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[[Characters/CodexAleraAlerans Aleran Groups]]

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Alerans]]
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[[foldercontrol]]

!Alerans

[[folder:Alerans as a whole]]

The long-lost descendants of the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legio_IX_Hispana Legio IX Hispana]] and its {{Camp Follower}}s, who ended up in Carna through a wormhole. Basically humans granted with ElementalPowers connected to nature spirits called "furies", the Alerans went on to conquer an entire continent and have ruled over their newfound empire for roughly a thousand years under the House of Gaius.
----
!!Tropes that apply to the Alerans:
* BadassArmy: The Aleran Legions were the primary tool from which the ancient Alerans were able to carve out their empire while being surrounded by numerous hostile forces like the Malorandim, Children of the Sun, Avar, Yrani, and Dekh. Zigzagged in the modern day, though, as while there are still several examples (most notably the Antillan and Phrygian Legions along with the First and Free Aleran), most Legions have been able to go ''decades'' (particularly in the southern cities) without seeing any action, making them very conservative and inexperienced. This unfortunately means that when the Vord finally attack, most of Alera's available forces are completely unprepared and get their asses royally handed to them multiple times before they're eventually able to wise up and effectively fight.
* DecadentCourt: Aleran politics are incredibly dirty and violent, to the point where "cutters" (read: assassins) will never be out of work.
* DeflectorShield: Skilled windcrafters can create shields of "hardened air" to deflect incoming objects, though in practice it's less a force field and more directing objects around/away from their intended target.
* DeliberateValuesDissonance: As they're descended from a LostRomanLegion, the Alerans frequently show an incredibly xenophobic (bordering on ''genocidal'') and imperialist attitude towards their non-human neighbors, and are also highly misogynistic and sexist (represented in how Alera is a NoWomansLand). Additionally, the practice of slavery is incredibly common and widespread, albeit becoming increasingly controversial and unpopular(to the point where it only seems to be several of the southernmost cities, such as Kalare, that are keeping the abominable practice running). Additionally, Alera also inherits from Rome a highly classist social structure whose nobility operates on a rigid MightMakesRight ethos. On a more positive note, though, modern racial politics (i.e., inter-human racism) are non-existent since the Alerans "left" Earth long before modern concepts around race were invented
* ElementalPowers: Six of them, to be exact, each bound to one of the six elements of nature.
** [[BlowYouAway Windcrafting]]: In addition to wind manipulation and {{Flight}}, windcrafting also grants SuperSpeed, the ability to chuck [[ShockAndAwe lightning bolts]] when combined with firecrafting, casting [[{{Invisibility}} veils]], creating limited "{{Deflector Shield}}s" through air currents, and the ability to create a telescope-like lens out of "hardened" air.
** [[DishingOutDirt Earthcrafting]]: Earth and rock manipulation, also granting SuperStrength (though [[LogicalWeakness only as long as the earthcrafter is touching the ground]]) and the ability to induce calm or lust in someone else.
** [[ExtraOreDinary Metalcrafting]]: Manipulation of iron and steel, granting ImplausibleFencingPowers and the ability to sense nearby metals; additionally, it can be used to artificially repress emotion and pain to turn the user into an ImplacableMan. The most powerful and skilled metalcrafters can [[ChromeChampion incorporate metal into their skin]] to protect themselves (although it's mentioned to be ''incredibly'' painful to do so).
** [[GreenThumb Woodcrafting]]: Manipulation of plants, including encouraging them to grow, or animating them directly, which also (as the name implies) applies to dead wood. It also grants the ability to create veils when enough plant matter is present, specifically with shadows. Most woodcrafters are archers, since control of both the arrows and bows gives them ImprobableAimingSkills.
** [[MakingASplash Watercrafting]]: Manipulating water (including ice), empathy, breathing underwater, the ability to change their appearance, long-range water-based communication, and, most importantly, healing. Without some metalcrafting, though, they tend to be {{Unhappy Medium}}s, since AMindIsATerribleThingToRead.
** [[PlayingWithFire Firecrafting]]: Fire and heat manipulation, along with granting the ability to inspire fear or passion and chucking [[ShockAndAwe lightning bolts]] when combined with windcrafting.
* EmotionControl: Firecrafting can inspire fear and/or passion, while earthcrafting can inspire lust and/or calm. Metalcrafting can instead [[StealthPun steel oneself against]] emotion.
* TheEmpath: Watercrafters naturally feel the emotions of those around them. Unless they also have [[RequiredSecondaryPowers access to metalcrafting]], this can result in them becoming an UnhappyMedium (or even ''worse'', as evidenced with Odiana being an AxCrazy {{Cloudcuckoolander}} thanks to her DarkAndTroubledPast as a SexSlave just coming into her water furies).
* EveryoneIsASuper: All Alerans are naturally born with the ability to mentally access and control furies. Even Tavi, who is initially thought to be a "furyless freak," eventually turns out to be "only" a late bloomer when he finally gains access to his furycrafting when he's twenty years old.
* FantasticCasteSystem: The social classes of Alera roughly go: Slaves, Freemen, Citizens, and Lords/Ladies, with several different ranks of nobility somewhere at the level of Citizens and higher. There is a strong but not perfect correlation between strength in furycrafting and social rank, and strength in furycrafting is at least partially heritable (until Tavi is implied to alter it at the end so it can be earned based on merit and effort), so while many characters have moved their way up in rank over their lives, the caste one is born into is still very determinative.
* FantasyCounterpartCulture: The Realm of Alera is a society very similar to Western Rome at the peak of its empire. Justified since it was founded by a LostRomanLegion. That being said, Alera has several distinct elements that show how far it has diverged from the ancient Roman culture, particularly with a more executive system of government where the Senate, High Lords, and First Lord exist side by side, the fact that slavery is a divisive topic instead of the norm, and the use of several aspects of the medieval European feudal system, such as Counts ruling over regions under the High Lords, and the title of a Knight of the Legions. Furthermore, unlike the incredibly religious Romans, the Alerans are highly agnostic and secular, to the point of outright claiming to have OutgrownSuchSillySuperstitions as "gods" and "prophecy".
* FeelNoPain: An aspect of metalcrafting. However, this doesn't mean the injuries being ignored are any less dangerous. If someone ignores the pain of a legitimately crippling injury (or a minor one from a poisoned weapon), it can cost them their life.
* {{Flight}}: Skilled windcrafters can generate windstreams to support their bodies and allow them to soar through the air. Notably, it's mentioned that this talent requires a windcrafter to also learn [[RequiredSecondaryPowers how to create a shield of hardened air out in front of them]] so as to protect them from incoming objects like insects or arrows.
* FounderOfTheKingdom: The original Gaius Primus, the first of the House of Gaius and the first of the First Lords of the Realm. Ever since his death, his family line - through multiple different branches - has ruled over the entire Realm in at least one way or another.
* HealItWithWater: Healing magic is one of the watercrafting arts and one of the most commonly used for its MundaneUtility. It usually requires the patient to be [[HealingVat immersed in a tub of water]], but the more powerful practitioners don't need to do so.
* HealingHands: Watercrafters can heal using their furies, but all but the most powerful need a tub of water to immerse the patient in.
* HumanityIsInsane: Almost every nonhuman species is convinced that Alerans are completely, irrationally ''mad''.
* HumansAreBastards: The Marat, Canim, Icemen, and Vord all think so. And considering how the Alerans are the only species to practice slavery, they're presented as not being entirely wrong (though eventually, the series makes it clear that aside from the Vord being literally born to regard all other species as resources for expansion, no species on Carna is inherently "superior" to any other morally speaking).
* HumansAreSpecial: The Alerans are frequently shown to have a level of honor and creativity (along with "madness") that utterly baffles their inhuman neighbors. It's to the point where they prove to be [[HumanityIsInfectious deceptively infectious]] and "taint" the Awakened Vord Queen with concepts of empathy and a desire for family.
* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: Many Canim, Icemen, and Marat believe this after being exposed to Aleran practices like slavery, organized massacres, and CivilWar.
* HumansAreWhite: Averted. While most of the viewpoint Aleran characters are described as being either white or at least having pale skin (i.e., Tavi, Fidelias, Ehren, and Invidia), many other Alerans (mostly those hailing from the southern reaches of the Realm) are described as having dark skin tones, most notably Amara (who is a DarkSkinnedBlonde). Makes sense, as the Alerans were founded by a LostRomanLegion hailing from both Central Europe and the Mediterranean.
* HumansByAnyOtherName: Why the Canim, Icemen, Marat, and Vord almost exclusively call them only "Alerans," the actual Alerans use "Aleran" and "human" interchangeably, and it's made clear that there's no real difference between the two terms.
* {{Invisibility}}: Both wind and woodcrafters can accomplish this, though through different means. Windcrafters have a more "traditional" form of invisibility, where they craft the air around a target so it reflects light away. Meanwhile, when enough plant matter is present, woodcrafters can accelerate and adjust plant growth around them so that they are hidden in the resulting shadows and leaves, making them effectively invisible.
* LostRomanLegion: The Alerans are descended from a people that their histories refer to as "Romans," who claimed to have come from 'Mother Rome,' and who originally appeared on Carna in numbers equal to a single Legion and its {{camp follower}}s. [[invoked]] WordOfGod is that they were the IX Roman Legion, and were transported to Carna by a wormhole. Notably, it was so long ago that the ruins of this civilization are called "Romanic", and there's a serious debate on whether or not Aleran ancestors had inherent furycraft (they did not).
* {{Magitek}}: In daily life, most Alerans use technology roughly equivalent to medieval Europe, which is about what one would expect considering the origin of Alera was as a LostRomanLegion. However, different aspects of furycrafting stand out as modern conveniences: furylamps, which function exactly like lightbulbs; coldstones, which provide refrigeration; watersending, which provides communication across thousands of miles; and air-coaches, which stand in for airplanes. Combined with the healing of watercrafting and the ability of woodcrafting to stimulate the growth of food crops, Alera has a general life-expectancy and quality of life equal to the mid-twentieth century United States.
* TheMagocracy: Though not as obvious about it as other settings using the same trope, Alera is effectively one of these. One's political power within Alera is dependent on their capacity for furycrafting, with the First Lord being generally held as the most powerful furycrafter. High Lords, just below the First Lord, are nearly as strong, and are each a virtual OneManArmy. Below these are Citizens, who possess strong furycrafting in one or more disciplines and can prove that strength in a furycrafting duel with another Citizen. Everyone else (who aren't slaves) are freemen, who have some basic furycrafting but usually not enough to stand out.
* MedievalStasis: For the most part among the Alerans, technology is static and has actually ''regressed'' from the original Roman settlers' because of the universal access to ElementalPowers. {{Magitek}} is so universal that despite the low tech levels, the actual quality of life is roughly equivalent to the mid-twentieth century, and the use of magic ''has'' been evolving. There is also an institutionalized traditionalism within Aleran society, thanks to the fact that they've spent a millennium simply fighting to survive against the DeathWorld that is Carna, which resulted in an emphasis on following set, traditional methods. This is ultimately a serious problem that the Alerans have, as they have no reference point to deal with enemies using advanced engineering like the Canim, let alone a completely new OutsideContextProblem like [[HordeOfAlienLocusts the Vord.]] Furthermore, Aleran furycrafting is almost entirely hereditary (at least until Tavi has Alera alter the system to make it merit-based in the series' epilogue), helping reinforce a static and unchanging power structure in society that makes it increasingly difficult for clever minds like Tavi to have their ideas spread and take root without sufficient outside assistance. However, Bernard and Tavi's re-invention of the ''catapult'' in the final novel along with numerous other achievements kickstarted by Tavi (such as the practice of "mounted infantry" units in the First Aleran and the "ski-ships" able to easily travel along the Shieldwall) seem to be the hints where the other Alerans (most notably Amara) finally get that their Medieval Stasis is breaking.
* MundaneUtility: All observed aspects of furycrafting have at least one "feature" that can be easily integrated into everyday life. In fact, Alera's economy is so based on furycrafting that most other forms of technological development have completely stagnated.
** Firecrafters can create "coldstones" (which allow for refrigeration without need of ice). Additionally, sealing fire furies in lamps allows for "furylamps," which are basically treated as electrical lights, and skilled-enough firecrafters can use their abilities to incite either fear or passion to help them play to the crowd and effective politicians.
** Watercrafters allow for near-instantaneous long-way communication through connected bodies of water (though according to Max, skilled-enough crafters can alter the conveyed messages) along with extensive healing and medical science.
** Windcrafters being able to fly allows for widespread and expedient aerial travel through coaches (where windcrafters act as the proverbial draft animals) along with being able to use their furies to create what are effectively modern telescopes through lenses of "hardened air."
** Earthcrafters can draw up bedrock and minerals from the earth (making both construction and mining a breeze) along with using their SuperStrength to make manual labor far more expedient. Additionally, some skilled earthcrafters have been known to use their ability to incite lust to act as strippers & prostitutes, being able to throw an entire crowd of already horny folks into a tizzy. If Bernard is to go by, earthcrafters' ability to incite calm also makes them very useful in terms of training beasts of burden and utilizing domesticated animals such as gargants, sheep, goats, and horses. Additionally, earthcrafters can bring up nutrients for farming plants to help bring in larger yields of crops, though this is usually an emergency measure and is mentioned as making the soil unusable for farming after a few seasons' worth of growth.
** Woodcrafters can use their powers to accelerate plant growth to bring in higher yields of crops for harvest along with being near-perfect hunters.
** Finally, metalcrafters can use their connection to metal to be excellent blacksmiths through being able to intimately tell where an iron tool's weakpoints are and where it needs to be fixed. And while it's not directly touched on, their ability to have such endurance that they can block out pain and/or keep going for days makes them excellent athletes and couriers.
* NoWomansLand: Though Alera's women do enjoy plenty of rights as freemen, the number of female Citizens is limited; up until Gaius promoted Isana to the Citizenry at the end of ''Furies of Calderon'', no woman had ever gained Citizenship without either serving in the military [[note]]Difficult, as women could not normally be ''legionares'', so this requires them to serve as either healers or Knights, both of which require strong furycrafting, or the woman had to disguise herself as a man until such a point that her deeds on the battlefield proved her worthy of being a Citizen if she revealed her gender[[/note]], winning a Citizenship bout (requiring strong furycrafting), or marriage into the Citizenry (strong furycrafting being nearly required as well). In short, women without Knight-level furycrafting are generally out of luck in Alera, at least until Gaius promoted Isana. This becomes an important plot point as the series progresses, as Isana's promotion is taken as an official statement by the First Lord regarding parity of genders and a sign of his power, making Isana a target for those trying to undermine Gaius' authority.
* OlderThanTheyLook: Sufficiently skilled watercrafters seem to age at a slightly slower rate than other humans, to the point where Gaius Sextus (who is in his mid-to-late eighties by the time of ''Princeps' Fury'') is described as looking like someone in their late forties or fifties aside from his [[LockedIntoStrangeness snowy white hair]].
* OurGargoylesRock: Gargoyles are [[NatureSpirit manifested earth furies]] bound into statues taking the form of certain animals (sometimes InUniverse mythical creatures, like sphinxes), and are typically used as the {{Magitek}} equivalent of automated security robots by sufficiently skilled Citizens and High Lords. It's mentioned that they're only good as DumbMuscle [[MightyGlacier and are often painfully slow, but even a glancing hit by them can turn someone into a wet spot on the pavement]].
* OutgrownSuchSillySuperstitions: Modern Aleran society is highly secular and agnostic. Aside from minor elements like how the city of Ceres is named after the ancient Roman goddess of agriculture and Sextus mentioning in ''Captain's Fury'' how Kalarus is intent on "dragging as many possible lives into the underworld with him", organized religion seems to have fallen by the wayside. In fact, the modern Alerans speak with outright scorn of several ancient Roman traditions and practices, and some refuse to believe these things ever happened because they are so patently ludicrous. These include, but are not limited to, praying to "gods", trying to tell the future by scattering animal entrails, shaping metal and stone without furies, constructing mechanical devices to supplant human labor, and building a civilized society without furycrafting. Considering the fact that the Great Furies like Kalus and Garados are at least as powerful as the Olympian gods, and have a '''far''' more palpable influence on the world, it's not really that surprising that religion as we know it fell by the wayside.
* PhysicalGod: Sufficiently skilled Citizens in Aleran society can effectively become this through their furycrafting. Easily the biggest examples are the First Lord and the High Lords, each of which is a PersonOfMassDestruction able to wipe out entire armies virtually single-handed.
* ProudWarriorRace: Downplayed; Because they've been fighting for roughly two millenia just to survive in the DeathWorld that is Carna, the Alerans have developed a heavy martial tradition in their society (to their point where it is law for all Aleran men to go on tour with one of their home city's Legions for at least three years), but modern Alera has sufficiently evolved to where a lot of focus is given to other professions such as espionage, scholarly work, and even bureucracy. Notably, this was played ''disturbingly'' straight with the ancient Romans who first landed in Alera millennia ago, as told below by the Great Fury Alera to Tavi in ''First Lord's Fury'':
-->'''Tavi:''' Then how did [the Romans] do it? How did they survive [without furycrafting]?\\
'''Alera:''' With savagery. Skill. Discipline. They came from a place where they were unrivaled masters of war and death. Their enemies here had never seen anything like them. Your forebears could not return whence they had come. They were trapped here, and only victory gave them survival. So they became victors -- no matter the cost.\\
They did things you would scarcely believe. They committed the most monstrous and heroic deeds. The generations of your people in that time became a single, savage mind, death incarnate -- and when they ran short of foes, [[CivilWar they practiced their skills upon one another]].
* SchizoTech: While Alera is implied to have a technology-level similar to that of ancient Rome (as befits a FantasyCounterpartCulture of the Romans), due to their use of furies, they lack some other techniques and technologies that would have been known to the real Romans, such as tracheotomy (because buying time for transporting patients isn't quite as vital when the doctor's a watercrafter) or even ''catapults'' (because you can blast things with firecrafters or bring down stone fortifications with earthcrafters instead).
* ShapeShifting: Downplayed; Sufficiently skilled watercrafters can change their appearances (including even features like facial structure and skin tone) to resemble another human being. However, it's mentioned to be very taxing and painful to do, and can be incredibly difficult to keep up over extended periods of time. Those with only a little watercrafting skill can still do so, but it requires longer periods of time to prepare and adjust the body so as to "keep the illusion up". For example, Fidelias was able to sufficiently alter his face so as to assume his previous cover as "Valiar Marcus" to infiltrate the First Aleran Legion, but his lack of skill in watercrafting required him to practice at it for several hours each day over the course of three weeks prior to joining the First Aleran.
* ShroudedInMyth: The ancient Romans who would become the ancestors of the modern Alerans first arrived in Carna two millennia ago. Eventually, after millennia of strife and war (both against their inhuman neighbors and then against ''themselves'' when they "ran out of foes" to practice their skills on), the original Gaius Primus conquered and united the disparate groups of Alerans all under his banner and founded the modern Realm of Alera. This time period is very poorly understood by the modern Alerans, to the point that despite numerous Roman ruins scattered across the land many Aleran scholars have shown incredibly biased and provably false attitudes towards the Romans, such as claiming that they had access to furycrafting since most Alerans think furycrafting is a vital component needed for any "civilized" species to found a long-lasting civilization with. In fact, this period of constant conflict was so long ago that many of the foes the ancient Alerans fought during that time (i.e., the Children of the Sun) have been reduced to half-remembered anecdotes in history class for most modern Alerans.
* SlaveryIsASpecialKindOfEvil: The long-standing Aleran practice of slavery is frequently shown to be easily their most abhorrent and inexcusable quality. Even the Marat (who practice ''[[ImAHumanitarian cannibalism]]'') are shown to be horrified by slavery and are portrayed as morally superior in terms of lacking that disturbing custom, and all Aleran characters who are supporters of slavery are portrayed as either being loathsome (i.e., Kord and Kalarus) or go through sufficient CharacterDevelopment that they become righteous fighters against the practice (i.e., Isana, Tavi, Amara, and Bernard).
* SuperReflexes: Wind, wood, and metalcrafters all showcase this. Windcrafters can do so through using the wind to augment their physical motions and effectively slow down their reaction time to a level where they can easily respond to any threat. Meanwhile, wood and metalcrafters are able to instinctively sense any wood or metal in their vicinity, and can use this along with their ordinary crafting talents to have ImprobableAimingSkills with bows and ImplausibleFencingPowers with swords respectively.
* SuperSpeed: Windcrafters can accelerate and move at incredible speeds through using their furies to guide and protect their movements through the air. At one point, Amara is described as flying so fast that she makes ''a sonic boom.''
* SuperStrength: As long as an earthcrafter is touching the ground, they can show incredible strength and can put incredible amounts of brute force behind their attacks. During the Battle of the Elinarch, one Knights Terra of the First Aleran is described as not only being able to easily carry [[{{BFS}} an incredibly oversized greatsword]], but also [[HalfTheManHeUsedToBe casually splitting one Canim raider entirely in half]] [[SingleStrokeBattle with one stroke]]. Only the Canim and Icemen have been shown to surpass a skilled earthcrafter calling upon their strength in power.
* UnhappyMedium: Skilled watercrafters without access to metalcrafting are BlessedWithSuck, as they ''constantly'' sense the emotions of all sapient life around them without being able to effectively block it out.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tavi]]
!Tavi of Calderon, a.k.a. Rufus Scipio, a.k.a.[[UsefulNotes/{{Augustus}} Gaius Octavian]], [[AwesomeMcCoolName a.k.a. Gaius Tavarus Magnus]]

Tavi, raised by his Aunt Isana and Uncle Bernard in the Calderon Valley, is apparently the only Aleran in the world to not possess the power of Furycraft. While this is often a major disadvantage, in order to compensate he's learned to rely on something else – his brain. After the events of the first book, he begins studying at Alera Imperia to join the imperial spy network known as the Cursors, and joins the newly-formed First Aleran Legion under the name Rufus Scipio.\\
\\
Tavi is really Gaius Octavian, son of the slain Princeps Septimus. Isana, actually his mother, accidentally suppressed his Furycraft when trying to make him look younger so he wouldn't be obviously the right age to be a son of Septimus and therefore a target for assassins. Eventually he does develop some Crafting, though to a lesser extent than most Lords. In the final book, the [[PersonOfMassDestruction full potential of his powers emerges]].
----
!!Tropes that apply to Tavi:
* AmbiguouslyBi: [[PlayedForLaughs Played in jest]] during ''First Lord's Fury''; When he, Kitai and Varg are all supremely impressed by Phyrigius Cyricus' impressive competence, Kitai jokingly remarks that she's now in love with Cyricus. Tavi's response to her? "I saw him ''first''."
* AwesomenessByAnalysis: Mostly done offscreen. The one time we see this in action, it's both awesome and terrifying as Tavi decides how to kill [[PersonOfMassDestruction High Lady Antillus]] and Crassus with a ''[[ImprovisedWeapon stick]]''.
* BadassBookworm: While not as much as [[TheSmartGuy Ehren]], he's really clever.
* BadassNormal: By Aleran standards, this actually makes him a HandicappedBadass. Although he becomes [[EmpoweredBadassNormal less normal as the series progresses.]]
* BroughtDownToBadass: Isana's well-intentioned spell may have made him the butt of jokes everywhere, but one can't deny he was able to compensate.
* BatmanGambit: He grows skilled in using his enemies' tendencies and tactics to bring them down.
** In ''Academ's Fury'' he, by means of Ehren and Aria, gets the Aquitaines to help protect Gaius and the crown from falling because it would ruin their own plans in the making.
** In ''Princeps' Fury'' he uses Captain Demos' desire for wealth and repayment for destroying Demos' slave chains to stop Demos from ever being in the slave trade again by making him swear to use only these chains to bind a slave. The chains are solid gold. A lifetime of wealth and earns Tavi Demos' loyalty and opinion.
* BattleCouple: With Kitai.
* BecomingTheMask: He starts ''Cursor's Fury'' as a civilian Cursor who joins the First Aleran undercover as a junior officer, despite having zero time in the Legions. When the book ends, he's become TheCaptain, so much so that he spends the next years serving primarily as a ''legionare'' instead of a Cursor. This is foreshadowed when Magnus outright tells him that this will happen, with regard to his military career: "When you start, it'll be an act. At the end, it won't be an act anymore."
* BewareTheNiceOnes: Tavi always tries to think the best of others and be as polite & considerate to others as possible. As such, in his rage and fury Tavi is absolutely merciless, as Fidelias almost found out.
* TheCallPutMeOnHold: Thanks to Isana stunting his growth, he doesn't get his furycrafting until about age 20. In contrast, his father obtained his powers around age 5.
* TheCaptain: He is given a field promotion to Captain in ''Cursor's Fury'' by virtue of being the senior-most officer left standing after a surprise attack. He keeps the promotion and the fourth book is called ''Captain's Fury'' for a reason.
* CharacterDevelopment: While he still retains his cleverness and snark even into the latter novels, he significantly matures, going from a crafty youngster to a WisePrince. He also gains an increased sense of empathy for others - While Tavi was never an EmptyShell or outright {{Jerkass}}, he still understandably suffered from the FantasticRacism and DeliberateValuesDissonance from growing up in Alera that one would expect. As he becomes a young adult, he becomes significantly more outspoken against slavery and moves past his countrymen's prejudices regarding their non-human "neighbors". He even feels sympathy for the Awakened Vord Queen when she finally dies, promising to make her death as quick and painless as possible.
* TheChessmaster: Metaphorically as well as literally. Even ''the First Lord'' takes a couple of lessons from him.
* CombatPragmatist: Well, when everybody can rip you to shreds with their bare hands, playing fair doesn't seem very important. He says once that he never wants to be in a "fair" fight ever again. Even after his crafting powers awaken, he's still a pragmatist in battle.
* ConsummateLiar: He was raised by Isana, one of the greatest {{Living Lie Detector}}s alive. He needed to develop this skill in order to get away with ''anything''.
* CrazyEnoughToWork: The majority of Tavi's plans are this. So much so that Kitai can correctly surmise where Tavi chose to have the FinalBattle by thinking of the one place only a lunatic would go willingly. It's pretty much his motto. One of his plans gives an ally ''heart palpitations''. For example:
** [[invoked]] His role in the defense of the Elinarch. Due to a lot of things going wrong at once, he ends up in command of a single, inexperienced legion (about 7,000 soldiers) who have to [[YouShallNotPass hold a bridge]] against an army of more than 50,000 Canim: centuries-old, enormous, and incredibly dangerous [[{{Wolfman}} wolfmen]]. First, to stop them from crossing the river anywhere else, he has all the butchers in the camp and the towns at either end of the Elinarch throw buckets of blood into the river to attract [[ThreateningShark sharks]]. Any Canim trying to swim across quickly learns the error of their ways. He also goes out to try to negotiate with the leaders. By himself. He proceeds to use his knowledge of their culture to laugh in the face of an EvilSorcerer and exploit a division in their leadership. Then he sits for an hour and [[SmartPeoplePlayChess plays ludus]] with [[TheStrategist Nasaug]] during a truce to let them remove their dead from the field[[note]]Tavi wins[[/note]], in order to buy time for his men to set up his next tactic: sawdust and fire furies planted in every building on the Canim side of the bridge, which he then has his only [[PlayingWithFire Knight Ignus]] [[StuffBlowingUp blow up]] while the Canim are trying to move through them. He'd makes sure they are all ''in'' the buildings by having everyone in the legion hold tiny firecraftings over the main square so the stones are superheated and anyone trying to step on them would get fried. And the battle ends when he has his [[BlowYouAway Knights Aeris]] [[SugarWiki/MomentOfAwesome bend the air to form a quarter-mile-wide magnifying glass, concentrating the sunlight into a]] DeathRay. The general consensus among the characters seems to be that Tavi is [[SuccessThroughInsanity completely insane]].
--->'''Ehren:''' This plan is insane... ''You'' are insane... ([[{{Beat}} looks around]]) [[ItMakesSenseInContext I need some pants]].
** And that thing mentioned above about going into the most suicidal place he could think of? His plan is to piss off the EldritchAbomination-like Great Furies Garados and Thana and use them against the Vord Queen. It only really works when she tries to claim the furies and he has the even crazier idea of cutting her connection and letting them go free to wreak random destruction. They are ''very'' pissed about the attempt to control them, and Thana--an enormous, sentient ''thunderstorm''--pretty much literally chews the Vord Queen up and spits her out.
** This is the man who made ships out of ''icebergs'' and attached runners to sailing ships to make them work over ice.
* DeadpanSnarker: Tavi can really lay the snark on when he wants to. Special mentions should be given to him telling the Canim Ambassador to his ''face'' that he has bad breath when they're on the verge of a MutualKill.
* TheDreaded:
** He becomes this to the Canim. He earns the nickname "Tavar" (after a wolverine-like creature from the Canim's homeland, that is small, very vicious, and routinely takes down things bigger than itself,) and the repeated efforts of the ritualists to sabotage relations between Tavi and Varg suggest that, despite all their bluster about their superiority, they are a lot more scared of him than he is of them. In ''First Lord's Fury'', Varg reminds Nasaug of the time he "fed Sarl to the Tavar" (in ''Cursor's Fury'') and says it completely without irony, showing he was aware it wasn't even a fair fight.
** The Awakened Vord Queen also becomes terrified of him, to the point where she wastes her remaining enslaved Citizens as part of an attempt to assassinate him and the leadership of the First Aleran simply because she's so desperate to find ''any'' way to kill him and prevent him from stopping her.
* EmpoweredBadassNormal: For most of his life, Tavi had to learn how to get by without furies in a world where everyone takes having them at their beck and call for granted, which has largely meant a life of constantly figuring out solutions to problems most of his peers don't have. The feats he's able to accomplish with that alone are impressive; once he does come into furycrafting skills of his own, applying that same sort of lateral thinking to their use has the same effect as giving Batman a Green Lantern Ring.
* ExactWords: Tavi proposes to Gaius amnesty for the freed slaves who acted in concert with the Canim using the words, "to those in this region who have broken laws in acting to protect their lives and those of their families due to the Canim invasion and Kalarus's rebellion." This just so happens to include Tavi himself, as he was acting to protect his mother and others when he broke Varg out of prison.
* AFatherToHisMen: Unlike Sextus, Tavi has personally led men into battle, risked his life to save them and cares about them personally. And for this, his men, even Fidelias, come to love him right back. Fidelias lampshades this in ''First Lord's Fury'' by thinking if Tavi asked his men to march into a leviathan's mouth, they would do so willingly - because they figure they would end up going out of the other side and loaded with treasure.
* FateWorseThanDeath: As he is her ''chala'', losing Kitai but being left alive. Tavi is frequently shown to be incredibly worried on her behalf and considers it literally unthinkable to live on without her if she'd ever get killed.
* GuileHero: To make up for his lack of furycrafting, Tavi relies on his intelligence. Suffice to say, after he finally comes into his furies, it makes him all the more dangerous.
* HeroicBastard: Tavi always assumed he was just the the son of a commoner and some legionnaire having a fling. This isn't correct. His father left Isana with legal proof of their courtship and wedding to prove Tavi wasn't born a bastard.
* TheHero: Saves the country from numerous threats.
* IdiotBall:
** In ''Captain's Fury'' he fails to think Arnos would have him watched for any wrongful action when he races to trade a prisoner back for Ehren. It causes him to be brought up on charges of treason and removed from command.
** In ''Cursor's Fury'' he realizes the Canim are able to destroy the command tent because of the standardized layout of all Legion camps. Later, he berates himself for not thinking up a new system because the Vord Queen uses the same idea, but this time attacking the healers.
** Kitai says he is holding it if he senselessly kills Fidelias for his traitorous actions. She reasons that if the man wants to die to attain some redemption, some order in his life, then Tavi should put that use helping take down a greater villain.
* IJustWantToBeSpecial: Although less and less so as the books go on. However, compared to the rest of society, it's ''IJustWantToBeNormal'' [[EveryoneIsASuper in this world]].
* InHarmsWay: In later books, Tavi shows himself willing to put himself in the thickest and most dangerous part of the fighting, where his skills are the most necessary and crucial. This is in contrast to the rest of Alera's leadership, including his grandfather Gaius Sextus, who would try to maneuver a political rival into that spot instead on the off-chance that it might end up being a convenient way to get rid of them.
* IShallTauntYou: Preferred manner of keeping his opponents off balance. He wins a duel against one of the most dangerous swordspeople in Alera with just six words.
* ItSeemedLikeAGoodIdeaAtTheTime: Desperately trying to think of a way to kill the ridiculously-lethal Vord Queen, Tavi leads her to the mountain Garados to try to wake it and Thana up. Unfortunately, the Vord Queen manages to get along to trying to ''control'' these two great furies - thankfully, Kitai manages to stop her from completing doing so rather than the other possible situation of "The Vord Queen is now has two great furies at her command and is literally unstoppable".
* ItsPersonal: Kitai gets him to openly admit his inner rage at Fidelias's actions during Second Calderon, and how this rage is blinding him to other matters.
* LikeFatherLikeSon: ''Lots'' of comparisons are made to Septimus, though Tavi is smarter than his dad thanks to a good twenty years of {{Badass Normal}}ity. Both are courageous on the battlefield, a natural leader. Both think about the plight of those who are less fortunate. Both fall for a woman who was considered taboo and scandalous, Isana being a commoner and Kitai being not even Aleran, and both women would stand up to their loves, challenging them and their choices when they felt they were wrong but never make an argument about it. They also both get seasick really easily. It's to the point that most of the characters who realize who Tavi really is pre-TheReveal do so because Tavi ends up acting ''exactly'' as Septimus would in the given situation.
* MagneticHero: Tavi has a way of attracting former enemies to his side, usually due to a combination of his intelligence, the way he cares for his subordinates and how he fights right in the thick of it with his troops.
* MasterSwordsman: Downplayed. His lack of furycrafting means he isn't as good as his peers, but he practices a lot between books and gets good enough to stand toe-to-toe with [[PsychoForHire Phrygiar Navaris]] in a duel.
* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: Tavi frequently shows excellent instincts and great skill at reading dangerous situations. While a large part of it is implied to be just due to his cleverness, comments from other characters (most notably the Great Fury Alera herself) claiming that the House of Gaius has ''always'' been exceptionally skilled in reading and reacting to predicted/future events suggests that even when he was without his furies, Tavi's instincts might have something supernatural (possibly a limited form/sense of prophecy) helping guide him and his family's actions towards the best possible path.
* MeaningfulName: ''Four'' of them:
** Gaius Octavian, meaning both the son of Septimus, and is the proper name of Emperor UsefulNotes/{{Augustus}}.
** His Canim nickname, "Tavar", is the name of a wolverine-like predator native to Canea, which even professional Canim warriors avoid because it fearlessly, cleverly, and ferociously fights to defeat its enemies and protect its territory despite its small size (relative to a Cane). In other words, it's exactly like Tavi.
** 'Scipio' is probably a reference to Scipio Africanus, the genius Roman general who defeated Hannibal. Rufus may refer to several people - the general Lucius Verginius Rufus seems plausible. "Here lies Rufus, who after defeating Vindex, did not take power, but gave it to the fatherland."
* MindlinkMates: With Kitai thanks to her bonding with him. They can sense the other one's presence and general moods. And when he gains furycrafting, she gains it too, while Tavi gains enhanced senses and endurance from her.
* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: He eventually gains the title Gaius Tavarus Magnus; "Tavarus Magnus" is roughly equivalent to "Lord Wolverine the Great."
* NiceGuy: Tavi has more than once shown immense compassion and understanding for others, actively tries to think the better of others, and wants to make the world a better place for no other reason than he feels that no one should suffer needlessly. It's to the point that he's sometimes considered to be a bit ''too'' nice to the people who should be his mortal enemies. Most notably, the Canim Hunter Sha is visibly taken aback when Tavi offers his sympathies over the deaths of his fellow Hunters in ''Princeps' Fury''.
* NiceJobBreakingItHero: He has no way of knowing that cutting himself in the Wax Forest would wake up the Vord Queen, but it did. Or that it would absorb his and Kitai's blood and inherit their traits.
* NoHistoricalFiguresWereHarmed: [[invoked]] According to WordOfGod, Tavi's characterization was heavily inspired by both Julius Caesar and Caesar Augustus.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness:
** In ''Cursor's Fury'' he has this revelation after a moment of self-examination. He is missing Kitai deeply and their strong bond makes being apart for long distances painful. However, he realizes that for the past few days, that pain has been gone and he has stopped talking about her in a forlorn manner. It takes him only a moment to realize Kitai has moved into the Legion camp he is stationed at, under the guise of a blind beggar.
** [[invoked]] In ''First Lord's Fury'', the Great Fury Alera grimly warns him of the InferredHolocaust that will come over the Alerans once her form has finished "dissolving" back into the countryside. He first desperately tries to come up with a CrazyEnoughToWork plan to solve this issue like he always does... but he realizes that even ''he'' can't possibly solve an issue of that scale and breaks down crying out of both guilt and grief.
* OlderThanTheyLook: In the first couple of books in particular; Amara assumes he's about twelve when she first sees him, to which he grouchily replies that he's fifteen. The reason he looks so young is that his mother intentionally stunted his growth when he was a child via watercrafting to make him seem younger than he was, in order to keep people from guessing that he might be the son of Gaius Septimus, who died fifteen years before the first book.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: Considering how much damage the guy can cause with [[HandicappedBadass no powers, is it any surprise that giving him access to the full crafting abilities of the First Lord caused an insane amount of badassitude to ensue?]]
* ThePlan: Several in the last three books.
* RagsToRoyalty: Starts as a poor, [[TheCallPutMeOnHold powerless shepherd]]. The series finishes with Tavi as the [[AsskickingEqualsAuthority First Lord]].
* ReallyRoyaltyReveal: Happens to him in ''Captain's Fury.''
* RefugeInAudacity:
** Tavi's way to stop the Icemen from destroying the Shieldwall in the future? '''Give it to them.''' With plans to have them ''lease it back'' to the Alerans, no less. Fidelias practically collapses from shock when he hears this.
** And, say, ''every other thing he does'', leading to hilarious moments that go something like "Oh God, he's doing something crazy... Meh. It's Tavi, go with it." Which overlaps nicely with his crazy amounts of enthusiasm, and the entry for CrazyEnoughToWork above.
*** Virtually everything he does is awesome and/or inventive, resulting in some of it fitting this trope while some doesn't. In addition to how he handles the Icemen, though, another example quite clearly fits this trope: In ''Captain's Fury'', he breaks half a dozen laws, and in ways that clearly could not be covered up or ignored. How does he handle it? He suggests to the First Lord a general amnesty for Alerans who cooperated with the Canim in conquered territory, but phrased in such a way that covers Tavi himself as well.
* SecretLegacy: Tavi grows up being told that his father (a nameless ''legionare'') and mother died at the First Battle of Calderon, killed by Marat. Turns out that his father was actually Gaius Septimus, legitimate heir to the First Lord; his mother, Isana, survived and went underground as his aunt to continue to raise him; and Septimus was assassinated during the battle by a cabal of Citizens.
* SingleTargetSexuality: Though he starts off with a childish crush on a steadholt girl, he falls ''hard'' for Kitai not long afterwards and stays that way for the rest of the series (much to [[HandsomeLech Max's]] frustration while trying to get him to loosen up).
* SmartPeoplePlayChess: Or the local equivalent, ''ludus''.
* TallDarkAndHandsome: He's a bit of a late bloomer (what with Isana slowing his growth and all), but even in ''Furies of Calderon'' Amara notes that he's a good-looking boy. By ''Captain's Fury'', he's repeatedly mentioned to be quite tall and rather attractive, with Kitai's cousin Enna [[EatingTheEyeCandy openly leering at him]] when she interrupts Kitai and Tavi in an intimate moment. As evidenced by both his uncle Bernard and his father Septimus, this seems to run in Tavi's family.
* TookALevelInBadass: In the first book, he's a steadholder's nephew with an eye for adaptation and a cool head in a crisis. In the second, he's a prize pupil at the Academy, the First Lord's personal assistant, a Cursor in training, and is good enough at combat that his trainer has him fake being bad to practice being undercover. He only gets better from there.
* TranquilFury: When he discovers that Fidelias had been masquerading as Valiar Marcus. He's very calm even as he makes it clear that he's absolutely furious at Fidelias. He only explodes later in private when arguing with Kitai and she's giving him a WhatTheHellHero speech for wasting such a valuable asset against the Vord.
* WarriorTherapist: Against Navaris. He attacks her mental problems to make her sloppy in actual combat. It's actually genuinely unsettling to see since the weakness he exploits in her is something he shares, so to see him dredging up someone else's worst memories to get the advantage of them in a fight, especially considering that he can only do so because he has the same problem, is jarring.
-->"I never knew my father either."
* WhatBeautifulEyes: Tavi's green eyes are typically mentioned as being among his most attractive features, and are easily the clearest indicator that he's the son of Princeps Septimus (since they're virtually identical). Kitai specifically mentions them when he meets back up with her in ''Academ's Fury'' prior to them becoming an OfficialCouple.
* WorthyOpponent: The Canim word "gadara" (respected and trusted enemy) is used a lot around him.
* XanatosGambit: While he is young and not always good at these, he was taught the art of them in his Cursor training. His old master often told him that, "Every problem was an opportunity, from a certain point of view." Take the IdiotBall example: he was able to move things about to avoid summary execution, be in a spot to escape from jail, go on a mission to gain a key ally, and defeat Arnos summarily. None of which would have happened if Arnos hadn't arrested him.
* YouAreInCommandNow: In ''Cursor's Fury'' he is placed in the the army under the guise of Rufus Scipio. He is given the rank of third subtribune to the Tribune Logistica (aka lowest rank Quartermaster Officer). And then he's delayed on the way to the officers' meeting and misses getting hit by an enormous lightning attack sent from the Canim that rendered all the other officers either dead or unable to work, and gets a surprise promotion to Captain.
[[/folder]]

!!Aleran Steadholders

[[folder:Isana]]
!Isana

Isana is Tavi's aunt (well, actually, mother). Born in the Calderon Valley, she is an incredibly powerful watercrafter but lacks access to other Furies. Isana distrusts Sextus because he allowed her husband, his son Septimus, to die, but becomes increasingly entangled in Aleran politics as the series goes on.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Isana:
* ActionMom: From an aunt's perspective, she is very protective of her nephew. She once flooded a river to keep him safe. Turns out, though, that she is his mother.
* ACupAngst: She was always a little peeved that her body looked more like that of a young woman barely on this side of adulthood than that of someone who has silver in her hair by the time of the second book. This, in fact, made her think that she'd never attract another man after Septimus.
* {{Ambadassador}}: She and Lady Placida serve as ambassadors to the Icemen. She even shields them from an Aleran attack.
* BadassLongcoat: Begins wearing one in ''Princep's Fury'', on the urging of Araris. It's thick leather with interwoven steel plates; not quite as good as legion armor, but better than nothing, and easier for her to fight and move in.
* BewareTheNiceOnes: She's one of the nicest people in the world. She can also fight a [[PersonOfMassDestruction High Lord]] in a DuelToTheDeath and make him admit defeat by [[WarriorTherapist psychoanalyzing him mid-fight]], absolutely ''destroys'' six monsters that could kill experienced soldiers with water and [[ManipulativeBastard manipulates]] both what amounts to a PhysicalGod and her [[TheDragon Dragon]] to put them in a vulnerable position while they ''knew'' she was jerking them around.
* CharacterDevelopment: She becomes remarkably manipulative and clever as she delves into Aleran politics at the Aquitaines' encouragement, to the point where she becomes the HopeBringer ''three times over''. Furthermore, she goes from someone who abhors violence and has always considered herself a [[NonActionGuy Non-Action Girl]] who wanted to hide Tavi away from the rest of the world for his protection to someone willing to sacrifice her own life in the name of permanently ending a bloody war and also making herself as public as possible in order to better garner support for the change that she knows should have already happened long before.
* DeadpanSnarker: As part of her taking a certain level in cynicism as the series goes on, with her gaining a rather dry opinion concerning her being repeatedly dragged into political intrigue against her will.
* DistressedDamsel: If there's a situation where she can be kidnapped and/or swoon, she'll be taken full advantage of. She even lampshades it later on:
-->'''Isana:''' At some point I would like a few weeks to go by in which I do not faint during a crisis.
* DoesNotKnowHisOwnStrength: Isana is an incredibly powerful watercrafter – one of the strongest in all of Alera. She never really grasped how powerful she was, assuming that her great strength came from familiarity with the Calderon Valley's furies. It isn't until later on that she begins to understand her true strength, and suspects that Septimus passed on many of his furies to her when he died.
* EatingTheEyeCandy: Finds herself... ''distracted'' when a shirtless Araris is fencing with Tavi aboard the ''Slive''.
* TheEmpath: A result of her powerful Watercrafting ability.
* FailureToSaveMurder: The reason she hates Gaius Sextus and didn't trust him with Tavi's safety.
* FamilyRelationshipSwitcheroo: She claims to be Tavi's aunt with a sister that died in childbirth. In actuality, she is Tavi's mother while her sister did die due to Tavi's birth.
* FemmeFatalons: One of her less-used tricks.
* HopeBringer:
** She is this to the Icemen when they sense she is truly honest about wanting peace, that peace might finally be achieved between their peoples.
** She becomes increasingly beloved by the common folk of Alera as the series goes on, with many in the Dianic League seeing her as one of the main reasons to actually hope for the end of slavery in everyone's current lifetime.
** Isana weaponizes this by giving Invidia hope of escape from the creature on her chest as a means of getting her to betray the Vord Queen.
* HealingHands: Give her enough reason, and she doesn't even need a tub of water to help her. She even becomes one of the best healers in all of Alera, with her giving back the '''eyes''' of a blinded First Aleran ''legionare'' in ''Captain's Fury''.
* AnIcePerson: Once she figures out that yes, snow counts as water.
-->'''Doroga:''' If I ever invade Calderon again, it will be in the summer.
* LivingLieDetector: [[invoked]] She sees through ''[[MagnificentBastard Gaius Sextus]]'' at one point. To put it into perspective, High Lady Placidus Aria ''misses'' the same opening in Gaius' facade.
* MamaBear: Everything she does, she does because she wants to protect Tavi.
* MakingASplash: Quite possibly the most powerful watercrafter in all of Alera, High Lords included.
* MasterOfOneMagic: As a single-element Crafter, Isana wouldn't normally be considered very impressive as Alerans rank their powers – but as mentioned above, she can do a ''lot'' with what she's got.
* NiceGirl: Isana is quite possibly the kindest and most considerate person in all of Alera, being both selfless and altruistic while always looking out those for less fortunate than her. Notably, her reaction to seeing the collared Alerans the Awakened Vord Queen has roped into serving as her PraetorianGuard is not one of fear, but pity.
* OlderThanTheyLook: She's probably in her mid-forties, but could pass for eighteen if it wasn't for some grey in her hair.
* RagsToRoyalty: She is the Cinderella-type, with the bonus of meeting Septimus when hired by him to be their personal help.
* TookALevelInBadass: She gets a ''lot'' more powerful after a little swim in the Leviathans' Run. It's not entirely clear, though, exactly why that is: maybe she got them from the swim in the ocean in a stressful situation, but then again maybe she had that power all along or Septimus left her some furies of his own when he died and she didn't realize it. In either case, any extraordinary use of her power in her homeland is more normal where she is familiar with the place, and because she's a nobody from the hinterlands, she just assumed she couldn't possibly be that powerful otherwise.
* UnhappyMedium: She's as good or better at watercrafting as some of the High Lords, but doesn't share their ability to block out [[TheEmpath emotions]] with metalcrafting. This leaves her curled up into a little ball from emotional overload a couple of times.
* WarriorTherapist:
** When she fights Antillus Raucus in ''Princeps' Fury'', explaining to him as she's about to die that the real reason he doesn't want to listen to her is jealousy at Septimus for defying his parents and marrying the commoner he loved and regret that he didn't do the same with Max's mother. He later acknowledges he was mistrusting of her because she could have been in league with those who killed his friend Septimus but her willingness to sacrifice herself as such proved him wrong.
** Her above actions were also present before the Icemen, who are powerful empaths. As they felt her words and emotions, they knew that she truly was there to make peace for them and the Alerans, even at the cost of her own life. Her willingness to die pushed them to agree to a ceasefire with the Alerans so they could fight the Vord and not fear a surprise attack.
* WaterIsWomanly: A single-element Crafter of Water and one of the strongest watercrafters in all of Alera. She's also selfless, kind empath and motherly figure for Tavi.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Bernard]]
!Bernard, Count Calderon

Bernard is Tavi's uncle and Isana's brother, possessing the power of both earth and woodcrafting. He begins the series as a steadholder (wealthy farmer/town mayor), but ultimately takes on a noble title as Count of Calderon and passes his steadholt to Isana. He is in love with Amara, and the two are married (at first in secret, but later openly).
----
!!Tropes that apply to Bernard:
* AlmightyJanitor: Formerly. He was only a rank-and-file soldier during his time in the Legions, despite his crafting skill being evident enough that Gaius pegs him as a former Knight Flora without a second thought (Bernard always thought the Knights were [[ArrogantKungFuGuy too uppity for his tastes]]). By the end of the first book, he's now the Count of Calderon and Alera's chief ambassador to the Marat, a station and title far more worthy of his abilities.
* ArcherArchetype: One of the best archers in the kingdom capable of taking down [[PersonOfMassDestruction High Lords]] with his arrows.
* BattleCouple: With Amara.
* BowAndSwordInAccord: Being both a powerful [[SuperStrength earthcrafter]] and [[ImprobableAimingSkills woodcrafter]], he's just as capable shooting targets at long range as he is at smashing them to a pulp with the biggest blunt object available.
* CanisMajor: Brutus, his earth fury, takes the form of a massive wolf made of stone when manifested.
* CarryABigStick: Favors a bow, but when melee is necessitated he prefers a large club like most earthcrafters, to better take advantage of his SuperStrength.
* DishingOutDirt: He's a powerful earthcrafter.
* GentleGiant: Bernard towers over pretty much everyone around him, family and loved ones included, and his fury-derived SuperStrength makes him a terror on the battlefield, but he's still a bonafide NiceGuy who shows respect to all, and a genuine hero for the Realm.
* GreenThumb: He is also a powerful woodcrafter.
* HappilyMarried:
** It is implied he was very much this to his late wife. He tenderly cared for her things long after she was gone, including her shoes he gives to Amara when they met.
** To Amara as well. Unfortunately, her own insecurities often leave her feeling more worried about their relationship than there is.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: He's pretty blunt and demanding to Tavi in the first book, but largely out of ToughLove so the latter can learn to handle himself. He becomes a lot nicer in later books, the implication being that pursuing a relationship with Amara brought some joy back into his life.
* LockedOutOfTheLoop: He has no idea of Tavi's true parentage for much of the series. He likely learns the truth sometime between the end of ''Cursor's Fury'', after Fade displayed his impressive skills and saved their lives, and Tavi's open declaration.
* LoopholeAbuse: He plans on using a small loophole to both keep Amara as his wife and fulfill his duties to have children. He will adopt a few of the bastard children other Aleran nobles created and cast aside because one parent wasn't of proper rank or station.
* TheLostLenore: His first wife's death left him not taking up with anyone for years until Amara came into his life.
* LoveAtFirstSight: He admits to have fallen for Amara when he tended her shoes after rescuing her and Tavi from the wilderness.
* MayDecemberRomance: He's old enough to have already married and have two children when he meets Amara.
* MightyGlacier: Especially compared to Amara. His Earth fury Brutus gives him SuperStrength, but he doesn't have the SuperSpeed that wind furies grant.
* MrFanservice: Many of Amara's chapters make note of his attractive HeroicBuild and handsome features.
* NotNowKiddo:
** Bernard to Frederic the Younger, regarding the Vord parasite he's captured in a cup.
** On the other hand, the other Citizens [[CassandraTruth pretty much ignore him]] when he tries to warn them about the Vord. After trying in vain for a while, he decides "screw it" and starts covertly building up Calderon's defenses instead.
* PapaWolf: He is fiercely protective of Tavi, especially before his crafting came in.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure:
** When he learns Doroga is a reasonable and honorable man, he is more than willing to listen to the needs of the Marat, honoring their agreements and later helping him fight the first incursion of the Vord.
** Later, he tries to convince others of the seriousness of the Vord threat. When that fails, he prepares his domain for the inevitable incursion and develops some serious weapons and defenses (thanks to some of Tavi's ideas).
* RetiredBadass: Ex-military, in fact.
* SilverFox: Downplayed. He's about a dozen years older than Amara, but is apparently aging [[MrFanservice quite nicely.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Kord]]
!Kord

A Steadholder like Bernard, who runs his Steadholt along with his two sons Aric and Bittan. Unlike Bernard, he is a brutal thug and his Steadholt is a WretchedHive that runs on slavery.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Kord
* AbusiveParents: Kord is a horrible father who mistreats Aric for being a [[WhiteSheep decent person]].
* AssholeVictim: No one feels bad for him when he's murdered by the Marat, not even his surviving son Aric.
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: He gets both scalped and his heart ripped out of his chest by a group of angry Marat of the Horse Tribe off-page after Odiana arranges it to look like he was responsible for desecrating the bodies of some of their fallen warriors.
* DishingOutDirt: An earthcrafter, though not of Bernard's level.
* HateSink: [[invoked]] Basically the main purpose of his existence in the first book is to give readers a villain they could hate wholeheartedly (Atsurak doesn't even interact with the main cast in his brief appearances, while Team Fidelias operates on EvilIsCool basis and has some redeeming traits).
* HeManWomanHater: Particularly brutal to female slaves.
* LaserGuidedKarma: Not only is he betrayed by the son he frequently abused and insulted, but the woman he brutally raped sets him up for a particularly painful and hideous death.
* ParentalFavoritism: Spoils Bittan, his thuggish son.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: A massive misogynist.
* ScaryScorpions: His Earth Fury manifests as one.
* SlaveCollar: Fond of discipline collars that make people take pleasure in obeying the orders of the person who put on the collar.
* SmugSnake: There's numerous times throughout ''Furies of Calderon'' that show him to be far less clever than he thinks himself to be.
* TheSociopath: Kord never shows anything like genuine empathy or love for another person, and even his ParentalFavoritism towards Bittan is ultimately less familial affection and more making sure that he has an effective servant/bruiser on his side.
[[/folder]]

!!Cursors

[[folder:Amara]]
!Amara, Countess Calderon

Amara is a windcrafter and a Cursor, one of the First Lord's elite messengers, spies, and general agents. She comes to the Calderon Valley while trying to return to the capital and warn Sextus of Aquitaine's plotting, thereby setting off much of the books' action. She is married to Bernard, but sometimes angsts about her fears of infertility (Alerans place great value on having children who will inherit their powers, to the point that a man of Bernard's rank is ''legally obligated'' to have children).
----
!!Tropes that apply to Amara:
* ActionGirl: Serves as both a spy and personal agent for Gaius Sextus.
* BabiesEverAfter: Thanks to Isana saving her with the Blessing of Night, a cure-all mushroom, the Blight-induced damage to her reproductive system years ago is healed, and during Tavi and Kitai's wedding, she is heavily pregnant. This doesn't include her adopted children, Masha and two boys.
* BattleCouple: With Bernard.
* BlowYouAway: One of the most skilled windcrafters in all of Alera.
* BrokenPedestal:
** Fidelias' betrayal really cut her deeply, as the man wasn't just her teacher but one for pretty much every Cursor.
** Her opinion of Gaius Sextus drops dramatically after his ShootTheDog moment.
* CharacterDevelopment: While she starts out with UndyingLoyalty towards both Alera and Sextus, she ends the series with only the former intact as she gains an uncomfortably intimate understanding of the DecadentCourt that is Aleran politics. Furthermore, she also gradually becomes less insecure and learns to take more pride in her accomplishments, finding great relish in becoming a beloved Countess of the Calderon Valley after quitting her former job as a Cursor.
* CoolHorse: Her air fury, Cirrus, appears as a translucent horse made of air when it's manifested physically.
* DangerousForbiddenTechnique: During the final assault to get Gaius to Mt. Kalare, she draws her fury so deeply into her, it allows her to move at Flash-like speeds. However, she lacks the secondary powers to do this without serious harm to her body as a result.
* DarkSkinnedBlonde: She's described as having dark skin and honey-brown hair.
* DeadpanSnarker: Shows herself to be quite sarcastic across the novels, such as her only responding with a FascinatingEyebrow when Tavi comes up with a terrible excuse for why he went to go get flowers for Beritte instead of getting the sheep like he was supposed to.
* {{Deuteragonist}}: She has the second-largest number of POV sections in the novels (right after Tavi's).
* EatingTheEyeCandy: PlayedForLaughs, with many of the chapters from her point of view having her getting lost in fantasies about or distracted by her husband's attractive physique.
* FatalFlaw: For all of her heroism and selflessness, Amara is an incredibly insecure person, often thinking [[HeroicSelfDeprecation incredibly lowly of herself]] and viewing herself as far less important than she is.
* {{Flight}}: She is one of the most talented flyers in the series. Invidia, a very powerful High Lord, defers to her in aerial tactics. The First Lord himself comments on how she is the first person he's flown with since Septimus' death who is able to keep up with him.
* FragileSpeedster: Might very well be the fastest flier in the Realm, but without Earth or Metalcrafting, she's not the most durable.
* GoodCannotComprehendEvil: Downplayed in ''Cursor's Fury''. After hearing Rook allude to the horrific techniques utilized in the training of Kalarus' female Bloodcrows, Amara can intellectually understand it but still finds herself unable to fully comprehend the sheer dehumanization and callousness practiced by Kalarus.
* GuileHero: Shown to be adept at political maneuvering and coming up with plans on the spot. Her preemptive double-cross of [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder Invidia]] in ''Captain's Fury'', planned and carried out during a high-speed aerial chase with Kalare's minions, is probably the highlight.
* HappilyMarried: To Bernard. Eventually.
* HeroicRROD: After the DangerousForbiddenTechnique mentioned above, she fell into this, unable to move, barely conscious, and probably dying until Gaius heals her.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Amara might be quite sarcastic at times and downright ruthless in combat, but she has repeatedly shown herself to be an incredibly selfless and kind person, willingly putting her own life on the line multiple times for what she thinks is right along with actively trying to make the world she lives in a better place.
* LawOfInverseFertility: As mentioned, she's afraid she's infertile, and Citizens are ''required'' to have kids. She avoids marrying him for a while on IWantMyBelovedToBeHappy logic and even after that remains insecure. Bernard eventually gets exasperated and points out that they could just adopt. This gets fixed after she's dosed with the Blessing of Night to recover from fatal poisoning.
* MasterSwordsman: A gender-inverted case. While still not on the skill of a [[ImplausibleFencingPowers Knights Ferrous]], Amara is an incredibly talented swordswoman, often using her windcrafting to accentuate her attacks.
* MinoredInAsskicking: Cursors are spies and messengers first and foremost, and generally intended to fight only when necessary. Amara still finds herself in many of the battles in the books, and holds her own in just about all of them.
* {{Troll}}: A more subtle case than most. For instance, as Tavi notes with quiet amusement in ''Captain's Fury'', she mocks High Lord Aquitaine's "lazy and confident" pose in the military planning session at the Elinarch by mimicking it near perfectly while on the other side of the room.
* WeakButSkilled: Amara is no slouch when it comes to windcrafting, but she lacks the raw power that the High Lords and other strong Citizens might have. That doesn't stop her from being one of the best fliers in the world, compensating her lower power by sheer talent and dedication.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Ehren]]
!Ehren ex Cursori

Another of Tavi's classmates, and a Cursor. Like Tavi, tends to rely more on his wits than his furies.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Ehren:
* AscendedExtra: In a sense, with him getting first a brief portion of the introduction to ''Cursor's Fury'' narrated from his perspective (along with a single chapter later on in the same book) before he's promoted to a regular viewpoint character in the last two books so that the readers can see more of how the Vord War is progressing in Alera.
* BadassBookworm: [[invoked]] One of the smartest characters in the series, which is saying something.
* BadassNormal: By [[EveryoneIsASuper Aleran]] standards, anyway. He has some talent for wood and windcrafting, but rarely relies on them over his talents with [[KnifeNut blades]] and [[GuileHero spycraft]].
* BeneathNotice: See that small guy with lots of papers in his hands? See him just walk around the rooms and hand out papers? Look at how weak his furies are, He cannot do anything with them one must think. What you don't see is a man carrying a large number of knives and a mind that manipulated a powerful High Lord to commit suicide.
* CasualDangerDialogue: Has some ''very'' funny moments like this. In one instance during ''Captain's Fury'', hearing a commotion on deck while aboard ''The Slive'', he opens his door to ask what's going on. When an arrow drives through the door close enough to touch his hand, he just goes, "Oh," and shuts the door. Later in the same book, after he wakes up naked, in a healing tub, staring at what he thought was an enemy about to kill him, his response is, "Oh. Well, I see some things have happened while I was lying down."
* TheChessmaster: Very good at thinking of contingency plans. And, it turns out, at manipulating people – in ''First Lord's Fury,'' he plays Aquitainus Attis like a ''harp'', resulting in the latter's death before he can become a threat to Tavi.
* DisneyDeath: Briefly in order to deflect suspicion that he was behind the assassination of Aquitane.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: His first few moments in ''Academ's Fury'' show a young man who calls Tavi out on his foolishness but will still stick with Tavi despite knowing they are walking into trouble.
* GuileHero: He's a capable fighter after [[TookALevelInBadass taking a couple levels in badass]], but is still horribly outclassed by the vast majority of the villains in the series, Aleran and otherwise. He gets by with cunning, manipulation, and being one of the most capable {{Rules Lawyer}}s in the land.
* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: In the last book. It is part of a plan to fake his death for a time until Attis dies, after Ehren manipulates him to commit tactical suicide. He later admits that the faked death was a little more authentic than he intended, as he hadn't planned on ''actually'' being skewered.
* KnifeNut: Daggers are his favored weapon, and he carries so many it's a small wonder metalcrafting senses don't go haywire whenever he's within a mile radius. At one point someone identifies him as a Cursor based solely on "the number of knives he had hidden on him."
* ManipulativeBastard: See TheChessmaster.
* NerdGlasses: One of a very small handful of characters mentioned to wear glasses, which serves to emphasize his studious personality.
* OlderAndWiser: [[invoked]] At Eastercon 2015, [[WordOfGod Jim Butcher]] stated that Ehren will have become this as he takes up the role of teacher for a future class of Cursors with Canim and Marat now joining.
* TheBladeAlwaysLandsPointyEndIn: He's very accurate with a throwing knife, at one point scoring a headshot on a vordknight as it's trying to impale him through the side of a high-speed wind coach, on ''reflex''.
* TheSmartGuy: Not quite in Tavi's league – though, to be fair, the only people who come close are Varg, Sextus, Aquitaine (at least before Ehren himself "kills" him), and Fidelias – but he is very clever.
* TheQuietOne: Doesn't usually talk much, which is rather handy in a spy.
* TookALevelInBadass: He's gained a ''lot'' of levels by the time of ''Cursor's Fury'' and his promotion to a full Cursor alongside Tavi. While in the previous book he's mostly a noncombatant and a bit of a CowardlyLion, he's now a trained warrior and spy with a level of ruthlessness that even Tavi finds unnerving - slicing [[SmugSnake Ullus']] throat after he's [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness outlived his usefulness]] without a moment of hesitation is only the first example.
* WeakButSkilled: In terms of furycrafting power, he is pathetic and weak. However, he is a skilled fighter, his furies allow him some skills but won't regularly set off the wards meant to detect furycrafting, and he can obfuscate with the best of them.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Magnus]]
!Astorius Magnus

