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The Keeper of the Dour Fens is an Imperial Title created by a commission announced by the Marcher Civilian Commissioner in Summer 380YE. The position is a sinecure, requiring minimal responsibility but offering a regular income of crystal mana. It takes its name partly from its location in Bregasland, and partly as a nod to the work done by the Circle of Endless Night - a coven of powerful magicians well versed in Night magic responsible for protecting the marshes during the war with the Jotun.

Responsibilities

The Keeper of the Dour Fens has no particular responsibilities, but there is some expectation that the mana gathered from Graven Rock will be used to help the war effort - or at least employed in the protection of Bregasland. The Keeper receives a seasonal bounty of crystal mana gathered from the caves under Graven Rock, and if the Rock were to be threatened in any way, it would be the responsibility of the Keeper of the Dour Fens to deal with those threats.

Powers

The Keeper of the Dour Fens is an Imperial title that grants custodianship of a sinecure.

Bounty of Mana

The Keeper of the Dour Fens receives an income of 10 crystal mana each season from the caves beneath Graven Rock.

Appointment

The Keeper is a Marcher national position appointed by the Senate. Under normal circumstances it will be appointed by unanimous vote of the Marcher senators.

Because this is a national position, the title can only be held by a Marcher citizen.

The Keeper has tenure and serves until they die, step down or are revoked.

The Keeper can be revoked by the General Assembly, the Marcher national assembly, and the Assembly of Nine.

History

The sinecure was completed shortly before the Spring Equinox 381YE.

Beneath Graven Rock

Graven Rock is an enormous block of stone, four miles to a side, that stands in Gravenmarch in Bregasland, not far from the town of Graven itself. Over the centuries it has been riddled with mine works and tunnels, as the miners of Graven carefully remove the mineral wealth locked in the stone. The sinecure that the Keeper of the Dour Fens oversees is situated in one of the many caverns found beneath the rock. It is not an easy matter to locate it - several of the passages that seem to lead to it have been collapsed, or veer away at the last moment. Without a guide who knows the way, or a good map, it is very difficult to locate the cave.

The rock contains several unconnected mine workings. This one, which was abandoned in 329YE, had a bad reputation. Workers would talk about hearing odd echoes and seeing peculiar lights - but the weltsilver ore here was rich and so these concerns were largely ignored. In the years since, this part of Graven Rock has continued to have a reputation for rum doings, given a wide berth, and said to be haunted. The Landskeepers of Bregasland know differently of course - the reaason this part of the rock has an odd reputation is that flows of mana from the western marshes meet those from the forest to the south and the hills to the east, and create peculiar eddies. These eddies have been harnessed before, and several local landskeepers maintain their own sources of mana in the vicinity.

Taking advantage of these flows, the Graven Rock sinecure consists of several carefully positioned mithril mirrors, and three stone dolmen, all situated in a large, dark cave far beneath the surface. The dolmen are inlaid with carefully carved totems: a leaping salmon in the west, a broad oak tree in the south, and a proud ram in the west, symbolising the marshes, the forests, and the hills. The walls of the cave are polished, and several dozen iron lanterns holding lightstones ensure that the cave is never swallowed in darkness.

Visitors to the cave still report odd phenomenon - lantern lights bobbing in the dark passages, the sound of picks and shovels, the coarse voices of miners, and the occasional rumble as of stones falling. Echoes of the time when the mines beneath Graven Rock were still being worked - yet without any suggestion of ghosts per se, as if the magically infused rock itself simply remembers a time when human beings (and orc slaves) used to occupy the now-empty galleries.