back there...and spend a little time before I need to return to Dalaran.'
The red-haired spellcaster said nothing more and his expression indicated that Krasus would hear nothing from him as to what was being planned in the shielded city.
'Your lives and your choices are yours,' he told the couple, but especially Rhonin. 'I am only grateful for your aid here and... and for your continued friendship.'
'You will always have that,' Vereesa said.
Krasus pulled himself together for one more spell. 'And as a friend, allow me this...'
The wizard and the high elf vanished.
'They are home with their children,' the dragon mage responded to Grenda's dumbfounded expression. 'I may be able to send some of your people in such a manner if given time to recuperate—'
But the dwarves all shook their heads. With an anxious grin, their leader answered, 'If it's all the same to you, great one, we of the earth folk prefer solid footin' under us!'
That made him smile. 'Of course. The ground is to you as the sky is to me. I understand very much.' He stepped back from Grenda. 'I leave you, then. May your axes be sharp and your tunnels strong....'
The Bronzebeards went down on one knee as Krasus again changed into his true form. As Korialstrasz, he dipped his head inhomage to the dwarves' own deeds, then leapt into the sky.
Once there, Korialstrasz arced not away from Grim Batol, but
He concentrated as best he could, seeking to assure himself that what he had told the others was true. Korialstrasz surveyed as much of Grim Batol's interior as possible, sensing only emptiness and that same residual evil that had permeated it for centuries.
And of the area where the chamber of the eggs would have been located, the red dragon sensed utter ruination. As he had said, without Sintharia, it had no longer been protected. Perhaps an egg or two had survived the destruction, but even the myatis coating he had seen on them would not be enough. Dargonax was the last of the twilight dragons.
Korialstrasz turned in the direction of home. He, too, missed his family. It was time to return there for awhile before again renewing his eternal vigil over Azeroth....
And behind him, Grim Batol sat as silent and as still...as death.
Yet far, far below the dread mount—deeper than even Sintharia had ever gone—it was not completely still. In the sunless cavern, a huge form finally moved about. The intruders were all gone. It was safe to begin.
Around him were gathered the eggs that Sintharia had thought sealed in her special cavern and that the accursed red dragon believed were now destroyed. There were many places to store them down here, many places to keep them viable until things were ready.
Deathwing laughed, the only mourning he would do for his former mate. She had been manipulated well, even in dealing with the damnable Korialstrasz, with whom there would yet be a reckoning.
Dismissing his ancient adversary, the mad Earth-Warder eagerly toyed with one of the eggs. Dargonax had been a flawed but quite interesting creation. Deathwing's consort had chosen an interesting path with her experiments. However, he understood where Sintharia had gone wrong.
And since everyone assumed the Earth-Warder dead, Deathwing had all the time in the world in which to 'hatch' his grand design... all the time he would need to erase the blunders of his children and his mate and ensure that