Know Your Lore: The unfortunate tale of Lilian Voss

Every zone in the old world was touched by Deathwing's emergence, and with the changes came new lore and storylines. One of the more poignant tales of new Azeroth comes from Tirisfal Glades, where newly raised Forsaken soldiers struggle to come to terms with their fate. Before the fall of the Lich King, every "newborn" Forsaken was raised from former members of the Scourge that had broken free from the control of the Lich King.
However, after the fall of the Lich King, the Forsaken were left without a way to create new Forsaken. Having lost countless Forsaken soldiers in the Northrend war, Sylvanas Windrunner sought out the val'kyr, former servants of the Lich King. The val'kyr had a very special talent -- they could raise the dead to life. Thus, Sylvanas had a way to create new Forsaken soldiers out of any corpses that happened to be handy.
The only drawback to this process was that one never knew how the awakened corpses would react. While some eagerly joined the ranks of the Forsaken, others were far too tied to their former lives to accept their fate. One of these newly minted undead was a woman named Lilian Voss, whose former life was unique to say the least. Lilian was a member of the Scarlet Crusade.

In the guise of Dathrohan, Balnazzar quietly worked to warp and twist the minds of those under his command, tricking Renault Mograine into killing his own father and thus paving the way for Balnazzar's ascension to power. Once Highlord Mograine was dead, "Dathrohan" prompted the formation of the Scarlet Crusade, an organization dedicated to the eradication of the undead.
But why was Balnazzar so obsessed with eliminating the undead? There were a couple of reasons behind this. The Lich King originally formed the Scourge under the orders of the Burning Legion. When Arthas came into the picture and began his service to the Lich King in earnest, he told Balnazzar and his two brothers, Detheroc and Varimathras, in no uncertain terms that the Lich King would no longer be following the orders of the Burning Legion, and he attempted to have the dreadlords killed.

Balnazzar "died" but came back -- his hatred for both Arthas and his infernal scourge, and the Banshee Queen that made a fool of him burning bright and hot. And so he organized the events that brought together the Scarlet Crusade. After all, the humans were easily manipulated, and whether they killed Scourge or Forsaken, it mattered little; his enemies would be taken care of either way. And so the Scarlet Crusade continued its campaign of terror, mindlessly killing both living and dead, any that happened to cross its path in the upper reaches of the Plaguelands.
To the Scarlet Crusade, anyone and everyone who wasn't a member of the cause was a potential carrier of the plague or undead in disguise. After all, nobody in their right mind would idly wander through the plaguelands unless they were somehow in league with the Scourge. Balnazzar's slow and deliberate brainwashing of the group had its intended affect, and the Scarlet Crusade unknowingly followed the dreadlord's plans. They were fighting for the noblest of causes, and as far as they were concerned, the end result completely justified the means of getting that result, even if innocent blood was shed along the way.
But the Scarlet Crusade's reign could only last so long, and over the course of the Northrend wars, leadership within the Scarlet Crusade crumbled. Balnazzar was revealed, as was Mal'Ganis, and the senior leadership of the organization was slowly eliminated. With the Lich King's defeat, the Scarlet Crusade had nowhere to go, and many soldiers of the organization fell in the ensuing battle with the Forsaken -- including a young woman named Lilian Voss.

Faced with her own horrifying reflection, Lilian fled, unwilling to accept or understand what had become of her. She sought out her father, a high priest of the Scarlet Crusade named Benedictus Voss. If no one else would help her, surely her father would know what to do. But before she could find her father, Lilian was captured by a group of Scarlet Crusade nearby. Though she told them who she was, the soldiers had no idea what to do with the young woman and kept her locked away while news of her fate was sent to the high priest.
High Priest Voss knew exactly what to do when confronted with news of his undead daughter. He ordered her immediate execution. Needless to say, the news did not go over well with Lilian, and in an astonishing display of power, she burst into violet flame, leapt through the bars of the cage that held her and incinerated her captor.
Something in Lilian Voss snapped. Scourge she may not be, but a lethal killing machine -- well, it was what she was raised to be. Her father's betrayal affected her deeply, and at once the innate callousness of the Scarlet Crusade was brought to light. Confronted with the realization that she would find no comfort in the arms of her father, Lilian chose instead to continue down the path her father had pushed her down since she was a child: murder. Murder without consideration or care for those who fell beneath the onslaught of violet fire.Scarlet Lieutenant Gebler says: The time has come, my little captive ... word has come back from your father.
Lilian Voss says: Gebler, you came! What did he say?
Scarlet Lieutenant Gebler says: High Priest Voss denounces you as a daughter. He's ordered that you be executed immediately.
Lilian Voss says: What? NO! This can't be! Gebler, you know me ... we were friends once!
Scarlet Lieutenant Gebler says: The High Priest sends his regrets. He had hoped that one day you would be a powerful weapon against our enemies.
Scarlet Lieutenant Gebler says: Unfortunately, you were too dangerous in life, and you're far too dangerous in undeath. I will enjoy killing you, you Scourged witch ...
Lilian Voss says: Gebler, father, why would you ...
Gelber attempts to kill Lilian, but she leaps through the bars, killing him.
Lilian Voss says: The world of the living may have turned its back on me, but I'm no damned Scourge.

