Graydon wrote:thanatos wrote:One thing is made clear though: The Carnadosans believe that they have Herrik's heir on their side (the cat-eyed sorcerer) and thus have the only legitimate claim to the Griffin Throne and that no legitimate heirs exist on Toren's side of the family. Even if Norfressa would prevail, the question of who would rule in Kontovar would remain (which is what the Carnadosans are counting on). But if indeed Kenhodan is Toren's heir or Toren "reborn" somehow, then they're in trouble. They would have to win the fight or at least end it in a draw to stay in power.
I don't think Kenhodan is the heir. I think Gwynna is. I think the granting of favour with the dagger is _literal_ ("you fight in my name"), not a romantic setup. It's the future Empress (who needs to be a wild wizard to do what needs to be done, just like Ottovar had to be) granting their future conquering general their imprinteur. (Kenhodan is probably Toren in a meaningful mystical sense, but probably not in a "can restore the empire as heir" sense.)
Remember that Leanna is heir-conveyant even under Sothoii laws (and that they're the old noble families, "sons of the fathers", and the Bowmasters are very old as a family) and that we by no means know that the Empire of Ottovar was a male-primogeniture system. And it would explain, given the current setup, why Wencit was willing to re-strafe Kontovar if anyone arcanely threatened Leanna.
Well for one, we don't know whether Gwynna is a "wild wizard" or not. Supposedly one could not be a mage and a wizard... at least not previously. But there is this old saw about the exception that proves the rule...
I don't fully agree with Kytheros on his concerns about the heir-conveyance but I don't fully disagree either. I will agree with him that if a known
legitimate heir to Torren was to be found among the Sothoii
somebody would have known. Wencit would have had to have been involved in deliberately hiding this
AND then lied about doing so. I don't think he did.
Unless I'm misremembering and Wencit never actually claimed there wasn't an heir. But I have a hard time buying that he didn't. Kormak at the very least would have wanted to know. Others would have asked. Unless Wencit deftly deflected their questions for several decades -- and somehow nobody noticed him doing so -- then somehow, somewhen the question MUST have been asked.
In another conversation it was suggested that instead the heir in question was illegitimate through Herrick. I don't buy that either:
The only area I will outright disagree with you is that I don't buy Herrick as the ancestor of the Sothoii. Evil he may have been and what's the difference between rapist of a continent and rapist of a woman? Sick bastard either way. But Wencit and Toren (and friends) were fighting a losing rearguard the whole way. When did they have time to rescue even ONE of the unfortunate by-blows? And even if they had time for one, how did they find time for ENOUGH of them to have such a bloodline-density that even now many Sothoii nobles have at least a trace of the gift, and quite a few far more than that? And even if that happened, how did known by-blows (which would have grown up stigmatized as not only bastards but also bastards of the "key enemy") become "popular" enough to marry enough of the survivors that eventually became the Sothoii?
Sorry, don't buy that one. The Sothoii are likely Ottovaran offshoots of some sort. But I very much doubt they're through Herrick. I suspect they're cadet branches of the family instead. Probably very extended cadet branches, second-sons of second-sons and such. But still (distant) bloodline relatives. Not close enough to be considered legitimate heirs to the Ottovaran crown, but close enough to still have heavy traces of the gift...
I also can't agree with your belief that Kenhodan is not the heir... because I think he's not just the heir, he's actually Torren himself. Probably "tossed through time" in some fashion, or perhaps sealed in some sort of "pocket universe" or something else that allowed him to skip over the intervening centuries.
I think it's pretty clear that Kenhodan is Toren. I suppose "reborn" might be technically possible, but I'm leaning strongly towards the original. Not sure exactly how. Perhaps "tossed through time" in some fashion? Or perhaps hidden in a "pocket universe" of some sort where time flows at a different speed? Something obviously pushed him forward in time by a huge amount. And something wiped his memory. My gut feeling/guess is Wencit did both deliberately, but obviously can't prove it.
My reasoning for [both/either] would be that it would have allowed Wencit to both tell the literal truth and badly deceive all in the exact same sentence. By saying "no legitimate heir exists today" he would be telling the literal truth while completely concealing that one would reappear in the future.
[...] He's still Toren. Physically, at least. Just not mentally. But who cares? He's physically still the legitimate heir of Ottovar. He's still a member of the bloodline. Why would any prophecy care that he's no longer himself mentally?
Too bad we have to wait two more years to find out where any of us are right (if we are at all)...