
The emperor is frail and aging, his aides say. The emperor won't live another year, the palace whispers.
The emperor has no children, an informant barks. There's a single, exiled son, born out of wedlock, a minister chimes in.
Nonsense, they all declare, their laughter like howls of hungry wolves over the lavish banquet, their wine laced with regret.
Thria, back when it spanned the entire continent, has no enemies except itself - the land is fragmented, split in five large tribes, each with a leader of its own, keeping the large, prospering cities in their territories in their grasp, unwilling to share with any of the others, unable to see eye to eye with strangers their ancestors called friends years ago. Above their rule sits but one man, one who's position they all covet for themselves, who's entire being they loathe more than any of their fellow fatebearers - the Emperor. Clad in the finest silk, entrapped in the most expensive of all jewelry, the effigy of a man boasts on a throne forged from what people call pure gold, only to be besmirched by the virtuous mans entire existence. His name is but a passage of the past, his deeds that of a better man, and yet, he persists against all odds, as the hatred, the poison, of his enemies - more and merrier than his allies ever were - seeps into his weary bones, alongside the cold of the frigid lands, making him numb, turning a once reverred man into an unforgiving ruler, one that cares for his subjects, but not for his enemies, or even himself. Beloved by the people is all he is, the king of kings, the Emperor with a forgotten name, a stoic face; he never marries, never settles, never gifts his concubines more than a single night of bliss, and yet, he lives forever, the need for an heir outdone by his seeming immortality, another farce, another plan with neither a goal in sight nor mind.
His death crawls about in the least surprising of ways - it's not an early one, nor is it a pretty one. The ailing, dying corpse of a once so beloved man sits perched atop its throne as word of his sickness, vile and without a cure, takes the land by storm. His sympathizers try their utmost to keep the commonfolk from fanning the flames, but the moment the news breaches the capital, reaches the ears of the five kings, never the Emperors allies but perhaps his biggest adversaries, they demand a hire be found. It's to nobodies surprise that the still living corpse, the one with sunken in eyes, with pale skin, with shaky hands and no appetite of his own, never sired a child, let alone a son to inherit that title, or throne of his. Not an uncommon occurence in a land as free as Thria, but nonetheless a notion of bitter defeat in warfare at the hands of warmongering idiots that covet nothing but absolute control over the entirety of the land, over its tribes, over everything that it possesses, for purposes more nefarious than any of them were likely willing to admit. And thus, the kings aides, his most trusted men, set out into the five tribes of the land, seeking someone worthy of the emperors title, first among the kings that they deem unfit, then among the commonfolk, before finally finding their best bet - a young man they claim was, indeed, the emperors son, born in a short liaison between him and an old sweetheart, far from home, during a short stint many years ago, when he paid the village a quiet visit, a foolproof story, a convient one, but one that works as they whisk the then-child away to the palace, shortly before the Emperors death is made official. While too young to rule, he is taught everything that he needs to know, protected by his teachers and the old mans personal guard, all except him very well aware that his life is a careful balancing act, that the five kings wish for nothing but his head on a silver platter. The new Emperor is crowned in a few years time and his first official order shall be ...
Looking back, it maybe is like the toy carts you rode when you were a kid. But those toy carts could never go beyond the walls of the lawn. We want to follow the rugged concrete road beyond the wall. As we've grown, we've decided to leave behind the toy cart.