A senior Cursor, under whom Tavi trains. He believes their ancestors lacked furycrafting but several of the teachers at the Academy laugh at him for this.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Magnus:
* BeneathNotice: A specialty of the Cursors. He keeps his place in the wilderness well stocked in wines and sweet breads to give to passing traders because one may not know what they could let slip when drunk. Tavi studies under him for six months and never picked up the fact he is a cursor too.
* BecomingTheMask: Originally, his archaeological work was a cover, but he admits that it's really grown on him.
* CassandraTruth: At first, Tavi just doesn't want to believe that his trusted First Spear Valiar Marcus was really Fidelias.
* CoolOldGuy: He's fairly eccentric, but gives good advise to Tavi on how to survive in the Legion.
* CrouchingScholarHiddenBadass: He first appears as a professor who's semi-voluntarily exiled himself to an archeological dig. And then it turns out he's also a senior cursor, and served in the Legions, and Fidelias notes that if he wants someone dead, they'll die.
* DeadpanSnarker: [[invoked]] He likes to point out when Tavi is acting a little ridiculous. One of these lines in ''Princeps' Fury'': "More mash, please, Your Highness."
* EarlyBirdCameo: Tavi cites his work at the Academy in ''Academ's Fury'', the book before he was actually introduced.
* IfIWantedYouDead: There is a training skill all Cursors must learn. It is to sneak up upon an unsuspecting victim completely unnoticed and within distance to plunge one's blade into the back of the neck, severing major arteries and the trachea. He does this to Fidelias when he begins to suspect something is not quite right with "Marcus". Fidelias realizes if Magnus wants him dead, he wouldn't have announced himself first.
* TheMentor: One of Tavi's mentors; he helps Tavi acclimate to Legion life, and later openly advises him.
* OlderSidekick: Who's also a valet.
* ServileSnarker: He rebuffs Tavi when, in ''Princeps' Fury'' Tavi ordered him and the cursors to not gather information on the Cane during the boat trip, with the line, "And Your Highness expected me to ''listen''?"
* SpotTheThread: His exposure of Fidelius starts when he notices a few inconsistencies in Valiar Marcus's backstory, such as having seemingly vanished off the face of the earth after serving his term.
* TheyCalledMeMad: Magnus invokes this when celebrating the success of his and Tavi's furycraft-free catapult at the beginning of ''Cursor's Fury''. (Magnus isn't exactly a [[MadScientist Mad Historian]], but to be fair, the fools at the Academy ''did'' call him mad.)
[[/folder]]

!!Lords and Other Nobles

[[folder:Gaius Sextus]]
!Gaius Sextus, First Lord of Alera

Gaius Sextus is the ruler of Alera, the most powerful Crafter alive, and essentially [[Literature/HarryPotter Albus Dumbledore]] without the [[ObfuscatingStupidity facade of eccentric senility]]. While often [[MagnificentBastard ruthless and manipulative]], he is both intelligent and wise and everything he does is for the greater good of Alera. All respect Gaius's abilities, but some (like Isana) think he's lost touch with the common people and is therefore dangerous. Others (like Aquitaine or Kalarus) want to take his throne for themselves.
----
!!Tropes applying to Sextus:
* AccompliceByInaction: Characters who were close to Septimus such as Isana, Attis, and Raucus consider Gaius to be this. His failure to do anything to protect Septimus is the root of their dislike and distrust of him.
* AntiHero: Pragmatic type. He destroys High Lord Kalarus, the city of Kalare, the valley the city's in, and thousands of Kalarus's innocent subjects... because it ends the war faster as well as saving more lives in the long run. He's also a ruthlessly practical man who literally tells Amara to her face that, while he personally wouldn't like it since he enjoys her company and finds her to be an excellent servant to the Crown, he would sacrifice her life in a heartbeat if it was necessary for the stability of the Realm.
* BadassBoast: Gives quite possibly ''the'' most epic one in the entire series when he's pulling a BrandishmentBluff on Kalarus Brencis Minoris in ''Captain's Fury'':
-->'''Gaius Sextus:''' Boy, you have a choice. You may choose to stand with your father against me. Or you may choose to live.\\
'''Kalarus Brencis Minoris:''' ...[[BlatantLies I'm not afraid of you]].\\
'''Gaius Sextus:''' Of course you are, and should be.
* BatmanGambit: He specializes in them. One of his more benign ones was making Tavi and Max roommates to help them become friends. Another is putting Amara's life on the line to test Fidelias's loyalty in the first book.
* BeautifulDreamer: A non-romantic version. According to Alera, he would visit Tavi's dorm when he was in the Academy and watch him sleep. It gave him comfort and pleasure.
* BestServedCold: Gaius waits about twenty-five years before killing the first of two men responsible for Septimus's death (see Moral Event Horizon). Then he convinces the second man to fly out against an insurmountable number of Vord with little backup.
* BigGood: Zigzagged. On the one hand, he's definitely much more benevolent and reasonable than half the other High Lords of the Realm. On the other hand, his cynical and manipulative nature is at least partially responsible ''for'' the sorry state of the Realm at the beginning of the story, and by the end of the story and his untimely demise almost none of the "good-aligned" characters are loyal to him any longer.
* BrandishmentBluff: While he is an incredibly powerful and dangerous crafter, he knows he is by no means a young man. Against a young crafter of suitable strength, such as Brencis Minoris, he would much rather not have to fight the person. This is especially true in his mission to blow up a volcano. Time is of the essence and delaying to fight a relatively well rested Brencis Minoris while Gaius is recovering still from his prolonged injuries in the swamp would likely lead to a failed mission.
* CreativeSterility: One of his main character flaws is that of his simple lack of creativity. Sextus, while intelligent and excellent at manipulating others from behind the scenes, is not one to directly challenge the cultural institutions of Alera even ''if'' he supports certain reforms. Really, Fidelias puts it best in the last book, describing Sextus as a man who "never looked past the wisdom of his forefathers."
* TheChessmaster: Very adept at maneuvering other Lords politically. In the fifteen years after his son and soon after his first wife died, likely after some period of mourning, he started over a decade's worth of selecting a new wife from the daughters or nieces of the High Lords or their families. His eventual choice was just a political stratagem to prevent neighboring High Lords from becoming allies as Gaius would literally have the one High Lord's daughter at his side.
* ChromeChampion: The first one to do it, and the only one who isn't exclusively a metalcrafter. It's part of his HeroicSacrifice.
* {{Determinator}}: Best seen in ''Captain's Fury'' when he takes a third option to the powerful wards Kalarus set up to detect him and walks without aide of his furies to Kalare's main city. How far? Just over 300 miles and Gaius is well into his eighties. He won't let anything stop him, whether blisters on his feet or a broken leg.
* DidntSeeThatComing: His above plan to get into Kalare got off to a bad foot because Gaius discounted an unknown known: blisters. He assumed his months of increased walking without being augmented by his furies would suffice in giving him the strength and endurance to handle the trip. If not for Bernard and Amara's quick actions, the plan would have failed before they got very far at all.
* DoNotGoGentle: Dying of old age, weak lungs, having walked several hundred miles in unpleasant environments, and having been secretly poisoned, Gaius Sextus does not run from the Vord but takes them on alone. He unleashes the long dormant volcano under his city and takes a huge number of Vord with him.
* DontMakeMeDestroyYou: He poses this point against Brencis Minoris in order to make the young man run away rather than face Gaius in a fight. He later reveals it was in part a BrandishmentBluff.
* ExactWords: When telling Amara and Bernard about Kalarus's plan with the volcano, he says that he will not let Kalare's citizens die at the hands of "that madman" (High Lord Kalarus). Notice he never said anything about ''preventing'' the volcano from erupting...
* ExcellentJudgeOfCharacter: Sextus shows himself multiple times to be dangerously good at reading others or discerning who they really are as people. For instance, it's heavily implied that he recognizes Fade (a.k.a. Araris Valerian) for who he is at a glance despite the disfiguring brand on his face, and from that he's able to immediately deduces who Tavi really is. Additionally, when he notes Amara and Bernard's relationship in ''Captain's Fury'', an annoyed Amara haughtily notes to him that she could've fallen out with Bernard years ago and have had "half a dozen lovers" since then for all he knew. Sextus then bursts into laughter, noting that she can ''claim'' that, but he knows her well enough that she would never actually do such a thing.
* FailureToSaveMurder: Several characters resent or hate Sextus because of his apparent failure to protect Septimus.
* FatalFlaw: His relative lack of charisma and fundamental inflexibility. While he's a brilliant schemer and manipulator, and a very good judge of human nature (unlike his son), he doesn't have the charm and creativity to balance it out that Octavian does.
* ForgotFlandersCouldDoThat: Deliberately invokes this in ''Captain's Fury''. He says that the High Lords of the realm, Kalarus in particular, see him only as a scheming old man, and that image is part of what makes Kalarus think he can just take over the realm. So during that book, he sets out to forcibly remind Kalarus and the rest of the High Lords that in a realm where AuthorityEqualsAsskicking, there is a [[PersonOfMassDestruction very good reason]] why the House of Gaius is in charge.
* HeroicSacrifice: In ''Princeps' Fury'', he sinks Alera Imperia and the surrounding countryside into a massive volcano, destroying the vast majority of the Vord army and slowing them down enough to let the Alerans regroup over the next several months.
* ItsPersonal: The murder of his son is just about the only thing that draws this reaction from him, though it's very well disguised - even Fidelias doesn't twig to it. However, slowly but surely, Gaius eliminates every single one of the known conspirators behind Septimus' death, often in spectacular and karmic fashion. The only exception is Invidia, who gets her just desserts shortly after his death.
* LaserGuidedKarma:
** Gives it to High Lord Rhodes when he convinces the man to lead a direct assault on the Vord as they attack Ceres. The High Lord is destroyed and consumed by the Vord, not unlike how Rhodes' efforts allowed for Septimus to suffer a similar fate against the Marat.
** He receives this, in his own view, from Caria. He knew she was a naïve child who didn't understand the political nature of the game he plays when they wed. He stays married to her for about ten years, and considers her poisoning him and taking that much from his life a fair trade, not even having her punished for her actions.
* ManipulativeBastard: Isana describes him as a "manipulative old serpent" in ''Captain's Fury'', and while she's got a grudge against him, she's not exactly wrong.
** Takes advantage of Amara's loyalty to help him destroy Kalarus. [[ShootTheDog She quits on the spot once she learns what he did. For his part, he's saddened but accepts it as the price of beating Kalarus.]]
** Later, Amara loathes him even more when in the face of the Vord threat he told Rook he would personally place her daughter anywhere she chose to be safe from the Vord, if she helped spy on them to learn how they are using furycrafting. If not, her current life may not be enough to save them both.
* MentorOccupationalHazard: He dies performing a HeroicSacrifice at the end of ''Princeps' Fury.''
* MoralEventHorizon: [[invoked]] In-universe example: Amara is unwilling to trust him ever again after he manipulates her into helping him get into position to turn one of the Great Furies against Kalarus, destroying the entire province with a volcanic eruption. Admittedly, it was that or let Kalarus [[TakingYouWithMe use it to destroy most of Alera's Legions when they finally killed him]], but as Amara bitterly points out, he still killed several hundred thousand innocent people no matter his excuse.
* NothingPersonal: He knows that dubious alliances and manipulation are a way of life in politics and spying (as if the two are all that different), so he doesn't tend to take it personally when someone seems to side against him, so long as they're doing it for good reasons. However, threatening his family is something he takes ''very'' personally, as Lords Kalarus and Rhodes eventually found out (one was blown up by his own giant superweapon, the other was tricked into a UriahGambit).
* OlderThanTheyLook: Like all powerful watercrafters – in this case, he looks like he's in his forties, when he's about 80 at the start of the series and likely could be in his 90s by ''First Lord's Fury''.
* OldSoldier: By the start of the books, he is said to nearly be eighty (in ''Academ's Fury'', he states that he's 'nearly four-score years'). He still commands enough power that no one dares openly challenge him for the throne. When one High Lord does declare open civil war, Gaius makes a three-month journey on foot without the aid of his furies, suffering a broken leg and blistered feet, to get beyond the man's defenses and destroy the man with his own superweapon.
* PapaWolf: It takes him a couple of decades, but he calmly and methodically disposes of almost all the people responsible for his son's death, or tricks them into disposing of themselves, with the sole exception of Invidia, who dies shortly after he does.
** He also spends most of the series protecting Tavi (his grandson) to the best of his ability.
* ParentalSubstitute: He's a fatherly mentor figure to Amara, and a grandfatherly figure to Tavi - of course, Tavi ''is'' his grandson, not that anyone but Araris/Fade and Isana knows it until he meets Tavi.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: When he isn't about to collapse due to his age and overwork catching up to him. Witness ''Captain's Fury'', when he kills off two whole legions of Kalarus's SuperSoldiers, or ''Princeps' Fury'', where he takes down ''millions'' of the Vord military forces with him in a HeroicSacrifice, sinking Alera's '''capital city''' into lava and turning the whole region into a wasteland that the Vord can't possibly use.
* PetTheDog: He's quietly fond of Tavi, and tends to be at his most gentle and grandfatherly around him - which, considering that he's actually Tavi's grandfather, is not entirely surprising.
* TheSmartGuy: He's not half as much of an out of the box thinker as his grandson - in fact, his CreativeSterility is cited as a FatalFlaw. However, he is a brilliant politician and schemer, a superb judge of people, a capable commander, and a surprisingly good teacher (Amara was, by her own account, pretty hopeless at wind-crafted veils. Gaius, while feverish, lying on a stretcher behind enemy lines and suffering from a broken leg and footsores, unable to use his own Furies, teaches her how to create an excellent veil in a couple of hours). He also successfully sneaks into Fidelias' quarters in the heavily protected Aquitaines' house, leaving behind a kind of cloak used in Kalarus' lands - as Fidelias points out, this simultaneously reveals that he knows where Fidelias is, where he's going, that he's giving his blessing, and that he can get in and out of a building inhabited by two of the most powerful, skilled, and intelligent furycrafters in the series without being detected.
** He's heavily implied to be the very first person to recognise Tavi for who he is outside of Araris and Isana, doing so at first sight. Since it took Captain Miles, one of Septimus' former ''[[BodyguardingABadass singulares]]'', at least two ''years'' of seeing Tavi almost every day, and Fidelias seeing him in full command mode to finally click to it, this is impressive as hell.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure:
** He's not bothered by Isana allying with the Aquitaines in ''Academ's Fury'', despite both him and her knowing that they're looking to depose him, pointing out to Tavi that she came for his help, which it was his responsibility to give, and though there were extenuating circumstances, the fact was that she didn't get it, so she had to turn elsewhere.
** [[invoked]] Has no problem with either Bernard and Amara's relationship (which is illegal under Aleran law) or Tavi and Kitai (which is an InterspeciesRomance within an empire fraught with FantasticRacism), and in the latter case [[SugarWiki/FunnyMoments just advises him to try not to get her pregnant.]]
** He will make use of Doroga and Bernard's friendship and seek peace with ancient enemies for greater goods.
** Is willing to listen and even says if he had the power, he would give Tavi permission to test his ideas with the Cane invasion force, but he must respect the decisions of the Senate, which have put Arnos in charge of Tavi.
* ShipperOnDeck: It's subtle, but throughout the series he seems to do everything in his power to put Bernard and Amara and Tavi and Kitai together – first, having Amara serve as his personal envoy to Bernard as the new Count of Calderon (thereby ensuring that she'll see him regularly), and then when Tavi [[BavarianFireDrill bullshits his way]] into having Kitai made an ambassador, makes it his only duty to be her teacher and guide for the following several weeks. The irony here is that Amara thinks she has to hide her marriage to Bernard because of her duty to Gaius and Tavi wants to hide ''his'' relationship so Gaius can't exploit it, but he seems to know about and approve of both cases, though in the latter he advises Tavi to at least avoid getting her pregnant.
* ShootTheDog:
** Better than the [[TakingYouWithMe alternative]] as the invading men would be killed by Kalarus' volcano. So he makes sure the volcano can only kill Kalarus' side. Similarly, he destroys the mosaic at Alera Imperia that the Great Fury of Alera's personality is based around since he couldn't afford it possibly falling into the hands of the Vord. Alera herself doesn't hold a grudge, implying that she much preferred it to the alternative.
** When his character is introduced, he takes a potshot at Amara: he admits he is willing to sacrifice a loyal retainer to test the fidelity of another one. He assumes the loyal one would lose the fight.
* TheSpock: He's utterly and relentlessly practical, a trait that turns many people off of him, as they get the impression that he doesn't actually care about people beyond their utility. As it happens, he does, but he sees duty to the Realm as coming above all other considerations, meaning that he's completely willing to ShootTheDog.
** The better side of this is that he tends not to take much personally (except the murder of his son, whereupon he spends the next two and a half decades methodically destroying the participants). He's sadly understanding when Amara silently resigns after he blow up Kalarus' volcano (after he manipulated her and Bernard into helping him to reach it), he's civil and willing to work with Fidelias even after his betrayal, and when Tavi is indignant at how Isana allied with the Aquitaines in ''Academ's Fury'', Gaius points out that he didn't help her. He was unconscious, but in his view, that didn't matter - he had an obligation, he failed to live up to it, so she turned to the next available help.
* TakingYouWithMe: He faces down a majority of the Vord forces from the spire on his castle. Using the ancient volcano beneath the lands with his own furies, he reduces the Vord forces down to a small tithe of what they once were.
* {{Troll}}: It's shown several times that he loves to thoroughly embarrass Tavi and Amara by lightheartedly teasing them about their romantic relationships, such as him "mildly" asking Tavi if he's "sleeping with the Marat Ambassador by any chance." When a blushing Tavi awkwardly stammers out that he and Kitai haven't done ''[[TechnicalVirgin that]]'', Sextus just snorts while trying to hide his laughter.
* UriahGambit: Tricks High Lord Rhodes into one, since Rhodes was one of those who killed his son.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Caria]]
!First Lady Gaius Caria

Second wife of Gaius Sextus, Caria is fifty years younger than her husband. This, combined with being used as a political pawn and neglected by her husband, makes her easy prey for Attis's manipulations.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Caria:
* ArrangedMarriage: To Gaius. He held off wedding another woman after his first wife's death and then picked her simply to drive a wedge between her father and Kalare, as her father would never rebel against Gaius if Gaius was holding his daughter hostage, in a fashion.
* AwfulWeddedLife: How both her and Gaius see their marriage. Instead of living out a great epic romance, she found herself married to a much older man who ignores her.
* KarmaHoudini: Gets completely off for having been poisoning her husband over the last few decades (although she might have died soon afterwards during the evacuation of Alera Imperia, just before Gaius destroyed it). Interestingly, it's actually enforced by Sextus, as he acknowledges that this was actually some karmic rebalancing directed back at him.
* LaserGuidedKarma: Delivers some towards Gaius. See MasterPoisoner and TamperingWithFoodAndDrink.
* MalMariee: "Badly married" Caria is fifty years younger than her husband Gaius Sextus. They have a sexless marriage. Her old husband doesn't treat her well and ignores her, so this trope lacks the jealousy part. In the spirit of the trope, she ends up having an affair with a charismatic and handsome man Attis who is manipulating her. It's later revealed she has been poisoning her husband for years.
* MasterPoisoner: She is poisoning Gaius for years and was only discovered just before the Vord attacked Alera Imperia. She used her medical knowledge from the Academy to do it.
* OldManMarryingAChild: While not as young as most examples of this trope, she's closer in age to Gaius's ''grandson'' than to Gaius himself. He even refers to her as a child a couple of times.
* SexlessMarriage: Gaius is old, and as disinterested in that part of their marriage as the rest of it. Tellingly, when Max disguises himself as Gaius and promises her some nookie time, she seems quite genuinely touched.
* SympatheticAdulterer: She is married off to an old man who ignores her most of the time. It's easy to see how she would end up having an affair with a charismatic and handsome man like Attis.
* SympatheticMurderer: Gaius forgives her for poisoning him because while she may have taken a few years of his life away, he's taken far more than that from her by sticking her into a loveless arranged marriage.
* TamperingWithFoodAndDrink: Has been poisoning Gaius for years by slipping small amounts of a medicine into his tonic.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Gaius Septimus]]
!Gaius Septimus

Septimus is the son of Gaius Sextus. He dies fifteen years before the series begins, in battle against the Marat in Calderon Valley. His death sets off the main conflict of the series by starting a succession crisis. What few people know is that Septimus married Isana in secret and they had a son, Tavi.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Septimus:
* ArrangedMarriage: He was supposed to marry Invidia, but he turned her down. She didn't take it well.
* ButForMeItWasTuesday: In his pursuit of protecting the common man from the abuses of nobility, he had many scuffles and insults levied against said nobility, particularly Rhodes and Kalare. He never paid these insults much mind after the matters were settled, not realizing these insults festered and turned these men to working to kill him.
* ChildMarriageVeto: Gaius wanted Septimus to marry Invidia, but Septimus rejected her proposal and married Isana in secret instead.
* DatingWhatDaddyHates: Septimus married Isana despite knowing it would enrage Gaius that he'd chosen a commoner over a powerful Citizen and crafter like Invidia.
* DefeatMeansFriendship: In ''Captain's Fury'', Araris mentions how he had a way of facing down his rivals without breaking their pride, and getting them to follow him, and brings up how Septimus and Raucus used to fight a lot when they were in the Academy. However, this only applied to direct rivals - when he was protecting commoners from rogue nobles, the latter held grudges.
* DisappearedDad: To Tavi, as Septimus died the night he was born.
* FatalFlaw: His (metaphorical) nearsightedness. It's noted that he tended to disregard the consequences of protecting the commoners from the nobility, the grudges that would cause and how they would fester, thinking that people would be as forgiving as he was.
* HundredPercentAdorationRating: Every good or neutral person thinks he'd have been an excellent First Lord (though the more politically adept concede his flaw of being a bit ''too'' nice). He was so well-loved that his death, particularly Gaius's failure to protect him, is the reason why Isana, Attis, Neddus, and Raucus all hate and[=/=]or distrust Gaius.
* KingIncognito: Had a habit of traveling around in disguise. He met Isana incognito and offered her a job elsewhere in the camp.
* LivingIsMoreThanSurviving: A major point of difference between Gaius & Septimus. Gaius was focused only on surviving, while Septimus wanted more out of life than just survival.
* TheLostLenore: A male version for Isana.
* MasterSwordsman: Sir Miles states in ''Academ's Fury'' that he was the very best, better even than Araris - though he also suspected that Araris held back so as not to embarrass him.
* MarryForLove: He marries Isana, a commoner and non-Citizen, for love despite the controversy it would cause.
* NiceGuy: All scenes of him in the series paint him as a kind, generous, and loyal noble who would've been a perfect ruler of Alera. Admittedly, it's worth noting that there's a pretty clear factor of UnreliableNarrator in play here since the people often talking about how great Septimus was are his family members, widow, and friends.
* PlotTriggeringDeath: His death sets off the main conflict of the series by causing a SuccessionCrisis in Alera.
* PosthumousCharacter: Dies fifteen years before the series begins. What we know of him comes from flashbacks and the recollections of other characters.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure:
** He is one of the first nobles in recent history to speak out against the slave trade.
** He realizes his best friend Araris is in love with his wife. Instead of being jealous, fearful, or smug, he warmly accepts this because Araris fell in love with the same qualities he himself did, wryly pointing out that he can hardly fault him for doing exactly what Septimus himself did. He even uses this love to make sure Rari would stay with a heavily pregnant Isana and protect her instead of staying at Septimus's side.
* TallDarkAndHandsome: It's said that Tavi looks a lot like his father in the later books.
* TrueCompanions: With Attis and Raucus. He mentions in his letter that he'd have gone mad after the Battle of Seven Hills without them. His ''singulares'' count as well.
* UnfriendlyFire: It is widely believed that Septimus was killed by the Marat. He was actually assassinated during the battle by a cabal of Citizens, who were put up to it by Invidia.
* WarriorPrince: He spent time serving in the Crown Legion and fought in several battles before he was ultimately killed.
* TheWisePrince: Was shaping up to be a good and thoughtful ruler who cared about the common people, and whose only real flaw was a habit of believing the best of people.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:High Lord Aquitainus Attis]]
!High Lord Aquitainus Attis

Mostly off-screen in the early books, Attis is one of the two high Lords in serious contention for the position of the next First Lord. Sleeping with the First Lord's wife may give him some advantage at this... especially as he's far more than the hedonist he appears to be.
----
!!Tropes applying to Aquitaine:
* AlasPoorVillain: It's hard not to feel at least some pity for him when he dies in ''First Lord's Fury''.
* AntiVillain: His rebellious activities are because he genuinely wants to strengthen Alera, not out of personal greed or envy of Sextus' position. When he does temporarily become First Lord in ''First Lord's Fury'', he genuinely does his best for Alera, and continues leading even when he's dying from the wound Invidia gave him.
* AwfulWeddedLife: How he and Invidia see their marriage. Though they put up a HappyMarriageCharade in public, the reality is their marriage is loveless and they can't stand each other. Once they end up on opposite sides of the Vord War, they have no reservations about taking up arms against each other.
* BatmanGambit: Is stuck in one by Tavi in ''Academ's Fury'' when Tavi has it revealed to him and his wife of the Vord-Cane threat against Gaius and knowing Kalare would use this opportunity to take the throne, they must work to protect Gaius and his seat on the throne. Neither particularly like this fact.
* BigBad: Subverted. He's built up as this in the first half of the series, but is upstaged in the second by the ''real'' BigBad, the Awakened Vord Queen.
* BigBadDuumvirate: With his wife. Technically, most of her schemes are aimed at getting him the throne, but that's only because as a woman that's the closest she'll ever get to true power in the misogynistic culture of Alera. In many ways, Invidia was the BigBad more than he ever was, since she was more actively involved in the plot and unknown to him, was behind the murder of his best friend, Septimus. Attis is, in fact, motivated largely by vengeance on the men he holds responsible for that (Kalarus, Rhodes, and [[FailureToSaveMurder Sextus]]).
* CharacterizationMarchesOn: Played with and discussed. ''Furies of Calderon'' introduces him as a [[ObfuscatingStupidity seemingly unsubtle drunkard who needs to be guided by his wife and more capable subordinates down the avenues to take the throne]] - though hint at his later characterisation with signs of razor-sharp intelligence, effortlessly dissecting an argument while apparently drunk and interested in getting laid. Later books run with this, reavealing that he is a clever and insightful manipulator, skilled in both legion strategy and politics, and disinclined to pointless violence - not that he won't kill people if they get in his way, of course, but he's not cavalier about it. A letter from Attis to Raucus shows that in his youth, Aquitaine was a much nobler and kinder man, but had developed a burning hatred for the corruption and treachery among the Aleran nobility after Septimus died. This, coupled with his ambition to replace Gaius Sextus for what he felt were his manipulations and deceptions, gradually turned Attis into a ruthless, scheming traitor. Shades of his more noble side start to come back out as the Vord close in on Alera and he rises to help lead the Realm. Isana and Aria suspect that the death of Septimus pushed him into becoming what he hates the most.
* TheChessmaster: One of the best in the series, though still not as good as Ehren or Tavi.
* ComeBackToBedHoney: He uses this on Caria when she starts to leave after they've just had sex, assuring her that Gaius won't be back for a while yet.
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: Invidia essentially disembowels him with a heated sword that sutured his wounds shut (preventing him from being healed by watercrafting), causing him to very slowly waste away over the last act of ''First Lord's Fury''.
* DeadpanSnarker: Has a dry wit about him. When he sees Invidia burned to a blackened crisp, but still alive, he only comments that he likes her new hair style. He also delivers her their ''divorce papers'' after she essentially disembowels him in the same scene.
* DeathbedConfession: He openly confirms his role in manipulating Atsurak into attacking Calderon years ago after Doroga tells him when the Vord War was over, they would have words about his role in getting a good many Marat killed.
* DramaticIrony: He hates Sextus because he failed to save Septimus, Attis's best friend. Attis is apparently unaware that he's married to the woman who masterminded Septimus's murder.
* EnemyMine:
** In ''Academ's Fury'' Tavi sends Ehren to apprise him and Invidia of the matter with the Vord, by using Aria to get into the house, to help deal with this serious matter. Neither like helping Sextus, but prefer him over the civil war the Vord (and Kalare's own attempt on the throne) want to bring about.
** With Sextus and the Vord. He's the first High Lord to stand with Gaius, and calls out Riva for being an obstructive idiot, because he knows that the priority is for Alera to survive – and at the same time, he can give a boost to his position.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: Aquitaine is first presented as a short-tempered hedonist being entertained by a dancing slave, but quickly shows himself to be [[ObfuscatingStupidity much cleverer than his first comments dictate]] by deconstructing an ''Argumentum AdHominem'' and then deferring to a low-born minion with more experience. The scene is also one for his wife Invidia; [[MoreDeadlyThanTheMale she was the dancing slave in disguise without him noticing.]]
* FaceDeathWithDignity: He accepts his fate after Invidia stabs him and spends his remaining time calmly leading and doing everything he can to hold Alera together.
* FailureToSaveMurder: The reason why he hates Gaius. He blames him for failing to protect Septimus and not taking action against the overly ambitious High Lords who were plotting against him.
* GracefulLoser: When he realizes that Ehren manipulated him into making himself vulnerable, leading to a mortal injury and thereby securing Tavi's position as the future First Lord, his only comment is a thoughtful and faintly admiring, "I think the little man assassinated me."
* HappyMarriageCharade: He and Invidia will show affection toward each other when others are present. The reality is their marriage is loveless and purely for political reasons. They eventually turn on each other without the slightest hesitation.
-->'''Aquitaine:''' We shared a goal, an occasional bed, and name. Little else.
* HeWhoFightsMonsters: He wanted to take down Lord Rhodes and Lord Kalarus, power hungry manipulators who were behind his friend's death. He ended up becoming just like them.
* TheHedonist: Has shades of this. He does like his wine and dancing girls.
* IdiotBall: He holds it once and pays for it. He assumes his gambit to lure his traitorous wife out worked and he vanquished her with a powerful firecrafting that left nothing, not even ash or dust, where part of a building and, supposedly Invidia, had worked. He spends the next few moments gloating to both Amara and Bernard, whom had been fighting her alongside him. Invidia reveals she ''did'' survive by launching herself from beneath where Attis stood and dealt a slow-killing blow to the man, and even points this out
* MeaningfulName: In Phyrgian mythology, Attis is castrated by Cybele and dies. Invidia deals Attis a death blow by piercing him in the loins with a red hot sword. Cauterizing the wound prevents it from healing.
* MyCountryRightOrWrong: In a twisted sense. He's truly loyal to the Realm as a whole... but is willing to arrange for the massacre of hundreds of thousands of its innocent civilians to make sure that its longetivity is ensured.
* OutGambitted: Shown in the last book. Gaius adopts him as Tavi's ''younger'' brother and leaves Ehren at his disposal. That way, Alera has a competent protector until the real heir gets back and one of Tavi's closest friends is close enough to Attis to arrange his death if and when he seems disinclined to get out of Tavi's way - which Ehren does, to a dying Attis' mild astonishment.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: He's one of the most powerful crafters in Alera, nearly on par with the First Lord himself.
* RedemptionEqualsDeath: Amara actually ''cries'' when he dies, since he'd been trying so hard to save everyone during his last few weeks.
* {{Revenge}}: One of his main motivations is revenge on those responsible for Septimus's death. While he took no part in Kalarus's death, he did conspire with Gaius to send Rhodes out to face the Vord alone.
* SpareToTheThrone: In one of Gaius' final acts, he adopts Attis into House Gaius as Tavi's "younger" brother to ensure when Tavi returns his primary claim on the position of First Lord isn't stopped by Attis on the ground of being older and more experienced in leadership than Tavi.
* StartOfDarkness: Septimus's death, specifically Gaius's inability to protect him, led Attis to turn against Gaius and begin plotting to take the throne himself.
* TilMurderDoUsPart: He and Invidia plan to kill each other once they are on opposite sides of the Vord War. She succeeds.
* TragicBromance: He and Septimus. They were best friends and he was never the same after Septimus's death.
* TrueCompanions: With Septimus and Raucus, though he decided to sever ties with Raucus after Septimus's death as Attis knew the path of revenge against Gaius and those responsible would lead him to dark places and actions. He also knew Raucus wouldn't follow him down this path but held nothing against him.
* UnsportsmanlikeGloating: He has a tendency to gloat after a victory. He ends up paying for it after making the mistake of gloating during his fight with Invidia rather than making sure he'd finished her off - something Invidia lampshades, after skewering him.
* WellIntentionedExtremist: No, really! Far from being behind Septimus's death, he was angry at Sextus's FailureToSaveMurder and decided that since he couldn't even protect his own son, someone else had to take over protecting the country.
** In the last book, he points out that had the heroes not foiled his plans in the first book, the country would have been unified to face the threat instead of delaying so long bickering and backbiting. Even more ironic in that said foiling is [[NiceJobBreakingItHero what woke the Vord up in the first place.]]
** Though conversely, if it hadn't been ''for'' his plans in the first book, it would have been much less likely that Tavi and Kitai would have been in position to break it in the first place.
* XanatosSpeedChess: The man has plots within plots within plots.
* YouAreTooLate: Arrived in the Calderon Valley too late to save Septimus, but he was there when they found his remains and knew furycrafting had been used against him.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:High Lady Aquitainus Invidia]]
!High Lady Aquitainus Invidia

At least as ambitious as her husband, Invidia is cynical, manipulative and lethal. She'll keep her word, in public at least, but only because her reputation for fair dealing is more important than anything else she'd gain – and in private she'll do whatever is most expedient. As a High Lady, she's utterly lethal on the battlefield when she needs to be.\\
\\
Tends to use watercrafting disguises a lot. In ''Captain's Fury'', she is shot and poisoned by her spy Fidelias. She was saved by the Awakened Vord Queen and put on life support in ''[=Princeps' Fury=]''. If the life-support Vord is removed or killed, she will die horribly in a matter of hours.
----
!!Tropes applying to Invidia:
* AscendedExtra: A downplayed case. She is briefly promoted to a viewpoint character for the prologue and a few chapters of ''First Lord's Fury'' so that the readers can see how both she and the Awakened Vord Queen are reacting to events. This ends after Isana and Araris are kidnapped by the Queen and Isana's viewpoint is then used in lieu of Invidia's.
* AssholeVictim: She aides in killing Princeps Septimus years ago for dumping her for a commoner, kills many more who are a threat to her power and rise in the ranks, blackmails Isana into being her political puppet as the price to save Tavi and Bernard, betrays every ally she makes when it can secure her more power or insure her own survival, which leads to her becoming the lead human and aide to the Vord when she is found dying from her own failed machinations, then she betrays the Vord Queen in hopes to secure her freedom from the Vord, only to turn back to the Queen when she outclasses the High Lords who Invidia lead in to kill her and offers her a cure to her poisoning so she will no longer need the vord-life-support creature on her chest. The only person to be saddened for her is the Vord Queen who, with Invidia's death, now understands what it is to lose a precious person.
* AwfulWeddedLife: How she and Attis see their marriage. Though they put up a HappyMarriageCharade in public, the reality is their marriage is loveless and they can't stand each other. Once they end up on opposite sides of the Vord War, they have no reservations about taking up arms against each other.
* BaldWoman: See BeautyIsNeverTarnished below.
* BatmanGambit: Is stuck in one by Tavi in ''Academ's Fury'' when Tavi has it revealed to her and her husband of the Vord-Cane threat against Gaius and knowing Kalare would use this opportunity to take the throne, they must work to protect Gaius and his seat on the throne. Neither particularly like this fact.
* BeautyIsNeverTarnished: Subverted after Attis sets her on fire, leaving her bald and heavily scarred. The echoes of her beauty remain, but it's a far cry from how she used to look. She's constantly referred to as the "burned woman" afterwards in narration.
* BigBadDuumvirate: More or less with her husband--it was a marriage of political advantage for both of them, and they both know it. In fact Invidia is probably more of a BigBad than he ever was, since she is much more involved in the story and in actually manipulating people or dealing with their underlings--for instance, he was as annoyed with [[ObstructiveZealot Senator Arnos]] as anyone else in the military, but Invidia was actually pulling Arnos' strings the whole time. Plus, she was behind the death of Septimus, which caused Attis' FaceHeelTurn in the first place.
* BodyHorror: The Vord life-support creature has its head buried in Invidia's flesh, and its claws have dug into her back. And that's ''before'' she's burned to a crisp.
* ChronicBackstabbingDisorder: [[invoked]] ''Every'' character with significant dealings with her has attempted to take her [[RunningGag sudden but inevitable betrayal]] into account, with levels of success ranging from "filleted for their trouble" to "[[SugarWiki/FunnyMoments left Invidia tied up and naked in the middle of the woods]]." The Awakened Vord Queen even admits that they can't be angry at her for treachery because it's just what Invidia ''does''.
* DarkActionGirl: Only when she needs to in the first few books, but pretty much solidly after joining the Vord Queen.
* DarkLordOnLifeSupport: After getting shot by a poisoned bolt from Fidelias, she needs the constant help of a Vord creature attached to her chest as life support, or she'll die painfully.
* DeathByIrony:
** Stabbed in the back by someone invisible, using a weapon she couldn't see coming.
** ''Twice'', if you count Fidelias's attempt (she lived, but only because of Vord life support). A traitorous underling shot her in the back with a poisoned bolt. To add insult to injury, the weapon used was the very one that she had given to Fidelias to use to assassinate either Tavi (a loyal servant of the Realm) or Arnos (one of her lackeys).
* DemotedToDragon: After she joins the Awakened Vord Queen.
* EnemyMine:
** Is manipulated into helping Gaius Sextus a couple of times, since she can't take over if someone else does first.
** Offered the chance for this in the last book to join the Alerans against the Vord Queen. When she refuses, she gets killed.
* EvenBadMenLoveTheirMamas: Downplayed, but comments by her in ''First Lord's Fury'' allude to how both she and her mother deeply loved each other before the latter passed away from illness.
* EvenEvilHasStandards: Not many, but she dislikes pointless deaths and would rather rule the country through manipulation of the government than all-out war. After siding with the Vord due to desperation, she's also shown small signs of regretting her choice.
-->'''Invidia:''' I'm willing to make sacrifices in pursuit of a greater goal. That's not the same as [[KickTheDog condoning the rape and murder of entire steadholts.]] [[ForTheEvulz There was no profit to those actions. No purpose.]] [[StupidEvil It's unprofessional. Idiotic.]] And I have difficulty tolerating idiots.
* EvilCannotComprehendGood: She's a bit better at this than a Vord, but not by much--she's just too cynical to really ''get'' altruism.
-->'''Invidia:''' We are selfless when it suits our purposes, or when it is easy, or when the alternative would be worse. But no one truly wishes to be selfless. They simply desire the acclaim and goodwill that comes from being thought so.
* FatalFlaw: [[GreenEyedMonster Envy]], [[MeaningfulName appropriately enough]]. Invidia is an incredibly spiteful and cruel person who can't stand the power and success enjoyed by others, and is willing to tear those people down even if it means that she won't get anything out of it except for her own twisted sense of satisfaction.
* FauxAffablyEvil: While she'll be polite and make a number of necessary deals in public, even managing to form a bond of sorts with the Awakened Vord Queen because of how useful she is, make no mistake - the woman is ultimately a ruthless monster.
* GreaterScopeVillain: Downplayed, since there's lots of other extenuating factors involved, but the point still stands that her assassination of Septimus ultimately kicked off the series' entire plot.
* GreenEyedMonster: She was jealous because Septimus rejected her marriage proposal and had him killed as revenge. And, well... [[MeaningfulName look at her name]].
* HappyMarriageCharade: She and Attis will show affection toward each other when others are present. The reality is their marriage is loveless and purely for political reasons. They eventually turn on each other without the slightest hesitation.
* HealingFactor: As a powerful watercrafter, she can heal from most injuries quickly. To take her down, sudden and blunt trauma is best. So a surprise spear to the chest and slashed throat cannot be countered. Cauterized wounds cannot be healed either.
* TheHeavy: Though she's not the ultimate villain of the series (she's always working for someone else, [[DragonWithAnAgenda technically speaking]]), as a major antagonist in every book she's definitely the most visible in the narrative, setting in motion a wide variety of threats in the present time ''and'' the backstory. Basically, if bad things are happening in Alera, Invidia either had a hand in causing it, or [[EnemyMine will be on hand to help step on the competition]].
* HiddenDepths: According to ''First Lord's Fury'', she was apprenticed by her father to all of the master artisans of her home city for a year at a time. As such, she's a surprisingly good carpenter.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard:
** Her near-death at the end of ''Captain's Fury'' came from Fidelias shooting her with a Cane bolt weapon. She gave him that weapon to assassinate either Arnos or Tavi.
** On a larger scale, her assassination of Septimus (which set the whole series' plot in motion) is what put her into the position she's in at the end of the series - a broken woman living on time borrowed from the Vord.
* IfICantHaveYou: She couldn't accept that Septimus rejected her, so she had him assassinated.
* ItsAllAboutMe: Look above and below for examples.
* KarmicDeath: Invidia, the woman whose main character trait is ChronicBackstabbingDisorder, is literally [[StealthPun stabbed in the back]].
* KickTheDog: She comes across as ''far'' too smug when she tells Isana that she was the one who helped arrange Septimus' assassination.
* LadyMacbeth: She manipulates Attis into essentially starting an undeclared war between the Marat and Alerans of the Calderon Valley. She is also the one who lands the killing blow on Attis.
* LesCollaborateurs: Joins up with the Vord after the Awakened Vord Queen gives her a form of biological life support.
* LivingOnBorrowedTime: If her Vord life support is damaged or removed, she only has hours to live while in complete and utter agony.
* MeaningfulName: "Invidia" means "envy".
* MeaningfulRename: Isana renames her Nihilus Invidia for her ChronicBackstabbingDisorder.
* MoreDeadlyThanTheMale: She is much more of a villain than her husband.
* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: Who names their kid "envy"?
* OhCrap: Suffers a small one at the end of ''Academ's Fury'' when Fidelias shows her his cloak to protect against wet weather which he left in the care of Gaius Sextus before his final mission and betrayal. He finds it in his room in the Aquitaine manor. This means not only does Gaius know where he is, but for Invidia, Gaius knows who he is working for.
%% * ThePlan: Has nothing on her husband, though.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: It's mostly shown in ''First Lord's Fury'', but Invidia is ultimately revealed to have an incredibly classist view of Aleran society, derisively referring to Isana as both a "glorified peasant" and "camp whore" while she and Araris are imprisoned by the Vord.
* PragmaticVillainy: Although, considering that she's directly or indirectly [[GreaterScopeVillain responsible for literally every problem]] that comes up in the novels, this may not be entirely true. It is, however, her view of herself:
-->'''Invidia:''' I'm willing to make sacrifices in pursuit of a greater goal. That's not the same as condoning the rape and murder of entire steadholts. There was no profit to those actions. No purpose. It's unprofessional. Idiotic. And I have difficulty tolerating idiots.
* TheQuisling: She sides with the Awakened Vord Queen in return for keeping her alive and letting her rule the Alerans who accepted the queen's deal.
* RavenHairIvorySkin: Has dark hair and pale skin, which has her considered strikingly beautiful.
* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Gives one to Arnos after he begs her to save him from the consequences of his actions throughout ''Captain's Fury''.
-->'''Invidia:''' I believe I made a mistake in you, Arnos. I knew you were a [[SmugSnake pompous egotist with delusions of grandeur]], but I ''did'' believe you were at least competent.\\
'''Arnos:''' We had a deal!\\
'''Invidia:''' We had an understanding. But you've broken faith with me. You told me you hadn't aquired any of your troops as mercenaries. But your extremely well-supplied and well-armed and well-paid cavalry seem to have taken it upon themselves [[RapePillageAndBurn to loot and pillage every human habitation they come across.]]\\
'''Arnos:''' Their Tribunes are acting independently of my orders!\\
'''Invidia:''' ''You're'' the commander of these Legions, dear. You're responsible for what they do. That's rather why one is able to attain glory and respect after a victory. [[DeadpanSnarker Or don't they teach that at the Collegia?]]\\
'''Arnos:''' How ''dare'' you lecture me on--\\
'''Invidia:''' (glares at Arnos, immediately shutting him up) ''Don't'' make me raise my hand, Arnos. [[ImpliedDeathThreat When I slap someone, he doesn't scurry away after.]]\\
'''Arnos:''' [[HypocrisyNod You were willing enough to spill Aleran blood six weeks ago!]]\\
'''Invidia:''' [[WellIntentionedExtremist I'm willing to make sacrifices in pursuit of a greater goal.]] [[EvenEvilHasStandards That's not the same as condoning the rape and murder of entire steadholts.]] [[PragmaticVillainy There was no profit to those actions. No purpose. It's unprofessional. Idiotic.]] [[StealthInsult And I have difficulty tolerating idiots.]]\\
'''Arnos:''' (scowls) Then you should agree that this conversation is unprofitable, given the circumstances. We need to focus on the matter at hand.\\
'''Invidia:''' ([[FascinatingEyebrow raises an eyebrow]]) Oh?\\
'''Arnos:''' (snorts) [[TemptingFate We're probably worried about nothing.]] Navaris is going to introduce our young captain to the crows, and that will solve the problems at hand.\\
'''Invidia:''' Will it? I've made a decision about the problems at hand, Arnos.\\
'''Arnos:''' What's that?\\
'''Invidia:''' They're ''your'' problems. Solve them by yourself. If you manage to survive them, I ''may'' be willing to renegotiate our relationship. But until then, you're on your own. (saunters off, leaving Arnos fuming in rage)
* TheSociopath: As the series goes on, it becomes disconcertingly clear that even ''the Awakened Vord Queen'' probably has more of a functioning moral compass than Invidia does. At the end of the day, she's only looking out for number one and cares nothing about whatever she has to do as long as it makes her own life more comfortable as consequence.
-->'''Invidia:''' ''Everyone'' wants someone to suffer, Isana. It's simply a matter of finding a target and an excuse.
* TheStarscream: To pretty much everyone she's ever worked with. She doesn't seem to be happy unless she's plotting against ''someone'', even if that someone is on her same side.
* TilMurderDoUsPart: She and Attis planned to kill each other once they are on opposite sides of the Vord War. She succeeds.
* VoluntaryShapeshifting: Standard for a powerful watercrafter. Her most notable use of it is to disguise herself as a legion laundrywoman in ''Captain's Fury'' to keep an eye on both Arnos and Fidelias.
* VillainousFriendship: Develops into a type IV relationship with the Awakened Vord Queen, with the Queen being somewhat put out by her sudden death and admitting that they had formed something of a bond.
* VillainousRescue: An odd case in ''First Lord's Fury''. She saves the life of the Awakened Vord Queen at one point from the Junior Queen during their duel in the ruins outside Alera Imperia, as she's smart enough to realize that the "non-defective" Junior Queen wouldn't see Invidia as a valuable asset to the Vord conquest.
* WildCard: At the end of the day, Invidia is ultimately on her own side, not anyone else's.
* WomanScorned: See GreenEyedMonster. It's worth noting that Invidia didn't have Septimus killed for falling in love with Isana because ''she'' loved Septimus or anything like that - Rather, she had Septimus killed because [[EvilIsPetty she couldn't stand the fact that]] Septimus snubbed the "great Invidia" for "a glorified peasant" and wanted to punish him for that perceived slight to her ego.
* XanatosGambit: The way she saw it, either outcome of Tavi's duel with Navaris is good for her - if he loses, then a big obstacle towards getting the throne is dead, and if he wins, then Arnos is pretty much toast, relieving Invidia of a retainer who was becoming too much of a liability. And after it's done, she has an agent with a Canim balest ready to shoot whoever wins, meaning no matter what the outcome is, she's removed two obstacles to her ambition. Of course, [[DidntSeeThatComing she didn't foresee Fidelias switching his loyalty to Tavi]] (who's saved his life, hasn't gotten him involved in anything horribly unethical, and would probably be a good First Lord) and shooting both Arnos and her.
* YouCouldHaveUsedYourPowersForGood: Fidelias tries to get her to see she could reveal herself in ''Captain's Fury'', save the trapped Legions from the Canim forces, and become a hero of the Realm once more. Instead, Invidia plans to sacrifice the Legions and depart with Fidelias, to make sure he is taken care of as well. Later, in ''First Lord's Fury'', Isana ''almost'' convinces her to help her fellow Lords defeat the Vord Queen and save the nation... but she decides to try killing them too to win the day as the last woman standing, and the whole plan blows up in her face.
* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Tends to happen to her retainers. She orders Fidelias to kill Arnos if Navaris wins the duel against Tavi, and Fidelias suspects (with good reason) that she'll order ''him'' killed sometime.
** Discussed in ''First Lord's Fury'', wherein Invidia (worrying about having been replaced), thinks to herself that she must appear calm, confident, and above all ''useful'', because the Vord's only concept of retirement is becoming food for the ''croach''.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:High Lord Kalarus Brencis]]
!High Lord Kalarus Brencis Majoris

The other main candidate (besides Aquitainus) as the First Lord's successor. The province of Kalare is one of the few where slavery is still rampant, and Kalarus has taken the twisted furycrafting of slave collars and weaponised it. He's also a horrifying mix of both TheHedonist and TheCaligula, being a murder-happy maniac obsessed with obtaining power for its own sake.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Kalarus:
* AssholeVictim: Literally the '''only''' reason Amara is horrified when Gaius kills him is that countless innocent civilans were caught in the crossfire.
* AxCrazy: The First Lord thinks that Kalarus would be a bit easier to deal with if he weren't quite so mad, since it makes him unpredictable.
* BeardOfEvil: He has a goatee, apparently to hide his weak chin.
* BigBadDuumvirate: For ''Academ's Fury'', ''Cursor's Fury'', and ''Captain's Fury''. In ''Academ's Fury'', he's responsible for organizing the assassination attempts on Isana, and uncovering who TheMole he planted within the Cursors is one of the major subplots of the novel, but his villainy is completely unrelated to the situations involving Sarl and the Vord Queens. He then directly tries to coup the government in ''Cursor's Fury'' with the assistance of a surprise VillainTeamUp with Sarl, but it ultimately falls through thanks to the actions of both Tavi and Amara. Finally, his rebellion is still going on in ''Captain's Fury'', and attempting to put a final end to it is the main conflict for Sextus and Amara's subplot, with his remaining alliance with the Canim now being very tentative and any potential involvement with Senator Arnos being tangential at best.
* BigBadWannabe: He tries very hard to be the BigBad, but he's ultimately just not quite up to snuff.
* TheCaligula: Equally, one can't deny that this guy is a few ''legionares'' short of an army.
* TheChessmaster: Half-succeeded. His "masterful plot" fails thanks to Sextus being a better player. Gaius saw only one way to defeat him, and though Kalarus never thought of it, Gaius was pissed that it came to that – namely, annihilating the entire province before Kalarus did.
* CompensatingForSomething: Lady Placida taunts him by bringing up how he apparently had a little problem bedding women back at the academy. Either he was impotent or he just was a bastard. Whatever it was, it's a major BerserkButton.
* DespotismJustifiesTheMeans: As alluded to below, he's been playing TheLongGame in terms of his coup against the First Lord, and seems to desire power just so he can lord it over others.
* DoNotGoGentle: Rather than accepting his defeat and probable death, Kalarus ties his life to that of the ancient volcano fury, angering it so much that when he dies, the volcano will erupt. His hope is to unleash the great fury not only on the Crown's forces that lay siege to his last city but the tens, if not hundreds of thousands of civilians and refugees crowded into the city.
* EvilIsPetty: The entire Amara & Gaius Sextus subplot of ''Captain's Fury'' only exists to try and mitigate the damage caused by Kalarus' pettiness. For all intents and purposes, he'd been defeated in the previous book. He no longer had a chance of actually becoming the First Lord. He was being beaten back by the forces of Alera and eventually his city would fall to a siege and he would be captured. However, Kalarus decided "Screw it!" and enslaved the volcano-dwelling Great Fury of Kalus to his very life. When the time finally came that armies would besiege his city (which itself would be packed to the brim with refugees), he would die and trigger a massive eruption with the intent of killing as many people as he could along the way. All to give one final middle-finger shaped farewell to Gaius after losing to him.
* FatalFlaw: {{Pride}}. He has an ego larger than the fire-mountain his home province is named after, and it proves to be his downfall multiple times over.
* FauxAffablyEvil: He ''tries'' to put upon a facade of civility, but he's really a savage maniac.
* TheGhost: In ''Captain's Fury''. He is alluded to in ''Furies Of Calderon'', since Kord got his slave collars from his province.
* HateSink: He's ultimately a perfect example of everything fundamentally '''wrong''' with the corrupt MightMakesRight-based aristocracy of Alera's Citizenry, being an obnoxious, misogynistic, petty, arrogant, xenophobic, and greedy sociopath who only cares about gaining more power for himself at the expense of everyone around him.
* IHaveYourWife: Kidnaps High Lady Placida Aria and the daughter of High Lord Atticus to prevent their armies from actively opposing him, and holds Rook's daughter hostage to ensure her continued good behavior. To add to his malevolence, Rook's daughter is his own granddaughter.
* KickTheDog: As far as he's concerned, the day is wasted if he hasn't found at least three small furry animals to kick before lunchtime.
** To put it into perspective, ordering the assassinations of countless abolitionists and brainwashing innocent ''children'' into becoming {{Super Soldier}}s loyal only to him '''still''' aren't the most horrific things he's done.
* KillItWithFire: His mastery of firecrafting is on par with Gaius Sextus. It is said he personally snuffed out a raging wildfire that threatened his precious hardwood forests he exported.
* LaserGuidedKarma: He is killed when the father of the man he murdered triggers the volcano he personally leashed to his own life erupts prematurely, derailing his ThanatosGambit and ending his rebellion by several years.
* TheLongGame: He and his ancestors have been planning a coup of the Realm for years, heavily taxing the commoners into virtual slavery, to build up enough money to support his secret legions.
* LoadBearingBoss: Set himself up as this on purpose as insurance when it looked like he was going to be defeated.
* MaskOfSanity: As both Gaius and Amara later realize in ''Cursor's Fury'', he's far more insane than they realized, which makes him significantly more difficult to predict and react to.
* OrcusOnHisThrone: In ''Captain's Fury''. Justified because Bernard and Amara crippled him at the end of ''Cursor's Fury'' – he was quite an active villain before that.
* OutGambitted: So, you set up a volcano to [[LoadBearingBoss explode when you're killed]] and cover a few hundred square miles around it with a surveillance network set to detect the furies of the one guy who can stop you? Too bad he takes a cue from his grandson and just ''walks'' in, not using any furies until he's too close for you to prevent him from taking control of the volcano away from you.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: He's widely despised, and with good reason. He's also probably not as smart as he thinks he is - certainly not smarter than Gaius. However, he is universally acknowledged as a genuine powerhouse.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: Is a virulent misogynist.
* ShootTheDog: Forces Sextus to do this.
* SiblingMurder: Implied, with it being mentioned that High Lady Antillius Dorotea is the only ''surviving'' sibling of Kalarus.
* TheSociopath: Kalarus has no real respect for human life, and isn't even that good at faking empathy in public.
* WouldHurtAChild:
** The man had child slaves fitted with obedience collars so their wills would be broken and they would become his berserker assassins.
** He holds his own granddaughter in a death trap to secure a High Lady and make Rook loyal to him.
* YouKilledMyFather: Though it's never brought up by Tavi, he ''is'' one of the two men who personally murdered Septimus (the other was High Lord Rhodes).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Brencis Minoris]]
!Kalarus Brencis Minoris

Son of Lord Kalarus and classmate of Tavi's at the Academy – where he was a vicious bully. Hasn't improved since, first becoming a servant of Kalarus during the CivilWar he instigates, and later being given a discipline collar by Invidia to serve the Vord during their invasion of Alera.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Brencis:
* AssholeVictim: Is eventually stabbed through the neck by Amara after he turns to the side of the Vord.
* CaptainErsatz: There's a fair bit of [[Literature/HarryPotter Draco Malfoy]] in him (Brencis is nastier, though, by virtue of having inherited a bit of his dad's instability), though it's unknown if that was deliberate. Even funnier when you consider that Tavi is a skinny kid with black hair and green eyes...
* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: Brencis is a talented warrior and crafter, despite being a coward and a jerk. When the going gets tough, he responds in kind, like the time when he fought Max to standstill despite being intoxicated, or when he disobeyed the Vord Queen despite having a discipline collar on. Also, he creates slaver collars more powerful then Invidia's, though that's at least in part because of tricks he learned from his father.
* TheDarkChick: Male variant, to the Vord. Completely selfish, he has no higher motives than having a good time.
* DespairEventHorizon: Seems to have passed it after Gaius Sextus obliterated Kalare, turning him into TheHedonist who doesn't care if the Vord win.
* DirtyCoward: When he ends up facing Amara, Bernard, and, most importantly, ''Gaius'', he ScreamsLikeALittleGirl and runs. Understandable, though, given that Gaius is a PersonOfMassDestruction.
* FatalFlaw: [[LazyBum Sloth]]. Brencis doesn't want to make the effort to actually support anything and just wants to live his life in luxury. After his province is obliterated by Gaius Sextus and he crosses the DespairEventHorizon, he can't even be arsed to help save humanity, instead collaborating with the Vord in exchange for material pleasures.
* HazyFeelTurn: In the sense that he was already evil before joining the Vord thanks to Invidia's slave collar.
* TheHedonist: After his father dies and Kalare collapses under volcanic ash, he spends his time having threesomes and taking drugs.
* InferioritySuperiorityComplex: Has difficulty mustering confidence to challenge people in the same league as him and compensates by picking on those obviously weaker.
* LesCollaborateurs: Works with the Vord so they can have collared Citizens to help in their conquest of Alera.
* MindRape: One of the best at it.
* MrFanservice: It's not commented on that often, but even Amara is briefly impressed by his handsomeness while pretending to act as his slave in ''Princeps' Fury''.
* TheRival: In ''Academ's Fury'', he is this to Tavi, seeing him as a freak and should be squashed. When he shows up next, he's kind of outclassed.
* SmugSnake: He loves to rub his high born status in the face of his classmates.
* VillainousValour: He manages to resist the horrific torment visited upon anyone rebelling against a slave collar so as to keep his own skin intact while in service of the Vord Queen.
* WellDoneSonGuy: Kalarus doesn't think very much of him.
* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: He is aware of this idea and resists giving the Awakened Vord Queen and Invidia knowledge of making truly broken and mindless collared slaves because once he does, it is only a matter of time before he would be killed.
* YuriFan: PlayedForHorror - After his father loses and he eventually joins the Vord, he spends the rest of his time [[RapeByProxy forcing women wearing his]] {{Slave Collar}}s to have sex with one another for his amusement.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:High Lord Antillus Raucus]]
!High Lord Antillus Raucus

