Shadowland noval spoilers, new excerpt

“How many?”

The king of Stormwind listened to the final cathedral bells tolling. The afternoon’s last rays of sunlight speared the stained-glass windows above, casting mournful shadows across the high altar. It was a melancholy image, one that only widened the pit in Anduin’s stomach. He waited in the echo of the bells while the soft-spoken Bishop Arthur, clad all in cream, black and gold, unlocked the door leading to the crypts beneath the Cathedral of Light.

“Six.” The answer came from Anduin’s close friend and trusted advisor, Genn Greymane, King of Gilneas. “Or rather, SI:7 discovered six. No one can say how many were washed away by the tides.”

“More could be in hiding,” High Exarch Turalyon pointed out. He stood tall and broad, his Light-forged armor a polished and impressive silver and gold. Bearded, scarred, Turalyon looked every inch the tried and hardened warrior. The two men followed Anduin down the winding path that snaked into the catacombs. “Shaw sent at least a dozen to monitor the waters between the Zandalari coast and the Eastern Kingdoms.”

“Let us go where there are no curious ears.” Anduin told them in a whisper.

Though the cathedral had largely emptied out after the evening service, a few brothers and priests remained. Of course they looked; who would not be eager to see the king of Stormwind present, and accompanied by two such illustrious warriors? To the people of Stormwind, Turalyon in particular was practically myth. His noble likeness had been forever commemorated as a statue in the Valley of Heroes rising above the bridge leading into Stormwind. He had helped forge the Knights of the Silver Hand, companion to heroes of legend and song like Uther the Lightbringer and Tirion Fordring.

All three stowed their conversation, making the long, sober descent into the crypts. Anduin hurried, though he dreaded what awaited him below. Still he went, for it was his duty to see what had befallen troops dispatched in his name.

The air grew colder, the scent of mud and brick reminding him of rainy autumn days. The fetor of stale air and dust followed, then a light perfume of dried flowers and herbs—a weak defense against the unmistakable odor of fresh rot. Fresh death.

At the very bottom of the crypts, where it was chill enough to bother even a man dressed all in furs, they found a row of bodies. Each was laid out and still in their sodden clothing, skin discolored, lips twisted in the agony of a mortal scream. Turalyon snatched a torch off the wall and charged ahead, sweeping the light over the corpses, his stoically handsome face pinched with concern.

“Look at the precision,” he said, standing before one young dwarf, his reddish beard full of sand and bits of seaweed. “One shot directly to the heart.”

Greymane joined the paladin at that body, carefully inspecting the arrow left sticking from the dwarf’s chest. “They are all like this. A single deadly shot. Mark the fletching on the arrows here and here: it has been shaved down.”

“That was why Shaw ordered them brought here,” Turalyon continued, his eyes fixed on the deceased dwarf lying between them. Anduin had never seen the war-forged paladin look afraid, and it was not fear in the man’s eyes then. Not fear, but rage.

“What am I not seeing?” Anduin asked, frowning.

“Zandalari arrows,” Turalyon replied. “But these are not Zandalari tactics.”

“I should think not! This is some mischief . . . some dark mischief I do not yet understand.” Greymane paced, lips curled as if a low worgen’s growl might emanate from his throat at any second. “There are few archers in the world that could make these shots, my king. The only sort I know are allied with the infernal Banshee Queen.”

“Dark rangers?” Anduin murmured, eyes darting between the two men. “Can we be certain?”

“Certain? No, but I’ve seen a damned mess of their arrows in my time and the style matches, and so does the accuracy,” Greymane huffed, pacing faster, every bit the caged and furious wolf.

“What would the dark rangers be doing in Zandalar? The Zandalari are allies of the Horde, and that would not make them friend to Sylvanas or her rangers.” Anduin had nearly put his hand down on one of the soldiers’ boots. Distracted, he had forgotten they were in the presence of the dead. But now he looked closer and felt keenly the stab in his chest. By the Light, they were all so terribly young . . .

He took small, cold comfort in the thought that at least the soldiers were home and protected in a sanctuary of the Light.

