The Shape of the World
A Land Divided by Power, Hunger, and Memory
This world is not held together by peace. It is held together by force, by trade, by old oaths, by fear, and by the simple fact that every kingdom, clan, and house still needs something from the others. The north hardens men and women into weapons. The south buries knives inside silk and law. Far to the east, marble halls and polished courts hide rot beneath order. To the west, the grass remembers what was taken from it, even if no human kingdom does.
Men speak of borders as if stone walls and rivers decide the shape of power. They do not. Power follows grain, fleets, roads, tribute, steel, weather, and blood. It follows whoever can feed an army in winter, whoever can choke a river mouth, whoever can keep beasts, ships, assassins, or gold pointed in the right direction for long enough to matter.
Some lands wear their violence openly. Others perfume it. Some rule by cavalry, some by trade, some by dark craft, some by the confidence that everyone else still mistakes comfort for safety. None of them are clean. None of them are safe. The world of GuttCutter rests on balances that were already failing before Seiry Bloodletter rode south and before GuttCutter began the hunt that would drag him into human cities.
This is a world where the wrong man can sit at the right king’s shoulder for too long. A world where a single child can become a political war worth killing over. A world where the dead are not always done with the living, and where magic is never just wonder. It is inheritance. It is control. It is appetite. It is cost.
To understand the story, you do not start with maps. You start with fracture. East against west. Clan against court. Oath against ambition. Order against what has slipped beneath it and is already feeding.
Kingdom of the East
Shineling
Shineling is what much of the world pretends power should look like. Marble halls. ordered courts. a king who is answered when he speaks. banners that hang clean and proud from white stone. armies drilled to discipline instead of clan fury. It is wealthy, literate, fed, and sure of itself. That confidence matters. Kingdoms rise on less.
King Goudall rules from that confidence. He is not a fool stumbling through his own throne room. He is a competent king with a large army, a polished court, and the kind of practiced authority that makes petitioners feel small before they ever speak. Disputes are weighed. taxes are counted. grain is measured. border complaints are heard and answered. servants move through his halls like part of the machinery that keeps the whole kingdom running, seen by everyone and noticed by no one. Shineling is efficient enough to mistake itself for stable. That is part of the danger.
Its court does not look corrupt in the crude way weak courts do. Men are not brawling drunk at the base of the throne. Lords are not openly looting the treasury. Shineling’s danger is subtler. It is a kingdom whose power has become so orderly that it no longer recognizes the shape of the thing growing inside it. That thing has a name. Mindeel.
Mindeel stands near the throne in plain robes while silk and gold draw every eye away from him. He speaks softly. He advises carefully. He does not need to dominate a room to own its future. Goudall believes he has the most dangerous wizard in the world serving his crown. The truth is uglier than that. Goudall thinks he holds the leash. The leash is already choosing where the kingdom will bite.
Shineling’s military strength is real. General William commands men who follow him because he has earned it, not because court paint was laid over soft hands. General Harren gives the kingdom a cavalry arm built for shock and speed. Admiral Kael holds the delta blockade in the south and treats starvation as strategy. The east is not weak. It is dangerous precisely because it is organized, wealthy, and convinced its threats are external.
That conviction is one of Mindeel’s greatest protections. While kings and generals focus on roads, fleets, and food, he works in places harder to chart. Souls. hidden rituals. invisible classes of people no one writes down. old hungers disguised as counsel. Shineling believes itself to be the bright face of order. The story stands on the fact that brightness can hide a pit just as easily as darkness can.
What Shineling Believes
That wealth, armies, law, and polished stone make a kingdom strong enough to master any threat. It has not yet learned the difference between commanding power and feeding it.
The Far Grass
The Sea of Grass
To the west lies a world most human powers have never understood and never needed to, right up until one wizard decided to make use of it. The Sea of Grass is not a vacant plain on a map. It is living territory. horizon without walls. rolling ground under twin moons. herds, wind, old routes, gathering places, and a people whose life was shaped by movement, instinct, memory, and bonds stronger than written law.
The People of the grasslands did not build marble courts. They did not carve kingdoms into stone. Their strength lived in clan memory, in the gathering tree, in thought-sharing, in hunting law, in kinship, in the simple fact that every life there belonged to a pattern older than human cities. To outsiders, the plains could look empty. They were never empty. They were inhabited by meaning.
