Know Your Lore: Stalvan Mistmantle

Welcome to this week's edition of Know Your Lore, bought to you today by assistant lore nerd Daniel Whitcomb.
Stalvan Mistmantle, an inhabitant of Duskwood, is one of those guys who just sort of sits there in lore, provoking admiration in some, malaise in others, and a lot of questions in others. Most Alliance have likely at least heard of him, but if you've leveled exclusively in the Horde, you may never have met him. His story is presented in a very sinister fashion, but as to the man behind the quest, and how exactly he came to surrounded by Necromancy and horror, that is a little less clear.
As an Alliance member, you first hear of Stalvan through a vision of Death received by Madame Eva. Specifically, she senses Death in the future for her granddaughter, and hears a name in her visions - Stalvan. Heading to Daltry, the town clerk, you begin your investigation. As you continue it, you find out more and more about Stalvan's life. Strangely enough, although it starts out benign, and in fact paints him to a pleasant fellow, an itinerant wanderer and country teacher, spirits appear and try to end your investigation violently. In addition, you often find yourself cursed simply from handling his old belongings.
Stalvan: The Early Years
The first thing you really learn about Stalvan in the Legend of Stalvan quest line is that he apparently hailed from Silverpine Forest. Nothing is really known about his status or life there. It seems possible he was part of some noble family, since there is a Mistmantle Family Ring. He also lives in Manor Mistmantle, which could conceivably be an old family holding, although he may also have simply redubbed it that when he moved there. Regardless, any of Stalvan's family that stayed behind in the area seem to have either succumbed to the Scourge or changed their name out of shame for his later deeds.
At some point made his way to Stormwind to study under a Headmaster Crillian at an unnamed Academy. It seems likely he left somewhere around 7-10 years ago, since he was in Southshore during Thrall's prison break according to the Caverns of Time. If he was heading straight to Stormwind, he would have been there soon after.
What he was studying is unclear. Magic might be a possibility, but Dalaran would have been closer and more prestigious, and Stalvan doesn't seem to have been slow witted or have had any other problems that would have caused him to be rejected from Dalaran though. It's possible, of course, that his family had connections in Stormwind, or he was studying some general course of academics that Crillian was renowned for teaching. Whatever it was, after a few years, his Master urged him to go out into the world and increase his knowledge and wisdom.
After leaving Stormwind, he came to Moonbrook, apparently just in time to become the first teacher of the new village schoolhouse. He was, by all indications, very well liked there. The next time he moved was to Goldshire, where an undelivered letter reveals that he was looking for a new job after leaving Moonbrook because of the state of events in the region (presumably the Defias moving in), specifically as a tutor to noble children. Strangely enough, that letter never got to its intended recipient, Lord Flintridge, but he was hired anyway.
This short stay in Goldshire may be the first sign that not all was right with this seemingly charming man. Apparently, the courier charged with delivering his letter was spooked in the night by some unknown thing, and ran out of the Inn in his nightclothes, never to return. Since this would have, in theory, happened before Stalvan was ever hired as a tutor, and before he committed his heinous act, It suggest he may have been up to shady things. Maybe the reason he left Moonbrook was related to this instead of being trouble with Defias.
Regardless of the undelivered status of the letter he sent to Lord Flintridge, he was eventually hired as a tutor to Lord Flintridge's Children, Giles and Tilloa. However, in the process of learning that, we also get some idea of what really happened, as we head to the Flintridge Manor in Stormwind only to learn that their Caretaker is packing up the last of the Flintridge estate to be auctioned off to pay back taxes. Apparently, the whole family was massacred.
From a torn journal page among the Flintridge estate's leavings, we learn that Stalvan found Tilloa to be a comely young maid "on the cusp of womanhood," and that they were headed to the family's summer home at the Eastvale Logging Camp in Elwynn Forest.
In Eastvale, you find yet another piece of the puzzle in another journal page. Stalvan apparently began to fall in love with Tilloa, and felt she reciprocated the feeling because she gave him a flower once. Yeah, essentially, he's a modern day Illidan, except even creepier.
The trail would end there, except that the new inhabitant of the old Flintridge summer cottage remembered hearing some stories about Stalvan when he hung out at the Scarlet Raven tavern in Duskwood. Luckily, it seems the Innkeep there keeps tabs on local lore and found some muddied journal pages. The pages finally confirm Stalvan's ultimate descent into madness. Tilloa brings home a fiance, and calls Stalvan a "nice old man" when introducing him. Apparently, this was suddenly enough to push him over the edge. In a rage, he accused Tilloa of betraying and mocking him.
What's likely is that Tilloa saw him as a favored tutor and a good mentor, but never considered the idea of being in love with him, since he was an authority figure and an older man. It's unlikely that she ever hated him or meant to scorn him, but unfortunately, hell hath no fury like a Mistmantle scorned.
