We fought off the mercenary army, saving this land for the Orsisi. Maybe they should be more
appreciative.”
“The Orsisi sacrificed many of their best warriors against those
bandits, and the Horde contributed as well. Not all of the glory can go to the Alliance. The Orsisi respect valor, and if you
just meet with them and be honest with them, I imagine you will make
significant headway. Surely it is
at least worth the attempt?”
Lindwick stroked his chin, deep in thought.
“I’ll relay what you said back to the camp commander. Stay here until I return.”
I watched Lindwick trudge back up the ramp, already beaten down by the
heat. My minders stayed silent, grimacing
with the frustration of having a hated enemy in one’s grasp but unable to do
anything about it.
A low whistle sounded out from the ledges after a long while, the dwarf
nearest me standing up at the sound, the disbelief plain on his face. He muttered something in Dwarven before
turning to me.
“It’s your lucky day, deader bastard. We’re leaving the mountain, so run back to your overgrown
cats. If I ever see you again,
I’ll make sure you go back in the ground.”
*********
Neferset City is a place of towering temples and obelisks, the glory of
its kings chiseled in stone.
Statues of long dead warriors protect the once-bustling streets, now
empty save for soldiers of the Ramkahen Legion. The city is arranged around a processional boulevard running
from the north to the south. Side
streets reach their ends in dusty marketplaces where fleas and beetles hold
court. Beyond that, the rude huts
of the common Neferseti cling to the precipices, a sort of shambling city wall.
The memory of bloodless slaughter haunts the grand boulevards. Dust gathers on heaps of once-living
rubble, the occupying Ramkaheni offering scant mercy to the ultimate
reprobates.
The rest of the world sees Uldum as a distant sideshow, almost too
exotic and picturesque to be real.
The tol’vir are curiosities, conveniently packaged as either noble
Ramkaheni or depraved Neferseti.
Ramkahen’s victory makes Uldum seem a rare success in this tumultuous
age.
What must be realized is that the warriors were not the only Neferseti
to receive stone bodies. Al’akir
imparted this gift to every last tol’vir in Neferseti lands, from high priest
to beggar. In Ramkaheni eyes, all
tol’vir who bear stone skin are an insult to the gods, and in Uldum such
mockery may only be answered by death.
I had reached the Royal Plaza, the pyramidal temples like mountains on
either side, the sun hammering down on the Ramkaheni warriors standing flank to
flank. The flagstones shine with a
painful brightness, bleaching the world to a scorched white. Across from me stood the Neferseti,
their splendor marred by defeat.
Smooth brown stone, inlaid with gold, takes the place of fur and skin. They behold their collapsing world
through eyes of polished jade, and streamlined wings sweep out from the
backs.
Entire families of Neferset had been corralled at the plaza,
hammer-wielding Ramkaheni keeping watch.
Among the Neferseti I could see stone women and children, a far cry from
the conquering army that once threatened to seize Uldum.
Funereal drums resounded as a pair of club-wielding Ramkaheni prodded
and struck a shackled Neferseti. The
prisoner’s stone paws dragged, scraping against the ground, powder seeping out
from hairline cracks his legs and sides.
The left wing ended in a jagged stump, and I wondered if the Neferseti
could feel pain.
Hollow cries rushed out from stone throats, the Neferseti onlookers
stirring, a few raising their arms.
The Ramkaheni silenced them with yowled curses and the threat of raised
hammers. The meaning of the
spectacle became clear to me as the prisoner climbed the first few steps of the
temple’s processional stairway, crippled in sight of Neferset’s holiest place.
The drums rattled into silence, the two guards moving aside as another
Ramkaheni, his head encased in a cruelly beaked vulture mask, a sledgehammer in
his hands, marched towards the prisoner.
The vulture-headed Ramkaheni took position behind the helpless Neferseti
and spoke, his tone translating Virtic into pure contempt. Raising his face to the heaven, the
prisoner’s surviving jade eye looked out from a cobweb of splintered skin.
