The arcane flares illuminated the sky just down the beach where they lived. Eliendre glanced up with some intrigue. Was it an emergency? Would the guards deal with it? Should they go?
It was one of the things she was never told about. Vellidan did not brief her either. He himself was as detached as she was from the rest of the estate, keeping mainly only to the borders of their own home. She knew her Shanâdo saw them too, as she knew that Narindiel would immediately respond. Taryane, however, was away in the city.
Eliendre would have stayed away from the source of the alarm, as she imagined Vellidan would, if not for the sudden presence of multiple armed guardians, and powerful presences of the arcane and the fel. Spellcasting leaves certain traces, and each caster has their own specific pattern when they teleport. Powerful presences made themselves known all of a sudden, and then she heard the most agonising cries. Cries of not just pain. It was as if their very lives were ripped out of those who made them.Â
Velldan was ahead of her before she could even spring forward. In no less than two blinks of an eye, they were both at the edge of scene, only Shanâdo Sunstorm grabbed her arm, his grip tight as a vise as he spun her to face him.
âWhatever happens, do not let yourself be seen.â
He dashed forward before Eliendre could react. To what he just said. To what her spectral sight saw. To what Vellidan did next. which was to land a flying kick at Lord Illethiann Firestar towards the large tree that sheltered the famous grave of the Lordâs deceased second born daughter.Â
Eliendre had seen carnage of every kind, from the mass slaughter of the Scourge in the Fall, to the hellhole that was the Antoran Wastes, and everything else in between. For her, each scene was always taken in all at once, without any detail missed. It was the same here: the battlemagi and spellbreakers encircling the little area by the grave; the pale, bleeding, very dead body of Nivendiâen Firestar, son of the Lord. Remnants of void encircled his form, particularly concentrated around his head and his neck, from where a severed artery bled as if it was impaled upon an invisible spike. Narindiel with her hand raised, surrounded by fel, at none other than Alaroth Voidstorm, twin brother to Vellidan who now stood in front of the renâdorei in a protective stance.Â
And Lord Firestar, angrily pushinig himself up from being kicked against the tree as his spellcasting was interrupted. While Lady Firestar cradled the body of her son, hysterically screaming at the healers, who were trying to remove the void taint in order to reverse the damage. To no avail.
Her heart turned cold. The horror of frontline battle was one thing, but the senseless murder of an innocent being in the very place where they were supposed to be the most safe, was a different kind of trauma.Â
None of it made any sense.
She parsed as much as she could make out from the shouting, and from what was happening before her as she kept out of sight behind a copse of trees. Illthiann accusing the twins of being traitors. Reiâannâs crying. Narindielâs loud interrogations. Alarothâs protests. A name. Priestess Starflare? Vellidan defending his brother. The ground was illuminated as fire was summoned, scorching the earth. Narindiel being stopped by Vellidan, and then going towards Illethiann only to disappear before she could touch the grieving Lord. To the naked eye, she would have stepped into thin air. For Eliendre, she saw the arcane spell matrix of a rapid teleport, casted by Illethiann Firestar himself towards Narindiel.
But his was not the only one. Where the body of Nivendiâen Firestar lay, a similar matrix, with a pattern completely different from any of the spellcasters present, surrounded him, as the healers that tended to him backed away from the immense heat surrounding the area now, and Reiâann suddenly rising to stalk towards Vellidan and Alaroth.Â
She wanted to say something. Someone is teleporting the body away. But Nivendiâen disappeared in the second she deliberated.
The outcry was horrific.Â
It all happened quickly afterward. Reiâann shouting for which of the mages around them was the one responsible for taking Nivenâdien away, to which none of them owned up, because none of them did it. Reiâann raising her hand, as Illethiann did. Powerful spells of arcane and fel respectively, ready to launch towards her Shanâdo and his brother. Vellidanâs warglaive flying to his hand, the tip of which he then aimed towards Reiâannâs throat, while Alaroth denied knowing where Nivendiâen was.Â
Eliendre moved. She would not let anyone attack her mentor, her teacher. Her foster father.
But Vellidan, astute as ever, casted a sharp glance in her direction, the fel energies saturating his empty eye sockets burning in his eyeless glare.Â
She was not to let herself be seen. No matter what happened.
