The Two-Fold Queen
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Overview
Lolth (Feyspeak \lɔlθ\ for woven), the Two-Fold Queen, was originally known as The Concordant Queen. She is the most feared and powerful of the Fey Gods. She rules two Courts simultaneously: the Bleak Bleeding Court as the Spider Queen, and the Bright Court of Genuflection as the Lady of the Web. Together, these Courts explore distorted descendants of the Strange Essence of Orientation and Action.
Among mortal scholars, Lolth is better documented than any other Fey God, though never safely understood. Her lore originates from fragmented Orisons, demonologists, apostate theologians, and forbidden Arcadian treatises smuggled out of the Strange. Unlike most Fey Gods, Lolth is referenced in multiple mortal traditions independently, often under contradictory names and warnings. Scholars universally agree on one point: Lolth ended The War of Erasure alone.
History
Origin
Lolth was born in Pelithos c. NIR 120, during the early centuries after the Shattering, when the world was stable but still young enough for its laws to be unfinished. From birth she displayed an unnerving facility with sorcery, not merely talent, but intuition. She did not study magic so much as recognize it. Spells behaved differently around her. Patterns emerged without instruction. Teachers reported that she solved problems they had not yet finished explaining.
Her youth became the subject of contradictory legends. Some claim she traveled widely, serving as an itinerant mage-for-hire, unraveling curses and binding entities no one else could touch. Others insist she was reclusive, conducting solitary experiments that warped natural law: fires that burned cold, shadows that cast light, wards that rearranged themselves when observed. One surviving tale speaks of a ruined tower where Lolth spent years perfecting seven impossible enchantments that linger in the tower still.
Eventually she began to hear the song of the Keening Women in her dreams, summoning her to Arcadia, remarkably, because the infamous witches had not sought out a pupil before or since. So she made one of the earliest pilgrimages to Arcadia to study with them, c. NIR 200. She studied with them for well over a century, and the apprenticeship was intense and fraught. Where the Keening Women approached philosophy as an act of numerological balance, maintaining orthogonality, and preserving structure, Lolth sought mathematical unity, a single governing dynamic to explain everything.
Ascension
Lolth ascended c. NIR 370, founding The Court of Alignment, the second of the Ancient Courts and becoming known as The Concordant Queen. Her ascension was a revelation both brilliant and catastrophic. She demonstrated that Strange Essences could be forced into synchronicity, creating a temporary state of perfect philosophical harmony. Witnesses described the event as unbearably beautiful, a moment where all doubt and contradiction ceased to exist. As its ruler, she taught that meaning emerged when belief, desire, and action were brought into harmony. Her court’s Species, the Spindles, embodied this truth physically through balanced, intentional focused forms.
The Court of Alignment became one of the most influential Courts, shaping early Arcadian thought and inspiring later philosophies of unity, reverence, and ritual. In this era, Lolth was obsessed with cultural unity.
The War of Erasure
During The War of Erasure, Lolth became the primary third target of Denial, the philosophical warfare invented by The King Who Never Was. His assault attempted to disprove her philosophy, strip her of her Fey Godhood, and dissolve her Court.
Unlike other victims of Denial, Lolth did not refute the argument.
Instead, she performed a horrifying miracle called the Erasure. This not only defeated The King Who Never Was, and dissolved his Forgotten Court, but it annihilated the Strange Essence of Condition entirely. This impossible act ended the War instantly and permanently destabilized Arcadian cosmology.
Lolth survived, but her Court of Alignment did not. In the wake of The Erasure, Lolth split irreversibly into two aspects, one Bleak and one Bright, each claiming a fragment of her former truth:
- As the Lady of the Web, she rules the Bright Court of Genuflection, one of the Midnight Courts, teaching meaning through reverence and worship.
- As the Spider Queen, she rules the Bleak Bleeding Court, one of the Midnight Courts, teaching meaning through pain and suffering.