All across Tirisfal Glades, the alert was raised by the Scarlet Crusade: The High Priest's daughter was a menace that needed to be destroyed, quickly. But Lilian had been trained by the very people she now killed. She knew their methods of fighting. Between her knowledge, her rage, and the mysterious fire that engulfed both her and her enemies, she left a trail of crimson-clad bodies wherever she traveled. It seemed there would be no reasoning with or stopping her.An Urgent Message to all Scarlet Officers and Enlistees:
The Scourge agent known as Lilian Voss has escaped from her captivity at the Scarlet Palisade. She is to be considered highly dangerous, and should be killed on sight. She has already slain 15 of our men. None were left wounded.
Do NOT try to apprehend her. Doing so will likely result in death. She is an enemy to the Crusade and must be crushed immediately.
The crusader who returns her head to the High Priest will be rewarded with 1,000 gold. Refer any questions to your commanding officer.
Having come to the inevitable conclusion that there was no going back, Lilian approached High Executor Derrington at the Bulwark in Tirisfal. While she didn't swear fealty to the Forsaken, she was quick to swear her enmity against the Scarlet Crusade. The High Executor appreciated her odd eagerness for bloodshed and sent her to take care of one of the few remaining Scarlet outposts to the north. A trail of violet-flamed bodies followed in her wake as she relentlessly continued to eradicate those who betrayed her.

As Lilian made her way to the tower, mechanically ripping apart any Scarlet who stood in her way, her mind was set on one thing, and one alone: Lilian wished to see her father and say hello.My name is Lilian Voss. Before I died, I was a member of the Scarlet Crusade. My father, High Priest Voss, raised me to be a weapon against the plagued. I studied stealth, sorcery, martial arts, anything to make myself stronger. I gave up my childhood for him.
Then, as fate would have it, I died and returned as... this. My father instantly forgot me and, when I returned, ordered me executed.
Come. We will speak with him now, in his tower to the northwest.
Lilian Voss embraced her father one final time -- around the neck. Scaling the walls of his tower, she strangled the life from the man, then threw his corpse to the ground with nary a word. While her brutal and unusual attacks caused other Scarlet Crusaders to burst into flame, she curiously avoided doing so with her father, instead letting him feel the life being squeezed from him by his loving daughter's cold, dead hands. And after it was over, Lilian stepped from the tower and vanished.Lilian Voss says: Father!
High Priest Benedictus Voss says: Lilian ... you're ... it's so nice to see you well.
Lilian Voss says: Shut up.
Lilian jumps on the Scarlet Bodyguard and Captain Melrache, killing them instantly.
Lilian Voss says: You raised me to be a killer. How am I doing, daddy?
High Priest Benedictus Voss says: I, ah ...
Lilian Voss says: But wait ... I remember now. You taught me to only kill the undead. So you do want me to kill myself, daddy?
High Priest Benedictus Voss says: Lilian, I ...
Lilian Voss says: Then again, why kill myself ... when I can kill YOU instead!
Nobody has seen Lilian Voss since that day. Her strange powers, the violet flames that engulfed her body and consumed those she fought have never been seen in a Forsaken before. Was it her unusual heritage, her upbringing in the Scarlet Crusade that brought it about? Was it Lilian's twisted version of the holy fire the Crusaders used in their fight against the undead? Nobody really knows. Will we ever see her again? It's possible -- her unique talents make her just the type of weapon the Forsaken would like to have in their control.
Some speculate that Lilian Voss would be an ideal person to lead the Forsaken, should something happen to Sylvanas Windrunner. But what they fail to realize is that Lilian would never fully ally herself with the Forsaken; to her, she is outside of life, outside of death, and utterly alone. Lilian isn't quite sane; her steadfast pursuit of the Scarlet Crusade borders on insanity, and her life in undeath is dedicated to other, more pressing tasks.

