My Fellow Keepers,

In 1997 Copernicus created Metamor Keep for all of the newcomers on the TSA. There were other story settings that were quite popular at the time but unless you were one of the early members of the TSA it was hard to break into them. I had joined the TSA that year and so I naturally gave Metamor Keep a try. I wrote my first two stories in rather quick succession, having already determined that my main character -- named after myself since I was mentioned by name in the intro story -- had a secret strength that he was keeping hidden and that the character Zhypar Habakkuk knew it and was trying to get him to admit it. The names of their orders, the details on each of their secrets was not fully clear to me just yet, but it was a start.

And then I started working on a third story, this one introducing Lady Kimberly. I struggled with it for a few months in which time I wondered whether I was going to keep writing in Metamor Keep since my character had been ignored by everyone else who had contributed stories (despite Copernicus's intent, many of the "old-timers" on the list did manage to write a few stories in which they all basically hung out with each other in one capacity or another). But I did manage to finish the tale and over the next couple of months I cranked out another dozen tales, almost all of which were focused on the relationship between Charles and Kimberly, as well as a few spotlights on the other rats. While working on these tales I managed to figure out the basics of Charles and Habakkuk's back-stories, and I also began to imagine a much larger tale that would unfold through all my short stories.

At this point most of the old-guard left Metamor Keep including Copernicus who left the TSA entirely. Chris Okane started writing his Long Scout stories and included me in his story "A Small Repair" which Roy Pounds did a picture for (and which I am still extremely fond of). Nor was that my only collaborative touch as Fox Cutter and I wrote a tale together, and then Christopher Hughes included me in his tale "Fetish". The latter altered the trajectory of my character significantly. Most people would object to having their plans turned on their head like that. I saw it as a golden opportunity and can state that no other story by another author has changed my course so dramatically as that. And then Phil Geusz wanted to write a story with me...

But even before some of this had happened things had been brewing in my head. During the Spring of 1998 as I wrapped up my first cycle of stories I devised a broad outline for the tales I would tell in Metamor Keep. My intention was to use the setting to hone my writing for a few years (five to ten I thought) and then take the skills I had created and move on to other ventures. I was inspired by Babylon 5's story arc that involved the defeat of a great enemy to the universe and then the little species-specific battles that had to be fought to undo their damage. I was also inspired by the epic scope of Tad Williams' "Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn" trilogy which seemed to bring the past into the present; the very history of his world mattered to the story and gave it direction. I had not felt that in anything other than Tolkein. I wanted to capture that essence for my tale, as well as use the idea of three great weapons being brought together to resurrect an ancient power; the character of Abafouq the Binoq was inspired by one of Tad's characters in fact.

And so in that Spring of 1998 I devised the Marzac plot and launched it with my story "Admissions and Applications". The scope and size of the continent was lost on me at the time and I chuckle at some of the distances I had assumed back then. I did not know all the details along the way, but I wanted to have a group of Keepers make a journey through many lands to Marzac where they would defeat the evil. And I wanted Charles to have to make a personal journey of cleansing that mimicked Dante's trek through Inferno and Purgatorio. When that was complete I would have written everything I had set out to write for Metamor. I figured it would take five maybe ten years at most to tell it all.

But then Phil wanted to write a story with me. "Keeping the Lamp Lit" forced me to destroy one of the villains I had crafted (Lord Loriod) but it gave me the opportunity to create the trio of Yonson, Agathe, and Zagrosek who would appear again and again in the stories that followed. We also, due to the objection of one of the old guard of the TSA who didn't want his character used anymore, had to create the character Wessex who I was then able to set on a path of my own choosing. Phil knew that what he had intended to do in Metamor Keep would destroy the feel of the setting (turning it into a Steampunk rather than a Fantasy setting). I loved the fantasy aspect and wanted to emphasize it all the more. I am privileged to have written the story with him and am grateful to him for helping expand what I had only the germ of in mind.

Already I had in mind the three artifacts of Yajakali, and introducing the censer as we did was a great way to take what had been references only I would understand and bring it to the next level. Now the readers understood that a longer-range story was in the works and that there were more evils out there than just Nasoj. I now had the question "What happened to the censer?" to drive a lot of the stories that would follow in the rest of the second cycle and throughout the third cycle. I wanted a little more than that though; I wanted a monster to strike terror, and so I created the Shrieker and introduced it toward the end of the second cycle (in "Dialoges" I believe). But most of the second cycle was of tamer matters and so the hints were always subtle.

