[SPOILERS] Excerpt from Blood Ties - Midnight Novel coming on Nov 18th

Just notice they released a short excerpt so I think it’s very nice to post it here:

Chapter One

Light’s Hope Chapel, Eastern Plaguelands

The Eastern Kingdoms

Clang. Clang. Clang.

The sound of hammer against steel was a familiar one outside Light’s Hope Chapel. But this time Master Craftsman Wilhelm—who usually repaired the weapons and armor of the Knights of the Silver Hand—was not the one producing it. The gruff dwarf was instead leaning back against a grassy hillock, peering up at the brown-gray sky of the Eastern Plaguelands and belting out a smithing song between swigs of Thunderbrew lager. He paused long enough to pose a question to the half-elf champion who had offered to take his place.

“How long can that skinny little arm of yers keep this up, laddie?” Wilhelm’s eyes twinkled, his mustache wet with foam. The “laddie” in question, Arator the Redeemer, grinned at him as he wiped his brow.

“Yet again I lament that I do not possess the dwarven musculature,” he said with an exaggerated sigh.

Wilhelm guffawed. “Ah, well, we cannae all be so fortunate.”

Arator’s arm was certainly up to the task, but it was hot work, and neither his human nor his elven blood gave him the innate dwarven ability to long withstand the heat of the forge. He removed his upper body armor and laid it to one side, revealing a pair of dragon tattoos on his muscled upper arms. They were identical in style, both outlined in gold, but filled in with different hues: one bright as the White Lady moon and the other a shade of charcoal.

A human boy of about ten, Winthrop, sat beside him. Winthrop was the newest squire to the famed paladin Lord Grayson Shadowbreaker, a position that Arator himself had held when he was new to the order. It was the boy’s task to which Arator now plied his own efforts, working on cleaning and hammering dents out of the great man’s armor. Today marked young Winthrop’s first visit to Light’s Hope Chapel, and he was far too dazzled by the elite company he presently kept to have made much progress in mending his lord’s gambeson.

“I can’t believe you’re bothering to help me,” he told Arator. “I mean . . . you’re the son of High Exarch Turalyon and Lady Alleria Windrunner! They’ve statues in the Valley of Heroes, songs sung about them. You were practically born famous!”

Arator had heard all this before and had tired of it years ago. Still, it was hardly Win’s fault, and he meant well. Although Arator was much older than Winthrop, the years of a half-elf did not keep pace with those of humans. It was one of many challenges bequeathed by his unique parentage. For all Arator’s experience and all he had seen, in many ways, he felt more kinship with the new squire than with his lord knight.

Arator turned his smile on the boy. “As I said, I enjoy being of assistance.” Arator well remembered how many tasks had been assigned during his own time as Grayson’s squire. It was important to learn skills like armor repair, of course, but young Win seemed buried beneath mundane chores. Arator felt that there was no task so small it was beneath him, if he could help someone by performing it.

Winthrop’s brown eyes narrowed, and he glanced toward where Lord Grayson and another of his former squires were engaged in conversation. “I hope he doesn’t get angry at us,” Winthrop murmured.

Arator couldn’t blame the boy for being concerned. Tall, muscular, having lost his right eye in battle long ago, Lord Grayson could seem intimidating even when out of armor and chatting casually. As one of Stormwind’s foremost paladins, he’d trained many among their number, had even brought Arator with him to their order’s war council a time or two. It was hard not to see him as intimidating, formidable—certainly an enemy Arator would not want to meet in battle. Simply sparring with the man was hard enough. But Grayson had made a firm commitment to others in the order, and he’d served the Light longer than most.

“Don’t worry,” Arator reassured the boy. “He’ll know it was my idea, not yours, trust me.”

“I don’t want you to get in trouble, either.”

“I won’t.”