And just as quickly, Eliendre witnessed, as if time now decided to slow down, the unstable fel portal that appeared behind Alaroth. Vellidan kicking his brother backwards into it before it closed. âGet her here.â He said to Alaroth before he disappeared, as Reiâann flicked her wrist, and a powerful lance of ice, launching as sudden and quickly as a bullet fired from a gun, flew towards the portal, striking the tree as it closed. Then, the warmage was pulled back by her husband, as the meteor of fel flew straight down upon Vellidan Sunstorm.
Her hands flew to her mouth to muffle her scream.
___
She took Vellidanâs glaive after the guards roughly handled his limp, broken body, intact only because of a last split-second metamorphosis, maybe, that probably saved him. She brought it, hands shaking, to their weapons rack, where their warglaives were always stored.
She kept to the shadows, not letting herself be seen as she stood by the pillars where they shackled and hung him, a warning to those who would dare to be traitors to the house of Firestar. Eliendre wanted to let him down and bear him away. But she did not know how to, without help, without causing more harm to him by moving him.
She did not know how long she stood there before Narindiel arrived, looking with despair at what they had done to Vellidan. But, unlike Eliendre, she managed to magic away the shackles and gently hover him down. Alaroth appeared afterwards, reporting that he did find the killer and brought her to the Firestars.
Later, at Whisperwind Grove, she waited outside the old tauren druidâs cottage as Vellidan was brought inside by Narindiel and Alaroth. None of them could convince her to leave.
In silence, she kept her vigil, as her Shanâdo - her father - was stabilised.Â
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And the shouting of Taryane and Vellidan in the background, echoing, like the voices of ghosts. As if they came from her head. As if they were not real.
___
Eliendre had not meant to find what she found. She was alone at home, as usual, and wanted to give herself a chance to wander. It was when she was alone that she could roam, without getting in anyoneâs way. While she never stepped into any of the occupied bedrooms without their ownersâ express permission, no-one had said that she was not allowed into the study.
Narindiel shared her space of work with nobody. Taryane preferred to keep to the security of her own messy room, with her own shelves stacked with tomes of her choosing, her table on which she could read, write, plan, tinker, and the numerous messy supplies and objects she had laying around. The study of their home was a place where Narindiel mainly worked on House-related matters, as far as Eliendre was told.Â
She had not intended to pry. She merely saw the scrap of parchment laying intact in the unlit brazier, spared from the flames that were meant to destroy its entirety. The scant words on it were enough for her to take pause.
For the first time in many weeks, Eliendreâs interest was keenly roused.
She told no-one about it. After all, it was not her business. She was never meant to have seen that little bit of information that was not privy to anyone. But it was too much even for her to resist, when Vellidan announced - out of the blue - that they were to go on a Hunt.
Eliendre raised the suggestion of the target herself. It was no lie that on her way to find Vellidan, after she left the Fel Hammer, she heard rumours of scattered agents of the Legion still in hiding in various parts of the world. They only needed to be sought out, tracked, and dealt with, permanently. It was a rumour, she had told Vellidan, that this particular demon was last seen in the south of Silithus. It was a good a place to start as any.
While she responded - too quickly, perhaps - that she was ready to head off, she noticed that Taryane was less than eager to embark on the excursion. She also noticed that Taryane, despite her reluctance, was keen to spend time with her own father, and so came anyway.
Eliendre tried hard not to be reminded of her own late father, and how similar a dynamic she once had with Annâda.
They departed without Narindiel, who had other responsibilities to attend to. One of the estateâs mages opened a portal for them to an old Horde base in the bleak land where the wars of the Shifting Sands took place not once, but twice. It was not Eliendreâs first time seeing the horror of the Blade of Sargeras impaled into the land, but Taryane, she noted, stared, expression stony, at the disturbing sight.Â
After questioning the few still-stationed Horde troops of any unusual sightings in the area, Eliendre forged ahead, leading the hunt. It was a familiar mindset to slide into. She lived and breathed nothing but the Path since she made up her mind and was initiated into the Illidari. It had become her identity. She made it who and what she was. It was easy to turn into a single-minded tracker, hunter, killer. It was easy to turn into a machine, bred and forged for a single purpose.
