The Lantern Council of Everlund
Everlund's history is one of steady adaptation under pressure. In its earliest years, the settlement thrived as a free river port, profiting from tolls, ferries, and grain sales. Its first setback came during the Silt Year, when the river changed course just enough to ruin several docks and bankrupt two powerful families. That crisis taught the city that no single house could safely dominate the river. The council charter followed, and for a time Everlund became known for its balance and stability. Its greatest triumph came during the Ashen March, when neighboring villages burned in a wider war and Everlund opened its gates to thousands of displaced families. The city survived the strain by rationing, conscripting labor for levees, and using Harper-backed negotiations to keep raiders off the roads. The policy earned Everlund a reputation as merciful and unbreakable. It also planted the seeds of its present tensions, because every refuge gained in that era became a political constituency with demands of its own. The defining watershed moment was the Night of Broken Seals, when several sealed grain vaults were found opened and emptied during a winter shortage. The city never proved whether it was theft, sabotage, or a desperate emergency order issued by an elder councilor. Riots followed, three wards burned, and the council narrowly avoided collapse by promising transparency that it never fully delivered. Since then, Everlund has lived in a state of controlled strain, maintaining the appearance of civic harmony while quietly preparing for the day when the river, the refugees, or its own people finally test the charter to breaking point.
City-state government and civic alliance · Pragmatic, civic-minded, and quietly divided between idealists and opportunists
The Lantern Council of Everlund
“One river, many lamps”
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