That is what makes Mindeel’s crime more than massacre. He did not simply kill a clan and ride away. He came to the gathering of the Clan of Four Winds and tore a world apart in a single night, burning bodies, stealing souls, and leaving absence where a people had stood. He did not just end lives. He harvested them. He turned memory, kinship, and history into fuel. That wound is one of the true foundations of the story.
GuttCutter walked that ruin as the last of his kind. He stood where hundreds had once stood. He watched the ash fall through what was left of the gathering place. He carried dragon blood and the touch of an Old One and survived where the rest were taken, but survival was not mercy. Survival made him witness. Survival made him the memory the grass could not keep for itself.
The Sea of Grass matters because it is the cleanest proof in the book that power unchecked becomes hunger. It is where the mask comes off. In Shineling, Mindeel still has robes, etiquette, and a place near the throne. In the grasslands, he was what he really is: a taker of souls, a devourer of peoples, a man willing to erase an entire world if it buys him one more step upward.
This is why the west cannot be treated as background lore. The grasslands are the conscience of the story, even in ruin. They are what was lost. They are what must be avenged. They are the measure by which every king, clan leader, house lord, and hunter is judged, whether those powers know it or not.
What the Grass Remembers
A people can be killed. A place can be burned. But theft leaves a shape behind. The Sea of Grass is not empty. It is wounded.
Northern Power
The Brotherhood of the Northern Lands
The Brotherhood is not a kingdom, and it does not pretend to be one. It is older and rougher than that. A confederation of warrior clans, rival bloodlines, old grudges, practical alliances, and hard law, it holds the north together by making itself too dangerous to break cleanly. Men kneel to the High Seat because the alternative is worse.
Its power comes from the clans that make it feared. Bloodletter. Stone Tower. and the other northern houses whose names carry weight because their war-bands, scouts, assassins, and riders can still settle matters with steel faster than most courts can settle them with parchment. The Brotherhood survives by force, but not by force alone. Oaths matter here. honor matters, though not always in ways softer kingdoms would recognize. blood guardianship matters. ritual matters. memory matters. the old law matters even when everyone in the room hates the man invoking it.
Clan Bloodletter, Seiry’s clan, embodies the Brotherhood at its most feared. Assassins. dark work. the first strike and the last one. Stone Tower holds the line where speed, discipline, and martial pride matter more than stealth. The northern clans are never simple reflections of one another. They need each other. They distrust each other. They compete for the same future while insisting the Brotherhood can only survive united. Both things are true.
The High Seat is not inherited through sentiment. Blood gets you to the threshold. proving you can hold power gets you further. Seiry’s claim begins in blood and is tested by a task designed to kill her. Bring back Mindeel’s head. return with proof. earn the seat not as daughter, but as someone worthy to make other clans bend the knee. The Brotherhood does not ask a leader to be beloved. It asks a leader to be strong enough that others think twice before turning the chamber into a slaughterhouse.
The Brotherhood’s weakness is built into its strength. Every clan carries its own pride, its own losses, its own measure of what rightful leadership should look like. Every alliance has a fault line under it. Every show of unity risks becoming a challenge. It can put armies into the field and terror into its enemies, but it is never far from internal fracture. That is why the north needs someone on the High Seat who can command more than loyalty inside one fortress hall.
It is also why Seiry and Gath matter so much. They are not simply rivals. They are two possible futures for the same brutal machine.
City of Splendor and Teeth
Zaluna and the Five Great Houses
If the Brotherhood is northern power stripped down to oath, threat, and blade, Zaluna is what power looks like once it has learned to dress itself well. The city rises in black stone, impossible height, bridges, banners, and old wealth. It is one of the great political centers of the south, a place where trade, marriage, leverage, secrecy, and force all wear formal names and make their moves behind beautiful walls.
Zaluna does not belong to a single ruler in the clean sense. It is held in tension by the great houses, each with its own specialty, pride, magic, and appetite. They compete constantly. They watch each other constantly. They would ruin each other gladly if doing so did not threaten the city that makes them rich. That is why Zaluna feels alive. The place is built not just from black stone, but from agreements, betrayals, ledgers, marriages, favors, hidden debts, and old threats that never quite die.