It was harder to remember how to live again, outside of the brethren of those similar to herself, who were willing to die for their purpose. It was harder to remember what it felt like to be happy, only for any semblance of happiness to turn into grief.
From the ruins by the old Scarab Wall, to the merciless burrows of the silithid, to the dunes and the rocky caves leading easward, Eliendre was relentless. They found remains of rotten corpses - or at least they looked like corpses. Of any and all races, remnants of not only Alliance and Horde forces, but also shamans of the Earthen Ring, and Cenarion druids. They were not normal corpses. Not with the rancid decomposition, akin to the corrupted rot if an undead and a demon had an offspring. They were scattered amongst the remains of actual corpses in a subtle yet bloody trail, hopefully leading to where their quarry was.
Taryane struggled to keep up. Several times, Eliendre paused, hearing the merciless taunting that Vellidan made towards the blood knight to spur her on. She felt a stab of guilt.Â
It was not Taryaneâs fault that Eliendre did not stop and wait. After all, it was harder to remember that there were other people than oneself and the foulness of the creature that shared your soul. It was harder to remember that there were those who still mattered. Who still cared.
Internally chiding herself, she slowed her pace, letting Taryane move beside her, than behind her.Â
Eventually, they reached the mountainous range that bordered the cruel sands and the primieval jungle of the Unâgoro Crater.
____
If there was a single demon that was, in Eliendreâs opinion, the most difficult to hunt down, it was a Nathrezim. Elusive, cunning, a master of stealth and of disguise, wielder of shadowy powers that could deceive minds, the worst dreadlords over the course of the Legionâs history, especially on Azeroth, were those who wrought ruin from within their enemies.Â
And if what Eliendre surmised was true, then this particular dreadlord - that, going by the scrap of paper she found, Narindiel had failed to destroy - was not going to be easy to deal with. Vellidan likely expected that, given that he remained at the back of them both, like a watcher, supervising them, only aiding if he needed to.Â
They came upon an unlikely group at a campsite, near the northeastern border. A rag-tag mix of hunters with no regard for the faction divide, eager to capture trophies of the beasts of the land. They were welcoming - overly welcoming, and extremely friendly. Too friendly.Â
Eliendre could not see anything wrong, but she would not expect to have seen nor detected anything wrong. It was Taryane who felt the most disturbed of them three. What could a Light-wielder sense that a demon hunter could not?
The roar and attack of the hulking dwarf after the blood knightâs unannounced blessing with the Sunwellâs Light was enough for them to act. More of them swarmed out from various hiding places: caves, tents hidden amongst the thick under growth, remnants of silithid burrows... Those that emerged were the ones who looked the least intact, as if discarded from failed experimentation. From them, every single open wound poured foul green blood. Neither undead, nor demon. Both undead yet demonic. Created by the very demons as the counter to the senses of a demon hunter.
Vellidan leapt into the fray as a literal army of homunculi erupted around herself and Taryane. Not only humanoids, but amongst them, remains of silithids. Remains even of some of the dino-beasts. Eliendre would not have minded if her Shanâdo did not join in: the potential threat to her person thrilled her. For the first time in weeks - no, months - she felt as if she was alive again. This was her purpose. She was supposed to have perished on Argus. She was not meant to have returned home, to pretend to know how to live again.
âEliendre!â
She saw the eruption of Light from the earth around Taryane, burning the homunculi in holy flames. Velllidan had shouted her name, and just in time. Before the rusty axe swung upon the back of the blood knightâs neck. Eliendre leapt across to her adopted sisterâs side, snarling as the consecrated ground seared the soles of her feet, and blocked the would-have-been killing blow, before in turn decapitating the offending copy of an orc berserker that wielded the weapon.
She did not see nor hear Taryaneâs reaction. She did not care to. Eliendreâs sight fell upon a single lookalike of a Forsaken body, crawling up the sides of the ragged cliff and upwards to what looked like a cave in the wall of rock.
She cut down the rest of the abominations that threw themselves in her way as she beelined to the escaping individual. Vellidan and Taryane were making good work of the swarm behind, giving her the opportunity of pursuit.
