The Shrouding

Overview

We do not speak of the night the world changed — we speak instead of the years that followed, for memory itself recoils from the beginning.
The scholars name it The Shrouding, though none can say who first whispered the word. It was not a war, though kingdoms burned. It was not a plague, though the dead walked in numbers that eclipsed the living. It was not a storm, though the skies wept ash and the seas swallowed entire fleets whole. 
Something was unmade. 
The bells rang in every cathedral at once — though no hands pulled their ropes. Livestock refused their feed. Dogs howled until their throats bled. The sun dimmed, not darkened, but dimmed, as though the world had been placed beneath mourning cloth. 
And then the silence came. 
For seven days and seven nights the wind did not move. 
In that stillness, graves split. 
What followed was not immediate ruin — that would have been mercy. Instead, it was a slow drowning of hope. Borders collapsed. Faith fractured. Ancient wards failed as though their makers had never existed. 
Some speak — quietly — of champions who vanished that night. Of a final stand never witnessed. Of a covenant broken not by malice, but by miscalculation. But such tales are dangerous, and the Church of the Veil forbids speculation on “the precipitating cause.” 
We are told instead that the age simply turned. 
That this was destiny. 
Yet the oldest among us remember something else. 
They remember that before The Shrouding, dawn felt different. 
Brighter. 
As though the world had once believed it would be saved.

Author unknown — believed written approximately 38 years after The Shrouding

Long Life Ancestries and The Shrouding

The view of the world history for long life Ancestries such as Elven lines etc.
The long-lived remember more — not better.

Vaelorin Thrice-Witnessed, On the Burden of Continuance

How Memory Works in this World

A long lived ancestry doesn’t have a clean archive of the last 100–300 years. They have layers: lived experience, second-hand memory, cultural silence, and things that were never spoken of again.

After The Shrouding, entire topics simply... stopped being discussed.

People didn’t erase it. They avoided it until it faded.

Fey-Touched Memory Degradation

Ancestries with ties to the Fey / Feywilds recall historical memory in terms of:

A sense that two things happened, but only one matters

The Shrouding - Trauma Filters

Long lived ancestries lived through:

Many chose to:

So recall often comes with:

Clear memory of consequences, not origins

Cultural Editing (Not Propaganda — Survival)

Long lived history did not rewrite history to control others. They did it to survive attention. As such knowledge is often:

Long Lived Ancestry - History Recollection

When rolling a historical Recall Knowledge:
Success 
They recall: 

Critical Success 
They recall: 

Failure 
They recall: 

Critical Failure 
They recall: 

Importantly: even critical success does not give a full answer.

 

The First Party Controversy

Collected excerpts from sermons, marginalia, banned essays, and surviving academic disputations concerning the so‑called "First Party" and their role in The Shrouding

I. The Orthodox Position (REDACTED)

"The First Party did not save the world. They merely postponed its acceptance of truth. Their actions fractured necessary rites, <REDACTED>, and caused immeasurable suffering through false hope. Their disappearance was not mysterious—it was <REDACTED> does not punish. <REDACTED> outlasts."

Excerpt from On the Inevitability of Rest, White Archivist Caldrus Vane

NB: Marginal note (ink scraped away): “Dates intentionally omitted.”

II. The Delayer Thesis (Suppressed, Incomplete)

The remainder of the chapter is missing.

"Multiple independent town records confirm a cessation of undead activity for a period ranging from twelve to twenty years following the First Party’s intervention. Trade resumed. Birth rates increased. If this was not salvation, it was at least reprieve. One must ask: what force was strong enough to unravel that reprieve?"

From Ash Held at Bay, Professor Emeritus Lysa Feld (Brunswick, pre‑Fall)

III. The Feywild Hypothesis (Dismissed as Folklore)

Transcript fragment, Corcot Collegium Debate Hall

Scholar Ren: “You cannot reconcile the dates unless you accept extra‑material displacement.”
Scholar Heth: “Fairy stories.”
Ren: “Then explain why three separate witnesses describe the same heroes dying, decades apart.”
Heth: “False memories. Cult interference.”
Ren: “Or time.”

Debate adjourned. Ren later recanted.

IV. The Wish Doctrine (Unpublished Treatise)

"The catastrophe was not caused by malice, but by grammar. ‘All those associated’ is not a merciful phrase—it is a net. When the wish was spoken, the dead did not rise. They were remembered. And some things are too patient to forget."

From When Gods Listen Poorly, anonymous author

Circulation punishable by death in Blackwake.

V. The Absence Problem

"People argue whether the First Party failed or succeeded. Idiots. They did both. What matters is that when the world needed them again, they were gone. Heroes are not measured by victories, but by whether they are present for the second disaster."

Field notes attributed to <REDACTED> (authentication disputed)

“They saved us once.”
“No, they only made it worse.”
“Doesn’t matter. They didn’t come back.”

— overheard at a dockside fire, Moonrest Haven

VII. Closing Annotation (Unknown Hand)

"If history cannot agree on what they did, perhaps that is because the world itself has not decided whether to forgive them."

A single sigil is drawn beneath this line: a broke <REDACTED> ratches.