1915: The Glamour Pact of Millionaire's Row

In the early 1910s, Euclid Avenue—known as Millionaires’ Row—was still one of the most prestigious streets in the United States. Industrial magnates like Rockefeller, Hanna, and Severance lived there, and their lavish mansions were surrounded by cultivated gardens, imported sculptures, and curated art collections.

In 1915, a secret Concord was forged between a reclusive circle of Kithain and a select group of mortal artists, gardeners, and architects who worked on the estates. This pact—later known as The Glamour Accord of the Gilded Avenue—allowed Changelings to infuse works of mortal beauty with intentional Dreaming resonance, binding certain homes and gardens as low-key freeholds.

The Liam Sidhe were dominant then, having never truly lost grip on the wealthier mortal classes, but it was a Boggan landscape architect named Greta Barrowhill who convinced a few wealthy art patrons to allow "whimsy and wonder" into their design ethos.

Whispers persist that one of these old homes still holds a slumbering chimera of impossible size, buried beneath the earth in a root cellar turned vault of dreams.


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