Winthrop sighed. “Everyone says I’m lucky he picked me, but . . .” The boy looked down. “He’s so . . . strong, and confident, and can knock me to the ground in seconds when we’re sparring. I’ve heard a lot of the stories—he’s a real hero! He’s more than just a knight, he’s a lord! I’ve got to make sure I don’t disappoint him.” As he spoke the words, Winthrop reached for the gambeson and set to mending it with renewed purpose.

Arator felt his smile fade slightly. Even though he might be the son of legends, he was, in Winthrop’s innocent words, just a knight of the Silver Hand. Many would say that was honor enough, but Winthrop’s easy dismissal of it only echoed Arator’s own thoughts. He had earned that rank for himself long ago, had even been recognized with a title. Now and then, the Light would grant a paladin inspiration regarding another’s destiny. Arator’s own father had been so moved to name the famous Uther “the Lightbringer.” Arator had been named “the Redeemer.” But whom or what exactly he would one day redeem eluded him. And until that moment came, it seemed the order was content to let him chase accolades without ever receiving them.

He tried not to let it bother him, but others younger than he, still panting and bloody, had received battlefield promotions. Their companions, weary but buoyed by victory, had cheered them with hoarse voices. Usually when he had such thoughts, Arator rebuked himself, as he did now, for being envious—and, perhaps, overly imaginative. He had joined the Knights of the Silver Hand to lend his strength to a worthy cause, and while acknowledgment of his efforts was nice, he certainly didn’t require it to continue his course.

Arator had fought well and valiantly in several wars already, but his efforts had been insufficient to attract much notice. At least, he thought ruefully, notice of the good kind. There seemed to be no end to the order’s rules, and Arator had bent, if not fully broken, most of them. He’d concerned himself too much with the locals here, hesitated there, gotten information from a questionable source another time. His methods were always a topic of discussion among the order, but Arator noticed that no one raised concerns with his results. Some had voiced, obliquely or bluntly, that his disregard for protocol and rules would one day harm his standing in the order, but Arator dismissed the idea. To him, it was simple: If he could not change his world, improve the lives of common folk, what purpose was left for a Knight of the Silver Hand?

In truth, it had been more than a willingness to be helpful that had prompted Arator to help young Winthrop. He had been summoned to Light’s Hope by Lord Maxwell Tyrosus, one of the central leaders within their order. Arator understood that Lord Tyrosus was an extraordinarily busy individual, and while he was not surprised he had to wait for an audience, he did need something to keep his mind off the meeting. Arator knew exactly why he had been asked to come here today, though he did not know what the outcome of the conversation would be.

Abruptly, Winthrop sprang to his feet, dropping the gambeson. “Lord Tyrosus!” he exclaimed, his voice climbing a half octave with excitement and delight.

But Arator felt only knife-sharp disappointment as he beheld the expression on the knight’s weatherworn face. An ominous clue as to the tone of the conversation. Arator schooled his own features lest Lord Tyrosus see how hard the blow had struck. Rising, Arator placed Lord Grayson’s armor down next to Winthrop, who was still gazing up at Tyrosus with wide eyes.

Lord Tyrosus glanced over the boy’s progress. “Good work, young man! But best pick up the pace, eh?”

Winthrop gulped and nodded furiously, unable to speak.

To Arator, Tyrosus said merely, “Come. Let us pay our respects together.”

They fell into step, heading toward the Sanctum of Light, the scent of stone and its coolness enveloping them as they descended. This had been the headquarters for the Knights of the Silver Hand since the Burning Legion’s invasion, and Arator knew it well. He had come here many times on Silver Hand business, but he often found himself at the sanctum for no other reason than to simply be with the Light, to draw inspiration from watching others perfect their skills, and to pay respect to the many who had gone before.

They paused before the tomb of the legendary Tirion Fordring. Tirion had been one of the five original paladins—the first in Azeroth’s history. Archbishop Alonsus Faol had called upon these five to lead the order long ago. Faol’s vision was to marry the Light’s compassion with the power of the hammer, knights who would be priest and warrior both. But where the Light had a tendency toward order and rigidity, Tirion knew it to be flexible and kind. He saw the Light’s reach in all he met, famously held empathy for his former enemies, and yet never feared raising hammer or sword when he saw injustice . . . even when it meant standing against his fellow paladins. Even when it meant exile from his home and this very order.