In the last page of the journal, he reveals his plan to kill Tilloa and her family. He followed through on it too, killing Tilloa, her fiance, her brother, and her parents in the massacre alluded to by Caretaker Folsom.
From there, your task is straightforward. You go to the authorities, who confirm Stalvan's identity and ask you to kill him. You go to his "manor," a ramshackle hut with a yard full of ghouls and an herb called the Tears of Tilloa, to find that he has somehow turned undead and is surrounded by Ghouls who may serve him, or at the least leave him alone. He attacks you, you kill him, and bring his ring to Madame Eva. Then you get your choice of two rewards: One is an axe that he probably used to murder the Flintridge family, the other his ring.
And thus ends the Legend of Stalvan Mistmantle.
The Man, The Myth, the Legend.
How Stalvan deserves the dark powers and the legend he's gained are honestly unclear to me. Make no mistake, what he did was rather heinous. He killed at least 5 people, possibly more if he killed the Flintridges' other servants or any bystanders. But was the crime itself so bloody and gruesome that it attracted the necromantic energies and damned spirits that flock to Stalvan's old haunts and protect his past?
There's two theories I can think of as to why this is so. The first is that he lives in Duskwood. Duskwood is a place that is currently in the grip of a powerful darkness. It seems a magnet to dark forces and misfortune. It may be that the darkness gripping Duskwood or the demonic power radiating from nearby Karazhan somehow latched on to Stalvan's insanity and negative emotions and manifested all these powers and turned him undead.
The other possibility is that he's always been a Necromancer. Perhaps the mysterious headmaster Crillian was a Necromancer or a Warlock. This would also match up with the mysterious happenings with the undelivered letter in Goldshire. Certainly if he's had Necromantic powers all along, it would explain why he's summoned ghosts to help protect his past and ghouls to help protect his manor. It might also explain why he's kidnapping little girls: Perhaps he's hoping to experiment on them to find a way to raise Tilloa. That would also explain why he's now undead: He may have turned himself into a Lich.
There's also the question of why a "legend" has built up around him so quickly. His infamous massacre could not have happened long ago. By all indications, he left Silverpine less than a decade ago, he left Moonbrook only a few years ago, and the Flintridge estate has only just been completely liquidated. Could a legend really pop up so quickly? Yes, he is a Mass Murderer, but most of us kill more people every day when questing, some of them not much more able to defend themselves than Stalvan's victims.
Perhaps it's the jilted lover theme, or the fact that the Flintridges were a noble family, thus adding a "celebrity" bent to the whole deal, and a bit of glamour. In addition, the idea of an insane criminal living on a haunted hill and dragging people to their death is similar to many an old ghost story, so you can also consider Stalvan to have essentially stepped into a preexisting type of legend.
Then again, Caretaker Folsom mentions that "his father" mopped up the blood from the Massacre, which would suggest it happened some time ago, when his father was the caretaker of the Flintridge estate -- a suggestion that doesn't jive with a timeline that would involve Stalvan leaving Silverpine Forest to come to Stormwind only a decade ago at most. Of course, this and the fact that Stalvan's original letter to Flintridge went undelivered but he was hired by the Flintridge family anyway may simply be examples of plot holes that were never noticed and plugged before the quest line was implemented.
The source of his unholy power is unsure, and his legend is perhaps bigger than it deserves to be, but all the same, Stalvan is now a fixture of WoW lore, the story of a creepy jilted lover who took things way, way too far. Maybe one day we'll get the full story as to just where he came from, what he learned, and how he got all those crazy necromantic powers. But for now, he's at least a decent amount of experience of a leveling alliance newbie, a good excuse to explore the Human lands, and another piece of Warcraft's new lore.
Wrath Spoilers Ahead!
One more little tidbit from Stalvan's past: It's interesting to note that a massacre wasn't his first choice to take his revenge. Before he decided to kill Tilloa and her family, Stalvan actually went to Dalaran at some point and tried to coerce a potion or charm from the Mages to make her fall in love with him. The Mages either couldn't or wouldn't do a thing, so Stalvan departed, leaving behind a bitter message for them -- one you can fish up in Dalaran come Wrath of the Lich King.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Quests, Lore, Know your Lore, NPCs






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
ash Sep 19th 2008 2:16AM
Is that picture off center or is my comp messed up?
DruidGuard Sep 19th 2008 2:21AM
Odd it's off for me too. Drag the picture and you can see it fully; it's a wide one, so it makes sense it's not fully visible
Breck Sep 19th 2008 2:20AM
Is that a sword in your screenshot or you just happy to see me?
Flint Sep 19th 2008 2:24AM
One of my favourite questlines. It's stories like these that make me like leveling with Alliance quite a bit more, Horde doesn't seem to have any equivalents.