As the only Strange God to wield two sources of Strange Power, Lolth is widely feared and regarded as the most powerful creature in Strange. She is the unspoken enemy and secret idol of all other Fey Courts. However, Arcadia still reeling from the savagery of Denial and The Erasure, all hostilities between Courts has become one of influence, proxy struggles, or ritualized and symbolic conflict.
Concordance
Lolth took no part in The Concordance. She regarded it as both theft and folly, a pale imitation of her former Court, bearing the stolen echo of her old title. Though she did not intervene, her hostility toward the fused Courts is undisguised.
Description
In her anthropomorphic form, generally regarded as her Lady of the Web aspct, Lolth appears as an impossibly beautiful elven woman with six, long, slender arms. She wears a beautiful silken dress with spider web motifs, rich in dark purple hues. Her skin is pale to the point of translucence. Her blonde hair is so long as to reach her feet, though it floats weightless as if in water.
In her surreal form, Lolth becomes vast and arachnid: a towering spider of smooth, glossy black chitin in an ever expanding aura of silvery webs. The pointed tips of her legs are deep purple. The only part of her that is not arachnid is her head. She has the head of a corrupted Sidhe with too many eyes, all deep purple in color, hair long and raven black, swirling like a dark storm.
Personality
Lolth is unique among the Fey Gods in that she is not herself engaged in the philosophical search for meaning she teaches. Where other Gods pursue meaning alongside their followers, Lolth positions herself above meaning, as its arbiter. This fundamental asymmetry defines her character and is the source of both her power and her monstrosity.
When she fractured herself to resist Denial, her mind did not shatter randomly. It divided along lines of philosophical utility, producing two complete, self-aware personalities that share memories, goals, and absolute certainty of their own correctness.
The Lady of the Web
As the Lady of the Web, Lolth is calm, articulate, and mesmerizing. She is patient with believers, generous with attention, and endlessly persuasive. She speaks of unity, order, and reverence with serene confidence, presenting worship not as submission but as participation in a grand, coherent design. She does not seek meaning through reverence, she presumes it. To the Lady of the Web, meaning already exists in perfect form, embodied in herself. Worship is not a path of discovery, but a recognition of fact. Those who revere her are not searching; they are correct. She experiences dissent not as insult, but as error. Her response is rarely anger. Instead, she exhibits a chilling certainty that disagreement will eventually resolve itself, either through conversion or removal. In her presence, even resistance can feel orderly, inevitable, and justified.
The Spider Queen
As the Spider Queen, Lolth is visceral, punitive, and terrifyingly focused. This aspect is where her philosophy of pain resides, but again, not as a shared journey. She alone is the arbiter of who deserves punishment and what punishments are due. She does not believe suffering reveals meaning to the self; she believes it reveals meaning to others. Pain, to the Spider Queen, is a tool of correction. Suffering is how misalignment is made visible, how error is punished into coherence. She does not view herself as cruel. She sees herself as precise. Unlike the Lady of the Web, the Spider Queen is not persuasive. She is demonstrative. Her justice is theatrical, exemplary, and unforgettable. Those who endure her attention are not meant to grow, they are meant to serve as warnings, symbols, and proofs.
Unified Will
Despite their differences in temperament, the Lady of the Web and the Spider Queen are not rivals. They do not argue. They do not contradict each other. They are complementary executions of a single intent: the enforcement of alignment.
- The Lady gathers.
- The Spider corrects.
Together, they form a closed system of belief in which Lolth alone stands outside the rules she imposes. She does not seek meaning because she believes she defines it. She does not test her philosophy because she considers testing unnecessary.
Philosophy: The Lady of the Web
Meaning is found when all things know their place.
—Court of Genuflection adage
The Court of Genuflection teaches that meaning arises from a Bright inflection of alignment, and that the Orientation of that alignment should be an object of reverence. To belong is to have meaning; to revere is to belong and to participate in something greater than the self, pointed in the right direction. Unity is not merely social harmony, but metaphysical correctness, a state in which belief, behavior, and hierarchy reinforce one another. This philosophy is a Bright echo of Alignment. Where Alignment sought harmony of thought and intention among equals, Genuflection insists that harmony is only possible when directed toward a single, unquestioned center. Meaning is not discovered through inquiry, but received through devotion. Reverence is thus not submission, but orientation. Those who worship correctly are aligned correctly. Those who refuse are not evil, merely mistaken.