The Five Houses
The Powers Beneath Zaluna
House Cerave
Masters of sea and storm. Their fleets carry wealth farther than most armies can march, and their stormcallers make sure those fleets stay feared. Cerave power is trade power, weather power, lineage power. They appear fairer than many rival houses, but fairness in Zaluna is usually just calculation with better posture. Lord Cerave bends himself first toward preservation of the house. Family matters because bloodline is policy. Aeilith matters because losing her threatens more than grief. It threatens continuity.
House Vortell
Beasts, fleshcraft, handlers, wolves, griffins, and the kind of controlled menace that does not need speeches. Vortell’s strength is living force shaped into asset and weapon. Their house looks at people the way a buyer looks at bloodstock, measuring value, leverage, and use. Lord Vortell’s alliance with Cerave holds only as long as the interests of both houses point in the same direction. Once they do not, courtesy will die fast.
House Drakken
Wealth buried deep enough to look respectable from a distance. Gems, vaults, old money, and the ugly truth of what wealth sometimes feeds when no one asks the right questions. Drakken stands for the southern habit of hiding rot behind prosperity. In the story, the house becomes one of the clearest examples that civilized power can still be monstrous when profit is allowed to outrank conscience.
House Emberforge
Steel, craft, furnaces, smiths, and the weight that comes from making what armies need. Emberforge does not only create weapons. It creates leverage. Whoever equips war shapes war. Forge magic lives close to labor, industry, and debt. The house carries a different kind of honor than the others, less silk, more fire, but no power in Zaluna remains innocent for long once politics gets its hands on it.
House Thalnir
Shadows, vaults, corpse-magic, forbidden structures, and the kind of house other powers tolerate only because fear can be useful when aimed outward. Thalnir is what Zaluna becomes when secrecy stops pretending to be respectable. Their people move where the law goes thin. Their pits and hidden places remind everyone that not all southern power comes wrapped in polished manners. Some of it waits underground and names terror as duty.
What Zaluna Knows
That every house is dangerous. What it keeps learning the hard way is that some dangers can still be negotiated with, and some cannot.
Trade Is Power
The Delta and the Flow of Empire
Not all victories are won where banners face each other on open ground. Some are won at river mouths. in ports. in tariffs. in what gets through and what does not. The Yggdrasil Delta and the southern waters matter because trade routes decide who starves slowly and who grows rich enough to arm another war.
Shineling’s blockade is one of the best examples of appearance outrunning truth. At court, a blockade sounds absolute. In practice, the world is messier. The great bulk river still runs north to south with heavy cargo and grain, while lesser routes, airships, and side channels complicate any king’s confidence. A ruler may believe he is closing a fist around the throat of the north while the main body of trade continues elsewhere, diminished perhaps, but alive. That mismatch between court certainty and logistical truth matters. It shapes policy. It breeds false confidence. It gives men like Mindeel room to guide royal anger toward strategies that impress loudly and fail quietly.
The world of GuttCutter is built on these channels. Grain. rye. spices. gems. weapons. people. secrets. no war in this story exists apart from supply. no house remains powerful by honor alone. no kingdom can choke another without first understanding what actually moves wealth. This is why rivers matter as much as castles. This is why ports matter as much as battlefields. This is why men who think themselves above trade still end up ruled by it.
Power Beyond Steel
Magic in This World
Magic in this story is not a schoolroom system laid out for comfort. People know pieces of it. cultures build rituals and trades around it. houses claim specialties. priests invoke it. dryads live inside it. wizards break themselves reaching deeper into it. But no one stands above it with a clean chart and a final answer. Magic is known by use, by inheritance, by danger, and by what it has already cost.
Blood and oath shape the north. The Brotherhood invokes old rites, sworn bonds, blessings, blood guardianship, and ceremonial law under the twin moons Eddel and Addel. Blood priests stand near that edge where power and ritual meet, where war, kinship, and the dead stop being neatly separate things. The twin moons themselves live in culture not as decoration, but as part of the world’s sense of balance, omen, and guidance.
Storm and sea belong to houses like Cerave, where weather itself becomes inheritance and trade advantage. Storm magic is power made dynastic. It can feed a fleet, destroy one, or make a house look chosen by the world itself.
Flesh and beastcraft rise in Vortell hands, shaping animals into instruments of war, trade, and intimidation. It is one of the clearest examples in the story that magic is not moral. It becomes what the wielder needs from it.
