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The Wayward King

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Main > Compendia > Creatures > Strange Gods > Fey Gods > The Wayward King
King Lugh.
King Lugh.

Overview

Lugh (Feyspeak \lu\ for bound), the Wayward King is the Fey God of Whirligigs and the ruler of The Dancing Court of Arcadia. Among mortal scholars, Lugh is better known than most Fey Gods, though still imperfectly understood. His name appears in sailor-lore, caravan songs, and hedge-witch rites that bless journeys or festivals. Most reliable knowledge comes from Strange explorers who encountered Whirligigs at revel-sites, crossroads, and moving landmarks that only exist while music is played. Orisons of Lugh are rare but widespread, favoring pilgrims, performers, wanderers, and celebrants rather than organized cults.

History

Origin

Before Arcadia, Lugh was an Elf of the middle Shattered Age, c. NIR 600. He came from a nomadic culture that conducted seasonal travel around Pelithos. He was a wayfinder who decided when it was time for his people to move on, and found the path that they would follow. Eventually the path began to enter his dreams and he could no longer settle with his people. Thus he crossed The Strange Sea to Arcadia c. NIR 750.

Even in Arcadia, he could not stay still. After becoming Sidhe, he did not settle with any of the Ancient Courts, instead roaming Arcadia and learning about Strange movement.

Ascension

Lugh’s revelation came when he realized that motion itself created meaning, independent of destination. He demonstrated this by leading a mass procession, c. NIR 1125, through unstable regions of Arcadia that stabilized only while people moved through it. Fey drawn to this truth gathered around him, and in time transformed into the Whirligigs. Thus was formed The Wandering Court, one of the Shattered Courts.

War of Erasure

During the War of Erasure, Lugh fled from philosophical battle. He evacuated rather than defended, and helped leading entire Courts out of collapsing conceptual ideologies. When the Denial began to unravel meanings, Lugh’s Court survived by never holding still.

This survival left a mark. After the War, the Court’s obsession focused less on exploration and more on dance — motion ritualized, repeatable, safe, and comforting. Dance became a coping mechanism, a way to keep meaninglessness at bay by ensuring nothing ever fully settled. This subtle philosophical shift caused The Wandering Court to become known as The Dancing Court, one of the Midnight Courts.

Concordance

Lugh was not a collaborator in the Concordance. He opposed it quietly, believing that binding philosophies was an invitation to catastrophe. After the Concordance fused other Courts, Lugh ordered his Court to avoid alliances entirely. Relations with the fused Courts remain cordial but distant.

Description

In his anthropomorphic form, Lugh appears as a tall, dark-skinned, athletic Elf with wind-tossed hair and luminous eyes. His posture is never still; even at rest, he shifts weight as though listening to unheard music. He favors loose garments that trail or flutter, emphasizing his movements.

In his surreal form, called The Dervish, Lugh becomes a knot of motion—limbs stretching into ribbons of light, joints bending impossibly, leaving afterimages with every step. Gravity seems optional. Observers often report vertigo and restlessness.

Personality

Lugh is joyful but evasive, generous but unreliable. He avoids commitments that would root him and resents philosophies that equate Meaning with permanence. He delights in festivals, migrations, and chance meetings—and vanishes when expected to preside.

Philosophy

  • Meaning arises from every-changing context
  • Obsessed with exploration and dance

Society

The Dancing Court is nomadic, a rarity in Arcadia. They are composed of ever-moving caravans of Whirligigs, stopping only for ritual festivities. Status is earned through exceptional skill at dance and helping the caravan move safely and swiftly.

Relations