____
Somewhere in the depths of her memory, Eliendre recalled the Unâgoro Crater as an ancient land once used by the Titans in the shaping of the world. Her mother was the one who made her read the history books, and then told her afterwards of the experiments made there, of the constructs where the first watchers inhabited.
She sliced the Forsaken homunculus in half as she stood in the pitch blackness of the cave. Her spectral vision allowed her to see what normal eyes could not, and even then, it was dark. Metallic pillars of titanic design lined the walls, decorated with runes that looked inert. It lined a tunnel further inwards. There was no one else in the immediate vicinity. Not that she could see.
âWhy did you snoop in my office? Why are you here?â
Eliendre whirled around, brandished warglaives still covered in the foul green blood of the copies. In person, Narindiel had suddenly appeared. The blood mageâs lips were in a thin, angry line. Fel fire surrounded her hands as she glared at Eliendre.Â
âWho gave you permission to look for the demon? Why didnât you go elsewhere? Where is Vellidan? Where is my daughter?â
There was the sound of scrambling, and Taryane pulled herself onto the smooth stone floor of the caveâs entrance. âMinnâda?â She blinked owlishedly at Narindiel.
Eliendre bared her teeth and snarled.
The head of Narindiel flew off her neck just as Vellidan himself appeared behind Taryane. Blood was everywhere. On her glaives. On her gloves. The walls of the cave. The floor.Â
Disgusting green blood.
Taryane, the colour drained from her face in shock, was the first to say anything after hers and Vellidanâs initial reactions of horror at what Eliendre did. Eliendre heard her say what must have been the first thing that came to her mind. âHow did you know she was not real?â
She froze in response, a sudden coldness plunged into her chest akin to a blade, as if the blood knightâs words were the literal water that doused her focused rage.
âEnough. We move onward.â Shanâdo Sunstormâs commanding voice interjected, breaking the tense silence. âI can smell him.â
She could feel Taryaneâs stare lingering on her, aghast and suspicious, even as she moved ahead with her father, leaving Eliendre trailing behind.Â
_____
They arrived later at the doorstep of their house, via the teleportation stone held by Vellidan. All of them, especially Taryane and herself, were bloodied, wounded, and exhausted. It had been a difficult task taking on the Nathrezim, even with the three of them. Eliendre had forced aside the horror of her own action beforehand, prior to once again becoming the honed demon-killing-machine that she was forged into, only now instead of another Illidari, she fought alongside a blood knight.Â
Vellidan helped too, but Eliendre knew him well enough in battle to have seen that on this occasion, he only aided when he had to: when either of them, in their difficult co-ordination, posed any risk in the face of the dreadlord.Â
In the end, it was Taryane who tore off the Nathrezimâs wings, her twin-blade radiant with holy flames cutting into the demonâs back and sides, while Eliendre sliced into his chest and ripped out his heart. In respect and in tribute, she offered it to her Shanâdo, for the months that she was separated from him in the aftermath of Argus.Â
âGo get seen to, Eli.â Taryaneâs voice was hoarse, parched from thirst and from too much shouting. She managed to heal herself as best as she could, of course, but with the likes of Eliendre and Vellidan, there was little she could do except reach for the healing salves, imbued bandages and potions, and offer them to both demon hunters.
Eliendre slowly shook her head, declining. She was wounded, but she was alive. The pain reminded her of it. She would recover, as she had many times in the past.
âCome and wash then. Annâda would be using the other bathroom.â
Again, she wordlessly declined. She turned a deaf ear to anything else Taryane or Vellidan might have said. Opening the doors to the back porch and the sea, she tread towards the beach instead.
____
She left her rinsed armour on the rocky sand. Her warglaives too, were wiped clean and stabbed in the ground in the shape of a cross behind her. Immersed in the water up to her neck, Eliendre brought her knees to her chest, and let the rhythmic ebb and flow of the waves gently sway her posture as she hugged her legs.
How did you know she was not real?