High Lord of Antillus and father of Max and Crassus. Raucus spends most of his time fighting the Icemen on the Shieldwall and is a very skilled battlecrafter. He is loyal to the House of Gaius, but hates Gaius Sextus for personal reasons.
----
!!Tropes applying to Raucus:
* AnArmAndALeg: The Awakened Vord Queen cuts off his right arm when he, Phrygia, and the Placidias fail to assassinate her.
* ArrangedMarriage: To Kalarus Dorotea. He hates her and would've preferred to marry Max's mother instead.
* AuthorityEqualsAsskicking: Even more than the other High Lords. To be High Lord of one of the Shield Cities, you have to be adept at asskicking.
* AwfulWeddedLife: His marriage to Dorotea. He never wanted to marry her in the first place, wanting instead to marry Max's mother. However, he caved to pressure when his father died, not knowing how strong Max would be, and married Dorotea to secure an alliance with Kalare and their food supplies which would greatly help the frozen lands up north. Dorotea then had Max's mother murdered.
* TheBigGuy: Of Septimus's circle of friends.
* BoisterousBruiser: He's a big guy with a large personality and no reservations about getting into fights.
* CaptainObvious: Has a tendency to point out the obvious. This is lampshaded by Lord Phrygia.
* DidntSeeThatComing: He's briefly taken aback when Isana - who he had previously assumed to be toadying on behalf of Gaius Sextus, who he personally despises - angrily snarls that she actually '''hates''' Sextus [[FailureToSaveMurder for having left her husband (Septimus) to die]].
* AFatherToHisMen: He personally attends the funerals of his men who die fighting on the Shieldwall. One of the reasons why he hates the Icemen so fervently is because of how many of his soldiers and people they've killed in the endless war on the Shieldwall.
* HeroAntagonist: He's the main obstacle preventing Isana from moving the Antillian and Phyrigian Legions south to support the rest of the Realm against the Vord in ''Princeps' Fury'', and her struggling to overcome him is the main conflict for her subplot in that novel.
* PapaWolf: When Crassus becomes leader of the First Aleran while Tavi is removed from the position in ''Captain's Fury'' it is mentioned if Arnos tries to get Crassus executed on trumped up charges or refusing to kill civilians, Raucus would quickly step in and challenge Arnos to ''juris macto''.
* ParentalNeglect: Raucus is a largely absent father due to spending so much of his time defending the Shieldwall. As such, he never intervened to stop Dorotea's abuse of Max. Things got so bad that Max ran off to join the Legions at '''14'''.
* ParentalObliviousness: It's unclear how much he knew about Dorotea's abuse of Max, considering he was gone most of the time.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: He's one of the most powerful High Lords and is a very skilled battlecrafer.
* PlayingWithFire: Though Raucus is skilled in all six forms of crafting, he is especially skilled at firecrafting. Lady Placida speculates this is due to his passionate nature.
* ShellShockedVeteran: The fifth book makes it clear that he's been one for decades. He has been protecting Alera from constant Iceman attacks since he was ''fourteen'', and forty years of warfare has left deep scars on his psyche. This is why he is so unwilling to believe that it could be possible to make peace with the Icemen, he's seen too many of his soldiers and worse, his ''civilians'', dead at their paws.
* SillyRabbitIdealismIsForKids: He's almost pathologically unable to even ''contemplate'' forming a lasting peace with the Icemen until Isana finally shows herself to be willing to die for it to succeed.
* StarCrossedLovers: He and Max's mom. Raucus wanted to marry her, but was forced to marry Dorotea instead. Then Dorotea had the woman killed.
* TrueCompanions: With Septimus and Attis, though he and Septimus didn't get along at first.
* VitriolicBestBuds: With Lord Phrygia.
* WorfHadTheFlu: He deliberately limits himself in the ''juris macto'' he has with Isana since he feels it would be disrespectful towards her.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:High Lady Antillus Dorotea]]
!High Lady Antillus Dorotea

Sister of High Lord Kalarus and wife of Antillus Raucus. They have one son, Crassus. She's tried to kill Max numerous times, viewing him as a threat to Crassus's inheritance. She is introduced in ''Cursor's Fury'', where she serves as the First Aleran's Tribune Medica.
----
!!Tropes applying to Dorotea:
* AbusiveParents: To Max - and Crassus as well; some of Max's scars are from protecting his half-brother from his mother's temper. Crassus makes his excuses, but when he sees someone else at risk from his mother's wrath he's quick to try to prevent it, knowing all too well what it's like.
* AmbitionIsEvil: Tavi comments that her ambition was a cancer that got amputated by the collar.
* ArrangedMarriage: To Raucus.
* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: She always did love her son Crassus; her persecution of Max and the attempts to kill him were mostly to keep him from taking her son's place.
* GoodFeelsGood: The collared Dorotea gives off a deep sense of fulfilment quite unlike the buried misery Isana senses in other collared slaves. Collar or no, Dorotea is finding healing people and experiencing their gratitude and liking very rewarding.
* HealingHands: She served as the Tribune Medica to the First Aleran before turning traitor. She resumes working as Tribune Medica after being collared.
* HeelFaceBrainwashing: An understated case. Her personality is still her own, even after being collared, but it becomes ''much'' more benevolent afterward. This trope is actually discussed by both Durias and Tavi - both of whom are rather sickened by the concept.
* LaserGuidedKarma: Defied; while it's darkly ironic that Dorotea -- the sister of a High Lord who's notorious for his monopoly on the slave trade -- should end up a collared slave herself, Tavi doesn't believe for an instant she deserved such a fate, regardless of how awful she was. He's sickened at the thought of what she must have endured at the hands of the formerly enslaved people freed by the Canim.
* MadeASlave: Sarl puts a slave collar on her. With his death, she can never be freed from the commands she has been placed under.
* MakeItLookLikeAnAccident: Her preferred method of removing her enemies.
* TheMedic: She is an able healer, first joining the Legion as the top medical official.
* MurderTheHypotenuse: Had Max's mother killed.
* OffingTheOffspring:
** He's not her biological offspring, but Max ''is'' her stepson and she's been trying to kill him for years.
* RageBreakingPoint: When the Awakened Vord Queen kills Foss, who saved Dorotea from the blast by pushing her away, she's filled with such righteous fury that she temporarily overcomes her slave commands and launches a powerful attack against the Vord Queen, stunning her enough for Tavi to catch up. That said, her collar quickly punishes her for this violation.
* ThatManIsDead: After being collared, she says that High Lady Antillus Dorotea no longer exists and she is simply Dorotea now. She also asks Tavi to tell Crassus that she's dead, as she believes it would be easier for him to mourn her.
* WickedStepmother: She beat Max repeatedly until he came into his furies and could stand up to her. After that she started arranging "accidents" for him.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:High Lady Placidus Aria]]
!High Lady Placidus Aria

Wife of High Lord Placida and one of the strongest crafters in Alera. She and her husband prefer to stay out of politics, though she eventually becomes a close friend and ally of Isana.
----
!! Tropes applying to Aria:
* ActionGirl: Earned her Citizenship through both merit of her furycrafting and skill in combat.
* {{Ambadassador}}: Serves as ambassador to the Icemen along with Isana during ''Princeps' Fury.''
* DamselInDistress: Kalarus captures her so he can use her as a hostage against her husband. Downplayed in that she could've escaped from him on her own, but he rigged things so that a child would die if she tried anything.
* {{Foil}}: She can be seen as the good counterpart to Invidia. Both are powerful and skilled crafters who hold a great deal of influence in Alera. When they both approached Isana in Isana's moments of need, Invidia made the cold calculating practical assessment on how it could help her goals, while Aria offers kindness for nothing asked in return.
* HairTriggerTemper: Her displaying this served as an alert to Isana that something was making Alerans feel irrationally angry around Icemen.
* HappilyMarried: To Placidus Sandos. While most High Lords marry for politics, they married for love.
* LadyOfBlackMagic: She's regal, elegant, and the first woman to become a Citizen by winning a ''juris macto'' duel. Later she becomes one of the top Aleran commanders during the Vord War.
* LoadBearingBoss: If she had been killed in ''Cursor's Fury'', numerous dangerous wild furies leashed under her command would've been released and would've ravaged the countryside of her province.
* RedheadInGreen: She's a redhead and frequently wears green, as it's the color of Placida.
* SilkHidingSteel: See LadyOfBlackMagic.
* TeamMom: Takes this position when the other High Lords (particularly Antillus, Phrygia and her husband) are picking on each other like school kids.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Senator Arnos]]
!Senator Arnos

The Senator in charge of military spending, who dismisses any report of military threats that don't fit his preconceptions. Politically, not a supporter of the First Lord, but in a position too sensitive to ignore.
----
!!Tropes applying to Arnos:
* AscendedExtra: He goes from having just a cameo in ''Cursor's Fury'' to being one of the main antagonists of ''Captain's Fury''.
* BadBoss: Seen hitting and insulting a secretary who gives him bad news. Also willing to sacrifice his army just for his personal political gain.
* BigBadDuumvirate: Forms one with both Kalarus and Nasaug in ''Captain's Fury'', though even then he's just the pawn of the Aquitaines.
* BigBadWannabe: He views himself as Invidia's equal. She views him as a pawn that, despite his stupidity, happens to be convenient for getting her husband into power. In the end, she orders Fidelias to kill him after [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness he has outlived his usefulness]] by taking care of Tavi for her.
* CommanderContrarian: Despite Tavi's innovations being highly effective, he ignores them simply because they aren't traditional.
* DirtyCoward: He has no stomach for fighting. When Bernard challenges him to a duel, he face turns red before he all but runs out of the room in fear.
* GeneralRipper: Has no problem sending his troops to their deaths - or sending them to cause massive civilian casualties - just for his political career and ego.
* HopeSpot: There is a brief moment in ''Captain's Fury'' when he gives a heartfelt thanks to Tavi for sending his men in at the right time to save his own. It looks like Tavi might be able to work with him and control him, but then he gives Tavi orders. See KickTheDog.
* HumiliationConga: Arnos's KarmaHoudiniWarranty has expired by the climax of ''Captain's Fury''. He discovers that his opponent is the legitimate heir to the throne (and so has the right to challenge him over the horrible things he's done), his champion loses the duel, meaning that he's going to have to face justice, and when he takes a hostage in an attempt to escape, he's shot in the back. As he lays dying, Tavi shows him absolutely no respect and only calls a healer for the woman he was trying to use as a human shield.
* IRejectYourReality: He dismisses ''anything'' that doesn't fit his preconceptions. Reports of a new and extraordinarily dangerous enemy, which has already chewed up a Marat force and an Aleran force, and is possibly on the loose? Just lies. Marat can't be trusted, you know. Canim now have ranged weapons? The Canim are just dogs who couldn't possibly innovate that, and the Canim crossbow you captured isn't sufficient evidence to the contrary. The Canim want to build ships and leave? Nope, the Canim only exist to make Alerans miserable, and giving them any quarter towards achieving this goal will just result in sea-going Canim raiders.
* {{Jerkass}}: Nobody really likes him. Even Invidia finds him annoying, and merely puts up with him because he's on her side and in a useful position.
* KickTheDog: He has an entire town ordered killed for "conspiring with the enemy" (read: not fighting to the death against an unbeatable opponent that ''doesn't'' want to kill you) just so he can get Tavi removed from his post when he inevitably refuses. Then he decides to kill them anyway as an "example" to the other towns.
* LackOfEmpathy: Doesn't even bat an eye when ordering the executions of a town of innocent people. He views everyone else as pawns in a game, and truly doesn't ''get'' how war hurts others.
* AMillionIsAStatistic: Indifferent to the casualties in his campaign. It's commented that he just views it as a game.
* NoodleIncident: A non-comic version. When Invidia is blackmailing him into doing what she wants, she mentions several things, including what seems to have been an assassination.
* ObstructiveZealot: He wants nothing more than his own political advantage, and does stupid and destructive things that get thousands of people, both soldiers and civilians, killed for it.
* SaveTheVillain: When he lays badly injured from a poisoned bolt in his chest, he thinks this is happening when Tavi calls for a healer. Tavi subverts his expectations by saying the healer is for the ''hostage'' he took, not him.
* SmugSnake: Convinced he is a brilliant tactician who uses the powers the Senate gave him to kill. Everyone else is convinced that he's a delusional idiot who somehow managed to weasel his way into a high position, and that he's just going to make things difficult for everyone before he finally falls. As it turns out, he actually ''can'' be more competent than he appears, he's just hamstrung by his prejudices.
* VillainousBreakdown: It begins when Tavi reveals himself as Gaius Octavian and challenges him to a duel, but he really loses it when Tavi beats his champion Navaris, meaning that he's [[KarmaHoudiniWarranty finally going to have to face the music for what he did]].
* WeHaveReserves: See GeneralRipper and AMillionIsAStatistic.
* YouCouldHaveUsedYourPowersForGood: Tavi commented that he could have, though he takes it back when he realizes that Arnos thinks AMillionIsAStatistic.
* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Invidia decides that Fidelias should kill him if he doesn't die during Tavi's ''juris macto'' against him.
[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:Senator Valerius]]
%%* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: To Senator Arnos.
%%[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:Count Gram]]
%%[[/folder]]

!!Mercenaries
[[folder:Fidelias]]
!Fidelias ex Cursori, a.k.a. Valiar Marcus

Fidelias was a Cursor and Amara's mentor, until he betrayed the First Lord for Aquitaine. A master spy and manipulator, he has greatly helped Aquitaine's bids for power until deciding Tavi would make a better ruler. He is now Tavi's advisor, in a SecretIdentity. In any event, Fidelias is absolutely loyal to only one thing – his country – and will do whatever he thinks is best for it, no matter how terrible others might think it.

Fidelias is absent throughout ''Cursor's Fury'', and it's only after a moment of FridgeLogic from Amara that the narration reveals where he is: throughout the book he's been serving in the First Aleran Legion as [[SergeantRock First Spear Valiar Marcus]], an old cover identity of his. Marcus later has some inner struggles with HeelFaceRevolvingDoor and BecomingTheMask, but ultimately [[HeelFaceTurn abandons Lady Aquitane and sides with Tavi.]]

----
!!Tropes that apply to Fidelias:
* TheAtoner: Kitai believes this of him as he didn't run when he had the chance once outed. He stayed and accepted Tavi's punishment without argument. He feels his death is needed to make amends.
* BecomingTheMask: After taking on the guise of Valiar Marcus, Tavi successfully earns his loyalty up until the point that he comes to value his role as Valiar Marcus over his role as Fidelias, even to the point of turning against Invidia.
* BeingEvilSucks: He defects to the Aquitaine's side because he thinks they're the best hope for the country. He does a lot of horrible things for them, like inciting the Marat to invade Alera, betraying his student Amara, and giving Arnos advice on how best to oust Tavi, who's TheGoodCaptain. He feels utterly horrible about all of this, and it eventually makes it so that he ''cannot'' reveal his identity to Tavi after Tavi earned his loyalty, because to Tavi, Fidelias is the one who attempted to murder his family.
* BigBadDuumvirate: While he's ultimately only the puppet of the Aquitaines, both he and Atsurak are the main antagonists of ''Furies of Calderon''.
* BigBadFriend: To Amara at the beginning of the first book, although they never interact after she discovers his treachery and escapes.
* ConsummateLiar: As he said to [[LivingLieDetector Odiana]]: "Yes, I do. No, I don't. The sky is green. I am seventeen years old. My real name is Gundred."
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: Nearly suffered from one in ''First Lord's Fury'' after his cover is blown, with him being '''crucified''' and left to fend for himself out in the frozen north of Phrygia. Thankfully, however, Kitai convinces Tavi to recant and Fidelias is saved.
* DeathSeeker: Has shades of this, particularly in the last novel where he doesn't even attempt to make a break for it after he's found out.
* DeathEqualsRedemption: Feels that he has to die in order to find some sort of redemption. Which happens. Sort of.
* EvilCounterpart: To Bernard, same crafting, both straightforward, mentors, and a little gruff at times. Too bad Fidelias is evil(ish).
* FallenHero:
** Amara and many Cursors view him as this for his betrayal to the Crown.
** Tavi, Max, and the First Aleran's leadership see him as this after they learn Valiar Marcus, their dependable First Spear, is also the greatest traitor to the realm.
* FamedInStory:
** Fidelias has a reputation as one of the best Cursors, which makes his defection a MassOhCrap moment for his former colleagues.
** Marcus is given the name Valiar in recognition of his bravery after the aforementioned raid, one of only five men so honored. When Max learns that Valiar Marcus is the First Spear of the First Aleran, he becomes a lot more hopeful of the Legion's chances.
* GoodFeelsGood: Even after he turns his coat, Fidelias always likes the rare occasions when he work lets him help the ordinary people of Alera. This is part of why he ends up BecomingTheMask; it's plainly obvious that Valiar Marcus, [[SergeantRock First Spear of the]] [[BadassArmy First]] [[BandOfBrothers Aleran]], is a ''lot'' happier than Fidelias ex Cursori.
* HeelFaceRevolvingDoor: Started out on the side of the Big Bad, then switched to the First Aleran, then almost to the Big Bad's [[TheDragon Dragon,]] before finally sticking to Tavi.
* IFightForTheStrongestSide: ...Because they're most likely to be able to preserve the Realm. But his true loyalty is to the country itself.
* MercyKill: In ''Furies of Calderon'' he kills a steadhold girl who is captured by the Marat and being eaten alive by them.
* NoNonsenseNemesis: Fidelias never gloats. He never does anything he hasn't thought out and planned ahead for, and he never offers his enemies any second chances or a dramatic showdown. Best demonstrated when he decides to deliver his resignation to Lady Aquitaine--with a balest bolt, from several hundred metres away, laced with two of the most lethal poisons in the Realm. One which quickens the heart rate and the other becomes more deadly the further it spreads in the body.
* NonIndicativeName: "Fidelias" means "faithful". Which he... um, isn't. Well, except to the Realm itself.
* ObliviousGuiltSlinging: Ends up on the receiving end of this - a ''lot'' - during ''Captain's Fury.''
* OldMaster: Revealed at Eastercon 2015 after the series, this will be his role among the next generation of Cursors, which would include Canim and Marat. Ehren will "Obi-wan" them directly and Fidelias will be "Yodaing" in the shadows.
* OldSoldier: The most experienced ''legionare'' in the First Aleran. At one point, Tavi is about to give him orders, and changes his mind.
-->Tavi paused, took a breath, and shook his head. "He'll know what to do."
* OnlyAFleshWound: Things like spears inside of him, or javelins scaled for nine-foot-tall Canim are only a mild inconvenience.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: In ''Cursor's Fury'', as the First Spear with years of experience, he has every right to remove Tavi from command when he knows Tavi is not a real officer, but listens to Tavi's arguments and ideas about how he knows much of the Cane. He eventually agrees to follow him. It helps in that moment, Fidelias likely realizes Tavi is Septimus' son.
* RetiredBadass: Valiar Marcus came out of retirement to join the First Aleran. This causes Magnus to become suspicious of him, since until he came out of retirement, Marcus had vanished off the face of Alera... around the time Fidelias was known to be operating.
* RewardedAsATraitorDeserves: Ultimately averted. It was a close thing, though: when Tavi found out who Marcus really was, he ordered him ''crucified'' and had to be talked out of it by Kitai.
* SecretIdentity: As Valiar Marcus.
* SecretSecretKeeper: At the end of ''Cursor's Fury'' he has realized Rufus Scipio is Tavi, who is really the child of Septimus, heir to the House of Gaius. He is a bit shocked but doesn't even dare hint that it is true when Lady Aquitaine asks.
* SergeantRock: Oh yes. There's a reason he's First Spear.
* SleepingWithTheBosssWife: His affair with Invidia. Fidelias worries about how Attis will react if he finds out.
* ThatManIsDead: Forced on him in favor of Valiar Marcus at the end of the series. Not that he minds, though.
* VoluntaryShapeshifting: Like many watercrafters, though it's much harder for him due to it not being his specialty. It takes almost a month and is apparently quite painful.
* WalkingSpoiler: The revelation that Valiar Marcus is Fidelias ex Cursori is one of the main plot twists at the end of ''Cursor's Fury''.
* WellIntentionedExtremist: He betrays Gaius in favor of the Aquitaines because he thinks Gaius is a dying old fool who won't simply bow out gracefully, and the ''other'' options for First Lord are petty schemers (and minor characters) and Lord Kalarus, who's a mentally unstable and vicious madman. He later implies he wouldn't have betrayed Gaius if he had known about Tavi, and pretty quickly switches his loyalty to him once he sees that Tavi is both the legitimate heir and a better ruler than the Aquitaines would be.
* WhatYouAreInTheDark: Soon after he realizes Magnus is very close to discovering his true identity (which Tavi would execute him for if he'd known), the pair of them are attacked by three Vord while alone. Marcus realizes he could very easily MakeItLookLikeAnAccident (after all, who would blame him for only being able to kill two and a half Vord?), but also that doing so is the kind of cold, self-serving action that he hated Alera's nobility for. He ends up saving Magnus.
* WildCard: For much of the series grasping just whose side he is on is the question. He ends up pretty firmly on Tavi's side by the end.
* WorthyOpponent: Gaius Sextus appears to hold him in high regards even after he turns coat. Enough to use furycraft to sneak into his room and leave him the swamp-exploring gear he had left behind because they're in an EnemyMine situation against Kalarus, also serving as an IfIWantedYouDead reminder.
* YouJustToldMe: During a fight with some Vord scouts, Magnus, who has been suspicious of Valiar Marcus for a long time, shouts, "Fidelias! Behind you!" When he whirls around to look and sees nothing there, he realizes he just blew his cover. Tavi is pissed.
* YourApprovalFillsMeWithShame: In ''Captain's Fury'', he gets this both coming and going. Lady Aquitaine is highly impressed by the plan he came up with to force Tavi to [[SadisticChoice either execute a town of innocent people or be imprisoned]], which he feels ''very'' guilty about, and [[ObliviousGuiltSlinging other officers of the First Aleran praise Valiar Marcus's loyalty]], when he's actually a spy.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Aldrick]]
!Aldrick ex Gladius

Former ''singulare'' to Princeps Septimus. Probably the second greatest swordsman alive, fears only the swordsman who once beat him – the legendary Araris Valerian. Lover of Odiana, and a mercenary in the service of the Aquitaines.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Aldrick:
* AwesomeMcCoolname: His name is literally Aldrick of the Sword.
* BackForTheFinale: After two books' worth of non-involvement, he shows up to help the good guys in the final battle.
* CatchPhrase: During the first book he will regularly say "Only Araris Valerian has ever beaten me, and you're not Araris," and variants thereof.
* EvenEvilHasStandards:
** In ''Furies of Calderon'', he's visibly disgusted both by the Marat practice of [[ImAHumanitarian devouring the flesh of their adversaries]] (sometimes ''[[EatenAlive while they're still alive]]'') and Fidelias coldly breaking the neck of a young steadholder girl who was captured by the Marat.
** [[BrokenBird Odiana was so broken]] by her treatment before they met that she wants him to put a [[MindRape discipline collar on her]]. He always refuses.
* EvilVsOblivion: He helps the First Aleran and Tavi's allies in the final battle against the Vord.
* ExtraOreDinary: He's a very skilled metalcrafter on par with Araris.
* FallenHero: He was once one of Septimus' closest allies, one of his bodyguards, but sleeping with Odiana, for whom Miles was smitten, to calm her down led to Miles challenging him to Juris Macto, which led to Araris taking up the spot after Miles' "accident" and his defeat. The ''juris macto'' led to the public reveal of the incident and Septimus couldn't allow him to be near him again. After that, he became a mercenary.
* MasterSwordsman: He's nearly as good as Araris. Unfortunately for him, "nearly" isn't nearly good enough.
* OhCrap: He practically ''collapses'' in shock near the climax of ''Furies of Calderon'' when he realizes that he's finally facing Araris Valerian again for the first time in almost two decades.
* OutOfFocus: Doesn't do much after the halfway point of the series.
* PretenderDiss: His "you're not Araris" CatchPhrase, as mentioned above. When it turns out his opponent actually ''is'' Araris, he's absolutely terrified.
* PunchClockVillain: A mercenary-revolutionary with standards, if not morals.
* TheRival: To Araris.
* SecretKeeper: Based on Invidia's first conversation in ''Captain's Fury'', Aldrick never told her or anyone else Araris is alive and where he has been hiding. Whether this is out of respect, or not wanting to admit Araris beat him ''again'' is unknown.
* TheStoic: Since metalcrafters can block out pain and emotion, he can be fairly emotionless.
* UnholyMatrimony: {{Stoic}} mercenary + AxCrazy {{Cloudcuckoolander}} = Surprisingly adorable couple.
* VillainousRescue: Just when Amara and Bernard's battle against the Vord in ''Academ's Fury'' seems lost, he appears leading the charge with Aquitaine's legionaries, transforming the conflict from an extremely close call into a resounding victory for the good guys.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Odiana]]
!Odiana

A powerful watercrafter who was enslaved as a young girl – a mind-warping slave collar combined with her powerful empathy and the trauma of slavery has driven her mad. She serves the Aquitaines alongside Aldrick.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Odiana:
* AxeCrazy: Years being mindraped as a slave will do that to you.
* BrainwashedAndCrazy: Suffering from the aftereffects of such.
* BrokenBird: They don't come more broken than her in this series.
* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: If, again, a lot more violent than usual.
* TheEmpath: Standard for a watercrafter.
* LivingLieDetector: Also standard for a watercrafter.
* TheMadHatter: Seems quite self-aware about her own insanity.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: Isana gets appopriately worried when she sees Odiana's "cheerfully insane" demeanor immediate fade into undisguised terror and panic when Kord pulls out a discipline collar for the two women to see.
* TheOphelia: Years as a slave broke her mind. She spends a lot of time giggling while drowning people.
* OutOfFocus: Doesn't do much after the halfway point of the series.
* PetTheDog: Helps Isana with no real ulterior motives when they're both trapped in Kord's steadhold.
* RapeAsBackstory: As a slave. When Kord and his men start raping her in front of Isana, she just grimly accepts it. In fact, she ''gives Isana advice'' on how to ''be'' raped in such a way that the rapists won't hurt her too much.
* TragicVillain: The poor woman's sanity broke like an old thread thanks to the hellish treatment she was forced into as a child.
* UnhappyMedium: Hoo ''boy''. Being brainwashed and raped just as your [[TheEmpath empath]] powers are coming in does [[AxCrazy nothing good for your sanity]].
* UnholyMatrimony: With Aldrick. {{Stoic}} mercenary + AxCrazy {{Cloudcuckoolander}} = Surprisingly adorable couple.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Demos]]
!Captain Demos

Captain of the ''Slive'', a merchant vessel that indulges in smuggling as long as they can afford the bribes. Originally recruited by Ehren to carry word of the Canim in ''Cursor's Fury,'' he's later hired to help Tavi transport Varg after their PrisonBreak in ''Captain's Fury'' and remains a part of the team through ''Princeps' Fury'' and ''First Lord's Fury.'' A powerful woodcrafter, as evidenced by the fact that the ''Slive'' itself is one big wood fury that he can control at will.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Demos:
* AntiVillain: Originally. He was the one who brought Sarl and the Vord Queen back to Canea. In his first appearance, he threatens a pawnshop owner with murder, and in his second appearance he nearly follows through--and then proceeds to kidnap all the women and children he can find on his way out of town. Sure, he's technically saving them from being murdered by a horde of Canim, but only so he can sell them into slavery. Yet he's somehow very likable, like a DarkerAndEdgier [[Franchise/PiratesOfTheCaribbean Captain Jack Sparrow]]. In the following book, Tavi notes that he doesn't have enough chains on his ship to be a full-time slaver; he probably never really sold them as slaves and really was just trying to save them. It's just that he's a pirate-- and he has a reputation to uphold.
* TheCaptain: A very talented smuggler. He cares for his men and moves to protect them if he can.
* CombatPragmatist: He has no problem fighting in any way that gets him an advantage, which includes using his the ship's wooden features against his enemies.
* GreenThumb: His whole ship is controlled by his powers over wood. So making doors open as surprise attacks are something attackers should be cautious of.
* EvenEvilHasStandards: He may be a smuggler who will kill you without hesitation if you can't pay him, but he dislikes slavery and is appalled by what the Canim do to their captives.
* HonestAdvisor: He is never cruel or mean to Tavi, and gives the title of Princeps little respect, but when it comes to his knowledge of the sea, sailing, and sea combat, he never minces words either. Tavi trusts his opinion on this and other matters.
* IGaveMyWord: Once Tavi purchases his service, he will see it through, even if Tavi destroys his slavery chains during the trip. That is to be a matter they will discuss after this current venture is over.
* ThePromise: When Tavi replaces the chains that he destroyed, he requests that if Demos approves of the replacements, he will never use any other set of chains for slavery. Demos, cynically suspecting them to be old rusty chains, agrees--provided they meet his expectations. Tavi doesn't give him rusty chains, but a long length of ''solid gold'' chains. Demos accepts them and becomes Tavi's mount at sea.
* ObfuscatingDisability : The ''Slive'' looks "stained, old, and worn." It isn't. It is a very fast and nimble ship on the open sea, and while not a powerhouse in combat, one not to be taken lightly either.
* OutGambitted: Tavi stuns him by offering chains of pure gold as replacement ones to the slaving chains Tavi destroyed. Demos wasn't sure exactly how Tavi planned to settle accounts with him, but he never anticipated this. He even notes that with ThePromise above, Tavi is making him wear his own chains and put them on freely.
* ShootTheMessenger: He almost became the victim of this trope when he delivered the final message from Kalarus to Sarl about the Canim invasion.
* TheStoic: He has two emotions: Blank, and pissed.
* TheUnsmile: They are instead described within one book as "showing his teeth."
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Rook]]
!Rook a.k.a. Gaelle

Head of the Bloodcrows (Kalarus's equivalent of the Cursors), she is Kalarus' chief spy and assassin; a minor but important recurring character.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Rook:
* BreakTheCutie: What her training seems to have involved. She was raped and broken emotionally to allow her strong intelligence to remain and still be loyal to her lord. She wasn't totally broken, though...
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: She gets part of her throat torn out by the Awakened Vord Queen, with her left to slowly drown in her own blood.
* DarkActionGirl: Not by choice. Kalarus keeps her in line by using her daughter against her.
* DroppedABridgeOnHim: Heartbreakingly and callously murdered by the Awakened Vord Queen because the Queen senses Rook's approval in Brencis Minoris not yielding information in making the slave collars even more effective. The Queen sees this flicker of independence as counter to her goals, so she kills her with as much thought as a human would feel for swatting a fly.
* FeedTheMole: After they discover she is a mole, she's allowed to remain with the Cursor candidates "undiscovered" because it's easier to keep an eye on her than to try to hunt down whatever replacement Kalarus would install.
* HeelFaceTurn: She defects from Kalarus' service the second she gets a serious chance to remove her daughter away from him.
* IHaveYourWife: Her daughter being kept close to Kalarus is how he keeps her under control.
* ImpersonationExclusiveCharacter: As Gaelle.
* KillAndReplace: Maestro Killian allows Rook to kill the real Gaelle shortly after she was selected for Cursor training and [[VoluntaryShapeshifting use watercratfing to assume her appearance]]. Killian [[IDidWhatIHadToDo did this]] to [[DoubleAgent get into Kalare's spy network.]]
* MamaBear: She commits treason against both the First Lord and Kalarus for the sake of her daughter Masha.
* TheMole: As Gaelle, who got close to Tavi in Cursor training.
* ObfuscatingStupidity: Even when collared and supposedly under Brencis' control, she is able to act and stay loyal to the Crown and protect her daughter. She eggs on one fellow slave to kill the Cursors they found to prevent the Cursors from revealing more information and then kills the second slave because he realizes the truth. After this betrayal, she then goes back to her master and gives the truth in such a way that she isn't disobeying his commands.
* PunchClockVillain: A good person forced to do bad things because [[IHaveYourWife Kalarus has her daughter.]]
* TakeCareOfTheKids: After being enslaved by a discipline collar, her last request to Amara is this, as the one place she felt was safest from the Vord was the Calderon Valley.
* TrappedInVillainy: Kalarus forced her to act as his puppet through threatening the safety of her daughter.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Navaris]]
! Phrygiar Navaris

Bodyguard, assassin, or blade-for-hire, Navaris doesn't care – she's in it for money and the reputation as the most dangerous swordswoman alive. Nowadays, though, she serves as the chief ''singulare'' to Senator Arnos, enforcing his corrupt will on anyone unlucky enough to get in her path through sword and intimidation.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Navaris:
* AlasPoorVillain: Downplayed. Tavi isn't particularly devastated by her death, but he's not very proud of using her FreudianExcuse to induce a VillainousBreakdown and [[DueToTheDead takes the time to gently close her eyes after she dies]].
* AnimalMotif: Snakes; both Tavi and Fidelias compare her eyes and general demeanor to a serpent's. It's fitting given that many snakes are quiet and unassuming, but extremely deadly, just like Navaris herself.
* AxCrazy: She thinks becoming a famous killer will force her father to acknowledge her.
* DarkActionGirl: A sadistic, AxCrazy killer with a bodycount in the hundreds if not thousands.
* DeathByIrony: Navaris became famous as a champion-for-hire (basically, she fights duels for rich people so they don't have to risk their lives). She ends up dying in a duel with Tavi.
* TheDragon: To Arnos. She's his main enforcer and his champion in any duels.
* DuelToTheDeath: She uses these as an excuse to legally kill lots and lots of people, mostly just for the hell of it.
* EvilVirtues: She has an extraordinary amount of willpower, which helps keep the AxCrazy in check.
* FreudianExcuse: She was born out of wedlock and never knew her father, or even who he was; she acts as she does in the hope that if she becomes the best in the country he'll appear and acknowledge her.
* MaskOfSanity: Much is made in Tavi and Isana's narration throughout ''Captain's Fury'' of how she's actually profoundly mad and is only able to make it ''seem'' like she isn't perfectly fine with disemboweling everyone she meets.
* MasterSwordsman: Araris is probably the only person on the planet more capable with a blade than she is, and unlike with Aldrick, the margin between them is close enough that Navaris is still a genuine threat to him. Tavi only managed to win their duel by playing on her psychological hang-ups, and even then it was a close deal.
* MurderIsTheBestSolution: Her response to pretty much any problem is to put a hand on her sword and get ready to start cutting throats. Tavi and Arnos are able to dissuade her a couple times, but eventually she stops accepting excuses and just starts slashing.
* ParentalAbandonment: She is the bastard child of a Citizen and commoner. Her father never acknowledged her and she might not even know his true name.
%% * PsychoForHire: So very much. Navaris is nowhere near sane.
* SanityHasAdvantages: She's a far better swordsmaster than Tavi is, but Tavi thinks far more clearly than her. He manages to use her deep-seated psychological flaws to talk her into a VillainousBreakdown, meaning that she ends up making the mistakes that allow him to kill her.
* ToBeAMaster: To be the greatest swordswoman alive! Oh, and to gain the recognition of her father.
* VillainousBreakdown: Tavi [[BreakThemByTalking talks her into one]].
[[/folder]]

!!Soldiers and Other Characters
[[folder:Araris]]
!Araris Valerian a.k.a. Fade

One of the greatest swordsman who ever lived and once Septimus' close friend, he is believed dead by most of the world and uses the identity of Bernard's disfigured, brain-damaged slave Fade to watch over and instruct Tavi. He also develops a romance with Isana.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Araris:

* BecomingTheMask: A bit of a twist on the actual description: he isn't a con man, and he only clings to his alternate identity out of guilt. But he clings ''hard''.
* BigBrotherWorship He loves his brother so much, he lamed him to stop him from fighting Aldrick in ''juris macto'' and being killed.
* BigDamnHeroes: A lot. Nearly every book has him appear and perform some awesome swordsmanship, and generally defeating the enemy, or at least stalling them for other heroes to arrive.
* BodyguardCrush: He was Isana's personal bodyguard while both were serving alongside Septimus in the Legions, and continues to protect her (and Tavi by extension) in the present day out of a sense of duty - and also because somewhere along the line, he ended up falling in love with Isana himself.
* TheCavalry: Likewise, a lot. Especially in ''Cursor's Fury'', when Bernard, Isana, and Amara are about to be killed by Kalarus's Immortals, and in comes Fade, out of nowhere, in a dirty chef's apron, and slashes their way out.
%% * ChromeChampion: Does this for the final showdown.
* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: His cover. He's ''very'' good at it. He abandons this after ''Cursor's Fury'', where he openly appears as Tavi, and later Isana's bodyguard, as Araris Valerian.
* ExtraOreDinary: His metalcrafting ability makes him the deadliest swordsman alive. [[MundaneUtility Also came in handy around Bernardholt's forge.]]
* FailureKnight: He blames himself for Septimus' death and falling in love with his best friend's wife.
* FakingTheDead: Part of the reason he became Fade is so that everyone would believe the greatest swordsman in the world had died.
* FeelNoPain: All metalcrafters have the ability to block out pain, but Araris is unquestionably one of the best at it: case in point, blocking an assassin's arrow by ''catching it through his palm'' barely makes him flinch.
* FirstEpisodeTwist: Some fairly critical details about him are revealed early on, which can make him tricky to talk about without giving plot twists away.
* GoodScarsEvilScars: Played with; he disguised himself by burning his face with the Legions' brand for cowardice. He's no coward, but he ''[[FailureKnight thinks]]'' [[FailureKnight he is.]]
* MarkOfShame: The brand on his face marking him as a coward to anyone who sees him at first glance. However, as noted in other tropes, Araris is only a coward in his own mind. His love for a woman who is the wife of his best friend and protecting her and not his Prince left him with guilt that lasts until Isana has a JourneyToTheCenterOfTheMind while healing him from a serious wound.
* MasterSwordsman: Widely renowned as the single greatest swordsman in Alera. After a while, the narration simply stops describing most of his fights, summing them up in lines like, "Nine men rushed him. They died."
* MeaningfulName: When your surname means 'all-heal', and you end up with the master healer, and at least metaphorically healing her....
* TheMentor: To Tavi. He's also the first person to realize that Tavi has become capable of furycraft. He specifically trains Tavi in sword-fighting.
* MyGreatestFailure: Blames himself for Septimus's death because Septimus had ordered him to leave and protect Isana instead. He failed to protect her sister Alia, and thought his delivery of Tavi caused him to be without furycrafting.
* MyGreatestSecondChance: Views Tavi (Septimus' son) and Isana (Septimus' wife) as these.
%% * NotSoStoic: It took one ''hell'' of a lot of effort, though.
* ObfuscatingStupidity: Again, he's good at this, in his Fade persona. He maintained it in view of anyone for over fifteen years. Even Bernard never caught on to the act. For part of the first book, Isana was worried he was lost in that persona.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: His brother, Sir Miles, knows him very well. Miles knows Rari would have died standing next to Septimus, however, he didn't. He has been protecting some boy for the past fifteen years. What could have made him abandon his best friend in a time of his greatest need? Cue OhCrap to Miles' FridgeBrilliance on the matter.
* PainfulTransformation: Araris makes it clear that even with his pain-numbing abilities via metalcrafting, his ChromeChampion transformation is ''highly'' painful (and the Vord Queen at one point takes advantage of this by reducing the temperature of the room to make his metal skin frost over), but when you're fighting the Vord Queen in a last-ditch effort to stop her from destroying all of Alera, [[GodzillaThreshold you'll do it]].
* ThePenance: Part of his branding himself is to pay for his perceived cowardice and his Greatest Failures.
* PercussivePrevention: In order to save his brother, Sir Miles, from an almost certain death in a duel, Araris arranged it so that Miles broke his leg. Then Araris fought the duel in his stead and won.
* PosthumousCharacter: Died before the start of the series in the Marat war. That's what is commonly believed, anyway. The reality is that he's been living undercover as the slave Fade.
* ScarsAreForever: That brand on his face isn't going away any time soon.
* SecondLove: He takes up a romance with Isana long after Septimums's death.
* TheStoic: Not even Isana can pick up on his emotions most of the time. That's right, he's stoic on the outside ''and'' the inside.
* SurvivorGuilt: Araris feels guilt over not being at Septimus's side during First Calderon, though the reason he wasn't there is because he was following Septimus's direct orders to protect Isana.
* WigDressAccent: His look as Fade has long, unkempt hair, a slack and unintelligent expression, dulled speech, and the burn mark on his face to hide his distinctive features. It works well enough because people saw the coward's mark and looked no further. Even his brother dismissed the similarities.
* TheWorfEffect: Araris alternates between descriptions of his martial prowess and scenes of him getting roundly trounced. For example, Navaris nearly guts him in ''Captain's Fury'', and the Vord stun him by hitting him with a door toward the beginning of ''First Lord's Fury''.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Max]]
!Antillar "Max" Maximus

Illegitimate son of one of the most powerful High Lords, Max is Tavi's roommate at the Academy and a close personal friend. Lives life for the moment, as he doesn't expect to outlive his father. Powerful in Earthcrafting (especially the ability to induce lust), with a respectable skill in watercrafting as well. As one of the nobility, is also capable in all six elements. Seems to have fallen into the role of Tavi's primary sidekick.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Max:
* BastardAngst: Max is regularly abused by his stepmother Dorotea due to his bastard status. She sees him as a threat to Crassus's inheritance and arranges "accidents" for him as a result. She also had his mother murdered.
* BigBrotherInstinct: He sometimes took whippings for things Crassus did in order to protect him. Additionally, Tavi notes in ''Captain's Fury'' if Arnos tries removing Crassus by trumped up charges and threatens to kill him, if their father [[PapaWolf didn't beat him to it]], Max would surely call ''Juris Macto'' against Arnos and then "scatter Arnos' residual pieces over a quarter-mile of farmland."
* TheBigGuy: Of Tavi's group from the Academy.
* BoisterousBruiser: Very loud, a ladies man and the most talented furycrafter of Tavi's academy friends.
* TheCharmer: Very much so. He spends [[TwinThreesomeFantasy a night with a pair of twins]] at one point.
* CerebusRetcon: His status as TheHedonist comes across in a far darker light in ''Cursor's Fury'' once it's revealed that it's a side effect of him being fully aware of how his WickedStepmother will ensure he has a short and tragic life.
* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: His outwardly lecherous behavior belies a surprisingly intelligent and tactically-minded nature.
* DysfunctionalFamily: His father was largely absent fighting on the Shieldwall, leaving Max at the mercy of his stepmother [[WickedStepmother Dorotea]], who killed his mother and regularly had him beaten. After he stood up to her, she began arranging "accidents" for him. It was this that caused Max to run off and join the Legions.
* FlatWhat: His reaction to being told the catapult he just destroyed, and promised to help rebuild, was made with ''no'' crafting and the new one will be like that.
* HandsomeLech: Occasionally verging on ChivalrousPervert.
* HeroicBastard: A good man who doesn't resent his half-brother for his mistreatment at the hands of his WickedStepmother. He even took the blame for a few things to protect his half-brother in their youths.
* HealingHands: He isn't as skilled as other watercrafters, but he has enough skill for minor wounds.
* HiddenDepths: Despite his goofy demeanor, he often shows a surprisingly clever mind in terms of politics, furycrafting, and insight into one's character. For instance, he bluntly but honestly informs Tavi in ''First Lord's Fury'' that he's a better man than Gaius Sextus ever was, since Tavi wouldn't have simply condemned the civilians of Alera Imperia that couldn't be evacuated in time to death like Sextus did with his HeroicSacrifice. He also read up on advanced furycrafting theory in preparation for Tavi's expedition to Canea so as to make sure he and his friends were CrazyPrepared. Furthermore, he critiques Tavi during ''First Lord's Fury'' by noting how he hasn't been properly taking Kitai's opinions into account within their romance.
* InASingleBound: His talent for windcrafting isn't quite enough to enable {{Flight}} like true Knights Aeris, but he can still jump very high and ''really'' far, to the point that Tavi genuinely mistakes it for crafted flight the first time he witnesses it.
* LadykillerInLove: He is very interested in Cereus Veradis, who won't give him the time of day. It's implied that she's started to warm up to him after the end of the Vord War, though.
* LookingForLoveInAllTheWrongPlaces: In contrast to Tavi, who is set only on Kitai, Max goes through a series of one-night stands. He lampshades it.
* MeaningfulName: Antyllus, son of Marc Antony, who ''did'' die young because his father's death stripped him of his protection - because Gaius Octavian murdered him.
* MrFanservice: It's often mentioned that [[SheCleansUpNicely He Cleans Up Nicely]] and that his attractive & boisterous HeroicBuild often got him into bed with any woman he smiled at in the Academy.
* MoodWhiplash: Causes it just by wandering in and out of scenes. Especially when his past comes up, he goes from happy to dark and curt quickly.
* ParentalIssues: Well, he ''is'' a bastard son of a High Lord. Additionally, his stepmother had his mother killed and has been trying to do the same to Max for years in order to shore up her son Crassus' position as heir.
* ThePornomancer: His most-used application of earthcraft is to induce lust in women.
* ReallyGetsAround: His first scene in ''Academ's Fury'' has him having just enjoyed a night with twins. Whether they did a Twin-Threesome or he just took them in turns is unsaid, but Tavi finding him and dragging him from the bed of some young woman during their schooling wasn't uncommon.
* TheRival: Dorotea sees him as this to Crassus. In reality, he forms a friendlier rivalry with his step-brother as the series goes on.
* SadClown: A lot of his heroic lechery and clowning around is because he knows his stepmother's planning to murder him anyway, so he sees no point in being too serious about life.
* SarcasticDevotee: Despite his "[[CatchPhrase Sacred Right]]" to complain, Max would give his life for Tavi.
* SiblingYinYang: He and Crassus. Max is a fun-loving BoisterousBruiser. Crassus is quieter and more thoughtful. They become an effective team over the course of the series.
* SpareToTheThrone: While Max has no ambitions to take his father's position of High Lord, Dorotea is aware that should something happen to her Crassus, or if Max gets enough support from Antillus' Legions and the other High Lords, he could challenge Crassus for the position. She views his actions, growing prominent in the legions, becoming friends with the page of the First Lord, as a plot to get around his illegitimacy. So she seeks to kill him.
* VitriolicBestBuds: Max has this relationship with virtually everyone he meets, most notably Crassus, Tavi, Ehren, and even Kitai.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Crassus]]
!Antillus Crassus

Max's younger and legitimate half-brother, and their father's heir.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Crassus:
* TheAtoner: For both his mother's treachery and both his and his mother's abuse of his step-brother.
* BashBrothers: Literally. Max and Crassus together are nigh-on unstoppable.
* BigBrotherInstinct: An age-inverted case. In part out of guilt for having previously been cruel to him in childhood when he didn't know any better, Crassus is ''very'' defensive of Max, to the point where he point-blank '''obliterates''' the Canim charge on the First Aleran's position so as to make sure a critically injured Max can be sent back to the healers.
* BroughtDownToBadass: The Awakened Vord Queen badly cripples him in ''First Lord's Fury'', to the point where it's unknown if he'll ever be able to actually walk again without extensive physical therapy. However, he's still an incredibly deadly furycrafter, and both he & a nearly-unconscious Max successfully erect a stone barrier during ''a furystorm'' to help the First Aleran in the Battle of Third Calderon.
* AFatherToHisMen: Maybe moreso than Tavi; not quite as popular, perhaps, but less willing to put lives in danger. Still generally liked and respected.
* InTheBlood: Zig-zagged. Fidelias observes that he has inherited the best parts of the Kalarus bloodline (patience, intelligence, long-term planning), but not their infamous [[TheCaligula mental instability]].
* LockedOutOfTheLoop: He was just as shocked as Tavi, Kitai, and Max were by his mother's treachery (Crassus only came along with the First Aleran since he was hoping he could try and bury the hatchet with Max).
* OnlySaneMan: Considering his step-brother is not the most [[BoisterousBruiser far-thinking person]], Ehren is a somewhat cold spy, his boss's plans are all CrazyEnoughToWork, and his boss's [[ActionGirl lover]] does whatever the hell she wants to, Crassus is pretty much forced into this position.
* TheRival: To Max, in a more friendly way as the story progresses.
* SiblingYinYang: He and Max. Max is a fun-loving BoisterousBruiser. Crassus is quieter and more thoughtful. They become an effective team over the course of the series.
* SpareToTheThrone: After his uncle starts his war and his cousin joined in, Crassus ends up becoming a potential heir to the lands of Kalare. He is of high birth, his mother is Kalarus' sister, making him first in line to take over the lands once the war is over. It left him in a nice political situation where he couldn't be killed if Arnos tried to make him commit an legal but morally bankrupt order and Crassus refuses.
* TheStrategist: His main weakness is that he is too cautious (which nearly costs him dearly), but even that usually serves him well since he is able to sense traps more easily than anyone else. In pretty much every other respect he's an excellent leader and tactician.
* WhatTheHellHero: When he finds out that his mother is alive and Tavi never told him, he doesn't take it well and calls him out on it. By the epilogue, he is still refusing to speak to Tavi while undergoing physical therapy in Antillus, and it's unclear if their friendship will ever be mended.
[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:Durias]]
%%* FireForgedFriends: With Tavi.
%%* LesCollaborateurs: He was the first Aleran to side with the Canim as part of the Free Aleran Legion. However, considering that he's a former slave and is using the opportunity to strike back against his oppressors, he's a very sympathetic example who's a HeroAntagonist at his worst.
%%* OnlySaneMan: Among the group of Alerans and Canim Tavi leads to kill one of the two remaining Canea Vord Queens.
%%[[/folder]]

!Other Races

!!Marat
[[folder:Marat as a whole]]

A race of "barbarian" elf-like humanoids who bond with animals. They are nomadic after their cities were destroyed centuries ago by the Vord. They live in a series of tribes found in the eastern continent of Maratea, linked to Alera by the Calderon Valley.
----
!!Tropes that apply to the Marat:
* AfterTheEnd: They once had an advanced Alera-style civilization with large cities, but they were wiped out by the Vord and left with only a handful of "barbarian" survivors.
* AnimalMotifs: The Marat tribes are each based around a certain animal, and the animal's nature is typically reflected in the tribals' demeanor. The known tribal animals are [[CoolHorse horses]] (fast, deceptively dangerous, hard-working, and stoic), [[SavageWolves wolves]] (merciless, cold, savage, and excellent at teamwork), [[FeatheredFiend herdbane]] (treacherous, quick-witted, flighty, impulsive, and stubborn), [[HonorableElephant gargants]] (honorable, wise, slow to act but absolutely devastating and near-impossible to counter), and [[PantheraAwesome lions]] (though the latter never appear in the series). There was formerly a [[FantasticFoxes Fox]] Tribe, but the Wolf and Herdbane Tribes wiped them out several years prior to the start of the series.
* BadassNormal: [[DownplayedTrope In comparison to the other sentient races of Carna]], as their connection to their ''chala'' is not the exact same game changer as, say, the {{Telepathy}} and AnIcePerson powers of the Icemen, the BloodMagic of the Canim, and the ElementalPowers of the [[WitchSpecies Alerans]], but they're still incredibly dangerous and probably the second-most recurring threat to Alera in the present day before the series begins.
* BarbarianTribe: The Marat, who are divided into tribes based on their animal totems and live in the lands east of Alera, forsaking contact [[TheHorde except when they invade the bridging valley]].
* TheBeastmaster: The Marat are a ''race'' of these, split into tribes based on their individual chosen animal.
* BestialityIsDepraved: Subverted. While a common stereotype of the Marat from the Alerans is that they "lay with their beasts," it quickly becomes pretty clear that this doesn't happen and the relationship between ''chala'' and Marat is far more intimate and complex than what can be easily described.
-->'''Isana:''' (to Kitai) What you have with Tavi... it's like your people's other totems, yes? The way your father is close to his gargant, Walker.\\
'''Kitai:''' ([[FascinatingEyebrow raises her eyebrows]]) Doroga was not ''mating'' with Walker when last I knew. Walker would not stand for it.
* BestHerToBedHer: The Marat, as a culture, have this in terms of their courting rituals. The man must win over the woman he wants in some competition, but with the catch that the competetion is one of ''her'' choosing. So, if a male of the Wolf Tribe seeks to court a lady of the Horse Tribe and she doesn't reciprocate, she can challenge him to a horse race, knowing full well she has the clear advantage and will likely easily win, thus ending his pursuit of her.
* TheBet: Marat are willing to wager high stakes, such as alliances and the life choices of their children on major trials. Kitai bets her father she will win against Tavi and thus be now considered an adult and free to choose her own path in life.
* BondCreatures: The Marat can do this with any animal and call their Bond Creatures "chala"; they gain not just telepathic communication with their animal, but actually begin to gain some of their physical attributes.
* BrutalHonesty: Since the Marat didn't even have a concept of telling falsehoods until Tavi explained the idea to Doroga, most Marat are incredibly blunt and matter-of-fact. Sometimes this is PlayedForDrama (like with Doroga's cold assessment about the "Field of Fools" - a.k.a. the Battle of First Calderon - when he's talking to an angry Placidus Aria in ''Princeps' Fury''), but more often than not it's PlayedForLaughs (such as Doroga and Kitai always finding it hilarious to embarrass their Aleran friends/allies with the frankness with which they talk about sex, or Doroga mocking the ''juris macto'' he has been called upon to officiate).
* CombatByChampion: There are customs in Marat culture about two clans settling disputes by having two representatives fight each other. ''Furies of Calderon'' has two examples:
** With Doroga's help, Tavi invokes this to claim he and Fade aren't the enemies of the Marat. The combat is Tavi and Kitai's task to sneak into the Vord base[[note]]No one knew at the time it was that[[/note]] and steal a precious cure-all mushroom. Tavi realizes nothing in the rules for this challenge forbid a ''tie'' and gets Kitai to partner with him so they can both win if they each hand over the mushroom at the same time.
** Doroga stops Atsurak's attack for a time on Garrison by challenging him to this, declaring the later's actions are an abomination to the One.
* CueTheSun: The Marat hordes hold off attacking Aleran positions like Garrison until the sun rises, timing their first charge to right when the sun comes over the eastern horizon of Maratea. Apart from the religious symbolism the Marat ascribe to the sun, they do this because the rising sun will also be shining right in the eyes of the Garrison defenders and hamper their ability to see.
* DueToTheDead: Their tradition of eating the flesh of their enemies to gain their strength may be this for some. When Hashat killed some of Princeps Septimus' ''[[PraetorianGuard singulares]]'' in the Battle of First Calderon, she took their possessions and ate their hearts to honor them and take of their strength.
* DuelToTheDeath: These are often used to settle disputes between the Marat.
* EveryoneHasStandards: The Marat might practice cannibalism, but even ''they'' find the Aleran practice of slavery to be horrifying.
* EyeColorChange: Bonding with a ''chala'' makes their eyes become the eye color of the ''chala''.
* GenderEqualsBreed: Well, in a sense. Though background Marat characters are of both genders, all named characters of any tribe are the same gender. All named members of the Gargant, Wolf, and Herdbane tribes are male, while all named members of the Horse tribe are female.
* GenderIsNoObject: Kind of. Unlike Alera and (arguably) the ranges of Canea, which are both NoWomansLand, the Marat are shown to live in a society where gender isn't viewed with that much importance and strength & honor are seen as the most significant aspects of a person's worth.
* TheGhost: Both the Lion Tribe and a seventh, unnamed tribe are never encountered in the series.
* HorseArcher: Almost all of the members of the Horse Tribe are depicted as this, and also have ImprobableAimingSkills.
* HumanAliens:
** The Marat are almost indistinguishable from humans, with the only physical differences being a higher body temperature, pale skin, silver-white hair, longer canine teeth and canted eyes.
** The Marat are so human, in fact, that they and Alerans can interbreed and have viable offspring.
* ImAHumanitarian: The Marat eat their enemies to "partake of their strength," with some clans eating them ''while they are still alive''.
* InnateNightVision: Like the Canim, they can see in the dark infinitely better than Alerans can.
* InnocentFanserviceGirl: For the most part, adult Marat barely bother with clothes beyond a loincloth and a belt to hold weapons and tools in. When first brought to a Marat camp, the narration notes that Tavi sees a lot of things a young Aleran boy isn't supposed to see -- but really wants to. This causes some difficulty when Tavi recruits a host of female Marat riders as cavalry for the First Aleran.
* ItWasAGift: The Marat believe that if given a gift from a friend, it would disrespect that friend if they don't use it. So, Tavi invokes this with the Marat cavalry that comes to help by personally giving each rider armor and clothes, mostly so they will actually [[PleasePutSomeClothesOn cover up to Aleran standards]].
* LanguageEqualsThought: The Marat language does not have a word for "lying", and the closest the Marat can come up with is to say that somebody is making an 'intentional mistake'. In their culture, when one person accuses another of being mistaken the result is a DuelToTheDeath between parties to determine who is correct. Thus, they find the concept of somebody deliberately telling a falsehood confusing and pointless.
* LightningBruiser: Not only do the Marat have SuperStrength, but they're also superhumanly fast and agile, with Kitai walking across a thin rope in ''Academ's Fury'' about as easily as if she was instead walking across a thick crossbeam - and all in a third of the time it took Tavi to crawl across.
* NobleSavage: With the exception of the more overtly villainous Atsurak, the vast majority of the Marat are depicted as being in this archetype as the series goes on, most obviously evidenced with both Kitai and Doroga.
* NotSoDifferentRemark: Tavi, Kitai, Doroga, and Amara have all made multiple remarks lampshading how similar their peoples really are to one another. The Marat can be just as dishonorable, needlessly cruel, illogical, noble, heroic, and kind as any Aleran can. Both societies also contain very confusing and arcane rules that aren't immediately obvious, and have rather dark traditions that they refuse to give up on (the Aleran practice of slavery - at least until the epilogue of ''First Lord's Fury'' - and the Marat practice of cannibalism).
* {{Polyamory}}: It's implied that at least some of the Marat practice this. Kitai mentions to Tavi at one point how her father Doroga had bedded multiple women after her own mother's passing, and if the comments from Enna in the introduction to ''Captain's Fury'' are anything to go by, it's not seen as that unusual for Marat to "share" their lovers even among their family members.
* ThePowerOfTheSun: The Marat worship the sun, calling it "the One" and often swear by it when making oaths.
* ProudWarriorRace: They ''have'' to be one to survive on [[DeathWorld Carna]], after all.
* SideBet: In ''Furies of Calderon'' when Doroga and Atsurak are fighting in their DuelToTheDeath, several other Marat from different tribes were making wagers on the winner. It is another part of their culture.
* SuperSenses: Downplayed; Not only do they have InnateNightVision, but the Marat are frequently shown to have far more acute senses than Alerans. Tavi, who is Kitai's ''chala'', has gained these as consequence, with him mentioning that it's less that he suddenly has, for instance, excellent hearing, but that he can now more carefully pick out individual sounds and easily figure out their sources.
* SuperStrength: Marat are significantly stronger than most Alerans, even when they don't have a bond with animals that further enhances that strength. Kitai is able to break apart a chair she is tied to with a couple of violent jerks, and Doroga (whose ''chala'' is the massive gargant Walker) can lift a massive boulder and throw it as a weapon.
* TechnicolorEyes: Marat children, called by the gender-neutral term whelps, have multi-colored eyes until the time of their bonding. When they bond with their ''chala'', their totem, their eye color changes permanently to the eye color of their ''chala''.
* ThisIsNotMyLifeToTake: The Marat have strict hunting ethics. The prey of a person is that person's to kill, whether animal or person. If Tavi is after someone, the Marat wouldn't kill the person but would work to contain the person to allow Tavi to kill him. That said, if the person attacks, they will defend themselves.
* OurElvesAreDifferent: Marat are basically Neolithic Wood Elves, though the term is never explicitly used for them.
* PsychicLink: How the link between a Marat and their ''chala'' seems to work, with them taking on aspects of their respective BondCreatures. For instance, Doroga gains SuperStrength even for a Marat from his Gargant Walker, and Kitai eventually gains access to furycrafting from Tavi.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Kitai]]
!Kitai

