|
(Taken
from the Royal
Library of Evendarr 6/25/603)
The History of
Saxony
Keep
A
history concerning the significant events that took place upon this ancient
ancestral ground during its 488 years of existence
Commissioned
by H. R. H. Sir Joseph Roderick
Hendrick Demrys Pendarves Saxony, Prince of Evendarr, Lord of Saxony Keep to
commemorate the coronation of their royal majesties, King Richard Endarr &
Queen Katherine Bartholomew Endarr on the 6th day of June, yr. 584 at castle
Evendarr in the city of Evendarr
Long
live their royal majesties!
by
Tollin Thistledown, Court Bard & Historian of
the Barony of Arawyn, set
down in the Year of the Realm of Evendarr 584
at
Saxony Keep in Port Jaskara, Capital
City of the Barony of Arawyn, in
the Duchy of Evendarr
Humbly
Dedicated to H. R. H. Prince Joseph,
Honored
Sponsor of This Great Endeavor
&
To Her Esteemed Ladyship Dame Acadia Landsheim, Baroness
of Arawyn, Liege & Patroness
PROLOGUE
It is the earnest wish of this Humble Bard that the reader’s critical
eye look upon his work as being but a brief delineation of the more significant
events to occur upon these ancient lands - a silhouette, as it were, instead of
a magnificent portrait. Many of the
most accurate records of the site have been lost or destroyed during the
Keep’s event-filled history. Too
often, conflicting accounts, fragmentary memories of legends, and a few whispers
hinted in tales and ballads are all that comes to the historian’s hand among
the Saxony family records and the Baronial archives.
To be sure, there may be additional material stored at other locations in
Evendarr; the Bardic College, the Royal Academy and the Guilds, other Saxony
family holdings and even among the Dwarves at Holmgate, to name but a few.
Moreover, in a search of the earliest Baronial records, now stored in the
cellars of the Manor House (which has been located in the town proper ever since
the tragic events of YR 392), some of the oldest material appears to have
suffered extensive damage due to water seepage.
Although Her Ladyship, Baroness Acadia, has had them removed to more
agreeable quarters, it will take the work of many experts to reclaim their
contents.
This brief history is, therefore, an exercise of the best efforts which
can be mustered from an old and caring friend for a place filled with history,
treachery, heroism and romance, a friend whose own age and infirmity prevents
the degree of vigor necessary for a more comprehensive opus.
Yet all may not be in vain, for this little tome may yet sow the seeds of
greater endeavor in the next generation. Let
this work then be construed as a promise of more eminent industry in times to
come.
In
Humble Gratitude,
Master
Bard Tollin Ambler Thistledown
Royal
Guild of Bardic Arts Court
Bard of Barony Arawyn
at
Saxony Keep
13
November, in the 584th Year of the Realm of Evendarr
TABLE
OF CALENDARS
The calendar kept by the Saxony family is based upon the years of each
consecutive Liege. It was
discontinued after the incorporation of Arawyn into the Kingdom of Evendarr.
This account refers to them only parenthetically, in the interests of
historical accuracy. Many thanks
are given to the Keep’s faithful gardener, Borilen Curiloth, who permitted
himself to be placed under a series of Truth Spells in order to enhance his
fading memories of old reunions and conversations.
To the best knowledge of this writer no other complete written record
exists, a condition that has now been rectified at Saxony Keep, and in other
archival locations.
The reader should note that the designations of ‘Degan’ and
‘Thonn’ refer to titles given to the heads of the family in succession, the
former to females and the latter to males.
All Saxony years began at the New Year, and bore the name until its end,
of the ruler who began the year.
SAXONY YEAR
EVENDARR EQUIVALENT
Degan Jaskara 1-18
None
Thonn Robard 1-4??
None
Thonn Ansel 1-11
to YR 3
Degan KethraÊ1-10
YR 4-13
Degan Eleena 1-2
YR 14-15
Thonn Bartel 1-23
YR 16-38
Thonn Robard Blackmane 1-8
YR 39-46
Thonn Archibald 1-15
YR 47-61
Degan Shayna 1-9
YR 62-70
Thonn Johann 1-7
YR 71-77
Degan Kethra One-Hand 1-10
YR 78-87
Thonn Alfred 1-24
YR 88-111
Thonn Teodor 1-2
YR 111-112
On July 4, YR 112 was signed the Treaty of Arawyn at Saxony Keep, and
Thonn Teodor retired the hereditary Saxony titles and the calendar, becoming
Lord Teodor Saxony, first Baron of Arawyn in the Kingdom of Evendarr. Tollin
Thistledown, Court Bard & Historian
CHAPTER
I - THE EARLIEST YEARS
The history of the Saxony family predates the Kingdom of Evendarr by at
least three decades, although the lands which eventually became the Barony of
Arawyn did not become incorporated into the Kingdom until the 112th Year of the
Realm of Evendarr (Thonn Teodor 2). In
fact, the Town of Port Jaskara is named in honor of the Degan Jaskara Seaxan,
leader of a seafaring clan, Grand Matriarch of her people and a legendary
virtuoso with sword and dagger. (‘Seaxan’
in Ancient Common speech means ‘knife’.)
Early legends claim kinship between the Saxony Clan and the Mer-folk that
are occasionally seen in the waters along the coast of Evendarr.
Whether true or not, the extended family settled in one of the most
favorable locations on Darksands Bay, where they soon established a reputation
as expert seafarers and shrewd traders. By
the time of the founding of the Kingdom of Evendarr, they were the acknowledged
power in the lands north of the Black River as far inland as the Sardon Hills.
A true keep did not exist in those early days.
Rather, the family’s main residence is said to have consisted of
several buildings within an enclosure, surrounded by a wooden palisade that was
reputed to have been constructed and protected with Magic.
It was simply called ‘The Fort’ as far as we know, and commanded the
same vantage point that the current edifice holds today.
In addition, there was a small but flourishing port with docks,
warehouses and a shipyard. At least
by the time of Thonn Robard Blackmane, prosperous farms, orchards and vineyards,
and forested tracts surrounded the growing town, all facing the fertile waters
of Darksands Bay.
In the 95th year of Evendarr (Thonn Alfred 8), Mount Sarobar erupted in
the Black Hills to the southeast, spewing ash and noxious gases north and west
across Darksands Bay. The harvest
was destroyed, and both hunting and fishing disappeared as land and water
animals alike perished by the thousands. Faced
with starvation, many farmers, hunters and fisherfolk - once law-abiding
citizens - took to the roads and the ocean as brigands and pirates.
In the years before the area recovered and prosperity returned, Port
Jaskara and the land and water routes to it became the favored targets of these
desperate peoples. In December of
the year of the Great Eruption brigands set fire to the town, destroying nearly
its entire waterfront. It is said
that an unknown item of great Magic was then brought to bear against the Saxony
fortifications; so that the fire also destroyed a portion of the breastworks and
several buildings in which, unfortunately, many priceless historic documents and
works of art were lost. Nevertheless,
the bulk of the family’s wealth had been stored elsewhere - in several of the
caves that pocket Darksands Bay - and the decision to rebuild was made.
CHAPTER
II - THE BUILDING OF SAXONY KEEP & SAXONY TOWER
Under the leadership of the legendary Thonn Alfred, a program was begun
which was to last several years. First,
a number of Spell-casters were employed to augment the defense of the town.
The next attacks resulted in the utter defeat of the invaders, and an
offer of amnesty was extended to many of the bands of raiders in exchange for
their service as guards and laborers. Thus the building of Saxony Keep
accomplished several goals. First,
it provided secure shelter for the residents of Port Jaskara as well as
travelers and trade interests. Secondly,
it provided work and income to many of the former refugees, who were only too
glad to forsake their lawless careers and return to a life of stability for
themselves and their families.