With a single smooth movement the executioner raised the hammer over his
right shoulder and swung forward with all his might. Dust and fragments of stone exploded from the remaining
wing, an ear-splitting crack reverberating through the plaza. The prisoner began to drop forward,
only for the guards to push him back into place.
Taking deliberate steps to the victim’s left, the executioner swung the
hammer a second time, the metal head driving into the front knee. The leg snapped backwards and split,
the Neferseti suddenly brought down by his own weight. Arms bound by shackles tried to balance
but the he collapsed to the side, dust spilling from the severed limb.
Some part of me urged escape, but I stayed rooted to the ground. In my mind I saw the tortured form of
the necromancer Festul in the Dragonblight’s frigid hell. I’d been able to grant Festul an escape,
but the Neferseti was beyond my ability to help, though he was surely more
deserving of it.
Still the hammer rose and fell, mighty shoulders splitting asunder,
stone arms rolling down the steps.
Perhaps I only imagined the terror in the single jade eye. More legs broke, the executioner’s
chest heaving with exertion.
Completely helpless, the prisoner lowered his head as if in
acceptance. Taking a deep breath,
the Ramkaheni hoisted the weapon as high as he could before slamming it down on
the prisoner’s scalp.
Tiny fragments burst in all directions as the sculpted head burst, the neck
splintering under the assault.
Mindless shudders roiled the corpse before it went suddenly still, death
rendering it inert.
Ramkaheni voices roared in approval, drowning out any sound made by the
watching Neferseti. Lifting the
hammer in both hands, the executioner bellowed to the crowd.
In a daze, the noon’s white light like fire, I watched as the plaza
emptied. The Ramkaheni returned to
their tasks, the soldiers herding away the native-born. On numb legs I walked to the victim’s
remains, a broken statue spilled onto the steps. I reasoned that he could well have committed some grievous
crime, but the sight of the gleeful mob brought to mind the early days of the
Scarlet Crusade. Perhaps the world
might be a better place had those zealots succeeded in wiping out my kind, but a
good result can only make evil means necessary, never moral.
It was at the execution site that I became acquainted with Belskur
Redblade, a middle-aged orc with a mop of gray hair reaching to his
shoulders. He’d also watched the
scene with a heavy heart, and was able to give some context.
“His name was Siruse, a Neferseti warrior. I did not know him personally, though he was one of the few
officers who survived the war.”
“Why was he executed?”
“Sedition. He may well have
been guilty; some Neferseti still hope to drive out the Ramkaheni, but most
know it is hopeless. Here, we
should not be in this place.
Follow me.”
As we walked, Belskur told me about himself. An independent warrior who came into his own during the
Outland Campaign, he had actually been a part of the band that killed Al’akir,
the lord of the elemental plane of air and a key Neferseti ally.
“A great battle that was, against a foe who deserved every wound we
inflicted upon it! There are few
things better than knowing the rightness of one’s cause.”
Since then, he had been living alone at the edge of Neferset City. Belskur took me to a cluster of adobe
huts that had once been occupied by poor Neferseti, canvas set up in place of a
broken roof that lay on the floor in pieces. The darkness offered a bit of relief, a kind of return to
normalcy for my northern self.
“The Ramkaheni dislike our presence, but no tol’vir forgets a debt, so
here we stay,” said Belskur. We
sat on a pile of rubble, passing a prodigious clay bottle of grainy Ramkaheni
beer between us. Scarabs crawled
in the dust of the entryway, their shells dull in the dim light.
“Why are you here?”
“I started as a spy!” he laughed, shaking his head. “I’m one of the only orcs here who
bothered to learn Virtic, so the Horde deemed it best for me to keep an eye on
the Alliance in case they decided to use the Neferseti as a proxy.”
“Do you consider that a valid concern?”
“I don’t, because it’s not, and you can tell that to your masters in
Orgrimmar.”
“Excuse me?”
“Are you not here to check on me?”
“No, I’m simply a traveler.”
Belskur’s brow furrowed, his gray eyes roving over me.
“I will assume you speak truly.