That header picture seems a bit wonky though, unless you meant it to only show Stalvan's sword and his, uh, lovely decoration sense.
kirrathjehrain Sep 19th 2008 2:25AM
The questline is an allusion to Vladimir Nabokov's "Lolita" (of which Tilloa is an anagram), a novel in which a travelling tutor becomes romantically involved with an underage girl.
Four Sep 19th 2008 2:55AM
Dang, beat me to it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lolita
4
vocenoctum Sep 19th 2008 2:54AM
My impression of the matter was that the girl wasn't the first, or last. It seemed to have happened a while ago, rather than just a couple years ago. I think Eva's daughter/granddaughter was to be his next victim in a string of such.
But, I think it's obvious there are many logical problems with the quest. I mean, the guy doesn't notice the line under saying "he went that way"? No one thinks to say "hey, Mistmantle? maybe you want the Mistmantle manner?"
It is a neat quest though. :)
Tenchan Sep 19th 2008 3:01AM
It's this questline that made me regret that I had not stuck to my first Alliance character back when I started playing. Horde can only dream of awesome low level questlines like this, and it sure is one of the reasons leveling up hordeside can be such a drag.
zappo Sep 19th 2008 9:45AM
It's a matter of opinion of whether these quests are better or not. While the story itself is interesting, it is extremely tedious in how much running around you do. Right now I'm leveling an alliance toon to do all of this stuff and I'm alright with the quests as long as there's a nice story or a good reward, but dear lord is there a lot of Fedex deliveries and I know a LOT of people hate doing them.
I wouldn't say horde quests are necessarily worse. You just have to understand that they come from different perspectives. The Tauren have those interesting hunting quests, the Forsaken have quests that are typically bent on vengeance but usually have a hint of sadness in them, trolls have cool voodoo-ish quests, etc.
The ax reward for this quest is totally awesome btw.
Jyotai Sep 20th 2008 4:23AM
One thing is that most alliance players never even bother to read the letters.
I've met people when doing this quest that are doing it for their tenth toon and have no idea what the plotline is.
Stalvan's a Pedophile - the letters are his creepy perspective on the whole mess - and you get to take him out.
But if most of the players don't even bother with the quest text, or reading the letters, it just ends up being a run around to get one of two very potent items for lowbie toons to level with.
Horde has some interesting hidden stories in its questlines - but they're a lot less obvious. As one example; you can stretch over many zones and levels to catch glimpses of the plots of the Apothecaries and something to do with the Grimtotem faction of the Tauren all intertwined somehow...
Codexx Sep 19th 2008 3:30AM
Sure his name isn't Humbert Humbert?
I'm not sure how far I actually got on this questline, but it is not only interesting, fun, low level(which is awesome) but it's one of those creepy quests that Blizzard sneaks in, which sometimes makes you wonder if they have some horror authors among them. Murdering a whole family? More quests like this, more lore characters like this, more questlines, but not too many it gets ruined would be very nice.
Altogether I've found that quests pertaining to the undead are often the most fun.
UnholyPanda Sep 19th 2008 3:50AM
Just a thought to the time line, but perhaps his stopping in Southshore in the Caverns of Time was at about the same time of his attempt to get the potion from Dalaran? This would mean the massacre happened as far as ten years back. Just a thought >
Steve Sep 19th 2008 4:01AM
I don't know if this is the right place to request topics for KYL (my favorite WOWInsider column, btw), but I would love to see something in-depth about Alterac/Alterac's fall/the Syndicate, and if there's anything to report on why they are so at odds with Ravenholdt.
Aerei Sep 19th 2008 4:21AM
Some former guildies of mine made a machinima detailing the questline's story, which was entered into the machinima contest at the last Blizzcon. I thought it was pretty decent.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yC1bIxhlaLo
sharkeater75 Sep 19th 2008 5:50AM
aerie... great vid!!! great artical too, Mr. whitcomb.
one of my favorite questlines by far. I think alliance side only surpassed by the Ony attunement which is nearly gone =(
Killu Sep 19th 2008 6:58AM
http://www.wowhead.com/?item=934
Callidon Sep 19th 2008 7:07AM
"There are other things like Necromancers at work at Raven Hill, and a pedophile (with a totally overrated questline) hanging out in the hills"
You can so tell its not Alex writing this week :O
Daniel Whitcomb Sep 19th 2008 9:50AM
Actually, I think the questline is sort of overrated too. I alluded to that a bit in my analysis, I thought. There's a lot of plot holes and leaps of faith in it, and it's never adequately explained as to why Stalvan has all these necromantic powers now.
Pucelle Sep 19th 2008 9:51AM
Thank god.
Caustik Sep 19th 2008 7:33AM
The questlines in Duskwood are amongst the best ingame imo : Stalvan, Abercrombie, Mor'Ladim, Morbent Fel... even the Missing Diplomat has some quest there.
Leading the zone to be one of my prefered, despite the creepy atmosphere :p