If you want to know more about the lore mentioned in this Know Your Lore, consult the following:
While you don't need to have played the previous Warcraft games to enjoy World of Warcraft, a little history goes a long way toward making the game a lot more fun. Dig into even more of the lore and history behind the World of Warcraft in WoW Insider's Guide to Warcraft Lore.Filed under: Lore, Know your Lore






Reader Comments (Page 2 of 5)
Artificial Jan 2nd 2011 6:07PM
Work for Magatha, do you? It's so rare to see a tauren who embraces evil so openly as you.
Anteia Jan 2nd 2011 7:02PM
Actually, Taurens have wanted to 'cure' the Forsaken but they're quite openly demonstrating in Cataclysm that they don't WANT to be cured. Their conquest and open use of the plague and devastation of land should be appalling to any Tauren sensibilities. And an undead is the reason an entire camp in Felwood which was once a horde outpost (mostly Tauren) are dead. A Tauren making an exception and hating the undead is entirely something that can fit their worldview and there's plenty of reason for hem to be horrified by what the Undead are doing. The Tauren were run out and almost made extinct by the centaurs...the Forsaken openly shout "Death to the living!" They don't say "Death to the Alliance". The Tauren have reason to have issue with this philosophy. They're the ones who work with night elves and draenei in the Earthen Ring and the Cenarian Circle. They, of all the Horde races, are the closest to finding the nature expressed by the Forsaken as horrifying.
Heck, this is even shown in WOTLK where a Tauren grimly keeps an eye on the forsaken in Dragonblight. A Tauren thinking the Undead need to go? It is not 'embracing evil'. It's actually quite a natural thing for them to feel.
Snuzzle Jan 2nd 2011 7:21PM
To the tauren, the undead are an abomination of the Earthmother and of life itself. Scars on the Earth and her children must be healed before they begin to fester and spread, but the Forsaken don't want to be healed. They've shown that they're anything but trustworthy as a whole, in fact they've proved time and time again that they revel in their festering and depravity.
The Grimtotem on the other hand, view the Forsaken as allies, because Magatha does. Why, we don't know for certain, but I suspect it's something to do with their alchemical skills and the fact that she had been slowly poisoning Cairne. Perhaps the poison that finally took his life was crafted by a Forsaken Apothecary?
A tauren who would like the Undead all killed is about as likely to be a Grimtotem as Varian is to kiss an orc. It's still a bit of a rebellious mindset (after all, even the Forsaken are the Earthmother's children, corrupt and deformed as they may be) but not entirely out of the realm of reason for a Tauren.
Wolftech Jan 2nd 2011 8:14PM
@Artificial - I am still waiting the Tauren to come to their collective senses and stop being evil and join the Alliance.
Fox Jan 2nd 2011 9:46PM
@ Artificial
Uh, no. Magatha and the Grimtotem allied with the Forsaken and are in fact the ones implied to have manipulated the Forsaken into the Horde for whatever nefarious purpose.
black.meph Jan 2nd 2011 11:18PM
May I suggest you check out the recruiters over at the SunWalkers booth...
Artificial Jan 2nd 2011 11:57PM
@Fox, Anteia, et al.: I am aware of all that. This does not alter the fact that Alchemistmerlin is openly advocating the killing of innocents out of racial hatred. Yes, an undead was responsible for what happened in Felwood, at the Wrathgate, etc. But evil is still evil. A good person wants to bring *the people responsible* to justice. An evil person wants to wipe out all of the members of the race that those people belonged to. You don't kill innocents because another person who happened to look like them was guilty. I know, that's a hard concept for Alliance people to swallow, but it's the truth. Alchemistmerlin's post advocated straight-up evil. If you don't see that, you're as evil as him, I'm afraid.
@Wolftech: They can't "stop being evil" to do that. In fact, it's only the Grimtotems that are siding with the Alliance in Cata zones, which makes perfect sense. The good tauren would never join an organization like the Alliance, they have far too much respect for life to descend to the kind of racial bigotry that permeates the Alliance. Alchemistmerlin excepted, of course.