While home with my family one Thanksgiving I looked over my family bookshelves and saw the Redwall books that I had loved as a child. I wanted to create a place in Metamor that could be like Mossflower Woods. And so I devised Glen Avery. At the time I was helping edit Chris Okane's stories, and as he had paid me so handsome a compliment as to include me in one of his own, I decided to include Misha in the story that introduced Glen Avery ("Declarations of Allegiance"). I had intended it to be a place that would show up from time to time to have more woodlands adventures and so the tone of the story was kept light with focus on the country-folk and how everyone knew everyone else (a hedgehog bearing pies, a bear with a brewery, the town run by squirrels, etc...). Yet the character of Garigan, intended as a one-off, kept asking for more attention. And then I knew he had to be a Sondeckis like Charles.

Of course, all of this was in the background of my dear friend Chris Hoekstra's creation of Rickkter and how much he and Charles hated each other! Chris and I even then wrote a story together "The Three Sides of Truth" to show poor Garigan hearing about the conflict between the Sondeckis and Kankoran from three different perspectives. It may not seem like much happened compared to later years, but so much was started there in that second cycle, all of which stories I wrote in 1998 and 1999!

With the third cycle I had the delight of working with Chris Okane on several stories and even plotting out some things for our characters, including Charles becoming a Long Scout -- believe it or not, they were supposed to be a super secret organization! But even while Charles had some lighter adventures, I still wanted to move forward with this big idea I had. In "Fireside" I had Misha tell a children's rhyme that mentioned the Binoq. In "Hunt" we uncover the Long House. And then in "Intercessor" I introduced the plot twist nobody saw coming, the hyacinth! I remember the first time I introduced Jessica it was because I needed Wessex to have an apprentice. I didn't really have any female characters other than Lady Kimberly, and I certainly didn't have any avians and it seemed like a nice idea. Having her fall in love with the captain of Yonson's guard just sort of happened but I'm glad it did. But after Charles warned everyone about Marzac, I needed a way for people to forget that Yonson was dangerous, and so the hyacinth was planted.

I knew Wessex would die from his efforts to pursue Marzac, and so I wanted to spend as much time as possible with him before I killed him. And so, little by little the stories grew longer and there were more of them. I introduced Qan-af-arael in a short little scene that I knew nobody would get. I nailed down Habakkuk's role in the big story and started revealing things little by little about him (working with Chris Hoekstra was fun here too). I had everything I was going to write through the Winter Solstice plotted out and detailed, even the Patriarch's arrival and murder (though several characters in his entourage surprised me with having stories of their own) was planned.

And most especially of all, the story "Nuptials" was planned and read to my wife, then girlfriend, on a special day. The poem used for the proposal was exactly how I proposed to my wife. We have been married for almost fifteen years now and Metamor Keep has always been part of it, even if only in the background.

And then Ryx had a little idea...

And what a little idea it was! I had been enjoying his stories right from the first and was thrilled to have him writing for Metamor Keep. I commented on each of them and made little suggestions. He was the first to have his characters visit Glen Avery since my own time there. He wrote a little scene with his character bumping into Lady Kimberly and somehow from that developed a friendship that led to her becoming Murikeer's pupil. I had not imagined that direction for her but I was thrilled by it and was glad to incorporate it into my own stories. But Winter Assault....

Winter Assault changed so much and moved so many goalposts for me. I returned to Glen Avery myself, another walk-on character decided to flirt with Charles which led to yet another plot arc, and now we were allowed to see what three Sondeckis could do together. I had the chance to show Zagrosek being good and I liked it. Thank you, Ryx!

Of course, "Winter's First Chill", which preceded Winter Assault, was truly for me a climax in my long-range story as it was the first time we actually got to see a Shrieker for real. And I indulged my mathematical training as the space in which they fought the Shrieker was a Lobachevskian hyperbolic geometry (multiple parallel lines through a single point). The death of Wessex though was painful to write. In the short time he'd been in Metamor I'd fallen in love with his character and I hated that I was forced to kill him.