Work began on the construction of Saxony Keep in YR 96 (Thonn Alfred 9).
The great outer Wall, some thirty feet high that once surrounded the
heights around Port Jaskara, was completed in the Evendarr Year 98 (Thonn Alfred
11). The inner wall and the Keep
itself were finished the following year - an astonishing feat of labor when one
considers that the city was under attack by both land and sea during nearly the
entire time.
The most magnificent structure - and the pride of Thonn Alfred - was the
great Saxony Tower which rose nearly eighty feet above the bluff upon which it
was set. Tall and slender, its
shape evoked the image of a great tree, with a graceful curvature beginning at
its four-sided base that flared into a triple parapet above its main cylindrical
section. It was designed and built
by the great Dwarven stoneshaper Ruta Hammerstone, and was fashioned of artfully
worked granite blocks sheathed in purest white marble from the Sardon Hills.
It is said to have been a replica of the Tower of Magic she had
constructed nearly a century earlier, which had stood outside the walls of the
old Royal capital of Cwyll. (The
center of Magical learning in the Kingdom’s early years, that edifice had been
destroyed in the great explosion of YR 32 that killed King Berthold III.)
Some suggested it bespoke an Elven influence, although those opinions
were never voiced in the presence of its creator.
Saxony Tower is said to have differed in appearance from the original
only by virtue of the great crystal which was set upon the uppermost parapet,
whose light provided a guide to safe harbor for incoming vessels.
It differed in use by serving as beacon, watchtower, guard post and
prison in the upper levels, along with a dungeon, torture chamber and vault in
its cellars. It was, however, as
much a defensive structure as a work of art, for within its circular walls were
many cunningly-placed arrow-slits, and both the lower and middle of the three
parapets were broad and sturdy enough to mount ballista’s, oil pots or heavy
crossbows.
Because the Tower had been assembled entirely without mortar, the legend
quickly grew that Magic had been used in its making, despite many oaths sworn by
everyone who had labored upon it that only the Permanent Light Spell ensorcelled
into the beacon contained an Eldritch power.
Before many years had passed, Saxony Tower had become a lodestone for
travelers eager to view its glory, and until its final destruction in YR 392 was
considered one of the great wonders of the entire Kingdom.
CHAPTER
III - UNION WITH EVENDARR
Although much effort and wealth had been expended upon restoring peace
and prosperity to its peoples, the lands under Saxony domain were still
recovering from the effects of the Great Eruption.
Even as local conditions stabilized, the Saxony’s found it necessary to
extend their protection northward along the coast until their lands reached to
the Ash Mountains and the bay north of the hamlet of Zamora by YR 104 (Thonn
Alfred 17). The local folk of Port
Jaskara had long called the surrounding area ‘Arawyn’, after the legendary
mountains to the southwest (there are fragments of local legends and ballads
that tell of the earliest Humans to inhabit the lands around Darksands Bay
migrating there from the Arawyn Mountains north of Holmgate).
The name of Arawyn gradually spread to include all Saxony lands, but the
northern folk continued to call themselves ‘Baltarians’, and some were not
entirely pleased with their new Lieges.
In YR 106 (Thonn Alfred 19), overtures were made to Arawyn inviting it to
join the Kingdom of Evendarr, primarily at the urging of the Court of Nevis,
Arawyn’s neighbor to the north. But
the feisty Thonn Alfred declined, preferring independence to the role of vassal
in a larger Realm.
By this time several members of the Saxony family had settled in
Evendarr, and some were rising in positions of power.
A few had achieved noble titles, foremost among them Lord Teodor Saxony,
a nephew of Thonn Alfred who had himself become an engineer of some renown.
Born in Port Jaskara in YR 65 (Degan Shayna 4), Teodor came early to a
love of the art, securing a coveted apprenticeship to Stonemistress Hammerstone
at the beginning of the construction of Saxony Keep.
Upon its completion, he traveled to Holmgate in Blackstone for further
instruction, and by YR 102 had secured his title and a senior position among the
Royal Engineers in the Court of Queen Cllotho.
When King Ulson II (‘The Builder’) ascended the Evendarrian Throne
the following year, he immediately ordered the development of plans for a new
capital city on the plains east of the Greenmarch Mountains, and a military
highway linking it to the coast at Braughm-Raor as a means of further securing
the union of Evendarr with Blackstone, his father’s former Kingdom.
Lord Teodor became the Royal Liaison to the Holmgate Dwarves, who were
largely responsible for the work, and these two great projects occupied him for
the remainder of his life.
On Midsummer’s Night in YR 111 (Thonn Alfred 24), the pirate band
called Maelstrom, under the leadership of the infamous Darkmage Cetos, launched
a vicious attack on Port Jaskara in revenge for punitive actions that the Thonn
had taken against it. Aided by the
Water Elementals she had Summoned, Cetos and her marauders breached the Keep’s
defenses and savagely massacred Thonn Alfred and his entire family - some 26
members in all. Necromancers raised
the victims as Undead; and although the Guard drove off the raiders the family
was never seen again. By law the
lands were to pass to the eldest surviving family member, but there were none
left in Arawyn with a direct birthright to its heritage.
Lord Teodor Saxony - now an ennobled citizen of Evendarr - became the new
Thonn of Arawyn, and the end of its independent status was at hand.
Shortly afterward, Lord Teodor was approached by the King and offered
entry into the growing Realm as a Baron of his own lands.
He accepted fealty as an act in the best interests of his people.
The Treaty of Arawyn was signed at Saxony Keep in YR 112 (Thonn Teodor 2
- the last year of the Saxony calendar), and Lord Teodor Saxony became the first
Baron of Arawyn in the Kingdom of Evendarr.
As a gift to his new King and country, Baron Teodor sent a large caravan
filled with wealth to be used in the projects to which he had become so devoted.
Apart from yearly visits to his birthplace, Baron Teodor took little
direct interest in the management of the Barony or its capital city.
He named his eldest son Edmund to be his Heir and Seneschal, an
arrangement that suited both the Baron and his vassals.
A seasoned warrior, Sir Edmund proved to be a capable administrator as
well, and the fortunes of Arawyn prospered.
The decision to join the Kingdom had largely been a popular one, since
the advantages of the Royal Highway system that was slowly connecting the
Kingdom by land were beginning to be appreciated by the merchants and artisans
of Port Jaskara. In fact, one of
Teodor’s actions as Baron was to begin negotiations with the Throne to bring a
King’s Road to Port Jaskara as soon as its other major projects had been
brought to completion. Unfortunately,
the Baron was permanently killed in a terrible rockslide just outside
Braughm-Raor in YR 116, and more influential voices urged the King in other
directions.
CHAPTER
IV - REBELLION
Thus did matters stand throughout the rule of Baron Edmund Saxony, who
died in YR 132. His daughter, Dame
Katren, succeeded him, but it is said that she had become weak and sickly in the
aftermath of an outbreak of the Spotted Plague which ravaged the capital in YR
130, and had killed two of her four children.
She had married Lord Durgan Balfour, a local noble who had agreed to
accept the Saxony name in exchange for being designated Heir.
Lord Saxony had the reputation of being a hot-head and stubborn of mind,
and his disposition had worsened after his children’s deaths.
When further negotiations with Evendarr failed to produce the promise of
a major highway into Port Jaskara, Lord Durgan began to conspire with several of
the town’s merchant families to consider a return to independence.