- Meaning arises from reverence
- Unity creates meaning, disunity dissolves it
- Hierarchy is not oppression, but clarity
- To revere the proper object is to be aligned
- Belief shapes reality when held collectively
- Cultural unity is sacred
- Obsession with ritualized worship
- Obsession with symbols of authority and legitimacy
- Obsession with conversion, indoctrination, and orthodoxy
- Obsession with suppressing dissent in the name of harmony
Creatures most often drawn to the Court of Genuflection are mortals seeking certainty, structure, and belonging, especially those emerging from chaos or moral ambiguity. Among the Fey, this philosophy attracts those unsettled by plurality, contradiction, or unresolved disagreement, and those who believe that peace can only be achieved when all voices speak the same truth. Many believe that the Lady of the Web attracts some to her philosophy simply by revealing herself to them: an creature worthy of worship.
Philosophy: The Spider Queen
The path to meaning is paved in pain.
—Bleeding Court adage
The Bleeding Court teaches that meaning is the result of inerrancy, and by extension a lack of meaning is a state of error. Pain and suffering is how to correct the error and thus find meaning. Pain is the mechanism by which truth is revealed. Those who are aligned need not suffer; those who resist alignment must be corrected until their resistance breaks. This philosophy is the Bleak echo of Alignment. Where Alignment sought harmony through shared intent, the Bleeding Court asserts that harmony must be enforced. Unity is not a state to be achieved gently, but a condition that must be carved into the world through consequence.
- Meaning arises when the errors of existence are corrected
- Misalignment must be made visible through suffering
- Pain reveals truth where persuasion provides the comfortable lie
- Justice is alignment enforced
- Order is proven by its ability to punish deviation
- Cultural unity is maintained through fear and consequence
- Obsession with punishment and retribution
- Obsession with public suffering as example
- Obsession with confession, penance, and visible remorse
- Obsession with breaking those who resist alignment
Creatures most often drawn to the Bleeding Court are those who believe the world is unnecessarily unjust, chaotic, or corrupt: judges, executioners, zealots, and the betrayed. Among the Fey, this philosophy appeals to those who view mercy as weakness and believe that unity can only be achieved once resistance has been destroyed.
Note on Lolth
It is important to note that Lolth is unique among Fey Gods, in that she does not participate in the philosophies she espouses. She does not revere: she expects reverence. She does not suffer: she dispenses suffering. She is above her philosophies, and the authoritative source of their truth.
Relations
The Lady of the Web
- The Bitter Queen: Maeve is outraged at Bright Lolth's ability to twist her social ridicule into exaltation. Meave quietly ignores this aspect of Lolth until she can find a way to hurt her, while Lolth enjoys the young Fey God's attempts to overcome her.
- The Bloated King: Mammon obsessively showers the Lady of the Web with gifts, sponsorships, and monuments, convinced that sufficient wealth can count as reverence, allowing him to buy power over her. Lolth accepts the displays as background noise, neither encouraging nor discouraging them, perfectly secure in the knowledge that devotion cannot be purchased. The imbalance leaves Mammon circling endlessly, mistaking visibility for intimacy.
- The First Queen: Ceadra and the Bright aspect of Lolth share a quiet, mutual recognition of guilt over collaborative cosmic transgressions neither fully regrets nor fully forgives. Each knows the other has committed an unforgivable acts against the structure of meaning itself, Ceadra by revealing the path to Fey Godhood and developing the secrets of Denial, Lolth, largely aided by Ceadra's ancient tutelage, by developing the arts to split Strange Essence into Bright and Bleak inflections, and honing Denial into Erasure. Their interactions are restrained, extremely courteous, and shaped by the understanding that they are accomplices to a crime so vast it fractured Strange reality itself. Neither seeks absolution from the other, but both recognize that if judgment ever came, it would have to come from outside their Strange universe.
