Night! Late night!
On a lofty terrace of Stormwind Keep, King Llane Wrynn stood like a statue, his royal robes fluttering gently in the cool breeze, eyes fixed on the cosmic stage above. The heavens, once a tranquil sea of glittering serenity, had become a battlefield.
Several stars—proud, ancient beacons—flickered like dying embers as a bloated crimson demon star clawed its way into prominence, its baleful light oozing across the sky like blood spilled across parchment. They twinkled feebly in protest, but one by one, the stars were snuffed out as if by the sweep of some invisible cosmic scythe.
One. Two. Three... six meteors screamed across the firmament like the souls of fallen heroes, vanishing forever into the bottomless ink of night. And then—the final gut-punch—a brilliant star, the celestial guardian of Azeroth for thousands of years, blinked and dimmed.
King Llane felt the air press against his chest like a hand around his heart. This wasn't just a bad night. This was the world crumbling by degrees.
"What's got that royal brow furrowed tighter than a gnome's wrench bag?" came a voice from the shadows.
Llane didn't need to turn. "Anduin. I'm thinking about Medivh. About betrayal. About whether decades of friendship meant anything."
Lothar, his sword-arm ever ready and his heart ever heavy with duty, stepped forward, the moonlight catching on the silver threads in his tunic.
"If he wanted the kingdom, he could've asked nicely," Llane growled. "I'd have considered it. Hell, I might've gift-wrapped it. Why, Anduin? Why!?"
Lothar sighed, the kind of sigh that only comes after watching someone you love light their life on fire.
"Either we were blind, or Medivh was running the greatest long con in the history of magic. Or..."
Llane wheeled around. "Or what?"
Anduin raised an eyebrow and gave an exaggerated shrug. "Or the man's got a new soul stuffed in his skin sack. I've seen stranger things in Duskwood. Spirits making tea. Ghosts running inns. Possession's practically fashionable these days."
Llane let out a snort. "I don't know if that's comforting or terrifying, but at least it makes me feel less like a fool."
The king's thoughts returned to darker matters. Half the kingdom lay in ruins. The orcs surged forward like a green tide with no respect for personal space or human borders. The Redridge Mountains were out of contact, Elwynn and Duskwood sliced down the middle like a cake at a goblin birthday party.
And now Medivh, Azeroth's arcane bouncer had flipped the table.
"Are the stars dying, Anduin? Is this the end?"
Lothar pointed skyward with dramatic flair. "Look there, Lion. See that? Among the twinklers, there's always a newbie trying to outshine the rest. Sure, some fizzle and faceplant, but others? They rise. That one over there? That's a new star. Fresh. Bold. Probably cocky."
Llane squinted. A new light indeed blazed on the horizon, stubbornly radiant amidst the gloom.
"By the Light..."
"Yep. Maybe we lost a friend, but we gained a wild card. We've got Duke."
The king clapped his old friend on the shoulder. "Call for Edmund tomorrow. Him and that weird wizard of his."
Lothar nodded. And he was thinking, as ever, of the mysterious "Thousand-Handed Death God." The elusive spell-slinger had popped in, saved their armored butts, dropped cryptic wisdom like candy, and vanished.
Next morning, Duke was summoned.
No thrones. No golden goblets or marble halls. Just three men and a pot of good, strong tea in a modest little room that smelled faintly of aged books and boiled leaf.
Duke walked in tall, confident, clean-shaven in a world where most men wore beards like battle scars. "Your Majesty. Is this visit for me, or for my mentor?"
Llane arched a brow. "Does it matter?"
"Yes," Duke answered without flinching. "If it's for him, I'll just turn around. He's busy. Saving the world. Again. Probably fighting a demon god with one hand and drinking tea with the other. Typical Tuesday."
The king chuckled. "So the 'Sea King' is you, not your 'master' ."
Duke sipped his tea. "Correct."
Llane leaned back, expression unreadable. "How far can I trust you, Duke? Anduin here thinks you know more than you say."
Anduin cut in. "Since the day you laid eyes on that cursed hourglass Medivh gave you, I've suspected. You know something, Edmund. Don't bother denying it. Intuition's all we've got left now."
Duke stared at them, calm as a lake in winter.
"I stayed silent because truth sounds a lot like madness until it becomes memory. You'd have locked me in the dungeons or worse."
Llane's jaw clenched. "What did you see?"
"The demon in Medivh was there from the start. First time I met him, I tasted the fel on the air. It's... a gift, I suppose. A curse if I'm being honest. Demons smell like rotten pride and cheap vengeance."
Llane and Anduin exchanged glances, and for the first time in days, the king smiled.
"Well," he said softly trying to lighten the mood, "that explains the cologne Medivh used."
And thus began the next phase of Stormwind's struggle—not with certainty, but with defiant hope. Because sometimes, when the old stars die, new ones burn brighter to take their place. Even if they're a bit sarcastic, a touch eccentric, and more than a little explosive.