Although the growing unrest was not a great secret, Baroness Katren could
not be persuaded of its importance until she discovered early in YR 139 that the
sentiment had spread into the countryside.
She counseled patience, and decided in spite of her growing infirmity to
travel herself to Evendarr City and plead Port Jaskara’s case directly to King
Ulson.
The King was beset with growing difficulties on the northern borders.
Although his forces had won at Battle Downs against the Nordennites in YR
122, the enemy continued to exert pressure upon Evendarr, threatening the very
existence of the Barony of Nevis, and from time to time even cut off the main
travel route between the Kingdom and the Royal Academy at Lake Hollym.
One man seemed to be able to keep the peace - the young commander Charles
Rotari - and the King deemed him worthy to be given a rule of his own.
Most importantly, King Ulson had received several petitions from the
Baltarians - who called the Saxony’s usurpers - to be made a separate fiefdom.
The adjacent Barony of Nevis, one of the four original realms making up
the Kingdom, had added its voice to those of the Baltarians, and its was a
powerful voice indeed.
The King offered Baroness Katren a compromise: if Arawyn would cede its
Baltarian lands to the Crown, he would immediately begin planning the
construction of a Royal Highway to link Port Jaskara to Evendarr City.
Dame Katren agreed, since it was her sense that all would benefit from
the decision. She returned to Port
Jaskara and announced the King’s decree.
Her husband then stood up in her Council chambers, and in an explosion of
temper declared that the plan might be the best she could devise, but he
intended to have the King’s Highway and Baltaria as well.
He left the capital and began to assemble a force of rebels.
Dame Katren sent agents to learn his plans, and eventually discovered a
mercenary army hidden in the Sardon Hills preparing to march upon Saxony Keep.
In a last act for her people’s welfare, the Baroness ordered the army
dispersed and recalled her husband to the capital where, it is said, she
intended to strip him of his title and end the marriage.
The accounts say that the very evening before Lord Durgan was to return
to Port Jaskara, Katren climbed to the top of Saxony Tower in order to catch a
glimpse of her husband’s party. Few
believe that she fell to her final death by accident even though the subsequent
investigation - and many Scry Spells - could show no evidence of foul play.
Lord Durgan Saxony succeeded his wife as the first Liege of Arawyn who
was not directly of Saxony blood. Let
it at least be said that he wept bitterly at her gravesite, and until his death
showed no interest in women other than as comrades.
Durgan’s first act was to declare Evendarrian rule at an end and
himself as Thonn Durgan Saxony. He
seized all of the Royal estates in Arawyn, intending to hold them hostage to the
Crown. He continued to recruit
mercenaries and called up a levy of local militia from the lands of the Saxonys
and their supporters, particularly in Baltaria.
Orders were given to capture the Baltarian dissidents, and a company of
Necromancers were dispatched to turn them against their own people as zombies.
Within a few weeks’ time, a reign of terror spread across Baltaria and
even into Saxony Keep, as 16 year-old Devon Saxony, the youngest surviving
child, was thrown from the highest parapet of Saxony Tower for attempting to
assassinate his father.
King Ulson lost no time in responding.
Taking the field himself, he led an army into Arawyn and in less than
three month’s time had put down the rebellion.
The destruction and loss of life were widespread, but the most awesome
weapon in the Royal arsenal was the Rod of the Elements, wielded by the King
himself, which Summoned many of the otherworldly creatures to wreak havoc among
the Saxony forces. In the greensward before Saxony Tower, Durgan Balfour was
stripped of his Saxony name and his titles and Obliterated, with his son and
daughter Alyssa as witnesses.
Thus ended the 1st Saxony Rebellion.
By Royal decree Arawyn lost Baltaria, which became a Barony under Sir
Charles Rotari. Sir Colin Demrys, a
Knight of Evendarr, became the new Baron of Arawyn, and the Saxonys were
forbidden from succession. No Royal
Highway was ever built to Port Jaskara. Braughm-Raor
in Blackstone became the main port of the Kingdom, but Port Jaskara is still
prosperous, though lacking in preeminence.
Yet the Saxony family was not completely humbled.
For their staunch opposition to Durgan’s treachery, Devon and Alyssa
were permitted to hold Saxony Keep as their ancestral home.
Each was given a small estate outside the Barony, and they were allowed
to retain the family’s business interests in the Port itself.
However, neither son nor daughter desired to remain in the place where
both of their parents had died so violently, and they eventually settled in
Evendarr City after Baron Colin agreed to pay an annual fee for the use of the
Keep as his Baronial residence. Nearly
two and a half centuries would pass before a Saxony returned to dwell in the
home of his forebears.
CHAPTER
V - INTERIM
Little will be said here of the 2nd Saxony Rebellion, which played itself
out for the most part in the streets and chambers of the Capital City and Castle
Evendarr. Most historians
considered the assassination of Queen Diane by Felicia Saxony as the prelude to
the 2nd Rebellion. Later, it was said that the YR 227 ER murder was
an act of madness brought about by Felicia’s resentment of the overriding
influence upon the Throne of the Five Old Families that founded the Kingdom of
Evendarr. This all according to records brought to Saxony Keep after the
Obliteration
It is merely noted here for historical purposes and without giving undue
credence to its accuracy, that to Felicia’s mind the openness of spirit which
had characterized the years immediately following the incorporation of
Blackstone and Kitheria into the Kingdom had disappeared.
Over time, the original union of Endarrs, Huntingtons, Monays,
Bartholomews, and the Buttons family had reasserted itself at the expense of
many loyal servants to the Crown of lesser pedigree.
While it is true that no Saxony in that time was able to stand as close
to the Throne as the Five, the Saxony family had certainly redeemed its name in
the eyes of the Crown after the tragedy of YR 139, and had actually gained
considerably in wealth and influence.
Whether or not the events of YR 267 ought to be called a Rebellion,
Saxony fortunes were considerably improved by the deaths of several members of
the Five Old Families. The marriage
of Lady Mathea Saxony to King Ulson III (‘The Conqueror’) that year may have
marked the height of Saxony influence in Evendarr until H. R. H. Prince Joseph
was formally Adopted as Heir to the Throne of Evendarr eight years ago.
Commentaries on Queen Mathea’s unsuccessful attempt to install her
brother Robert as Count of Blackstone are quite detailed in their analysis of
her lengthy statement before she was Obliterated for King Ulson’s murder in YR
291. Although most dismiss
her allegations as being without merit, she nevertheless insisted that she had
only been seeking justice for the centuries of favoritism shown to the people of
Blackstone. Most specifically, she sought retribution for the merchant interests
of Braughm-Raor that had taken place at the expense of the Saxony’s and Port
Jaskara. In any case, the matter
becomes important to this narrative only for purposes of continuity.
Life in Port Jaskara and Saxony Keep continued largely uneventfully
during much of the 4th century of the Kingdom.
The Demrys Lieges proved to be both wise and popular, and while they were
unsuccessful in their advocacy for a Royal Road to the port, they nevertheless
managed to greatly improve the land transportation system.
Their greatest triumph, in conjunction with the Barony of Sardonia, was
the Red River Portage system which speeded access to Lake Hollym and the growing
northern territories.
YR 304 saw both joy and tragedy at Saxony Keep.
Dame Aneille Demrys was the youngest daughter of Baroness Margala, and a
trader whose seafaring exploits had taken her across the Great Northern Ocean to
the Elven Kingdom of Brynmaerdyth. She
fell in love with Lord Xavier Saxony, who became the Protector of Ashbury in YR
305. A great wedding feast was held
at the Keep, which reunited the far-flung Saxony clan with its ancestral home
for the first time in more than a century and a half.
