The Guardsman's Office was a glorified hut, in Kael'thas' royal opinion. It was a two-story, wooden structure with what could be called "waterfront real estate" values, but that was simply glorifying having the office being built dangerously close to the stream of multicolored experimental sewage.
Of course, when it had been originally built, this was not a problem. In fact, "guardsmen" were nothing more than glorified janitorial staff, in Kael'thas' mind. After all, this was a nation built on efficiency and magocracy, and that meant there were magical constructs for defense in the form of ward arrays and towering golems breathed life by streams of arcane power. The State of Dalaran never worried about any foreign hostiles sneaking into their dungeons, because those were the most magically guarded locations in the city, bar only the vaults. And if something could get into the vaults, then everyone of note in the city must have been killed or defeated in some way anyway.
So when the Prince of All Quel'Dorei walked up to the (albeit magically enforced) wooden building, he scoffed at it. It was a waste of time and space; the city didn't need it or guardsmen at all. As a mage, he obviously believed magic superior to the strength of arms.
Kassan stayed back and hollered out at one of the closed, glass windows, "Oi, Raethan, I got a customer for ya'. Don't let 'em get mugged, they're important."
There was an extra bit of bounce in the Prince's footsteps at that, and he raised his chin a little higher than it already was. His footsteps echoed through the stone tunnel not dryly, while he mused how much gold must have been spent on the guards down here for them to have magically or alchemically crafted windows. Those were too smooth to be made by hand, after all. Nevertheless, he strut into the building as its rather normal sized wooden doors creaked open for him (in contrast to the tunnels it was in, which could fit rows of war golems).
The lobby, for that was what it was, was almost exactly as he expected. It was entirely made of a sort of dark wood, with visible lines of gaps between each plank, making the entire structure seem shoddy. A couple of hovering torches of magical ember flickered and crackled overhead and several circular tables were laid about before a rather tall counter lined with barrels of what smelled like cheap ale as if this guardhouse lobby was some sort of tavern.
In fact, that was probably what it was, because one thing the Prince noticed immediately after stepping forth was the smell. It smelled of roasted cinnamon and toasty, hearty bread. There had to be some kind of magical filter at the door that kept the smell of the magical sewer (which did, at times, smell like a normal sewer) out.
Four guards were playing some kind of free-for-all game of what was obviously a game of Hearthstone, with some house rules, and there was a bored looking High Elf at the lobby counter who made no attempt to hide that he was more interested in the game than in his Prince. This specific High Elf guard had a sort of cropped, short hair, very different from the average High Elf, as it was in fashion for males of any sort of culture or breeding to take pride in their long, luscious hair. To cut it so short, and to mold it into spikes with disgusting and hair-damaging alchemy was an affront that told Kael'thas that this man had no Quel'Dorei pride. He also seemed to carry himself with a sort of rage uncommon in the higher orders, and this told Kael all he needed to know.
It was an upstart who rose beyond his rank. Kael's chin rose even higher, and his regal voice filled the air and instilled into it a chill that only those of the higher orders could. "Greetings, I assume you are Guardsman Raethan. I am Prince Kael'thas Sunstrider and I require your services."
The man at the counter looked up with seemingly purposeful laziness. "Yeah? Well, ya can't bribe me, see? And I ain't seen anyone with your precious Blue-Eyes 'round here."
"You know," Kael's eyes narrowed immediately, like a shark swimming upon the scent of blood. "How do you know?"
"Word travels in our circle," Raethan shrugged. He picked up a mug and spat into it before wiping it with a dirty rag that had been sitting beside his boots. "From one duelist to another, Prince, you ought to know. There were only four of them printed after all... Rare cards get anyone's attention. 'Sides, the blue cards you had were... uncommon as well. People pay attention to that, especially if, ahem, cards show up in the, ah, open market."
"Blue cards" were a reference to the rarity of the cards. The cheapest cards were those without any gems sealed into them; those were the weakest and most worthless. One rank above those were "white cards", or what could now be called the more common cards with a white opal encrusted in the middle, sealed with rather potent magic. Not too potent, of course, compared to the blue cards, but still strong. "Blue cards" were the uncommon cards... and Kael'thas had something above that. One of the one hundred or so cards created so far enchanted with a purple gem known as a "Black Diamond". Just the gem alone was worth over one hundred gold coins, and that was if you could even find them...
To Kael, his Blue-Eyes White-Dragon was not just his property and not just an investment, but a beloved card that had won him his fair share of important battles. It was a comrade at arms and a constant companion in this place, this Dalaran, so far away from home. He believed that the card had a heart of its own and that they had a bond... before it was all snatched unfairly away from him.
The very thought filled him with rage, and his arcane might seemed to boil to the surface from within. His normally azure eyes now glowed with a furious white, and he stared down the insolent guard.
Well, he tried to anyway.
Raethan yawned. "Look, what do you want? The auction broke your deck apart already, and those cards are now in the hands of dozens of different people. I can't help you with that, or anything really." But then he made a cupping gesture with his free hand.
Kael looked down and frowned. "What... what do you mean? Aren't you a guard? Your duty is to aide me!"
"Are you serious, Prince? Look, never mind. Come with me out of this, uh, public place." He beckoned Kael to a small door hidden to the side of the room. It was naturally hidden by flickering shadows, an optical illusion of sorts, that even with dispelling effects would not have alarmed any mage of its presence.
Kael nodded. "Fine."
The room was small and cramped. It was filled with wooden crates and barrels of supplies, but there were not weapons here. It was simply a larder perhaps or some kind of storage facility? It was dark, with only a single torch that Raethan had to light with an augmented fire bolt. That was rather strange, to Kael, since they had so many magical lights outside.
