House M’ke’s origins are somewhat mysterious. Some claim that the house originated in an unknown area beyond the Tyr region, while others believe that M’ke was founded by dissident templars fleeing their sorcerer-king’s wrath. Whatever its origin, M’ke became a force to be reckoned with. Under the leadership of a veiled sorceress named Katyana, who never showed more of herself than a pair of exotic, kohl-lined dark purple eyes, M’ke quickly unseated House Comis, then the most influential merchants in Raam. This was accomplished through a combination of assassinations, raids on enemy trade routes, and dramatic undercutting of Comis’s prices in major cities. Within a few years, M’ke had taken over major trade routes to Draj, Urik, and Nibenay. Finally, M’ke launched a military campaign against Comis, using household agents, guards, and large numbers of mercenaries to take over the vital trade village of Dayos, between Raam and Draj. This crushing victory sent House Comis fleeing southward to obscurity and eventual extinction. M’ke’s subsequent behavior has been an interesting combination of ruthlessness and caution. They treat more powerful rivals with intense respect, but they steal trade routes and even engage in open combat with weaker houses. Despite their occasional vicious streak, members of House M’ke are generally considered pleasant and intelligent individuals with few bad habits. This is only one of many bizarre contrasts in the confusing, contradictory House M’ke.
As the years passed, intelligent business practices
prevailed, and House M’ke amassed a sizeable treasury,
setting portions of each year’s profits aside for use during
lean years.
Lean years came sooner than expected. Abalach-Re,
ruler of Raam, is now a laughing stock, with nobles openly
warring for control of the city, and many leading citizens
calling for her overthrow.
The recent chaos in Tyr, where for the first time in
history a sorcerer-king has been overthrown, has added
new fuel to the fires in Raam. Battles between bands of
noblemen and their followers are common in the city’s
streets. The Great Vizier’s templars, as reviled as their
mistress, find it more and more difficult to carry out their
duties. While Abalach-Re still maintains a great deal
of power, corruption, violence, and crime have run wild.
These unsettled conditions have crippled Raam’s once thriving economy, and the city’s merchant houses have suffered accordingly.
Much of House M’ke’s hoarded wealth is now being
channelled into hiring mercenaries to guard warehouses
and facilities within the city and to defend the house
against the marauding nobles, who are now little better
than raiding tribes themselves.
Rebellion is spoken of openly in Raam, an event almost
unthinkable in other cities. The Great Vizier ‘s templars
are held in utter contempt rather than treated with the
respect and fear accorded templars elsewhere. Several
nobles are speaking of combining their armies to assault
Abalach-Re’s palace and put one of their own on the
throne as the new sorcerer-king. As the plot spreads,
pressure builds from both within and without the city
for M’ke to throw in with the conspirators, pressure that
M’ke’s patriarch Truvo has thus far resisted.
Hamanu of Urik and Tectuktitlay of Draj also
desire Abalach-Re’s overthrow. Hamanu sees this as an
opportunity to expand his empire, while Tectuktitlay
wants some stability in Raam. With such influential
sympathizers, the conspiracy against the Great Vizier is
certain to continue gaining strength.
Trade by the house has shrunk of late, with M’ke
withdrawing to secure citadels and outposts and adopting
a fortress mentality to withstand the chaos in Raam.
Truvo M'ke realizes that this means the future will hold
intense struggles to regain old routes, but the house has
been equal to the task in the past.