Kitai is a woman of the Marat, and Tavi's frequent partner, foil, and love interest. Tough and athletic, like Tavi she has learned to rely on her wits to beat powerful Crafters. Like all Marat, she has bonded telepathically with a being of another species, but is unique in that her ''[[BondCreatures chala]]'' is sapient (namely, Tavi). As a result, she often feels isolated from both cultures. As Tavi develops his Furycrafting, she becomes able to share it through their bond.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Kitai:
* AcquiredPoisonImmunity: After her and Tavi's struggle against the Wax Forest in ''Furies of Calderon'', she's shown to have quickly recovered from the Wax Spiders' poison in ''Academ's Fury''.
* ActionGirl: She fights side-by side with Tavi, and is actually the more capable of the two at most physical activities.
* ActionGirlfriend: Frankly, Kitai's even more comfortable with the prospects of a fight than the trained spy, soldier and military officer she's in a romantic relationship with.
* {{Ambadassador}}: Becomes the Marat Ambassador to Alera after ''Academ's Fury.''
* BadassNormal: Like Tavi, she has no superhuman abilities to speak of for the first three books, but still manages to hold her own against Vord and Canim without much difficulty.
* BattleCouple: With Tavi.
* {{Bifauxnen}}: To the point that Tavi actually mistakes her for a man a couple of times before getting to know her better. By ''Cursor's Fury'', she's developed a more feminine figure, but still favors masculine clothes and stylings.
* CerebusCallback: Inverted. Her breaking down crying in ''Academ's Fury'' and bitterly noting that she wanted a horse instead of Tavi as her ''chala'' followed by him comforting her is one of the most emotional moments out of the entire series. However, as the series goes on and she becomes more comfortable with Tavi and accepts him as essentially her soulmate, her wanting a horse becomes a comedic RunningGag culminating in a particularly hilarious BrickJoke in ''Princeps' Fury''.
* CuteLittleFangs: Part of being a Marat.
* DeadpanSnarker: Kitai has very little respect for... well, much of anything, really.
* DefeatEqualsFriendship: Part of her initial admiration for Tavi stems from him besting her in the Trial of Wits in the Wax Forest.
* DidNotSeeThatComing: She was completely stunned by how Tavi actually came back to save her life from the Keepers in the Wax Forest, to the point where he sacrificed the Blessing of Night mushroom he needed to safeguard his family for ''her'' sake without thinking.
* DontThinkFeel: It's implied that her ability to grasp furycrafting just as quickly as Tavi despite her lack of Academy training is due to this trope. Kitai chides him for letting his wishes and emotions blind him from just letting his powers develop naturally.
* DualWielding: Her fighting style of choice.
* EmpoweredBadassNormal: As Tavi is her ''chala'', just as he becomes capable of First Lord-tier fury-crafting, so does she.
* FateWorseThanDeath: To her, losing Tavi but living herself would be this. For this reason, she wants to be with Tavi, in life or death. He feels the same way in regards to her.
* {{Foil}}: For Tavi. Both lost a parent when they were young because of another clan or noble attacking them. Both sought to be "normal" for their own culture, Tavi wants Furycrafting and Kitai wants a horse. She is basically a princess, as her father is headman of one tribe and representative of many others to the Alerans, and Tavi is, unknown to him, also a prince. They differ in that while both sport a dry wit, Kitai is relatively level-headed and Tavi is often treated like a lunatic for his ''very'' outside-the-box ideas.
* HumanityIsInsane: Routinely points out the irrationality of human society. Tavi generally agrees.
* GoodIsNotSoft: While she's a very friendly and honorable person, she's still at the end of the day a "barbarian" who practices cannibalism and lives with an almost sexual desire for combat and bloodshed.
* GreaterNeedThanMine: A variation. After the attack by the Awakened Vord Queen to kill their medics, Kitai awakens enough to see a dead Foss, and both Tavi and Crassus dying. Dorotea is also down from her collar. Does she save Tavi first, with her limited energy? No, she instead uses it to save Dorotea, knowing that the High Lady would have the power to save both Tavi and Crassus and others later in combat.
* IJustWantToBeNormal: [[RunningGag She wanted a horse.]]
* InHarmsWay: She joins Tavi in leading from the front many times. She even refuses to sit in the back when he finds out she is pregnant.
* InterspeciesFriendship: Besides Tavi, she develops several close relationships with several other Alerans. Outside of Max and Ehren, she is closest to Mistress, and later Tribune, Cymnea. Cymnea first ran the brothel and bathhouse among the camp followers and looked after Kitai when the later was in her "Gerta" disguise. She is also the one Kitai goes to to learn about Aleran Nobles' view on legitimate children and probably that she was pregnant with Tavi's child.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Kitai spends most of her time as a snarky {{Troll}} with little to no respect for anyone she meets, but has also shown herself to be a surprisingly selfless and thoughtful person with strong moral standards (such as her unmitigated disgust towards slavery).
* TheLancer: Again, to Tavi. She will support his crazy plans, but also call him out on both his stupidity/arrogance and when his pride is blinding him.
* LeParkour: Uses this a lot under her guise as "the Black Cat" in ''Academ's Fury''.
* LightningBruiser: Kitai not only has the natural SuperStrength of being a Marat, but is incredibly agile and showcases incredible reflexes in battle, to the point where she essentially ''dances'' around enemy Canim during the Battle of the Elinarch.
* [[LikeFatherLikeSon Like Mother Like Daughter]]: According to Doroga, her {{Tsundere}} actions towards a terrified Tavi is exactly how he and her mother first started out.
* LockedIntoStrangeness: Her bonding with Tavi gave her matching green eyes. It was seeing her eyes matching Tavi's that told her father and aunt what had happened between them.
* MindlinkMates: With Tavi thanks to her bonding with him. They can sense the other one's presence and general moods. And when he gains furycrafting, she gains it too, while Tavi gains enhanced senses and endurance from her.
* MyGirlIsASlut: Kitai is ''very'' proud of her sexual prowess and seems to be almost always game for her and Tavi to ravish each other. For his part, Tavi is far more bashful and easily embarrassed than she is, but is ultimately just as enthusiastic as she is regarding their "activities."
* NonPOVProtagonist: She shows up in every book, usually fights side-by-side with Tavi and gets tons of characterization, but we never see her thoughts aside from part of the introduction to ''Academ's Fury''.
* ObfuscatingDisability: For much of ''Cursor's Fury'' she follows Tavi as a camp follower but pretends to be blind and kind of dumb, just playing her flute outside the brothel. The blindness is to cover her matching green eyes and dirty hair to cover her white Marat hair.
* ObfuscatingStupidity: See the ObfuscatingDisability entry. It's also implied that she intentionally exaggerates the stereotypes typically associated with the Marat just to {{Troll}} those around her.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness:
** Easily her most vulnerable moment is when Tavi finally realizes that he is her ''chala'' during ''Academ's Fury''. In this scene, Kitai actually bursts into tears, sobbing about how confused she feels (partly due to her being newly bonded to Tavi, partly due to her being confused about the increasingly romantic feelings she's gaining for him) and about how miserably alone she feels since she's the first Marat to '''ever''' have a sapient entity - much less an ''Aleran'' - be her ''[[BondCreatures chala]]''.
** After she discovers the chains used for transporting slaves on ''The Slive'', she's atypically serious and visibly bitter/disgusted. Similarly, her realizing that she's pregnant in the final book causes her to become furious with Tavi for having been carrying on an informal relationship with her, as she doesn't want their child to have to deal with the major social stigmas that Alerans place on illegitimacy.
* OnlySaneMan: Despite (or, perhaps in part ''because of'') being a "barbarian princess," she's actually one of the sanest and most level-headed people in the series.
* PhantomThief: In ''Academ's Fury''. It's good practice for assisting with a jailbreak, and comes in handy again when they need to smuggle Varg out.
* PregnantBadass: Through all of the last book.
* PretendPrejudice: Half her lines are about how much Alerans suck. She still seems to get along with them pretty well.
%% * ProudWarriorRaceGirl: Like her father.
* SamusIsAGirl:
** Tavi takes an embarrassingly long time to figure out that Kitai's a girl when he first meets her.
** He does it ''again'' upon first encountering her "Black Hood" persona in ''Academ's Fury''.
* SarcasticDevotee: Kitai is unflinchingly loyal to Tavi at all times, after they grow closer. This in no way prevents her from snarking at his insecurities and failings, or questioning the sanity of some of his ideas.
* SayingTooMuch: When talking with Isana about their bond, Kitai corrects Isana's thought the bond is like watercraft-based empathy as it is much deeper and intimate. Isana realizes the only way Kitai could know what watercraft-based empathy felt like was if she experienced it personally. This leads Isana to realize Kitai, and by extension Tavi, can furycraft.
* SingleTargetSexuality: Aside from a joking comment concerning her appreciating the competence of High Lord Phrygia's heir in ''First Lord's Fury'', she and Tavi only have eyes for each other.
* StrongAndSkilled: She's much quicker and more coordinated in a fight than Tavi, and physically stronger than him too thanks to her Marat physiology. Gaining access to furycrafting enhances these attributes further, though Tavi still has the edge on her in intelligence.
* SuperStrength: When tied to a chair in ''Academ's Fury'', she breaks the chair on her own with barely any effort. She's also one of the few characters in the series that is accomplished in DualWielding, and repeatedly shows off incredible strength whenever pressed into a fight.
* TechnicolorEyes: In the first book, Kitai's eyes are described as "iridescent" – this is apparently a trait of all Marat "whelps" (i.e. those who haven't bonded to a totem yet). They [[EyeColorChange change]] permanently to green once she bonds to Tavi.
* TookALevelInBadass: As the series goes on, she becomes a more intelligent and skilled opponent even ''without'' gaining access to Tavi's potent furycrafting.
* TheUglyGuysHotDaughter: Doroga is a bit fugly, but still pretty cool. Kitai is often described in the later books as being exotically beautiful.
* {{Tsundere}}: Towards Tavi at first. Most notably, when she thanks him for having saved her life near the end of ''Furies of Calderon'' and how she won't forget it, the narration phrases it like she's giving him a ''threat''. Tavi, on his part, is utterly terrified and (more or less) cowering in his bed at the moment of her "thanking him."
* {{Troll}}: As alluded to above, she often exaggerates the stereotypes associated with the Marat just because she thinks everyone else's reaction to her is hilarious.
* UnsettlingGenderReveal: A non-sexual example. Tavi is very put-off when he discovers that she's a girl during their trial in the Wax Forest, while she's only first confused and then irritated by his awkwardness.
* VitriolicBestBuds: With Max and Ehren.
* WhatTheHellHero: Does this to Tavi whenever he does something stupid or immoral.
** In ''Captain's Fury'' his quiet acceptance of slavery in defending Demos having slavery chains gets some ire from her until he destroys the chains.
** His realizing his just having sex with her and not properly courting her in either of their cultures, could be used against them politically and her personally, being called the Prince's Whore by Citizens (Tavi is genuinely horrified when he realizes this, having been rather oblivious to what others were saying).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Doroga]]
!Doroga, Headman of the Gargant Tribe

Doroga is Kitai's father and one of the most important Marat chieftains. He is blunt and earthy, but anyone who speaks with him for long realizes that he is far more intelligent and canny than he appears (as his own daughter notes, he only ''looks'' stupid). Doroga is the first to recognize the menace the Vord pose to the world, remembering them from old Marat legends, and also sends Kitai to learn about the Alerans, bringing her into contact with Tavi again.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Doroga:
* ActionDad: While he rarely fights alongside his daughter (who can ''more'' than look after herself), he is a significant badass in his own right.
* BigDamnHeroes: On a regular basis.
* BigGood: After Atsurak's death, he's the most prominent leader seen among the Marat, and is a good friend of both Bernard and Tavi while being fervently dedicated to preventing the Vord from suceeding at destroying the world.
* TheBigGuy: His ''[[BondCreatures chala]]'' is a giant ground sloth. It goes with the territory.
* BoisterousBruiser: Doroga is always happy when finding a good fight.
* BondCreatures: His is with Walker the gargant.
* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: As Kitai puts it in the first book, the problem with Doroga is that he does not ''seem'' wise.
* CannotSpitItOut: Not Doroga himself, but he's fond of mocking Alerans (primarily Amara and Bernard) about their inability to talk candidly about sexual topics.
* CarryABigStick: His weapon of choice is a cudgel nearly too big for a High Lady with powerful earthcrafting to even ''lift''.
* CoolOldGuy: Hell yeah.
* DeadpanSnarker: Kitai had to get it from ''somewhere''. Particularly memorable was his editorializing when asked to mediate a ''[[DuelToTheDeath juris macto]]''.
* FireForgedFriends: With Bernard. So much so that Bernard is willing to challenge a Senator who had insulted Doroga.
-->'''Bernard:''' Senator. If you call my friend a liar one more time, [[TranquilFury I will take it badly]].\\
'''Arnos:''' Excuse me?\\
'''Bernard:''' I suggest you find an alternate shortsighted, egomaniacally ridiculous reason to blatantly, recklessly ignore an obvious threat to the Realm simply because you don't wish it to exist. If you cannot restrain yourself from base slander, I will be pleased to meet you in a ''[[DuelToTheDeath juris macto]]'' and personally rip your forked tongue from your head.
* GeniusBruiser: No one ''ever'' expects a huge, ugly, CoolOldGuy to be quite as canny as Doroga is. He's a decent tactician, learned to read and write surprisingly quickly, has pulled off at least one pretty good BatmanGambit, and has a tendency to function as all-purpose wisdom dispenser whenever Jim Butcher needs to give a character some advice.
* ItsPersonal: Part of his duel against Atsurak is motivated by him still feeling hatred over him having wiped out his wife's tribe (Clan Fox) several years ago.
* ItWasAGift: He is regularly seen wearing the tunic Gaius gave him at the end of the first book. That said, the sleeves were too small for his arms, so he had to remove them.
* PapaWolf: When he sees some alien bug attacking his daughter, he immediately grabs the nearest coffin-sized boulder and chucks it at it.
* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Oh yes. Doesn't mean he's not a realist.
* ShipperOnDeck: His closing remarks in ''Furies of Calderon'' has him say Tavi is "doomed", and he and his wife were just like Kitai and Tavi, which just involved [[BelligerentSexualTension clear disagreeing]].
* SleevesAreForWimps: He's so heavily muscled that he had to tear the ''legionare'''s tunic he wears to make it a vest; otherwise he couldn't get it on.
* SuperStrength: As a result of his chala being a Gargant. Most clearly demonstrated in the first book, where he picks up a coffin-sized boulder and throws it. And even manages to hit his target. Without hitting either Tavi or Kitai, who were very close to it. ''In the dark''.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Atsurak]]
!Atsurak, Headman of the Herdbane Tribe

Marat headman of the Herdbane tribe, and also a hordemaster (warleader of several tribes). Serves as one of the primary villains in ''Furies of Calderon''.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Atsurak:
* BigBadDuumvirate: Forms one with Fidelias for ''Furies of Calderon'', though he's ultimately just the puppet of the Aquitaines.
* DiscOneFinalBoss: The Aquitaines were pulling his strings.
* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Standard for the Marat.
* RewardedAsATraitorDeserves: Fidelias kills him quickly, to get crucial evidence back, as soon as he is no longer useful.
* SmugSnake: He's a bit smarter than he initially appears, getting the signet knife as an assurance against the Aquitaines stabbing him in the back. Unfortunately for him, he doesn't think any further than that and sorely underestimates Fidelias, who [[NoNonsenseNemesis cuts his throat at the first opportunity when the tide turns against them]].
* StarterVillain: Introduced in the first book to both show how skilled the Marat are in combat and how skilled the Aquitaines and Fidelias are at manipulating people.
* UnwittingPawn: See DiscOneFinalBoss above. The Aquitaines wanted to arrange a Marat invasion as an excuse to swoop in to the rescue and get Gaius deposed for incompetence. Doroga saw through them, but Atsurak was dumb enough to fall for it.
* WhiteHairBlackHeart: Like all Marat, he has white hair. He also attempts to sacrifice and eat an Aleran.
[[/folder]]

!!Canim
[[folder:Canim as a whole]]

A race of gigantic (seven feet tall is short for them) [[WolfMan humanoid wolves]]. They have access to BloodMagic and live in a series of advanced nation-states called "ranges" from the far-off western continent of Canea, though the range of Narash is the only one to have open diplomatic relations with Alera. The range of Shuar is also encountered in ''Princeps' Fury''.
----
!!Tropes that apply to the Canim:
* BloodMagic: Their Ritualists' specialty. Incidentally, it only works with the blood of sentient beings.
* BoringYetPractical: Being that they don't have access to Aleran witchmen (specialized watercrafters that allow Aleran ships to traverse through the dangerous stretches of sea inhabited by [[KrakenAndLeviathan leviathans]]), the Canim just have ''very'' good nautical charts of the oceans pointing out where the leviathans' ranges are so they can stay far away.
** This is how Canim technology in general seems to work, as the BloodMagic practiced by the Ritualists does not have the same flexibility to it as Aleran furycrafting. Most of what they build is intended to be used by someone without any magic, and most often they're all the more useful for it (ranging from terrifyingly dangerous weapons like their massive "balest" crossbows to the simple pulley system used to water the rooftop gardens found in their steadholt-analogues).
* CanisMajor: Canim are, on average, ''very'' large.
* ConLang: "Canish," the Canim language. It is often described as sounding like something barely above a wolf's growl, to the point where Isana briefly thinks Tavi has lost his mind when talking to Varg at one point in ''Captain's Fury''. Admittedly, we don't see enough of it being used at once to see how it functions as an actual language, but from what can be inferred, body language plays a significantly more important role in it than it does with Aleran (English). Additionally, a good indicator of how much of a ProudWarriorRace the Canim are is that they have ''eleven'' different words to mean "enemy" (''[[WorthyOpponent gadara]]'' is the only term we learn among them).
* DittoAliens: Subverted. The Narashan Canim are the only Canim to have diplomatic relations with the Alerans and look like seven-foot-tall [[{{Wolfman}} Wolfmen]] with midnight-black fur, leading to most Alerans assuming that all Canim look like them. Later on, however, Tavi and company are introduced to the Shuaran Canim, another Canim subspecies who have tawny golden fur and less stocky bodies than that of the Narashans, along with comparatively slender snouts.
* DueToTheDead: The Canim sing a "Blood Song" for fallen warriors. Notably, Warriors who become Hunters have their Blood Songs sung when they make the transition, as it is meant to represent that their old life is over and their only duty now is to serve their Warmaster.
* EveryoneHasStandards: The Canim are a brutal and downright ruthless ProudWarriorRace that see most other races on Carna as inferior, but they abhor the slaughter of non-combatants in wartime and view the Aleran practice of slavery as utterly abominable.
* EndangeredSpecies: The Canim are utterly massacred by the Vord's conquest of Canea during the midpoint of the series, to the point where only around sixty thousand civilians of both Narash and Shuar were able to be evacuated to Alera (where they settle first around Antillus before having Tavi give over the Vord-conquered city of Parcia to them to help acknowledge them as an extant state under Aleran control).
* EnemyCivilWar: In a sense. As Tavi and Maestro Magnus later realize in ''Princeps' Fury'', one of the only reasons why the Alerans have been able to survive on Carna is because [[WeAREStrugglingTogether the many ranges of the Canim have been constantly bickering amongst themselves for most of history]], and the Alerans would've been stomped into mulch if the Canim had ever banded together and tried to wipe out the "demons."
* EnemiesEqualsGreatness: Inherent in the concept of ''gadara''. Having a strong and cunning opponent declare you ''gadara'' is a powerful testament to your own strength and cunning.
* ExpressiveEars: Canim primarily show emotion with their ears, and one of the tells that a Canim has been Taken is that their ears "don't look right."
* FantasticCasteSystem: Canim society is divided into a number of different castes, of which four are known:
** Warriors, who are ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin. They're the leaders of the Canim, and as such are the most commonly encountered in the series. Varg and Nasuag are Warriors.
** Ritualists (also called Bloodspeakers), who use BloodMagic to cast a wide variety of spells. For most of Canim history, they used their own blood. Recently, they've made a breakthrough by utilizing the blood of others. This has left them with more power, time for politics, and an itch to usurp the warriors as the leaders of the Canim. Sarl, Khral, and Morak are Ritualists.
** Makers, the "civilian" caste, composed of anyone who's not a Warrior, Ritualist, or Hunter. In theory, the other Castes exist to serve them, but power corrupts with Canim as much as it does with humans.
** Hunters, the Canim's spies and assassins. Sha, Nef, and Koh are Hunters.
* FantasticSlur: The Canim often refer to the Alerans as "demons" for their deadly ElementalPowers. Relatedly, if the young Canim rear guard Sarsh in ''Captain's Fury'' is anything to go by, calling an Aleran "monkey-boy" is also an appropriate insult.
* FriendlyEnemy: Combine it with WorthyOpponent and you get a ''gadara''. To the Canim, a ''gadara'' is more trustworthy than an ally, as while an ally can betray you, a ''gadara'' is still an enemy and thus one can expect violence from them. Generally, to be acknowledged as a ''gadara'', the two who declare themselves as such exchange swords in front of witnesses. Prior to the events of ''Captain's Fury'', no Canim had ever had an Aleran ''gadara'', until Tavi became one of these with both Nasaug and Varg.
* GangOfHats: A cultural example. Aside from the common FantasticCasteSystem, it's frequently mentioned that the various ranges of the Canim had certain trades that they liked to "specialize" in. For instance, the Narashan Canim are incredible sailors and expert engineers (according to Tavi, the Narashan Canim have forgotten more about sailing than the Alerans have ever learned), while the Shuaran Canim are masters at both siege warfare and mining.
* GenuineHumanHide: When facing opponents not of Canim make, the Ritualists seem to like wearing clothing made from the skins of their enemies. A good indicator of how StupidEvil a particular Ritualist is can be seen if they're still wearing the "pale leather cloaks" made of human skin around the Alerans even after an EnemyMine is formed between the two races. Meanwhile, the more heroic Ritualists, like Master Morak, wear makeshift armor formed out of scavenged Vord chitin.
* HumanSacrifice: Though it's not necessarily just Alerans, with Varg describing their BloodMagic with "The ritualists are not choosy about which blood they take, so long as it is from a reasoning being." Technically, they don't need to necessarily ''kill'' someone to use their blood in the spell, but part of the problem with Canim BloodMagic is that they essentially need to kill a sentient being to perform the '''really''' massive spells, especially if the spellcaster in question isn't that experienced. For reference, it's mentioned that the massive armada the Narashan Canim used to escape to Alera cost ''millions'' of Ritualists their lives.
* ItIsDehumanizing: Both the narration and Alerans regularly refer to them as "it," as Alerans often view Canim as little more than beasts. It's not until the ending of ''Cursor's Fury'', when Tavi is among the first Alerans to see a '''female''' Cane, that the narration starts using "he" and "she."
* InnateNightVision: Like the Marat, the Canim can see in the dark far better than any human can.
* KillerRabbit: Their young cubs look like [[PreciousPuppies adorable puppies]] with opposable thumbs. They can also tear someone's hand off with their fangs with sufficient force to dislocate their shoulder at just five years old.
* LanguageBarrier: An interesting example runs between them and the Alerans. Sure, they're capable of learning each others' ''verbal'' languages, but among Canim, body language speaks just as loudly, if not moreso. Most Alerans don't realize they have to ensure their posture and body language send the right messages when dealing with Canim. For instance, while to an Aleran a nod is a polite, civil greeting, to a Canim, lowering your chin means you're covering your throat and ready for a fight. Tavi manages to even earn the respect and acknowledgement of Varg at one point by biting his throat - the fact that he couldn't do anything because of his comparatively weak teeth and jaw muscles being irrelevant, as the physical gesture was all it took.
* LightningBruiser: Canim are as strong as earthcrafters, have incredibly high pain tolerance, and can move deceptively fast for their enormous size. Even their untrained civilian conscripts can be as dangerous as an Aleran legionnaire or three as a result, and Cane Warriors can tear through entire squads of opponents like a scythe through grain if a Knight isn't present to counter them.
* LogicalWeakness:
** As powerful as their BloodMagic can be, it's limited by the available quantity of blood to be used in their spells. That being said, sufficiently skilled Ritualists like Morak minimize this issue to the point where it's virtually irrelevant.
** The Canim's sheer size and the reach of their arms and weapons also makes them surprisingly vulnerable to the Alerans when they can get close. A tactic that the First Aleran develops is "shields high, swords low," in which the ''legionares'' raise their shields over their heads, advance in very close, and strike at the Canim's legs with the gladius.
* MundaneUtility: Downplayed. Unlike furycrafting, Canim BloodMagic [[CripplingOverspecialization seems to be primarily designed for use in combat]]. However, according to Varg, it also has its uses elsewhere, such as blessing bloodlines, improving fertility in Canim women, increasing the bounty of crops, and lessening the ravages of storms, droughts, and plagues. The last aspect in particular is implied to be the reason why, despite furies existing in Canea, no furystorms or wild furies are observed there by Tavi and other Alerans in ''[=Princeps' Fury=]''.
* NationalWeapon: The Narashan Canim seem to be associated with swords while the Shuarans use axes.
* NaturalWeapon: While they're not stupid enough to go into battle without being armed, even an unarmed Cane is a formidable challenge thanks to their sharp claws and fangs, superior senses, and SuperStrength.
* NoWomansLand: Implied, with it not being until the Narashan Canim Invasion of the Amaranth Vale in ''Cursor's Fury'' that the first female Cane is ever seen.
* TheNoseKnows: The Canim's sense of smell is incredibly sensitive, to the point where one of the tells of their kind being Taken by the Vord or not is their scent. Varg was also able to figure out that Tavi was related to both Gaius Sextus and Isana simply based on how his scent was similar to both of theirs.
* NotSoDifferentRemark: Both Tavi and Varg have made repeated musings on how similar their two peoples are to one another. Though the Canim often remark on the strangeness and complexity of Aleran culture, Canim culture itself has numerous ''faux pas'' and convoluted loopholes to navigate, which is acknowledged as the books progress.
* OurOrcsAreDifferent: Aside from a lack of green skin (what with them being a race of [[{{Wolfman}} Wolfmen]]), the Canim fulfill virtually every other trait seen in Blizzard Orcs, being large, powerful, warlike, having a culture predicated on honor, and a longstanding enmity with humanity.
* ProudWarriorRace: Though their philosophy is that the Warriors exist to serve the Makers, not the other way around. The view of the Warriors that everyone else is an enemy results in bizarre interactions, such as Varg being forced to use his Hunters as an intermediary to pass a warning to the Alerans, simply because as a Warrior he can't directly help his enemies, even if they are ''gadara.'' In ''Academ's Fury'', Varg frames helping Tavi find out about the Vord plot as an attempt to ensure that the Canim's eventual victory over Alera will be an honorable one on the field of battle rather than a victory through duplicity.
* Really700YearsOld: Canim live for hundreds of years. At one point Tavi gets to know a Cane who's ''nine hundred'' years old, who is elderly but certainly not decrepit.
* ReassignedToAntarctica: Downplayed. One of their policies is to assign overly aggressive young warriors to low-priority rear-area duties, in the hopes of them getting tempered and loosing their HotBlooded natures. Its success is pretty variable, since most young Canim are smart enough to realize that it's a humiliating punishment but still too boneheaded to realize ''why'' they're being punished in the first place.
* TheStoic: [[DownplayedTrope Downplayed]] in that due to them have a very different facial structure from Alerans, it can be quite difficult for Alerans to tell the emotional state of a Cane in comparison to, say, a Marat or even one of the Icemen.
* SuperStrength: An average Cane's strength is many magnitudes greater than that of both the average Aleran and even Marat, to the point where only the Knights Terra when calling upon their earthcrafting for strength are shown to be able to match them. Perhaps the most notable example of this is in ''Captain's Fury'', where after Tavi is only able to make a tiny bend in a heavy iron gate that has been furycrafted into the surrounding stone after calling upon all of his earthcrafting, Varg tears the gate out like the stone around it is made of wet clay and then tosses the gate overhead with only some effort.
* WarRefugees: Are reduced to this after the events of ''Princeps' Fury'', with the surviving Narashan and Shuaran Canim settling in the Aleran city of Parica (which had been previously taken over by the Vord).
* WeirdWeather: Lots of their spells seem to revolve around clouds and the weather, being able to cause vicious storms and summon a gale-force wind mighty enough to propel an entire armada of ships.
* {{Wolfman}}: An entire ''species'' of them.
* WorthyOpponent: The concept of ''gadara.'' The Canim view it with more significance than that of "friends" and even "allies" - A friend can disappoint you, and an ally can betray you. But a ''gadara''? Not only can they be counted on to always try and kill you, but they also have damn well ''earned'' being your enemy in the first place.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Varg]]
!Ambassador/Warmaster Varg

Varg is the [[{{Wolfman}} Canim]] Ambassador to Alera. He's a lot smarter than most Alerans give him and his kind credit for, and recognizes Tavi's capabilities fairly quickly. After getting [[TheStarscream double-crossed by his advisor]], he spends some time in Aleran prison until Tavi eventually breaks him out to get his aid.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Varg:
* {{Ambadassador}}: Naturally, with him having taken on a Taken Canim Warrior offscreen in ''Academ's Fury'' while unarmed and still won in an utter CurbStompBattle.
* AscendedExtra: Downplayed; A brief segment of the introduction to ''First Lord's Fury'' is told from his perspective.
* BadassBoast: Gives one to one of the two surviving Canea Vord Queens in ''Princeps' Fury'' when he's the only one standing in the mouth of a Vord hive and preventing her escape right after Tavi's been wounded and two of his own Hunters were just killed facing off against her. Made all the more impressive when one remembers that at this point, Varg thinks that the Vord had wiped out his entire family except for his son Nasaug.
-->'''Varg:''' Come, creature. Come through me if you can.
* BigGood: The most prominent leader shown among the Canim of Narash (and eventually, all of the surviving Canim) and a close ''gadara'' of Tavi's. Even Nasaug defers to his leadership.
* BruiserWithASoftCenter: Seeing Varg drop the Warmaster act and be "grandpa" to his grandchildren in ''Princeps' Fury'' is adorable beyond belief.
* TheChessmaster: Both metaphorically and literally (in terms of him being quite skilled at ''ludus'', the Aleran equivalent to chess). He teaches some of these skills to Tavi (again, both in terms of how to be a more skilled manipulator and in terms of how to play ''ludus'' well).
* CuttingTheKnot: He knows Sarl is working with some unknown power to take down Gaius Sextus and the Alerans. He cannot abide by such underhanded and deceitful methods being done, especially since it isn't Sarl's place to act against code and ethics of their kind. So, he does the one thing he can do: Try to talk with Gaius about this matter, warning him of the attack. When Tavi gets in the way, so Varg won't see an incapacitated Gaius, Varg later just kidnaps Kitai to make Tavi follow him to the Vord's base.
* DeadpanSnarker: Has a rather dry sense of humor. For instance, he jokingly describes ''The Slive'' as "smelling like wet human" (which [[ActuallyPrettyFunny makes Tavi burst into laughter]]) in ''Captain's Fury'', and his reaction to eating one of the biscuits used as rations by Aleran sailors earlier in the same book is to give the Canim equivalent of a wince and tell Tavi that "Alerans must be hardier than I thought."
* EverybodyKnewAlready: [[invoked]] Apparently, Canim have a sense of smell strong enough to identify family relations. This means that he doesn't need to be told who Tavi's mother and grandfather are. In fact, [[YouDidntAsk Varg knew two books before Tavi did]]. This also creates some {{Fridge Brilliance}} when one thinks about the scene where they met – Tavi was bluffing only from his own perspective and not Varg's, pretending to be what he ''actually was''.
* GeniusBruiser: He's both one of the smartest and physically most powerful characters in the books – and considering [[GambitPileup this]] [[WorldOfBadass series]], that's saying something.
* LargeHam: When given a reason, he can be quite the melodramatic guy. What's his response to a BreakingSpeech by the Vord Queen stating people should just give up and surrender?
-->"I AM STILL THIRSTY! WHO WILL DRINK WITH ME?!"
* TheNicknamer: Gives Tavi the [[MeaningfulName Meaningful Nickname]] of "Tavar".
* OldSoldier: He is several centuries old by the Aleran calendar and only a hundred by the Cane calendar, but is one of the strongest and deadliest fighters in the series.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: He lapses into a HeroicBSOD upon learning that Shuar is the last surviving range left in Canea in ''Princeps' Fury'', meaning that his family is almost certainly dead. Tavi even describes how Varg takes on body language that he has never seen before in a Cane - specifically, body language such as loosely flopping ears and a listless tongue [[DespairEventHorizon that only speaks of utter tragedy, sorrow, and despair]]. It takes Tavi [[GetAHoldOfYourselfMan literally smacking him off of his saddle with a taurga prod]] to get him back into the proper mindset and refocus on the future.
* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Always seen wearing his armor and he enjoys a good fight. He also hates backstabbing and the trickery Sarl used with the Vord.
* ReallySevenHundredYearsOld: His exact age is never mentioned, but admits to having played ''ludus'' for at least 600 years.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Many times over.
** As the ambassador for the Canim, his job is to assess and watch the Alerans, to know when it is right and time to make war against them. When he suspects Sarl is doing something to his people and needs allies, he moves to bring the Alerans into it. First he tries directly seeing Gaius, which was stopped by Tavi, and later sends a message about a routine changing of his guards which shouldn't merit any notice to the First Lord to bring attention to some problem, and lastly he just kidnaps Kitai to make Tavi follow him.
** After he failed to stop Sarl's taking of his guards to become Taken by the Vord, he took responsibility for Sarl's actions and surrendered himself to Gaius's authority. He only left jail when it was advantageous to reclaiming power and reuniting swiftly with his people.
** As the Alerans are his enemies, he cannot as a rule, give them information outright. Instead, he passes on the information via his own network of spies both to help Tavi and to test the man. Will his warning of possible danger make Tavi honor just the letter of their agreement to return them to their homeland and turn around, or will Tavi stay and aide as he can.
** As violence is sometimes required on younger Canim, he holds nothing against Marcus needing to use some violence when the soldier learning the Aleran language attacks Marcus for correcting his grammar.
** He agrees with Tavi's idea to pass time on the journey from Alera to his homeland educating humans in the Canim language and Canim in the human language.
* SmartPeoplePlayChess: He helps teach Tavi how to play ''ludus''.
* SpannerInTheWorks: Topples the Vord plan to assassinate Gaius Sextus in ''Academ's Fury'' by CuttingTheKnot and physically dragging Tavi over to their nest. The Vord knew that he suspected them, but didn't think he'd be listened to because he was widely distrusted in the Capital.
* TheSpock: Varg loves combat and will engage in it easily but he, like many wiser Cane, can subvert his own violent tendencies with cold logical reasoning. He will take an insult or jibe from Tavi, his respected enemy, when Tavi has a point. This is best seen when Tavi deliberately kept from him the fact about 10,000 of his countrymen are being held by Shuaran Cane to be bled for the war against the Vord. Tavi needs Varg for the mission on hand to save Alerans, Shuaran Cane and his own countrymen, not running off to help his people in the short-run. Despite this, Varg is able to work through his rage and understand Tavi's manipulations and reasons. However, it is pointed out to Tavi, had any of his people been hurt or failed to be saved because of this subterfuge, Varg would have embraced his violent tendencies and killed his Aleran ''gadara''.
* WorthyOpponent: To Tavi, and the Alerans in general. The word is ''gadara'', which Varg starts using for Tavi after hearing that his son has recognized Tavi as such. The Canim actually prefer having Worthy Opponents to friends: they're people you can respect and even like, yet will always keep you on your toes. However, Tavi knows this only goes so far. If Varg senses he could get more out of withdrawing his support for Tavi, he will do it. Note that Nausag, Varg's son and protege, addresses him as ''gadara-sar'', meaning "Worthy Opponent-Father."
* YouDidntAsk: When Tavi goes to explain that Isana is actually his mother, Varg's response is basically, "Yes, I know. I can smell it." He then goes on to mention that he knew Tavi was the First Lord's grandson since he'd first met him; he just figured he shouldn't say anything, because who knew what those crazy Alerans were thinking and maybe it was normal.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Nasaug]]
!Warmaster Nasaug

Leader of the Canim warriors who arrive in Alera with Sarl, Nasaug is honorable yet ruthless and above all a highly competent military commander. He is one of Tavi's primary antagonists (albeit a [[WorthyOpponent respected one]]) throughout the middle part of the series.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Nasaug:
* AntiVillain: He's only on Alera because he has to be, but since he's here, he's going to do the best job he can.
* AskAStupidQuestion: PlayedForDrama; Him looking at Tavi like he's an utter moron for honestly asking why Alerans aren't seen as trustworthy is meant to show [[HumansAreTheRealMonsters how much of a cynical and bitter view that Nasaug has gained regarding humanity]].
* AuthorityEqualsAsskicking: Oh, yes. During the nightime attack on the First Aleran in ''Cursor's Fury'', he's described as [[SingleStrokeBattle killing three legionaries with one stroke of his sword]].
* BadassFamily: Varg is his father.
* BigBadDuumvirate: ''Technically'' forms one with both Kalarus and Senator Arnos for ''Captain's Fury'', but he's such an AntiVillain that he's only really a BigBad-type character in the sense that he's opposing the Aleran Legions.
* TheChessmaster: Carefully manipulates events so that Sarl gets killed and his ritualist cronies are disgraced, leaving him free to pursue his own objectives.
* DefeatMeansFriendship: Gains a newfound respect for Tavi after he surrenders to the Aleran in ''Captain's Fury''.
* DragonAscendant: Takes over complete command of the Canim forces in the Amaranth Vale after Sarl dies.
* DragonWithAnAgenda: To Sarl at first. Lampshaded later by Varg, who describes his actions at the beginning of the war as having "fed Sarl to the Tavar." When it's put like that, you almost feel ''sorry'' for the poor bastard.
* EveryoneHasStandards: He's absolutely horrified by the slaughter of innocent Aleran steadholts by the Senatorial Guard's mercenary cavalry, to the point where he vows that he will avenge the fallen civilians by competely wiping out all of the remaining Aleran Legions in the Vale to make sure that Senator Arnos gets his just desserts.
* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: Gains this viewpoint after being exposed to the Aleran practice of slavery in the Amaranth Vale.
* {{Hypocrite}}: While he shows nothing but utter disgust for the Aleran practice of slavery, his ostensible ally of Kalarus is the most notorious practitioner of slavery in the entire Realm. Downplayed in that it was more ''Sarl'' and Kalarus that seem to have been in an actual alliance, with Nasaug's association with Kalarus seeming to be informal at best (i.e., as long as the other exists, they secure the other's flank from the Alerans' counter-attacks).
* NoHistoricalFiguresWereHarmed: His invasion of Alera, status as a strategic genius, and matching wits with Tavi under the guise of "Rufus Scipio" paints him as being the Canim equivalent of [[UsefulNotes/PunicWars Hannibal Barca]].
* PragmaticVillainy: Downplayed since his pragmatism is also in part motivated by the fact that Nasaug still has actual moral standards. As noted by Tavi, his strategy of leaving columns of Aleran refugees alone as they flee from the warzone is actually brilliant since it means that the Alerans have to use more resources caring for the refugees that they could instead use to crush Nasaug's forces, giving him more time to consolidate and ready for battle.
* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Like his father.
* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Gives a ''vicious'' one to Tavi in ''Captain's Fury'' when the latter is trying to arrange a peace between the Canim and Alerans near the beginning of the novel. Notably, Tavi is briefly taken aback and even silently admits [[VillainHasAPoint that Nasaug isn't exactly wrong]] FromACertainPointOfView.
-->'''Nasaug:''' Captain. You are ''[[WorthyOpponent gadara]]''. But not all Alerans are.\\
'''Tavi:''' "Gadara"? Enemy?\\
'''Nasaug:''' Not the same. You have my respect. But you do not lead them. You do not speak in the voice of Gaius Sextus. And your people have proven to us, many times, that they are not worthy of respect.\\
'''Tavi:''' (confused) How so?\\
'''Nasaug:''' ([[AskAStupidQuestion stares at Tavi like he's an idiot]]) [[HumansAreTheRealMonsters Because you are monsters.]] You are worse than starving beasts. You slaughter one another by the thousands over matters of leadership. Your people crush those without power and take whatsoever they wish from them for the simple reason that they can. ([[DeathGlare glares at Tavi with utter contempt]]) You betray, enslave, and brutalize your own kind, Aleran. Your ''own.'' [[ArmorPiercingQuestion If you treat your own folk this way, what fool could possibly believe you would act any differently toward mine?]]
* SmartPeoplePlayChess: Including with the enemy commander in the middle of a bloody battle. According to Tavi, he won because Nasaug's game on the skyboard isn't as strong as it could be, and he also initially underestimated Tavi.
* TheStarscream: Actively works against Sarl to betray him and seize power. This is good for the Canim, because Nasaug is exponentially more competent than Sarl. This is bad for the Alerans for the exact same reason, although it's somewhat negated since Nasuag is also a ReasonableAuthorityFigure and can be negotiated with.
* TheStrategist: A very gifted one who matches Tavi for two years. His first gambit in ''Cursor's Fury'' not only aims to allow his warriors reclaim the fallen on the battlefield while playing ludus with Tavi, but show Tavi a means of defeating Sarl and delays the next engagement between the two sides long enough for night to come which would help his forces, who can see far better in low-light situations than the Alerans can.
* WorthyOpponent: To Tavi, and also to Varg, his mentor and father.
* XanatosGambit: As Tavi observes, his strategies ''never'' serve just a single purpose. He sees to it that he has many paths to a victory.
[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:Lararl]]
%%[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:Tarsh]]
%%* BastardBastard: It's mentioned that he's a ChildBornOfRape from a [[EvilSorcerer corrupt Ritualist]] and a young female Cane who was barely older than a pup. He's also a complete and utter asshole.
%%[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:Anag]]
%%* HypercompetentSidekick: To Tarsh. As Tarsh was KickedUpstairs by sending him to be in charge of Molvar (far enough away from the primary battlefront between Shuar and the Vord that he wouldn't cause that much trouble), Anag was assigned to him to help mitigate Tarsh's incompetence and help whip his fellow soldiers into proper shape.
%%[[/folder]]

[[folder:Sha]]
!Hunter Sha

Leader of the Narashan Canim's Hunters (basically the Canim equivalent to Cursors), having come over to assist Sarl and Nasaug in their attempted conquest of Alera. Has UndyingLoyalty towards both Varg and Nasaug, but also recognizes the weaknesses behind the Canim's ProudWarriorRace code of honor and works with Fidelias behind the scenes to help account for this as the Alerans and Canim form an EnemyMine against the Vord.
----
* DidntSeeThatComing: He looks over at Tavi in visible shock after he [[NiceGuy sincerely thanks him and his fellow Hunters for saving his life]] in the Canea Vord Queen's hive. Keep in mind how most Canim regard Alerans as murder-happy "[[HumansAreTheRealMonsters demons]]" who enslave their own people ForTheEvulz.
* {{Foil}}: To Fidelias, to the point where Fidelias himself thinks of Sha as his opposite number among the Canim. Both are dangerously clever spies who have UndyingLoyalty to their home nations and peoples, and are willing to work outside of their peoples' codes of honor (informal or otherwise) for what they see as the common good. However, Fidelias is a WildCard who temporarily joined the rebellious Aquitaines before he turned back to serving the Crown while Sha has maintained his loyalty to Nasaug (and, by extension, Narash as a whole) for the entirety of the series.
* FriendlyEnemy: With the Alerans, most clearly shown in the OddFriendship he develops with Fidelias.
* LastOfHisKind: He is seemingly the only surviving Hunter remaining among the Canim as of ''First Lord's Fury''.
* MasterOfDisguise: He and his fellow Hunters are able to get the drop on the second Canea Vord Queen by dressing themselves up in makeshift suits made of scavenged Vord chitin. The disguises are skilled enough to fool her and her guards for just long enough that they can kill her PraetorianGuard and leave her open for Varg and Tavi to finish her off.
* NotAfraidToDie: He had his [[DueToTheDead blood song]] already sung for him when he became a Hunter countless years ago.
* OddFriendship: "Friendship" is admittedly pushing it a bit, but he and Fidelias form a remarkable camraderie together as they work behind the scenes to help preserve the Canim-Aleran alliance (most notably in how they sneakily kill Khral and hide his body so that the more reasonable Master Marok can take control of the surviving Canim Ritualists).
* OldMaster: [[invoked]] WordOfGod has all but stated that he will be helping train a new generation of Hunters and Cursors alongside Ehren and Fidelias at the new Academy.
* ShootTheDog: The literal purpose of the Hunters is to perform the necessary duties that a Warmaster or other Canim Warleader cannot bring themselves to actually do.
* StealthExpert: Despite being a {{Wolfman}} several feet taller than the average Aleran, he's still one to the level that impresses even ''Kitai''.
* StealthHiBye: One of his specialties as a Hunter. Most impressively, Sha and his compatriots Nef and Koh are able to get on top of Lararl's fortress in the dark during a torrential rainstorm without being noticed by Kitai.
* ThoseTwoGuys: Or, "Those Three Guys," to be more accurate; initially, he's only seen in the company of his other two Hunters, Nef and Koh. After they're both killed in the battle against one of the Canean Vord Queens, he's mostly seen either on his own or in the company of Fidelias.
* UndyingLoyalty: To his masters Varg and Nasaug. He literally tells Tavi at one point that his job is to die in the most efficient way possible for his leaders.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Sarl]]
!Bloodspeaker Sarl

A Canim ritualist, who is both Varg's political rival and (initially, at least) his office aid. Undermines Varg by seeking alliances behind his back including with the Vord.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Sarl:
* BigBadDuumvirate: Forms one with the Vord Queens (both the Awakened and Calderon specimens) for ''Academ's Fury'', and one with Kalarus in both ''Academ's Fury'' and ''Cursor's Fury''.
* BigBadWannabe: He wanted to be the BigBad [[HeroOfAnotherStory Of Another Story]] for the Canim. His plan was the Ritualists to take over the Canim lands and overthrow the Warrior caste. A solid EvilPlan overall... and then he just had to accept help from the Vord Queen, who got him what he wanted and then quickly turned on him, driving him out of the Canim continent. By the time he becomes the main story's BigBad in ''Cursor's Fury'', he's desperately fleeing from her with what amounts to a refugee fleet. He's also no match for the Warrior Canim leader Nasuag ''or'' Tavi, and dies after getting OutGambitted.
* BloodMagic: Like all ritualists. And like more corrupted ones, he uses the blood of sacrificed people and not his own stock.
* BurningTheShips: The first thing he does upon landing in Alera is burn the ships they arrived in. This way, Nasaug's forces would be commited to the fight, and would have no means of retreat or escape.
* DirtyCoward: Tavi knows it, and uses it to make him look like an idiot.
* EvilSorcerer: An evil SmugSnake who uses BloodMagic.
* IHaveYourWife: Sarl manages to force Nasaug and the warrior caste into following him over to Alera by kidnapping several families and holding them hostage.
* GeneralFailure: A downplayed example, but still evident. Strategically, Sarl is relatively solid. His overall plan to defeat the First Aleran in ''Cursor's Fury'' failed solely because one of his agents got pickpocketed by pure happenstance for reasons totally unrelated to suspicion or being discovered, and even then he almost totally crippled the army's chain of leadership in a single attack. Tactically, he's a complete mess. Misunderstanding his own race's basic advantages in combat and holding back a brilliant planner like Nasaug are just two examples.
* GoneHorriblyRight: He sought power to destroy Varg and the Alerans. He allied himself with the Vord and even helped the Queen escape to his lands in order to re-cultivate their power. The Vord helped him take over- and then started [[HordeOfAlienLocusts doing what the Vord do]].
* TheNoseKnows: Like all Cane, Sarl has an exceptional sense of smell. He was even capable of recalling the scent of a messenger boy he only met once two years prior, now standing before him in the guise of someone else. It almost gets Tavi killed, had he not lucked into the one item that could've possibly saved him from Sarl's magic.
* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Subverted. Sarl's a Cane and therefore you'd ''expect'' him to be one of these, but he's really a coward who only fights after Tavi goads him into it because not going after Tavi when called a coward would make him lose major support.
* SmugSnake: Treats the Makers like trash, insults Nasaug and Tavi and generally believes himself to be far more powerful and intelligent than he really is.
* TheStarscream: To Varg.
* TreacherousAdvisor: Though Varg saw through him pretty well except for that bit with the Vord.
* UnskilledButStrong: Using other people's blood for his casting means that he has access to a lot of power but he tends to be sloppy in his application. While the attacks work (except for the fact that Tavi usually has a way of surviving the ones directed at ''him''), Morak gets similar results using much less power. Sarl tends to favor big flashy attacks that use a lot more power than is required so as to make himself look more intimidating that he really is.
* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: Thanks to his idiocy, the WarRefugees of the Shuaran and Narashan Canim are literally all that remains of their entire ''species'' after the Vord obliterated the entire continent of Canea.
* UnwittingPawn: The Vord played him for a fool, using him to get into a position where they could easily conquer the continent of Canea after initially appearing to be his ally. He also had his death easily arranged for him by Nasaug.
* VillainTeamup: Him and High Lord Kalarus. Together, their combined power and ingenuity almost brought Alera itself to its knees. High Lord Kalarus stationed his armies at key positions scattered around the country, and arranged for them to strike multiple fronts at the exact same time. Their signal? Sarl using his ritual magic to turn the entire country's skies red, filling them with acidic tentacle monsters to stop aerial communication, transport, and preventing Gaius from observing anything that happens in the realm. On Sarl's end, Kalarus' sister is stationed within the one Legion standing between him and the country. He calls a lightning strike down upon all the officers of the Legion while they're having a meeting, planning to leave the sister alive using a gem given to her that makes her immune to his magics. She would take command of the Legion as the sole surviving officer and retreat from the area, allowing Sarl's forces a solid defensible foothold in Alera. Presumably, Kalarus would then take most of Alera for himself while leaving Sarl to have his colony in the Amaranth Vale. The scope of this teamup takes the entire cast by surprise.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Morak]]
!Master Morak

One of the few decent Canim ritualists, who believes in the following the Old Way of using one's own blood for magic instead of another being's.
----
* AuthorityEqualsAsskicking: Shows the difference between a master ritualist and a novice when he beats a younger ritualist in a quick draw of spells and makes the Cane literally vomit up his guts. He doesn't even bother to ''turn around''.
* BadassBoast: "Clouds of acid are for amateurs!"
** To clarify for those not quite as familiar with the series, clouds of acid are a common Ritualist combat spell, which has seen ubiquitous use throughout the series. Morak, on the other hand, creates clouds of ''{{Eldritch Abomination}}s''.
* BloodMagic: Like all Canim Ritualists. Morak, however, only uses his own blood.
* DeadpanSnarker: Has his moments of dry wit, such as below when he's using an acid spell to help give the Free Aleran and First Aleran Legions time to strengthen their defenses.
-->'''Fidelias:''' (mildly) [[CallBack I thought you said 'clouds of acid were for amateurs'?]]\\
'''Marok:''' That was not a cloud. It was a ''wall''. (closes his eyes in irritation) [[UngratefulBastard Whining demon]]. You are ''welcome.''
* GoodOldWays: He uses his own blood to fuel his spells, not the blood of others like Sarl does. This is the original way the Bloodspeakers worked, before they discovered that they could use others' blood.
* GoodScarsEvilScars: His arms are covered with self-inflicted scars. For him (and other ritualists) his are a ''good'' thing, as it shows that they use their own blood instead of others' for their magic.
* GrumpyOldMan: Gives off this vibe. Most notably, his reaction to having to deal with an upstart adversarial Ritualist is not one of fear or surprise, but resigned annoyance and impatience.
* KlingonPromotion: A variation. He didn't kill Khral, the leader of the Ritualists just left on a sacred pilgrimage before Tavi's trial[[note]]In truth, Sha and Fidelias killed him and hid his remains, making it look like he just went off on the journey[[/note]]. As none of of his lieutenants wanted to step up in fear of Khral's return and displeasure at them taking his spot, the job fell to Morak.
* SelfHarm: Believes in harming only himself for his magic and incidentally carries around a lot of bandages as a consequence of that.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Was willing to listen to Tavi's side of the story involving the deaths of the makers and his solution to the problem and killed the Canim trying to use their deaths as an excuse to attack the Alerans.
* WeakButSkilled: He only uses his own blood for his casting, so he has a very low pool of energy. However, he's very efficient at using what he has compared to, say, Sarl, who just throws around power wildly. At one point, he's capable of causing another Cane to puke up his guts using only a couple drops of blood.
* WeHaveReserves: A variation. He is more than willing to give the Alerans some aide as it puts their forces more on the front line while protecting his fellow Canim. To his Aleran allies, this is considered a good thing.
* WorthyOpponent: To Varg. They are each other's ''gadara''.
[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:Khral]]
%%* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: To Sarl.
%%[[/folder]]

!!The Icemen
[[folder:The Icemen as a whole]]

Called the "Gadrim-ha" by the Marat, the Icemen are a race of "savage" and mysterious Bigfoot-esque humanoids organized into a series of wandering tribes. They live in the lands of the frozen north far beyond the rest of the Realm, but regularly travel south and attack the Alerans. As such, the Alerans have built the massive defensive construct known as the "Shieldwall" to protect the rest of the Realm from their raids, and have had the two Shield Cities of Antillus and Phrygia warring with the Icemen for as long as recorded history.
----
!!Tropes that apply to the Icemen:
* [[invoked]] AlternativeCharacterInterpretation: Discussed in ''Princeps' Fury''. When Isana is looking at the great Shieldwall while on the northern side of the wall (the direction that the Icemen would regularly see), she muses how to the Icemen, it looks more like a prison wall cutting them off from the rest of the outside world than the immense defensive construct that the Alerans see it as.
* AnIcePerson: Doroga specifically comments on the incorrect Aleran theory that the Icemen follow the winter storms south when attacking the Shield Cities — in reality, the storms ''follow the Icemen.''
* BigfootSasquatchAndYeti: The descriptions given of the Icemen in first ''Furies of Calderon'' and later ''Princeps’ Fury'' shows that they strongly resemble the archetypal Bigfoot.
* ADayInTheLimelight: Isana's subplot in ''Princeps' Fury'' finally shines a light on the Icemen as she tries to arrange a lasting peace between Alerans and Icemen so that the Shield Legions can be sent south to help defend the Realm from the Vord.
* TheEmpath: Their watercrafting is so powerful that they can communicate among themselves with no speech at all, using their empathy-based telepathy instead. Their intense enmity for the Alerans comes largely from the mix of their water-based empathy with the minor firecrafting that Alerans use to stay warm in the cold northern regions. When fire and water are mixed it creates feelings of anxiety and anger, so just by being next to each other the two sides feed each other's hatred.
* EnemyMine: They sign an armisitice with the Alerans so that the Shield Legions can go south and fight their mutual enemy of the Vord. Additionally, the Icemen also help Tavi rapidly transport his forces along the Shieldwall.
* {{Expy}}: In many ways, they're one for the Forest People from ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles''. Both are an enigmatic race of {{Bigfoot}}-inspired humanoids with a long-lasting tradition of magic, and live far from human civilization while still operating under a more or less human psychology.
* FeelingOppressedByTheirExistence: Basically the root of the war between them and the Alerans. The Alerans won't retreat because they're sure the Icemen will take advantage of them leaving their lands unguarded, while the Icemen won't back down because they feel that they'll be invaded if they don't drive the Alerans far enough back from the Shieldwall. The reason this happens is because the interaction between the Icemen's natural water-based empathic magic and Aleran cold-resisting firecrafting encourages feelings of agression, anxiety, and anger, poisoning all relationships until Isana (a non-firecrafter) came along and figured out what was going on.
* ForeverWar: They've been fighting with the Alerans for at least three centuries.
* HatePlague: The use of both Aleran firecrafting (which ''legionares'' constantly use to stay warm) and the watercrafting-based telepathy of the Icemen in close proximity to each other sets up a mutually inimical resonance that makes both parties grouchy and uncomfortable. Since this happens every time Alerans and Icemen are in proximity, a tense first meeting where the Alerans were already scared of the Icemen helped spark a multi-century ForeverWar.
* HiveMind[=/=]MindHive: They exist somewhere between the two. Their empath powers are on such a level that they can freely express their emotions to each other, countless individual minds networked together into one united semblance of will.
* HufflepuffHouse: While the Icemen have been at war with Alera more continually than any of the other nonhuman factions ([[ForeverWar for about 300 years]] ''solid''), their attacks are confined to a particular region in the far north where the POV characters almost never go, meaning they get comparatively little pagetime and development.
* MasterOfOneMagic: They're an entire species of "only" watercrafters. This means that their empath abilities are so advanced that they're effectively all ''telepaths'', and their military movements are heralded by devastating blizzards.
* TheNicknamer: Given that none of then speak Aleran as their native language, they have a wide variety of terms they use to describe certain characters or locations. As an example, High Lord Antillus Raucus is called "Fire Sword".
* NotAlwaysEvil: After being built up for almost the entire series as vicious, savage barbarians that only desire to kill any innocent Aleran in sight, they turn out to be a very thoughtful, calm, and naturally peaceful people who are just as sickened and weary of the ForeverWar they've been waging as the Alerans are.
* NotSoDifferentRemark: The entire plotline involving the Icemen and Alerans in ''Princeps' Fury'' is mostly about Isana and her coterie realizing that their peoples are far more similar than either world like to admit. Both appear to be barbaric animals to the other but are far less villainous than they initially appear, and have fought each other for so long that most have long-since given up any sense of hope for a lasting peace being achieved between the two peoples.
* OurCryptidsAreMoreMysterious: They're basically an entire race of telepathic Yetis.
* OutOfFocus: It's not until the fifth book in this six-book series that a ''single'' Iceman appears on page, though they're very important to the overall story.
* QuantityVsQuality: A weird case where the Icemen follow ''both''. As a whole, the Icemen rely on the latter since they cannot hope to match the united might of an Aleran Legion except when in sufficient numbers. However, individually the Icemen fall into the former by far, being that any single Iceman can easily kill any single ''legionare'' without much effort thanks to their AnIcePerson powers, SuperStrength, {{Telepathy}}, and stamina.
* TheQuietOne: The Icemen very rarely communicate verbally with others, since their immense empath powers basically makes verbal communication moot.
* SuperStrength: They all showcase immense strength. When Isana first meets a group of Icemen in ''Princeps' Fury'', she notices that as crude as their weapons look, they're all designed to be so thick and heavy that an Aleran could only equip and use them by calling upon earthcrafting.
* {{Telepathy}}: In a sense. The Icemen are such master watercrafters that they can easily project and recieve their emotions to one another, to the point where they only seem to speak when talking to someone who can't access their "mental network". Below is a good example of how it is shown to work when Isana and her cotiere are meeting with the Icemen to arrange a peace treaty after their "war-chief" Red Waters cuts Isana's cheek with his spear and the "peace-chief" Sunset gets angry at him:
-->[Sunset] [[DeathGlare turned his gaze on Red Waters]], and Isana felt a sudden, uncomfortably sharp spike of disapproval. Red Waters evidently felt it even more intensely than Isana had. He swayed slightly under the force of it and took a step back to stand beside Big Shoulders again, radiating a mild sense of chagrin. Amusement flowed around the circle of Icemen.\\
The Icemen, Isana realized, had just had their own version of the scene that had played out between her and Aria. Sunset had slapped Red Waters down -- and the entire time, they ''never spoke.'' They hardly ''moved.''
[[/folder]]


!!The Vord
[[folder:The Vord as a whole]]

