Saragar

Separated from the rest of the region by the Burning Plains and the Thunder Mountains, the city of Saragar sits on the shores of the Last Sea, called Marnita by Saragarians. Visitors from the Tablelands would consider Saragar a miracle. All of the drudge work performed by slaves in other cities is taken care of by the minds of ancient criminals trapped forever in obsidian spheres. The streets are cleaned, cattle herded, crops tended, garbage removed, and water purified by these psionic powered spheres.

The only price the citizens must pay to have all of their needs looked after in this way is that they must remain happy. The primary law of Saragar is, “Happiness must be maintained!”

Life and Society
For the most part Saragar maintains a closed self-sufficient society. To visit Saragar is to step back into the Green age. People dress in tabards and gowns befitting a less savage age. The relatively cooler climate in the vale makes such clothing practical and comfortable. There is an abundance of metal in Saragar compared to the Tablelands, though most of it is ancient and shows signs of wear. Some new sources of ore exist in the surrounding mountains, but few citizens of Saragar still know how to extract it, let alone forge it into new items.

Someone from the city-states of the Tyr region might consider Saragar to be a paradise. That certainly is the perception the Triune Mind Lords try to propagate. They generate laws to bolster the illusion of happiness and serenity but do nothing to truly address those concerns. The lawkeepers enforce these rules. For this reason the Saragar dwellers have learned to constantly display serene attitudes.

There are no wizards of any sort in Saragar. Wizardry is considered evil and most citizens in Saragar who witness it don’t have any idea what they are seeing. Psionics are the true power of the domain.

Government and Politics
The basic form of Saragar’s government is a triune of lawmakers who write the city’s laws, an army of lawkeepers to enforce the laws, and a bureaucracy of lawtenders to perform the administrative function. The trio that make up Saragar’s Triune Mind Lords are powerful, ageless masters of psionics. They are Thesik (LE male mindlord human) , Barani (NE female mindlord human) , and Kosveret (CE male mindlord elf). The citizens of Saragar consider the Mind Lords gods and treat them as such; thought there is little interaction between the Mind Lords and the populous.

Senior Lawkeeper Efkenu (LN male human) is the only person to have regular contact with the Mind Lords. He passes on their edicts and as head of the lawkeepers sees that their laws are enforced. Though a fair man, Efkenu makes no distinctions between the types of offenses and all criminal acts are punished in the same manner. The accused is taken to the harmonizers. The harmonizers are psions who reach into a subject’s mind to sift and shape thoughts back to the track the Mind Lords have dictated.

The lawkeepers are as corrupt as any templar. They enforce the laws arbitrarily and to suit their own desires. Supervisors rarely leave their offices to check on their subordinates and only rebuke subordinates for their behavior if it interferes with their own plans. The lawtenders perform all of the administrative work. They tend to be the most optimistic of people, determined that there is no problem that cannot be solved with a little determination and positive thinking. While they are not corrupt like the lawkeepers, the lawtenders are not very good administrators. They insist on only performing their duties by the book, and refuse to delineate from their guidelines no matter how inefficient or incorrect those guidelines are.

Power Groups
The Underground: Despite the relative pleasantness of Saragar, there are some people who recognize that they are living in a society in decay; one that relies on powerful immortals for every aspect of their lives. These people make up the Underground which has been growing in Saragar for the past few hundred years.

Most members of the Underground are just upset that their lives have become more inconvenient as some of the obsidian orbs have begun to fail. Others just like having someone to complain to without being arrested by the lawkeepers.

A smaller group, who consider themselves the real Underground, speak out on street corners against the Mind Lords. They are always working on crazed schemes such as assassinating the Mind Lords, or destroying all of the obsidian orbs, but they lack the power to implement any of these plans.

Important Sites
The Distillery and the Water Tower: The distillery is a psionically powered factory used to transform salt water from the Last Sea into fresh water. The water is pumped from the distillery into the water tower which is connected to a citywide plumbing network that pipes fresh water into every building in Saragar.

The Palace: A massive palace overlooks the city of Saragar from a hill east of the city. Unlike the palaces of the sorcerer-kings, the palace of the Mind Lords was built more for awe-inspiring beauty than for defense. The security provided by the lawkeepers is lax around the palace, as the Mind Lords are confident they could handle any intruder.

Statues of the three Mind Lords stand on a circular base at the highest point of the palace. The base slowly rotates throughout the day powered by an obsidian sphere. The people of Saragar use the statues to tell time, as the statues complete a full rotation every hour.

Major Settlements
Blufftown (Thorp, 50): This small settlement sits on the side of a bluff on an isolated butte in the middle of the Last Sea called the Lonely Butte. The lawkeepers generally refuse to set foot on the Lonely Butte unless directly ordered to do so by the Mind Lords, which makes Blufftown a perfect safe haven for the Underground and other fugitives from the Mind Lords’ rule.\

The community is little more than a couple of inns sitting inside a cave in the side of a cliff. The only way to enter the village is to be hauled up in a device consisting of a large wicker basket and a series of ropes and pulleys powered by an obsidian orb.

Cubarto (Small Town, 1,500): Cubarto is located on the opposite of side of Marnita from Saragar. The people of Cubarto are loud and lusty and would not fit in Saragar. With the lack of a presence of the lawkeepers, most people in Cubarto support the Underground, though discreetly. The villagers make their living off of fishing and trade coming into their port on its way to Kharzden or Sylvandretta. The village is known throughout the valley of the Last Sea for throwing a large party at the end of the year at which a large public feast is held.

Kharzden (Large Town, 2,000): Kharzden is a Dwarven colony scattered through ancient mining shafts in the Thunder Mountains. Most of the veins of ore were mined out long ago, and most of the metal items the dwarves have are ancient. The Dwarven society is matriarchal and is lead by Queen Elakta. Her word is law and is to be obeyed by all. Queen Elakta refused to have much to do with the lawkeepers, and maintains the tradition in Kharzden of not calling for help from the lawkeepers. The dwarves live underground and grow subterranean crops in massive chambers underneath the mountains. The dwarves have always doubted the power of the Mind Lords to keep the rest of the world at bay, and tried to make their community as self sufficient as possible.

Shallat (Hamlet, 300): Shallat is one of a number of small fishing villagers on the shores of Marnita. What makes the village stand out is the Shallat family who rules the villages. Each member of the Shallat family is a skilled physician and many are also water clerics. The Shallat healers provide their services to anyone in need, no matter who they are. The villagers of Shallat are funloving people and are generally treated well by everyone living on the shores of the Last Sea. Even brigands and pirates do not harass the village, as potentially they might need the skills of the Shallat healers.

Sylvandretta (Small Village, 500): The elves of Sylvandretta are called “ghost elves” by the people of Saragar because of their fair skin and their cold and aloof nature. The ghost elves believe that the purity of their bloodline must be preserved above all other concerns, and isolate themselves from the other races of the Last Sea region.

The secluded settlement of Sylvandretta is located in the Spirit Forest nestled within a grove of trees of life. The community is run by a council of seven elders, elected by the general Elven population.