That said, one thing he saw in that story, his dream there, featured nine dancers. This was a reference to what would happen in the Hall of Unearthly Light in "Last Tale of Yajakali" which I would finally be able to write nine years later.

The fourth cycle was about bringing everything together so that we could begin the massive journey story. But so many little threads that had begun in Winter Assault needed to be addressed. Thomas's addiction to the halter, culminating in "Never Again a Man" took a considerable amount of time (and won me an Ursa Major award to boot!) Then there was Vinsah's tale which became bound up with the journey of Ryx's characters Murikeer and Malger. And of course I indulged myself by showing off as much of Glen Avery as possible once I exiled Charles there. The story "Wagging Tongues Will" allowed me to accomplish so much, such as introducing the other evil accomplice of Marzac, Bishop Jothay, as well as show the Sword. And I had to create some ancient artifact called The Pillars of Ahdyojiak so that I could justify how difficult it was to teleport over vast distances (and avoid somebody just asking why I didn't use teleport spells to accomplish stuff later) And, at Phil's request, I found a way to get his character out of Metamor Keep.

Probably one thing most people did not like that I did in the fourth cycle was introduce the Magyars. Thieves and tricksters they have been greeted with dismay by most everyone and several people have told me that they tend to skip over their stories. Yet I love them dearly and I think I've created some of the most interesting places in their tales. The city of Cheskych is a marvel that I yearn to more fully describe, and the ancient city of Carethedor high in the mountains was a delight to explore. I will never forget the fight with the undead dragon there! Of course, there is also the place that confused people even more, Cenziga. I knew what it was from the very first moment and those who have read "Last Tale of Yajakali" will understand. Inspired by the works of Tim Powers (specifically "Declare") it was the anti-thesis to Marzac and the substance to fill in the cleft created there. All that survived it were duplicated in a sense. Marzac nullified all that came to it.

One thing that did become apparent to me in this time was that I looked forward to certain face-offs more than others. I was pumped for the fight between Nemgas and Czestadt (whose name I thought was cool until I realized it was typed entirely with the left hand), but few others seemed to feel any excitement in it. I was electrified the first time we met the Marquis, but others just wondered who that was (though not for long!) So yes, in that I had some disappointments but that is how it always will be with story-telling. That said, I was thrilled when everyone had the same reaction as Rickkter to Habakkuk's proclamation, "It's the Hyacinth!" Nobody had a clue that it had been there the whole time, even though I mentioned it frequently!

Nor was I disappointed by the huge battle sequence in "Lineaments of Coming Night". I deliberately gave Saroth and Electra a role in it because I loved their stories from way back in the early days of Metamor (it was 2004 at this point) and wanted to show them that appreciation. I loved pitting all of those big name Metamorians in the belfry against the three wizards. Giving Charles the hand-print scar over his right eye was done on a whim, as was turning him into stone, but dang was it cool! Chris Hoekstra gave me permission (actually, he suggested it!) to do what I did to Rickkter and boy was I going to make sure that Rickkter went down after one heck of a fight! Every moment of that fight, a fifty page long sequence, made my day. At this point I cannot even recall what anybody else thought about it. I loved it and still love it!

What "Lineaments of Coming Night" did was set me up for the massive journey. I took a year away from Metamor so that I could plan and try some other things. During that time I got a new job, had to move from my home to someplace I'd never been before, and my wife and I did a lot of new things together. I wanted to tell it in a single story that was shaped like a novel. So I had to have chapters, chapter titles, and a very clear chronology. I wrote seven separate (yet intersecting) plot lines, determined the scenes that had to occur for each, and then figured out how to interleave them together so that it would all make sense and have dramatic timing. And then, beginning in 2006 I started writing. It took three and a half years but finally "Last Tale of Yajakali" was complete and one of the most important scenes I had in mind back in 1998 was finally accomplished.

And since then I have been trying to reach that other scene I had in mind, of the journey through Inferno and Purgatorio that Charles would undertake. It has taken me six years of work on my sixth cycle of stories to finally reach that point. Like the fourth cycle I planned out all of the stories I would write, their dates, titles, and even a rough guess of how long each would be. And yes, like all of my cycles, the titles were in either alphabetical or reverse alphabetical order. Just a little bit of OCD there!