Raethan turned to him as the door close, and a savage expression took place over the guardsman's visage. He reached out again, "You gotta pay me for information, kid. You think the Kirin-Tor rule down here? No, I'm the boss in the sewers, and you might not have to pay a toll thanks to Kassan, but nothing is for free in this world."
"You're the boss? Really." Kael'thas scoffed. "And what of the Tycoon?"
"I could knife 'er if I wanted," Raethan's voice seemed to tremble for a second, but it happened too fast, and he seemed to act like it didn't happen. He leaned closer, and allowed the shadow to loom on his face intimidatingly as he glared down at Kael'thas.
It was at this moment that Kael realized the guardsman was actually older than him, and probably very, very deadly. It was also probably prudent not to poke the subjects that might make the lower orders rebel for no reason. He might be a prideful prince, but he was no idiot elf. "Fine. Then I need a new deck to compete in the Tournament of Power. Can you find me a dealer for some boosters?"
"Boosters, eh? Nah, Prince, the Tournament of Power is just a month away... everyone worth their salt is buying every booster there is." Raethan scoffed and leaned back. He seemed to regain his composure. "Last I heard, there even a Lordaeron Booster was being sold on the auction for over fifteen hundred big ones."
"That's... that's enough to buy a small army," Kael gasped. "And the Lordaeron set is trash!"
Raethan smirked, and it wasn't a nice smirk. "Yeah. So you see, there ain't no chance I've got that. Look, I can offer you two things, Prince, that I can see you actually buying. One, I can provide you with a deck, something I built myself, see? That'll cost you a pretty penny. And the other... well, I can point you to who currently owns your precious Blue-Eyes—ah!"
"WHO?" Magical fire leaked out of Kael's eyes so much that the room was temporarily blindingly white.
"Ah, ah, ah," Raethan smirked again, shaking a lazy finger at the Prince.
Kael'thas sighed. Damn. He had no choice. "How much?"
"How much, what?" The guardsman's smirk widened.
"How much will it cost me?" He ground out from his gritted teeth. The room dimmed.
"Ten."
"Silvers?" Kael'thas asked incredulously.
"No, gold, and not the mineral kind. Too much alchemically transmuted crap we seen these days, you could fool some dumb farmers, but you can't fool me with that stuff. I need to real deal, stamped by the Bank of Dalaran itself." He paused before speaking more softly, "or, if you have... ah, you don't. There's no point in asking you."
Before the man finished speaking, Kael grabbed a fistful of coins from his pouch and dropped them on the top of a wooden barrel. Their splendor shone even with the dim torch light.
Raethan took one and conjured a spark of arcane power. It was instantly repelled by the coin. "Alright, it's the real deal. If you want the Blue-Eyes White-Dragon, you'll have to find Archmage Aran."
"Fordred Aran?!" Kael'thas was aghast. He couldn't intimidate that man, who could stare even death in the eyes and stand tall, into giving up that card. He would have to duel him... in a game of cards for it.
"The very same." Raethan's insufferable smirk lingered. "I might distrust all 'o them Kirin-Tor to even do my dirty laundry, but that's a man with principle. You could, oh, challenge him to a card game for it and he'd stand by his word... if you can win. Ante up, Prince."
"Fine," Kael growled. "Let me see the deck."
"I have it right here, in fact," Raethan handed over a set of worn out cards.
Kael quickly scanned through these cards, his irritation building with each flip. "How much, Raethan?"
"Oh, how about... a hundred gold?" Raethan studied his nails, not even looking up at the Prince.
"Are you serious? This is a deck of common cards!" Kael roared.
"And here I thought you were shit at bargaining. I'll let you have it for 95. What a deal, am I right?" His grin only seemed to grown.
And with it, the irritation within Kael. For a moment, he thought he would just conjure a Flamestrike on the guardsman, but Kael'thas knew that wasn't a real option. While the man was just a lowly peasant, he was still in his place of power. And those little tricks of fire bolt and arcane sparks only told him that Raethan was at least a mediocre mage of some respect.
He couldn't strike the man, not when he had nothing to gain from it. "Give me an uncommon at least. For that price, I could buy three starter decks. And at least start decks come with a set of uncommons."
"Uncommons that are shit, though," Raethan pointed out. He seemed to take in the Prince's rage for a moment longer before nodding. "Fine, fine, since Kassan brought you here. He's one of my men, after all. I'll add a limited-print uncommon, how's about that? A Dark Magician."
"... Why?" Kael'thas asked suspiciously.
"You're not haggling down the price, you shit haggler of a prince!" Raethan laughed in the royal High Elf's face.
"So lower it!" Kael'thas pleaded. He didn't think any of this entire trip was something he'd ever do. No one would haggle with a Prince! He always just demanded and got what he wanted. At first, the few signs of defiance were amusing, especially from his equals, but now, even upstart peasants thought they were his equal? He wanted nothing more than to get out of here, and it was only his desire for power and for this card game that kept him rooted where he stood.
"Ah, as the Tycoon is oft to say, inflation is quite the bitch, Prince," Raethan retorted. He turned down towards Kael with a knowing look. "Yeah, I might shank her one day, but her papers on economics are some of the best and most enlightening in the field. In fact, you might say she discovered the study and science of economics."
"Economics?"
"The magic of money, something you might want to learn about, Prince."
"I can see the value in this," Kael'thas nodded as he made his exchange. He would get his vengeance on this guardsman one day, but not today. He had to prepare to get his cards back and... "Wait... she? The Tycoon is a woman?"