It would be strange for the warchief to send a Forsaken. Besides, any fool can see that the
Neferseti are nearly ruined. The
Alliance would use them as proxies if they could, but there are too few
warriors left.
“Stone soldiers are mighty indeed, but they cannot heal from their
wounds. Stone women do not bear
children. The Neferseti are
doomed. The Ramkaheni murdered
them by the hundreds once the city walls fell. Had I not been in the Skywall at the time, I would have
taken my ax to the Ramkahen Legion.”
“But they are still doing it!
The execution outside—“
“Believe me: if the Ramkahen Legion had its way, there would be an
endless stream of executions in that place.” He took a deep gulp from the bottle, wiping his mouth as the
brew trickled down his chin.
“Blood and thunder! I wish
they had stronger stuff than this.”
“Are you all right?”
“Dammit, I helped kill the Windlord! Do you think this is a challenge? All I do is sit and wait, watching the Alliance act like
true warriors. Thrall charged us
with protecting the weak, and there are none weaker than the Neferseti in this
place. The Neferseti live only
because the Alliance protects them.
The Horde does nothing.”
“Perhaps we can also vouch for the Neferseti.”
“Absolutely not. If we do,
the Alliance will take it as us trying to claim the Neferseti, and then they
will use the Neferseti as troops.
There is a draenic priestess, Ruunea, who leads the relief effort in
Neferset City. She does this
because of her belief in the Light—to think my father might have murdered her
family back in Draenor!”
Before my eyes Belskur seemed to crumple.
“Ruunea protects the Neferseti, and the Alliance lets her because doing
so does not threaten them. The
moment the Horde gets involved, the Alliance will assume the worst. Ruunea told me so herself when I
pledged to defend her with ax and word against all who challenged her.”
“Then why stay here?”
“Have you not been listening?
I must report on the Alliance’s deeds. Not that there’s anything to report. Forgive me; you should not be seeing me
like this. I am a warrior, and
must act the part. But all this
damned waiting…”
“Does the Alliance really trust the Horde so little? Surely we can find some common ground
in protecting the Neferseti.”
“No. With the Horde comes
war and plague. The Orsisi already
run at our beck and call, and the Alliance will not let the Neferseti meet the
same fate. I wish I could end this
by killing some monster, but in this world, if Deathwing dies, we will fight
over the corpse.”
“The draenei, at least, are very dedicated to their principles. Ruunea may be able to make some headway
with her leaders, and perhaps the Horde could persuade the Alliance to let you
help.”
“If what I hear is true, Prophet Velen does have the ear of Prince
Anduin. Maybe when he is king… but
not until then.”
We continued to talk into the night, a whisper of a southern breeze
unable to relieve the stubborn heat.
Belskur told me of his coming of age in the internment camps and a youth
spent forging the frontier in the Barrens. When dusk passed, he ate a simple dinner of dense Ramkaheni
bread and lentil soup, and retired soon after finishing.
I remained awake, sitting on a pile of shattered adobe in the darkened
house, darkness leeching away the day’s heat. My mind wrestled with the reality of Uldum, its woes
inextricable from Azeroth’s. Most
see the Neferseti as Uldum’s homegrown villains, but the real evil appeared to
lie with Ramkahen.
Yet saying that is just as inaccurate and unfair as blaming
Neferset. Whatever their reasons,
however much they actually knew, the Neferseti did aid the forces of Deathwing. So too did Neferset attack Ramkahen for
control of the central Vir’naal in ancient times; the mighty Vir’naal Dam,
whose mere existence dried up miles of Neferseti farmland, testifies to the
result.
None of the three factions can truly be described as good or evil. All are opportunistic, fearful, and
determined in equal measure.
Perhaps this is why the truth of Uldum is so troubling.
*********
The morning sun glowed red against the city’s ancient stones, promising
another brutal day. I ambled out
into the still and silent bazaar, trying to imagine how it had looked in better
days.
The Neferseti have lost their future as surely as the Forsaken. What had motivated their leaders to
make such a bargain? Stone skin is
of use to warriors, but not to farmers; indeed, what purpose do farmers have
when bodies no longer hunger?