In the end I didn't write a few of the stories (the story where Guernef and Abafouq shed their corruption was to be called "Grappling Between Stone and Sky") because of severe burnout I was suffering in 2012 (the story "Heading to All Tomorrows" took me almost the entire year to write and yet is one of the shorter tales of the sixth cycle). I also had a story in mind showing how Berchem lost himself while a female skunk and started to think he really was Rhena (to highlight the hyacinth's power and Jessica's corruption) but it never gelled with me. There were a couple of others I abandoned because I collapsed their plots together ("Inchoate Carillon, Inconstant Cuckold" is essentially two stories merged into one). And there was one story which came out of the blue because I was inspired by my vacation to Maine to celebrate my tenth anniversary; this would be "Healing Wounds in Arabarb". I had always intended to kill Calephas myself, but this allowed me the chance to showcase Lindsey's home and his complex relationships there. Yes, I did get carried away at times exploring that land. And I had the opportunity to follow through on something I had discussed with Bill Kieffer way back when, having Wicked Potter end up a toy of Calephas. But what truly caught me by surprise was the villain Gmork; yet another one-off that decided they were too cool to die!

Those who had been reading carefully already know that Lindsey's draconic heritage was decided much earlier. But so much else of this story surprised even me as it spun from my pen. If I had to name my top three stories in all of Metamor Keep, "Healing Wounds in Arabarb" is one of the three. While I did screw up the properties of White Phosphorus, I felt like at its end, I had been to Fjellvidden, I had hidden from Gmork and his slaves, I had been a dragon with Pharcellus, I had wept with fear with Quoddy and Machias, and I had schemed with Lindsey's parents to bring about the end to Calephas's tyranny. Everyone had a tale in that story, and nobody was unimportant. I would offer this story up to anyone as a story in which my heart lives.

And yes, Hallan, I am still sorry that I gave you nightmares with Gmork!

But there were moments of laughter too. I think on "Dominion of the Hyacinth" where Jessica turns our friends into children and little Charles and little Rickkter proceed to try and beat each other up; this gets so out of hand that a bear mother gives them both a spanking! I cannot help but laugh when I think of that scene. It shows the lighter side of Metamor is still there despite all the struggle and pain. And in many ways it is another moment of easing the tension between Charles and Rickkter. How serious can you take your feud if you've been spanked as a little child for it?

It took two years to finish the next and final tale in my sixth cycle. Ryx and I tossed ideas back and forth for a few months before we settled on the basic outlines of the 724 period. The character of Charlie Sutt and how he came to be that way needed to be ironed out. While his power to Dream had been hinted at for some time, so many details of the intervening sixteen years had to be sorted before we could even begin. I have stacks of chat logs where we went back and forth considering a wide array of possibilities before we finally figured out which one would truly work. Ryx went whole hog and developed the entire Sutt household staff (most of which never showed up in the story of course) and I detailed what the Narrows would look like and kept track of what scenes came next. We took turns writing and editing most of the material. Some sections are more Ryx and others are more my own. But every line has been at the very least examined by both of us.

And in this story I finally reached the point I had seen back in 1998 as the culmination and completion of everything I had hoped to achieve in Metamor Keep. With "Divine Travails of Rats" finished, I can step away from Metamor knowing that I have accomplished what I sought to do.

Metamor Keep is not just a set of stories to me. It has become a foundation for friendships that have endured over a decade and now nearly two! It is the foundation for new friendships and a constant source of inspiration. My heart has been poured into it. When I look at Metamor Keep I see a part of myself staring back at me. It is a vast family that I love and could never abandon.

I do not know what else I will be writing for Metamor Keep in the years ahead. There are many stories I do wish to tell (the journey to Sondeshara, the journey to Cheskych, Charlie finding love, Elvmere finding his way home, the end of Gmork, more tales of the Fellowship of the Egg, etc...) but I have no idea what time will be given to me to tell any of them. My daughter is now two-and-a-half and as such she is the center of my life and all writing takes a big back seat. But I am not leaving and I will always be part of Metamor Keep.

And my deepest gratitude and admiration for all of you who choose to live here with me in this remarkable place! After living here almost eighteen years, I know this is my home. And while I may take a vacation from time to time, I will always come back here to live. May Metamor Keep outlast us all!

May He bless you and keep you in His grace and love,

Charles Matthias

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