Lord Xavier swore oath to uphold the Judgment of King Ulson II, and the
happy couple repaired to Ashbury the following year, where Lord Xavier’s
beloved wife continued her explorations, this time on land.
Later that year, the Baroness announced the betrothal of another
daughter, Ylaina, to Timmonel of Lyster, a Squire to a Knight of Arawyn.
On the surface the match appeared to be flawless, but as the time for the
Wedding Feast drew closer, Ylaina became more withdrawn and morose. Suspicious,
Dame Margala began to ply her daughter with questions. She soon learned that
Ylaina had fallen in love with a Mer-man and yearned to go to the sea with him,
but was torn between her affection for Timmonel and her duty to the Barony
against the wishes of her heart. For
once one joins the Mer-folk and becomes one of them, all ties to the land are
forever severed.
Baroness Margala was wise enough to know that, will she or nil she, her
daughter was lost to her. Ylaina
would either Transform into one of the Sea Folk or pine away to death.
Sadly, she bade Ylaina farewell and watched as tearful good-byes were
exchanged with Timmonel. Ylaina
sailed her little boat into the deepening fog of Darksands Bay and was never
seen again.
Squire Timmonel was devastated, and as the days went by could do no more
than stand upon the heights of Saxony Tower searching in vain for his lost love,
or pace the great Wall for hour after hour.
Finally one night, a fierce storm lashed the city with wind and sleet.
When daybreak came, Timmonel was gone from Saxony Keep, and the legends
say that he went out to sea to search for Ylaina one final time.
CHAPTER
VI - THE 3RD SAXONY REBELLION: SEEDS
OF CONFLICT
In the long history of Evendarr there have been many instances of
internal strife. Even the Five Old
Families have seen episodes of quarrels, sedition, treason and estrangement
among one another and with the Endarr Throne.
But perhaps no family has seen its fortunes rise and fall as
precipitously as the House of Saxony; the tragic events of YR 388 - 392 serve as
an illustrative example. The
effects upon Saxony Keep were of such import that a more detailed background
needs to be presented in order that the reader might clearly understand how the
events came to pass.
There is an old Hobling saying that war needs only one life to live but
one hundred deaths to die. Whether
this is true in the case of Brigadier Lord Johann Saxony cannot be proven, but
his records of the campaign show that many of his decisions appear to have been
motivated by a presumption that no matter how many Saxony lives were given in
service to the Crown or how much Saxony blood was shed in its defense, its name
would never bear the luster of those of the Founders.
It is not clear how he came to this supposition, being himself the
grand-nephew of King Willem whose own sister, Princess Gynneth, had married Lord
Johann’s grandfather - Sir Damien Saxony, Protector of Ashbury after his
father, Lord Xavier Saxony.
The records clearly show that the decisions of King Mykel II which Lord
Johann received with such ill-favor were grounded far more in reasons of state,
and in the counsel of advisors, than in personal preferences.
But all those who knew him agreed that Lord Johann Saxony was a man who
acted upon feelings rather than careful thought, and no amount of reasoned
discourse could stay the Saxony Lord’s hand once he had decided to set it
against his kinsman.
Lord Johann’s father, Lord Robert Saxony, had been named the Royal
Seneschal under King Willem, and continued in that office after the King’s
tragic death in YR 359. Being
cousin to Prince Mykel, the elder Saxony had expected to be named Regent for the
14 year-old Heir, and become embittered when Lord Chancellor Powell Huntington
was confirmed in that office instead. To
the end of his life, Lord Robert harbored a monumental dislike for the
Huntington family that he took few pains to conceal.
Yet it was universally known that the Huntington Lord was not only a
brilliant and courageous man, but that he had shared a special relationship with
Prince Mykel since the child’s birth. It
was, in fact, the Prince himself who had been the greatest advocate of Lord
Huntington’s Regency, bearing no enmity toward Lord Robert or any other member
of his family, but the greatest affection and respect for ‘Uncle’ Powell.
Lord Johann had grown up as Prince Mykel’s close companion, almost as
an elder brother, being the Prince’s senior by a mere two years.
From the earliest age he had been every inch a warrior, unlike his cousin
whose broader interests reflected an aptitude for the statecraft for which he
was being schooled. It is said that
the two would argue long hours on the requirements of governance, Johann
preferring a military solution to nearly every problem and Mykel seeking a more
balanced perspective. They were the
best of friends, despite Lord Robert’s attempts to distance his son from the
young Endarr Prince.
When Mykel ascended the Throne in YR 361 as King Mykel II, he immediately
commissioned Lord Johann as his chief aide, and the two often campaigned
together. They distinguished
themselves particularly in the Troll Campaign in Ashbury in YR 363 - 364, and in
the Lizard Wars in Kitheria which began five years later, and lasted on-and-off
for more than a decade.
By YR 368, Lord Johann Saxony was a Major in the Royal Army’s most
prestigious unit - the 1st Old Guard. He
had also been married in YR 366 to Dame Rhennys Oakley, a Captain in the Crown
Guard with whom he had a son, Andric, the following year.
Two years afterward, Dame Rhennys was killed in battle and the child was
sent to live with his Saxony cousins in Ashbury.
It was Lord Johann who first met the Lady Katherine Huntington in YR 375,
and immediately became smitten with her. Both
he and the King had known her since her childhood;
but it was not until she captivated the crowd at the 180th Mayfair Derby
in Cwyll - by riding her own horse to victory at age 16 - that he took note of
the fact that she had grown into a young woman of beauty and spirit.
Huntington custom had always been to begin early the training of their
children to the rigors and dangers of service to the Crown.
Lady Katherine had already seen some adventuring,
but Lord Johann was an experienced warrior, and a widower who was twice
her age. His single-minded
courtship of her over the next three years came perilously close to being judged
a breach of Courtly manners, and resulted in eliciting a response quite the
opposite of the growing ardor on her part that he so desired.
To make matters worse, the elder Lord Saxony’s vocal opposition to
Johann’s pursuit of a Huntington was beginning to result in open enmity
between father and son.
In a singular alliance born of desperation, both Lord Robert and Lord
Powell appealed to the King to intervene. At
that time, the Lizard Wars were approaching their fiercest intensity, and
reports that an Elven Vampire had seized control of the monsters had begun to
filter out of the Kitherian Mires. Brigadier
Saxony, now commanding three regiments of the 7th Brigade, was dispatched to
prosecute the hunt, and for the next two years was only intermittently in
attendance at Court.
Free to spend time at the Royal Court now that Lord Johann was no longer
in constant attendance, Lady Katherine struck up a friendship with the King.
To everyone’s surprise - including their own, as King Mykel declared at
their betrothal - that friendship deepened into love, and the two were wed in
May of YR 380.
The elder Saxony was delighted with this turn of events.
It had been he who had openly promoted Mykel’s suit and Lord Huntington
who had initially expressed concern that this was his daughter’s true desire.
Notwithstanding, Lord Robert had personally delivered the news to his son
in the field, using the event as another example of how Huntington treachery
against the Saxony’s had even turned the King against his own cousin and
friend.
Despite his bitter disappointment, Lord Johann returned to Evendarr City
in time for the Royal nuptials, triumphantly bearing the severed heads of one
hundred Lizardmen upon the upraised lances of his cavalry.
Shortly afterward he resigned his commission, declaring his intent to
take up residence at the Saxony ancestral home.
Attaching himself to the Court of Arawyn, he soon became the Commander of
the Baronial Guard, and spent only brief visits at Court thereafter.
By all accounts he had become grim and hardened. Opinions differed as to
whether this was due solely to his loss of Lady Katherine or the hardships he
had endured in the Kitherian Mires - for despite his extraordinary heroics and
the utter defeat of the Lizardmen, the Vampire had eluded him.