Alchemistmerlin Jan 3rd 2011 12:01AM
Artificial:
The undead are not, in fact, a race. The undead are a plague. Beings created by magical infection, willingly and purposefully infecting others.
Viruses don't get to play the race card.
xoxotl Jan 3rd 2011 12:16AM
@Artificial: I enjoy the part where you chastise everybody for being racist bigots and stereotyping people based on their race, and then casually stereotype everybody in the Alliance as evil based on their race. Well played, sir! Well played!
@Alchemistmerlin: "Viruses don't get the play the race card." Win. Pure win.
Artificial Jan 3rd 2011 12:44AM
@xoxotl: It's the old saying, "turnabout is fair play". You can't very well engage in racial prejudice and then get mad when people turn it against you. One would hope you take my meaning here -- if it's unfair for me to call all Alliance members evil (which I didn't, actually, but I stepped right up to that line when I said "bigotry permeates the Alliance", true enough) because of the way some or even many act, then it's equally unfair for the Alliance to be doing the same. It gets frustrating to see comments like Alchemistmerlin's getting such a pass when they're "hey, lets wipe out an entire race", whereas the only thing that draws anyone's ire for stereotyping is my nowhere near as over the top "bigotry permeates the Alliance". "Hey, that kind of stereotyping is unfair... when it's applied to me! But the OP was fine..." *sigh*
Hiwa Jan 3rd 2011 3:20AM
I can definitely understand Tauren being appalled by the Forsaken. I also wonder how they manage to turn a blind eye to the wreckage and vileness that is spread by goblins wherever they go (I mean come on, strip mining? You think Earthmother approves of THAT?). How do they justify the rapid Orcan deforestation of the ancient forests of Ashenvale? Or hey, what do you think the Tauren think about the Orcs putting furbolgs in cages and leaving them there, like animals?
I'm a proud Tauren. I'm also a proud Horde. But it's true, they're in denial about a lot of things. Now that Thrall is no longer acting warchief, what is the place for the Tauren in the Horde anymore?
xoxotl Jan 3rd 2011 5:17AM
@ Artificial:
Big difference is that the leaders of any other race on Azeroth aren't openly calling for the wholesale slaughter (and rebirth as undead) of every living thing on the planet.
Even the leaders of the Alliance that you hate so much has been willing to pursue peace with the Horde on several occasions. Sometimes it worked out, sometimes it didn't. But at least they understand the value of it.
There's only one other faction who openly calls for the indiscriminate death of all living things: the Twilight Hammers. And they're considered enemies of every sane sentient on the planet.
madlander Jan 3rd 2011 8:46AM
Hey Mon, Have more respect for ya Horde brothas and sistas, I know da Forsaken are darka din da rest of us, but dey still our allies. And da Forsaken as a whole fully support and would die for da Horde. The Dark Lady herself just be have a hard time copin' with da new found power she havin'. But don't worry Mon, Hellscream, Vol'jin and da other leadas of da Horde will keep her in check.
Rufin Jan 5th 2011 7:49PM
F you asshole
For The Forsaken!!! For the Dark Lady!!
oh yea.. Fuck Garrosh!
Joseph Smith Jan 2nd 2011 3:30PM
I was wondering what happened to those Scarlet camps. I haven't had a chance to roll my undead hunter yet to play that startzone.
As usual, an excellent article Anne, keep up the good work
Jamz Jan 2nd 2011 4:29PM
Do WPL quests
michael_sykes_blythe Jan 2nd 2011 3:38PM
Her name comes from Lilliana Vess, a Planeswalker from Magic: The Gathering. I don't know a huge amount about Lilliana, though, so I've no idea what other similarities there are in her story.
Joey Jan 3rd 2011 3:14AM
Well for one they both have an affinity for the color purple.
sixstringslinger666 Jan 2nd 2011 3:39PM
Wowwiki seems to say she could be a reference to the MTG card Liliana Vess.. Wouldn't be surprising, Blizzard seems to have all sorts of references to things all acro
Rob Jan 2nd 2011 3:47PM
I've made a million undead, but never stuck with it. I now have a low level troll, could I run him back to Tirisfal and do the quests surrounding this? Because that'd be sweet.