A HordeOfAlienLocusts accidentally awakened from the Wax Forest at the beginning of the series.
----
!!Tropes that apply to the Vord:
* AdaptiveAbility: The Vord Queens will design new types of Vord to adjust to and counter whatever their enemies are currently throwing at them, as noted below under EvilEvolves.
* AliensAreBastards: They're extraterrestrial in origin according to the author, and have a literal genetic imperative to wipe out all life that isn't fellow Vord.
* AlienBlood: The Vord bleed a greenish mucus in lieu of actual blood.
* AlienInvasion: [[invoked]] As per WordOfGod, they're actually aliens and the Alerans & Marat just don't have the proper words for "impact crater" in their vocabulary to describe the Wax Forest when referring to it as their origin.
* AlwaysChaoticEvil: Inverted. They are a very ''lawful'' evil, especially the current Queen who would honor deals struck with her. The others under her rule are also lawful, justified by being part of a HiveMind.
* AnimalisticAbomination: The Vord types that aren't designed to specifically resemble their foes (like the vordknights resembling the Knights Aeris of Alera and the various Cane-forms resembling the Canim) will typically take forms that resemble a nightmarish parody of the local wildlife. To wit, Tavi spots huge frog-like Vord leaping at the fortifications of Shuar in ''Princeps' Fury'', while a plurality of Vord forces in Alera are described as resembling garim (basically Komodo Dragons), gorillas, and praying mantises.
* ArchEnemy: The Marat hold a special level of hatred towards them since the Vord originally caused the collapse of the Marat's ancient Alera-esque advanced civilization (the {{Barbarian Tribe}}s encountered in the present are TheRemnant of that civilization's few survivors).
* BigBad: Of the whole series.
* BigCreepyCrawlies: Vord not controlling an Aleran, Canim, Marat, etc. are usually gigantic bugs. Queens, of course, excepted.
* BlueAndOrangeMorality: As evidenced below with their Queens, the Vord simply do ''not'' get basic psychology and operate on a fundamentally different wavelength. To the Vord, the only importance is the propagation of their species - Anything else, like art, individuality, or basic morality are considered to be deluded lunancies shared by non-Vord.
* BugWar: The Vord conquered virtually all of Canea [[GreatOffscreenWar between the second and fifth novels]], and their invasion of Alera proper is the primary focus of the last two novels in the series.
* CaptainErsatz: They are directly inspired by the Zerg of ''VideoGame/StarCraft'' fame.
* CivilizationDestroyer: Basically the Vord's entire hat as a species. They destroyed the original Marat civilization prior to the series, reducing the survivors to a barbarian existence. They also wipe out all but ''two'' of the Canim's ranges - namely, Shuar and the few surviving refugees of Narash - and would've done the same to the Alerans if not for the protagonists.
* DarkIsEvil: No matter whatever form they take, the Vord are almost always coverd in the same midnight-black chitin.
* DeathOfPersonality: There is no coming back for someone once they've been [[PuppeteerParasite Taken]] by the Vord. After being Taken, the individual in question will display even less humanity than one of Kalarus' [[LaserGuidedTykeBomb Immortals]].
* EvilEvolves: The queens constantly breeds new forms to adapt to changing conditions and correct any weaknesses. Face them with Knights Aeris? You get flying vordknights. Face them with a legion shieldwall? You get mantis warriors that attack over the top of it. Need to take down nine foot tall wolfmen? You get bigger and bulkier soldiers. Face them with defensive fortifications? You get giant vordbulks that can plow through them.
* EvilIsNotAToy: As the rebellious Canim ritualists learned to the detriment of their whole continent and nearly everyone on it, the Vord are single-mindedly focused on being the only living things alive. The Queens are smart enough to play nice in order to establish a power base, but the instant they judge themselves capable of reliably taking you out, they ''will''.
* HiveMind: Vord are only intelligent around a Vord Queen. Otherwise, they act just like any other animal.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: A ''very'' downplayed case, but their AdaptiveAbility bites them in the rear in both ''Princeps' Fury'' and ''First Lord's Fury''. For the former, the fact that the Vord made themselves look like the Canim they were fighting made it so that the ''croach'' had to grow in a thicker variation to support their weight without breaking... making it remarkably easy for the lighter Alerans to sneak across it when they go to assassinate one of the Canea Queens near the end of the novel. And for the latter, the Aleran Vord [[CripplingOverspecialization who have specialized themselves to fight against Aleran shieldwalls]] find themselves ''completely'' out of their depth and subjected to multiple {{Curb Stomp Battle}}s when they're forced to face Canim cavalry charges.
* HordeOfAlienLocusts: It's even implied that they came from space (unlike the other residents of Carna, who are "lost travelers" that came through wormholes by accident and were deposited here).
* HostileTerraforming: The Vord spread the alien ''croach'' with them wherever they go. It chokes out and "digests" anything organic placed inside of it, and turns it into a nutrient-rich slurry that other Vord feed on between battles. As a result, it kills off all other life around it. Notably, it's subtly implied that the Vord themselves are ultimately "just" a bioweapon created by a more advanced hostile species for the purpose of xenoforming a planet into a state more suitable to colonize themselves.
* InsectoidAliens: They're a HordeOfAlienLocusts whose HiveMind is governed by powerful Queens (who are also {{Explosive Breeder}}s), and practice both WeHaveReserves and ZergRush in their battle tactics (albeit with more thought given to strategy than what is typically seen elsewhere). Additionally, the majority of the Vord strongly resemble a certain insect/anthropod/crustacean species from Earth/Carna, as evidenced with the Takers (scorpions), wax spiders (spiders, [[CaptainObvious natch]]), vordknights (dragonflies), "basic" warriors (lobsters/crabs), hornets (hornets/wasps), and mantis warriors (praying mantises).
* KeystoneArmy: Get rid of the Queen and you get rid of their threat. This normally wouldn't be too much of a problem since the Queens can reproduce quickly, but of the three non-sterile Queens, the Maratea and Calderon Queens are dealt with in ''Academ's Fury'' and the Awakened Queen can't produce children whenever she wishes because they inevitably try to kill her, and she eventually dies in the last book without any more heirs. Both Canea Queens are sterile, and one gets killed off in ''Princeps' Fury'', meaning that the Vord are now permanently this.
* KnightOfCerebus: Virtually ''nothing'' is funny about them, and the story always takes a darker turn whenever the Vord appear.
* LightIsNotGood: The wax spiders (also known as the "Keepers") are a subspecies of Vord specifically tasked with tending to and spreading the ''croach'', and are covered in bone-white chitin.
* MalignantPlotTumor: They're introduced in a SideQuest in the first book and appear to be dealt with as a threat in the second – only to come back with a vengeance later on, now on the verge of world domination.
* MeatMoss: The ''croach'' is the equivalent to the Zerg's creep. It serves as a security measure (if you break its surface, the Vord come running), sustenance (digesting organic matter into a nutrient soup for the Vord to feed on), and reproduction (almost all new Vord are spawned from it).
* MonstrousCannibalism: When the Awakened Queen's store of ''croach'' in the ruins of Riva is destroyed by Tavi's forces, she suddenly finds her remaining forces in the Calderon Valley severely malnourished and at threat of starvation. Her solution? Have her surviving forces devour the weakest and most severely injured tenth of her remaining forces. Both Isana and even ''[[TheSociopath Invidia]]'' [[EveryoneHasStandards are visibly disturbed by this display of the Queen's sheer callousness towards her own kind]].
* OurZombiesAreDifferent: Those Taken by the Vord become Parasite Zombies. Most disturbingly, NoKillLikeOverkill typically has to be applied to them since despite ostensibly being {{Technically Living Zombie}}s, Taken ''will'' always fight their way through injuries that would otherwise completely cripple or kill the original host.
* OutsideGenreFoe: The Vord would come straight out of science fiction -- almost literally, as the Wax Forest is an impact crater from the spaceship that they crash-landed on Carna according to WordOfGod -- but find themselves overrunning the very high fantasy Carna.
* PuppeteerParasite: Their Takers crawl into your mouth and take control of your body.
* RaisingTheSteaks: As evidenced by a Taken grass lion Amara is forced to kill in ''Princeps' Fury'', the Vord aren't just limited to sentient life in terms of Taken infection.
* RogueDrone: An interesting variant. Because Tavi and Kitai first "awoke" the Awakened Vord Queen in ''Furies of Calderon'', the non-Queen Vord treat the two of them as other members of TheHorde and ignore them unless they directly attack them. Additionally, the Awakened Queen becoming IntriguedByHumanity causes her to be viewed as a Rogue Drone by her own Daughter Queens, all of whom try to kill her.
* SicklyGreenGlow: The ''croach'' is often described as glowing with an unsettling greenish light.
* SlayingMantis: After being stymied by Aleran shieldwalls in the previous book, the Awakened Queen comes up with "mantis warriors," which basically resemble praying mantises but the size of a man. With their scythe-like claws, mantis warriors can reach right over a shieldwall and strike at the unprotected soldiers behind it.
* SurprisinglySuddenDeath:
** Once the Queen dies, most of the horde simply starves to death in about six months.
** Averted with the Vord the Awakened Queen gave to the Alerans who surrendered to her and asked for amnesty. They are mentioned as continuing to follow her commands to protect the holders even after her death, to the point where they're seen defending the surrendered Alerans from "wild" Vord.
* TheVirus: Vord Takers basically turn their victims into zombies.
* WorfHadTheFlu: The Awakened Vord Queen offhandedly mentions in ''First Lord's Fury'' to Invidia that Carna should've been completely consumed by the Vord in less than five years after she was accidentally awakened by Tavi and Kitai in the Wax Forest. However, her being IntriguedByHumanity has caused each of her Daughter Queens to try and kill her, with her being seen as "defective." This severely crippled the Vord's strategic abilities since the Awakened Queen couldn't rapidly create multiple Daughter Queens to properly manage their forces, ultimately giving Alera and her newfound allies a fighting chance.
* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Big on this. It actually bites them in the rear with Brencis Minoris, since he keeps the secret of making powerful slave collars for the Vord because he knows that he's dead if he's not indispensable. Thus, when Amara kills him, the Vord are out a powerful asset that they can't possibly replace.
* ZergRush: Although, oddly enough, ''without'' HollywoodTactics.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Vord Queen]]
!Vord Queen

[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin The leader(s) of the Vord]]. There are a few distinct Queens: The Awakened Queen is the one woken up by Tavi and Kitai; she absorbed some of their blood, mutating her and making her into a nonstandard Queen. The Calderon Queen tries to attack Calderon Valley in ''Academ's Fury'', with a previous Queen in Maratea having been already wiped out by an alliance of Marat tribes just prior to the novel's events. The three Canea Queens are the ones born in Canea, with one previously killed by the Canim before the events of ''Princeps' Fury''. The Junior Queen is born in Alera during the events of ''First Lord's Fury''. Every single one of them is absolutely terrifying.
----
!!Tropes that apply to the Vord Queen:
* AbsurdlySharpClaws: Their claws are sharp enough to carve cleanly through Legion steel and Canim hide alike.
* AlasPoorVillain: The death of the Awakened Vord Queen is surprisingly tragic, with her bitterly admitting that the emotional bonds humanity forms with each other makes them superior to the Vord before she quietly tries to FaceDeathWithDignity.
* AlienBlood: It's greenish.
* AntiVillain: The Awakened Queen only attacks Alera because that is the only way she believes she will be able to survive the inevitable war with her daughters. She spends most of her time trying to understand Aleran customs. Tavi actually feels sorry for killing her and assures her that he will make it as quick as possible.
* AuthorityEqualsAsskicking: She is the leader of the Vord and the most powerful of them. The Awakened Queen is also far more powerful than the Junior Queens.
* BareHandedBladeBlock: Fast and durable enough to pull this off, though they tend to favor deflecting [[AbsurdlySharpBlade metalcrafter swords]] rather than blocking them outright. At one point in ''Princeps' Fury'', the Awakened Queen blocks a knife thrust from Amara this way, then proceeds to stab the Cursor ''with her own dagger'' a moment later.
* BatmanGambit:
** The Queen that attacks the Calderon Valley in ''Academ's Fury'' anticipates where the sick and wounded after battle will be put so she could send in her body-snatching Takers and claim more of them.
** The Awakened Queen is fully aware Invidia will betray her. It is simply a part of her nature, like a slive has poison, and so allows her to plot behind her back to bring in most of the remaining High Lords and Ladies to kill her knowing she would turn on them to secure herself a better defense against the remaining Citizenry. She just set a trap to benefit her in the end.
* BigBad: Of the series as a whole, though they're only really that prominent in the second half of the series. The Awakened Queen herself is the direct Big Bad for all of ''First Lord's Fury''.
* BigBadDuumvirate: It varies depending on the book. The Awakened and Calderon Queens are the ultimate antagonists of ''Academ's Fury'', but both Kalarus and Sarl are the main instigators of that novel's events. Meanwhile, the two surviving Canea Queens and the Awakened Queens share the role of BigBad for ''Princeps' Fury''.
* BishonenLine: When we first see the Awakened Queen, she's buggy and "unfinished" looking. When we meet the Calderon Queen, she looks like an Aleran girl with fangs, chitinous skin, and glowing eyes. The Canea Queen looks like a green version of Kitai with some of Tavi's features. The final form of the Awakened Queen looks almost human - except for her BlackEyesOfEvil.
* BlackEyesOfEvil: One of the things that gives away the Awakened Queen as nonhuman.
* CreepyChild: The Awakened Queen has extremely creepy childlike aspects to her. As Invidia notes, she's only nine years old, and her "doll house" is a steadholt deep in Vord territory she created to [[IntriguedByHumanity try and comprehend humanity]]. It's just as scary as it sounds.
* CuteMonsterGirl: [[invoked]] She ''tries'', [[UncannyValley but...]]
* DeathByIrony: The Vord Queens believe that individuality is a weakness. The second Canea Queen is killed by a gambit that only works ''because'' of individuality (namely, using Tavi as a stalking horse).
* DyingRace: The prime Vord Queen creates sterile "daughters" deliberately because they inevitably rise up and attempt to destroy her. With her death in the final book, the only queen left, in Canea, does not have the ability to produce more.
* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes:
** The first Queen does care about Invidia, the Junior Queens, and her horde, even if the other Queens would kill her for having such affections.
** The Canea Queen loves and is loyal the first Queen as a mother, even if she will attempt to kill her.
* EvilCannotComprehendGood: All the Vord Queens, to greater or lesser degrees.
** The Calderon Queen dies because while she can ''technically'' understand the concept of sacrifice, she can't understand why anyone would actually ''do'' it. This means she leaves herself completely open to a suicide attack from Amara (who has decided that her death would be worth it to save Alera from the Queen's threat).
** The Awakened Queen is pretty self-aware about her troubles with comprehending good, and ''tries'' to understand it (like by observing human daily life and performing social rituals like a communal dinner), but she doesn't succeed too much.
** The Junior Queen from ''First Lord's Fury'' fits this to a T. When she's told that the dinner they're participating in is for the purpose of [[ThePowerOfFriendship creating bonds between them]], she wonders [[LiteralMinded why they need restraints]].
* ExplosiveBreeder: A single Queen can apparently produce ''hundreds of thousands'' of offspring in a matter of months--and not just generic "worker" creatures, but whole strains of specialized minions that incorporate different physical traits and tactics to battle specific threats.
* FaceDeathWithDignity: The Awakened Vord Queen has this surprisingly poignant statement - "I know how a Vord Queen dies. I am ready."
* FanDisservice: The Vord Queens go naked except for cloaks, but their HumanoidAbomination nature means that their nakedness just serves to make them seem even more alien.
* FlyingBrick: The Awakened Queen takes all the [[LightningBruiser inherent physical power]] of the other queens and adds in the ability to fly via windcrafting. Her first fight scene sees her [[CurbStompBattle completely annihilate]] [[PersonOfMassDestruction High Lord Rhodes]] in a midair battle, though she might've also had some help from Invidia.
* GeniusBruiser: One of the scariest things about the Vord Queens in general is how incredibly ''smart'' they are. The first Queen is so intelligent she's almost like a Zerg version of [[Franchise/StarWars Grand Admiral Thrawn]].
* TheGhost: The Maratea Queen and both the first and third Canea Queens are never seen.
* GlowingEyesOfDoom: The Calderon Queen is described as featuring these.
* GreenSkinnedSpaceBabe: Both the Awakened and Canea Queens look like a green-skinned, black-eyed cross between Kitai and Tavi's aunt. Unsurprising since Kitai and Tavi's blood is what awoke the former. However, it's deconstructed in that their physical attractiveness is completely lost due to their [[BlueAndOrangeMorality fundamentally alien psychology]].
* HiveQueen: [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Well, duh.]]
* HumanityIsInfectious: The primary/Awakened Vord Queen. This makes her defective in the eyes of her daughters, who are genetically programmed to kill her for deviating from the Vord standard.
* InnocentFanserviceGirl: [[invoked]] Subverted - The fact that the Awakened Queen and her Daughter Queens tend to go around totally nude except for cloaks just highlights how [[UncannyValley unsettling]] they really are.
* IntriguedByHumanity: The Awakened Queen is quite interested in the bonds humans form between each other and spends most of ''First Lord's Fury'' trying to study them.
* LastOfHerKind: By the end of ''First Lord's Fury'', the only Vord Queen left in Carna is the second Canea Queen. She's sterile, so there will never be any more.
* JabbaTableManners: The Junior Queen. This is meant to emphasize how different the Awakened Queen is from standard Queens -- while the Awakened Queen eats daintily, the Junior Queen just grabs portions of food and stuffs them in her mouth.
* LethalChef: The Awakened Queen doesn't really ''get'' cooking. It doesn't help that she's trying to cook ''croach'', which is only technically edible.
-->'''Invidia:''' On a scale of one to ten, ten being the most revolting and one being almost edible, I believe that rating this recipe would [[BrokeTheRatingScale require the use of exponents]].
* LightningBruiser: Each of the Queens are this. Swords barely scratch them. They are as fast as a decent Windcrafter, and as strong as an Earthcrafter. And that's ''before'' the Awakened Queen learns how to furycraft.
* LiteralMinded: The Junior Queen, partially because she ReallyWasBornYesterday, and partially because EvilCannotComprehendGood.
* MadeOfIron: Balest bolts bounce off the Awakened Queen's skin. Balest bolts can, for reference, go all the way through two heavily armored ''legionares''. It ultimately takes the raging furystorm of '''two''' Great Furies - Garados and Thana - to wear her down to the point where Tavi can kill her.
* MamaBear: Pretty much everything the Awakened Queen does in the entire series is purely because she has an overwhelming ''need'' to make sure her "children" are safe.
* OffingTheOffspring: The Awakened Queen kills the Junior Queen. Of course, the Junior Queen attacked first. And according to the Awakened Queen, this has happened with every single one of her daughters unless she's gotten out of Dodge fast enough to avoid them.
* OverarchingVillain:
** She or the threat of her was something brought up in most every book before her major assault on Alera. Her presence in the first book was only as a larval creature Tavi had just woken up by accident.
** Tavi plans on using the last Canea Queen as this in a GenghisGambit to help bring together the good races of Alera into a better and stronger union.
* PetTheDog: When the Awakened Queen is in a position to completely exterminate humanity, she sets aside areas where they can live freely, safely and under their own government, the only condition being they let her sterilise them. Considering her Vord instincts are continuously screaming at her to immediately wipe out every non-Vord, the fact that she's willing to slowly establish Vord dominance by preventing new human life rather than immediately causing death and suffering to those who are already alive says a lot about her. Note that while this does indeed weaken the resistance against her she has the numbers to crush them completely if she wanted to, and this offer is not a trick; she fully keeps her word to them to the point that even after she's killed, the Vord she assigned to protect the surrendered humans continue to do so, even from other Vord.
* PragmaticVillainy: The Awakened Queen spares many cities and settlements in Alera rather than destroy them outright, but only because she knows she'll waste time and resources fighting those people. Instead she allows them to live, with the only price being that they are not allowed to bear children.
* PreMortemOneLiner: The Awakened Vord Queen calmly muses aloud that "Individuality is counter-productive" before tearing open Rook's throat once it becomes clear that the former bloodcrow is of no more use to the Vord.
* PsychicPowers: All Vord Queens have them, with mind reading and [[MasterOfIllusion illusion crafting]] as specialties.
* PsychopathicManchild: The Awakened Vord Queen is shown to be this in ''First Lord's Fury''. Not only is Tavi utterly sickened when he realizes that she's taking an active ''delight'' in savaging the First Aleran's camp, but she frequently goes into fits of childish rage whenever she's arguing with either Isana or Invidia.
* QuizzicalTilt: Whenever the Queens encounter examples of heroism in the face of their alien ruthlessness, they're often described as tilting their heads in confusion "like a hawk fascinated with the lunacy of their prey."
* RapunzelHair: The "Green Kitai"-form Canea Queen has waist-length white hair.
* SealedEvilInACan: Who gets unsealed accidentally by Tavi and Kitai towards the end of the first book, thus setting the stage for the rest of the series.
* SpockSpeak: Part of what makes the Vord Queens so creepy is the chillingly clinical and LiteralMinded tone they use when talking to not-Vord, as if it's meant to serve as yet another reminder of what an OutsideGenreFoe they are. For instance, the Awakened Queen seems to be only able to refer to her nightly meals with Isana and Invidia as "the dinner ritual," she calls parents "progenitors," and love is "emotional non-material bonds."
* SelfMadeOrphan: All of the Daughter Vord Queens will try to kill the original, their mother, because she isn't pure Vord.
* VillainBall: While she's otherwise brilliant, the Awakened Queen holds it briefly by not searching Araris carefully enough, which led to him being able to ward off the numbing effect of her prison: because of his hidden dagger, he could use metalcrafting and stay alert while stuck in the ''croach''.
* WaifFu: The Awakened Queen is able to tear through nine-foot tall Canim warriors, shred a Legion shieldwall, and take on the mightiest crafters in Alera with casual ease. She's also only about as tall as Tavi and Kitai.
* WeHaveReserves: The Queens will throw hundreds if not thousands of forces against a foe because they can create more so quickly. It is even weaponized in Canea when the horde constantly attacking the last surviving Canim range of Shuar for so long was a distraction while she had another group slowly dig a tunnel into the settlement.
[[/folder]]

!Other
[[folder:Alera]]
!Alera

Probably the greatest and most powerful fury in existence, and effectively the incarnation of the entire continent. She's taken a fondness to the House of Gaius, acting as a SpiritAdvisor to them and causing effects on a massive scale when they ask and it suits her. However, she will not directly aid one side over another; using her power effectively relies on setting up situations where some outside influence helps your side more than the other.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Alera:
* ActuallyPrettyFunny: She's clearly trying not to laugh when she learns of an angry Kitai's LysistrataGambit towards Tavi in the prologue of ''First Lord's Fury''.
* AlasPoorVillain: A variant. While they were never actually "villains," she expresses sorrow to Tavi for his ancestors having wiped out the other sapient races on the continent before the present day, referring to them as having been just "lost travellers" like the Romans/Alerans/humans, Marat, Canim, Icemen, and Vord all are.
* AllPowerfulBystander: The most powerful fury to have ever existed, but she never gets directly involved or favors one side over the other in the many conflicts of her world. Though she does favor the House of Gaius, she only helps them when they politely ask her and doing so suits her.
* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Technically all furies would be this for the elements of nature, but Alera's the most human and comprehensible of them, having interacted with the House of Gaius for centuries and is essentially the embodiment of the entire continent of Alera.
* BishonenLine: Of the Great Furies we see, Kalus is a giant volcano, Garados is a hideous mountain beast, and Thana is a vast, gaunt shape composed of countless windmanes. Alera, on the other hand, is very humanlike until you get to her eyes.
* DeathOfPersonality: As noted below, the destruction of her mosaic in Alera Imperia causes her personality that was formed by the ancient Alerans to slowly disintegrate over the course of the last novel.
* KaleidoscopeEyes: They cycle through just about every color imaginable. But then, she's a PhysicalGod...
* LackOfEmpathy: She's amiable enough, but the combined factors of being an impossibly old PhysicalGod, and not even a human one at that, mean she does not process thoughts and emotions the same way others do. She understands them well enough, though.
* LaserGuidedKarma: In a particularly twisted sense. As she muses below, her DeathOfPersonality is partly justified since she (in the form of furystorms and the like) had killed more of humanity than anything else in the history of Carna before the Vord came.
* TheMentor: Her TrainingFromHell is all that gets Tavi anywhere near normal skill levels at crafting. She also grimly notifies of him of the terrifyingly high stakes and dangerous situations he will have to deal with along with trying to best educate him on how to deal with them (to the point where she outright asks him if he's ready to do [[WellIntentionedExtremist whatever it takes]] to finally wipe out the Vord and save his people).
* MentorOccupationalHazard: Sextus' destruction of Alera Imperia destroyed the mosaic that called her into being as a discrete existence, and she's already fading away when she first meets Tavi. Despite this, she continues helping Tavi and Kitai throughout the book and she doesn't die until after the epilogue.
* MightMakesRight: While she can put on a facade of empathy and kindness, being a NatureSpirit means that [[NatureIsNotNice she has this mindset as a fundamental part of her psychology]]. See below when she and Tavi are describing how the original Gaius Primus bloodily conquered the other Alerans after a millennia of strife and suffering to bring about the Realm:
-->'''Alera:''' Laws. Justice. Art. The pursuit of knowledge. It all came from a single source.\\
'''Tavi:''' ''(sickened)'' The ability to kill.\\
'''Alera:''' ''(grimly nods)'' Strength is the first virtue. This is not a pleasant fact. Its distastefulness does not alter the truth that without strength to protect them, all other virtues are ephemeral, ultimately meaningless.
* MrExposition: A variant, with her helping inform Tavi of some details related to the Romans who would go on to eventually found Alera along with various facets of furycrafting.
* PhysicalGod: Her power is effectively unlimited. However, actually using them can have continent-wide and potentially worldwide repercussions. For example, requesting moderate weather in one part of the realm spins off violent storms elsewhere. Tavi's stunt with the ice-sledding ships will cause a global ice age a few thousand years in the future.
-->Until the Vord came, I and my kin had killed more Alerans than any foe your folk had ever faced.
* SpiritAdvisor: To the House of Gaius. She usually limits herself to just the ruling First Lord, but because of Tavi's bond with Kitai and him telling Kitai before being told not to, she extends her advice to Kitai.
* TechnicolorEyes: Her eyes are described as resembling constantly-changing mineral veins rather than anything else.
* TimeAbyss: She is '''billions''' of years old, although she's only existed as herself for as long as the mosaic in Gaius Sextus' meditation chamber has. Really, she might be one of the foremost examples of this trope: "Entire species come and go, like the sparks rising from a campfire."
[[/folder]]
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to:

'''WARNING!''' All spoilers are '''unmarked''' on The character pages for this page!

[[foldercontrol]]

!Alerans

[[folder:Alerans as a whole]]

The long-lost descendants of the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legio_IX_Hispana Legio IX Hispana]] and its {{Camp Follower}}s, who ended up in Carna through a wormhole. Basically humans granted with ElementalPowers connected to nature spirits called "furies", the Alerans went on to conquer an entire continent and have ruled over their newfound empire for roughly a thousand years under the House of Gaius.
----
!!Tropes that apply to the Alerans:
* BadassArmy: The Aleran Legions were the primary tool from which the ancient Alerans were able to carve out their empire while being surrounded by numerous hostile forces like the Malorandim, Children of the Sun, Avar, Yrani, and Dekh. Zigzagged in the modern day, though, as while there are still several examples (most notably the Antillan and Phrygian Legions along with the First and Free Aleran), most Legions
series have been able split due to go ''decades'' (particularly in the southern cities) without seeing any action, making them very conservative and inexperienced. This unfortunately means that when the Vord finally attack, most of Alera's available forces are completely unprepared and get their asses royally handed to them multiple times before they're eventually able to wise up and effectively fight.
* DecadentCourt:
length.

[[index]]
[[Characters/CodexAleraAlerans
Aleran politics are incredibly dirty and violent, to the point where "cutters" (read: assassins) will never be out of work.
* DeflectorShield: Skilled windcrafters can create shields of "hardened air" to deflect incoming objects, though in practice it's less a force field and more directing objects around/away from their intended target.
* DeliberateValuesDissonance: As they're descended from a LostRomanLegion, the Alerans frequently show an incredibly xenophobic (bordering on ''genocidal'') and imperialist attitude towards their non-human neighbors, and are also highly misogynistic and sexist (represented in how Alera is a NoWomansLand). Additionally, the practice of slavery is incredibly common and widespread, albeit becoming increasingly controversial and unpopular(to the point where it only seems to be several of the southernmost cities, such as Kalare, that are keeping the abominable practice running). Additionally, Alera also inherits from Rome a highly classist social structure whose nobility operates on a rigid MightMakesRight ethos. On a more positive note, though, modern racial politics (i.e., inter-human racism) are non-existent since the Alerans "left" Earth long before modern concepts around race were invented
* ElementalPowers: Six of them, to be exact, each bound to one of the six elements of nature.
** [[BlowYouAway Windcrafting]]: In addition to wind manipulation and {{Flight}}, windcrafting also grants SuperSpeed, the ability to chuck [[ShockAndAwe lightning bolts]] when combined with firecrafting, casting [[{{Invisibility}} veils]], creating limited "{{Deflector Shield}}s" through air currents, and the ability to create a telescope-like lens out of "hardened" air.
** [[DishingOutDirt Earthcrafting]]: Earth and rock manipulation, also granting SuperStrength (though [[LogicalWeakness only as long as the earthcrafter is touching the ground]]) and the ability to induce calm or lust in someone else.
** [[ExtraOreDinary Metalcrafting]]: Manipulation of iron and steel, granting ImplausibleFencingPowers and the ability to sense nearby metals; additionally, it can be used to artificially repress emotion and pain to turn the user into an ImplacableMan. The most powerful and skilled metalcrafters can [[ChromeChampion incorporate metal into their skin]] to protect themselves (although it's mentioned to be ''incredibly'' painful to do so).
** [[GreenThumb Woodcrafting]]: Manipulation of plants, including encouraging them to grow, or animating them directly, which also (as the name implies) applies to dead wood. It also grants the ability to create veils when enough plant matter is present, specifically with shadows. Most woodcrafters are archers, since control of both the arrows and bows gives them ImprobableAimingSkills.
** [[MakingASplash Watercrafting]]: Manipulating water (including ice), empathy, breathing underwater, the ability to change their appearance, long-range water-based communication, and, most importantly, healing. Without some metalcrafting, though, they tend to be {{Unhappy Medium}}s, since AMindIsATerribleThingToRead.
** [[PlayingWithFire Firecrafting]]: Fire and heat manipulation, along with granting the ability to inspire fear or passion and chucking [[ShockAndAwe lightning bolts]] when combined with windcrafting.
* EmotionControl: Firecrafting can inspire fear and/or passion, while earthcrafting can inspire lust and/or calm. Metalcrafting can instead [[StealthPun steel oneself against]] emotion.
* TheEmpath: Watercrafters naturally feel the emotions of those around them. Unless they also have [[RequiredSecondaryPowers access to metalcrafting]], this can result in them becoming an UnhappyMedium (or even ''worse'', as evidenced with Odiana being an AxCrazy {{Cloudcuckoolander}} thanks to her DarkAndTroubledPast as a SexSlave just coming into her water furies).
* EveryoneIsASuper: All Alerans are naturally born with the ability to mentally access and control furies. Even Tavi, who is initially thought to be a "furyless freak," eventually turns out to be "only" a late bloomer when he finally gains access to his furycrafting when he's twenty years old.
* FantasticCasteSystem: The social classes of Alera roughly go: Slaves, Freemen, Citizens, and Lords/Ladies, with several different ranks of nobility somewhere at the level of Citizens and higher. There is a strong but not perfect correlation between strength in furycrafting and social rank, and strength in furycrafting is at least partially heritable (until Tavi is implied to alter it at the end so it can be earned based on merit and effort), so while many characters have moved their way up in rank over their lives, the caste one is born into is still very determinative.
* FantasyCounterpartCulture: The Realm of Alera is a society very similar to Western Rome at the peak of its empire. Justified since it was founded by a LostRomanLegion. That being said, Alera has several distinct elements that show how far it has diverged from the ancient Roman culture, particularly with a more executive system of government where the Senate, High Lords, and First Lord exist side by side, the fact that slavery is a divisive topic instead of the norm, and the use of several aspects of the medieval European feudal system, such as Counts ruling over regions under the High Lords, and the title of a Knight of the Legions. Furthermore, unlike the incredibly religious Romans, the Alerans are highly agnostic and secular, to the point of outright claiming to have OutgrownSuchSillySuperstitions as "gods" and "prophecy".
* FeelNoPain: An aspect of metalcrafting. However, this doesn't mean the injuries being ignored are any less dangerous. If someone ignores the pain of a legitimately crippling injury (or a minor one from a poisoned weapon), it can cost them their life.
* {{Flight}}: Skilled windcrafters can generate windstreams to support their bodies and allow them to soar through the air. Notably, it's mentioned that this talent requires a windcrafter to also learn [[RequiredSecondaryPowers how to create a shield of hardened air out in front of them]] so as to protect them from incoming objects like insects or arrows.
* FounderOfTheKingdom: The original Gaius Primus, the first of the House of Gaius and the first of the First Lords of the Realm. Ever since his death, his family line - through multiple different branches - has ruled over the entire Realm in at least one way or another.
* HealItWithWater: Healing magic is one of the watercrafting arts and one of the most commonly used for its MundaneUtility. It usually requires the patient to be [[HealingVat immersed in a tub of water]], but the more powerful practitioners don't need to do so.
* HealingHands: Watercrafters can heal using their furies, but all but the most powerful need a tub of water to immerse the patient in.
* HumanityIsInsane: Almost every nonhuman species is convinced that Alerans are completely, irrationally ''mad''.
* HumansAreBastards: The Marat, Canim, Icemen, and Vord all think so. And considering how the Alerans are the only species to practice slavery, they're presented as not being entirely wrong (though eventually, the series makes it clear that aside from the Vord being literally born to regard all other species as resources for expansion, no species on Carna is inherently "superior" to any other morally speaking).
* HumansAreSpecial: The Alerans are frequently shown to have a level of honor and creativity (along with "madness") that utterly baffles their inhuman neighbors. It's to the point where they prove to be [[HumanityIsInfectious deceptively infectious]] and "taint" the Awakened Vord Queen with concepts of empathy and a desire for family.
* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: Many Canim, Icemen, and Marat believe this after being exposed to Aleran practices like slavery, organized massacres, and CivilWar.
* HumansAreWhite: Averted. While most of the viewpoint Aleran characters are described as being either white or at least having pale skin (i.e., Tavi, Fidelias, Ehren, and Invidia), many other Alerans (mostly those hailing from the southern reaches of the Realm) are described as having dark skin tones, most notably Amara (who is a DarkSkinnedBlonde). Makes sense, as the Alerans were founded by a LostRomanLegion hailing from both Central Europe and the Mediterranean.
* HumansByAnyOtherName: Why the Canim, Icemen, Marat, and Vord almost exclusively call them only "Alerans," the actual Alerans use "Aleran" and "human" interchangeably, and it's made clear that there's no real difference between the two terms.
* {{Invisibility}}: Both wind and woodcrafters can accomplish this, though through different means. Windcrafters have a more "traditional" form of invisibility, where they craft the air around a target so it reflects light away. Meanwhile, when enough plant matter is present, woodcrafters can accelerate and adjust plant growth around them so that they are hidden in the resulting shadows and leaves, making them effectively invisible.
* LostRomanLegion: The Alerans are descended from a people that their histories refer to as "Romans," who claimed to have come from 'Mother Rome,' and who originally appeared on Carna in numbers equal to a single Legion and its {{camp follower}}s. [[invoked]] WordOfGod is that they were the IX Roman Legion, and were transported to Carna by a wormhole. Notably, it was so long ago that the ruins of this civilization are called "Romanic", and there's a serious debate on whether or not Aleran ancestors had inherent furycraft (they did not).
* {{Magitek}}: In daily life, most Alerans use technology roughly equivalent to medieval Europe, which is about what one would expect considering the origin of Alera was as a LostRomanLegion. However, different aspects of furycrafting stand out as modern conveniences: furylamps, which function exactly like lightbulbs; coldstones, which provide refrigeration; watersending, which provides communication across thousands of miles; and air-coaches, which stand in for airplanes. Combined with the healing of watercrafting and the ability of woodcrafting to stimulate the growth of food crops, Alera has a general life-expectancy and quality of life equal to the mid-twentieth century United States.
* TheMagocracy: Though not as obvious about it as other settings using the same trope, Alera is effectively one of these. One's political power within Alera is dependent on their capacity for furycrafting, with the First Lord being generally held as the most powerful furycrafter. High Lords, just below the First Lord, are nearly as strong, and are each a virtual OneManArmy. Below these are Citizens, who possess strong furycrafting in one or more disciplines and can prove that strength in a furycrafting duel with another Citizen. Everyone else (who aren't slaves) are freemen, who have some basic furycrafting but usually not enough to stand out.
* MedievalStasis: For the most part among the Alerans, technology is static and has actually ''regressed'' from the original Roman settlers' because of the universal access to ElementalPowers. {{Magitek}} is so universal that despite the low tech levels, the actual quality of life is roughly equivalent to the mid-twentieth century, and the use of magic ''has'' been evolving. There is also an institutionalized traditionalism within Aleran society, thanks to the fact that they've spent a millennium simply fighting to survive against the DeathWorld that is Carna, which resulted in an emphasis on following set, traditional methods. This is ultimately a serious problem that the Alerans have, as they have no reference point to deal with enemies using advanced engineering like the Canim, let alone a completely new OutsideContextProblem like [[HordeOfAlienLocusts the Vord.]] Furthermore, Aleran furycrafting is almost entirely hereditary (at least until Tavi has Alera alter the system to make it merit-based in the series' epilogue), helping reinforce a static and unchanging power structure in society that makes it increasingly difficult for clever minds like Tavi to have their ideas spread and take root without sufficient outside assistance. However, Bernard and Tavi's re-invention of the ''catapult'' in the final novel along with numerous other achievements kickstarted by Tavi (such as the practice of "mounted infantry" units in the First Aleran and the "ski-ships" able to easily travel along the Shieldwall) seem to be the hints where the other Alerans (most notably Amara) finally get that their Medieval Stasis is breaking.
* MundaneUtility: All observed aspects of furycrafting have at least one "feature" that can be easily integrated into everyday life. In fact, Alera's economy is so based on furycrafting that most other forms of technological development have completely stagnated.
** Firecrafters can create "coldstones" (which allow for refrigeration without need of ice). Additionally, sealing fire furies in lamps allows for "furylamps," which are basically treated as electrical lights, and skilled-enough firecrafters can use their abilities to incite either fear or passion to help them play to the crowd and effective politicians.
** Watercrafters allow for near-instantaneous long-way communication through connected bodies of water (though according to Max, skilled-enough crafters can alter the conveyed messages) along with extensive healing and medical science.
** Windcrafters being able to fly allows for widespread and expedient aerial travel through coaches (where windcrafters act as the proverbial draft animals) along with being able to use their furies to create what are effectively modern telescopes through lenses of "hardened air."
** Earthcrafters can draw up bedrock and minerals from the earth (making both construction and mining a breeze) along with using their SuperStrength to make manual labor far more expedient. Additionally, some skilled earthcrafters have been known to use their ability to incite lust to act as strippers & prostitutes, being able to throw an entire crowd of already horny folks into a tizzy. If Bernard is to go by, earthcrafters' ability to incite calm also makes them very useful in terms of training beasts of burden and utilizing domesticated animals such as gargants, sheep, goats, and horses. Additionally, earthcrafters can bring up nutrients for farming plants to help bring in larger yields of crops, though this is usually an emergency measure and is mentioned as making the soil unusable for farming after a few seasons' worth of growth.
** Woodcrafters can use their powers to accelerate plant growth to bring in higher yields of crops for harvest along with being near-perfect hunters.
** Finally, metalcrafters can use their connection to metal to be excellent blacksmiths through being able to intimately tell where an iron tool's weakpoints are and where it needs to be fixed. And while it's not directly touched on, their ability to have such endurance that they can block out pain and/or keep going for days makes them excellent athletes and couriers.
* NoWomansLand: Though Alera's women do enjoy plenty of rights as freemen, the number of female Citizens is limited; up until Gaius promoted Isana to the Citizenry at the end of ''Furies of Calderon'', no woman had ever gained Citizenship without either serving in the military [[note]]Difficult, as women could not normally be ''legionares'', so this requires them to serve as either healers or Knights, both of which require strong furycrafting, or the woman had to disguise herself as a man until such a point that her deeds on the battlefield proved her worthy of being a Citizen if she revealed her gender[[/note]], winning a Citizenship bout (requiring strong furycrafting), or marriage into the Citizenry (strong furycrafting being nearly required as well). In short, women without Knight-level furycrafting are generally out of luck in Alera, at least until Gaius promoted Isana. This becomes an important plot point as the series progresses, as Isana's promotion is taken as an official statement by the First Lord regarding parity of genders and a sign of his power, making Isana a target for those trying to undermine Gaius' authority.
* OlderThanTheyLook: Sufficiently skilled watercrafters seem to age at a slightly slower rate than other humans, to the point where Gaius Sextus (who is in his mid-to-late eighties by the time of ''Princeps' Fury'') is described as looking like someone in their late forties or fifties aside from his [[LockedIntoStrangeness snowy white hair]].
* OurGargoylesRock: Gargoyles are [[NatureSpirit manifested earth furies]] bound into statues taking the form of certain animals (sometimes InUniverse mythical creatures, like sphinxes), and are typically used as the {{Magitek}} equivalent of automated security robots by sufficiently skilled Citizens and High Lords. It's mentioned that they're only good as DumbMuscle [[MightyGlacier and are often painfully slow, but even a glancing hit by them can turn someone into a wet spot on the pavement]].
* OutgrownSuchSillySuperstitions: Modern Aleran society is highly secular and agnostic. Aside from minor elements like how the city of Ceres is named after the ancient Roman goddess of agriculture and Sextus mentioning in ''Captain's Fury'' how Kalarus is intent on "dragging as many possible lives into the underworld with him", organized religion seems to have fallen by the wayside. In fact, the modern Alerans speak with outright scorn of several ancient Roman traditions and practices, and some refuse to believe these things ever happened because they are so patently ludicrous. These include, but are not limited to, praying to "gods", trying to tell the future by scattering animal entrails, shaping metal and stone without furies, constructing mechanical devices to supplant human labor, and building a civilized society without furycrafting. Considering the fact that the Great Furies like Kalus and Garados are at least as powerful as the Olympian gods, and have a '''far''' more palpable influence on the world, it's not really that surprising that religion as we know it fell by the wayside.
* PhysicalGod: Sufficiently skilled Citizens in Aleran society can effectively become this through their furycrafting. Easily the biggest examples are the First Lord and the High Lords, each of which is a PersonOfMassDestruction able to wipe out entire armies virtually single-handed.
* ProudWarriorRace: Downplayed; Because they've been fighting for roughly two millenia just to survive in the DeathWorld that is Carna, the Alerans have developed a heavy martial tradition in their society (to their point where it is law for all Aleran men to go on tour with one of their home city's Legions for at least three years), but modern Alera has sufficiently evolved to where a lot of focus is given to other professions such as espionage, scholarly work, and even bureucracy. Notably, this was played ''disturbingly'' straight with the ancient Romans who first landed in Alera millennia ago, as told below by the Great Fury Alera to Tavi in ''First Lord's Fury'':
-->'''Tavi:''' Then how did [the Romans] do it? How did they survive [without furycrafting]?\\
'''Alera:''' With savagery. Skill. Discipline. They came from a place where they were unrivaled masters of war and death. Their enemies here had never seen anything like them. Your forebears could not return whence they had come. They were trapped here, and only victory gave them survival. So they became victors -- no matter the cost.\\
They did things you would scarcely believe. They committed the most monstrous and heroic deeds. The generations of your people in that time became a single, savage mind, death incarnate -- and when they ran short of foes, [[CivilWar they practiced their skills upon one another]].
* SchizoTech: While Alera is implied to have a technology-level similar to that of ancient Rome (as befits a FantasyCounterpartCulture of the Romans), due to their use of furies, they lack some other techniques and technologies that would have been known to the real Romans, such as tracheotomy (because buying time for transporting patients isn't quite as vital when the doctor's a watercrafter) or even ''catapults'' (because you can blast things with firecrafters or bring down stone fortifications with earthcrafters instead).
* ShapeShifting: Downplayed; Sufficiently skilled watercrafters can change their appearances (including even features like facial structure and skin tone) to resemble another human being. However, it's mentioned to be very taxing and painful to do, and can be incredibly difficult to keep up over extended periods of time. Those with only a little watercrafting skill can still do so, but it requires longer periods of time to prepare and adjust the body so as to "keep the illusion up". For example, Fidelias was able to sufficiently alter his face so as to assume his previous cover as "Valiar Marcus" to infiltrate the First Aleran Legion, but his lack of skill in watercrafting required him to practice at it for several hours each day over the course of three weeks prior to joining the First Aleran.
* ShroudedInMyth: The ancient Romans who would become the ancestors of the modern Alerans first arrived in Carna two millennia ago. Eventually, after millennia of strife and war (both against their inhuman neighbors and then against ''themselves'' when they "ran out of foes" to practice their skills on), the original Gaius Primus conquered and united the disparate groups of Alerans all under his banner and founded the modern Realm of Alera. This time period is very poorly understood by the modern Alerans, to the point that despite numerous Roman ruins scattered across the land many Aleran scholars have shown incredibly biased and provably false attitudes towards the Romans, such as claiming that they had access to furycrafting since most Alerans think furycrafting is a vital component needed for any "civilized" species to found a long-lasting civilization with. In fact, this period of constant conflict was so long ago that many of the foes the ancient Alerans fought during that time (i.e., the Children of the Sun) have been reduced to half-remembered anecdotes in history class for most modern Alerans.
* SlaveryIsASpecialKindOfEvil: The long-standing Aleran practice of slavery is frequently shown to be easily their most abhorrent and inexcusable quality. Even the Marat (who practice ''[[ImAHumanitarian cannibalism]]'') are shown to be horrified by slavery and are portrayed as morally superior in terms of lacking that disturbing custom, and all Aleran characters who are supporters of slavery are portrayed as either being loathsome (i.e., Kord and Kalarus) or go through sufficient CharacterDevelopment that they become righteous fighters against the practice (i.e., Isana, Tavi, Amara, and Bernard).
* SuperReflexes: Wind, wood, and metalcrafters all showcase this. Windcrafters can do so through using the wind to augment their physical motions and effectively slow down their reaction time to a level where they can easily respond to any threat. Meanwhile, wood and metalcrafters are able to instinctively sense any wood or metal in their vicinity, and can use this along with their ordinary crafting talents to have ImprobableAimingSkills with bows and ImplausibleFencingPowers with swords respectively.
* SuperSpeed: Windcrafters can accelerate and move at incredible speeds through using their furies to guide and protect their movements through the air. At one point, Amara is described as flying so fast that she makes ''a sonic boom.''
* SuperStrength: As long as an earthcrafter is touching the ground, they can show incredible strength and can put incredible amounts of brute force behind their attacks. During the Battle of the Elinarch, one Knights Terra of the First Aleran is described as not only being able to easily carry [[{{BFS}} an incredibly oversized greatsword]], but also [[HalfTheManHeUsedToBe casually splitting one Canim raider entirely in half]] [[SingleStrokeBattle with one stroke]]. Only the Canim and Icemen have been shown to surpass a skilled earthcrafter calling upon their strength in power.
* UnhappyMedium: Skilled watercrafters without access to metalcrafting are BlessedWithSuck, as they ''constantly'' sense the emotions of all sapient life around them without being able to effectively block it out.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tavi]]
!Tavi of Calderon, a.k.a. Rufus Scipio, a.k.a.[[UsefulNotes/{{Augustus}} Gaius Octavian]], [[AwesomeMcCoolName a.k.a. Gaius Tavarus Magnus]]

Tavi, raised by his Aunt Isana and Uncle Bernard in the Calderon Valley, is apparently the only Aleran in the world to not possess the power of Furycraft. While this is often a major disadvantage, in order to compensate he's learned to rely on something else – his brain. After the events of the first book, he begins studying at Alera Imperia to join the imperial spy network known as the Cursors, and joins the newly-formed First Aleran Legion under the name Rufus Scipio.\\
\\
Tavi is really Gaius Octavian, son of the slain Princeps Septimus. Isana, actually his mother, accidentally suppressed his Furycraft when trying to make him look younger so he wouldn't be obviously the right age to be a son of Septimus and therefore a target for assassins. Eventually he does develop some Crafting, though to a lesser extent than most Lords. In the final book, the [[PersonOfMassDestruction full potential of his powers emerges]].
----
!!Tropes that apply to Tavi:
* AmbiguouslyBi: [[PlayedForLaughs Played in jest]] during ''First Lord's Fury''; When he, Kitai and Varg are all supremely impressed by Phyrigius Cyricus' impressive competence, Kitai jokingly remarks that she's now in love with Cyricus. Tavi's response to her? "I saw him ''first''."
* AwesomenessByAnalysis: Mostly done offscreen. The one time we see this in action, it's both awesome and terrifying as Tavi decides how to kill [[PersonOfMassDestruction High Lady Antillus]] and Crassus with a ''[[ImprovisedWeapon stick]]''.
* BadassBookworm: While not as much as [[TheSmartGuy Ehren]], he's really clever.
* BadassNormal: By Aleran standards, this actually makes him a HandicappedBadass. Although he becomes [[EmpoweredBadassNormal less normal as the series progresses.]]
* BroughtDownToBadass: Isana's well-intentioned spell may have made him the butt of jokes everywhere, but one can't deny he was able to compensate.
* BatmanGambit: He grows skilled in using his enemies' tendencies and tactics to bring them down.
** In ''Academ's Fury'' he, by means of Ehren and Aria, gets the Aquitaines to help protect Gaius and the crown from falling because it would ruin their own plans in the making.
** In ''Princeps' Fury'' he uses Captain Demos' desire for wealth and repayment for destroying Demos' slave chains to stop Demos from ever being in the slave trade again by making him swear to use only these chains to bind a slave. The chains are solid gold. A lifetime of wealth and earns Tavi Demos' loyalty and opinion.
* BattleCouple: With Kitai.
* BecomingTheMask: He starts ''Cursor's Fury'' as a civilian Cursor who joins the First Aleran undercover as a junior officer, despite having zero time in the Legions. When the book ends, he's become TheCaptain, so much so that he spends the next years serving primarily as a ''legionare'' instead of a Cursor. This is foreshadowed when Magnus outright tells him that this will happen, with regard to his military career: "When you start, it'll be an act. At the end, it won't be an act anymore."
* BewareTheNiceOnes: Tavi always tries to think the best of others and be as polite & considerate to others as possible. As such, in his rage and fury Tavi is absolutely merciless, as Fidelias almost found out.
* TheCallPutMeOnHold: Thanks to Isana stunting his growth, he doesn't get his furycrafting until about age 20. In contrast, his father obtained his powers around age 5.
* TheCaptain: He is given a field promotion to Captain in ''Cursor's Fury'' by virtue of being the senior-most officer left standing after a surprise attack. He keeps the promotion and the fourth book is called ''Captain's Fury'' for a reason.
* CharacterDevelopment: While he still retains his cleverness and snark even into the latter novels, he significantly matures, going from a crafty youngster to a WisePrince. He also gains an increased sense of empathy for others - While Tavi was never an EmptyShell or outright {{Jerkass}}, he still understandably suffered from the FantasticRacism and DeliberateValuesDissonance from growing up in Alera that one would expect. As he becomes a young adult, he becomes significantly more outspoken against slavery and moves past his countrymen's prejudices regarding their non-human "neighbors". He even feels sympathy for the Awakened Vord Queen when she finally dies, promising to make her death as quick and painless as possible.
* TheChessmaster: Metaphorically as well as literally. Even ''the First Lord'' takes a couple of lessons from him.
* CombatPragmatist: Well, when everybody can rip you to shreds with their bare hands, playing fair doesn't seem very important. He says once that he never wants to be in a "fair" fight ever again. Even after his crafting powers awaken, he's still a pragmatist in battle.
* ConsummateLiar: He was raised by Isana, one of the greatest {{Living Lie Detector}}s alive. He needed to develop this skill in order to get away with ''anything''.
* CrazyEnoughToWork: The majority of Tavi's plans are this. So much so that Kitai can correctly surmise where Tavi chose to have the FinalBattle by thinking of the one place only a lunatic would go willingly. It's pretty much his motto. One of his plans gives an ally ''heart palpitations''. For example:
** [[invoked]] His role in the defense of the Elinarch. Due to a lot of things going wrong at once, he ends up in command of a single, inexperienced legion (about 7,000 soldiers) who have to [[YouShallNotPass hold a bridge]] against an army of more than 50,000 Canim: centuries-old, enormous, and incredibly dangerous [[{{Wolfman}} wolfmen]]. First, to stop them from crossing the river anywhere else, he has all the butchers in the camp and the towns at either end of the Elinarch throw buckets of blood into the river to attract [[ThreateningShark sharks]]. Any Canim trying to swim across quickly learns the error of their ways. He also goes out to try to negotiate with the leaders. By himself. He proceeds to use his knowledge of their culture to laugh in the face of an EvilSorcerer and exploit a division in their leadership. Then he sits for an hour and [[SmartPeoplePlayChess plays ludus]] with [[TheStrategist Nasaug]] during a truce to let them remove their dead from the field[[note]]Tavi wins[[/note]], in order to buy time for his men to set up his next tactic: sawdust and fire furies planted in every building on the Canim side of the bridge, which he then has his only [[PlayingWithFire Knight Ignus]] [[StuffBlowingUp blow up]] while the Canim are trying to move through them. He'd makes sure they are all ''in'' the buildings by having everyone in the legion hold tiny firecraftings over the main square so the stones are superheated and anyone trying to step on them would get fried. And the battle ends when he has his [[BlowYouAway Knights Aeris]] [[SugarWiki/MomentOfAwesome bend the air to form a quarter-mile-wide magnifying glass, concentrating the sunlight into a]] DeathRay. The general consensus among the characters seems to be that Tavi is [[SuccessThroughInsanity completely insane]].
--->'''Ehren:''' This plan is insane... ''You'' are insane... ([[{{Beat}} looks around]]) [[ItMakesSenseInContext I need some pants]].
** And that thing mentioned above about going into the most suicidal place he could think of? His plan is to piss off the EldritchAbomination-like Great Furies Garados and Thana and use them against the Vord Queen. It only really works when she tries to claim the furies and he has the even crazier idea of cutting her connection and letting them go free to wreak random destruction. They are ''very'' pissed about the attempt to control them, and Thana--an enormous, sentient ''thunderstorm''--pretty much literally chews the Vord Queen up and spits her out.
** This is the man who made ships out of ''icebergs'' and attached runners to sailing ships to make them work over ice.
* DeadpanSnarker: Tavi can really lay the snark on when he wants to. Special mentions should be given to him telling the Canim Ambassador to his ''face'' that he has bad breath when they're on the verge of a MutualKill.
* TheDreaded:
** He becomes this to the Canim. He earns the nickname "Tavar" (after a wolverine-like creature from the Canim's homeland, that is small, very vicious, and routinely takes down things bigger than itself,) and the repeated efforts of the ritualists to sabotage relations between Tavi and Varg suggest that, despite all their bluster about their superiority, they are a lot more scared of him than he is of them. In ''First Lord's Fury'', Varg reminds Nasaug of the time he "fed Sarl to the Tavar" (in ''Cursor's Fury'') and says it completely without irony, showing he was aware it wasn't even a fair fight.
** The Awakened Vord Queen also becomes terrified of him, to the point where she wastes her remaining enslaved Citizens as part of an attempt to assassinate him and the leadership of the First Aleran simply because she's so desperate to find ''any'' way to kill him and prevent him from stopping her.
* EmpoweredBadassNormal: For most of his life, Tavi had to learn how to get by without furies in a world where everyone takes having them at their beck and call for granted, which has largely meant a life of constantly figuring out solutions to problems most of his peers don't have. The feats he's able to accomplish with that alone are impressive; once he does come into furycrafting skills of his own, applying that same sort of lateral thinking to their use has the same effect as giving Batman a Green Lantern Ring.
* ExactWords: Tavi proposes to Gaius amnesty for the freed slaves who acted in concert with the Canim using the words, "to those in this region who have broken laws in acting to protect their lives and those of their families due to the Canim invasion and Kalarus's rebellion." This just so happens to include Tavi himself, as he was acting to protect his mother and others when he broke Varg out of prison.
* AFatherToHisMen: Unlike Sextus, Tavi has personally led men into battle, risked his life to save them and cares about them personally. And for this, his men, even Fidelias, come to love him right back. Fidelias lampshades this in ''First Lord's Fury'' by thinking if Tavi asked his men to march into a leviathan's mouth, they would do so willingly - because they figure they would end up going out of the other side and loaded with treasure.
* FateWorseThanDeath: As he is her ''chala'', losing Kitai but being left alive. Tavi is frequently shown to be incredibly worried on her behalf and considers it literally unthinkable to live on without her if she'd ever get killed.
* GuileHero: To make up for his lack of furycrafting, Tavi relies on his intelligence. Suffice to say, after he finally comes into his furies, it makes him all the more dangerous.
* HeroicBastard: Tavi always assumed he was just the the son of a commoner and some legionnaire having a fling. This isn't correct. His father left Isana with legal proof of their courtship and wedding to prove Tavi wasn't born a bastard.
* TheHero: Saves the country from numerous threats.
* IdiotBall:
** In ''Captain's Fury'' he fails to think Arnos would have him watched for any wrongful action when he races to trade a prisoner back for Ehren. It causes him to be brought up on charges of treason and removed from command.
** In ''Cursor's Fury'' he realizes the Canim are able to destroy the command tent because of the standardized layout of all Legion camps. Later, he berates himself for not thinking up a new system because the Vord Queen uses the same idea, but this time attacking the healers.
** Kitai says he is holding it if he senselessly kills Fidelias for his traitorous actions. She reasons that if the man wants to die to attain some redemption, some order in his life, then Tavi should put that use helping take down a greater villain.
* IJustWantToBeSpecial: Although less and less so as the books go on. However, compared to the rest of society, it's ''IJustWantToBeNormal'' [[EveryoneIsASuper in this world]].
* InHarmsWay: In later books, Tavi shows himself willing to put himself in the thickest and most dangerous part of the fighting, where his skills are the most necessary and crucial. This is in contrast to the rest of Alera's leadership, including his grandfather Gaius Sextus, who would try to maneuver a political rival into that spot instead on the off-chance that it might end up being a convenient way to get rid of them.
* IShallTauntYou: Preferred manner of keeping his opponents off balance. He wins a duel against one of the most dangerous swordspeople in Alera with just six words.
* ItSeemedLikeAGoodIdeaAtTheTime: Desperately trying to think of a way to kill the ridiculously-lethal Vord Queen, Tavi leads her to the mountain Garados to try to wake it and Thana up. Unfortunately, the Vord Queen manages to get along to trying to ''control'' these two great furies - thankfully, Kitai manages to stop her from completing doing so rather than the other possible situation of "The Vord Queen is now has two great furies at her command and is literally unstoppable".
* ItsPersonal: Kitai gets him to openly admit his inner rage at Fidelias's actions during Second Calderon, and how this rage is blinding him to other matters.
* LikeFatherLikeSon: ''Lots'' of comparisons are made to Septimus, though Tavi is smarter than his dad thanks to a good twenty years of {{Badass Normal}}ity. Both are courageous on the battlefield, a natural leader. Both think about the plight of those who are less fortunate. Both fall for a woman who was considered taboo and scandalous, Isana being a commoner and Kitai being not even Aleran, and both women would stand up to their loves, challenging them and their choices when they felt they were wrong but never make an argument about it. They also both get seasick really easily. It's to the point that most of the characters who realize who Tavi really is pre-TheReveal do so because Tavi ends up acting ''exactly'' as Septimus would in the given situation.
* MagneticHero: Tavi has a way of attracting former enemies to his side, usually due to a combination of his intelligence, the way he cares for his subordinates and how he fights right in the thick of it with his troops.
* MasterSwordsman: Downplayed. His lack of furycrafting means he isn't as good as his peers, but he practices a lot between books and gets good enough to stand toe-to-toe with [[PsychoForHire Phrygiar Navaris]] in a duel.
* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: Tavi frequently shows excellent instincts and great skill at reading dangerous situations. While a large part of it is implied to be just due to his cleverness, comments from other characters (most notably the Great Fury Alera herself) claiming that the House of Gaius has ''always'' been exceptionally skilled in reading and reacting to predicted/future events suggests that even when he was without his furies, Tavi's instincts might have something supernatural (possibly a limited form/sense of prophecy) helping guide him and his family's actions towards the best possible path.
* MeaningfulName: ''Four'' of them:
** Gaius Octavian, meaning both the son of Septimus, and is the proper name of Emperor UsefulNotes/{{Augustus}}.
** His Canim nickname, "Tavar", is the name of a wolverine-like predator native to Canea, which even professional Canim warriors avoid because it fearlessly, cleverly, and ferociously fights to defeat its enemies and protect its territory despite its small size (relative to a Cane). In other words, it's exactly like Tavi.
** 'Scipio' is probably a reference to Scipio Africanus, the genius Roman general who defeated Hannibal. Rufus may refer to several people - the general Lucius Verginius Rufus seems plausible. "Here lies Rufus, who after defeating Vindex, did not take power, but gave it to the fatherland."
* MindlinkMates: With Kitai thanks to her bonding with him. They can sense the other one's presence and general moods. And when he gains furycrafting, she gains it too, while Tavi gains enhanced senses and endurance from her.
* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: He eventually gains the title Gaius Tavarus Magnus; "Tavarus Magnus" is roughly equivalent to "Lord Wolverine the Great."
* NiceGuy: Tavi has more than once shown immense compassion and understanding for others, actively tries to think the better of others, and wants to make the world a better place for no other reason than he feels that no one should suffer needlessly. It's to the point that he's sometimes considered to be a bit ''too'' nice to the people who should be his mortal enemies. Most notably, the Canim Hunter Sha is visibly taken aback when Tavi offers his sympathies over the deaths of his fellow Hunters in ''Princeps' Fury''.
* NiceJobBreakingItHero: He has no way of knowing that cutting himself in the Wax Forest would wake up the Vord Queen, but it did. Or that it would absorb his and Kitai's blood and inherit their traits.
* NoHistoricalFiguresWereHarmed: [[invoked]] According to WordOfGod, Tavi's characterization was heavily inspired by both Julius Caesar and Caesar Augustus.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness:
** In ''Cursor's Fury'' he has this revelation after a moment of self-examination. He is missing Kitai deeply and their strong bond makes being apart for long distances painful. However, he realizes that for the past few days, that pain has been gone and he has stopped talking about her in a forlorn manner. It takes him only a moment to realize Kitai has moved into the Legion camp he is stationed at, under the guise of a blind beggar.
** [[invoked]] In ''First Lord's Fury'', the Great Fury Alera grimly warns him of the InferredHolocaust that will come over the Alerans once her form has finished "dissolving" back into the countryside. He first desperately tries to come up with a CrazyEnoughToWork plan to solve this issue like he always does... but he realizes that even ''he'' can't possibly solve an issue of that scale and breaks down crying out of both guilt and grief.
* OlderThanTheyLook: In the first couple of books in particular; Amara assumes he's about twelve when she first sees him, to which he grouchily replies that he's fifteen. The reason he looks so young is that his mother intentionally stunted his growth when he was a child via watercrafting to make him seem younger than he was, in order to keep people from guessing that he might be the son of Gaius Septimus, who died fifteen years before the first book.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: Considering how much damage the guy can cause with [[HandicappedBadass no powers, is it any surprise that giving him access to the full crafting abilities of the First Lord caused an insane amount of badassitude to ensue?]]
* ThePlan: Several in the last three books.
* RagsToRoyalty: Starts as a poor, [[TheCallPutMeOnHold powerless shepherd]]. The series finishes with Tavi as the [[AsskickingEqualsAuthority First Lord]].
* ReallyRoyaltyReveal: Happens to him in ''Captain's Fury.''
* RefugeInAudacity:
** Tavi's way to stop the Icemen from destroying the Shieldwall in the future? '''Give it to them.''' With plans to have them ''lease it back'' to the Alerans, no less. Fidelias practically collapses from shock when he hears this.
** And, say, ''every other thing he does'', leading to hilarious moments that go something like "Oh God, he's doing something crazy... Meh. It's Tavi, go with it." Which overlaps nicely with his crazy amounts of enthusiasm, and the entry for CrazyEnoughToWork above.
*** Virtually everything he does is awesome and/or inventive, resulting in some of it fitting this trope while some doesn't. In addition to how he handles the Icemen, though, another example quite clearly fits this trope: In ''Captain's Fury'', he breaks half a dozen laws, and in ways that clearly could not be covered up or ignored. How does he handle it? He suggests to the First Lord a general amnesty for Alerans who cooperated with the Canim in conquered territory, but phrased in such a way that covers Tavi himself as well.
* SecretLegacy: Tavi grows up being told that his father (a nameless ''legionare'') and mother died at the First Battle of Calderon, killed by Marat. Turns out that his father was actually Gaius Septimus, legitimate heir to the First Lord; his mother, Isana, survived and went underground as his aunt to continue to raise him; and Septimus was assassinated during the battle by a cabal of Citizens.
* SingleTargetSexuality: Though he starts off with a childish crush on a steadholt girl, he falls ''hard'' for Kitai not long afterwards and stays that way for the rest of the series (much to [[HandsomeLech Max's]] frustration while trying to get him to loosen up).
* SmartPeoplePlayChess: Or the local equivalent, ''ludus''.
* TallDarkAndHandsome: He's a bit of a late bloomer (what with Isana slowing his growth and all), but even in ''Furies of Calderon'' Amara notes that he's a good-looking boy. By ''Captain's Fury'', he's repeatedly mentioned to be quite tall and rather attractive, with Kitai's cousin Enna [[EatingTheEyeCandy openly leering at him]] when she interrupts Kitai and Tavi in an intimate moment. As evidenced by both his uncle Bernard and his father Septimus, this seems to run in Tavi's family.
* TookALevelInBadass: In the first book, he's a steadholder's nephew with an eye for adaptation and a cool head in a crisis. In the second, he's a prize pupil at the Academy, the First Lord's personal assistant, a Cursor in training, and is good enough at combat that his trainer has him fake being bad to practice being undercover. He only gets better from there.
* TranquilFury: When he discovers that Fidelias had been masquerading as Valiar Marcus. He's very calm even as he makes it clear that he's absolutely furious at Fidelias. He only explodes later in private when arguing with Kitai and she's giving him a WhatTheHellHero speech for wasting such a valuable asset against the Vord.
* WarriorTherapist: Against Navaris. He attacks her mental problems to make her sloppy in actual combat. It's actually genuinely unsettling to see since the weakness he exploits in her is something he shares, so to see him dredging up someone else's worst memories to get the advantage of them in a fight, especially considering that he can only do so because he has the same problem, is jarring.
-->"I never knew my father either."
* WhatBeautifulEyes: Tavi's green eyes are typically mentioned as being among his most attractive features, and are easily the clearest indicator that he's the son of Princeps Septimus (since they're virtually identical). Kitai specifically mentions them when he meets back up with her in ''Academ's Fury'' prior to them becoming an OfficialCouple.
* WorthyOpponent: The Canim word "gadara" (respected and trusted enemy) is used a lot around him.
* XanatosGambit: While he is young and not always good at these, he was taught the art of them in his Cursor training. His old master often told him that, "Every problem was an opportunity, from a certain point of view." Take the IdiotBall example: he was able to move things about to avoid summary execution, be in a spot to escape from jail, go on a mission to gain a key ally, and defeat Arnos summarily. None of which would have happened if Arnos hadn't arrested him.
* YouAreInCommandNow: In ''Cursor's Fury'' he is placed in the the army under the guise of Rufus Scipio. He is given the rank of third subtribune to the Tribune Logistica (aka lowest rank Quartermaster Officer). And then he's delayed on the way to the officers' meeting and misses getting hit by an enormous lightning attack sent from the Canim that rendered all the other officers either dead or unable to work, and gets a surprise promotion to Captain.
[[/folder]]