In YR 383, he married Genevieve de Montfort, Court Healer to Baron Edward
Demrys, but even her letters acknowledged that there was but scant affection
between them. A year later their
only child died at birth, and within a few months Lady Genevieve accepted a
professorship in the Royal College of Earthly Arts at Janitria.
The two never saw one another again.
Yet all was not bleak for Lord Johann at Saxony Keep.
He had taken apartments in the donjon itself, and soon made himself
indispensable to the aging Baron. By
YR 385 he was himself Baron in all but name, having enlisted the loyalties of
noble and commoner alike. He would
spend long hours walking the parapets of Saxony Tower, or patrolling the
countryside or waterfront - often to the cheers of the people, who were elated
that a Saxony had finally returned to Thonn Alfred’s citadel.
Whether he was even then planning sedition will likely never be known.
CHAPTER
VII - THE 3RD SAXONY REBELLION: OUTBREAK
Thus did matters remain until March of YR 388.
Lord Robert had seen failing health for several years, and in that month
his Healer sent word to Saxony Keep for Lord Johann to attend his father’s
bedside with the greatest urgency. It
is not known what words were exchanged during their final conversation, but even
as Lord Robert’s body lay in state in the Hall of Crystal at Castle Evendarr,
his son demanded audience with the King and the Council.
Full of passion, pride and grief, Lord Johann told the astonished King
and Queen that he had been informed, in his father’s dying words, that the
post of Royal Seneschal had been promised to the House of Saxony by none other
than King Willem himself. The Lord
also admonished his Lieges that his years of loyal service, even in the face of
sore trial, had entitled him to the distinction of that office.
His words became so full of vitriol and defiance that they could not be
permitted to pass without censure.
A young Knight, Dame Allandra Vandoros, challenged Lord Johann to Honor
Combat and swiftly cut him down. The
King granted his cousin a Life spell and forgave him, expressing Mykel’s hope,
as the accounts of that event showed that his Saxony kinsman was only mad with
grief. Lord Johann arose, and
without waiting any response returned to his father’s Vigil.
He would not speak with anyone about the matter until after Lord Robert
was buried.
Those who were present at that fateful meeting all later agreed that the
Lord’s entire demeanor was lacking in reasoned temperament, which bode ill for
his fitness to hold the very office to which he had made claim.
Finally the King went himself to his cousin’s chambers, and would only
say afterwards that the two men could not reach agreement.
That very day, Lord Johann departed Castle Evendarr for the final time in
his life.
He returned to Port Jaskara to find Baron Edward also near to death,
racked by a consumptive illness that no amount of Healing could defeat.
To make matters worse, the Baron’s only child and Heir, the Lady
Bethina, was now a gibbering half-wit as the result of an error made during her
casting of a Ritual. Public
sentiment began to rise for the Baron to name Lord Johann the rightful Heir to
Arawyn.
On October 8th of the 388th Year of the Realm of Evendarr, a message
arrived at Saxony Keep bearing the Royal Seal.
In it, as is shown in the copy which resides in the Royal Archives, was a
personal message from King Mykel to his cousin declaring that, on the advice of
his Council, the office of Seneschal to the King would be granted to Lord
Ambrose Huntington, the youngest son of Lord Powell and brother to Queen
Katherine. However, Lord Johann was
to present himself to the Throne with all due speed, in order to receive a
special Grace from the King’s own hand.
It is understandable that the King wished to make known his intent to his
kinsman before Court and Council, for the Royal Grant was to be nothing less
than the rescinding of the Judgment of Ulson and the restoration of Barony
Arawyn to the House of Saxony. Sadly,
the news was contained in a Royal Decree that, if its contents ever reached the
Saxony’s eyes, arrived too late to change the course of events.
We shall never know what path might have been taken had Johann Saxony
stayed his hand long enough to learn of his King’s intentions.
But his was ever a warrior’s way, and once he had decided to defy the
Crown, he threw himself into his campaign with the passionate intensity so
characteristic of him.
One week later, a small company of helmeted troops bearing the banners of
Saxony and Arawyn arrived at Castle Evendarr.
In silence they entered the Throne Room and stood before the King and
Queen. As the entire chamber fell
quiet, the leader removed his face-piece, revealing the gaunt visage of Sir
Edward Demrys, now transformed by arts Necromantic into a Death Knight.
He removed the gauntlet of Johann Saxony from his belt and threw it
before the Throne, crying out the words that began the 3rd Saxony Rebellion:
‘Hear the voice of Saxony! From
this day forward, Arawyn shall nevermore bend its knee to Endarr, or to
Huntington! So speaketh Johann
Saxony, King of Arawyn, and so do I, Edward Demrys of Arawyn, make my final
intentions known! Long live the
King of Arawyn!’ ‘Long live the
King of Arawyn!’ cried the Arawyn soldiers, and with these words Edward and
his entire company - Undead all - fell upon their swords and passed into dust.
CHAPTER
VIII - THE COURSE OF WAR
It is not necessary to the purpose of this narrative to render a detailed
chronicle of four years of war. Sufficient
to the reader’s understanding is that the conflict, once begun, thundered out
of Arawyn across the plains of Sardonia and Greymoor.
At the height of the Saxony’s success, he had nearly split the Kingdom
in two by taking for a time the eastern shores of the Velowyn River at the
ancient town of Velowyn itself. His
former position and his years of service as Brigadier made Johann Saxony a most
formidable foe, and his army’s ranks were swelled for a time by many who held
a grievance with the Crown, and by mercenaries hired with Saxony gold.
Although the Royal Army’s response was swift and no less passionate in
the defense of its land, conflicts in several other theaters - most notably in
Ashbury and on the borders of Therendry - kept the full might of the King from
being brought to bear upon the insurrection.
Pirate attacks along the coast of Rotaria occupied that Duchy’s naval
forces (there being no Royal Navy at the time), allowing trade and
transportation to continue largely unimpeded to and from Port Jaskara.
It was even rumored that certain merchant clans in Braughm-Raor and Daven
were growing rich in illegal trade with the Arawyn rebels.
For the first year of the campaign, King Mykel continued to seek a
diplomatic resolution to the conflict, twice sending messages under flags of
truce that proffered an offer to negotiate an end to the hostilities.
The first delegation was turned back without ever entering the Saxony’s
presence; the second returned by way of Resurrection.
By the winter of 390 - 391, whose severity forced a pause in the campaign
until the end of April, King Mykel decided to take command himself as Marshal of
the Armies of Evendarr.
The King’s arrival in the field brought the two old battle companions
into direct tactical combat against one another.
In the first few months the Arawyn forces seemed to be gaining the upper
hand, but a brilliant flanking maneuver across the Velowyn north of Johann’s
army - aided, it is said, by Water Elementals Summoned by Lord Ambrose - caught
the rebels in a pincer movement late that summer.
Thus was the stage set for the Battle of the Harvest Moon at Velowyn, on
the 12th day of September, 391. When
it had ended two days later, the King had won the decisive battle in the war
against his once-beloved foe.
By this time, Rotarian naval forces had mounted a successful blockade of
Darksands Bay, and supplies to the insurgents were no longer plentiful.
Additional Royal troops and mercenaries of long service were now swelling
the ranks of the King. Johann was
forced into a defensive strategy which, though skillful enough to drag out the
war for several additional months, was by all accounts leading to his inevitable
defeat. Slowly, step by bloody
step, the Army of Arawyn began to retreat across Evendarr.
By the following spring all of Saxony territory had been regained by the
Kingdom save Port Jaskara and its immediate environs.
