Prince of Frost
A creature of wrath and winter, ruling from his Fortress of Frozen Tears in the Vale of Long Night in the Feywild. He detests mortals of the Material Plane, particularly those who consider themselves heroes, and dreams of covering their many worlds with perpetual winter.
Mental characteristics
Personal history
The great powers of the Feywild dance through time unburdened by its chains, leaving their marks in stories and histories. Little can be known for certain about the archfey. Some accounts say that the Maiden of the Moon was once an eladrin who rose to power through passion for the hunt. Others claim that she is a dream of the moon. Perhaps neither tale is the truth. Maybe both are. So it is with the Prince of Frost. It is foolish to seek fact in the Feywild, but one can find stories. And if one delves deeply into the mysteries of the Pale Prince, this is the tale one might find.
Summer's Children
In a time now forgotten, no winter ever gripped the Feywild domain known now as the Vale of the Long Night. The region was a place of light and joy. As home to the Summer Queen’s eldest son, it reflected the Summer Court where the vale’s inhabitants spent most of their time. In that court, the children of summer passed the long days with song and celebration, basking in the bright beauty and the company of friends.
Three of the brightest lights of the court were the Daughters of Delight, scions of another eladrin domain connected to the Summer Court. Loveliest of the three was the Lady Sharaea. She had long been betrothed to the Sun Prince, eldest son of the Summer Queen. The prince, whose name is forgotten, loved Sharaea with all his heart, and for a time she loved him in return. However, Sharaea grew disillusioned with the endless revelry of the court, and she began to spend her days in the mortal world, seeking to make a difference. Her summer lover grew jealous, but his attempts to pull her back only drove her farther away. She found new love in the arms of Hayne Kasar, a brave and selfless warrior, and together they fought to defend the innocent and battle the forces of darkness.
Sharaea traveled at the side of her beloved. Their deeds and great love inspired songs, some of which survive to the present day. In Sharaea’s absence, the heart of the fey prince grew colder, and in time he demanded that his betrothed return to the court. He insisted that she honor her vow and be wed to him. When Sharaea refused, the prince swore to capture and marry her, even if he had to keep her a prisoner in his demesne. Sharaea knew she could not resist his power, and she feared for the safety of her mortal lover.
So it was that she and Hayne ventured to Letherna and made a deal with the The Raven Queen. In exchange for a favor to the goddess of death in the future, their souls were drawn from their bodies and cast forward in time. One day they shall be reborn. It was Sharaea’s hope that the passage of time would soothe the jealous heart of the Sun Prince.
Winter's Heart
The name of the Sun Prince has been torn from the tales and taken from the tongues of mortals. Little is known of his life in the elder world. When he learned how he had been betrayed, how Sharaea was lost to him, his heart turned to ice. So powerful was his bitter sorrow that it spread a chill across the land, transforming his sun-dappled demesne into the Vale of the Long Night. The prince blamed the heroes of the mortal world for turning his beloved against him, and in the darkness of his heart’s winter, his thirst for vengeance grew. His cold heart drew to him the darkest fey and infected others. He sought others of his kind, and eventually he became the greatest among them.
Sharaea’s sisters, Velayn and Loralae were filled with despair at the loss of their sibling, and the Sun Prince captured them in their sister’s stead. His bitter power magnified their sorrow and bound them to his frozen heart. They wasted away, and soon the Daughters of Delight were no more. In their place were the Sisters of Lament, frozen shades of the lovely maidens haunting the winter winds. Their new master turned his back on the Summer Court. In his striving, he had become the Prince of Frost, also known as the Pale Prince, greatest of the Winter Court fey. Although not all the Winter Court follows his agenda, and in fact numerous members of the court oppose it, his power became secure. He then swore to take his wrath out on the mortal world until the day that he finds Sharaea and binds her to him once and for all.
The Prince of Frost knows the Raven Queen helped Sharaea escape, and for this he might have held the goddess in contempt. Strange fate, however, has gained the Pale Prince a measure of respect in the Raven Queen’s eyes. The prince is a harbinger of sorrow and deliverer of death, so they are alike in some ways. She watches him closely, wondering if he might make a fine exarch or even a consort. The prince takes secret de-light in usurping some of the Raven Queen’s power with his wintry might. If he knew of her admiration, would he turn his heart from its bitterness? If he did, would the Prince of Frost revert again to the Sun Prince?
Personality Characteristics
Motivation
A heart frozen by lost love drives the actions of the Prince of Frost. He knows that Sharaea’s soul is des-tined to be reborn into the mortal world, and he has sworn that he will find her when she returns. He will have his betrothed at his side, even if she is trapped in bonds of ice. As such, he has agents spread across the world searching for any sign that the Daughter of De-light has been reborn. Over the course of centuries, he has kidnapped princesses, sorceresses, and other fe-males of great beauty and skill, hoping that he has found his beloved. However, he has been disappointed every time. His victims remain in his court, blood and flesh preserved in ice.
As powerful as his possessiveness is, the prince is driven by a desire for revenge. He hates the mortal world for luring Sharaea from his side. More than that, he hates bold and brave folk who help those weaker than they are for no other reason than compassion. One such person stole Sharaea’s heart. Adventure and hero-ics drew Sharaea from the Feywild. Similar folk helped her escape her rightful fate and cast her soul into the future. The Prince of Frost hopes to find Hayne Kasar reborn, as well, and seeks to make him suffer for the loss of Sharaea.
While the prince waits for the cycle of rebirth, he soothes his frigid heart by sending his forces against mortal heroes, proving his superiority by besting them in games of wit, skill, and combat. In a broader scope, he enjoys sowing sorrow among mortals, especially when he can shatter the bonds of love. His fortress is made of frozen tears, and he likes little more than to turn the fires of passion to cold ashes.
While this sport gives the prince some small pleas-ure, at times the Prince of Frost has loftier goals. When his hunger for revenge burns bright in his frozen heart, he looks at the mortal world and considers what joy he might find in spreading his chill shadow across the sun-lit valleys. If he claimed the world as his demesne, there would be no escape for Sharaea or her lover upon their return — and no mortal world to steal his lover away.


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