She did not know how she knew. It was instinct. Cold blooded and cruel instinct. A gamble? A calculated risk? Though she was correct in her decision making, what must have unsettled - must have frightened Taryane, was how decisive her action was. How she had absolutely no hesitation nor remorse in culling a figure of kindness, of maternal love, of charity. An individual who meant the world to her two companions. Her new family. Anyone else who was in her place would have taken pause and be conflicted, but she did not.
How hard was it to remember how to live again?Â
What would her Annâda and Minnâda say if they knew what she had turned into?
Eliendre sat in the water, unwilling to move, unwilling to think. She let the ebb and flow of the waves rock her. It was the closest to a comforting embrace that she had. That she would allow.
Eliendre joined the Illidari as an initiate soon after the events of the Broken Shore that saw the Horde retreating under Sylvanasâ call, when Volâjin fell. She could have been one of the Illidari on whom Korrinth inscribed the arcane runes to keep the inner demon under control. Eliendre would not have remembered her, due to the blinding pain that the process would have caused overshadowing any other detail at the time.
Later, as Eliendre matured into a fully fledged demon huntress, she would have remained in the background, learning passively and actively the methods and princples behind carving the arcane runes herself. Should Korrinth ever have questioned her about her interest, she would have learnt that Eliendre was an apprentice mage before she became a Spellbreaker, prior to joining the Illidari, and all the younger elf wanted to be was useful to her newfound brethren, when she was not hunting.
Their house in Eversong was on the northernmost outskirt of Goldenmist Village, by the bank of the Elrendar. Eliendreâs father had erected a grave for her mother outside, marking the site where she died trying to protect them during the Fall.
Vines and overgrown weed greeted her when she arrived at the old porch. Sheer stubbornness and sentiment brought her father back time after time, in between duties on the frontline. It was by fortune that they never needed to be home more than a few nights at a time, given the risk of staying here any longer than that.
The front door lock offered little resistance as Eliendre, for the first time since her deployment to the Broken Shore with Annâda, came home.
The vines had creeped in through the cracked stone walls. Moss-covered damp decorated the corners. The scant furniture was still covered with thick canvas that protected them from dust and cobwebs when they were away.
She stood at the doorway, looking at the space she called home for her entire life, through a different set of eyes. Like a boulder dropping in her stomach, the nausea hit her out of the blue, and she staggered outside, doubled over as she retched up the contents of an empty stomach.
â-
She had arrived home around midday, but had since sat out in the barren garden, of which the sole decoration was her motherâs grave, until it was dusk. Her warglaive - one half of the pair she wielded from the beginning of her new life until now, that was reforged from her fatherâs weapon - was impaled by the plain stone marker. Her blindfold - made of the scarf Annâda always wore - has been tied loosely around its guard. The gold and red strip of cloth, tattered with wear and with age, danced lightly in the gentle breeze.
Upon the gravestone, Eliendre carved out her fatherâs name next to her motherâs: Velâthoran and Jorianna Dawnsunder. Together in death, as they were in life.
It was something she should have done after she was well enough to travel, after she was rescued from death.
âI am sorry I only brought you home now. Please forgive me.â
She bowed her head and knelt in silence, unmoving for the rest of the night.
â-
It was the afternoon of the following day, after her reunion with her shanâdo, that she once more braved going back inside the house. Perhaps the empty disappointment of that meeting overshadowed whatever it was she felt when she stepped through the front door.
Nothing appeared missing. Their family portrait - painted when Eliendre was still an adolescent and a fledgling student of the arcane arts under her motherâs tutelage - was still in the corner by her fatherâs bed.
Donât look at it.
As she threw back the canvas tarp, she ruefully thought that if she still had her eyes, the dust clouds would have made them water. Her fatherâs bed looked exactly as it did the day they left: neatly made. Hers as well, though messily tangled as she left in more of a hurry. The table and chairs, the wardrobe â they still stood, even if they had seen better days, though empty now. Their belongings consisted of only the bare basics after all, being soldiers of the High Home.
And in the extension of the house, the forge and anvil still appeared ready to be fired. On the armour stand, the pieces of Annâdaâs ceremonial armour-
Eliendre turned away. She would rather look at the family portrait again.
She held the book-sized painting to her chest as she sat out by the gravestone and warglaive. If she still had her eyes, she would have wept. Instead, she shook with dry, silent sobs.