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idk why i had any hope it’d be horde related.

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I am not expecting much in the way of positive Horde development here. If anything, weirdly enough though, I am looking forward to further development into fel/Legion/demon lore. Always kind of nice to see what the demons have been up to since the Burning Legion’s fall.

But I am wondering how closely this will tie into Midnight’s main plot?

My big super out there guess is the plot twist will be Xal’atath will somehow be behind this demonic resurgence and use it as opportunity to harvest fel macguffin energy into the dark heart. She’s been trying to harvest energy from various sources and it makes me wonder if she’s acting out of opportunity or maybe she does actually need diverse energy sources.

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I assume Arator’s vague prophetic dream he mentioned in BC will play out here (only Turalyon won’t actually die) because I don’t know when else in this expansion you’re going to get Arator and Turalyon under a red sky surrounded by demons.

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This raises a lot of questions about the current status of the Silver Hand (and other Legion era orders). We know the Silver Hand splintered post legion with the Horde leaving and the SH fully joining the Alliance war effort. The Argent Crusade seems to be independent again as of SL, but Tyrosus leads the Silverhand? Did the Argent Crusade join the Alliance for the 4th war? Arator seems like he sees himself as a SH knight first but he lives in Silvermoon? Either I’m getting my wires crossed or this all seems like a massive plot hole?

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No. Tyrosus does not lead the Silver Hand, he is the present leader of the Argent Crusade. Turalyon took command over the order from us after his return to fight in the Fourth War and remained in the Alliance since. The Argents did not join the Alliance for the Fourth War, they are and have always remained neutral.

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it’s golden, what did you expect? Coherence?

From the woman who wrote that Thrall didn’t know he was an Orc because of nonsense about his reflection when anyone can look at your own damn body and see that he is green as hell?

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Wasn’t she also the one that wrote that thrall is only a good guy because he was raised by humans and one girl was nice to him?

Or am I tripping?

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Golden thought Thrall couldn’t look at the color of his own skin and compare it to the humans around him. Or see his reflection in the water-trough Blackmoore gave him. No, Blackmoore was too clever by hiding all the mirrors.

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she didn’t write that one, she said that during the Thrall Panel with the enthusiastic agreement of Copeland and the side-eye and complete silence of Gregory lol

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I’d hope they explore this in the book. The son of Stormwind’s regent lord who lives in Silvermoon and gets mentored by its regent lord speaks to a more novel crisis of identity than this latest pass at Silver Hand paladin drama.

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This is one of those moments I would appreciate them relegating plot to the novels if it meant granting us a respite from these characters in the actual game, but no such luck.

Needless to say, between the author and the cast of characters; this is a hard pass for me.

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I smell Orc hate

From the description that Amazon gives, I think that will be the case since it involves remnants of the Legion, demons, and other nonsense about family drama. Hell, even the background of the book has red colored mountains.

A few things that bother me about this book is: Why is Arator seemingly having an identity crisis that involves Alleria and Turalyon? How in the world does Arator see any of his blood parents personality traits in himself when we know that he was raised by Rhonin and Veressa alongside his cousins, who have yet to make an in-game appearance despite being of similar ages to him btw, Turalyon and Alleria should be complete strangers to him. He should be welcoming and open to them as they try to get to know him, but also maintaining a comfortable distance from them because he knows that they aren’t his actual parents. Veressa and Rhonin are.

There should be a whole push-and-pull relationship between the three of them as Alleria and Turalyon try to forcefully insert themselves as his parents despite them never having been around him and his resistance to them because he feels that they are attempting to wholeheartedly replace the two people who actually raised him since his infancy.