!!Aleran Steadholders

[[folder:Isana]]
!Isana

Isana is Tavi's aunt (well, actually, mother). Born in the Calderon Valley, she is an incredibly powerful watercrafter but lacks access to other Furies. Isana distrusts Sextus because he allowed her husband, his son Septimus, to die, but becomes increasingly entangled in Aleran politics as the series goes on.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Isana:
* ActionMom: From an aunt's perspective, she is very protective of her nephew. She once flooded a river to keep him safe. Turns out, though, that she is his mother.
* ACupAngst: She was always a little peeved that her body looked more like that of a young woman barely on this side of adulthood than that of someone who has silver in her hair by the time of the second book. This, in fact, made her think that she'd never attract another man after Septimus.
* {{Ambadassador}}: She and Lady Placida serve as ambassadors to the Icemen. She even shields them from an Aleran attack.
* BadassLongcoat: Begins wearing one in ''Princep's Fury'', on the urging of Araris. It's thick leather with interwoven steel plates; not quite as good as legion armor, but better than nothing, and easier for her to fight and move in.
* BewareTheNiceOnes: She's one of the nicest people in the world. She can also fight a [[PersonOfMassDestruction High Lord]] in a DuelToTheDeath and make him admit defeat by [[WarriorTherapist psychoanalyzing him mid-fight]], absolutely ''destroys'' six monsters that could kill experienced soldiers with water and [[ManipulativeBastard manipulates]] both what amounts to a PhysicalGod and her [[TheDragon Dragon]] to put them in a vulnerable position while they ''knew'' she was jerking them around.
* CharacterDevelopment: She becomes remarkably manipulative and clever as she delves into Aleran politics at the Aquitaines' encouragement, to the point where she becomes the HopeBringer ''three times over''. Furthermore, she goes from someone who abhors violence and has always considered herself a [[NonActionGuy Non-Action Girl]] who wanted to hide Tavi away from the rest of the world for his protection to someone willing to sacrifice her own life in the name of permanently ending a bloody war and also making herself as public as possible in order to better garner support for the change that she knows should have already happened long before.
* DeadpanSnarker: As part of her taking a certain level in cynicism as the series goes on, with her gaining a rather dry opinion concerning her being repeatedly dragged into political intrigue against her will.
* DistressedDamsel: If there's a situation where she can be kidnapped and/or swoon, she'll be taken full advantage of. She even lampshades it later on:
-->'''Isana:''' At some point I would like a few weeks to go by in which I do not faint during a crisis.
* DoesNotKnowHisOwnStrength: Isana is an incredibly powerful watercrafter – one of the strongest in all of Alera. She never really grasped how powerful she was, assuming that her great strength came from familiarity with the Calderon Valley's furies. It isn't until later on that she begins to understand her true strength, and suspects that Septimus passed on many of his furies to her when he died.
* EatingTheEyeCandy: Finds herself... ''distracted'' when a shirtless Araris is fencing with Tavi aboard the ''Slive''.
* TheEmpath: A result of her powerful Watercrafting ability.
* FailureToSaveMurder: The reason she hates Gaius Sextus and didn't trust him with Tavi's safety.
* FamilyRelationshipSwitcheroo: She claims to be Tavi's aunt with a sister that died in childbirth. In actuality, she is Tavi's mother while her sister did die due to Tavi's birth.
* FemmeFatalons: One of her less-used tricks.
* HopeBringer:
** She is this to the Icemen when they sense she is truly honest about wanting peace, that peace might finally be achieved between their peoples.
** She becomes increasingly beloved by the common folk of Alera as the series goes on, with many in the Dianic League seeing her as one of the main reasons to actually hope for the end of slavery in everyone's current lifetime.
** Isana weaponizes this by giving Invidia hope of escape from the creature on her chest as a means of getting her to betray the Vord Queen.
* HealingHands: Give her enough reason, and she doesn't even need a tub of water to help her. She even becomes one of the best healers in all of Alera, with her giving back the '''eyes''' of a blinded First Aleran ''legionare'' in ''Captain's Fury''.
* AnIcePerson: Once she figures out that yes, snow counts as water.
-->'''Doroga:''' If I ever invade Calderon again, it will be in the summer.
* LivingLieDetector: [[invoked]] She sees through ''[[MagnificentBastard Gaius Sextus]]'' at one point. To put it into perspective, High Lady Placidus Aria ''misses'' the same opening in Gaius' facade.
* MamaBear: Everything she does, she does because she wants to protect Tavi.
* MakingASplash: Quite possibly the most powerful watercrafter in all of Alera, High Lords included.
* MasterOfOneMagic: As a single-element Crafter, Isana wouldn't normally be considered very impressive as Alerans rank their powers – but as mentioned above, she can do a ''lot'' with what she's got.
* NiceGirl: Isana is quite possibly the kindest and most considerate person in all of Alera, being both selfless and altruistic while always looking out those for less fortunate than her. Notably, her reaction to seeing the collared Alerans the Awakened Vord Queen has roped into serving as her PraetorianGuard is not one of fear, but pity.
* OlderThanTheyLook: She's probably in her mid-forties, but could pass for eighteen if it wasn't for some grey in her hair.
* RagsToRoyalty: She is the Cinderella-type, with the bonus of meeting Septimus when hired by him to be their personal help.
* TookALevelInBadass: She gets a ''lot'' more powerful after a little swim in the Leviathans' Run. It's not entirely clear, though, exactly why that is: maybe she got them from the swim in the ocean in a stressful situation, but then again maybe she had that power all along or Septimus left her some furies of his own when he died and she didn't realize it. In either case, any extraordinary use of her power in her homeland is more normal where she is familiar with the place, and because she's a nobody from the hinterlands, she just assumed she couldn't possibly be that powerful otherwise.
* UnhappyMedium: She's as good or better at watercrafting as some of the High Lords, but doesn't share their ability to block out [[TheEmpath emotions]] with metalcrafting. This leaves her curled up into a little ball from emotional overload a couple of times.
* WarriorTherapist:
** When she fights Antillus Raucus in ''Princeps' Fury'', explaining to him as she's about to die that the real reason he doesn't want to listen to her is jealousy at Septimus for defying his parents and marrying the commoner he loved and regret that he didn't do the same with Max's mother. He later acknowledges he was mistrusting of her because she could have been in league with those who killed his friend Septimus but her willingness to sacrifice herself as such proved him wrong.
** Her above actions were also present before the Icemen, who are powerful empaths. As they felt her words and emotions, they knew that she truly was there to make peace for them and the Alerans, even at the cost of her own life. Her willingness to die pushed them to agree to a ceasefire with the Alerans so they could fight the Vord and not fear a surprise attack.
* WaterIsWomanly: A single-element Crafter of Water and one of the strongest watercrafters in all of Alera. She's also selfless, kind empath and motherly figure for Tavi.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Bernard]]
!Bernard, Count Calderon

Bernard is Tavi's uncle and Isana's brother, possessing the power of both earth and woodcrafting. He begins the series as a steadholder (wealthy farmer/town mayor), but ultimately takes on a noble title as Count of Calderon and passes his steadholt to Isana. He is in love with Amara, and the two are married (at first in secret, but later openly).
----
!!Tropes that apply to Bernard:
* AlmightyJanitor: Formerly. He was only a rank-and-file soldier during his time in the Legions, despite his crafting skill being evident enough that Gaius pegs him as a former Knight Flora without a second thought (Bernard always thought the Knights were [[ArrogantKungFuGuy too uppity for his tastes]]). By the end of the first book, he's now the Count of Calderon and Alera's chief ambassador to the Marat, a station and title far more worthy of his abilities.
* ArcherArchetype: One of the best archers in the kingdom capable of taking down [[PersonOfMassDestruction High Lords]] with his arrows.
* BattleCouple: With Amara.
* BowAndSwordInAccord: Being both a powerful [[SuperStrength earthcrafter]] and [[ImprobableAimingSkills woodcrafter]], he's just as capable shooting targets at long range as he is at smashing them to a pulp with the biggest blunt object available.
* CanisMajor: Brutus, his earth fury, takes the form of a massive wolf made of stone when manifested.
* CarryABigStick: Favors a bow, but when melee is necessitated he prefers a large club like most earthcrafters, to better take advantage of his SuperStrength.
* DishingOutDirt: He's a powerful earthcrafter.
* GentleGiant: Bernard towers over pretty much everyone around him, family and loved ones included, and his fury-derived SuperStrength makes him a terror on the battlefield, but he's still a bonafide NiceGuy who shows respect to all, and a genuine hero for the Realm.
* GreenThumb: He is also a powerful woodcrafter.
* HappilyMarried:
** It is implied he was very much this to his late wife. He tenderly cared for her things long after she was gone, including her shoes he gives to Amara when they met.
** To Amara as well. Unfortunately, her own insecurities often leave her feeling more worried about their relationship than there is.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: He's pretty blunt and demanding to Tavi in the first book, but largely out of ToughLove so the latter can learn to handle himself. He becomes a lot nicer in later books, the implication being that pursuing a relationship with Amara brought some joy back into his life.
* LockedOutOfTheLoop: He has no idea of Tavi's true parentage for much of the series. He likely learns the truth sometime between the end of ''Cursor's Fury'', after Fade displayed his impressive skills and saved their lives, and Tavi's open declaration.
* LoopholeAbuse: He plans on using a small loophole to both keep Amara as his wife and fulfill his duties to have children. He will adopt a few of the bastard children other Aleran nobles created and cast aside because one parent wasn't of proper rank or station.
* TheLostLenore: His first wife's death left him not taking up with anyone for years until Amara came into his life.
* LoveAtFirstSight: He admits to have fallen for Amara when he tended her shoes after rescuing her and Tavi from the wilderness.
* MayDecemberRomance: He's old enough to have already married and have two children when he meets Amara.
* MightyGlacier: Especially compared to Amara. His Earth fury Brutus gives him SuperStrength, but he doesn't have the SuperSpeed that wind furies grant.
* MrFanservice: Many of Amara's chapters make note of his attractive HeroicBuild and handsome features.
* NotNowKiddo:
** Bernard to Frederic the Younger, regarding the Vord parasite he's captured in a cup.
** On the other hand, the other Citizens [[CassandraTruth pretty much ignore him]] when he tries to warn them about the Vord. After trying in vain for a while, he decides "screw it" and starts covertly building up Calderon's defenses instead.
* PapaWolf: He is fiercely protective of Tavi, especially before his crafting came in.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure:
** When he learns Doroga is a reasonable and honorable man, he is more than willing to listen to the needs of the Marat, honoring their agreements and later helping him fight the first incursion of the Vord.
** Later, he tries to convince others of the seriousness of the Vord threat. When that fails, he prepares his domain for the inevitable incursion and develops some serious weapons and defenses (thanks to some of Tavi's ideas).
* RetiredBadass: Ex-military, in fact.
* SilverFox: Downplayed. He's about a dozen years older than Amara, but is apparently aging [[MrFanservice quite nicely.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Kord]]
!Kord

A Steadholder like Bernard, who runs his Steadholt along with his two sons Aric and Bittan. Unlike Bernard, he is a brutal thug and his Steadholt is a WretchedHive that runs on slavery.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Kord
* AbusiveParents: Kord is a horrible father who mistreats Aric for being a [[WhiteSheep decent person]].
* AssholeVictim: No one feels bad for him when he's murdered by the Marat, not even his surviving son Aric.
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: He gets both scalped and his heart ripped out of his chest by a group of angry Marat of the Horse Tribe off-page after Odiana arranges it to look like he was responsible for desecrating the bodies of some of their fallen warriors.
* DishingOutDirt: An earthcrafter, though not of Bernard's level.
* HateSink: [[invoked]] Basically the main purpose of his existence in the first book is to give readers a villain they could hate wholeheartedly (Atsurak doesn't even interact with the main cast in his brief appearances, while Team Fidelias operates on EvilIsCool basis and has some redeeming traits).
* HeManWomanHater: Particularly brutal to female slaves.
* LaserGuidedKarma: Not only is he betrayed by the son he frequently abused and insulted, but the woman he brutally raped sets him up for a particularly painful and hideous death.
* ParentalFavoritism: Spoils Bittan, his thuggish son.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: A massive misogynist.
* ScaryScorpions: His Earth Fury manifests as one.
* SlaveCollar: Fond of discipline collars that make people take pleasure in obeying the orders of the person who put on the collar.
* SmugSnake: There's numerous times throughout ''Furies of Calderon'' that show him to be far less clever than he thinks himself to be.
* TheSociopath: Kord never shows anything like genuine empathy or love for another person, and even his ParentalFavoritism towards Bittan is ultimately less familial affection and more making sure that he has an effective servant/bruiser on his side.
[[/folder]]

!!Cursors

[[folder:Amara]]
!Amara, Countess Calderon

Amara is a windcrafter and a Cursor, one of the First Lord's elite messengers, spies, and general agents. She comes to the Calderon Valley while trying to return to the capital and warn Sextus of Aquitaine's plotting, thereby setting off much of the books' action. She is married to Bernard, but sometimes angsts about her fears of infertility (Alerans place great value on having children who will inherit their powers, to the point that a man of Bernard's rank is ''legally obligated'' to have children).
----
!!Tropes that apply to Amara:
* ActionGirl: Serves as both a spy and personal agent for Gaius Sextus.
* BabiesEverAfter: Thanks to Isana saving her with the Blessing of Night, a cure-all mushroom, the Blight-induced damage to her reproductive system years ago is healed, and during Tavi and Kitai's wedding, she is heavily pregnant. This doesn't include her adopted children, Masha and two boys.
* BattleCouple: With Bernard.
* BlowYouAway: One of the most skilled windcrafters in all of Alera.
* BrokenPedestal:
** Fidelias' betrayal really cut her deeply, as the man wasn't just her teacher but one for pretty much every Cursor.
** Her opinion of Gaius Sextus drops dramatically after his ShootTheDog moment.
* CharacterDevelopment: While she starts out with UndyingLoyalty towards both Alera and Sextus, she ends the series with only the former intact as she gains an uncomfortably intimate understanding of the DecadentCourt that is Aleran politics. Furthermore, she also gradually becomes less insecure and learns to take more pride in her accomplishments, finding great relish in becoming a beloved Countess of the Calderon Valley after quitting her former job as a Cursor.
* CoolHorse: Her air fury, Cirrus, appears as a translucent horse made of air when it's manifested physically.
* DangerousForbiddenTechnique: During the final assault to get Gaius to Mt. Kalare, she draws her fury so deeply into her, it allows her to move at Flash-like speeds. However, she lacks the secondary powers to do this without serious harm to her body as a result.
* DarkSkinnedBlonde: She's described as having dark skin and honey-brown hair.
* DeadpanSnarker: Shows herself to be quite sarcastic across the novels, such as her only responding with a FascinatingEyebrow when Tavi comes up with a terrible excuse for why he went to go get flowers for Beritte instead of getting the sheep like he was supposed to.
* {{Deuteragonist}}: She has the second-largest number of POV sections in the novels (right after Tavi's).
* EatingTheEyeCandy: PlayedForLaughs, with many of the chapters from her point of view having her getting lost in fantasies about or distracted by her husband's attractive physique.
* FatalFlaw: For all of her heroism and selflessness, Amara is an incredibly insecure person, often thinking [[HeroicSelfDeprecation incredibly lowly of herself]] and viewing herself as far less important than she is.
* {{Flight}}: She is one of the most talented flyers in the series. Invidia, a very powerful High Lord, defers to her in aerial tactics. The First Lord himself comments on how she is the first person he's flown with since Septimus' death who is able to keep up with him.
* FragileSpeedster: Might very well be the fastest flier in the Realm, but without Earth or Metalcrafting, she's not the most durable.
* GoodCannotComprehendEvil: Downplayed in ''Cursor's Fury''. After hearing Rook allude to the horrific techniques utilized in the training of Kalarus' female Bloodcrows, Amara can intellectually understand it but still finds herself unable to fully comprehend the sheer dehumanization and callousness practiced by Kalarus.
* GuileHero: Shown to be adept at political maneuvering and coming up with plans on the spot. Her preemptive double-cross of [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder Invidia]] in ''Captain's Fury'', planned and carried out during a high-speed aerial chase with Kalare's minions, is probably the highlight.
* HappilyMarried: To Bernard. Eventually.
* HeroicRROD: After the DangerousForbiddenTechnique mentioned above, she fell into this, unable to move, barely conscious, and probably dying until Gaius heals her.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Amara might be quite sarcastic at times and downright ruthless in combat, but she has repeatedly shown herself to be an incredibly selfless and kind person, willingly putting her own life on the line multiple times for what she thinks is right along with actively trying to make the world she lives in a better place.
* LawOfInverseFertility: As mentioned, she's afraid she's infertile, and Citizens are ''required'' to have kids. She avoids marrying him for a while on IWantMyBelovedToBeHappy logic and even after that remains insecure. Bernard eventually gets exasperated and points out that they could just adopt. This gets fixed after she's dosed with the Blessing of Night to recover from fatal poisoning.
* MasterSwordsman: A gender-inverted case. While still not on the skill of a [[ImplausibleFencingPowers Knights Ferrous]], Amara is an incredibly talented swordswoman, often using her windcrafting to accentuate her attacks.
* MinoredInAsskicking: Cursors are spies and messengers first and foremost, and generally intended to fight only when necessary. Amara still finds herself in many of the battles in the books, and holds her own in just about all of them.
* {{Troll}}: A more subtle case than most. For instance, as Tavi notes with quiet amusement in ''Captain's Fury'', she mocks High Lord Aquitaine's "lazy and confident" pose in the military planning session at the Elinarch by mimicking it near perfectly while on the other side of the room.
* WeakButSkilled: Amara is no slouch when it comes to windcrafting, but she lacks the raw power that the High Lords and other strong Citizens might have. That doesn't stop her from being one of the best fliers in the world, compensating her lower power by sheer talent and dedication.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Ehren]]
!Ehren ex Cursori

Another of Tavi's classmates, and a Cursor. Like Tavi, tends to rely more on his wits than his furies.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Ehren:
* AscendedExtra: In a sense, with him getting first a brief portion of the introduction to ''Cursor's Fury'' narrated from his perspective (along with a single chapter later on in the same book) before he's promoted to a regular viewpoint character in the last two books so that the readers can see more of how the Vord War is progressing in Alera.
* BadassBookworm: [[invoked]] One of the smartest characters in the series, which is saying something.
* BadassNormal: By [[EveryoneIsASuper Aleran]] standards, anyway. He has some talent for wood and windcrafting, but rarely relies on them over his talents with [[KnifeNut blades]] and [[GuileHero spycraft]].
* BeneathNotice: See that small guy with lots of papers in his hands? See him just walk around the rooms and hand out papers? Look at how weak his furies are, He cannot do anything with them one must think. What you don't see is a man carrying a large number of knives and a mind that manipulated a powerful High Lord to commit suicide.
* CasualDangerDialogue: Has some ''very'' funny moments like this. In one instance during ''Captain's Fury'', hearing a commotion on deck while aboard ''The Slive'', he opens his door to ask what's going on. When an arrow drives through the door close enough to touch his hand, he just goes, "Oh," and shuts the door. Later in the same book, after he wakes up naked, in a healing tub, staring at what he thought was an enemy about to kill him, his response is, "Oh. Well, I see some things have happened while I was lying down."
* TheChessmaster: Very good at thinking of contingency plans. And, it turns out, at manipulating people – in ''First Lord's Fury,'' he plays Aquitainus Attis like a ''harp'', resulting in the latter's death before he can become a threat to Tavi.
* DisneyDeath: Briefly in order to deflect suspicion that he was behind the assassination of Aquitane.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: His first few moments in ''Academ's Fury'' show a young man who calls Tavi out on his foolishness but will still stick with Tavi despite knowing they are walking into trouble.
* GuileHero: He's a capable fighter after [[TookALevelInBadass taking a couple levels in badass]], but is still horribly outclassed by the vast majority of the villains in the series, Aleran and otherwise. He gets by with cunning, manipulation, and being one of the most capable {{Rules Lawyer}}s in the land.
* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: In the last book. It is part of a plan to fake his death for a time until Attis dies, after Ehren manipulates him to commit tactical suicide. He later admits that the faked death was a little more authentic than he intended, as he hadn't planned on ''actually'' being skewered.
* KnifeNut: Daggers are his favored weapon, and he carries so many it's a small wonder metalcrafting senses don't go haywire whenever he's within a mile radius. At one point someone identifies him as a Cursor based solely on "the number of knives he had hidden on him."
* ManipulativeBastard: See TheChessmaster.
* NerdGlasses: One of a very small handful of characters mentioned to wear glasses, which serves to emphasize his studious personality.
* OlderAndWiser: [[invoked]] At Eastercon 2015, [[WordOfGod Jim Butcher]] stated that Ehren will have become this as he takes up the role of teacher for a future class of Cursors with Canim and Marat now joining.
* TheBladeAlwaysLandsPointyEndIn: He's very accurate with a throwing knife, at one point scoring a headshot on a vordknight as it's trying to impale him through the side of a high-speed wind coach, on ''reflex''.
* TheSmartGuy: Not quite in Tavi's league – though, to be fair, the only people who come close are Varg, Sextus, Aquitaine (at least before Ehren himself "kills" him), and Fidelias – but he is very clever.
* TheQuietOne: Doesn't usually talk much, which is rather handy in a spy.
* TookALevelInBadass: He's gained a ''lot'' of levels by the time of ''Cursor's Fury'' and his promotion to a full Cursor alongside Tavi. While in the previous book he's mostly a noncombatant and a bit of a CowardlyLion, he's now a trained warrior and spy with a level of ruthlessness that even Tavi finds unnerving - slicing [[SmugSnake Ullus']] throat after he's [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness outlived his usefulness]] without a moment of hesitation is only the first example.
* WeakButSkilled: In terms of furycrafting power, he is pathetic and weak. However, he is a skilled fighter, his furies allow him some skills but won't regularly set off the wards meant to detect furycrafting, and he can obfuscate with the best of them.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Magnus]]
!Astorius Magnus

A senior Cursor, under whom Tavi trains. He believes their ancestors lacked furycrafting but several of the teachers at the Academy laugh at him for this.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Magnus:
* BeneathNotice: A specialty of the Cursors. He keeps his place in the wilderness well stocked in wines and sweet breads to give to passing traders because one may not know what they could let slip when drunk. Tavi studies under him for six months and never picked up the fact he is a cursor too.
* BecomingTheMask: Originally, his archaeological work was a cover, but he admits that it's really grown on him.
* CassandraTruth: At first, Tavi just doesn't want to believe that his trusted First Spear Valiar Marcus was really Fidelias.
* CoolOldGuy: He's fairly eccentric, but gives good advise to Tavi on how to survive in the Legion.
* CrouchingScholarHiddenBadass: He first appears as a professor who's semi-voluntarily exiled himself to an archeological dig. And then it turns out he's also a senior cursor, and served in the Legions, and Fidelias notes that if he wants someone dead, they'll die.
* DeadpanSnarker: [[invoked]] He likes to point out when Tavi is acting a little ridiculous. One of these lines in ''Princeps' Fury'': "More mash, please, Your Highness."
* EarlyBirdCameo: Tavi cites his work at the Academy in ''Academ's Fury'', the book before he was actually introduced.
* IfIWantedYouDead: There is a training skill all Cursors must learn. It is to sneak up upon an unsuspecting victim completely unnoticed and within distance to plunge one's blade into the back of the neck, severing major arteries and the trachea. He does this to Fidelias when he begins to suspect something is not quite right with "Marcus". Fidelias realizes if Magnus wants him dead, he wouldn't have announced himself first.
* TheMentor: One of Tavi's mentors; he helps Tavi acclimate to Legion life, and later openly advises him.
* OlderSidekick: Who's also a valet.
* ServileSnarker: He rebuffs Tavi when, in ''Princeps' Fury'' Tavi ordered him and the cursors to not gather information on the Cane during the boat trip, with the line, "And Your Highness expected me to ''listen''?"
* SpotTheThread: His exposure of Fidelius starts when he notices a few inconsistencies in Valiar Marcus's backstory, such as having seemingly vanished off the face of the earth after serving his term.
* TheyCalledMeMad: Magnus invokes this when celebrating the success of his and Tavi's furycraft-free catapult at the beginning of ''Cursor's Fury''. (Magnus isn't exactly a [[MadScientist Mad Historian]], but to be fair, the fools at the Academy ''did'' call him mad.)
[[/folder]]

!!Lords and
Groups]]
[[Characters/CodexAleraOtherRaces
Other Nobles

[[folder:Gaius Sextus]]
!Gaius Sextus, First Lord of Alera

Gaius Sextus is the ruler of Alera, the most powerful Crafter alive, and essentially [[Literature/HarryPotter Albus Dumbledore]] without the [[ObfuscatingStupidity facade of eccentric senility]]. While often [[MagnificentBastard ruthless and manipulative]], he is both intelligent and wise and everything he does is for the greater good of Alera. All respect Gaius's abilities, but some (like Isana) think he's lost touch with the common people and is therefore dangerous. Others (like Aquitaine or Kalarus) want to take his throne for themselves.
----
!!Tropes applying to Sextus:
* AccompliceByInaction: Characters who were close to Septimus such as Isana, Attis, and Raucus consider Gaius to be this. His failure to do anything to protect Septimus is the root of their dislike and distrust of him.
* AntiHero: Pragmatic type. He destroys High Lord Kalarus, the city of Kalare, the valley the city's in, and thousands of Kalarus's innocent subjects... because it ends the war faster as well as saving more lives in the long run. He's also a ruthlessly practical man who literally tells Amara to her face that, while he personally wouldn't like it since he enjoys her company and finds her to be an excellent servant to the Crown, he would sacrifice her life in a heartbeat if it was necessary for the stability of the Realm.
* BadassBoast: Gives quite possibly ''the'' most epic one in the entire series when he's pulling a BrandishmentBluff on Kalarus Brencis Minoris in ''Captain's Fury'':
-->'''Gaius Sextus:''' Boy, you have a choice. You may choose to stand with your father against me. Or you may choose to live.\\
'''Kalarus Brencis Minoris:''' ...[[BlatantLies I'm not afraid of you]].\\
'''Gaius Sextus:''' Of course you are, and should be.
* BatmanGambit: He specializes in them. One of his more benign ones was making Tavi and Max roommates to help them become friends. Another is putting Amara's life on the line to test Fidelias's loyalty in the first book.
* BeautifulDreamer: A non-romantic version. According to Alera, he would visit Tavi's dorm when he was in the Academy and watch him sleep. It gave him comfort and pleasure.
* BestServedCold: Gaius waits about twenty-five years before killing the first of two men responsible for Septimus's death (see Moral Event Horizon). Then he convinces the second man to fly out against an insurmountable number of Vord with little backup.
* BigGood: Zigzagged. On the one hand, he's definitely much more benevolent and reasonable than half the other High Lords of the Realm. On the other hand, his cynical and manipulative nature is at least partially responsible ''for'' the sorry state of the Realm at the beginning of the story, and by the end of the story and his untimely demise almost none of the "good-aligned" characters are loyal to him any longer.
* BrandishmentBluff: While he is an incredibly powerful and dangerous crafter, he knows he is by no means a young man. Against a young crafter of suitable strength, such as Brencis Minoris, he would much rather not have to fight the person. This is especially true in his mission to blow up a volcano. Time is of the essence and delaying to fight a relatively well rested Brencis Minoris while Gaius is recovering still from his prolonged injuries in the swamp would likely lead to a failed mission.
* CreativeSterility: One of his main character flaws is that of his simple lack of creativity. Sextus, while intelligent and excellent at manipulating others from behind the scenes, is not one to directly challenge the cultural institutions of Alera even ''if'' he supports certain reforms. Really, Fidelias puts it best in the last book, describing Sextus as a man who "never looked past the wisdom of his forefathers."
* TheChessmaster: Very adept at maneuvering other Lords politically. In the fifteen years after his son and soon after his first wife died, likely after some period of mourning, he started over a decade's worth of selecting a new wife from the daughters or nieces of the High Lords or their families. His eventual choice was just a political stratagem to prevent neighboring High Lords from becoming allies as Gaius would literally have the one High Lord's daughter at his side.
* ChromeChampion: The first one to do it, and the only one who isn't exclusively a metalcrafter. It's part of his HeroicSacrifice.
* {{Determinator}}: Best seen in ''Captain's Fury'' when he takes a third option to the powerful wards Kalarus set up to detect him and walks without aide of his furies to Kalare's main city. How far? Just over 300 miles and Gaius is well into his eighties. He won't let anything stop him, whether blisters on his feet or a broken leg.
* DidntSeeThatComing: His above plan to get into Kalare got off to a bad foot because Gaius discounted an unknown known: blisters. He assumed his months of increased walking without being augmented by his furies would suffice in giving him the strength and endurance to handle the trip. If not for Bernard and Amara's quick actions, the plan would have failed before they got very far at all.
* DoNotGoGentle: Dying of old age, weak lungs, having walked several hundred miles in unpleasant environments, and having been secretly poisoned, Gaius Sextus does not run from the Vord but takes them on alone. He unleashes the long dormant volcano under his city and takes a huge number of Vord with him.
* DontMakeMeDestroyYou: He poses this point against Brencis Minoris in order to make the young man run away rather than face Gaius in a fight. He later reveals it was in part a BrandishmentBluff.
* ExactWords: When telling Amara and Bernard about Kalarus's plan with the volcano, he says that he will not let Kalare's citizens die at the hands of "that madman" (High Lord Kalarus). Notice he never said anything about ''preventing'' the volcano from erupting...
* ExcellentJudgeOfCharacter: Sextus shows himself multiple times to be dangerously good at reading others or discerning who they really are as people. For instance, it's heavily implied that he recognizes Fade (a.k.a. Araris Valerian) for who he is at a glance despite the disfiguring brand on his face, and from that he's able to immediately deduces who Tavi really is. Additionally, when he notes Amara and Bernard's relationship in ''Captain's Fury'', an annoyed Amara haughtily notes to him that she could've fallen out with Bernard years ago and have had "half a dozen lovers" since then for all he knew. Sextus then bursts into laughter, noting that she can ''claim'' that, but he knows her well enough that she would never actually do such a thing.
* FailureToSaveMurder: Several characters resent or hate Sextus because of his apparent failure to protect Septimus.
* FatalFlaw: His relative lack of charisma and fundamental inflexibility. While he's a brilliant schemer and manipulator, and a very good judge of human nature (unlike his son), he doesn't have the charm and creativity to balance it out that Octavian does.
* ForgotFlandersCouldDoThat: Deliberately invokes this in ''Captain's Fury''. He says that the High Lords of the realm, Kalarus in particular, see him only as a scheming old man, and that image is part of what makes Kalarus think he can just take over the realm. So during that book, he sets out to forcibly remind Kalarus and the rest of the High Lords that in a realm where AuthorityEqualsAsskicking, there is a [[PersonOfMassDestruction very good reason]] why the House of Gaius is in charge.
* HeroicSacrifice: In ''Princeps' Fury'', he sinks Alera Imperia and the surrounding countryside into a massive volcano, destroying the vast majority of the Vord army and slowing them down enough to let the Alerans regroup over the next several months.
* ItsPersonal: The murder of his son is just about the only thing that draws this reaction from him, though it's very well disguised - even Fidelias doesn't twig to it. However, slowly but surely, Gaius eliminates every single one of the known conspirators behind Septimus' death, often in spectacular and karmic fashion. The only exception is Invidia, who gets her just desserts shortly after his death.
* LaserGuidedKarma:
** Gives it to High Lord Rhodes when he convinces the man to lead a direct assault on the Vord as they attack Ceres. The High Lord is destroyed and consumed by the Vord, not unlike how Rhodes' efforts allowed for Septimus to suffer a similar fate against the Marat.
** He receives this, in his own view, from Caria. He knew she was a naïve child who didn't understand the political nature of the game he plays when they wed. He stays married to her for about ten years, and considers her poisoning him and taking that much from his life a fair trade, not even having her punished for her actions.
* ManipulativeBastard: Isana describes him as a "manipulative old serpent" in ''Captain's Fury'', and while she's got a grudge against him, she's not exactly wrong.
** Takes advantage of Amara's loyalty to help him destroy Kalarus. [[ShootTheDog She quits on the spot once she learns what he did. For his part, he's saddened but accepts it as the price of beating Kalarus.]]
** Later, Amara loathes him even more when in the face of the Vord threat he told Rook he would personally place her daughter anywhere she chose to be safe from the Vord, if she helped spy on them to learn how they are using furycrafting. If not, her current life may not be enough to save them both.
* MentorOccupationalHazard: He dies performing a HeroicSacrifice at the end of ''Princeps' Fury.''
* MoralEventHorizon: [[invoked]] In-universe example: Amara is unwilling to trust him ever again after he manipulates her into helping him get into position to turn one of the Great Furies against Kalarus, destroying the entire province with a volcanic eruption. Admittedly, it was that or let Kalarus [[TakingYouWithMe use it to destroy most of Alera's Legions when they finally killed him]], but as Amara bitterly points out, he still killed several hundred thousand innocent people no matter his excuse.
* NothingPersonal: He knows that dubious alliances and manipulation are a way of life in politics and spying (as if the two are all that different), so he doesn't tend to take it personally when someone seems to side against him, so long as they're doing it for good reasons. However, threatening his family is something he takes ''very'' personally, as Lords Kalarus and Rhodes eventually found out (one was blown up by his own giant superweapon, the other was tricked into a UriahGambit).
* OlderThanTheyLook: Like all powerful watercrafters – in this case, he looks like he's in his forties, when he's about 80 at the start of the series and likely could be in his 90s by ''First Lord's Fury''.
* OldSoldier: By the start of the books, he is said to nearly be eighty (in ''Academ's Fury'', he states that he's 'nearly four-score years'). He still commands enough power that no one dares openly challenge him for the throne. When one High Lord does declare open civil war, Gaius makes a three-month journey on foot without the aid of his furies, suffering a broken leg and blistered feet, to get beyond the man's defenses and destroy the man with his own superweapon.
* PapaWolf: It takes him a couple of decades, but he calmly and methodically disposes of almost all the people responsible for his son's death, or tricks them into disposing of themselves, with the sole exception of Invidia, who dies shortly after he does.
** He also spends most of the series protecting Tavi (his grandson) to the best of his ability.
* ParentalSubstitute: He's a fatherly mentor figure to Amara, and a grandfatherly figure to Tavi - of course, Tavi ''is'' his grandson, not that anyone but Araris/Fade and Isana knows it until he meets Tavi.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: When he isn't about to collapse due to his age and overwork catching up to him. Witness ''Captain's Fury'', when he kills off two whole legions of Kalarus's SuperSoldiers, or ''Princeps' Fury'', where he takes down ''millions'' of the Vord military forces with him in a HeroicSacrifice, sinking Alera's '''capital city''' into lava and turning the whole region into a wasteland that the Vord can't possibly use.
* PetTheDog: He's quietly fond of Tavi, and tends to be at his most gentle and grandfatherly around him - which, considering that he's actually Tavi's grandfather, is not entirely surprising.
* TheSmartGuy: He's not half as much of an out of the box thinker as his grandson - in fact, his CreativeSterility is cited as a FatalFlaw. However, he is a brilliant politician and schemer, a superb judge of people, a capable commander, and a surprisingly good teacher (Amara was, by her own account, pretty hopeless at wind-crafted veils. Gaius, while feverish, lying on a stretcher behind enemy lines and suffering from a broken leg and footsores, unable to use his own Furies, teaches her how to create an excellent veil in a couple of hours). He also successfully sneaks into Fidelias' quarters in the heavily protected Aquitaines' house, leaving behind a kind of cloak used in Kalarus' lands - as Fidelias points out, this simultaneously reveals that he knows where Fidelias is, where he's going, that he's giving his blessing, and that he can get in and out of a building inhabited by two of the most powerful, skilled, and intelligent furycrafters in the series without being detected.
** He's heavily implied to be the very first person to recognise Tavi for who he is outside of Araris and Isana, doing so at first sight. Since it took Captain Miles, one of Septimus' former ''[[BodyguardingABadass singulares]]'', at least two ''years'' of seeing Tavi almost every day, and Fidelias seeing him in full command mode to finally click to it, this is impressive as hell.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure:
** He's not bothered by Isana allying with the Aquitaines in ''Academ's Fury'', despite both him and her knowing that they're looking to depose him, pointing out to Tavi that she came for his help, which it was his responsibility to give, and though there were extenuating circumstances, the fact was that she didn't get it, so she had to turn elsewhere.
** [[invoked]] Has no problem with either Bernard and Amara's relationship (which is illegal under Aleran law) or Tavi and Kitai (which is an InterspeciesRomance within an empire fraught with FantasticRacism), and in the latter case [[SugarWiki/FunnyMoments just advises him to try not to get her pregnant.]]
** He will make use of Doroga and Bernard's friendship and seek peace with ancient enemies for greater goods.
** Is willing to listen and even says if he had the power, he would give Tavi permission to test his ideas with the Cane invasion force, but he must respect the decisions of the Senate, which have put Arnos in charge of Tavi.
* ShipperOnDeck: It's subtle, but throughout the series he seems to do everything in his power to put Bernard and Amara and Tavi and Kitai together – first, having Amara serve as his personal envoy to Bernard as the new Count of Calderon (thereby ensuring that she'll see him regularly), and then when Tavi [[BavarianFireDrill bullshits his way]] into having Kitai made an ambassador, makes it his only duty to be her teacher and guide for the following several weeks. The irony here is that Amara thinks she has to hide her marriage to Bernard because of her duty to Gaius and Tavi wants to hide ''his'' relationship so Gaius can't exploit it, but he seems to know about and approve of both cases, though in the latter he advises Tavi to at least avoid getting her pregnant.
* ShootTheDog:
** Better than the [[TakingYouWithMe alternative]] as the invading men would be killed by Kalarus' volcano. So he makes sure the volcano can only kill Kalarus' side. Similarly, he destroys the mosaic at Alera Imperia that the Great Fury of Alera's personality is based around since he couldn't afford it possibly falling into the hands of the Vord. Alera herself doesn't hold a grudge, implying that she much preferred it to the alternative.
** When his character is introduced, he takes a potshot at Amara: he admits he is willing to sacrifice a loyal retainer to test the fidelity of another one. He assumes the loyal one would lose the fight.
* TheSpock: He's utterly and relentlessly practical, a trait that turns many people off of him, as they get the impression that he doesn't actually care about people beyond their utility. As it happens, he does, but he sees duty to the Realm as coming above all other considerations, meaning that he's completely willing to ShootTheDog.
** The better side of this is that he tends not to take much personally (except the murder of his son, whereupon he spends the next two and a half decades methodically destroying the participants). He's sadly understanding when Amara silently resigns after he blow up Kalarus' volcano (after he manipulated her and Bernard into helping him to reach it), he's civil and willing to work with Fidelias even after his betrayal, and when Tavi is indignant at how Isana allied with the Aquitaines in ''Academ's Fury'', Gaius points out that he didn't help her. He was unconscious, but in his view, that didn't matter - he had an obligation, he failed to live up to it, so she turned to the next available help.
* TakingYouWithMe: He faces down a majority of the Vord forces from the spire on his castle. Using the ancient volcano beneath the lands with his own furies, he reduces the Vord forces down to a small tithe of what they once were.
* {{Troll}}: It's shown several times that he loves to thoroughly embarrass Tavi and Amara by lightheartedly teasing them about their romantic relationships, such as him "mildly" asking Tavi if he's "sleeping with the Marat Ambassador by any chance." When a blushing Tavi awkwardly stammers out that he and Kitai haven't done ''[[TechnicalVirgin that]]'', Sextus just snorts while trying to hide his laughter.
* UriahGambit: Tricks High Lord Rhodes into one, since Rhodes was one of those who killed his son.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Caria]]
!First Lady Gaius Caria

Second wife of Gaius Sextus, Caria is fifty years younger than her husband. This, combined with being used as a political pawn and neglected by her husband, makes her easy prey for Attis's manipulations.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Caria:
* ArrangedMarriage: To Gaius. He held off wedding another woman after his first wife's death and then picked her simply to drive a wedge between her father and Kalare, as her father would never rebel against Gaius if Gaius was holding his daughter hostage, in a fashion.
* AwfulWeddedLife: How both her and Gaius see their marriage. Instead of living out a great epic romance, she found herself married to a much older man who ignores her.
* KarmaHoudini: Gets completely off for having been poisoning her husband over the last few decades (although she might have died soon afterwards during the evacuation of Alera Imperia, just before Gaius destroyed it). Interestingly, it's actually enforced by Sextus, as he acknowledges that this was actually some karmic rebalancing directed back at him.
* LaserGuidedKarma: Delivers some towards Gaius. See MasterPoisoner and TamperingWithFoodAndDrink.
* MalMariee: "Badly married" Caria is fifty years younger than her husband Gaius Sextus. They have a sexless marriage. Her old husband doesn't treat her well and ignores her, so this trope lacks the jealousy part. In the spirit of the trope, she ends up having an affair with a charismatic and handsome man Attis who is manipulating her. It's later revealed she has been poisoning her husband for years.
* MasterPoisoner: She is poisoning Gaius for years and was only discovered just before the Vord attacked Alera Imperia. She used her medical knowledge from the Academy to do it.
* OldManMarryingAChild: While not as young as most examples of this trope, she's closer in age to Gaius's ''grandson'' than to Gaius himself. He even refers to her as a child a couple of times.
* SexlessMarriage: Gaius is old, and as disinterested in that part of their marriage as the rest of it. Tellingly, when Max disguises himself as Gaius and promises her some nookie time, she seems quite genuinely touched.
* SympatheticAdulterer: She is married off to an old man who ignores her most of the time. It's easy to see how she would end up having an affair with a charismatic and handsome man like Attis.
* SympatheticMurderer: Gaius forgives her for poisoning him because while she may have taken a few years of his life away, he's taken far more than that from her by sticking her into a loveless arranged marriage.
* TamperingWithFoodAndDrink: Has been poisoning Gaius for years by slipping small amounts of a medicine into his tonic.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Gaius Septimus]]
!Gaius Septimus

Septimus is the son of Gaius Sextus. He dies fifteen years before the series begins, in battle against the Marat in Calderon Valley. His death sets off the main conflict of the series by starting a succession crisis. What few people know is that Septimus married Isana in secret and they had a son, Tavi.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Septimus:
* ArrangedMarriage: He was supposed to marry Invidia, but he turned her down. She didn't take it well.
* ButForMeItWasTuesday: In his pursuit of protecting the common man from the abuses of nobility, he had many scuffles and insults levied against said nobility, particularly Rhodes and Kalare. He never paid these insults much mind after the matters were settled, not realizing these insults festered and turned these men to working to kill him.
* ChildMarriageVeto: Gaius wanted Septimus to marry Invidia, but Septimus rejected her proposal and married Isana in secret instead.
* DatingWhatDaddyHates: Septimus married Isana despite knowing it would enrage Gaius that he'd chosen a commoner over a powerful Citizen and crafter like Invidia.
* DefeatMeansFriendship: In ''Captain's Fury'', Araris mentions how he had a way of facing down his rivals without breaking their pride, and getting them to follow him, and brings up how Septimus and Raucus used to fight a lot when they were in the Academy. However, this only applied to direct rivals - when he was protecting commoners from rogue nobles, the latter held grudges.
* DisappearedDad: To Tavi, as Septimus died the night he was born.
* FatalFlaw: His (metaphorical) nearsightedness. It's noted that he tended to disregard the consequences of protecting the commoners from the nobility, the grudges that would cause and how they would fester, thinking that people would be as forgiving as he was.
* HundredPercentAdorationRating: Every good or neutral person thinks he'd have been an excellent First Lord (though the more politically adept concede his flaw of being a bit ''too'' nice). He was so well-loved that his death, particularly Gaius's failure to protect him, is the reason why Isana, Attis, Neddus, and Raucus all hate and[=/=]or distrust Gaius.
* KingIncognito: Had a habit of traveling around in disguise. He met Isana incognito and offered her a job elsewhere in the camp.
* LivingIsMoreThanSurviving: A major point of difference between Gaius & Septimus. Gaius was focused only on surviving, while Septimus wanted more out of life than just survival.
* TheLostLenore: A male version for Isana.
* MasterSwordsman: Sir Miles states in ''Academ's Fury'' that he was the very best, better even than Araris - though he also suspected that Araris held back so as not to embarrass him.
* MarryForLove: He marries Isana, a commoner and non-Citizen, for love despite the controversy it would cause.
* NiceGuy: All scenes of him in the series paint him as a kind, generous, and loyal noble who would've been a perfect ruler of Alera. Admittedly, it's worth noting that there's a pretty clear factor of UnreliableNarrator in play here since the people often talking about how great Septimus was are his family members, widow, and friends.
* PlotTriggeringDeath: His death sets off the main conflict of the series by causing a SuccessionCrisis in Alera.
* PosthumousCharacter: Dies fifteen years before the series begins. What we know of him comes from flashbacks and the recollections of other characters.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure:
** He is one of the first nobles in recent history to speak out against the slave trade.
** He realizes his best friend Araris is in love with his wife. Instead of being jealous, fearful, or smug, he warmly accepts this because Araris fell in love with the same qualities he himself did, wryly pointing out that he can hardly fault him for doing exactly what Septimus himself did. He even uses this love to make sure Rari would stay with a heavily pregnant Isana and protect her instead of staying at Septimus's side.
* TallDarkAndHandsome: It's said that Tavi looks a lot like his father in the later books.
* TrueCompanions: With Attis and Raucus. He mentions in his letter that he'd have gone mad after the Battle of Seven Hills without them. His ''singulares'' count as well.
* UnfriendlyFire: It is widely believed that Septimus was killed by the Marat. He was actually assassinated during the battle by a cabal of Citizens, who were put up to it by Invidia.
* WarriorPrince: He spent time serving in the Crown Legion and fought in several battles before he was ultimately killed.
* TheWisePrince: Was shaping up to be a good and thoughtful ruler who cared about the common people, and whose only real flaw was a habit of believing the best of people.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:High Lord Aquitainus Attis]]
!High Lord Aquitainus Attis

Mostly off-screen in the early books, Attis is one of the two high Lords in serious contention for the position of the next First Lord. Sleeping with the First Lord's wife may give him some advantage at this... especially as he's far more than the hedonist he appears to be.
----
!!Tropes applying to Aquitaine:
* AlasPoorVillain: It's hard not to feel at least some pity for him when he dies in ''First Lord's Fury''.
* AntiVillain: His rebellious activities are because he genuinely wants to strengthen Alera, not out of personal greed or envy of Sextus' position. When he does temporarily become First Lord in ''First Lord's Fury'', he genuinely does his best for Alera, and continues leading even when he's dying from the wound Invidia gave him.
* AwfulWeddedLife: How he and Invidia see their marriage. Though they put up a HappyMarriageCharade in public, the reality is their marriage is loveless and they can't stand each other. Once they end up on opposite sides of the Vord War, they have no reservations about taking up arms against each other.
* BatmanGambit: Is stuck in one by Tavi in ''Academ's Fury'' when Tavi has it revealed to him and his wife of the Vord-Cane threat against Gaius and knowing Kalare would use this opportunity to take the throne, they must work to protect Gaius and his seat on the throne. Neither particularly like this fact.
* BigBad: Subverted. He's built up as this in the first half of the series, but is upstaged in the second by the ''real'' BigBad, the Awakened Vord Queen.
* BigBadDuumvirate: With his wife. Technically, most of her schemes are aimed at getting him the throne, but that's only because as a woman that's the closest she'll ever get to true power in the misogynistic culture of Alera. In many ways, Invidia was the BigBad more than he ever was, since she was more actively involved in the plot and unknown to him, was behind the murder of his best friend, Septimus. Attis is, in fact, motivated largely by vengeance on the men he holds responsible for that (Kalarus, Rhodes, and [[FailureToSaveMurder Sextus]]).
* CharacterizationMarchesOn: Played with and discussed. ''Furies of Calderon'' introduces him as a [[ObfuscatingStupidity seemingly unsubtle drunkard who needs to be guided by his wife and more capable subordinates down the avenues to take the throne]] - though hint at his later characterisation with signs of razor-sharp intelligence, effortlessly dissecting an argument while apparently drunk and interested in getting laid. Later books run with this, reavealing that he is a clever and insightful manipulator, skilled in both legion strategy and politics, and disinclined to pointless violence - not that he won't kill people if they get in his way, of course, but he's not cavalier about it. A letter from Attis to Raucus shows that in his youth, Aquitaine was a much nobler and kinder man, but had developed a burning hatred for the corruption and treachery among the Aleran nobility after Septimus died. This, coupled with his ambition to replace Gaius Sextus for what he felt were his manipulations and deceptions, gradually turned Attis into a ruthless, scheming traitor. Shades of his more noble side start to come back out as the Vord close in on Alera and he rises to help lead the Realm. Isana and Aria suspect that the death of Septimus pushed him into becoming what he hates the most.
* TheChessmaster: One of the best in the series, though still not as good as Ehren or Tavi.
* ComeBackToBedHoney: He uses this on Caria when she starts to leave after they've just had sex, assuring her that Gaius won't be back for a while yet.
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: Invidia essentially disembowels him with a heated sword that sutured his wounds shut (preventing him from being healed by watercrafting), causing him to very slowly waste away over the last act of ''First Lord's Fury''.
* DeadpanSnarker: Has a dry wit about him. When he sees Invidia burned to a blackened crisp, but still alive, he only comments that he likes her new hair style. He also delivers her their ''divorce papers'' after she essentially disembowels him in the same scene.
* DeathbedConfession: He openly confirms his role in manipulating Atsurak into attacking Calderon years ago after Doroga tells him when the Vord War was over, they would have words about his role in getting a good many Marat killed.
* DramaticIrony: He hates Sextus because he failed to save Septimus, Attis's best friend. Attis is apparently unaware that he's married to the woman who masterminded Septimus's murder.
* EnemyMine:
** In ''Academ's Fury'' Tavi sends Ehren to apprise him and Invidia of the matter with the Vord, by using Aria to get into the house, to help deal with this serious matter. Neither like helping Sextus, but prefer him over the civil war the Vord (and Kalare's own attempt on the throne) want to bring about.
** With Sextus and the Vord. He's the first High Lord to stand with Gaius, and calls out Riva for being an obstructive idiot, because he knows that the priority is for Alera to survive – and at the same time, he can give a boost to his position.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: Aquitaine is first presented as a short-tempered hedonist being entertained by a dancing slave, but quickly shows himself to be [[ObfuscatingStupidity much cleverer than his first comments dictate]] by deconstructing an ''Argumentum AdHominem'' and then deferring to a low-born minion with more experience. The scene is also one for his wife Invidia; [[MoreDeadlyThanTheMale she was the dancing slave in disguise without him noticing.]]
* FaceDeathWithDignity: He accepts his fate after Invidia stabs him and spends his remaining time calmly leading and doing everything he can to hold Alera together.
* FailureToSaveMurder: The reason why he hates Gaius. He blames him for failing to protect Septimus and not taking action against the overly ambitious High Lords who were plotting against him.
* GracefulLoser: When he realizes that Ehren manipulated him into making himself vulnerable, leading to a mortal injury and thereby securing Tavi's position as the future First Lord, his only comment is a thoughtful and faintly admiring, "I think the little man assassinated me."
* HappyMarriageCharade: He and Invidia will show affection toward each other when others are present. The reality is their marriage is loveless and purely for political reasons. They eventually turn on each other without the slightest hesitation.
-->'''Aquitaine:''' We shared a goal, an occasional bed, and name. Little else.
* HeWhoFightsMonsters: He wanted to take down Lord Rhodes and Lord Kalarus, power hungry manipulators who were behind his friend's death. He ended up becoming just like them.
* TheHedonist: Has shades of this. He does like his wine and dancing girls.
* IdiotBall: He holds it once and pays for it. He assumes his gambit to lure his traitorous wife out worked and he vanquished her with a powerful firecrafting that left nothing, not even ash or dust, where part of a building and, supposedly Invidia, had worked. He spends the next few moments gloating to both Amara and Bernard, whom had been fighting her alongside him. Invidia reveals she ''did'' survive by launching herself from beneath where Attis stood and dealt a slow-killing blow to the man, and even points this out
* MeaningfulName: In Phyrgian mythology, Attis is castrated by Cybele and dies. Invidia deals Attis a death blow by piercing him in the loins with a red hot sword. Cauterizing the wound prevents it from healing.
* MyCountryRightOrWrong: In a twisted sense. He's truly loyal to the Realm as a whole... but is willing to arrange for the massacre of hundreds of thousands of its innocent civilians to make sure that its longetivity is ensured.
* OutGambitted: Shown in the last book. Gaius adopts him as Tavi's ''younger'' brother and leaves Ehren at his disposal. That way, Alera has a competent protector until the real heir gets back and one of Tavi's closest friends is close enough to Attis to arrange his death if and when he seems disinclined to get out of Tavi's way - which Ehren does, to a dying Attis' mild astonishment.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: He's one of the most powerful crafters in Alera, nearly on par with the First Lord himself.
* RedemptionEqualsDeath: Amara actually ''cries'' when he dies, since he'd been trying so hard to save everyone during his last few weeks.
* {{Revenge}}: One of his main motivations is revenge on those responsible for Septimus's death. While he took no part in Kalarus's death, he did conspire with Gaius to send Rhodes out to face the Vord alone.
* SpareToTheThrone: In one of Gaius' final acts, he adopts Attis into House Gaius as Tavi's "younger" brother to ensure when Tavi returns his primary claim on the position of First Lord isn't stopped by Attis on the ground of being older and more experienced in leadership than Tavi.
* StartOfDarkness: Septimus's death, specifically Gaius's inability to protect him, led Attis to turn against Gaius and begin plotting to take the throne himself.
* TilMurderDoUsPart: He and Invidia plan to kill each other once they are on opposite sides of the Vord War. She succeeds.
* TragicBromance: He and Septimus. They were best friends and he was never the same after Septimus's death.
* TrueCompanions: With Septimus and Raucus, though he decided to sever ties with Raucus after Septimus's death as Attis knew the path of revenge against Gaius and those responsible would lead him to dark places and actions. He also knew Raucus wouldn't follow him down this path but held nothing against him.
* UnsportsmanlikeGloating: He has a tendency to gloat after a victory. He ends up paying for it after making the mistake of gloating during his fight with Invidia rather than making sure he'd finished her off - something Invidia lampshades, after skewering him.
* WellIntentionedExtremist: No, really! Far from being behind Septimus's death, he was angry at Sextus's FailureToSaveMurder and decided that since he couldn't even protect his own son, someone else had to take over protecting the country.
** In the last book, he points out that had the heroes not foiled his plans in the first book, the country would have been unified to face the threat instead of delaying so long bickering and backbiting. Even more ironic in that said foiling is [[NiceJobBreakingItHero what woke the Vord up in the first place.]]
** Though conversely, if it hadn't been ''for'' his plans in the first book, it would have been much less likely that Tavi and Kitai would have been in position to break it in the first place.
* XanatosSpeedChess: The man has plots within plots within plots.
* YouAreTooLate: Arrived in the Calderon Valley too late to save Septimus, but he was there when they found his remains and knew furycrafting had been used against him.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:High Lady Aquitainus Invidia]]
!High Lady Aquitainus Invidia