Just before the Royal forces took the port, King Mykel made one last
overture to his kinsman. This time
the head of the Obliterated emissary was returned upon her horse’s saddle.
Enraged beyond the obligations of blood and family, King Mykel swore oath
before all who bore witness to this atrocity that Johann Saxony was as evil as
he was mad, and that this combat was now to the Final Death.
Less than a day later Port Jaskara fell to the Royal Army, and a full
siege was laid to Saxony Keep.
CHAPTER
IX - THE SIEGE OF SAXONY KEEP
It is still believed by those who witnessed the event that only the
superb Dwarven craftsmanship wrought by Stonemistress Hammerstone saved the
defenders of Saxony Keep from being overrun during the Royal Army’s initial
assault on Port Jaskara. Although
desertions from the failing rebels were increasing, and their intelligence
reported that Johann’s legions had dwindled to a few hundred of his most
fanatical supporters, the realization quickly dawned upon the attackers that
their most formidable opponent was the Keep itself.
It was virtually impregnable to all but the most powerful of Magics, and
from its redoubts and parapets there came a constant hail of death.
Night assaults were beaten back under the light of the great crystal,
which the enemy had contrived to use as a weapon.
They would shield its base to darken the Keep’s interior, while still
illuminating the Royal positions. After
nearly two weeks of constant combat there were no more deserters, and it was
later recorded that the former Saxony Lord seemed unusually patient during this
period. His demeanor became almost
cheerful despite the apparent hopelessness of his position, and some of those
who remained inside the Keep began to wonder if he had truly gone mad.
On the 10th day of the siege, King Mykel’s wizards were finally
successful in Summoning an Earth Elemental, who was able to infiltrate the Keep
from below ground and make its way to the rebel supplies.
Scry spells determined that by the time it was destroyed, most of the
food and ammunition had been eliminated, and both wells were collapsed.
The end could not be long in coming.
CHAPTER
X - THE FINAL DAY
By early on the morning of April 9th, 392, speculation on both sides had
concluded that the Saxony forces would not withstand the King’s siege for many
more hours. They were now into the
15th day, and additional Scry spells were beginning to bring the information the
King had long been hoping for - that
hunger and thirst were beginning to take their toll on fighting effectiveness
and morale. Preparations were being
completed for a massive Royal assault that King Mykel and his commanders
calculated would overwhelm the enemy by sheer force of numbers and Magic.
Suddenly there was a flurry of activity within the Keep, followed by the
casting of many Obfuscate spells. Anxious
moments passed even as the King’s siege engines were being readied.
Then from the upper parapet of Saxony Tower a single heavy crossbow bolt
was shot, a packet attached to its shaft. The
packet bore the Saxony seal, and was immediately brought to the King.
It contained the worst of news. To
the King’s great horror, Johann Saxony had contrived to kidnap Mykel’s
beloved Queen Katherine and their young son and Heir, the 3 year-old Prince
Berthold, out of Castle Evendarr. Somehow
the captives had been spirited into the Keep - it is believed through
passageways deep underground, although afterwards the Queen could never confirm
the speculation - and were now being held as hostages against whatever terms the
Saxony Lord might demand.
His first was simple and direct: that the siege against Saxony Keep be
lifted immediately. As an earnest
of Johann’s intent, the message was accompanied by a lock of hair from the
head of each captive and the threat that any following messages would instead be
accompanied by their fingers. Torn
between his love for his family and his duty to his people, King Mykel agonized
over his decision. Finally, he
chose a course that he hoped would stand the greatest chance of success for both
himself and the Kingdom.
During her scouting of the Keep’s defenses earlier in the siege, one of
King Mykel’s irregulars had come upon a tiny, concealed gate directly below
Saxony Tower. Her practiced eye had
immediately noted the presence of traps, evaluated the quality of the locks
which held both the outer door and inner portcullis and, lastly, Detected the
Eldritch glow that indicated the presence of Magic.
In the distance, she could hear the measured step of a guard’s pacing.
She dutifully reported her discovery to the King, never guessing at the
time that this might be their only hope of rescuing the Royal captives.
This, then, was the King’s plan: while the bulk of Mykel’s army began
making overt preparations to abandon the siege, a portion of the Royal forces
would storm the main gate as a diversionary tactic.
At the same time, the King and a specially chosen group of volunteers
would attempt to slip into the Keep through that secret Warded entrance and make
their way into Saxony Tower, desperately hoping that they would achieve their
objective in time. The Royal
spell-casters would continually Scry the party’s progress.
As soon as it had passed the first challenge, Lord Ambrose would briefly
Dispel their Obfuscation, the Scry spells would catch a glimpse of the King
moving forward, and the diversion would begin.
It will do well enough for history’s sake to say of the King’s final
heroic journey that he succeeded in his rescue. Both the Queen and the Prince
were safely returned from their trials to bear witness to a complete victory by
the Armies of Evendarr over the rebels of Arawyn, and to live long and honored
lives in the service of the land and its peoples.
There are other tales, some which tell of the Gypsy Bard, whom Fortune
had placed inside the Keep, coming to the party’s aid when all other means for
passing through the Ward had been exhausted. Yet other tales depict the long
battle, always upward, to gain entry into the Tower and of the final
confrontation between the King and his arch-foe, the former Saxony Lord and
Mykel Endarr’s own kinsman.
Nevertheless, the names of the heroes who accompanied their Lord and
Liege should be repeated, since they are writ large upon these ruins, and their
Spirits may yet roam in the half-collapsed tunnels that are said to thread their
way still beneath this bloody ground. And
these were, besides King Mykel himself, Lord Powell Huntington and his son, Lord
Ambrose: Dame Allandra Vandoros,
who carried out the Queen’s final Justice upon Johann Saxony and later became
King Berthold’s Champion; and
Brother Laramis Hartwell, who provided Life to one and Healing to all, and then
more, as Guildmaster of Healers for the City of Evendarr;
and Mages’ Guildmaster Jarridar Coriolis, Arch-Wizard of Flame and
Truth, who served the King with his Magic, and who may have ended his life a few
years later engulfed by the Magic he served.
And there was Magda Ivanova Ajanisa, the Gypsy whose destiny led her to
that Warded portal, whose magnanimity - together with dexterous hands - provided
a Ward Key that allowed a King to rescue his beloved family and made her a
legend among her own; and the Eorl
Haarkan Thunderblade, Barbarian, leader of mercenaries, and until his death
acclaimed the greatest warrior in all Evendarr;
and the Lady V’ktara Solonori of the Kyralia or Stone Elves, Royal
Magistrate under three Sovereigns, who passed the Queen’s Judgment upon the
Saxony; and Shandra MacGregor, a
thief called ‘Honesty’, who discovered and outwitted the little postern gate
which led to the death of a Saxony traitor, and ultimately to her marriage in
later years to the loyal son of that same traitor.
And the last, though not the less important for the order of their
naming, were Gurndrak Hammerstane, Dwarven Armorer and Master Weaponsmith to the
King, who came from simplicity, sped a Royal rescue through a citadel he claimed
was built by an ancestor, and returned to simplicity;
and the Lord Arigil Nandemyr, a Quentari Elf who made a King’s anguish
his own, sang a song of lost love that won a Gypsy Bard’s heart, and lost his
own in unrequited silence in a land far from home;
and young Perrin Galenson, who took a bolt meant for a King and spent his
life as a Knight in service to a Queen.
There are two names of which brief mention has already been made, but to
whom this writer must still pay the debt of history.
They are, of course, those of Johann Saxony and King Mykel Endarr.
