warriors of light
âSoldiers, Netherlight Temple is believed to be under imminent threat by the dreadlord Balnazzar.â Tyrosus paused, letting that news sink in. Before the muttering in the crowd could really gain traction, he continued, âWe will be sending a squadron of our best fighters to assist them. If anyone is interested in volunteering for the mission before I begin assigning places, please come forward now.â
There didnât seem to be the mass movement towards the front of the chapel that Reg was hoping for. Grimacing, he nudged a draenei aside and started winding his way through the crowd. If this involved rather more elbows in ribs than was strictly politeâwell, everyone was wearing armor, anyway, and Aya was on mending duty in Hearthglen and couldnât frown at him from there. âI will!â His voice was lost in the crowd; he took a moment to clear his throat and hip-check a dwarf who had been trying to back up in front of him. âHighlord Tyrosus, I volunteer!â
Tyrosus looked him up and down critically. âExcellent; we were in need of a good front-line fighter.â He lifted his gaze from Reg and swept it out over the assembled Silver HandâBlood Knights, Sunwalkers, ex-Argents, hunters and rogues and priests. âNow that Crusader Bladesworn has boldly been the first to step forward, I trust the rest of you will follow his good example.â
Reg winced. Itâs happening again. I thought they were done holding me up and telling the rest that they surely couldnât do worse than the dead man, but I suppose Tyrosus never got the memo. He cleared his throat again. âMay I be dismissed, Highlord? I have much preparation to do.â
Tyrosus glanced at him and flashed him a quick smile. âOf course. And thank you for volunteering.â
Heâd sounded genuine. Reg was still idly pondering it the next morning as he stood in loose formation with the rest of the Silver Hand, the portal to Netherlight glowing in front of them. A Blood Knight next to him kept flicking her ears, and the movement was distracting enough that he almost missed Tyrosusâ speech.
ââŚWe strike at the heart of the beast! Put your faith in the Light, champions, and it will protect you!â
And then he turned and charged through the portal, and the Silver Hand followed him.
The Netherlight Temple gleamed, all warm ceramic and glass, but Reg barely noticed what any of it looked like; his sabaton had just landed on the shining stone floor when the raw Light of the place hit him like a hammer. The demons had already begun their assault, and he knew he should join the frayâbut as his fellow fighters charged ahead, he stood frozen in place. The heat was nearly overwhelming; he thought he could feel his skin sizzling even through his armor. He took a deep breath of too-hot air, and then another.
The air brought scents he knew too well. Felblood. Sanctified blood.
Even if it burned him to cinders, he would fight. With one final prayer in his heartâLight, let me serve youâhe drew his sword and charged.
His world narrowed to the length of his blade, with only the barest idea of what was happening beyond it. The demons were pouring in from portals around the temple, and though the priests were largely holding their own (a bolt of pure LightâdodgeâstrikeâConsecration; move) they were being hit hard. Reg hamstrung a wrathguard, catching an eredar on the backswing before it could fling fire at a troll. A gap opened up in the fighting, and he wound under another demonâs guard (stabbing it in the ribs as he passed) to leap atop a table. From his new vantage point, he had a slightly better idea of what was happening in the hall.
Well. That explained the searing Light, at least. A Naaruâan actual Light-blessed Naaruâwas chiming steadily in the center of the hall, and any demon within range of its emanations was burnt to ash. A white-bearded draenei stood in front of it, channeling a glowing shield of Light. Reg tore his gaze away. Shadows coiled in his peripheral vision; he turned for a better look and found himself sucking in a breath he didnât need.
There was Rythien, back against the wall, with his shadow tentacles making bloody work of any demon that got too close. Reg couldnât see the priestâs cane, but he didnât appear to need it with the shadows shifting around himâand then a demon cleaved two of the tendrils in half, and Rythien fell to one knee with blood dripping from his nose.
Reg charged across the room to him just as a felguard brought its axe around. It could have decapitated Rythien; Reg twisted around its arm and sank his sword into its chest.
Rythien snorted; Reg could smell the blood, and it made his mouth water. âOw, fuck.â Shadows surged, lifting him to his feet again as he added, âThanks.â
Reg cast a glance over his shoulder at him. No obvious wounds. Good. âJameston would murder me if I let you be killed.â
Rythienâs ears flagged, but he was already looking past him; whatever he saw made his eyes go wide. âFuck.â
Reg spun to follow his gaze, and found himself privately echoing the statement. The draeneiâs shield was cracking as a massive dreadlord hammered on it, and the Naaru beyond it was chiming desperately. ââŚCover me.â
âReginaldâ!â
There was more, but Reg was already moving. It seemed to take an age to traverse the battlefield, and he found himself sparing a fleeting wish that heâd brought along his gunâbut then, suddenly, he found himself within range of Balnazzar. He was three times his size and radiated energy that made his skin crawl, but more importantly he hadnât noticed him yet.
He wasted no time. As his sword bit into the back of the dreadlordâs leg, felblood sprayed outâbut Balnazzar didnât fall. Oh, dear.
The demonâs voice made his stomach churn. âFoolish mortals. You think to stop me?â
The displacement of air as he teleported away almost knocked Reg over; for a moment pure panic gripped his heart, and then he spun around as the dreadlordâs voice rang out from the altar. âTaste the true might of the Burning Legion!â
More portals ripped open along the sides of the temple; as floods of demons poured through, Reg leapt into action again. Imps fell easily; felguards took a little more time, but for a few minutes he was sure he was making a dent in the Legionâs forces.
And then he realized that they wouldnât stop coming. While he gutted one felguard, another landed a blow that shattered his pauldron; an imp he missed on the first swing attached itself to his sabaton and he wasted precious seconds getting it off. A wrathguard nearly took his head off while he struggled. Weâre losing ground. Light, protect usâŚ
His prayers were answered in a sudden rush of heat. A massive, bat-winged, glowing thing (dreadlord-shaped, but surely it couldnât beâ) appeared in front of the beleaguered Naaru; its voice carried out over the din of battle. âArmy of Light, to me! Attack!â
Oh. Heâd heard of Lothraxion, the supposedly âredeemedâ dreadlord that led a division of the Army of Light, but heâd dismissed it as rumor; now that it was here and directing a squadron of well-armed and excessively shiny paladins into the fray, he realized Ayaâs friend had been right. Drat. I must remember to apologize when Iâthere! An opening appeared in the chaos of combat, and he dashed through it to join the paladins striking at Balnazzar.
Everything became a bit hectic after that. Light and shadow crashed into the dreadlord, narrowly avoiding the melee fighters trying to bring Balnazzar down to stabbing range. For a terrible moment, all Reg could focus on was staying out of the wayâthe Light would burn him just as surely as felfire would, and be much more embarrassing to explain.
Then felblood sprayed through the air, and pure Light seared where the dreadlord lay.
Reg breathed again, finally lowering his sword. Thank the Light, itâs over.
Hoofbeats sounded behind him as the draenei let his shield fall. âThank you, heroes. Now, let us tend to the wounded.â
Reg instinctively turned to watch the draenei passâhe practically bled Light. Hrm. He looks familiar⌠It wasnât until Rythien bowed at his approach that Reg realized where heâd seen him before. ââŚSweet Light.â He almost wished heâd brought his camera. It wasnât every day he got to see the prophet of the draenei people in the flesh.
He let the surprise wash over him, cleaned his blade on his cloak, and went to lend his first aid skills to the task of cleaning up.