“It could be a warning from Sylvanas. Perhaps she sent her rangers to punish the new queen. The Dark Lady was still warchief when they made their alliance, but our spies believe Queen Talanji has pulled her support and remains largely independent. We all know how well Sylvanas takes betrayal.” Turalyon said gravely.

Anduin nodded, considering the paladin’s point of view, but Greymane had other ideas, tossing up his hands in frustration.

“This is our opportunity, Anduin, don’t you see it? Where Sylvanas goes her dark rangers are sure to follow. She may be close at hand, and these murders her critical mistake. We should gather what forces we can spare and sail west. Whether she is in league with the Zandalari or moving against them matters not; we must not squander a chance to finish this.

He ended with a resounding note to his already galvanizing baritone, but Anduin didn’t move. Instead, he stared resolutely at Turalyon, who appeared unconvinced at best. The paladin shifted in his heavy golden plate armor, a crease of worry between his brows.

“Now is the time to think, my king, not the time to react. There are still spies unaccounted for in the field, and we must not forget the armistice. Zandalar is a vast continent, certainly, but the eyes there are friendly to the Horde, not to the Banshee Queen.” He tucked a fist under his chin thoughtfully. “The Horde wants her dead as much as we do. The armistice you signed is meaningless if we cannot rely on the Horde to share intelligence of this nature.”

“The armistice,” Greymane hissed, obviously unenthused. “We can rely on the Horde for nothing. How many times must we learn this lesson, Anduin? I know you know better.”

Anduin did. He did not necessarily trust the Horde, but he did weigh their actions. Were they untrue to their words, they would have assassinated him and his Alliance generals outside the gates of Orgrimmar before or after the mak’gora.

He waited a moment, hoping Greymane would calm down, but the man’s face had turned red with fury, his thick white whiskers bristling.

“Genn . . . ” Anduin tore his eyes away from his advisor and friend, instead raking his gaze across the bodies laid before them. “Rash action has harmed us far more often than care and caution. I will not overcommit to what could be a diversion.”

High Exarch Turalyon nodded his agreement.

“We must ask ourselves: Why would Sylvanas go to Zandalar? What would she want there?”

“What does it matter?” Greymane thundered. “You said it yourself, Turalyon. The Zandalari queen pledged herself to Sylvanas first. Perhaps that vow remains true. Perhaps she has turned her back on the Horde and even now shelters the traitor and her soldiers.” He gestured to the fallen spies. “Perhaps these brave few were killed for discovering the truth.”

Anduin had a duty to the truth, whatever it might be. Both men provided opinions he valued, but he could not deny that Turalyon offered the more tempting take. Still. Still.

“I am reminded, my noble friends,” Anduin began softly. “Of a day not so long ago, and not so far from here. A placid place in the Arathi Highlands. A gathering meant to be peaceful, a gathering meant to reunite families torn asunder by forces they could never have foreseen . . . ” He sighed, leaning forward, resting his knuckles on the edge of the stone slab. “Human and Forsaken families met in good faith, trying to find common ground and common love—and many did. For their trust, for their grace, they received only slaughter.” He lifted his gaze to Greymane, who had gone mercifully still, the flush in his face fading. “I give your recommendations equal weight. Turalyon, take Alleria Windrunner and investigate these deaths.”

Standing tall again, Anduin pressed his hand over his heart, finding that Turalyon regarded him with a sure smile. He approved. “I name you High Commander of the Alliance forces. Your task—your only task—is to find Sylvanas Windrunner so we might bring her to proper justice. Hunt her day and night, use whatever means you must.”

Turalyon bowed his head with practiced gentility, accepting the honor and the charge with a humble, “My heart and my sword to the cause.”

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The notion that Talanji might be still allied to Sylvanas and that the previous excerpt hints at her arranging a fake assassination to provide an official reason for Zandalar cutting off communications with the Horde this is interesting to say the least.

Considering they brought the unwitting Zekhan into it(the Dark Rangers must have been very good at pushing him in the right direction despite being invisible) when they would have been better served by getting a Zandalari rescuer saving the day it seems Sylvanas is as stupid and spiteful as ever and will likely get Talanji exposed which would lead to her being replaced by Dazar.

