The Keening Women
Template:Breadcrumb The Three




Overview
The Three (Commontongue), also Mná Caointe (Feytongue \mɪˈnɑ ˈkwintɑ\ for keening women), also The Stygian Queens (Elftongue \ˈstɪʤiən\ for hateful and dark) are named for the fact that there are exactly three individuals sharing this Strange God throne. Like most Strange Gods, lore about The Three is rare and incomplete. The lore comes primarily from scholars who have studied the Bleak Gods and their Orisons.
The Three are the rulers of The Court of Three, and Gods of the Hags.
History
Like all Bleak Gods, The Three came into existence when the Elves of Pelithos migrated across The Strange Sea to Arcadia in the early Dark Age (c. 1395). While most Fey Gods emerged as singular figures embodying an obsession, The Three manifested together, inseparable and indivisible, as if their nature could not be contained in one will.
Early Arcadian chronicles describe them not as rulers who seized a court, but as an inevitability—appearing wherever promises were made, bargains struck, or costs ignored. Their court coalesced around them naturally, drawing in Arcadians obsessed with numbers, tallies, and unpaid reckonings.
Unlike other Fey monarchs, The Three have never waged wars nor expanded territory. Their influence spreads passively and inexorably, following any system that attempts to measure value, suffering, or obligation. They are believed to have been involved with several world-defining catastrophes throughout history.
Description
The Three have two forms. The first are as three individual women: Cailleach (Feytongue \ˈkɑˌlijʊk\ for old woman) the Crone, Draoi (Feytongue \dri\ for wise) the Matron, and Mairnéalach (Feytongue \mɑrˈniəˌlʊk\ for young woman) the Maiden. Cailleach appears as an impossibly tall and thin woman with shriveled skin and a missing eye, often depicted with a sinister replacement. Draoi appears as a squat woman with an enormous girth and a basket covering her head. Mairnéalach appears as a woman of middle height and incredibly wiry and muscular frame with a wide smiling mouth full of sharp teeth.
The second form is that of a massive ogress with heads fused together. It is dressed in tattered cloth covered in moss.
Personality
All three of the Stygian Queens are dangerously polite, every etiquette a high stakes game for survival.
Cailleach is the keeper of books. Cold, deliberate, and endlessly patient, she keeps track of all payments, whether by blood, betrayal, or bargain. She is obsessed with counting backward, keeping a ledger of the costs of the past. She is known for tending moss-covered withered bodies of her victims. She is the cold accountant, mercilessly collecting on debts and exacting costs.
Draoi is gentle but suffocating, speaking in the warm tones of a lullaby, but offering disapproving kindness that is heavy as chains. She is obsessed with balance, one coin, one kiss, one cry is her motto. An unpaid favor is the greatest offense against her. She is known for drowning and cooking her victims in cauldrons of milk. She is the compassionate one, following the spirit of the deal instead of the letter of the deal.
Mairnéalach is restless and cruely curious. She plays games with fate like a child pulling wings from butterflies. She wants to know how things will end and delights in testing her predictions. She is obsessed with promises and their relationship to the future. She tempts people into promises they cannot keep and then counts down to their doom. She is known for biting off pieces of her victim, counting as she does. She delights in loopholes, technicalities, and unexpected costs.
These personalities fuse into the Ogress, the three heads bickering and agreeing in turn.
Strange Philosophy
If it costs nothing, it means nothing.
The Three teach that meaning is found in numerological significance, which they see symbolized perfectly in the exchange of things: debts and costs. Wars only matter because of how many lives are lost, history only matters because of how many names are forgotten, lives only matter because of how many breaths are taken.
They maintain that:
- Everything incurs a cost, whether acknowledged or not
- Failing to account for costs is the greatest sin
- Meaning comes from understanding the price and paying willingly
The Court is famous for its superstitions, such as counting grains of spilled salt. It is believed that an oath sworn thrice, one for each Queen, carries unavoidable consequences.
Orisons
Most Orisons of The Three are Hags of Arcadia, but The Three do also form pacts with Mortals. The primary tenets of Orisons of The Three are:
- Everything has a cost: They believe strongly in the transactional nature of The Three.
- Fate can be restructured like a contract: Many Orisons of The Three seek to change their fate or the fate of others.
- The etiquette of The Three must be respected: All offerings and rituals should be numerologically correct, all debts recorded and paid.
Orisons of The Three generally believe that The Three collect records of costs paid in the universe toward some unknowable, sacred arithmetic that will solve the mystery of the universe.