Surely the Neferseti had known this would mean an end to their nation.
If anyone could help the Neferseti, it would be the Earthen of
Ulduar. They alone function as the
Titans presumably intended, and know how to upkeep stone bodies. Conceivably, they might even be able to
produce more tol’vir. If the
Neferseti are brought to the Earthen, however, I suspect it will only bring the
Neferseti closer into Alliance orbit.
Perhaps that is not so terrible.
When Belskur awoke, he suggested going to Whitestone Plaza in the city’s
northwest quadrant.
“Priestess Ruunea often goes there with her Neferseti charges. You should meet them; one speaks
Common.” I had mentioned my
familiarity with that language the previous day.
“I thought the Horde needed to keep its distance.”
“Only from those Neferseti outside of Alliance protection.”
As we walked through the streets, the early morning shadows long and
sharp, Belskur explained that about a hundred Neferseti lived in a refugee camp
west of the city. Enclosed in the
fens of the Cradle of the Ancients, Ruunea had established it to protect the
surviving family members of high-ranking Neferseti.
A ten-strong Ramkaheni patrol occupied Whitestone Plaza, boredom evident
in their slouched postures. Most
lounged in the shade of a partially collapsed warehouse, swatting at the brown
desert flies buzzing around their heads.
Several hailed Belskur, standing up at his arrival.
Whitestone Plaza had once been a target for the short-lived Neferseti
resistance. Now, the Ramkahen
Legion guards the place against a nonexistent threat. The soldiers themselves are more interested in idling than
in guard duty; as a general rule, the Ramkahen Legion consists mostly of poorly
disciplined volunteers who split their time between military service and
farming. The small professional
core is badly overstretched during the flood season.
By the time Ruunea appeared, garbed in loose-fitting white robes, her
arrival went almost unnoticed. The
soldiers preferred to hear Belskur’s tales of battling Al’akir and his armies,
and the orc loved the attention. Belskur
waved to Ruunea, but kept at his story, speaking more quickly but unwilling to
end the retold battle prematurely.
Ruunea possessed the sort of ageless beauty common to the draenei. White hair and horns contrasted with a
perfect face that looked chiseled from cobalt. Accompanying her was a Neferseti woman with a necklace of
turquoise squares set into her stone neck.
I introduced myself when she finished reporting to the Ramkaheni, and
expressed my curiosity and sympathy regarding the Neferseti. Belskur had not yet pulled away from
his audience, talking and gesturing like an ecstatic drunk.
“Your interest is commendable, Brother Destron. However, I must inquire as to why you
seek to learn more. There are
those who use knowledge for unethical purposes.”
“I travel mostly to satiate my own curiosity, though I tell others of my
findings. I assure you that I
never tell anything to the apothecaries,” I said, fully aware of how poor my
words sounded.
“How do you know Brother Belskur?”
“We met by happenstance yesterday, at Siruse’s execution.”
“Another execution?”
“Yes. I’m sorry, did you
know him?”
“I did not, but the news is distressing. For what was he killed?”
“Belskur himself didn’t seem particularly sure, but he said something
about possible sedition against the Ramkaheni.”
“We are trying to get as many of the Neferseti to the camp as
possible. The Ramkaheni laws are
in place for good reason, but I fear they enforce them too cruelly.”
“Is there anything the Horde can do to help?”
“Do you have any influence with them?”
“Not really, but I might be able to suggest your ideas to one of the
more reasonable authorities.”
“The Horde can help best by leaving the Orsisi alone. This land is under enough stress
without the nomads being turned into weapons.”
“Point taken.” I do not
disagree that the Horde’s manipulation of Orsis is immoral. Still, I could not be sure that the
Alliance didn’t truly intend the same with the Neferseti.
“Who is the Neferseti with you?” I asked.
“Sister Shepsa. She is a
very courageous woman. Her husband
was a priest who died in the war; now she works to sustain and educate other
friends of the old regime.”
“Does she speak Common or Orcish?”