Johann Saxony met the fate that Justice and the Law require of a
seditionist. Yet it is not certain
whether his fate was earned more by rebellion, or the equally abominable crimes
of kinslaying and Regicide. For it
is written in the archives of both the Kingdom and the Barony, and sworn by all
those who witnessed the tragic events of that hour, that ‘Johann Saxony alone
gave the order which resulted in the premature loss of the King to the Realm,
and of husband and father to his beloved family’.
It is, in fact, a tribute to the sense of Honor and Duty to the Law and
the Code of Chivalry manifested by those present, that the array of hideous
punishments which could have been exacted upon that twisted remnant of foresworn
fealty and family, were stayed by a grieving Queen.
There are those who believe - like one faithful Elven gardener who has
entered his fourth century of service to Saxony Keep - that the swift and clean
justice meted out to Johann lanced the festering sore upon the spirit of the
House of Saxony which many had called Envy.
For since that sad day in 392, though there have been offspring who might
be called simple, or perhaps foolish, none have been called traitor and several
have been named ‘Honorable’, of which the current Lord of Saxony Keep may be
the most renowned.
And at the end of that long day, Evendarr had lost a King and gained its
wholeness. Mykel Endarr was dead,
Berthold was the Crown Prince and Katherine was both Dowager Queen and Regent.
The King had left behind a legacy of justice and conciliation, but those
capstones of the Diplomatic Arts were swiftly transformed into bold strategy and
dogged persistence when the need arose. He
gave up the utmost in the service of those things which he had held most dear to
his heart: his family and his Land.
There are no better reasons to offer one’s life.
CHAPTER
XI - QUEEN’S JUDGMENT: THE
DESTRUCTION OF SAXONY KEEP
With its leader now dead the collapse of the rebellion followed quickly,
as the remnants of an army that had numbered in the thousands threw down its
arms in surrender. Of the three
hundred final defenders of the Keep, the full weight of the Queen’s justice
fell upon only a few dozen leaders. Several
of Johann’s Necromancers had already committed suicide and their whereabouts
were never ascertained, although whispers that they had Resurrected in Baltaria
continued for years afterward. Only
one other - Diarmid Byrne, called ‘Byrne the Bloody’ - was Obliterated for
the atrocities he had perpetrated. It
is said that his descendant became the infamous pirate Keegan Byrne who met his
own fate more than a century later upon the cliffs of Capulus, and that Bloody
Byrne’s ghost still haunts the grounds of Saxony Keep.
There were twenty-one first executions, of which five were Banished from
Evendarr upon Resurrection. Eight
were declared Outlaw and executed a second time, to Resurrect in parts unknown
with the Queen’s Bounty upon their heads.
The remainder, all minor nobles, were brought to the Capital in chains to
be paroled to their families after paying a heavy forfeiture to the Crown.
The common soldiers were given the Queen’s Amnesty upon swearing oath
never to take up arms again. The
mercenaries were, of course, released from detention after redeeming their
bonds. Only after all this was
accomplished did Queen Katherine pronounce her Judgment upon the Saxony family
and upon Saxony Keep.
The land on which the Keep stood was forfeited to the Crown, and the
House of Saxony was stripped of its ancestral rights in Arawyn.
Dame Ysabet Landsheim, who had been a Captain in the 3rd Crown Guard, was
declared the new Baroness of Arawyn. She
was issued two Royal Orders: to
build a Manor House in the town of Port Jaskara away from the Keep, and to
rebuild the Court of Arawyn with not a single known drop of Saxony blood among
any of its nobility.
But the Queen’s severest judgment was reserved for the Keep itself.
A great space was cleared before the Tower, and the crowds who had
gathered upon its walls were ordered to stand back.
In a clear voice that some say caused the stones themselves to ring in
response, she cried her Doom: ‘As
my Husband and my King was Destroyed by thee, let ye now be Destroyed by me!’
And it is said that the ground shook with the force of her words, as
though the Keep itself echoed her agony.
Then her brother, the Lord Ambrose Huntington, stood forth.
He raised his Staff and spoke words of a Magic so powerful that every
spellcaster was brought to knee with the force of it.
Out of a clear sky a great bolt of lightning struck the topmost parapet,
and the crystal beacon that had shone upon Port Jaskara and Darksands Bay for
three hundred years became as bright as the Sun, and exploded into a shower of
molten fragments. The brilliant
light spread further, engulfing the lower parts, and the base, until the entire
Tower shimmered like sunlight upon water. With
a great roar of sound and wind it disappeared even as its lower depths were
shaken by a temblor, and the stones of the great Wall collapsed and sank into
the ground.
Water steamed from boiling wells and clouds of dust poured out of the
earth, darkening the sky so that the Sun appeared as dimly as a waning Moon.
Both mortals and animals fled in panic - even the bravest of warriors and
wizards - but the small group standing at the Queen’s side kept their vigil.
When the Magic had finished its work not one stone of Saxony Tower
remained upon another, and there was no trace of the great Wall that had
surrounded the Keep and the heights overlooking the town.
Age and war had not been able to touch the glory that was the pride of
Thonn Alfred Saxony throughout three centuries, but the tears of a Queen had
brought it to an awesome end.
The Royal party departed immediately afterward, Queen Katherine having
given orders that from the few stones remaining of Saxony Tower was to be built
a memorial to King Mykel, that all might remember the great evil which had
occurred there. As she passed out
of the courtyard, she stepped out of her shoes and ordered them to be burned on
the very spot. And this is where
began the custom of ‘burning one’s shoes’ as a sign of the utmost contempt
for a place and the implied oath that the wearer shall never again set foot in
it.
CHAPTER
XII - THE HEALING: THE RETURN OF
SAXONY
It is ironic that the only other family members to have taken Johann’s
part in the 3rd Saxony Rebellion were a few distant cousins of questionable
repute, possibly seeking to better their fortunes in a Saxony-ruled Kingdom.
Of the remaining descendants of Lord Xavier and Sir Damien, those few who
could be spared from the Troll campaigns in Ashbury - which had diluted the
Royal forces pitted against Johann - had fought valiantly on the Kingdom’s
behalf. It may be that this news
eventually reached the Queen’s ears, for within the Royal Archives rests her
decree of the 21st April, 392 that stripped the titles from all of the Saxonys,
but was rescinded the next day without ever having been sent.
In any case, Sir Damien was the last Saxony Protector of Ashbury as that
office passed into other hands.
Johann’s son, Andric, was to marry the Dowager Viscountess Shandra
MacGregor in YR 401, with whom he had five children.
He refused to share title with her, claiming that to do so might offend
the Queen and that Her Royal Highness had suffered enough at a Saxony’s hands.
By all accounts, Andric was revered as a gentle and compassionate Healer
who worked diligently among his people at their estate, and was as kindly
disposed toward animals as toward the sentient folk.
It was said of him that he had never cast a Necromantic spell, and in his
later years he began to study Spellsinging after its powers had begun to become
more certain.
His three oldest children took their mother’s name and rode off to the
adventurer’s life, but the two youngest, who were twins, elected to call
themselves Saxonys, and both became Bards of some renown.
The elder twin, Robard the Handsome, found a wealthy patroness in
Corleonis and is reputed to have ended his life in luxury and dissipation.
The younger, Jessalyn, studied midwifery as well, and for 30 years she
rode circuit around the shores of Lake Hollym.
She gave of her songs and
her birthing skills to all who asked, regardless of their ability to pay;
and became so popular that it is said she was one of the few Humans to be
granted the right of passage through the Ash Forest by the reclusive Amani,
although she was never to set foot within the Wold.
