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Chapter 560 Garona's Stealth and Deception Research



Chapter 560 Garona's Stealth and Deception Research

Gordos's men quickly quelled the rebellion, whether it was the rebellious low-level orc laborers or the demons who had previously ridden on the heads of the Burning Blade orcs.

Taman the Hunger was torn to pieces; this Doomguard died using the same cruel methods it used to employ against ordinary orcs.

Azalan's head was severed, and this traitor of unknown lifespan finally met his end and destiny.

The high-ranking demon warlock Yegosh, who was originally the true leader of the Burning Blade Clan in Ragefire Chasm, was now reduced to ashes by Lorraine. Even his smug hellhound, which had once intimidated lower-ranking demons, was completely eliminated by Lorraine.

In reality, the Burning Blade clan has lost its core leader, or at least its contact person for the Twilight's Hammer in this area.

The ancient stone ruins and statues in Ragefire Rift are too ancient to be known. Gordos is just one of the high-ranking shamans of the Burning Blade clan. In Ragefire Rift, besides Yegosh, only the chieftain of the Fireblade clan guarding the barrier at the entrance of the Shadow Rift might know more secrets.

When Yegosh died, all the stone statues opened their massive mouths, and most of the orcs and leaders present did not understand what this meant... Only Lorraine, whose mental power had been greatly enhanced after the fourth full awakening of the will of the undead, sensed the anomaly.

He was constantly on guard against danger from all sides.

The female orc standing atop the stone statue, carrying the head of Azalan, was someone Lorraine didn't recognize... nor did Lilith.

Godos immediately confirmed who this person was.

Speaking of orcs, we must mention Garona, the progenitor of assassins who has long since disappeared, the shadow assassin, a female spy of Draenei and orcish descent, and a female orc!

......

Historically, in addition to demon warlocks who served demons, the Shadow Council also included a large number of assassins and spies who served Gul'dan, as well as some craftsmen and technicians who researched fel cannons, who helped the original orcish tribe conquer cities and strongholds.

The enslavement of dragons in battle, the manufacture of fel cannons, and the forging of war machines were each the responsibility of different clans.

Garona was a pitiful orc.

Her mother was originally the sister of Marad, the draenei garrison commander. Gul'dan forced her to marry one of his orcs, resulting in a half-draenei and half-orc hybrid.

However, Garona was enslaved and trained by Gul'dan from a young age, and subjected to various shadow magic experiments. He molded her not only physically but also psychologically into an assassin for the Shadow Council.

Gul'dan once sent her to infiltrate Azeroth as an advance force. She was captured by humans, but through contact with them, she quickly learned a lot of human knowledge, mastered their language, and was promoted to translator.

He repeatedly switched sides, acting as a triple agent among humans, orcs, and Medivh.

Medivh was fascinated by the power within her, and inexplicably used the crystallization of her life as a bond, leaving behind a spark, euphemistically calling it a soul-binding surveillance... Thus, the half-orc Garona became pregnant with Medivh's child, a super hybrid child born of Draenei, orc, human, and possibly Titan blood. Garona named him Endermay, and this super hybrid child disappeared without a trace, vanishing for a time like Garona herself...

During the major wars between humans and orcs, and in the turmoil surrounding the opening of the Dark Portal, Garona personally assassinated King Llane of Stormwind, the father of Varian Wrynn and a former friend of Medivh and Anduin Lothar...

The emotional entanglements and various secrets involved need not be elaborated upon; in any case, Garona was caught in a web of injustices, constantly striving to establish herself as an assassin and gain the respect of her people...

When the orcs suffered repeated defeats in the Second War and Orgrim seized power, Garona was captured. After being severely tortured and interrogated, the Shadow Council's stronghold was betrayed.

Orgrim then carried out a purge of the Shadow Council warlocks, freeing the orcs from demonic control. However, this also caused the orcish clans to disintegrate, and Blackhand died at Orgrim's hands. Some say Orgrim was a despicable traitor, questioning whether he betrayed Lothar, the Lion of the Alliance, or Blackhand, the Warchief, to seize power. His purge of Gul'dan's minions was far from honorable...

In the tradition of the orcs, Orgrim's actions were clearly not honorable. However, the orcs, who had long been puppets and tools, were not exactly benevolent men and women when they slaughtered draenei prisoners, invaded Azeroth, and destroyed Stormwind. How could they be qualified to say that they were honorable?

