Indeed - wow gold
Indeed, without the green flesh, the disfigured, tusked face, and the hostile, superior attitude she might almost be attractive. Still, she was inhis library, and going throughhis books (well, Medivh’s library, and Medivh’s books, but the Magus had entrusted them tohim). “So you are an Emissary,” he said at last. He tried to keep his words light and conversational. “I was told of your impending arrival.” The half-orc nodded, concentrating on the words before her. “Who are you emissaringfor, exactly?” Garona looked up, and Khadgar saw a flicker of irritation beneath her heavy brows. Khadgar felt good about bothering her, but at the same time wondered where the woman drew the line. He did not want to push too hard or too fast,“Oh, we will be useful,” Gul’dan assured him, bowing low. His mind was already working. “I will create for you a host of creatures such as you have never seen before, mighty Doomhammer—warriors who will serve you alone. With their might and our magic we will crush this world’s magi even as the Horde tramples its warriors into the dust.” Doomhammer nodded, his snarl fading to a thoughtful frown. “Very well,” he said at last. “You have promised me warriors who can combat the humans’ magic. I will hold you to that.” Then he turned and walked away, clearly dismissing him. The orc warriors departed as well, leaving Gul’dan still on his knees with Cho’gall not far away. The orc warlock thought he heard them laughing as they left. Damn him! Gul’dan thought, watching the warchief disappear back into his tent.Medivh crossed to him and helped him to his feet. “I am sorry, lad,” he began. “I had forgotten you were still here. I assumed you were a thief.” “A thief that insisted on leaving a room wow gold neater than he found it,” said Khadgar. It hurt a little when he breathed. “Yes,” said Medivh, looking around the room, and nodding, despite the disruption his own attack had caused. “Yes. I don’t believe anyone else had ever gotten this far before.” “I’ve sorted by type,” said Khadgar, still bent over and grasping his knees. “Histories, including epic poems, to your right. Natural wow gold sciences on your left. Legendary material in the center, with languages and reference books. The more powerful material—alchemic notes, spell descriptions, and theory go on the balcony, along with some books wow gold I could not identify that seem fairly powerful. You’re going to have to look at those yourself.” “Yes,” said Medivh, now ignoring wow gold the youth and scanning the room. “Excellent. An excellent job. Very good.” He looked around, seeming zxcgali like a man just getting his bearings again. “Very good indeed. You’ve done well. Now come along.” The master mage bolted for the door, pulled himself up short, then turned. “Are you coming?” Khadgar felt as if he had been wow gold hit by another mystic bolt. “Coming? Where are we going?” “To the top,” said Medivh curtly. “Come now or we’ll be too late. Time is of the essence!” For an older man Medivh moved swiftly up the stairs, covering them two at a time at a brisk pace. “What’s at the top?” gasped wow gold Khadgar, finally catching up at a landing near the top. “Transport,” snapped Medivh, then hesitated for a moment. He turned in place and his shoulders dropped. For a moment it looked like the fire had burned out of his eyes. “I must apologize. For back there.” And damn that human wizard as well! Gul’dan shook his head. Perhaps he should be cursing his own impatience instead. It had been that which had driven him to enter Medivh’s mind, seeking the information the Magus had promised but thus far withheld from him. And it had merely been bad luck that Gul’dan had been inside Medivh’s mind when the human had died, his own spirit weakened by the sudden violence. He had been trapped, unable to return to his body all this time, unaware of the world around him. And that had given Doomhammer the opportunity to seize control. But now, at last, he was awake again. And once more he could pursue his plans. Because at least that desperate, dangerous act had not been wasted. Gul’dan had the information he needed. And soon he would not need Doomhammer or the Horde any longer. Soon he would be all-powerful without them. “Gather the others,” he told Cho’gall, pushing himself up off the ground and testing his limbs. He was weak, but he would manage. He had no time to do otherwise. “I will forge them into a clan in truth, one that will serve my own ends and protect me from Doomhammer’s wrath. They shall be Stormreavers, and they will show all the Horde what we warlocks can accomplish, until even Doomhammer cannot deny their worth. Gather your clan as well.” Cho’gall led the Twilight’s Hammer clan—they were obsessed with the end of the world but were fearsome fighters. “There is much to do.” lest he earn another beating, or another curt dismissal by the Magus. At least this time he would get some information out before the battle. He said, “I mean, if you’re the Emissary, that means that someone is giving you orders, someone is pulling your strings, someone you have to report back to. Whom do you represent?” “I’m sure your Master, the Old Man, would tell you, if you asked,” said Garona smoothly, but her eyes remained hard. “I’m sure he would,” Khadgar lied. “If I had the effrontery to ask him. So I ask you instead. Whom do you represent? What powers have you been granted? Are you here to negotiate, or demand, or what?” Garona closed the book (Khadgar felt a small victory in distracting her from her task) and said, “Do all humans think alike?” “It would be boring if we did,” said Khadgar. “I mean, does everyone agree about everything? Are people always agreeing to what their masters or superiors want?” said Garona. The hardness in her eyes faded just a touch. “Hardly,” said Khadgar. “One reason that there are so many tomes is that everyone has an opinion. And that is just the literate ones.” “So understand that there are differences of opinions among the orcs as well,” said Garona. “The Horde is made of up of a number of clans, all with their own chieftains and war leaders. All orcs belong to a clan. Most orcs are loyal to their clan and their chieftain.” “What are the clans?” asked Khadgar. “What are they called?” “Stormreaver is one,” said the half-orc. “Blackrock. Twilight’s Hammer. Bleeding Hollow. Those are the major ones.” Related Article:
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| 2010-2-22 13:36:55 by aiongoldzxc |