Know Your Lore: Garona: A study on stealth and treachery, part 2

The World of Warcraft is an expansive universe. You're playing the game, you're fighting the bosses, you know the how -- but do you know the why? Each week, Matthew Rossi and Anne Stickney make sure you Know Your Lore by covering the history of the story behind World of Warcraft.
Human or orc... An orc would say that it's a human hand -- too slender to be really useful, not enough muscle to hold an ax or bash a skull in properly -- too pale, too weak, and too ugly. You see the parts of me that are orcish. My orcish superiors, and all other orcs, see the parts of me that are human. I am both, and neither, and considered an inferior being by both sides.
-- The Last Guardian
Garona spent the first half of her life unaware of her true bloodline -- and unaware of the mental controls placed in her mind by the Shadow Council. After escaping Doomhammer's forces, she fled, gave birth to her son Med'an, and then handed him over to an old friend for safekeeping. It wasn't that she didn't want to raise the boy; it was that she thought she was a danger to the child.
There were two moments that stuck with Garona the most. The first was that moment in Karazhan's tower, in which she witnessed herself killing King Llane. The second was the moment in which that horrifying vision came to pass -- and there was nothing she could do to stop it. The combination of these two events made Garona realize, in terror, that she seemed to be destined to play the part of the villain, no matter what she had to say to the contrary.

We've covered the events of the Warcraft comics in a prior Know Your Lore, so I won't touch on them in detail here. There were several key points in Garona's life that were revealed in the comics, however -- points that were absolutely earth-shattering for her. It was revealed that her heritage, long though by both her and those around her to be human, was actually draenei, not human at all. Above and beyond that, the machinations of the Shadow Council, the controls they had placed in her head, the engineering of her birth -- all of this was also revealed to the half-orc.
And it nearly destroyed her. Imagine, if you will, living your life secure and comfortable with who you are. One day, you find yourself committing murder, out of the blue -- despite your mind screaming against it. Garona thought herself completely insane, and she had no idea why. But she knew that she murdered her kinsman of a sort -- half-kinsman, if you will -- despite not wanting to do it. She isolated herself on purpose, to avoid harming anyone else.
There Garona sat, alone -- without even the comfort of her child for company. Oh, she could watch over him from afar, making sure he didn't come to harm, but she wouldn't be able to hold the baby. She wouldn't be able to see his first steps or hear his first words. She was utterly convinced that there was nothing stopping her from one day, out of the blue, turning around and casually murdering her son, even as her mind railed against doing so. She wasn't about to take that chance.

Yet in the Warcraft comics series, we see that Garona was never too far away, fiercely devoted to protecting her son at all costs. Despite her fears that she would one day end her son's life just as she'd ended Llane's, she still couldn't bring herself to move too far away. Because despite her body's strange independence of her mind's wishes, Med'an was still the last remnant of a time in which she'd been ... not happy, per se, but content with the moment.
When the truth was revealed, all preconceptions Garona had about her life came falling down around her. She wasn't half-human -- the amount of time she'd spent getting to know the human race, its culture and customs, it was all because of the Shadow Council's wishes. They let her think -- encouraged her to think that she was human, encouraged her to go to the humans and try to figure them out. In reality, her birth wasn't a random act of fate; it was an engineered moment in time. Her existence was not her own; her existence was purely at the whim of Gul'dan and the Shadow Council.

And the worst part of it all was the revelation that she was controlled by the Shadow Council and, later, Cho'gall. It wasn't her body acting strangely; it wasn't that there was anything wrong with her mentally that caused her to murder Llane. It was the fact that from her birth, she had been bred to be a tool. She wasn't half-human. At that moment, in her mind, she may not even have considered herself half-orc. She was simply a tool, something the Shadow Council had created to use. The fact that the tool they created had thoughts and feelings of its own didn't really concern the Council, as long as the tool performed as expected.
On top of this, underneath these realizations was the realization that every happy memory she had -- speaking with Medivh, long chats with Llane, even the birth of her son -- none of it would have existed if she had never been created. The Shadow Council wasn't just responsible for her brutal murder of King Llane; they were responsible for every memory, every moment of her life. Without the Shadow Council's intervention, she wouldn't even be alive.

Garona's presence is revealed in the Twilight Highlands, where she continues her quest to destroy what's left of the Twilight's Hammer. But there's more to the story: Garona discovered that Cho'gall wasn't really dead. Horde players are sent to assist Garona as she plans her assault on the Twilight's Hammer and Cho'gall, culminating in a final confrontation over The Hammer of Twilight, a weapon imbued with the power of an Old God."The Twilight's Hammer remains a threat that must be eradicated. And I am good at killing. So together, Meryl and I will teach the Hammer how to die. But Cho'gall -- the last being on Azeroth who held sway over me -- is no more."
Cho'gall takes the Hammer and flees, leaving the player to fight a gronn named Skullcrusher the Mountain. After all is said and done, the player is told that they must assault the Bastion of Twilight and defeat Cho'gall. But Garona's presence is mysteriously absent. It continues to be absent through the entirety of the Bastion of Twilight raid. Even when Horde raids confront Cho'gall, she is nowhere to be seen, not even in heroic mode. It seems as though Garona has simply disappeared.