“Only Virtic. I can tell
you, Brother Destron, that the Neferseti have truly come together in this
troubled time. Sister Shepsa has
helped greatly in this.”
“A role model of sorts?”
“Yes. The Neferseti, much
like your own Forsaken, are a static population. Sister Shepsa’s two daughters will never grow up, stuck in
stone as they are. In this
hardship, they have learned to put faith in the community rather than in a
denied future.”
“Is there any way to return them to flesh?”
“There are some who are working on that. The Earthen may be able to help manage them in this current
state. A few seek answers in the
Skywall—after Al’akir’s death, the air elementals have become more accommodating.”
“The Alliance has diplomatic relations with the Skywall?”
“So paranoid, are you? No,
we do not, there are only researchers.
The Steamwheedle Cartel, of all groups, sees riches in the Skywall, and
offers transport to that place.”
“I see.” I glanced at
Shepsa, her carved features unreadable to me. Did she know we discussed her nation’s future? Without speaking Virtic, I’d never be
more than a wandering fool in Uldum.
Belskur finally broke away from his fans, who slunk back into the
shade. Sweat dripped from his
rough face as he bowed before Ruunea.
“Hail, priestess. I see you
have met my friend.”
“Light be with you, Brother Belskur. Brother Destron’s interest in the Neferseti speaks well of
him.”
“Yes. Did Captain Eltuney
trouble you?” Belskur looked
towards one of the lounging Ramkaheni.
“No. Our sanctuary is still
tolerated by Ramkahen, thanks mostly to the Explorer’s League.”
“We saw another execution the other day. The accused cannot fight his way out with either blade or
with word; they just take him up to the square and break him to pieces. A terrible thing. The Neferseti should not be made into a
race of captives, as the humans did to the orcs.”
“Do you think that the Neferseti need a Thrall of their own?”
Belskur’s face scrunched up, and he growled beneath his breath.
“I do not want to see them trod upon any longer! The spirit of their race must be
revived!”
“Brother Belskur, you should consider yourself lucky that I do not
believe there is such a thing as the spirit of a race. There is only the Most Holy Light, of
which we are all part. Our
circumstances differ, but we are all within it.”
“Perhaps saying that is the spirit of the draenei?” chuckled Belskur. “Forgive me, I should not make
fun. I know what my people did to
you, and to the humans. For all
these evil things, don’t I have all the more reason to rankle at cruelty? I sense the despair in this place,
where the deeds of Neferseti heroes are chiseled into the monuments. There is some spirit here, something
that is Neferseti.”
“You can theorize, but you have no proof, either spiritual or
material. I only see a people in
need.”
Ruunea let us follow as she left Whitestone Plaza for the Neferseti
Quarter. She and Shepsa hoped to
persuade more Neferseti to relocate.
The number of volunteers had slowed in recent months.
“Those still here feel little hope.”
I could not help but wonder if perhaps the camp was not to the liking of
its residents, and that word had spread.
Again, there was no way for me to know. I cannot easily read the emotions of regular tol’vir and the
Neferseti are far beyond my ability.
In my experience, the draenei are often just as saintly as they seem,
though they do not always understand what their friends truly want.
Once called the Merchant’s Quarter, the Neferseti Quarter shows fewer
signs of damage. The poor areas
and the main boulevard had hosted most of the fighting, and the humble Neferseti
merchants owned few possessions worth looting. It is a strange sight, where dozens of Neferseti stand
motionless, living statues under the sun.
No conversation lightens the hot and dusty air, the place as much of a
tomb as the eastern ruins.
Belskur and I waited at the edge of the neighborhood as Ruunea went in
to do her work, so as not to cause disruption. As we idled, he told me about his time in Outland, where
he’d fought in the Hellfire Peninsula, Zangarmarsh, and the Blade’s Edge.
“I still remember when I first reached the Path of Glory, stretching as
far as the eye can see, and then realized what it was made of,” he said, his
voice shaking. The Path of Glory
is the miles-long monument to Horde brutality, a road made of draenic bones.