Tragedy again struck the Crown when, in YR 472, Queen Brenna I, her son
Ulson and son-in-law Alexander were foully murdered just outside their estate in
Northwatch, in the Fire Downs of northern Endarr Barony.
Necromancers and Undead had laid an ambush that overpowered the Queen’s
guards and left few survivors. One
of them was the Queen’s Page, young Darrell Huntington, who told the grieving
Court of how the aging Bard Jessalyn Saxony had Spellsung her way to the
Queen’s side as one by one her defenders fell.
Then, her Magic spent, the Bard had fought valiantly for her Queen until
she willingly stepped in front of an Obliterate spell meant for the Sovereign.
Sadly, the Bard’s sacrifice was in vain, but in gratitude for
Jessalyn’s heroic act, Queen Merriel II modified the Judgment of Katherine and
returned Saxony Keep to the House of Saxony, though as a Baronial rather than a
Royal estate.
At first there were murmurs of protest from those who felt that Queen
Katherine’s memory would be sullied by such an act, but in the outpouring of
praise for the late Bard - even by the Ash Forest Amani, who bestowed upon her
the rare appellation of Elf-Friend - those voices were quickly muted.
Scry spells cast by the Court Mages confirmed the Bard’s innocence, and
a Royal Decree was issued on the 15th of March, YR 473, which stated in part:
‘a King’s life was taken by a Saxony;
a Saxony’s life was given for a Queen.
Thus are the scales of Judgment balanced.’
The Queen’s Grant was tempered, however, with the proviso that no major
construction might be considered
for the Keep without the consent of the Crown.
CHAPTER
XIII - THE MODERN ERA
Since Jessalyn Saxony had no direct Heirs, the Grant passed to another of
Sir Damien’s line - Lord Oleander Saxony, a distant cousin of the late Bard.
He was a successful Alchemist who had taught for many years at the Royal
Academy, and had made a considerable fortune developing restorative elixirs for
a number of noble patrons. A shy
man who was given to stuttering among strangers, he busied himself in his
laboratory and herb garden, and was rarely seen in Port Jaskara.
By this time, Saxony Keep had fallen into disrepair after nearly a
century of intended neglect. Part
of the roof of the main Residence had collapsed, and the grounds were largely
overgrown. The only areas still in
some order were the kitchen gardens and the stables, kept intact by the Keep’s
faithful gardener, Borilen Curiloth, a Wood Elf who had taken service with Queen
Mathea’s mother, Lady Larissa, in YR 268 and had quietly remained ever since.
For the next decade the residence was restored into a more modern
Manorial style, and the grounds were cleared into a greensward.
Over time the town had grown away from the Keep as the ruins of war
succumbed to overgrowth, and stories of anguished spirits haunting the place
became imbedded in the minds of the Jaskarans.
Lord Oleander died of acid poisoning during an experiment in 491, and
Saxony Keep passed to his daughter, the Lady Pamilla.
Lady Pamilla Saxony was the wealthy widow of Major Preston Garvey of the
4th Crown Guard, and reputed to be one of the greatest beauties in all of
Evendarr. She had received a Royal
title for herself upon her husband’s death in 493, ostensibly in posthumous
recognition of his services to the Crown, but Court rumor whispered that it was
more likely in compensation for her close friendship with King Roderick I.
Heiress of two fortunes - her husband’s and her father’s - she began
to divide her time between Evendarr City, where she was considered one of the
most successful hostesses in Court Society, and Saxony Keep, where her three
young children grew up in the care of their governesses, stewards and tutors.
She renewed the business interests of the Saxony family in Port Jaskara,
and became the greatest patroness of Bards and other artists in Arawyn since the
days of Baroness Margala Demrys. It
was Lady Pamilla who popularized the sport of hunting in Arawyn, and her
friendly competition with the Arawyn Court for the most brilliant entertainments
filled the grounds of Saxony Keep with visitors.
During the four decades that she presided over Saxony Keep as its Lady,
additional housing, a Guild Hall, a Library and merchants’ shops were built as
the Keep once again entered the bustling life of Port Jaskara.
Lady Pamilla retired from Courtly life to Saxony Keep in 531, where she
remained busy with her many activities until her final - and only - death in 561
at the age of 90. She was truly one
of the grandest Personalities of her age.
Lady Pamilla had outlived all of her children, and Saxony Keep passed to
her grandson, Sir Renfrew Saxony. Although
born and raised at Saxony Keep, Sir Renfrew had settled in Evendarr City at an
early age, and had married the Lady Malvinia Pendarves, a Healer in the Court of
King Hendrick II. In 546 he was
named Master of the Royal Hounds by the newly-crowned King Roderick II, and
spent little time in Arawyn up to his death in a hunting accident in Blackstone
in YR 567.
During this time, Saxony Keep was in the capable, though quiet hands, of
Sir Renfrew’s sister, the Lady Alyssa. A
Scholar by training and by nature, she preferred a studious atmosphere to the
gaiety of Keep life under Lady Pamilla. Although
Lady Alyssa continued the Saxony patronage of the Arts, it is now directed
through the Baronial Court, and Keep festivals have since been limited to twice
annually. Lady Alyssa married Sir
Andrei Griswold of the 75th Assault Regiment in YR 558, and both of their
children now serve at the Royal Academy. She
suffered a series of deaths in the Ritual Circle in 581, and did not Resurrect
in June of that year.
Saxony Keep passed into the hands of its current Lord, His Royal Highness
Prince Joseph, upon his father’s final death.
A former Cavalry Brigadier - who achieved fame in the Arawyn Campaign of
YR 576 - and Heir to the Throne of Evendarr, Sir Joseph Saxony was Formally
Adopted by his childhood friend and hero, King Richard I, on the 12th Day of
November, in the 576th Year of the Realm of Evendarr.
Although born in Evendarr City, and with duties that require his
attendance elsewhere in the Kingdom, His Highness has nevertheless taken pains
to visit Saxony Keep from time to time, and to oversee its maintenance and
preservation. He has continued the
practice of twice-annual festivals on the Keep’s greensward, and has also made
arrangements for those wishing to view this historic site to find lodging and
sustenance within the Keep itself.
It may be that some day in the far future (it is hoped), Prince Joseph
Saxony will take his place upon the Throne of Evendarr.
If such a singular event does indeed occur, then Prince Joseph will have
yet increased the honor that has been the Saxony ideal ever since his ancestors
built, protected, fought and died upon these ancient grounds.
To be sure there have been occasions when such a goal exceeded the grasp
of the frail and culpable mortals who have reached to attain it, but through all
of the trials of history Saxony Keep endures, and continues.
EPILOGUE
It is no Gift of Prophecy which prompts this writer to close the final
pages of his opus with an expression of the conviction that the last chapter of
Saxony Keep is yet to be written; that
destiny paces where the echoes of memory can locate stout Walls looming over
Port Jaskara in the mist, and Spirits long dead keep watch from high upon a
Tower that still shines out of the shadows of long ago.
There are those who will swear by every oath which comes to mortal mind
that deep below the stony roots of Saxony Tower, where granite courses yet mark
the traces of abandoned passageways and rusting iron the lost promises of entry,
that steel still crashes upon steel, and tongues without flesh cry out a Magic
that has lost its power, and upward, ever upward go the sounds of struggle until
the goal of heart and mind and flesh is...gone, forever.
Saxony Tower is no more.
Yet sometimes, when the mists are rising or furtive winds blow scraps of
fog across Darksands Bay and the moonlight is just so, or the lightning flashes
this way and not that, one can almost see the graceful form that corresponds to
the sense, hovering just below consciousness, that when the night air clears,
Saxony Tower will stand as of old - because it has never truly been away.
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