But when push comes to shove, when Cho'gall finally falls, Garona isn't even there to see it. Either this is a gigantic misstep on the part of the storywriting department, or Garona's attention has been drawn elsewhere. Considering her past, considering her zeal towards seeing Cho'gall destroyed, it would have to be a pretty major something to draw Garona's attention away. So which is it? Has Garona's story simply been forgotten, or have we yet to discover Garona's ultimate fate?
I'm optimistic that we haven't seen the last of Garona, but then I tend to veer on the side of optimism when it comes to Warcraft lore -- where others see strange holes and gaps in storytelling, I see possibilities for other, larger events that can be woven into play. As it stands, Garona remains one of the most fascinating enigmas of Warcraft lore, the strength of character and will she demonstrates in resisting Cho'gall's control is nothing short of astounding. Have we seen the last of Garona? I certainly hope not, but only future patches and events will tell.
For more information on related subjects, please look at these other Know Your Lore entries:
- Med'an, Cho'gall and the Prophecy
- The Council of Tirisfal and the last Guardian
- The Twilight's Hammer
- The Old Gods
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
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 2)
Tim Feb 28th 2011 9:29AM
Garona is my favorite lore character. It is crap that she didn't show up in the raid but hell, I didn't show up at the raid either. But yeah, she has such a mad on for Cho'gall; it is kinda fishy...
nonentity Feb 28th 2011 11:42AM
Love Garona, I was so glad to finally see her ingame. But to have her just... disappear then... not even when killing Cho'Gall... what the?
I SERIOUSLY hope they don't go with the "she was kidnapped and turned into a raid boss" thing for 4.2, 4.3 or whatever (like they are going to do with Fandral Staghelm and the green dragon who was to escort him to Moonglade) ...
Guess the only thing that could keep Garona from being there when Cho'Gall was truly, finally killed would be something to do with Med'an. Or damn Varian getting his hands on her in the midst of all this chaos.
I fear we'll have Med'an fighting by our side - and taking all the credit - when we finally attack Deathwing, possibly because Deathwing ....... kidnapped Garona or some such thing.
tamingoftheshrew Feb 28th 2011 11:44AM
Aw, Garona. She is a wonderful character, I do hope we see more of her. :)
woshiernog Feb 28th 2011 2:16PM
Maybe red shirt guy can find out for us at Blizzcon 2011.
BB Crisp Feb 28th 2011 3:18PM
It would have made sense for her to appear in Twilight Bastion for the Horde, but who would have been the equivalent for the Alliance? No way Blizzard would have implemented something like that unless there were another major lore character that could accompany Alliance raids and I can't think of anybody that would fit the role in that situation.
badplanetkevin Feb 28th 2011 5:53PM
Garona's quest lines in the highlands are the help her "break free from Cho'gal's grasp" which implies that she is still under his influence. If she was to show up during the fight, chances are he would've used her as his weapon once again.
Lachdanan Feb 28th 2011 7:17PM
Hopefully when we see her again, it will be in a storyline involving Med'an, one of my favourite lore characters. :)
Siaperas Feb 28th 2011 8:28PM
It could be possible that Blizz's encounter team didn't include Garona in the Bastion of Twilight raid because they couldn't think of a loaded Alliance counterpart. The Alliance quest feature Mathias Shaw, but he has nowhere near the connection to Cho'gall as Gorona does.
From a lore point, perhaps Gorona didn't join raiders in the Bastion of Twilight because she was afraid that if she was well within Cho'gall's gaze, she could be used again to kill the raiders. Best to stay out of their way and let them do their job. Or, perhaps as suggested something is happening with Med'an, and she needed to get to him asap. Hopefully we see more of her. Many of the characters from the first two Warcraft games have plenty of room for development.
ansuki Feb 28th 2011 9:33PM
Ye slightly disappointed that she didn't turn up in the raid, as I'm a big lore fan and like to see a storyline carried through. Kind of like in WoTLK, for Hordies, in the end game content, there was a lot of emphasis on Sylvannis and her attempts to kill Arthas. If anyone had a grudge against him, I thought her's would be the biggest and was really disappointed when after guiding us through FoS, PoS and fanally HoR, she was not at the big finale in ICC when Arthas bit the dust. Sure Tirion was good enough, but still, nothing like seeing a woman scorned get her revenge. Let's hope Garona gets a look (and a knife) in somewhere.
Mondryn Mar 1st 2011 10:04AM
Maybe she doesn't show up because she's afraid that her body will be taken over again and she'll end up killing all of the players?
Zetsubou Mar 6th 2011 12:52AM
two scenarios play out in my head after reading this.
1: they screwed up lore or plot or whatever. she will have soloed him or something. blah...
2: her absence at cho'gall's defeat has sinester implications. either cho'gall was (still is possibly? he's cheated death before.) controlled/ing her, which means she could be doing something bad now, or some other shadow council member has some hooks in her, using her for some devious end.
>.> i kinda feel bad, because she's probably the closest tie draenei have to story advancement in cata, and she really has no outwardly apparent draenei traits, inside or out. i disagree with the notion that she is an example of strong character or willpower. being a person that is posessed alone means she had little will to break free. similar things have been overcome by similar people through willpower alone. her path of atonement by hunting counsel members does little to change her predicament. any member along a chain with sufficient power and knowledge of her locks can marionette her along. if she truly had willpower she would be seeking ways to remove her ties to the counsel, or at least resist their dominion.
the draenei and orcs have long histories of strength, willpower, and perseverance through hardships. she would do well to learn from her blood. all the better that she isn't tied to the frail humans, who lack strength and ways to preserve or access knowledge.