“That my people could do that… and it just went on, and on, and on. I wept like a child. And now, after all this, the draenei
still seek to help! Did you know that
any orc who now wishes to see Outland must get permission from the warchief?”
“I hadn’t heard that.”
“Outland is no longer of much value. They do not want these reminders of the past, for fear they
might dull our spirits. I think it
would make us stronger to know, so that we might fight evil all the harder.”
Ruunea and Shepsa returned at midday with nothing to show for their
efforts. We joined them on the way
out of the city. Ruunea’s camp is
nestled between the bluffs and the marshes west of Neferset City, close enough
for her to return on the day of her arrival. She and Belskur continued their conversation, Shepsa walking
behind them, her appearance—majestic and even terrifying taken on its own—made
ludicrous by the gulf separating us.
I longed to reach out, but could neither understand nor learn from
her. I again felt the weight of
the world, all its history and torment, pressing on my back.
We at last reached a place where rows of abandoned houses crack under
the sun’s heat, the lush greenery of the Cradle of the Ancients just a few
miles away.
At Neferset’s height, the Vir’naal River Delta and the Cradle of the
Ancients had supported their three great cities. Enslaved Ramkaheni and Orsisi struggled up the narrow paths
to Neferset City, pulling enormous carts weighed down with food grown on the riverbanks.
The Vir’naal Dam reduced the output of the delta, spurring riots in the lush
metropolis of the Lost City. This
disobedience, say the Neferseti, roused the wrath of the gods, who dried up the
Cradle of the Ancients in a terrible drought. Neferset never recovered, and hatred of Ramkahen seeped into
their very bones. Neferseti
priests had taken the Cradle of the Ancients’ recent and mysterious renewal as
a sign of divine support, only to lose the war a few weeks later.
“What did the Neferseti believe?” I asked Ruunea, feeling silly for
relying so much on her.
“They followed the same gods as the other tol’vir. As you may know, the Ramkaheni and
Orsisi both believe that the gods turned the tol’vir to flesh and departed to
the heavens after growing disgusted with their worshippers’ poor behavior. The Neferseti differ in this; they
believe that some malign entity turned them into flesh, and that the gods
shunned them as a result.”
“What sort of malign entity?”
“The Neferseti called it Kutep.”
“Was Kutep blamed for other disasters?”
“No; Neferseti legends say that the god Aman cursed Kutep before
leaving, trapping him within stone.
Some think there is a link between Kutep and C’thun. The Neferseti still blamed the
unfortunate for their own problems.”
“Do they blame themselves for losing the war?”
“Some do. More than any
other tol’vir, the Neferseti wished to return to stone. When the servants of Al’akir made the
offer, the priests jumped at the chance.
Here was the entire point of their existence, a chance to usher in a
return to glory. They did not care
that it would physically doom their people, for they saw in it spiritual
salvation.
“Many, like Sister Shepsa, now think that the Neferseti must have been
wrong all this time. Some still
believe that they are being tested, but they are few in number.”
“Do the ones in your care all follow the Light?”
“No. My main purpose here
is to protect the Neferseti. By my
actions, I spread the Most Holy Light, and can educate a few of them in more
detail. From there it may spread.”
Ruunea at last bade us farewell, walking down the path to the Cradle of
the Ancients. I could just see the
camp down below, massive stone figures shadows against the pale tents.
“Have you ever seen the camp up close?” I asked Belskur.
“Once, when I went ahead on a scouting mission. Ruunea is a good person, Destron. The Neferseti need protection.”
“I agree. I suppose a part
of me is suspicious, but the draenei have always been fair-minded. I only wish I could talk to one of the
Neferseti about this.”
“Do not worry about it; I am sure Ruunea told you the essentials.”
Sighing at my own helplessness, I watched the sun descend into the empty
lands, its searing heat a short-lived ghost in the desert night.
First time commenter, but I've been following Destron's adventures for the past few years now and have yet to be disappointed. I eagerly look forward to each new installment, and love how you're able to flesh out the World of Warcraft with your storytelling. Great job, as always!
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