IMO, this whole book should be about Veressa’s and Arator’s POV and their relationship and how it affects Alleria and Turalyon.

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And the woman who also wrote that Genn had a tail in Before the Storm… Even though he doesn’t.

I remember when I read that part of Before the Storm, I was thinking:

“Genn doesn’t have a tail. It seems like the author just added this for some goofy scene she had in her head.”

I want to say it was distractingly contrived, but that doesn’t even seem strong enough.

At least she later recanted :

1) Sharp eyes have caught a slipup in Before the Storm–unlike Genn, I’m only human. I mistakenly pinned a tail on the worgen. @Llorewalker caught it & we thought we’d docked all the tails, but missed one, so there is a vestigial tail in the book. So no, worgen don’t have tails.

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If you happy and you know it clap your hands clap oh no

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There was a short story released shortly before WW that did briefly addrress how he doesn’t really know his parents at all, but it wasn’t about that and it’s not been mentioned in-game as far as I can tell.

Now they’ve been back for something like 10 years so obviously he would have gotten to know them since then, but that doesn’t change that they weren’t around for his formative years.

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There’s a sixty-page excerpt up on Penguin House (look inside) if anyone wants an early look. A few first impressions:

  • The Burning Legion stronghold revisited is Felsoul Hold in Suramar. Its soul-eating machinery is back online, possibly rigged to harvest Suramar City; several nightborne have been abducted and killed. Thalyssra requests the aid of a Blood Knight division in the Duskwatch’s investigation, but Liadrin outsources the venture to Arator in an effort to raise his coinage with the Silver Hand, whose protocols he keeps disregarding. Man, how close we came to a blood elf/nightborne story…
  • Arator gets a more blood elf-friendly backstory as a trained Farstrider raised as much by Lor’themar and Liadrin as Vereesa, even after the Scourging. (Sylvanas was too busy and then too dead to involve herself much in his life.) Casts what little we already knew of his early life into some doubt. Sounds like he’s had dual citizenship in Silvermoon his entire life.
  • Alleria and Turalyon dine with Thalyssra and Lor’themar in Suramar and discuss faction politics. Thalyssra wants to strengthen global relations and has charmed and befriended Alleria, who views the armistice as an opportunity to rebuild broken bridges with her old buddy Lor’themar, whose friendship she still desires. Alleria’s recap of their estrangement and her exile from Silvermoon notably omits what motivated it, which is a shame, since Thalyssra’s eagerness for peace with the Alliance is of less narrative significance than Alleria’s nebulous feelings towards the Horde IMO.
  • Genn is Turalyon’s regent while he visits his fellow regent lord. Turalyon in general gets a pretty positive portrayal here. Still a Tough Light Guy but with moments of tenderness and levity. Again though, it is weird that Thalyssra and Lor’themar’s cross-faction diplomacy is examined more closely than Turalyon and Alleria’s.
  • Kayn Sunfury is one of Arator’s close friends and seems to be the adventure’s presumptive “Horde” guy. Lor’themar and Thalyssra are wary of him and Turalyon is especially leery about the Illidari after what happened to Xe’ra (who Lightforged him) but Thalyssra vouches for his character. Kayn’s also given canon credit for defending the Exodar from Rakeesh; no idea where this leaves poor Altruis. The excerpt ends with the Windrunners boarding the Fel Hammer to pick Kayn up so maybe Altruis will show up too.
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“Flip you Thalyssra, I don’t feel like helping you, Arator is getting dangerously close to unfriendly reputation with the Silver Hand.” -…Lady Liadrin?

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I wouldn’t be surprised if Kayn was chosen purely because he was the default for non-DH and the DH player’s choice is non canon.

Though that makes the Shade of Akama the canon choice unless they split the difference and have Kayn do some events (like the Exodar) and Altruis the others (seeking Akama’s aid). They both show up when the DH player gets their class mount, so it wouldn’t be out of nowhere to go that route.

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