At least as ambitious as her husband, Invidia is cynical, manipulative and lethal. She'll keep her word, in public at least, but only because her reputation for fair dealing is more important than anything else she'd gain – and in private she'll do whatever is most expedient. As a High Lady, she's utterly lethal on the battlefield when she needs to be.\\
\\
Tends to use watercrafting disguises a lot. In ''Captain's Fury'', she is shot and poisoned by her spy Fidelias. She was saved by the Awakened Vord Queen and put on life support in ''[=Princeps' Fury=]''. If the life-support Vord is removed or killed, she will die horribly in a matter of hours.
----
!!Tropes applying to Invidia:
* AscendedExtra: A downplayed case. She is briefly promoted to a viewpoint character for the prologue and a few chapters of ''First Lord's Fury'' so that the readers can see how both she and the Awakened Vord Queen are reacting to events. This ends after Isana and Araris are kidnapped by the Queen and Isana's viewpoint is then used in lieu of Invidia's.
* AssholeVictim: She aides in killing Princeps Septimus years ago for dumping her for a commoner, kills many more who are a threat to her power and rise in the ranks, blackmails Isana into being her political puppet as the price to save Tavi and Bernard, betrays every ally she makes when it can secure her more power or insure her own survival, which leads to her becoming the lead human and aide to the Vord when she is found dying from her own failed machinations, then she betrays the Vord Queen in hopes to secure her freedom from the Vord, only to turn back to the Queen when she outclasses the High Lords who Invidia lead in to kill her and offers her a cure to her poisoning so she will no longer need the vord-life-support creature on her chest. The only person to be saddened for her is the Vord Queen who, with Invidia's death, now understands what it is to lose a precious person.
* AwfulWeddedLife: How she and Attis see their marriage. Though they put up a HappyMarriageCharade in public, the reality is their marriage is loveless and they can't stand each other. Once they end up on opposite sides of the Vord War, they have no reservations about taking up arms against each other.
* BaldWoman: See BeautyIsNeverTarnished below.
* BatmanGambit: Is stuck in one by Tavi in ''Academ's Fury'' when Tavi has it revealed to her and her husband of the Vord-Cane threat against Gaius and knowing Kalare would use this opportunity to take the throne, they must work to protect Gaius and his seat on the throne. Neither particularly like this fact.
* BeautyIsNeverTarnished: Subverted after Attis sets her on fire, leaving her bald and heavily scarred. The echoes of her beauty remain, but it's a far cry from how she used to look. She's constantly referred to as the "burned woman" afterwards in narration.
* BigBadDuumvirate: More or less with her husband--it was a marriage of political advantage for both of them, and they both know it. In fact Invidia is probably more of a BigBad than he ever was, since she is much more involved in the story and in actually manipulating people or dealing with their underlings--for instance, he was as annoyed with [[ObstructiveZealot Senator Arnos]] as anyone else in the military, but Invidia was actually pulling Arnos' strings the whole time. Plus, she was behind the death of Septimus, which caused Attis' FaceHeelTurn in the first place.
* BodyHorror: The Vord life-support creature has its head buried in Invidia's flesh, and its claws have dug into her back. And that's ''before'' she's burned to a crisp.
* ChronicBackstabbingDisorder: [[invoked]] ''Every'' character with significant dealings with her has attempted to take her [[RunningGag sudden but inevitable betrayal]] into account, with levels of success ranging from "filleted for their trouble" to "[[SugarWiki/FunnyMoments left Invidia tied up and naked in the middle of the woods]]." The Awakened Vord Queen even admits that they can't be angry at her for treachery because it's just what Invidia ''does''.
* DarkActionGirl: Only when she needs to in the first few books, but pretty much solidly after joining the Vord Queen.
* DarkLordOnLifeSupport: After getting shot by a poisoned bolt from Fidelias, she needs the constant help of a Vord creature attached to her chest as life support, or she'll die painfully.
* DeathByIrony:
** Stabbed in the back by someone invisible, using a weapon she couldn't see coming.
** ''Twice'', if you count Fidelias's attempt (she lived, but only because of Vord life support). A traitorous underling shot her in the back with a poisoned bolt. To add insult to injury, the weapon used was the very one that she had given to Fidelias to use to assassinate either Tavi (a loyal servant of the Realm) or Arnos (one of her lackeys).
* DemotedToDragon: After she joins the Awakened Vord Queen.
* EnemyMine:
** Is manipulated into helping Gaius Sextus a couple of times, since she can't take over if someone else does first.
** Offered the chance for this in the last book to join the Alerans against the Vord Queen. When she refuses, she gets killed.
* EvenBadMenLoveTheirMamas: Downplayed, but comments by her in ''First Lord's Fury'' allude to how both she and her mother deeply loved each other before the latter passed away from illness.
* EvenEvilHasStandards: Not many, but she dislikes pointless deaths and would rather rule the country through manipulation of the government than all-out war. After siding with the Vord due to desperation, she's also shown small signs of regretting her choice.
-->'''Invidia:''' I'm willing to make sacrifices in pursuit of a greater goal. That's not the same as [[KickTheDog condoning the rape and murder of entire steadholts.]] [[ForTheEvulz There was no profit to those actions. No purpose.]] [[StupidEvil It's unprofessional. Idiotic.]] And I have difficulty tolerating idiots.
* EvilCannotComprehendGood: She's a bit better at this than a Vord, but not by much--she's just too cynical to really ''get'' altruism.
-->'''Invidia:''' We are selfless when it suits our purposes, or when it is easy, or when the alternative would be worse. But no one truly wishes to be selfless. They simply desire the acclaim and goodwill that comes from being thought so.
* FatalFlaw: [[GreenEyedMonster Envy]], [[MeaningfulName appropriately enough]]. Invidia is an incredibly spiteful and cruel person who can't stand the power and success enjoyed by others, and is willing to tear those people down even if it means that she won't get anything out of it except for her own twisted sense of satisfaction.
* FauxAffablyEvil: While she'll be polite and make a number of necessary deals in public, even managing to form a bond of sorts with the Awakened Vord Queen because of how useful she is, make no mistake - the woman is ultimately a ruthless monster.
* GreaterScopeVillain: Downplayed, since there's lots of other extenuating factors involved, but the point still stands that her assassination of Septimus ultimately kicked off the series' entire plot.
* GreenEyedMonster: She was jealous because Septimus rejected her marriage proposal and had him killed as revenge. And, well... [[MeaningfulName look at her name]].
* HappyMarriageCharade: She and Attis will show affection toward each other when others are present. The reality is their marriage is loveless and purely for political reasons. They eventually turn on each other without the slightest hesitation.
* HealingFactor: As a powerful watercrafter, she can heal from most injuries quickly. To take her down, sudden and blunt trauma is best. So a surprise spear to the chest and slashed throat cannot be countered. Cauterized wounds cannot be healed either.
* TheHeavy: Though she's not the ultimate villain of the series (she's always working for someone else, [[DragonWithAnAgenda technically speaking]]), as a major antagonist in every book she's definitely the most visible in the narrative, setting in motion a wide variety of threats in the present time ''and'' the backstory. Basically, if bad things are happening in Alera, Invidia either had a hand in causing it, or [[EnemyMine will be on hand to help step on the competition]].
* HiddenDepths: According to ''First Lord's Fury'', she was apprenticed by her father to all of the master artisans of her home city for a year at a time. As such, she's a surprisingly good carpenter.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard:
** Her near-death at the end of ''Captain's Fury'' came from Fidelias shooting her with a Cane bolt weapon. She gave him that weapon to assassinate either Arnos or Tavi.
** On a larger scale, her assassination of Septimus (which set the whole series' plot in motion) is what put her into the position she's in at the end of the series - a broken woman living on time borrowed from the Vord.
* IfICantHaveYou: She couldn't accept that Septimus rejected her, so she had him assassinated.
* ItsAllAboutMe: Look above and below for examples.
* KarmicDeath: Invidia, the woman whose main character trait is ChronicBackstabbingDisorder, is literally [[StealthPun stabbed in the back]].
* KickTheDog: She comes across as ''far'' too smug when she tells Isana that she was the one who helped arrange Septimus' assassination.
* LadyMacbeth: She manipulates Attis into essentially starting an undeclared war between the Marat and Alerans of the Calderon Valley. She is also the one who lands the killing blow on Attis.
* LesCollaborateurs: Joins up with the Vord after the Awakened Vord Queen gives her a form of biological life support.
* LivingOnBorrowedTime: If her Vord life support is damaged or removed, she only has hours to live while in complete and utter agony.
* MeaningfulName: "Invidia" means "envy".
* MeaningfulRename: Isana renames her Nihilus Invidia for her ChronicBackstabbingDisorder.
* MoreDeadlyThanTheMale: She is much more of a villain than her husband.
* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: Who names their kid "envy"?
* OhCrap: Suffers a small one at the end of ''Academ's Fury'' when Fidelias shows her his cloak to protect against wet weather which he left in the care of Gaius Sextus before his final mission and betrayal. He finds it in his room in the Aquitaine manor. This means not only does Gaius know where he is, but for Invidia, Gaius knows who he is working for.
%% * ThePlan: Has nothing on her husband, though.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: It's mostly shown in ''First Lord's Fury'', but Invidia is ultimately revealed to have an incredibly classist view of Aleran society, derisively referring to Isana as both a "glorified peasant" and "camp whore" while she and Araris are imprisoned by the Vord.
* PragmaticVillainy: Although, considering that she's directly or indirectly [[GreaterScopeVillain responsible for literally every problem]] that comes up in the novels, this may not be entirely true. It is, however, her view of herself:
-->'''Invidia:''' I'm willing to make sacrifices in pursuit of a greater goal. That's not the same as condoning the rape and murder of entire steadholts. There was no profit to those actions. No purpose. It's unprofessional. Idiotic. And I have difficulty tolerating idiots.
* TheQuisling: She sides with the Awakened Vord Queen in return for keeping her alive and letting her rule the Alerans who accepted the queen's deal.
* RavenHairIvorySkin: Has dark hair and pale skin, which has her considered strikingly beautiful.
* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Gives one to Arnos after he begs her to save him from the consequences of his actions throughout ''Captain's Fury''.
-->'''Invidia:''' I believe I made a mistake in you, Arnos. I knew you were a [[SmugSnake pompous egotist with delusions of grandeur]], but I ''did'' believe you were at least competent.\\
'''Arnos:''' We had a deal!\\
'''Invidia:''' We had an understanding. But you've broken faith with me. You told me you hadn't aquired any of your troops as mercenaries. But your extremely well-supplied and well-armed and well-paid cavalry seem to have taken it upon themselves [[RapePillageAndBurn to loot and pillage every human habitation they come across.]]\\
'''Arnos:''' Their Tribunes are acting independently of my orders!\\
'''Invidia:''' ''You're'' the commander of these Legions, dear. You're responsible for what they do. That's rather why one is able to attain glory and respect after a victory. [[DeadpanSnarker Or don't they teach that at the Collegia?]]\\
'''Arnos:''' How ''dare'' you lecture me on--\\
'''Invidia:''' (glares at Arnos, immediately shutting him up) ''Don't'' make me raise my hand, Arnos. [[ImpliedDeathThreat When I slap someone, he doesn't scurry away after.]]\\
'''Arnos:''' [[HypocrisyNod You were willing enough to spill Aleran blood six weeks ago!]]\\
'''Invidia:''' [[WellIntentionedExtremist I'm willing to make sacrifices in pursuit of a greater goal.]] [[EvenEvilHasStandards That's not the same as condoning the rape and murder of entire steadholts.]] [[PragmaticVillainy There was no profit to those actions. No purpose. It's unprofessional. Idiotic.]] [[StealthInsult And I have difficulty tolerating idiots.]]\\
'''Arnos:''' (scowls) Then you should agree that this conversation is unprofitable, given the circumstances. We need to focus on the matter at hand.\\
'''Invidia:''' ([[FascinatingEyebrow raises an eyebrow]]) Oh?\\
'''Arnos:''' (snorts) [[TemptingFate We're probably worried about nothing.]] Navaris is going to introduce our young captain to the crows, and that will solve the problems at hand.\\
'''Invidia:''' Will it? I've made a decision about the problems at hand, Arnos.\\
'''Arnos:''' What's that?\\
'''Invidia:''' They're ''your'' problems. Solve them by yourself. If you manage to survive them, I ''may'' be willing to renegotiate our relationship. But until then, you're on your own. (saunters off, leaving Arnos fuming in rage)
* TheSociopath: As the series goes on, it becomes disconcertingly clear that even ''the Awakened Vord Queen'' probably has more of a functioning moral compass than Invidia does. At the end of the day, she's only looking out for number one and cares nothing about whatever she has to do as long as it makes her own life more comfortable as consequence.
-->'''Invidia:''' ''Everyone'' wants someone to suffer, Isana. It's simply a matter of finding a target and an excuse.
* TheStarscream: To pretty much everyone she's ever worked with. She doesn't seem to be happy unless she's plotting against ''someone'', even if that someone is on her same side.
* TilMurderDoUsPart: She and Attis planned to kill each other once they are on opposite sides of the Vord War. She succeeds.
* VoluntaryShapeshifting: Standard for a powerful watercrafter. Her most notable use of it is to disguise herself as a legion laundrywoman in ''Captain's Fury'' to keep an eye on both Arnos and Fidelias.
* VillainousFriendship: Develops into a type IV relationship with the Awakened Vord Queen, with the Queen being somewhat put out by her sudden death and admitting that they had formed something of a bond.
* VillainousRescue: An odd case in ''First Lord's Fury''. She saves the life of the Awakened Vord Queen at one point from the Junior Queen during their duel in the ruins outside Alera Imperia, as she's smart enough to realize that the "non-defective" Junior Queen wouldn't see Invidia as a valuable asset to the Vord conquest.
* WildCard: At the end of the day, Invidia is ultimately on her own side, not anyone else's.
* WomanScorned: See GreenEyedMonster. It's worth noting that Invidia didn't have Septimus killed for falling in love with Isana because ''she'' loved Septimus or anything like that - Rather, she had Septimus killed because [[EvilIsPetty she couldn't stand the fact that]] Septimus snubbed the "great Invidia" for "a glorified peasant" and wanted to punish him for that perceived slight to her ego.
* XanatosGambit: The way she saw it, either outcome of Tavi's duel with Navaris is good for her - if he loses, then a big obstacle towards getting the throne is dead, and if he wins, then Arnos is pretty much toast, relieving Invidia of a retainer who was becoming too much of a liability. And after it's done, she has an agent with a Canim balest ready to shoot whoever wins, meaning no matter what the outcome is, she's removed two obstacles to her ambition. Of course, [[DidntSeeThatComing she didn't foresee Fidelias switching his loyalty to Tavi]] (who's saved his life, hasn't gotten him involved in anything horribly unethical, and would probably be a good First Lord) and shooting both Arnos and her.
* YouCouldHaveUsedYourPowersForGood: Fidelias tries to get her to see she could reveal herself in ''Captain's Fury'', save the trapped Legions from the Canim forces, and become a hero of the Realm once more. Instead, Invidia plans to sacrifice the Legions and depart with Fidelias, to make sure he is taken care of as well. Later, in ''First Lord's Fury'', Isana ''almost'' convinces her to help her fellow Lords defeat the Vord Queen and save the nation... but she decides to try killing them too to win the day as the last woman standing, and the whole plan blows up in her face.
* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Tends to happen to her retainers. She orders Fidelias to kill Arnos if Navaris wins the duel against Tavi, and Fidelias suspects (with good reason) that she'll order ''him'' killed sometime.
** Discussed in ''First Lord's Fury'', wherein Invidia (worrying about having been replaced), thinks to herself that she must appear calm, confident, and above all ''useful'', because the Vord's only concept of retirement is becoming food for the ''croach''.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:High Lord Kalarus Brencis]]
!High Lord Kalarus Brencis Majoris

The other main candidate (besides Aquitainus) as the First Lord's successor. The province of Kalare is one of the few where slavery is still rampant, and Kalarus has taken the twisted furycrafting of slave collars and weaponised it. He's also a horrifying mix of both TheHedonist and TheCaligula, being a murder-happy maniac obsessed with obtaining power for its own sake.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Kalarus:
* AssholeVictim: Literally the '''only''' reason Amara is horrified when Gaius kills him is that countless innocent civilans were caught in the crossfire.
* AxCrazy: The First Lord thinks that Kalarus would be a bit easier to deal with if he weren't quite so mad, since it makes him unpredictable.
* BeardOfEvil: He has a goatee, apparently to hide his weak chin.
* BigBadDuumvirate: For ''Academ's Fury'', ''Cursor's Fury'', and ''Captain's Fury''. In ''Academ's Fury'', he's responsible for organizing the assassination attempts on Isana, and uncovering who TheMole he planted within the Cursors is one of the major subplots of the novel, but his villainy is completely unrelated to the situations involving Sarl and the Vord Queens. He then directly tries to coup the government in ''Cursor's Fury'' with the assistance of a surprise VillainTeamUp with Sarl, but it ultimately falls through thanks to the actions of both Tavi and Amara. Finally, his rebellion is still going on in ''Captain's Fury'', and attempting to put a final end to it is the main conflict for Sextus and Amara's subplot, with his remaining alliance with the Canim now being very tentative and any potential involvement with Senator Arnos being tangential at best.
* BigBadWannabe: He tries very hard to be the BigBad, but he's ultimately just not quite up to snuff.
* TheCaligula: Equally, one can't deny that this guy is a few ''legionares'' short of an army.
* TheChessmaster: Half-succeeded. His "masterful plot" fails thanks to Sextus being a better player. Gaius saw only one way to defeat him, and though Kalarus never thought of it, Gaius was pissed that it came to that – namely, annihilating the entire province before Kalarus did.
* CompensatingForSomething: Lady Placida taunts him by bringing up how he apparently had a little problem bedding women back at the academy. Either he was impotent or he just was a bastard. Whatever it was, it's a major BerserkButton.
* DespotismJustifiesTheMeans: As alluded to below, he's been playing TheLongGame in terms of his coup against the First Lord, and seems to desire power just so he can lord it over others.
* DoNotGoGentle: Rather than accepting his defeat and probable death, Kalarus ties his life to that of the ancient volcano fury, angering it so much that when he dies, the volcano will erupt. His hope is to unleash the great fury not only on the Crown's forces that lay siege to his last city but the tens, if not hundreds of thousands of civilians and refugees crowded into the city.
* EvilIsPetty: The entire Amara & Gaius Sextus subplot of ''Captain's Fury'' only exists to try and mitigate the damage caused by Kalarus' pettiness. For all intents and purposes, he'd been defeated in the previous book. He no longer had a chance of actually becoming the First Lord. He was being beaten back by the forces of Alera and eventually his city would fall to a siege and he would be captured. However, Kalarus decided "Screw it!" and enslaved the volcano-dwelling Great Fury of Kalus to his very life. When the time finally came that armies would besiege his city (which itself would be packed to the brim with refugees), he would die and trigger a massive eruption with the intent of killing as many people as he could along the way. All to give one final middle-finger shaped farewell to Gaius after losing to him.
* FatalFlaw: {{Pride}}. He has an ego larger than the fire-mountain his home province is named after, and it proves to be his downfall multiple times over.
* FauxAffablyEvil: He ''tries'' to put upon a facade of civility, but he's really a savage maniac.
* TheGhost: In ''Captain's Fury''. He is alluded to in ''Furies Of Calderon'', since Kord got his slave collars from his province.
* HateSink: He's ultimately a perfect example of everything fundamentally '''wrong''' with the corrupt MightMakesRight-based aristocracy of Alera's Citizenry, being an obnoxious, misogynistic, petty, arrogant, xenophobic, and greedy sociopath who only cares about gaining more power for himself at the expense of everyone around him.
* IHaveYourWife: Kidnaps High Lady Placida Aria and the daughter of High Lord Atticus to prevent their armies from actively opposing him, and holds Rook's daughter hostage to ensure her continued good behavior. To add to his malevolence, Rook's daughter is his own granddaughter.
* KickTheDog: As far as he's concerned, the day is wasted if he hasn't found at least three small furry animals to kick before lunchtime.
** To put it into perspective, ordering the assassinations of countless abolitionists and brainwashing innocent ''children'' into becoming {{Super Soldier}}s loyal only to him '''still''' aren't the most horrific things he's done.
* KillItWithFire: His mastery of firecrafting is on par with Gaius Sextus. It is said he personally snuffed out a raging wildfire that threatened his precious hardwood forests he exported.
* LaserGuidedKarma: He is killed when the father of the man he murdered triggers the volcano he personally leashed to his own life erupts prematurely, derailing his ThanatosGambit and ending his rebellion by several years.
* TheLongGame: He and his ancestors have been planning a coup of the Realm for years, heavily taxing the commoners into virtual slavery, to build up enough money to support his secret legions.
* LoadBearingBoss: Set himself up as this on purpose as insurance when it looked like he was going to be defeated.
* MaskOfSanity: As both Gaius and Amara later realize in ''Cursor's Fury'', he's far more insane than they realized, which makes him significantly more difficult to predict and react to.
* OrcusOnHisThrone: In ''Captain's Fury''. Justified because Bernard and Amara crippled him at the end of ''Cursor's Fury'' – he was quite an active villain before that.
* OutGambitted: So, you set up a volcano to [[LoadBearingBoss explode when you're killed]] and cover a few hundred square miles around it with a surveillance network set to detect the furies of the one guy who can stop you? Too bad he takes a cue from his grandson and just ''walks'' in, not using any furies until he's too close for you to prevent him from taking control of the volcano away from you.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: He's widely despised, and with good reason. He's also probably not as smart as he thinks he is - certainly not smarter than Gaius. However, he is universally acknowledged as a genuine powerhouse.
* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: Is a virulent misogynist.
* ShootTheDog: Forces Sextus to do this.
* SiblingMurder: Implied, with it being mentioned that High Lady Antillius Dorotea is the only ''surviving'' sibling of Kalarus.
* TheSociopath: Kalarus has no real respect for human life, and isn't even that good at faking empathy in public.
* WouldHurtAChild:
** The man had child slaves fitted with obedience collars so their wills would be broken and they would become his berserker assassins.
** He holds his own granddaughter in a death trap to secure a High Lady and make Rook loyal to him.
* YouKilledMyFather: Though it's never brought up by Tavi, he ''is'' one of the two men who personally murdered Septimus (the other was High Lord Rhodes).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Brencis Minoris]]
!Kalarus Brencis Minoris

Son of Lord Kalarus and classmate of Tavi's at the Academy – where he was a vicious bully. Hasn't improved since, first becoming a servant of Kalarus during the CivilWar he instigates, and later being given a discipline collar by Invidia to serve the Vord during their invasion of Alera.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Brencis:
* AssholeVictim: Is eventually stabbed through the neck by Amara after he turns to the side of the Vord.
* CaptainErsatz: There's a fair bit of [[Literature/HarryPotter Draco Malfoy]] in him (Brencis is nastier, though, by virtue of having inherited a bit of his dad's instability), though it's unknown if that was deliberate. Even funnier when you consider that Tavi is a skinny kid with black hair and green eyes...
* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: Brencis is a talented warrior and crafter, despite being a coward and a jerk. When the going gets tough, he responds in kind, like the time when he fought Max to standstill despite being intoxicated, or when he disobeyed the Vord Queen despite having a discipline collar on. Also, he creates slaver collars more powerful then Invidia's, though that's at least in part because of tricks he learned from his father.
* TheDarkChick: Male variant, to the Vord. Completely selfish, he has no higher motives than having a good time.
* DespairEventHorizon: Seems to have passed it after Gaius Sextus obliterated Kalare, turning him into TheHedonist who doesn't care if the Vord win.
* DirtyCoward: When he ends up facing Amara, Bernard, and, most importantly, ''Gaius'', he ScreamsLikeALittleGirl and runs. Understandable, though, given that Gaius is a PersonOfMassDestruction.
* FatalFlaw: [[LazyBum Sloth]]. Brencis doesn't want to make the effort to actually support anything and just wants to live his life in luxury. After his province is obliterated by Gaius Sextus and he crosses the DespairEventHorizon, he can't even be arsed to help save humanity, instead collaborating with the Vord in exchange for material pleasures.
* HazyFeelTurn: In the sense that he was already evil before joining the Vord thanks to Invidia's slave collar.
* TheHedonist: After his father dies and Kalare collapses under volcanic ash, he spends his time having threesomes and taking drugs.
* InferioritySuperiorityComplex: Has difficulty mustering confidence to challenge people in the same league as him and compensates by picking on those obviously weaker.
* LesCollaborateurs: Works with the Vord so they can have collared Citizens to help in their conquest of Alera.
* MindRape: One of the best at it.
* MrFanservice: It's not commented on that often, but even Amara is briefly impressed by his handsomeness while pretending to act as his slave in ''Princeps' Fury''.
* TheRival: In ''Academ's Fury'', he is this to Tavi, seeing him as a freak and should be squashed. When he shows up next, he's kind of outclassed.
* SmugSnake: He loves to rub his high born status in the face of his classmates.
* VillainousValour: He manages to resist the horrific torment visited upon anyone rebelling against a slave collar so as to keep his own skin intact while in service of the Vord Queen.
* WellDoneSonGuy: Kalarus doesn't think very much of him.
* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: He is aware of this idea and resists giving the Awakened Vord Queen and Invidia knowledge of making truly broken and mindless collared slaves because once he does, it is only a matter of time before he would be killed.
* YuriFan: PlayedForHorror - After his father loses and he eventually joins the Vord, he spends the rest of his time [[RapeByProxy forcing women wearing his]] {{Slave Collar}}s to have sex with one another for his amusement.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:High Lord Antillus Raucus]]
!High Lord Antillus Raucus

High Lord of Antillus and father of Max and Crassus. Raucus spends most of his time fighting the Icemen on the Shieldwall and is a very skilled battlecrafter. He is loyal to the House of Gaius, but hates Gaius Sextus for personal reasons.
----
!!Tropes applying to Raucus:
* AnArmAndALeg: The Awakened Vord Queen cuts off his right arm when he, Phrygia, and the Placidias fail to assassinate her.
* ArrangedMarriage: To Kalarus Dorotea. He hates her and would've preferred to marry Max's mother instead.
* AuthorityEqualsAsskicking: Even more than the other High Lords. To be High Lord of one of the Shield Cities, you have to be adept at asskicking.
* AwfulWeddedLife: His marriage to Dorotea. He never wanted to marry her in the first place, wanting instead to marry Max's mother. However, he caved to pressure when his father died, not knowing how strong Max would be, and married Dorotea to secure an alliance with Kalare and their food supplies which would greatly help the frozen lands up north. Dorotea then had Max's mother murdered.
* TheBigGuy: Of Septimus's circle of friends.
* BoisterousBruiser: He's a big guy with a large personality and no reservations about getting into fights.
* CaptainObvious: Has a tendency to point out the obvious. This is lampshaded by Lord Phrygia.
* DidntSeeThatComing: He's briefly taken aback when Isana - who he had previously assumed to be toadying on behalf of Gaius Sextus, who he personally despises - angrily snarls that she actually '''hates''' Sextus [[FailureToSaveMurder for having left her husband (Septimus) to die]].
* AFatherToHisMen: He personally attends the funerals of his men who die fighting on the Shieldwall. One of the reasons why he hates the Icemen so fervently is because of how many of his soldiers and people they've killed in the endless war on the Shieldwall.
* HeroAntagonist: He's the main obstacle preventing Isana from moving the Antillian and Phyrigian Legions south to support the rest of the Realm against the Vord in ''Princeps' Fury'', and her struggling to overcome him is the main conflict for her subplot in that novel.
* PapaWolf: When Crassus becomes leader of the First Aleran while Tavi is removed from the position in ''Captain's Fury'' it is mentioned if Arnos tries to get Crassus executed on trumped up charges or refusing to kill civilians, Raucus would quickly step in and challenge Arnos to ''juris macto''.
* ParentalNeglect: Raucus is a largely absent father due to spending so much of his time defending the Shieldwall. As such, he never intervened to stop Dorotea's abuse of Max. Things got so bad that Max ran off to join the Legions at '''14'''.
* ParentalObliviousness: It's unclear how much he knew about Dorotea's abuse of Max, considering he was gone most of the time.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: He's one of the most powerful High Lords and is a very skilled battlecrafer.
* PlayingWithFire: Though Raucus is skilled in all six forms of crafting, he is especially skilled at firecrafting. Lady Placida speculates this is due to his passionate nature.
* ShellShockedVeteran: The fifth book makes it clear that he's been one for decades. He has been protecting Alera from constant Iceman attacks since he was ''fourteen'', and forty years of warfare has left deep scars on his psyche. This is why he is so unwilling to believe that it could be possible to make peace with the Icemen, he's seen too many of his soldiers and worse, his ''civilians'', dead at their paws.
* SillyRabbitIdealismIsForKids: He's almost pathologically unable to even ''contemplate'' forming a lasting peace with the Icemen until Isana finally shows herself to be willing to die for it to succeed.
* StarCrossedLovers: He and Max's mom. Raucus wanted to marry her, but was forced to marry Dorotea instead. Then Dorotea had the woman killed.
* TrueCompanions: With Septimus and Attis, though he and Septimus didn't get along at first.
* VitriolicBestBuds: With Lord Phrygia.
* WorfHadTheFlu: He deliberately limits himself in the ''juris macto'' he has with Isana since he feels it would be disrespectful towards her.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:High Lady Antillus Dorotea]]
!High Lady Antillus Dorotea

Sister of High Lord Kalarus and wife of Antillus Raucus. They have one son, Crassus. She's tried to kill Max numerous times, viewing him as a threat to Crassus's inheritance. She is introduced in ''Cursor's Fury'', where she serves as the First Aleran's Tribune Medica.
----
!!Tropes applying to Dorotea:
* AbusiveParents: To Max - and Crassus as well; some of Max's scars are from protecting his half-brother from his mother's temper. Crassus makes his excuses, but when he sees someone else at risk from his mother's wrath he's quick to try to prevent it, knowing all too well what it's like.
* AmbitionIsEvil: Tavi comments that her ambition was a cancer that got amputated by the collar.
* ArrangedMarriage: To Raucus.
* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: She always did love her son Crassus; her persecution of Max and the attempts to kill him were mostly to keep him from taking her son's place.
* GoodFeelsGood: The collared Dorotea gives off a deep sense of fulfilment quite unlike the buried misery Isana senses in other collared slaves. Collar or no, Dorotea is finding healing people and experiencing their gratitude and liking very rewarding.
* HealingHands: She served as the Tribune Medica to the First Aleran before turning traitor. She resumes working as Tribune Medica after being collared.
* HeelFaceBrainwashing: An understated case. Her personality is still her own, even after being collared, but it becomes ''much'' more benevolent afterward. This trope is actually discussed by both Durias and Tavi - both of whom are rather sickened by the concept.
* LaserGuidedKarma: Defied; while it's darkly ironic that Dorotea -- the sister of a High Lord who's notorious for his monopoly on the slave trade -- should end up a collared slave herself, Tavi doesn't believe for an instant she deserved such a fate, regardless of how awful she was. He's sickened at the thought of what she must have endured at the hands of the formerly enslaved people freed by the Canim.
* MadeASlave: Sarl puts a slave collar on her. With his death, she can never be freed from the commands she has been placed under.
* MakeItLookLikeAnAccident: Her preferred method of removing her enemies.
* TheMedic: She is an able healer, first joining the Legion as the top medical official.
* MurderTheHypotenuse: Had Max's mother killed.
* OffingTheOffspring:
** He's not her biological offspring, but Max ''is'' her stepson and she's been trying to kill him for years.
* RageBreakingPoint: When the Awakened Vord Queen kills Foss, who saved Dorotea from the blast by pushing her away, she's filled with such righteous fury that she temporarily overcomes her slave commands and launches a powerful attack against the Vord Queen, stunning her enough for Tavi to catch up. That said, her collar quickly punishes her for this violation.
* ThatManIsDead: After being collared, she says that High Lady Antillus Dorotea no longer exists and she is simply Dorotea now. She also asks Tavi to tell Crassus that she's dead, as she believes it would be easier for him to mourn her.
* WickedStepmother: She beat Max repeatedly until he came into his furies and could stand up to her. After that she started arranging "accidents" for him.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:High Lady Placidus Aria]]
!High Lady Placidus Aria

Wife of High Lord Placida and one of the strongest crafters in Alera. She and her husband prefer to stay out of politics, though she eventually becomes a close friend and ally of Isana.
----
!! Tropes applying to Aria:
* ActionGirl: Earned her Citizenship through both merit of her furycrafting and skill in combat.
* {{Ambadassador}}: Serves as ambassador to the Icemen along with Isana during ''Princeps' Fury.''
* DamselInDistress: Kalarus captures her so he can use her as a hostage against her husband. Downplayed in that she could've escaped from him on her own, but he rigged things so that a child would die if she tried anything.
* {{Foil}}: She can be seen as the good counterpart to Invidia. Both are powerful and skilled crafters who hold a great deal of influence in Alera. When they both approached Isana in Isana's moments of need, Invidia made the cold calculating practical assessment on how it could help her goals, while Aria offers kindness for nothing asked in return.
* HairTriggerTemper: Her displaying this served as an alert to Isana that something was making Alerans feel irrationally angry around Icemen.
* HappilyMarried: To Placidus Sandos. While most High Lords marry for politics, they married for love.
* LadyOfBlackMagic: She's regal, elegant, and the first woman to become a Citizen by winning a ''juris macto'' duel. Later she becomes one of the top Aleran commanders during the Vord War.
* LoadBearingBoss: If she had been killed in ''Cursor's Fury'', numerous dangerous wild furies leashed under her command would've been released and would've ravaged the countryside of her province.
* RedheadInGreen: She's a redhead and frequently wears green, as it's the color of Placida.
* SilkHidingSteel: See LadyOfBlackMagic.
* TeamMom: Takes this position when the other High Lords (particularly Antillus, Phrygia and her husband) are picking on each other like school kids.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Senator Arnos]]
!Senator Arnos

The Senator in charge of military spending, who dismisses any report of military threats that don't fit his preconceptions. Politically, not a supporter of the First Lord, but in a position too sensitive to ignore.
----
!!Tropes applying to Arnos:
* AscendedExtra: He goes from having just a cameo in ''Cursor's Fury'' to being one of the main antagonists of ''Captain's Fury''.
* BadBoss: Seen hitting and insulting a secretary who gives him bad news. Also willing to sacrifice his army just for his personal political gain.
* BigBadDuumvirate: Forms one with both Kalarus and Nasaug in ''Captain's Fury'', though even then he's just the pawn of the Aquitaines.
* BigBadWannabe: He views himself as Invidia's equal. She views him as a pawn that, despite his stupidity, happens to be convenient for getting her husband into power. In the end, she orders Fidelias to kill him after [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness he has outlived his usefulness]] by taking care of Tavi for her.
* CommanderContrarian: Despite Tavi's innovations being highly effective, he ignores them simply because they aren't traditional.
* DirtyCoward: He has no stomach for fighting. When Bernard challenges him to a duel, he face turns red before he all but runs out of the room in fear.
* GeneralRipper: Has no problem sending his troops to their deaths - or sending them to cause massive civilian casualties - just for his political career and ego.
* HopeSpot: There is a brief moment in ''Captain's Fury'' when he gives a heartfelt thanks to Tavi for sending his men in at the right time to save his own. It looks like Tavi might be able to work with him and control him, but then he gives Tavi orders. See KickTheDog.
* HumiliationConga: Arnos's KarmaHoudiniWarranty has expired by the climax of ''Captain's Fury''. He discovers that his opponent is the legitimate heir to the throne (and so has the right to challenge him over the horrible things he's done), his champion loses the duel, meaning that he's going to have to face justice, and when he takes a hostage in an attempt to escape, he's shot in the back. As he lays dying, Tavi shows him absolutely no respect and only calls a healer for the woman he was trying to use as a human shield.
* IRejectYourReality: He dismisses ''anything'' that doesn't fit his preconceptions. Reports of a new and extraordinarily dangerous enemy, which has already chewed up a Marat force and an Aleran force, and is possibly on the loose? Just lies. Marat can't be trusted, you know. Canim now have ranged weapons? The Canim are just dogs who couldn't possibly innovate that, and the Canim crossbow you captured isn't sufficient evidence to the contrary. The Canim want to build ships and leave? Nope, the Canim only exist to make Alerans miserable, and giving them any quarter towards achieving this goal will just result in sea-going Canim raiders.
* {{Jerkass}}: Nobody really likes him. Even Invidia finds him annoying, and merely puts up with him because he's on her side and in a useful position.
* KickTheDog: He has an entire town ordered killed for "conspiring with the enemy" (read: not fighting to the death against an unbeatable opponent that ''doesn't'' want to kill you) just so he can get Tavi removed from his post when he inevitably refuses. Then he decides to kill them anyway as an "example" to the other towns.
* LackOfEmpathy: Doesn't even bat an eye when ordering the executions of a town of innocent people. He views everyone else as pawns in a game, and truly doesn't ''get'' how war hurts others.
* AMillionIsAStatistic: Indifferent to the casualties in his campaign. It's commented that he just views it as a game.
* NoodleIncident: A non-comic version. When Invidia is blackmailing him into doing what she wants, she mentions several things, including what seems to have been an assassination.
* ObstructiveZealot: He wants nothing more than his own political advantage, and does stupid and destructive things that get thousands of people, both soldiers and civilians, killed for it.
* SaveTheVillain: When he lays badly injured from a poisoned bolt in his chest, he thinks this is happening when Tavi calls for a healer. Tavi subverts his expectations by saying the healer is for the ''hostage'' he took, not him.
* SmugSnake: Convinced he is a brilliant tactician who uses the powers the Senate gave him to kill. Everyone else is convinced that he's a delusional idiot who somehow managed to weasel his way into a high position, and that he's just going to make things difficult for everyone before he finally falls. As it turns out, he actually ''can'' be more competent than he appears, he's just hamstrung by his prejudices.
* VillainousBreakdown: It begins when Tavi reveals himself as Gaius Octavian and challenges him to a duel, but he really loses it when Tavi beats his champion Navaris, meaning that he's [[KarmaHoudiniWarranty finally going to have to face the music for what he did]].
* WeHaveReserves: See GeneralRipper and AMillionIsAStatistic.
* YouCouldHaveUsedYourPowersForGood: Tavi commented that he could have, though he takes it back when he realizes that Arnos thinks AMillionIsAStatistic.
* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Invidia decides that Fidelias should kill him if he doesn't die during Tavi's ''juris macto'' against him.
[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:Senator Valerius]]
%%* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: To Senator Arnos.
%%[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:Count Gram]]
%%[[/folder]]

!!Mercenaries
[[folder:Fidelias]]
!Fidelias ex Cursori, a.k.a. Valiar Marcus

Fidelias was a Cursor and Amara's mentor, until he betrayed the First Lord for Aquitaine. A master spy and manipulator, he has greatly helped Aquitaine's bids for power until deciding Tavi would make a better ruler. He is now Tavi's advisor, in a SecretIdentity. In any event, Fidelias is absolutely loyal to only one thing – his country – and will do whatever he thinks is best for it, no matter how terrible others might think it.

Fidelias is absent throughout ''Cursor's Fury'', and it's only after a moment of FridgeLogic from Amara that the narration reveals where he is: throughout the book he's been serving in the First Aleran Legion as [[SergeantRock First Spear Valiar Marcus]], an old cover identity of his. Marcus later has some inner struggles with HeelFaceRevolvingDoor and BecomingTheMask, but ultimately [[HeelFaceTurn abandons Lady Aquitane and sides with Tavi.]]

----
!!Tropes that apply to Fidelias:
* TheAtoner: Kitai believes this of him as he didn't run when he had the chance once outed. He stayed and accepted Tavi's punishment without argument. He feels his death is needed to make amends.
* BecomingTheMask: After taking on the guise of Valiar Marcus, Tavi successfully earns his loyalty up until the point that he comes to value his role as Valiar Marcus over his role as Fidelias, even to the point of turning against Invidia.
* BeingEvilSucks: He defects to the Aquitaine's side because he thinks they're the best hope for the country. He does a lot of horrible things for them, like inciting the Marat to invade Alera, betraying his student Amara, and giving Arnos advice on how best to oust Tavi, who's TheGoodCaptain. He feels utterly horrible about all of this, and it eventually makes it so that he ''cannot'' reveal his identity to Tavi after Tavi earned his loyalty, because to Tavi, Fidelias is the one who attempted to murder his family.
* BigBadDuumvirate: While he's ultimately only the puppet of the Aquitaines, both he and Atsurak are the main antagonists of ''Furies of Calderon''.
* BigBadFriend: To Amara at the beginning of the first book, although they never interact after she discovers his treachery and escapes.
* ConsummateLiar: As he said to [[LivingLieDetector Odiana]]: "Yes, I do. No, I don't. The sky is green. I am seventeen years old. My real name is Gundred."
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: Nearly suffered from one in ''First Lord's Fury'' after his cover is blown, with him being '''crucified''' and left to fend for himself out in the frozen north of Phrygia. Thankfully, however, Kitai convinces Tavi to recant and Fidelias is saved.
* DeathSeeker: Has shades of this, particularly in the last novel where he doesn't even attempt to make a break for it after he's found out.
* DeathEqualsRedemption: Feels that he has to die in order to find some sort of redemption. Which happens. Sort of.
* EvilCounterpart: To Bernard, same crafting, both straightforward, mentors, and a little gruff at times. Too bad Fidelias is evil(ish).
* FallenHero:
** Amara and many Cursors view him as this for his betrayal to the Crown.
** Tavi, Max, and the First Aleran's leadership see him as this after they learn Valiar Marcus, their dependable First Spear, is also the greatest traitor to the realm.
* FamedInStory:
** Fidelias has a reputation as one of the best Cursors, which makes his defection a MassOhCrap moment for his former colleagues.
** Marcus is given the name Valiar in recognition of his bravery after the aforementioned raid, one of only five men so honored. When Max learns that Valiar Marcus is the First Spear of the First Aleran, he becomes a lot more hopeful of the Legion's chances.
* GoodFeelsGood: Even after he turns his coat, Fidelias always likes the rare occasions when he work lets him help the ordinary people of Alera. This is part of why he ends up BecomingTheMask; it's plainly obvious that Valiar Marcus, [[SergeantRock First Spear of the]] [[BadassArmy First]] [[BandOfBrothers Aleran]], is a ''lot'' happier than Fidelias ex Cursori.
* HeelFaceRevolvingDoor: Started out on the side of the Big Bad, then switched to the First Aleran, then almost to the Big Bad's [[TheDragon Dragon,]] before finally sticking to Tavi.
* IFightForTheStrongestSide: ...Because they're most likely to be able to preserve the Realm. But his true loyalty is to the country itself.
* MercyKill: In ''Furies of Calderon'' he kills a steadhold girl who is captured by the Marat and being eaten alive by them.
* NoNonsenseNemesis: Fidelias never gloats. He never does anything he hasn't thought out and planned ahead for, and he never offers his enemies any second chances or a dramatic showdown. Best demonstrated when he decides to deliver his resignation to Lady Aquitaine--with a balest bolt, from several hundred metres away, laced with two of the most lethal poisons in the Realm. One which quickens the heart rate and the other becomes more deadly the further it spreads in the body.
* NonIndicativeName: "Fidelias" means "faithful". Which he... um, isn't. Well, except to the Realm itself.
* ObliviousGuiltSlinging: Ends up on the receiving end of this - a ''lot'' - during ''Captain's Fury.''
* OldMaster: Revealed at Eastercon 2015 after the series, this will be his role among the next generation of Cursors, which would include Canim and Marat. Ehren will "Obi-wan" them directly and Fidelias will be "Yodaing" in the shadows.
* OldSoldier: The most experienced ''legionare'' in the First Aleran. At one point, Tavi is about to give him orders, and changes his mind.
-->Tavi paused, took a breath, and shook his head. "He'll know what to do."
* OnlyAFleshWound: Things like spears inside of him, or javelins scaled for nine-foot-tall Canim are only a mild inconvenience.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: In ''Cursor's Fury'', as the First Spear with years of experience, he has every right to remove Tavi from command when he knows Tavi is not a real officer, but listens to Tavi's arguments and ideas about how he knows much of the Cane. He eventually agrees to follow him. It helps in that moment, Fidelias likely realizes Tavi is Septimus' son.
* RetiredBadass: Valiar Marcus came out of retirement to join the First Aleran. This causes Magnus to become suspicious of him, since until he came out of retirement, Marcus had vanished off the face of Alera... around the time Fidelias was known to be operating.
* RewardedAsATraitorDeserves: Ultimately averted. It was a close thing, though: when Tavi found out who Marcus really was, he ordered him ''crucified'' and had to be talked out of it by Kitai.
* SecretIdentity: As Valiar Marcus.
* SecretSecretKeeper: At the end of ''Cursor's Fury'' he has realized Rufus Scipio is Tavi, who is really the child of Septimus, heir to the House of Gaius. He is a bit shocked but doesn't even dare hint that it is true when Lady Aquitaine asks.
* SergeantRock: Oh yes. There's a reason he's First Spear.
* SleepingWithTheBosssWife: His affair with Invidia. Fidelias worries about how Attis will react if he finds out.
* ThatManIsDead: Forced on him in favor of Valiar Marcus at the end of the series. Not that he minds, though.
* VoluntaryShapeshifting: Like many watercrafters, though it's much harder for him due to it not being his specialty. It takes almost a month and is apparently quite painful.
* WalkingSpoiler: The revelation that Valiar Marcus is Fidelias ex Cursori is one of the main plot twists at the end of ''Cursor's Fury''.
* WellIntentionedExtremist: He betrays Gaius in favor of the Aquitaines because he thinks Gaius is a dying old fool who won't simply bow out gracefully, and the ''other'' options for First Lord are petty schemers (and minor characters) and Lord Kalarus, who's a mentally unstable and vicious madman. He later implies he wouldn't have betrayed Gaius if he had known about Tavi, and pretty quickly switches his loyalty to him once he sees that Tavi is both the legitimate heir and a better ruler than the Aquitaines would be.
* WhatYouAreInTheDark: Soon after he realizes Magnus is very close to discovering his true identity (which Tavi would execute him for if he'd known), the pair of them are attacked by three Vord while alone. Marcus realizes he could very easily MakeItLookLikeAnAccident (after all, who would blame him for only being able to kill two and a half Vord?), but also that doing so is the kind of cold, self-serving action that he hated Alera's nobility for. He ends up saving Magnus.
* WildCard: For much of the series grasping just whose side he is on is the question. He ends up pretty firmly on Tavi's side by the end.
* WorthyOpponent: Gaius Sextus appears to hold him in high regards even after he turns coat. Enough to use furycraft to sneak into his room and leave him the swamp-exploring gear he had left behind because they're in an EnemyMine situation against Kalarus, also serving as an IfIWantedYouDead reminder.
* YouJustToldMe: During a fight with some Vord scouts, Magnus, who has been suspicious of Valiar Marcus for a long time, shouts, "Fidelias! Behind you!" When he whirls around to look and sees nothing there, he realizes he just blew his cover. Tavi is pissed.
* YourApprovalFillsMeWithShame: In ''Captain's Fury'', he gets this both coming and going. Lady Aquitaine is highly impressed by the plan he came up with to force Tavi to [[SadisticChoice either execute a town of innocent people or be imprisoned]], which he feels ''very'' guilty about, and [[ObliviousGuiltSlinging other officers of the First Aleran praise Valiar Marcus's loyalty]], when he's actually a spy.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Aldrick]]
!Aldrick ex Gladius

Former ''singulare'' to Princeps Septimus. Probably the second greatest swordsman alive, fears only the swordsman who once beat him – the legendary Araris Valerian. Lover of Odiana, and a mercenary in the service of the Aquitaines.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Aldrick:
* AwesomeMcCoolname: His name is literally Aldrick of the Sword.
* BackForTheFinale: After two books' worth of non-involvement, he shows up to help the good guys in the final battle.
* CatchPhrase: During the first book he will regularly say "Only Araris Valerian has ever beaten me, and you're not Araris," and variants thereof.
* EvenEvilHasStandards:
** In ''Furies of Calderon'', he's visibly disgusted both by the Marat practice of [[ImAHumanitarian devouring the flesh of their adversaries]] (sometimes ''[[EatenAlive while they're still alive]]'') and Fidelias coldly breaking the neck of a young steadholder girl who was captured by the Marat.
** [[BrokenBird Odiana was so broken]] by her treatment before they met that she wants him to put a [[MindRape discipline collar on her]]. He always refuses.
* EvilVsOblivion: He helps the First Aleran and Tavi's allies in the final battle against the Vord.
* ExtraOreDinary: He's a very skilled metalcrafter on par with Araris.
* FallenHero: He was once one of Septimus' closest allies, one of his bodyguards, but sleeping with Odiana, for whom Miles was smitten, to calm her down led to Miles challenging him to Juris Macto, which led to Araris taking up the spot after Miles' "accident" and his defeat. The ''juris macto'' led to the public reveal of the incident and Septimus couldn't allow him to be near him again. After that, he became a mercenary.
* MasterSwordsman: He's nearly as good as Araris. Unfortunately for him, "nearly" isn't nearly good enough.
* OhCrap: He practically ''collapses'' in shock near the climax of ''Furies of Calderon'' when he realizes that he's finally facing Araris Valerian again for the first time in almost two decades.
* OutOfFocus: Doesn't do much after the halfway point of the series.
* PretenderDiss: His "you're not Araris" CatchPhrase, as mentioned above. When it turns out his opponent actually ''is'' Araris, he's absolutely terrified.
* PunchClockVillain: A mercenary-revolutionary with standards, if not morals.
* TheRival: To Araris.
* SecretKeeper: Based on Invidia's first conversation in ''Captain's Fury'', Aldrick never told her or anyone else Araris is alive and where he has been hiding. Whether this is out of respect, or not wanting to admit Araris beat him ''again'' is unknown.
* TheStoic: Since metalcrafters can block out pain and emotion, he can be fairly emotionless.
* UnholyMatrimony: {{Stoic}} mercenary + AxCrazy {{Cloudcuckoolander}} = Surprisingly adorable couple.
* VillainousRescue: Just when Amara and Bernard's battle against the Vord in ''Academ's Fury'' seems lost, he appears leading the charge with Aquitaine's legionaries, transforming the conflict from an extremely close call into a resounding victory for the good guys.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Odiana]]
!Odiana

A powerful watercrafter who was enslaved as a young girl – a mind-warping slave collar combined with her powerful empathy and the trauma of slavery has driven her mad. She serves the Aquitaines alongside Aldrick.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Odiana:
* AxeCrazy: Years being mindraped as a slave will do that to you.
* BrainwashedAndCrazy: Suffering from the aftereffects of such.
* BrokenBird: They don't come more broken than her in this series.
* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: If, again, a lot more violent than usual.
* TheEmpath: Standard for a watercrafter.
* LivingLieDetector: Also standard for a watercrafter.
* TheMadHatter: Seems quite self-aware about her own insanity.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: Isana gets appopriately worried when she sees Odiana's "cheerfully insane" demeanor immediate fade into undisguised terror and panic when Kord pulls out a discipline collar for the two women to see.
* TheOphelia: Years as a slave broke her mind. She spends a lot of time giggling while drowning people.
* OutOfFocus: Doesn't do much after the halfway point of the series.
* PetTheDog: Helps Isana with no real ulterior motives when they're both trapped in Kord's steadhold.
* RapeAsBackstory: As a slave. When Kord and his men start raping her in front of Isana, she just grimly accepts it. In fact, she ''gives Isana advice'' on how to ''be'' raped in such a way that the rapists won't hurt her too much.
* TragicVillain: The poor woman's sanity broke like an old thread thanks to the hellish treatment she was forced into as a child.
* UnhappyMedium: Hoo ''boy''. Being brainwashed and raped just as your [[TheEmpath empath]] powers are coming in does [[AxCrazy nothing good for your sanity]].
* UnholyMatrimony: With Aldrick. {{Stoic}} mercenary + AxCrazy {{Cloudcuckoolander}} = Surprisingly adorable couple.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Demos]]
!Captain Demos

Captain of the ''Slive'', a merchant vessel that indulges in smuggling as long as they can afford the bribes. Originally recruited by Ehren to carry word of the Canim in ''Cursor's Fury,'' he's later hired to help Tavi transport Varg after their PrisonBreak in ''Captain's Fury'' and remains a part of the team through ''Princeps' Fury'' and ''First Lord's Fury.'' A powerful woodcrafter, as evidenced by the fact that the ''Slive'' itself is one big wood fury that he can control at will.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Demos:
* AntiVillain: Originally. He was the one who brought Sarl and the Vord Queen back to Canea. In his first appearance, he threatens a pawnshop owner with murder, and in his second appearance he nearly follows through--and then proceeds to kidnap all the women and children he can find on his way out of town. Sure, he's technically saving them from being murdered by a horde of Canim, but only so he can sell them into slavery. Yet he's somehow very likable, like a DarkerAndEdgier [[Franchise/PiratesOfTheCaribbean Captain Jack Sparrow]]. In the following book, Tavi notes that he doesn't have enough chains on his ship to be a full-time slaver; he probably never really sold them as slaves and really was just trying to save them. It's just that he's a pirate-- and he has a reputation to uphold.
* TheCaptain: A very talented smuggler. He cares for his men and moves to protect them if he can.
* CombatPragmatist: He has no problem fighting in any way that gets him an advantage, which includes using his the ship's wooden features against his enemies.
* GreenThumb: His whole ship is controlled by his powers over wood. So making doors open as surprise attacks are something attackers should be cautious of.
* EvenEvilHasStandards: He may be a smuggler who will kill you without hesitation if you can't pay him, but he dislikes slavery and is appalled by what the Canim do to their captives.
* HonestAdvisor: He is never cruel or mean to Tavi, and gives the title of Princeps little respect, but when it comes to his knowledge of the sea, sailing, and sea combat, he never minces words either. Tavi trusts his opinion on this and other matters.
* IGaveMyWord: Once Tavi purchases his service, he will see it through, even if Tavi destroys his slavery chains during the trip. That is to be a matter they will discuss after this current venture is over.
* ThePromise: When Tavi replaces the chains that he destroyed, he requests that if Demos approves of the replacements, he will never use any other set of chains for slavery. Demos, cynically suspecting them to be old rusty chains, agrees--provided they meet his expectations. Tavi doesn't give him rusty chains, but a long length of ''solid gold'' chains. Demos accepts them and becomes Tavi's mount at sea.
* ObfuscatingDisability : The ''Slive'' looks "stained, old, and worn." It isn't. It is a very fast and nimble ship on the open sea, and while not a powerhouse in combat, one not to be taken lightly either.
* OutGambitted: Tavi stuns him by offering chains of pure gold as replacement ones to the slaving chains Tavi destroyed. Demos wasn't sure exactly how Tavi planned to settle accounts with him, but he never anticipated this. He even notes that with ThePromise above, Tavi is making him wear his own chains and put them on freely.
* ShootTheMessenger: He almost became the victim of this trope when he delivered the final message from Kalarus to Sarl about the Canim invasion.
* TheStoic: He has two emotions: Blank, and pissed.
* TheUnsmile: They are instead described within one book as "showing his teeth."
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Rook]]
!Rook a.k.a. Gaelle

Head of the Bloodcrows (Kalarus's equivalent of the Cursors), she is Kalarus' chief spy and assassin; a minor but important recurring character.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Rook:
* BreakTheCutie: What her training seems to have involved. She was raped and broken emotionally to allow her strong intelligence to remain and still be loyal to her lord. She wasn't totally broken, though...
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: She gets part of her throat torn out by the Awakened Vord Queen, with her left to slowly drown in her own blood.
* DarkActionGirl: Not by choice. Kalarus keeps her in line by using her daughter against her.
* DroppedABridgeOnHim: Heartbreakingly and callously murdered by the Awakened Vord Queen because the Queen senses Rook's approval in Brencis Minoris not yielding information in making the slave collars even more effective. The Queen sees this flicker of independence as counter to her goals, so she kills her with as much thought as a human would feel for swatting a fly.
* FeedTheMole: After they discover she is a mole, she's allowed to remain with the Cursor candidates "undiscovered" because it's easier to keep an eye on her than to try to hunt down whatever replacement Kalarus would install.
* HeelFaceTurn: She defects from Kalarus' service the second she gets a serious chance to remove her daughter away from him.
* IHaveYourWife: Her daughter being kept close to Kalarus is how he keeps her under control.
* ImpersonationExclusiveCharacter: As Gaelle.
* KillAndReplace: Maestro Killian allows Rook to kill the real Gaelle shortly after she was selected for Cursor training and [[VoluntaryShapeshifting use watercratfing to assume her appearance]]. Killian [[IDidWhatIHadToDo did this]] to [[DoubleAgent get into Kalare's spy network.]]
* MamaBear: She commits treason against both the First Lord and Kalarus for the sake of her daughter Masha.
* TheMole: As Gaelle, who got close to Tavi in Cursor training.
* ObfuscatingStupidity: Even when collared and supposedly under Brencis' control, she is able to act and stay loyal to the Crown and protect her daughter. She eggs on one fellow slave to kill the Cursors they found to prevent the Cursors from revealing more information and then kills the second slave because he realizes the truth. After this betrayal, she then goes back to her master and gives the truth in such a way that she isn't disobeying his commands.
* PunchClockVillain: A good person forced to do bad things because [[IHaveYourWife Kalarus has her daughter.]]
* TakeCareOfTheKids: After being enslaved by a discipline collar, her last request to Amara is this, as the one place she felt was safest from the Vord was the Calderon Valley.
* TrappedInVillainy: Kalarus forced her to act as his puppet through threatening the safety of her daughter.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Navaris]]
! Phrygiar Navaris

Bodyguard, assassin, or blade-for-hire, Navaris doesn't care – she's in it for money and the reputation as the most dangerous swordswoman alive. Nowadays, though, she serves as the chief ''singulare'' to Senator Arnos, enforcing his corrupt will on anyone unlucky enough to get in her path through sword and intimidation.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Navaris:
* AlasPoorVillain: Downplayed. Tavi isn't particularly devastated by her death, but he's not very proud of using her FreudianExcuse to induce a VillainousBreakdown and [[DueToTheDead takes the time to gently close her eyes after she dies]].
* AnimalMotif: Snakes; both Tavi and Fidelias compare her eyes and general demeanor to a serpent's. It's fitting given that many snakes are quiet and unassuming, but extremely deadly, just like Navaris herself.
* AxCrazy: She thinks becoming a famous killer will force her father to acknowledge her.
* DarkActionGirl: A sadistic, AxCrazy killer with a bodycount in the hundreds if not thousands.
* DeathByIrony: Navaris became famous as a champion-for-hire (basically, she fights duels for rich people so they don't have to risk their lives). She ends up dying in a duel with Tavi.
* TheDragon: To Arnos. She's his main enforcer and his champion in any duels.
* DuelToTheDeath: She uses these as an excuse to legally kill lots and lots of people, mostly just for the hell of it.
* EvilVirtues: She has an extraordinary amount of willpower, which helps keep the AxCrazy in check.
* FreudianExcuse: She was born out of wedlock and never knew her father, or even who he was; she acts as she does in the hope that if she becomes the best in the country he'll appear and acknowledge her.
* MaskOfSanity: Much is made in Tavi and Isana's narration throughout ''Captain's Fury'' of how she's actually profoundly mad and is only able to make it ''seem'' like she isn't perfectly fine with disemboweling everyone she meets.
* MasterSwordsman: Araris is probably the only person on the planet more capable with a blade than she is, and unlike with Aldrick, the margin between them is close enough that Navaris is still a genuine threat to him. Tavi only managed to win their duel by playing on her psychological hang-ups, and even then it was a close deal.
* MurderIsTheBestSolution: Her response to pretty much any problem is to put a hand on her sword and get ready to start cutting throats. Tavi and Arnos are able to dissuade her a couple times, but eventually she stops accepting excuses and just starts slashing.
* ParentalAbandonment: She is the bastard child of a Citizen and commoner. Her father never acknowledged her and she might not even know his true name.
%% * PsychoForHire: So very much. Navaris is nowhere near sane.
* SanityHasAdvantages: She's a far better swordsmaster than Tavi is, but Tavi thinks far more clearly than her. He manages to use her deep-seated psychological flaws to talk her into a VillainousBreakdown, meaning that she ends up making the mistakes that allow him to kill her.
* ToBeAMaster: To be the greatest swordswoman alive! Oh, and to gain the recognition of her father.
* VillainousBreakdown: Tavi [[BreakThemByTalking talks her into one]].
[[/folder]]

!!Soldiers and Other Characters
[[folder:Araris]]
!Araris Valerian a.k.a. Fade

One of the greatest swordsman who ever lived and once Septimus' close friend, he is believed dead by most of the world and uses the identity of Bernard's disfigured, brain-damaged slave Fade to watch over and instruct Tavi. He also develops a romance with Isana.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Araris:

* BecomingTheMask: A bit of a twist on the actual description: he isn't a con man, and he only clings to his alternate identity out of guilt. But he clings ''hard''.
* BigBrotherWorship He loves his brother so much, he lamed him to stop him from fighting Aldrick in ''juris macto'' and being killed.
* BigDamnHeroes: A lot. Nearly every book has him appear and perform some awesome swordsmanship, and generally defeating the enemy, or at least stalling them for other heroes to arrive.
* BodyguardCrush: He was Isana's personal bodyguard while both were serving alongside Septimus in the Legions, and continues to protect her (and Tavi by extension) in the present day out of a sense of duty - and also because somewhere along the line, he ended up falling in love with Isana himself.
* TheCavalry: Likewise, a lot. Especially in ''Cursor's Fury'', when Bernard, Isana, and Amara are about to be killed by Kalarus's Immortals, and in comes Fade, out of nowhere, in a dirty chef's apron, and slashes their way out.
%% * ChromeChampion: Does this for the final showdown.
* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: His cover. He's ''very'' good at it. He abandons this after ''Cursor's Fury'', where he openly appears as Tavi, and later Isana's bodyguard, as Araris Valerian.
* ExtraOreDinary: His metalcrafting ability makes him the deadliest swordsman alive. [[MundaneUtility Also came in handy around Bernardholt's forge.]]
* FailureKnight: He blames himself for Septimus' death and falling in love with his best friend's wife.
* FakingTheDead: Part of the reason he became Fade is so that everyone would believe the greatest swordsman in the world had died.
* FeelNoPain: All metalcrafters have the ability to block out pain, but Araris is unquestionably one of the best at it: case in point, blocking an assassin's arrow by ''catching it through his palm'' barely makes him flinch.
* FirstEpisodeTwist: Some fairly critical details about him are revealed early on, which can make him tricky to talk about without giving plot twists away.
* GoodScarsEvilScars: Played with; he disguised himself by burning his face with the Legions' brand for cowardice. He's no coward, but he ''[[FailureKnight thinks]]'' [[FailureKnight he is.]]
* MarkOfShame: The brand on his face marking him as a coward to anyone who sees him at first glance. However, as noted in other tropes, Araris is only a coward in his own mind. His love for a woman who is the wife of his best friend and protecting her and not his Prince left him with guilt that lasts until Isana has a JourneyToTheCenterOfTheMind while healing him from a serious wound.
* MasterSwordsman: Widely renowned as the single greatest swordsman in Alera. After a while, the narration simply stops describing most of his fights, summing them up in lines like, "Nine men rushed him. They died."
* MeaningfulName: When your surname means 'all-heal', and you end up with the master healer, and at least metaphorically healing her....
* TheMentor: To Tavi. He's also the first person to realize that Tavi has become capable of furycraft. He specifically trains Tavi in sword-fighting.
* MyGreatestFailure: Blames himself for Septimus's death because Septimus had ordered him to leave and protect Isana instead. He failed to protect her sister Alia, and thought his delivery of Tavi caused him to be without furycrafting.
* MyGreatestSecondChance: Views Tavi (Septimus' son) and Isana (Septimus' wife) as these.
%% * NotSoStoic: It took one ''hell'' of a lot of effort, though.
* ObfuscatingStupidity: Again, he's good at this, in his Fade persona. He maintained it in view of anyone for over fifteen years. Even Bernard never caught on to the act. For part of the first book, Isana was worried he was lost in that persona.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: His brother, Sir Miles, knows him very well. Miles knows Rari would have died standing next to Septimus, however, he didn't. He has been protecting some boy for the past fifteen years. What could have made him abandon his best friend in a time of his greatest need? Cue OhCrap to Miles' FridgeBrilliance on the matter.
* PainfulTransformation: Araris makes it clear that even with his pain-numbing abilities via metalcrafting, his ChromeChampion transformation is ''highly'' painful (and the Vord Queen at one point takes advantage of this by reducing the temperature of the room to make his metal skin frost over), but when you're fighting the Vord Queen in a last-ditch effort to stop her from destroying all of Alera, [[GodzillaThreshold you'll do it]].
* ThePenance: Part of his branding himself is to pay for his perceived cowardice and his Greatest Failures.
* PercussivePrevention: In order to save his brother, Sir Miles, from an almost certain death in a duel, Araris arranged it so that Miles broke his leg. Then Araris fought the duel in his stead and won.
* PosthumousCharacter: Died before the start of the series in the Marat war. That's what is commonly believed, anyway. The reality is that he's been living undercover as the slave Fade.
* ScarsAreForever: That brand on his face isn't going away any time soon.
* SecondLove: He takes up a romance with Isana long after Septimums's death.
* TheStoic: Not even Isana can pick up on his emotions most of the time. That's right, he's stoic on the outside ''and'' the inside.
* SurvivorGuilt: Araris feels guilt over not being at Septimus's side during First Calderon, though the reason he wasn't there is because he was following Septimus's direct orders to protect Isana.
* WigDressAccent: His look as Fade has long, unkempt hair, a slack and unintelligent expression, dulled speech, and the burn mark on his face to hide his distinctive features. It works well enough because people saw the coward's mark and looked no further. Even his brother dismissed the similarities.
* TheWorfEffect: Araris alternates between descriptions of his martial prowess and scenes of him getting roundly trounced. For example, Navaris nearly guts him in ''Captain's Fury'', and the Vord stun him by hitting him with a door toward the beginning of ''First Lord's Fury''.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Max]]
!Antillar "Max" Maximus