â-
Did their duty begin and end with Lord Illidan?
Did the meaning of their existence begin and end with his?
â-
It was the morning of the fourth day, that she finally gathered enough courage to reach for the formal armour of the late Spellbreaker Captain Dawnsunder.
Eliendre remembered the day she tore off her apprenticeâs robe and put the very same armour on. She challenged Annâda to a duel when he tried to make her take it off. He beat her until she was bruised and bleeding and his heart was broken, but he let her train under him from then on.
It felt right at the time, and she never looked back on her decision.
Just as she knew her father, save for his refusal to move away from their home, had never looked back after the Fall.
The flint on the shelf was still dry. The smithing tools were still in good condition.
Eliendre fired up the forge. Hands - discoloured and scaled since the last time she did this - reached for the bellows.
Slowly, she began to work on Annâdaâs old armour, that now belonged to her.
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Eliendre placed the last of the armour onto the stand. The ornamental pieces of sanguine and gold were re-wrought and re-worked into ones that more suited the functional needs of a demon huntress like herself.
She recalled the departing back of her Shanâdo from his visit to her family home. It had been a day - perhaps more - since he left her a crumpled mess with his question. His offer. Shocked, surprised, somewhat anaesthetised to the implication of his words, Eliendre could barely process what it meant for her from then on. She answered in the only way she knew: with as much dignity as she could muster, and never once disrespecting the Illidari who saved her life and gave her a new one.
She never expected anything more from Vellidan. Her visit to his home in QuelâThalas was but a part of her unrelenting search for him. It was the last place in the Nether - the last place in the world - where if he was still alive, he would be. Though his condescension was disappointing, the least she could ask for was that he was whole and hale. It was enough, even if she went away from the gates of the Firestar estate with an empty sadness, sorry that she could not fulfil Lynaethiaâs dying wish, spoken after the demon in her died, seconds before she did.
Eliendre pushed aside the memory of the night she put down her senior and her fellow demon huntress. Her sister, borne of the same Shanâdo, broken in her own way, whose Light that kept her going was thought extinguished. She was distressed over a missing memory gem for a long time after Eliendre found her wandering the Antoran wastes after the whole thing was over. Lynaethia by then had spiralled too far downward to be coherant about what she was talking about. Grief turned to madness turned to rage and finally regret as the demon within overcame her.
She was not the first sister-in-arms Eliendre had to put out of her misery, nor would she be the last. Eliendre forced herself to move forward. Part of Lynaethia lived in herself now: she would be disrespecting her if she did not.Â
She had to, especially for herself.
___
Blackened, clawed nails ran over the edge of the gravestone, over the names of Velâthoran and Jorianna Dawnsunder.
Her father kept returning to their family home after the Fall. He never wanted to let it go. âWe will not be cowed into submissionâ was what he always said. But he threw himself into unforgiving and unrelenting duty, to the frontlines over and over again. Eliendre never wanted to leave his side. She did what she thought was right, in changing the course of her lifeâs path to ensure that she would always be with him. That he would never be alone, there in the midst of war and battle. Until the end, she stayed with him. He was her world. All they had left was each other. And the memory of her mother and their home.
Their house was never truly inhabitable since the Fall. Sentiment and stubborness held it up. Once they were gone, it fell to ruin, and would eventually crumble, as did the other houses and land ravaged by the Scourge.
There were better homes. Better houses. Better lives than the one they lived. How could one move forward, if one kept being held back?
âWill you forgive me for going to a new family?
âWill you forgive me for letting you go?â
Scaled, discoloured fingers untied her blindfold from the single warglaive impaled into the barren earth. Tenderly, she tied the red and gold strip of tattered cloth - her fatherâs old scarf - around the gravestone.
___
The red and gold of her new attire saw her moving with more ease past the patrolling guards of Silvermoon.
All she had were the armour she remade that she now wore, the cowl of the tattered cloak over her head and horns, and her warglaives - paired once more, and completely wrapped so as not to draw wary attention.Â
And in her arms, the portrait of her mother, her father, and herself.
Eliendre held up the insignia given to her by Shanâdo to the guards of the Firestar Estate. They let her in.