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I’m going to go out on a limb here and say that it’s likely not that these dead troops were in the wrong and that they simply were grr angery at the Horde.

Seems a bit too stupid for it to literally be, dark rangers using Zanda arrows to epic own the Alliance. I hate being optimistic, but I’m looking forward to seeing what happens.

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Zekhan was pushed by a unknown force not the dark rangers

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I’m confused about what’s going on here. Why are there Horde spies dead in Stormwind by Zandalari arrows used by dark rangers?

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since when are dwarves in the horde?

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there was a previous one?

Oh yeah you’re right, I missed that line.

WoW. So Anduin gives Turalyon the Title of being High Commander of the Alliance Forces? WoW.

Also Wasn’t Genn going to team up with Tyrande after she stormed off to go looking for Sylvanas?

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Soooo… Anduin’s status as emperor is official then? I mean if the High King position was supposed to be analogous to the Supreme Commander of the Military then wtf was that new job description for Turalyon?

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https://blizzardwatch.com/2020/02/07/shadows-rising-warcraft-novel-shadowlands/

It mentions this:

Not the response he was hoping for. Zekhan backed away, already bracing for the lecture Thrall would give him for bothering the queen. He threw up his arms as if in surrender, a cold shiver overcoming him, like someone had traced the tip of a knife down his spine. And then he fell backward, steady one minute and flailing the next, his elbow smashing into something hard and then wet. A goblet. Talanji’s missing servant had returned and Zekhan had crashed right into him.

All eyes followed the Zandalari queen as she gathered her small entourage and marched out of the tents, head held high and proud. All eyes, Zekhan noted, except for those belonging to Thrall. It had all happened in the space of a blink: the assassin, the lightning, the queen’s outrage… He couldn’t help but fixate on the moment when his arm knocked the cup out of the assassin’s hand. He felt certain his feet had been firmly planted on the ground, that something or someone had shoved him back into the Zandalari.

A knife down his spine… How similar to Sylvanas, Dark Rangers and the Wardens…

I thought the whole point of High King was that they are the supreme commander of the Alliance.

I really, really hate this blue warchief idea.

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Nooope… Going to be debunked quite soon.

My condolences in getting saddled with Supreme Leader Boyking Wrynn.

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Tyrande noticed the ascendancy of the Blue Warchief and is quite displeased as shown with her dialogue with Shandris.

She is the only Alliance Leader who doesn’t tow the line.

The Horde is turning into a Red Alliance(and has already gotten rid of most of it’s darker elements of it’s leadership with this Novel seemingly set to get rid of the last remaining dark element in the leadership) while the Alliance is turning into a Blue Horde(with it’s darker leadership growing stronger and trying to get the Blue Warchief to become more and more decisive).

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Love how they completely left out the Night Elves in that book. Like not even one mention…

Maybe the race is actually extinct now so it makes sense that they aren’t part of the story anymore :thinking:

Not going to touch a book like that…

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Are you like making up stuff? Are you ok?
cause everything you said was wrong, its the most wrong thing I ever read on these forums

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Pfff suuure… Is not like the “council” has failed at self awareness, self policing and lack of in-fighting as off this novel.

Nah, the Horde leaders are still the stupid evil warmongers of always, they literally haven’t stopped failing since Cata.

I thought that the only warmonger was Talanji… Baine, Rokhan, Thrall and most of the others aren’t shown warmongering but trying to make Talanji see reason by working with the Council.

If the new excerpt does indeed hint at Talanji siding with Sylvanas she would be the last dark element of leadership being excised one would think at least until we learn what Geya’rah thinks of the peace between Alliance and Horde.

Gallywix, Nathanos, Dark Warden Sira and Sylvanas are no longer part of the Horde remember?

Man, it doesn’t matter if “it’s just Talanji”. The whole point of culling Sylvanas and Gallywix was to remove the questionable conflicted elements that made the Horde leadership vulnerable to villain batting in pvp oriented narrative expacs.

By proxy of hitting Talanji with the warmonger bat devs are proving to us they have zero interest in changing the Horde cyclical storytelling regarding Horde leaders becoming genocidal maniacs for the lols.

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The council failed at that automatically by including Geya’rah.

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