- The Giving Queen: Iobairtin openly admires the Lady of the Web, mistaking Lolth’s radiant authority and ritualized reverence for a kind of sacred intimacy. Lolth, in her Bright aspect, neither encourages nor rejects the attention, she finds Iobairtin’s devotion flattering and useful, accepting the philosophy of sacrifice as a form of worship, but she is made uneasy by the arrangement in ways she cannot describe.
- The Lady of the Web: Bright Lolth feels a lingering, personal fondness for Aisling, seeing in her a reflection of a path she once brushed against: surrender. Aisling receives this attention with distant, strained courtesy, finding Lolth’s interest faintly intrusive and unsettling, given the Fey Gods power. Their bond endures as a soft but uneasy tension.
- The Thespian Queen: Cealgran and the Lady of the Web share a light, performative acquaintance marked by flirtation, spectacle, and mutual curiosity. Cealgran delights in presenting different roles to Lolth, testing which masks offer the most compelling reverence and which provoke intrigue. Lolth indulges these encounters as amusing diversions, allowing the Thespian Queen to play roles that test her regard.
- The Wayward King: Lugh and the Lady of the Web share a tense relationship of master and hesitant courtier. The Lady of the Web seeks to draw Lugh into her vast lattice of reverence, treating his popularity, joy, and festivals as resources that should properly flow toward her worship. Lugh evades her gently but persistently, charming her emissaries, attending her gatherings just long enough to unsettle them, and refusing to let admiration harden into devotion.
The Spider Queen
- The Bitter Queen: Bleak Lolth regards Maeve as an embarrassing child. Lolth praises Maeve's brilliant and vicious instincts, but is disappointed by what she regards as shallow injury. Maeve is careful to dance around this attention, not out of any concern for Lolth's judgment, but fearing the Spider Queen's wrath should the disappointment turn violent.
- The First Queen: Ceadra and the Bleak aspect of Lolth share a tense, familial dynamic rooted in unintended creation. Ceadra regards the Spider Queen as a distorted offspring of Lolth’s original self, a consequence of lessons taught too well and safeguards learned too late, and carries a quiet, enduring responsibility for her existence. The Spider Queen resents this unspoken parentage, bristling at Ceadra’s calm authority and implied culpability, and responds with defiance, hostile not from disbelief, but from a quiet understanding of the truth of it.
- The Giving Queen: Iobairtin and the Spider Queen once shared a dark, intimate relationship based on painful sacrifice, and for a time that common ground was enough for them to connect intimately. The relationship ended in exhaustion: Iobairtin realized she could not keep offering herself as the instrument of suffering, and the Spider Queen accepted this with rare restraint, judging the suffering already given as sufficient payment. Their separation is “amicable” only by Bleak standards, no vendetta, no punishment, just a quiet, mutual acknowledgment that the debt has been settled.
- The Sleeping Queen: Aisling is thought of as a strangely cherished possession by the Spider Queen, who sees the Sleeping Queen's escape as a form of self-indulged suffering. Aisling, for her part, submits passively to this ownership, partly finding a bleak comfort in this novel form of surrender, but also out of fear for what it would mean to defy the Spider Queen.
- The Thespian Queen: Cealgran and the Spider Queen share a volatile professional camaraderie forged in mutual value in carefully planned results. Cealgran provides narratives, disguises, and emotional bait that make Lolth’s punishments more effective and more theatrical. The Spider Queen tolerates Cealgran’s presence because her arts create exquisite conditions for correction, even as both know the collaboration could collapse into violence at any moment.
- The Wayward King: Lugh and the Bleak aspect of Lolth share a cat-and-mouse relationship of master and rebel. The Spider Queen considers Lugh a wayward pupil that has escaped correction, a dangerously free (and therefore flawed) spirit. Lugh rejects her authority and eludes her judgment, creating an endless chase.