In short, Orgrim actually saved most of the orcs who were unwilling to be enslaved and used as tools. Thrall inherited his will and established the new Horde. After the destruction of the Shadow Council, Garona disappeared in the chaos, and everyone thought she was dead or had escaped.

The Shadow Council was merely a puppet organization supported by the Burning Legion within the orcish race. Kil'jaeden the Deceiver was particularly adept at creating such shadow councils...

The reason Gul'dan, this ambitious fellow, was chosen was because the original orc leader, the shaman Ner'zhul of the Shadowmoon Clan, was disobedient. Despite making mistakes, he refused to be controlled, so Ner'zhul was tortured and twisted into the incomplete form of the first Lich King, sealed in ice, and thrown onto the Frozen Throne in Northrend, Azeroth...

Gul'dan was obedient, but his ambitions were far greater, so the Shadow Council bears undeniable responsibility for the orcs' and the Legion's defeat...

The majority of the Legion retreated, while the small groups that remained operated in secret under the supervision of the Legion's demons. In Ragefire Chasm, the Shadow Council's strongholds were just the tip of the iceberg. The only thing Lorraine hadn't expected was that the legendary figure was actually sealed in the underground lava ruins of Orgrimmar.

......

At this time, Lorraine and Lilith did not know this legendary assassin. In Azeroth, apart from the one-armed Scarlet Assassin that Lorraine had encountered before, Garona was the most famous, mainly because she killed King Llane & Wrynn of Stormwind, but was pregnant with the child of the human guardian Medivh.

In other words, Garona is quite attractive.

Upon closer inspection, Lorraine felt that this half-orc female assassin had a great figure and gave off a completely different vibe from traditional orcs. In addition to her wild strength, her pair of eerie, demonic eyes, which no orc had ever possessed, immediately proved that this half-orc bloodline was unique.

In Lorraine's memory, the most famous assassins were the Death Hunters under the Queen's command, and the undead sentinels were a testament to their skill, as evidenced by Chrysanthemum Tea's refinement.

I've also heard that there's another famous female undead assassin, Lillian Voss, who defected from the Scarlet Crusade, voluntarily corrupted herself, and joined Scholomance.

Lorraine witnessed the Queen's wanted poster for her, with the threat of death... It seems that Lillian & Voss are not only the Scholomance Academy's trump card, but also an existence that the Queen fears.

Lorraine wasn't quite sure of the reason, but if his teacher were sober, he could probably explain it.

The current battles on Whisper Coast and in the northern seas of Lordaeron are definitely related to another undead female assassin, Lillian & Voss.

Aside from that, if we're talking about well-known assassins, then there's only the seemingly neutral but actually lawless assassin alliance at Ravenholdt Manor.

I've heard that there's a female elf assassin in the Alliance named Valina, or Maiev the Warden who has been hunting Illidan for countless years. Lorraine doesn't know much about these people, and his teacher, as a staunch Horde loyalist, doesn't know much about them either. Even if he did, rogues are the natural enemy of mages, so his teacher doesn't have any nice things to say about them.

After all, nobody wants to be ambushed, backstabbed, boned, or have their throat slit in seconds... and then lie dead.

.......

Lorraine couldn't recognize the true god, but Godos did; he had vaguely heard from his superiors that they had captured the biggest traitor.

The biggest traitor to the Shadow Council, who appeared to be Gul'dan to the Horde and Legion at the time, was not actually Gul'dan; the entire Shadow Council served Gul'dan.

Gul'dan was extremely ambitious. He wanted to surpass his teacher Ner'zhul, break free from the control of Kil'jaeden of the Burning Legion, and directly obtain the blessing and power of the Burning Legion's overlord.

Gul'dan, upon arriving at the Tomb of Sargeras, was met with the contempt and rage of the Dark Titan. He was instantly reduced to ashes, leaving only a skull of Gul'dan formed from the absorption of powerful fel energy.

It can be said that since Gul'dan's death, the Skull of Gul'dan has become an artifact that the remnants of the Shadow Council all want to obtain.

The survivors of the Raiders clan took it with them, but the Raiders clan lost the artifact, the Skull of Gul'dan.

Most of the remaining members also disappeared.

Godos never imagined that the stronghold he had been guarding was actually holding a shadow assassin...

If a stone figure is such a person, then who is imprisoned in the mouths of all the other stone figures in the surrounding rows?

......


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