Forge magic lives in craft and material. It is heat, metal, runes, work, and the long discipline of making. Its danger lies partly in how respectable it looks. A sword can be beautifully made and still built for slaughter. A forge can sustain civilization and arm atrocity in the same season.
Old magic lives beyond the systems people pretend to control. Dryads. old ones. places where the boundary between mortal life and older force wears thin. The Great Forest, the Enchanted Grove, and the Sea of Grass all carry traces of this. It is less obedient than house magic and often more honest in its cruelty.
Dark wizardry, the kind Mindeel practices, is where the story’s deepest horror enters. Soul-theft. accumulation. devouring life to fuel ascent. This is not simply a stronger spellbook. It is transgression. It is appetite. It is what happens when a man stops treating power as burden or tool and begins treating other living beings as fuel.
Then there is Glashirrim, Seiry’s blade. Cursed steel. runes. blood groove. black jewel. hunger. a weapon that grants strength in proportion to what it takes and asks its wielder to survive the taking. Bound inside it are opposed forces, dark appetite and light restraint, not in peace, but in tension. The sword embodies one of the story’s deepest truths: power is never free, and what keeps a person intact under power may be thinner than anyone looking from outside can see.
Not Every Power Wears a Crown
Those Who Stand Outside the Easy Order of Men
The People of the Sea of Grass were never simply “beasts” for human kingdoms to misunderstand. They were a civilization of their own kind, ordered by instinct, bond, memory, hunting law, and communal life. Their destruction is one of the story’s irreducible crimes.
Dryads are not decorative forest spirits. They are rooted powers of place. Ironwood Dryads, White Dryads, rulers of groves and guardians of old borders, beings tied to land in ways that make distance itself a wound. Through Elara and Calypso, the story makes clear that the natural world is not passive background. It chooses, binds, weakens, shelters, and exacts prices.
The underpeople matter as much as nobles, even when kingdoms refuse to admit it. Mindeel comes from those invisible classes who clean, serve, haul, and vanish beneath notice. That origin matters because it sharpens the story’s anger at systems that build splendor on unseen lives and then act shocked when something terrible grows in the blind spot.
The dead are not always done. Through Cornin’s sight into the Betweenworld, through GuttCutter’s burden, through blood rites, through soul-theft, the story insists that consequence lingers. A death can end a body and still refuse to end its pressure on the living.
The Cost of Looking Away
Kingdoms thrive on what they can name and count. This world is full of powers that do not care whether men understand them before they strike.
What the Story Is Really Driving Toward
Two Hunters, One Wizard, and a World Already Off Balance
Everything on this page bends back toward one collision.
Seiry Bloodletter rides south because the Brotherhood demands proof. She must bring back Mindeel’s head or lose the future she has bled for. Her hunt begins as trial, inheritance, ambition, and survival. She rides with a cursed blade that grows stronger on death and a past that makes strength feel safer than softness ever could.
GuttCutter hunts for a different reason and a harsher one. He does not care about courts, succession, or the internal politics of men. He wants the wizard dead because his people were not merely slain. They were stolen. His vengeance is not symbolic. He means to free what was taken or die in the attempt.
Mindeel sits at the center of both hunts because he is more than a villain standing in the path of heroes. He is the wound connecting east and west. He is what lets Shineling’s polish and the Sea of Grass’s silence belong to the same story. He is the reason Seiry’s trial matters beyond one chamber in the north and the reason GuttCutter’s grief becomes a threat to entire cities.
This is the true world lore of GuttCutter: not that there are kingdoms and clans and houses and rivers and magic systems, but that all of them are already being pulled toward the same break. The east thinks itself secure. The north thinks strength will be enough. The south thinks politics can keep danger civilized. The west already knows what happens when they are wrong.
The hunt is what drags all of those illusions into the same road.
Before Book Two
What This World Understands Too Late
No one in this story is standing in a stable age. The Brotherhood is looking for leadership. the southern houses are feeding themselves on bargains that will not hold forever. Shineling mistakes control for safety. old powers are waking in forests, blades, and blood. trade routes are contested. children are treated like succession made flesh. beasts are shaped into assets. the dead are waiting to be avenged.
That is why the world of GuttCutter matters. Not because it is broad, but because it is pressurized. Every force inside it is already leaning too hard against something else. The question is not whether it breaks. The question is who survives the sound when it does.