Illegitimate son of one of the most powerful High Lords, Max is Tavi's roommate at the Academy and a close personal friend. Lives life for the moment, as he doesn't expect to outlive his father. Powerful in Earthcrafting (especially the ability to induce lust), with a respectable skill in watercrafting as well. As one of the nobility, is also capable in all six elements. Seems to have fallen into the role of Tavi's primary sidekick.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Max:
* BastardAngst: Max is regularly abused by his stepmother Dorotea due to his bastard status. She sees him as a threat to Crassus's inheritance and arranges "accidents" for him as a result. She also had his mother murdered.
* BigBrotherInstinct: He sometimes took whippings for things Crassus did in order to protect him. Additionally, Tavi notes in ''Captain's Fury'' if Arnos tries removing Crassus by trumped up charges and threatens to kill him, if their father [[PapaWolf didn't beat him to it]], Max would surely call ''Juris Macto'' against Arnos and then "scatter Arnos' residual pieces over a quarter-mile of farmland."
* TheBigGuy: Of Tavi's group from the Academy.
* BoisterousBruiser: Very loud, a ladies man and the most talented furycrafter of Tavi's academy friends.
* TheCharmer: Very much so. He spends [[TwinThreesomeFantasy a night with a pair of twins]] at one point.
* CerebusRetcon: His status as TheHedonist comes across in a far darker light in ''Cursor's Fury'' once it's revealed that it's a side effect of him being fully aware of how his WickedStepmother will ensure he has a short and tragic life.
* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: His outwardly lecherous behavior belies a surprisingly intelligent and tactically-minded nature.
* DysfunctionalFamily: His father was largely absent fighting on the Shieldwall, leaving Max at the mercy of his stepmother [[WickedStepmother Dorotea]], who killed his mother and regularly had him beaten. After he stood up to her, she began arranging "accidents" for him. It was this that caused Max to run off and join the Legions.
* FlatWhat: His reaction to being told the catapult he just destroyed, and promised to help rebuild, was made with ''no'' crafting and the new one will be like that.
* HandsomeLech: Occasionally verging on ChivalrousPervert.
* HeroicBastard: A good man who doesn't resent his half-brother for his mistreatment at the hands of his WickedStepmother. He even took the blame for a few things to protect his half-brother in their youths.
* HealingHands: He isn't as skilled as other watercrafters, but he has enough skill for minor wounds.
* HiddenDepths: Despite his goofy demeanor, he often shows a surprisingly clever mind in terms of politics, furycrafting, and insight into one's character. For instance, he bluntly but honestly informs Tavi in ''First Lord's Fury'' that he's a better man than Gaius Sextus ever was, since Tavi wouldn't have simply condemned the civilians of Alera Imperia that couldn't be evacuated in time to death like Sextus did with his HeroicSacrifice. He also read up on advanced furycrafting theory in preparation for Tavi's expedition to Canea so as to make sure he and his friends were CrazyPrepared. Furthermore, he critiques Tavi during ''First Lord's Fury'' by noting how he hasn't been properly taking Kitai's opinions into account within their romance.
* InASingleBound: His talent for windcrafting isn't quite enough to enable {{Flight}} like true Knights Aeris, but he can still jump very high and ''really'' far, to the point that Tavi genuinely mistakes it for crafted flight the first time he witnesses it.
* LadykillerInLove: He is very interested in Cereus Veradis, who won't give him the time of day. It's implied that she's started to warm up to him after the end of the Vord War, though.
* LookingForLoveInAllTheWrongPlaces: In contrast to Tavi, who is set only on Kitai, Max goes through a series of one-night stands. He lampshades it.
* MeaningfulName: Antyllus, son of Marc Antony, who ''did'' die young because his father's death stripped him of his protection - because Gaius Octavian murdered him.
* MrFanservice: It's often mentioned that [[SheCleansUpNicely He Cleans Up Nicely]] and that his attractive & boisterous HeroicBuild often got him into bed with any woman he smiled at in the Academy.
* MoodWhiplash: Causes it just by wandering in and out of scenes. Especially when his past comes up, he goes from happy to dark and curt quickly.
* ParentalIssues: Well, he ''is'' a bastard son of a High Lord. Additionally, his stepmother had his mother killed and has been trying to do the same to Max for years in order to shore up her son Crassus' position as heir.
* ThePornomancer: His most-used application of earthcraft is to induce lust in women.
* ReallyGetsAround: His first scene in ''Academ's Fury'' has him having just enjoyed a night with twins. Whether they did a Twin-Threesome or he just took them in turns is unsaid, but Tavi finding him and dragging him from the bed of some young woman during their schooling wasn't uncommon.
* TheRival: Dorotea sees him as this to Crassus. In reality, he forms a friendlier rivalry with his step-brother as the series goes on.
* SadClown: A lot of his heroic lechery and clowning around is because he knows his stepmother's planning to murder him anyway, so he sees no point in being too serious about life.
* SarcasticDevotee: Despite his "[[CatchPhrase Sacred Right]]" to complain, Max would give his life for Tavi.
* SiblingYinYang: He and Crassus. Max is a fun-loving BoisterousBruiser. Crassus is quieter and more thoughtful. They become an effective team over the course of the series.
* SpareToTheThrone: While Max has no ambitions to take his father's position of High Lord, Dorotea is aware that should something happen to her Crassus, or if Max gets enough support from Antillus' Legions and the other High Lords, he could challenge Crassus for the position. She views his actions, growing prominent in the legions, becoming friends with the page of the First Lord, as a plot to get around his illegitimacy. So she seeks to kill him.
* VitriolicBestBuds: Max has this relationship with virtually everyone he meets, most notably Crassus, Tavi, Ehren, and even Kitai.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Crassus]]
!Antillus Crassus

Max's younger and legitimate half-brother, and their father's heir.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Crassus:
* TheAtoner: For both his mother's treachery and both his and his mother's abuse of his step-brother.
* BashBrothers: Literally. Max and Crassus together are nigh-on unstoppable.
* BigBrotherInstinct: An age-inverted case. In part out of guilt for having previously been cruel to him in childhood when he didn't know any better, Crassus is ''very'' defensive of Max, to the point where he point-blank '''obliterates''' the Canim charge on the First Aleran's position so as to make sure a critically injured Max can be sent back to the healers.
* BroughtDownToBadass: The Awakened Vord Queen badly cripples him in ''First Lord's Fury'', to the point where it's unknown if he'll ever be able to actually walk again without extensive physical therapy. However, he's still an incredibly deadly furycrafter, and both he & a nearly-unconscious Max successfully erect a stone barrier during ''a furystorm'' to help the First Aleran in the Battle of Third Calderon.
* AFatherToHisMen: Maybe moreso than Tavi; not quite as popular, perhaps, but less willing to put lives in danger. Still generally liked and respected.
* InTheBlood: Zig-zagged. Fidelias observes that he has inherited the best parts of the Kalarus bloodline (patience, intelligence, long-term planning), but not their infamous [[TheCaligula mental instability]].
* LockedOutOfTheLoop: He was just as shocked as Tavi, Kitai, and Max were by his mother's treachery (Crassus only came along with the First Aleran since he was hoping he could try and bury the hatchet with Max).
* OnlySaneMan: Considering his step-brother is not the most [[BoisterousBruiser far-thinking person]], Ehren is a somewhat cold spy, his boss's plans are all CrazyEnoughToWork, and his boss's [[ActionGirl lover]] does whatever the hell she wants to, Crassus is pretty much forced into this position.
* TheRival: To Max, in a more friendly way as the story progresses.
* SiblingYinYang: He and Max. Max is a fun-loving BoisterousBruiser. Crassus is quieter and more thoughtful. They become an effective team over the course of the series.
* SpareToTheThrone: After his uncle starts his war and his cousin joined in, Crassus ends up becoming a potential heir to the lands of Kalare. He is of high birth, his mother is Kalarus' sister, making him first in line to take over the lands once the war is over. It left him in a nice political situation where he couldn't be killed if Arnos tried to make him commit an legal but morally bankrupt order and Crassus refuses.
* TheStrategist: His main weakness is that he is too cautious (which nearly costs him dearly), but even that usually serves him well since he is able to sense traps more easily than anyone else. In pretty much every other respect he's an excellent leader and tactician.
* WhatTheHellHero: When he finds out that his mother is alive and Tavi never told him, he doesn't take it well and calls him out on it. By the epilogue, he is still refusing to speak to Tavi while undergoing physical therapy in Antillus, and it's unclear if their friendship will ever be mended.
[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:Durias]]
%%* FireForgedFriends: With Tavi.
%%* LesCollaborateurs: He was the first Aleran to side with the Canim as part of the Free Aleran Legion. However, considering that he's a former slave and is using the opportunity to strike back against his oppressors, he's a very sympathetic example who's a HeroAntagonist at his worst.
%%* OnlySaneMan: Among the group of Alerans and Canim Tavi leads to kill one of the two remaining Canea Vord Queens.
%%[[/folder]]

!Other Races

!!Marat
[[folder:Marat as a whole]]

A race of "barbarian" elf-like humanoids who bond with animals. They are nomadic after their cities were destroyed centuries ago by the Vord. They live in a series of tribes found in the eastern continent of Maratea, linked to Alera by the Calderon Valley.
----
!!Tropes that apply to the Marat:
* AfterTheEnd: They once had an advanced Alera-style civilization with large cities, but they were wiped out by the Vord and left with only a handful of "barbarian" survivors.
* AnimalMotifs: The Marat tribes are each based around a certain animal, and the animal's nature is typically reflected in the tribals' demeanor. The known tribal animals are [[CoolHorse horses]] (fast, deceptively dangerous, hard-working, and stoic), [[SavageWolves wolves]] (merciless, cold, savage, and excellent at teamwork), [[FeatheredFiend herdbane]] (treacherous, quick-witted, flighty, impulsive, and stubborn), [[HonorableElephant gargants]] (honorable, wise, slow to act but absolutely devastating and near-impossible to counter), and [[PantheraAwesome lions]] (though the latter never appear in the series). There was formerly a [[FantasticFoxes Fox]] Tribe, but the Wolf and Herdbane Tribes wiped them out several years prior to the start of the series.
* BadassNormal: [[DownplayedTrope In comparison to the other sentient races of Carna]], as their connection to their ''chala'' is not the exact same game changer as, say, the {{Telepathy}} and AnIcePerson powers of the Icemen, the BloodMagic of the Canim, and the ElementalPowers of the [[WitchSpecies Alerans]], but they're still incredibly dangerous and probably the second-most recurring threat to Alera in the present day before the series begins.
* BarbarianTribe: The Marat, who are divided into tribes based on their animal totems and live in the lands east of Alera, forsaking contact [[TheHorde except when they invade the bridging valley]].
* TheBeastmaster: The Marat are a ''race'' of these, split into tribes based on their individual chosen animal.
* BestialityIsDepraved: Subverted. While a common stereotype of the Marat from the Alerans is that they "lay with their beasts," it quickly becomes pretty clear that this doesn't happen and the relationship between ''chala'' and Marat is far more intimate and complex than what can be easily described.
-->'''Isana:''' (to Kitai) What you have with Tavi... it's like your people's other totems, yes? The way your father is close to his gargant, Walker.\\
'''Kitai:''' ([[FascinatingEyebrow raises her eyebrows]]) Doroga was not ''mating'' with Walker when last I knew. Walker would not stand for it.
* BestHerToBedHer: The Marat, as a culture, have this in terms of their courting rituals. The man must win over the woman he wants in some competition, but with the catch that the competetion is one of ''her'' choosing. So, if a male of the Wolf Tribe seeks to court a lady of the Horse Tribe and she doesn't reciprocate, she can challenge him to a horse race, knowing full well she has the clear advantage and will likely easily win, thus ending his pursuit of her.
* TheBet: Marat are willing to wager high stakes, such as alliances and the life choices of their children on major trials. Kitai bets her father she will win against Tavi and thus be now considered an adult and free to choose her own path in life.
* BondCreatures: The Marat can do this with any animal and call their Bond Creatures "chala"; they gain not just telepathic communication with their animal, but actually begin to gain some of their physical attributes.
* BrutalHonesty: Since the Marat didn't even have a concept of telling falsehoods until Tavi explained the idea to Doroga, most Marat are incredibly blunt and matter-of-fact. Sometimes this is PlayedForDrama (like with Doroga's cold assessment about the "Field of Fools" - a.k.a. the Battle of First Calderon - when he's talking to an angry Placidus Aria in ''Princeps' Fury''), but more often than not it's PlayedForLaughs (such as Doroga and Kitai always finding it hilarious to embarrass their Aleran friends/allies with the frankness with which they talk about sex, or Doroga mocking the ''juris macto'' he has been called upon to officiate).
* CombatByChampion: There are customs in Marat culture about two clans settling disputes by having two representatives fight each other. ''Furies of Calderon'' has two examples:
** With Doroga's help, Tavi invokes this to claim he and Fade aren't the enemies of the Marat. The combat is Tavi and Kitai's task to sneak into the Vord base[[note]]No one knew at the time it was that[[/note]] and steal a precious cure-all mushroom. Tavi realizes nothing in the rules for this challenge forbid a ''tie'' and gets Kitai to partner with him so they can both win if they each hand over the mushroom at the same time.
** Doroga stops Atsurak's attack for a time on Garrison by challenging him to this, declaring the later's actions are an abomination to the One.
* CueTheSun: The Marat hordes hold off attacking Aleran positions like Garrison until the sun rises, timing their first charge to right when the sun comes over the eastern horizon of Maratea. Apart from the religious symbolism the Marat ascribe to the sun, they do this because the rising sun will also be shining right in the eyes of the Garrison defenders and hamper their ability to see.
* DueToTheDead: Their tradition of eating the flesh of their enemies to gain their strength may be this for some. When Hashat killed some of Princeps Septimus' ''[[PraetorianGuard singulares]]'' in the Battle of First Calderon, she took their possessions and ate their hearts to honor them and take of their strength.
* DuelToTheDeath: These are often used to settle disputes between the Marat.
* EveryoneHasStandards: The Marat might practice cannibalism, but even ''they'' find the Aleran practice of slavery to be horrifying.
* EyeColorChange: Bonding with a ''chala'' makes their eyes become the eye color of the ''chala''.
* GenderEqualsBreed: Well, in a sense. Though background Marat characters are of both genders, all named characters of any tribe are the same gender. All named members of the Gargant, Wolf, and Herdbane tribes are male, while all named members of the Horse tribe are female.
* GenderIsNoObject: Kind of. Unlike Alera and (arguably) the ranges of Canea, which are both NoWomansLand, the Marat are shown to live in a society where gender isn't viewed with that much importance and strength & honor are seen as the most significant aspects of a person's worth.
* TheGhost: Both the Lion Tribe and a seventh, unnamed tribe are never encountered in the series.
* HorseArcher: Almost all of the members of the Horse Tribe are depicted as this, and also have ImprobableAimingSkills.
* HumanAliens:
** The Marat are almost indistinguishable from humans, with the only physical differences being a higher body temperature, pale skin, silver-white hair, longer canine teeth and canted eyes.
** The Marat are so human, in fact, that they and Alerans can interbreed and have viable offspring.
* ImAHumanitarian: The Marat eat their enemies to "partake of their strength," with some clans eating them ''while they are still alive''.
* InnateNightVision: Like the Canim, they can see in the dark infinitely better than Alerans can.
* InnocentFanserviceGirl: For the most part, adult Marat barely bother with clothes beyond a loincloth and a belt to hold weapons and tools in. When first brought to a Marat camp, the narration notes that Tavi sees a lot of things a young Aleran boy isn't supposed to see -- but really wants to. This causes some difficulty when Tavi recruits a host of female Marat riders as cavalry for the First Aleran.
* ItWasAGift: The Marat believe that if given a gift from a friend, it would disrespect that friend if they don't use it. So, Tavi invokes this with the Marat cavalry that comes to help by personally giving each rider armor and clothes, mostly so they will actually [[PleasePutSomeClothesOn cover up to Aleran standards]].
* LanguageEqualsThought: The Marat language does not have a word for "lying", and the closest the Marat can come up with is to say that somebody is making an 'intentional mistake'. In their culture, when one person accuses another of being mistaken the result is a DuelToTheDeath between parties to determine who is correct. Thus, they find the concept of somebody deliberately telling a falsehood confusing and pointless.
* LightningBruiser: Not only do the Marat have SuperStrength, but they're also superhumanly fast and agile, with Kitai walking across a thin rope in ''Academ's Fury'' about as easily as if she was instead walking across a thick crossbeam - and all in a third of the time it took Tavi to crawl across.
* NobleSavage: With the exception of the more overtly villainous Atsurak, the vast majority of the Marat are depicted as being in this archetype as the series goes on, most obviously evidenced with both Kitai and Doroga.
* NotSoDifferentRemark: Tavi, Kitai, Doroga, and Amara have all made multiple remarks lampshading how similar their peoples really are to one another. The Marat can be just as dishonorable, needlessly cruel, illogical, noble, heroic, and kind as any Aleran can. Both societies also contain very confusing and arcane rules that aren't immediately obvious, and have rather dark traditions that they refuse to give up on (the Aleran practice of slavery - at least until the epilogue of ''First Lord's Fury'' - and the Marat practice of cannibalism).
* {{Polyamory}}: It's implied that at least some of the Marat practice this. Kitai mentions to Tavi at one point how her father Doroga had bedded multiple women after her own mother's passing, and if the comments from Enna in the introduction to ''Captain's Fury'' are anything to go by, it's not seen as that unusual for Marat to "share" their lovers even among their family members.
* ThePowerOfTheSun: The Marat worship the sun, calling it "the One" and often swear by it when making oaths.
* ProudWarriorRace: They ''have'' to be one to survive on [[DeathWorld Carna]], after all.
* SideBet: In ''Furies of Calderon'' when Doroga and Atsurak are fighting in their DuelToTheDeath, several other Marat from different tribes were making wagers on the winner. It is another part of their culture.
* SuperSenses: Downplayed; Not only do they have InnateNightVision, but the Marat are frequently shown to have far more acute senses than Alerans. Tavi, who is Kitai's ''chala'', has gained these as consequence, with him mentioning that it's less that he suddenly has, for instance, excellent hearing, but that he can now more carefully pick out individual sounds and easily figure out their sources.
* SuperStrength: Marat are significantly stronger than most Alerans, even when they don't have a bond with animals that further enhances that strength. Kitai is able to break apart a chair she is tied to with a couple of violent jerks, and Doroga (whose ''chala'' is the massive gargant Walker) can lift a massive boulder and throw it as a weapon.
* TechnicolorEyes: Marat children, called by the gender-neutral term whelps, have multi-colored eyes until the time of their bonding. When they bond with their ''chala'', their totem, their eye color changes permanently to the eye color of their ''chala''.
* ThisIsNotMyLifeToTake: The Marat have strict hunting ethics. The prey of a person is that person's to kill, whether animal or person. If Tavi is after someone, the Marat wouldn't kill the person but would work to contain the person to allow Tavi to kill him. That said, if the person attacks, they will defend themselves.
* OurElvesAreDifferent: Marat are basically Neolithic Wood Elves, though the term is never explicitly used for them.
* PsychicLink: How the link between a Marat and their ''chala'' seems to work, with them taking on aspects of their respective BondCreatures. For instance, Doroga gains SuperStrength even for a Marat from his Gargant Walker, and Kitai eventually gains access to furycrafting from Tavi.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Kitai]]
!Kitai

Kitai is a woman of the Marat, and Tavi's frequent partner, foil, and love interest. Tough and athletic, like Tavi she has learned to rely on her wits to beat powerful Crafters. Like all Marat, she has bonded telepathically with a being of another species, but is unique in that her ''[[BondCreatures chala]]'' is sapient (namely, Tavi). As a result, she often feels isolated from both cultures. As Tavi develops his Furycrafting, she becomes able to share it through their bond.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Kitai:
* AcquiredPoisonImmunity: After her and Tavi's struggle against the Wax Forest in ''Furies of Calderon'', she's shown to have quickly recovered from the Wax Spiders' poison in ''Academ's Fury''.
* ActionGirl: She fights side-by side with Tavi, and is actually the more capable of the two at most physical activities.
* ActionGirlfriend: Frankly, Kitai's even more comfortable with the prospects of a fight than the trained spy, soldier and military officer she's in a romantic relationship with.
* {{Ambadassador}}: Becomes the Marat Ambassador to Alera after ''Academ's Fury.''
* BadassNormal: Like Tavi, she has no superhuman abilities to speak of for the first three books, but still manages to hold her own against Vord and Canim without much difficulty.
* BattleCouple: With Tavi.
* {{Bifauxnen}}: To the point that Tavi actually mistakes her for a man a couple of times before getting to know her better. By ''Cursor's Fury'', she's developed a more feminine figure, but still favors masculine clothes and stylings.
* CerebusCallback: Inverted. Her breaking down crying in ''Academ's Fury'' and bitterly noting that she wanted a horse instead of Tavi as her ''chala'' followed by him comforting her is one of the most emotional moments out of the entire series. However, as the series goes on and she becomes more comfortable with Tavi and accepts him as essentially her soulmate, her wanting a horse becomes a comedic RunningGag culminating in a particularly hilarious BrickJoke in ''Princeps' Fury''.
* CuteLittleFangs: Part of being a Marat.
* DeadpanSnarker: Kitai has very little respect for... well, much of anything, really.
* DefeatEqualsFriendship: Part of her initial admiration for Tavi stems from him besting her in the Trial of Wits in the Wax Forest.
* DidNotSeeThatComing: She was completely stunned by how Tavi actually came back to save her life from the Keepers in the Wax Forest, to the point where he sacrificed the Blessing of Night mushroom he needed to safeguard his family for ''her'' sake without thinking.
* DontThinkFeel: It's implied that her ability to grasp furycrafting just as quickly as Tavi despite her lack of Academy training is due to this trope. Kitai chides him for letting his wishes and emotions blind him from just letting his powers develop naturally.
* DualWielding: Her fighting style of choice.
* EmpoweredBadassNormal: As Tavi is her ''chala'', just as he becomes capable of First Lord-tier fury-crafting, so does she.
* FateWorseThanDeath: To her, losing Tavi but living herself would be this. For this reason, she wants to be with Tavi, in life or death. He feels the same way in regards to her.
* {{Foil}}: For Tavi. Both lost a parent when they were young because of another clan or noble attacking them. Both sought to be "normal" for their own culture, Tavi wants Furycrafting and Kitai wants a horse. She is basically a princess, as her father is headman of one tribe and representative of many others to the Alerans, and Tavi is, unknown to him, also a prince. They differ in that while both sport a dry wit, Kitai is relatively level-headed and Tavi is often treated like a lunatic for his ''very'' outside-the-box ideas.
* HumanityIsInsane: Routinely points out the irrationality of human society. Tavi generally agrees.
* GoodIsNotSoft: While she's a very friendly and honorable person, she's still at the end of the day a "barbarian" who practices cannibalism and lives with an almost sexual desire for combat and bloodshed.
* GreaterNeedThanMine: A variation. After the attack by the Awakened Vord Queen to kill their medics, Kitai awakens enough to see a dead Foss, and both Tavi and Crassus dying. Dorotea is also down from her collar. Does she save Tavi first, with her limited energy? No, she instead uses it to save Dorotea, knowing that the High Lady would have the power to save both Tavi and Crassus and others later in combat.
* IJustWantToBeNormal: [[RunningGag She wanted a horse.]]
* InHarmsWay: She joins Tavi in leading from the front many times. She even refuses to sit in the back when he finds out she is pregnant.
* InterspeciesFriendship: Besides Tavi, she develops several close relationships with several other Alerans. Outside of Max and Ehren, she is closest to Mistress, and later Tribune, Cymnea. Cymnea first ran the brothel and bathhouse among the camp followers and looked after Kitai when the later was in her "Gerta" disguise. She is also the one Kitai goes to to learn about Aleran Nobles' view on legitimate children and probably that she was pregnant with Tavi's child.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Kitai spends most of her time as a snarky {{Troll}} with little to no respect for anyone she meets, but has also shown herself to be a surprisingly selfless and thoughtful person with strong moral standards (such as her unmitigated disgust towards slavery).
* TheLancer: Again, to Tavi. She will support his crazy plans, but also call him out on both his stupidity/arrogance and when his pride is blinding him.
* LeParkour: Uses this a lot under her guise as "the Black Cat" in ''Academ's Fury''.
* LightningBruiser: Kitai not only has the natural SuperStrength of being a Marat, but is incredibly agile and showcases incredible reflexes in battle, to the point where she essentially ''dances'' around enemy Canim during the Battle of the Elinarch.
* [[LikeFatherLikeSon Like Mother Like Daughter]]: According to Doroga, her {{Tsundere}} actions towards a terrified Tavi is exactly how he and her mother first started out.
* LockedIntoStrangeness: Her bonding with Tavi gave her matching green eyes. It was seeing her eyes matching Tavi's that told her father and aunt what had happened between them.
* MindlinkMates: With Tavi thanks to her bonding with him. They can sense the other one's presence and general moods. And when he gains furycrafting, she gains it too, while Tavi gains enhanced senses and endurance from her.
* MyGirlIsASlut: Kitai is ''very'' proud of her sexual prowess and seems to be almost always game for her and Tavi to ravish each other. For his part, Tavi is far more bashful and easily embarrassed than she is, but is ultimately just as enthusiastic as she is regarding their "activities."
* NonPOVProtagonist: She shows up in every book, usually fights side-by-side with Tavi and gets tons of characterization, but we never see her thoughts aside from part of the introduction to ''Academ's Fury''.
* ObfuscatingDisability: For much of ''Cursor's Fury'' she follows Tavi as a camp follower but pretends to be blind and kind of dumb, just playing her flute outside the brothel. The blindness is to cover her matching green eyes and dirty hair to cover her white Marat hair.
* ObfuscatingStupidity: See the ObfuscatingDisability entry. It's also implied that she intentionally exaggerates the stereotypes typically associated with the Marat just to {{Troll}} those around her.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness:
** Easily her most vulnerable moment is when Tavi finally realizes that he is her ''chala'' during ''Academ's Fury''. In this scene, Kitai actually bursts into tears, sobbing about how confused she feels (partly due to her being newly bonded to Tavi, partly due to her being confused about the increasingly romantic feelings she's gaining for him) and about how miserably alone she feels since she's the first Marat to '''ever''' have a sapient entity - much less an ''Aleran'' - be her ''[[BondCreatures chala]]''.
** After she discovers the chains used for transporting slaves on ''The Slive'', she's atypically serious and visibly bitter/disgusted. Similarly, her realizing that she's pregnant in the final book causes her to become furious with Tavi for having been carrying on an informal relationship with her, as she doesn't want their child to have to deal with the major social stigmas that Alerans place on illegitimacy.
* OnlySaneMan: Despite (or, perhaps in part ''because of'') being a "barbarian princess," she's actually one of the sanest and most level-headed people in the series.
* PhantomThief: In ''Academ's Fury''. It's good practice for assisting with a jailbreak, and comes in handy again when they need to smuggle Varg out.
* PregnantBadass: Through all of the last book.
* PretendPrejudice: Half her lines are about how much Alerans suck. She still seems to get along with them pretty well.
%% * ProudWarriorRaceGirl: Like her father.
* SamusIsAGirl:
** Tavi takes an embarrassingly long time to figure out that Kitai's a girl when he first meets her.
** He does it ''again'' upon first encountering her "Black Hood" persona in ''Academ's Fury''.
* SarcasticDevotee: Kitai is unflinchingly loyal to Tavi at all times, after they grow closer. This in no way prevents her from snarking at his insecurities and failings, or questioning the sanity of some of his ideas.
* SayingTooMuch: When talking with Isana about their bond, Kitai corrects Isana's thought the bond is like watercraft-based empathy as it is much deeper and intimate. Isana realizes the only way Kitai could know what watercraft-based empathy felt like was if she experienced it personally. This leads Isana to realize Kitai, and by extension Tavi, can furycraft.
* SingleTargetSexuality: Aside from a joking comment concerning her appreciating the competence of High Lord Phrygia's heir in ''First Lord's Fury'', she and Tavi only have eyes for each other.
* StrongAndSkilled: She's much quicker and more coordinated in a fight than Tavi, and physically stronger than him too thanks to her Marat physiology. Gaining access to furycrafting enhances these attributes further, though Tavi still has the edge on her in intelligence.
* SuperStrength: When tied to a chair in ''Academ's Fury'', she breaks the chair on her own with barely any effort. She's also one of the few characters in the series that is accomplished in DualWielding, and repeatedly shows off incredible strength whenever pressed into a fight.
* TechnicolorEyes: In the first book, Kitai's eyes are described as "iridescent" – this is apparently a trait of all Marat "whelps" (i.e. those who haven't bonded to a totem yet). They [[EyeColorChange change]] permanently to green once she bonds to Tavi.
* TookALevelInBadass: As the series goes on, she becomes a more intelligent and skilled opponent even ''without'' gaining access to Tavi's potent furycrafting.
* TheUglyGuysHotDaughter: Doroga is a bit fugly, but still pretty cool. Kitai is often described in the later books as being exotically beautiful.
* {{Tsundere}}: Towards Tavi at first. Most notably, when she thanks him for having saved her life near the end of ''Furies of Calderon'' and how she won't forget it, the narration phrases it like she's giving him a ''threat''. Tavi, on his part, is utterly terrified and (more or less) cowering in his bed at the moment of her "thanking him."
* {{Troll}}: As alluded to above, she often exaggerates the stereotypes associated with the Marat just because she thinks everyone else's reaction to her is hilarious.
* UnsettlingGenderReveal: A non-sexual example. Tavi is very put-off when he discovers that she's a girl during their trial in the Wax Forest, while she's only first confused and then irritated by his awkwardness.
* VitriolicBestBuds: With Max and Ehren.
* WhatTheHellHero: Does this to Tavi whenever he does something stupid or immoral.
** In ''Captain's Fury'' his quiet acceptance of slavery in defending Demos having slavery chains gets some ire from her until he destroys the chains.
** His realizing his just having sex with her and not properly courting her in either of their cultures, could be used against them politically and her personally, being called the Prince's Whore by Citizens (Tavi is genuinely horrified when he realizes this, having been rather oblivious to what others were saying).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Doroga]]
!Doroga, Headman of the Gargant Tribe

Doroga is Kitai's father and one of the most important Marat chieftains. He is blunt and earthy, but anyone who speaks with him for long realizes that he is far more intelligent and canny than he appears (as his own daughter notes, he only ''looks'' stupid). Doroga is the first to recognize the menace the Vord pose to the world, remembering them from old Marat legends, and also sends Kitai to learn about the Alerans, bringing her into contact with Tavi again.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Doroga:
* ActionDad: While he rarely fights alongside his daughter (who can ''more'' than look after herself), he is a significant badass in his own right.
* BigDamnHeroes: On a regular basis.
* BigGood: After Atsurak's death, he's the most prominent leader seen among the Marat, and is a good friend of both Bernard and Tavi while being fervently dedicated to preventing the Vord from suceeding at destroying the world.
* TheBigGuy: His ''[[BondCreatures chala]]'' is a giant ground sloth. It goes with the territory.
* BoisterousBruiser: Doroga is always happy when finding a good fight.
* BondCreatures: His is with Walker the gargant.
* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: As Kitai puts it in the first book, the problem with Doroga is that he does not ''seem'' wise.
* CannotSpitItOut: Not Doroga himself, but he's fond of mocking Alerans (primarily Amara and Bernard) about their inability to talk candidly about sexual topics.
* CarryABigStick: His weapon of choice is a cudgel nearly too big for a High Lady with powerful earthcrafting to even ''lift''.
* CoolOldGuy: Hell yeah.
* DeadpanSnarker: Kitai had to get it from ''somewhere''. Particularly memorable was his editorializing when asked to mediate a ''[[DuelToTheDeath juris macto]]''.
* FireForgedFriends: With Bernard. So much so that Bernard is willing to challenge a Senator who had insulted Doroga.
-->'''Bernard:''' Senator. If you call my friend a liar one more time, [[TranquilFury I will take it badly]].\\
'''Arnos:''' Excuse me?\\
'''Bernard:''' I suggest you find an alternate shortsighted, egomaniacally ridiculous reason to blatantly, recklessly ignore an obvious threat to the Realm simply because you don't wish it to exist. If you cannot restrain yourself from base slander, I will be pleased to meet you in a ''[[DuelToTheDeath juris macto]]'' and personally rip your forked tongue from your head.
* GeniusBruiser: No one ''ever'' expects a huge, ugly, CoolOldGuy to be quite as canny as Doroga is. He's a decent tactician, learned to read and write surprisingly quickly, has pulled off at least one pretty good BatmanGambit, and has a tendency to function as all-purpose wisdom dispenser whenever Jim Butcher needs to give a character some advice.
* ItsPersonal: Part of his duel against Atsurak is motivated by him still feeling hatred over him having wiped out his wife's tribe (Clan Fox) several years ago.
* ItWasAGift: He is regularly seen wearing the tunic Gaius gave him at the end of the first book. That said, the sleeves were too small for his arms, so he had to remove them.
* PapaWolf: When he sees some alien bug attacking his daughter, he immediately grabs the nearest coffin-sized boulder and chucks it at it.
* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Oh yes. Doesn't mean he's not a realist.
* ShipperOnDeck: His closing remarks in ''Furies of Calderon'' has him say Tavi is "doomed", and he and his wife were just like Kitai and Tavi, which just involved [[BelligerentSexualTension clear disagreeing]].
* SleevesAreForWimps: He's so heavily muscled that he had to tear the ''legionare'''s tunic he wears to make it a vest; otherwise he couldn't get it on.
* SuperStrength: As a result of his chala being a Gargant. Most clearly demonstrated in the first book, where he picks up a coffin-sized boulder and throws it. And even manages to hit his target. Without hitting either Tavi or Kitai, who were very close to it. ''In the dark''.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Atsurak]]
!Atsurak, Headman of the Herdbane Tribe

Marat headman of the Herdbane tribe, and also a hordemaster (warleader of several tribes). Serves as one of the primary villains in ''Furies of Calderon''.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Atsurak:
* BigBadDuumvirate: Forms one with Fidelias for ''Furies of Calderon'', though he's ultimately just the puppet of the Aquitaines.
* DiscOneFinalBoss: The Aquitaines were pulling his strings.
* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Standard for the Marat.
* RewardedAsATraitorDeserves: Fidelias kills him quickly, to get crucial evidence back, as soon as he is no longer useful.
* SmugSnake: He's a bit smarter than he initially appears, getting the signet knife as an assurance against the Aquitaines stabbing him in the back. Unfortunately for him, he doesn't think any further than that and sorely underestimates Fidelias, who [[NoNonsenseNemesis cuts his throat at the first opportunity when the tide turns against them]].
* StarterVillain: Introduced in the first book to both show how skilled the Marat are in combat and how skilled the Aquitaines and Fidelias are at manipulating people.
* UnwittingPawn: See DiscOneFinalBoss above. The Aquitaines wanted to arrange a Marat invasion as an excuse to swoop in to the rescue and get Gaius deposed for incompetence. Doroga saw through them, but Atsurak was dumb enough to fall for it.
* WhiteHairBlackHeart: Like all Marat, he has white hair. He also attempts to sacrifice and eat an Aleran.
[[/folder]]

!!Canim
[[folder:Canim as a whole]]

A race of gigantic (seven feet tall is short for them) [[WolfMan humanoid wolves]]. They have access to BloodMagic and live in a series of advanced nation-states called "ranges" from the far-off western continent of Canea, though the range of Narash is the only one to have open diplomatic relations with Alera. The range of Shuar is also encountered in ''Princeps' Fury''.
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!!Tropes that apply to the Canim:
* BloodMagic: Their Ritualists' specialty. Incidentally, it only works with the blood of sentient beings.
* BoringYetPractical: Being that they don't have access to Aleran witchmen (specialized watercrafters that allow Aleran ships to traverse through the dangerous stretches of sea inhabited by [[KrakenAndLeviathan leviathans]]), the Canim just have ''very'' good nautical charts of the oceans pointing out where the leviathans' ranges are so they can stay far away.
** This is how Canim technology in general seems to work, as the BloodMagic practiced by the Ritualists does not have the same flexibility to it as Aleran furycrafting. Most of what they build is intended to be used by someone without any magic, and most often they're all the more useful for it (ranging from terrifyingly dangerous weapons like their massive "balest" crossbows to the simple pulley system used to water the rooftop gardens found in their steadholt-analogues).
* CanisMajor: Canim are, on average, ''very'' large.
* ConLang: "Canish," the Canim language. It is often described as sounding like something barely above a wolf's growl, to the point where Isana briefly thinks Tavi has lost his mind when talking to Varg at one point in ''Captain's Fury''. Admittedly, we don't see enough of it being used at once to see how it functions as an actual language, but from what can be inferred, body language plays a significantly more important role in it than it does with Aleran (English). Additionally, a good indicator of how much of a ProudWarriorRace the Canim are is that they have ''eleven'' different words to mean "enemy" (''[[WorthyOpponent gadara]]'' is the only term we learn among them).
* DittoAliens: Subverted. The Narashan Canim are the only Canim to have diplomatic relations with the Alerans and look like seven-foot-tall [[{{Wolfman}} Wolfmen]] with midnight-black fur, leading to most Alerans assuming that all Canim look like them. Later on, however, Tavi and company are introduced to the Shuaran Canim, another Canim subspecies who have tawny golden fur and less stocky bodies than that of the Narashans, along with comparatively slender snouts.
* DueToTheDead: The Canim sing a "Blood Song" for fallen warriors. Notably, Warriors who become Hunters have their Blood Songs sung when they make the transition, as it is meant to represent that their old life is over and their only duty now is to serve their Warmaster.
* EveryoneHasStandards: The Canim are a brutal and downright ruthless ProudWarriorRace that see most other races on Carna as inferior, but they abhor the slaughter of non-combatants in wartime and view the Aleran practice of slavery as utterly abominable.
* EndangeredSpecies: The Canim are utterly massacred by the Vord's conquest of Canea during the midpoint of the series, to the point where only around sixty thousand civilians of both Narash and Shuar were able to be evacuated to Alera (where they settle first around Antillus before having Tavi give over the Vord-conquered city of Parcia to them to help acknowledge them as an extant state under Aleran control).
* EnemyCivilWar: In a sense. As Tavi and Maestro Magnus later realize in ''Princeps' Fury'', one of the only reasons why the Alerans have been able to survive on Carna is because [[WeAREStrugglingTogether the many ranges of the Canim have been constantly bickering amongst themselves for most of history]], and the Alerans would've been stomped into mulch if the Canim had ever banded together and tried to wipe out the "demons."
* EnemiesEqualsGreatness: Inherent in the concept of ''gadara''. Having a strong and cunning opponent declare you ''gadara'' is a powerful testament to your own strength and cunning.
* ExpressiveEars: Canim primarily show emotion with their ears, and one of the tells that a Canim has been Taken is that their ears "don't look right."
* FantasticCasteSystem: Canim society is divided into a number of different castes, of which four are known:
** Warriors, who are ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin. They're the leaders of the Canim, and as such are the most commonly encountered in the series. Varg and Nasuag are Warriors.
** Ritualists (also called Bloodspeakers), who use BloodMagic to cast a wide variety of spells. For most of Canim history, they used their own blood. Recently, they've made a breakthrough by utilizing the blood of others. This has left them with more power, time for politics, and an itch to usurp the warriors as the leaders of the Canim. Sarl, Khral, and Morak are Ritualists.
** Makers, the "civilian" caste, composed of anyone who's not a Warrior, Ritualist, or Hunter. In theory, the other Castes exist to serve them, but power corrupts with Canim as much as it does with humans.
** Hunters, the Canim's spies and assassins. Sha, Nef, and Koh are Hunters.
* FantasticSlur: The Canim often refer to the Alerans as "demons" for their deadly ElementalPowers. Relatedly, if the young Canim rear guard Sarsh in ''Captain's Fury'' is anything to go by, calling an Aleran "monkey-boy" is also an appropriate insult.
* FriendlyEnemy: Combine it with WorthyOpponent and you get a ''gadara''. To the Canim, a ''gadara'' is more trustworthy than an ally, as while an ally can betray you, a ''gadara'' is still an enemy and thus one can expect violence from them. Generally, to be acknowledged as a ''gadara'', the two who declare themselves as such exchange swords in front of witnesses. Prior to the events of ''Captain's Fury'', no Canim had ever had an Aleran ''gadara'', until Tavi became one of these with both Nasaug and Varg.
* GangOfHats: A cultural example. Aside from the common FantasticCasteSystem, it's frequently mentioned that the various ranges of the Canim had certain trades that they liked to "specialize" in. For instance, the Narashan Canim are incredible sailors and expert engineers (according to Tavi, the Narashan Canim have forgotten more about sailing than the Alerans have ever learned), while the Shuaran Canim are masters at both siege warfare and mining.
* GenuineHumanHide: When facing opponents not of Canim make, the Ritualists seem to like wearing clothing made from the skins of their enemies. A good indicator of how StupidEvil a particular Ritualist is can be seen if they're still wearing the "pale leather cloaks" made of human skin around the Alerans even after an EnemyMine is formed between the two races. Meanwhile, the more heroic Ritualists, like Master Morak, wear makeshift armor formed out of scavenged Vord chitin.
* HumanSacrifice: Though it's not necessarily just Alerans, with Varg describing their BloodMagic with "The ritualists are not choosy about which blood they take, so long as it is from a reasoning being." Technically, they don't need to necessarily ''kill'' someone to use their blood in the spell, but part of the problem with Canim BloodMagic is that they essentially need to kill a sentient being to perform the '''really''' massive spells, especially if the spellcaster in question isn't that experienced. For reference, it's mentioned that the massive armada the Narashan Canim used to escape to Alera cost ''millions'' of Ritualists their lives.
* ItIsDehumanizing: Both the narration and Alerans regularly refer to them as "it," as Alerans often view Canim as little more than beasts. It's not until the ending of ''Cursor's Fury'', when Tavi is among the first Alerans to see a '''female''' Cane, that the narration starts using "he" and "she."
* InnateNightVision: Like the Marat, the Canim can see in the dark far better than any human can.
* KillerRabbit: Their young cubs look like [[PreciousPuppies adorable puppies]] with opposable thumbs. They can also tear someone's hand off with their fangs with sufficient force to dislocate their shoulder at just five years old.
* LanguageBarrier: An interesting example runs between them and the Alerans. Sure, they're capable of learning each others' ''verbal'' languages, but among Canim, body language speaks just as loudly, if not moreso. Most Alerans don't realize they have to ensure their posture and body language send the right messages when dealing with Canim. For instance, while to an Aleran a nod is a polite, civil greeting, to a Canim, lowering your chin means you're covering your throat and ready for a fight. Tavi manages to even earn the respect and acknowledgement of Varg at one point by biting his throat - the fact that he couldn't do anything because of his comparatively weak teeth and jaw muscles being irrelevant, as the physical gesture was all it took.
* LightningBruiser: Canim are as strong as earthcrafters, have incredibly high pain tolerance, and can move deceptively fast for their enormous size. Even their untrained civilian conscripts can be as dangerous as an Aleran legionnaire or three as a result, and Cane Warriors can tear through entire squads of opponents like a scythe through grain if a Knight isn't present to counter them.
* LogicalWeakness:
** As powerful as their BloodMagic can be, it's limited by the available quantity of blood to be used in their spells. That being said, sufficiently skilled Ritualists like Morak minimize this issue to the point where it's virtually irrelevant.
** The Canim's sheer size and the reach of their arms and weapons also makes them surprisingly vulnerable to the Alerans when they can get close. A tactic that the First Aleran develops is "shields high, swords low," in which the ''legionares'' raise their shields over their heads, advance in very close, and strike at the Canim's legs with the gladius.
* MundaneUtility: Downplayed. Unlike furycrafting, Canim BloodMagic [[CripplingOverspecialization seems to be primarily designed for use in combat]]. However, according to Varg, it also has its uses elsewhere, such as blessing bloodlines, improving fertility in Canim women, increasing the bounty of crops, and lessening the ravages of storms, droughts, and plagues. The last aspect in particular is implied to be the reason why, despite furies existing in Canea, no furystorms or wild furies are observed there by Tavi and other Alerans in ''[=Princeps' Fury=]''.
* NationalWeapon: The Narashan Canim seem to be associated with swords while the Shuarans use axes.
* NaturalWeapon: While they're not stupid enough to go into battle without being armed, even an unarmed Cane is a formidable challenge thanks to their sharp claws and fangs, superior senses, and SuperStrength.
* NoWomansLand: Implied, with it not being until the Narashan Canim Invasion of the Amaranth Vale in ''Cursor's Fury'' that the first female Cane is ever seen.
* TheNoseKnows: The Canim's sense of smell is incredibly sensitive, to the point where one of the tells of their kind being Taken by the Vord or not is their scent. Varg was also able to figure out that Tavi was related to both Gaius Sextus and Isana simply based on how his scent was similar to both of theirs.
* NotSoDifferentRemark: Both Tavi and Varg have made repeated musings on how similar their two peoples are to one another. Though the Canim often remark on the strangeness and complexity of Aleran culture, Canim culture itself has numerous ''faux pas'' and convoluted loopholes to navigate, which is acknowledged as the books progress.
* OurOrcsAreDifferent: Aside from a lack of green skin (what with them being a race of [[{{Wolfman}} Wolfmen]]), the Canim fulfill virtually every other trait seen in Blizzard Orcs, being large, powerful, warlike, having a culture predicated on honor, and a longstanding enmity with humanity.
* ProudWarriorRace: Though their philosophy is that the Warriors exist to serve the Makers, not the other way around. The view of the Warriors that everyone else is an enemy results in bizarre interactions, such as Varg being forced to use his Hunters as an intermediary to pass a warning to the Alerans, simply because as a Warrior he can't directly help his enemies, even if they are ''gadara.'' In ''Academ's Fury'', Varg frames helping Tavi find out about the Vord plot as an attempt to ensure that the Canim's eventual victory over Alera will be an honorable one on the field of battle rather than a victory through duplicity.
* Really700YearsOld: Canim live for hundreds of years. At one point Tavi gets to know a Cane who's ''nine hundred'' years old, who is elderly but certainly not decrepit.
* ReassignedToAntarctica: Downplayed. One of their policies is to assign overly aggressive young warriors to low-priority rear-area duties, in the hopes of them getting tempered and loosing their HotBlooded natures. Its success is pretty variable, since most young Canim are smart enough to realize that it's a humiliating punishment but still too boneheaded to realize ''why'' they're being punished in the first place.
* TheStoic: [[DownplayedTrope Downplayed]] in that due to them have a very different facial structure from Alerans, it can be quite difficult for Alerans to tell the emotional state of a Cane in comparison to, say, a Marat or even one of the Icemen.
* SuperStrength: An average Cane's strength is many magnitudes greater than that of both the average Aleran and even Marat, to the point where only the Knights Terra when calling upon their earthcrafting for strength are shown to be able to match them. Perhaps the most notable example of this is in ''Captain's Fury'', where after Tavi is only able to make a tiny bend in a heavy iron gate that has been furycrafted into the surrounding stone after calling upon all of his earthcrafting, Varg tears the gate out like the stone around it is made of wet clay and then tosses the gate overhead with only some effort.
* WarRefugees: Are reduced to this after the events of ''Princeps' Fury'', with the surviving Narashan and Shuaran Canim settling in the Aleran city of Parica (which had been previously taken over by the Vord).
* WeirdWeather: Lots of their spells seem to revolve around clouds and the weather, being able to cause vicious storms and summon a gale-force wind mighty enough to propel an entire armada of ships.
* {{Wolfman}}: An entire ''species'' of them.
* WorthyOpponent: The concept of ''gadara.'' The Canim view it with more significance than that of "friends" and even "allies" - A friend can disappoint you, and an ally can betray you. But a ''gadara''? Not only can they be counted on to always try and kill you, but they also have damn well ''earned'' being your enemy in the first place.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Varg]]
!Ambassador/Warmaster Varg

Varg is the [[{{Wolfman}} Canim]] Ambassador to Alera. He's a lot smarter than most Alerans give him and his kind credit for, and recognizes Tavi's capabilities fairly quickly. After getting [[TheStarscream double-crossed by his advisor]], he spends some time in Aleran prison until Tavi eventually breaks him out to get his aid.
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!!Tropes that apply to Varg:
* {{Ambadassador}}: Naturally, with him having taken on a Taken Canim Warrior offscreen in ''Academ's Fury'' while unarmed and still won in an utter CurbStompBattle.
* AscendedExtra: Downplayed; A brief segment of the introduction to ''First Lord's Fury'' is told from his perspective.
* BadassBoast: Gives one to one of the two surviving Canea Vord Queens in ''Princeps' Fury'' when he's the only one standing in the mouth of a Vord hive and preventing her escape right after Tavi's been wounded and two of his own Hunters were just killed facing off against her. Made all the more impressive when one remembers that at this point, Varg thinks that the Vord had wiped out his entire family except for his son Nasaug.
-->'''Varg:''' Come, creature. Come through me if you can.
* BigGood: The most prominent leader shown among the Canim of Narash (and eventually, all of the surviving Canim) and a close ''gadara'' of Tavi's. Even Nasaug defers to his leadership.
* BruiserWithASoftCenter: Seeing Varg drop the Warmaster act and be "grandpa" to his grandchildren in ''Princeps' Fury'' is adorable beyond belief.
* TheChessmaster: Both metaphorically and literally (in terms of him being quite skilled at ''ludus'', the Aleran equivalent to chess). He teaches some of these skills to Tavi (again, both in terms of how to be a more skilled manipulator and in terms of how to play ''ludus'' well).
* CuttingTheKnot: He knows Sarl is working with some unknown power to take down Gaius Sextus and the Alerans. He cannot abide by such underhanded and deceitful methods being done, especially since it isn't Sarl's place to act against code and ethics of their kind. So, he does the one thing he can do: Try to talk with Gaius about this matter, warning him of the attack. When Tavi gets in the way, so Varg won't see an incapacitated Gaius, Varg later just kidnaps Kitai to make Tavi follow him to the Vord's base.
* DeadpanSnarker: Has a rather dry sense of humor. For instance, he jokingly describes ''The Slive'' as "smelling like wet human" (which [[ActuallyPrettyFunny makes Tavi burst into laughter]]) in ''Captain's Fury'', and his reaction to eating one of the biscuits used as rations by Aleran sailors earlier in the same book is to give the Canim equivalent of a wince and tell Tavi that "Alerans must be hardier than I thought."
* EverybodyKnewAlready: [[invoked]] Apparently, Canim have a sense of smell strong enough to identify family relations. This means that he doesn't need to be told who Tavi's mother and grandfather are. In fact, [[YouDidntAsk Varg knew two books before Tavi did]]. This also creates some {{Fridge Brilliance}} when one thinks about the scene where they met – Tavi was bluffing only from his own perspective and not Varg's, pretending to be what he ''actually was''.
* GeniusBruiser: He's both one of the smartest and physically most powerful characters in the books – and considering [[GambitPileup this]] [[WorldOfBadass series]], that's saying something.
* LargeHam: When given a reason, he can be quite the melodramatic guy. What's his response to a BreakingSpeech by the Vord Queen stating people should just give up and surrender?
-->"I AM STILL THIRSTY! WHO WILL DRINK WITH ME?!"
* TheNicknamer: Gives Tavi the [[MeaningfulName Meaningful Nickname]] of "Tavar".
* OldSoldier: He is several centuries old by the Aleran calendar and only a hundred by the Cane calendar, but is one of the strongest and deadliest fighters in the series.
* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: He lapses into a HeroicBSOD upon learning that Shuar is the last surviving range left in Canea in ''Princeps' Fury'', meaning that his family is almost certainly dead. Tavi even describes how Varg takes on body language that he has never seen before in a Cane - specifically, body language such as loosely flopping ears and a listless tongue [[DespairEventHorizon that only speaks of utter tragedy, sorrow, and despair]]. It takes Tavi [[GetAHoldOfYourselfMan literally smacking him off of his saddle with a taurga prod]] to get him back into the proper mindset and refocus on the future.
* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Always seen wearing his armor and he enjoys a good fight. He also hates backstabbing and the trickery Sarl used with the Vord.
* ReallySevenHundredYearsOld: His exact age is never mentioned, but admits to having played ''ludus'' for at least 600 years.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Many times over.
** As the ambassador for the Canim, his job is to assess and watch the Alerans, to know when it is right and time to make war against them. When he suspects Sarl is doing something to his people and needs allies, he moves to bring the Alerans into it. First he tries directly seeing Gaius, which was stopped by Tavi, and later sends a message about a routine changing of his guards which shouldn't merit any notice to the First Lord to bring attention to some problem, and lastly he just kidnaps Kitai to make Tavi follow him.
** After he failed to stop Sarl's taking of his guards to become Taken by the Vord, he took responsibility for Sarl's actions and surrendered himself to Gaius's authority. He only left jail when it was advantageous to reclaiming power and reuniting swiftly with his people.
** As the Alerans are his enemies, he cannot as a rule, give them information outright. Instead, he passes on the information via his own network of spies both to help Tavi and to test the man. Will his warning of possible danger make Tavi honor just the letter of their agreement to return them to their homeland and turn around, or will Tavi stay and aide as he can.
** As violence is sometimes required on younger Canim, he holds nothing against Marcus needing to use some violence when the soldier learning the Aleran language attacks Marcus for correcting his grammar.
** He agrees with Tavi's idea to pass time on the journey from Alera to his homeland educating humans in the Canim language and Canim in the human language.
* SmartPeoplePlayChess: He helps teach Tavi how to play ''ludus''.
* SpannerInTheWorks: Topples the Vord plan to assassinate Gaius Sextus in ''Academ's Fury'' by CuttingTheKnot and physically dragging Tavi over to their nest. The Vord knew that he suspected them, but didn't think he'd be listened to because he was widely distrusted in the Capital.
* TheSpock: Varg loves combat and will engage in it easily but he, like many wiser Cane, can subvert his own violent tendencies with cold logical reasoning. He will take an insult or jibe from Tavi, his respected enemy, when Tavi has a point. This is best seen when Tavi deliberately kept from him the fact about 10,000 of his countrymen are being held by Shuaran Cane to be bled for the war against the Vord. Tavi needs Varg for the mission on hand to save Alerans, Shuaran Cane and his own countrymen, not running off to help his people in the short-run. Despite this, Varg is able to work through his rage and understand Tavi's manipulations and reasons. However, it is pointed out to Tavi, had any of his people been hurt or failed to be saved because of this subterfuge, Varg would have embraced his violent tendencies and killed his Aleran ''gadara''.
* WorthyOpponent: To Tavi, and the Alerans in general. The word is ''gadara'', which Varg starts using for Tavi after hearing that his son has recognized Tavi as such. The Canim actually prefer having Worthy Opponents to friends: they're people you can respect and even like, yet will always keep you on your toes. However, Tavi knows this only goes so far. If Varg senses he could get more out of withdrawing his support for Tavi, he will do it. Note that Nausag, Varg's son and protege, addresses him as ''gadara-sar'', meaning "Worthy Opponent-Father."
* YouDidntAsk: When Tavi goes to explain that Isana is actually his mother, Varg's response is basically, "Yes, I know. I can smell it." He then goes on to mention that he knew Tavi was the First Lord's grandson since he'd first met him; he just figured he shouldn't say anything, because who knew what those crazy Alerans were thinking and maybe it was normal.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Nasaug]]
!Warmaster Nasaug

Leader of the Canim warriors who arrive in Alera with Sarl, Nasaug is honorable yet ruthless and above all a highly competent military commander. He is one of Tavi's primary antagonists (albeit a [[WorthyOpponent respected one]]) throughout the middle part of the series.
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!!Tropes that apply to Nasaug:
* AntiVillain: He's only on Alera because he has to be, but since he's here, he's going to do the best job he can.
* AskAStupidQuestion: PlayedForDrama; Him looking at Tavi like he's an utter moron for honestly asking why Alerans aren't seen as trustworthy is meant to show [[HumansAreTheRealMonsters how much of a cynical and bitter view that Nasaug has gained regarding humanity]].
* AuthorityEqualsAsskicking: Oh, yes. During the nightime attack on the First Aleran in ''Cursor's Fury'', he's described as [[SingleStrokeBattle killing three legionaries with one stroke of his sword]].
* BadassFamily: Varg is his father.
* BigBadDuumvirate: ''Technically'' forms one with both Kalarus and Senator Arnos for ''Captain's Fury'', but he's such an AntiVillain that he's only really a BigBad-type character in the sense that he's opposing the Aleran Legions.
* TheChessmaster: Carefully manipulates events so that Sarl gets killed and his ritualist cronies are disgraced, leaving him free to pursue his own objectives.
* DefeatMeansFriendship: Gains a newfound respect for Tavi after he surrenders to the Aleran in ''Captain's Fury''.
* DragonAscendant: Takes over complete command of the Canim forces in the Amaranth Vale after Sarl dies.
* DragonWithAnAgenda: To Sarl at first. Lampshaded later by Varg, who describes his actions at the beginning of the war as having "fed Sarl to the Tavar." When it's put like that, you almost feel ''sorry'' for the poor bastard.
* EveryoneHasStandards: He's absolutely horrified by the slaughter of innocent Aleran steadholts by the Senatorial Guard's mercenary cavalry, to the point where he vows that he will avenge the fallen civilians by competely wiping out all of the remaining Aleran Legions in the Vale to make sure that Senator Arnos gets his just desserts.
* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: Gains this viewpoint after being exposed to the Aleran practice of slavery in the Amaranth Vale.
* {{Hypocrite}}: While he shows nothing but utter disgust for the Aleran practice of slavery, his ostensible ally of Kalarus is the most notorious practitioner of slavery in the entire Realm. Downplayed in that it was more ''Sarl'' and Kalarus that seem to have been in an actual alliance, with Nasaug's association with Kalarus seeming to be informal at best (i.e., as long as the other exists, they secure the other's flank from the Alerans' counter-attacks).
* NoHistoricalFiguresWereHarmed: His invasion of Alera, status as a strategic genius, and matching wits with Tavi under the guise of "Rufus Scipio" paints him as being the Canim equivalent of [[UsefulNotes/PunicWars Hannibal Barca]].
* PragmaticVillainy: Downplayed since his pragmatism is also in part motivated by the fact that Nasaug still has actual moral standards. As noted by Tavi, his strategy of leaving columns of Aleran refugees alone as they flee from the warzone is actually brilliant since it means that the Alerans have to use more resources caring for the refugees that they could instead use to crush Nasaug's forces, giving him more time to consolidate and ready for battle.
* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Like his father.
* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Gives a ''vicious'' one to Tavi in ''Captain's Fury'' when the latter is trying to arrange a peace between the Canim and Alerans near the beginning of the novel. Notably, Tavi is briefly taken aback and even silently admits [[VillainHasAPoint that Nasaug isn't exactly wrong]] FromACertainPointOfView.
-->'''Nasaug:''' Captain. You are ''[[WorthyOpponent gadara]]''. But not all Alerans are.\\
'''Tavi:''' "Gadara"? Enemy?\\
'''Nasaug:''' Not the same. You have my respect. But you do not lead them. You do not speak in the voice of Gaius Sextus. And your people have proven to us, many times, that they are not worthy of respect.\\
'''Tavi:''' (confused) How so?\\
'''Nasaug:''' ([[AskAStupidQuestion stares at Tavi like he's an idiot]]) [[HumansAreTheRealMonsters Because you are monsters.]] You are worse than starving beasts. You slaughter one another by the thousands over matters of leadership. Your people crush those without power and take whatsoever they wish from them for the simple reason that they can. ([[DeathGlare glares at Tavi with utter contempt]]) You betray, enslave, and brutalize your own kind, Aleran. Your ''own.'' [[ArmorPiercingQuestion If you treat your own folk this way, what fool could possibly believe you would act any differently toward mine?]]
* SmartPeoplePlayChess: Including with the enemy commander in the middle of a bloody battle. According to Tavi, he won because Nasaug's game on the skyboard isn't as strong as it could be, and he also initially underestimated Tavi.
* TheStarscream: Actively works against Sarl to betray him and seize power. This is good for the Canim, because Nasaug is exponentially more competent than Sarl. This is bad for the Alerans for the exact same reason, although it's somewhat negated since Nasuag is also a ReasonableAuthorityFigure and can be negotiated with.
* TheStrategist: A very gifted one who matches Tavi for two years. His first gambit in ''Cursor's Fury'' not only aims to allow his warriors reclaim the fallen on the battlefield while playing ludus with Tavi, but show Tavi a means of defeating Sarl and delays the next engagement between the two sides long enough for night to come which would help his forces, who can see far better in low-light situations than the Alerans can.
* WorthyOpponent: To Tavi, and also to Varg, his mentor and father.
* XanatosGambit: As Tavi observes, his strategies ''never'' serve just a single purpose. He sees to it that he has many paths to a victory.
[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:Lararl]]
%%[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:Tarsh]]
%%* BastardBastard: It's mentioned that he's a ChildBornOfRape from a [[EvilSorcerer corrupt Ritualist]] and a young female Cane who was barely older than a pup. He's also a complete and utter asshole.
%%[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:Anag]]
%%* HypercompetentSidekick: To Tarsh. As Tarsh was KickedUpstairs by sending him to be in charge of Molvar (far enough away from the primary battlefront between Shuar and the Vord that he wouldn't cause that much trouble), Anag was assigned to him to help mitigate Tarsh's incompetence and help whip his fellow soldiers into proper shape.
%%[[/folder]]

[[folder:Sha]]
!Hunter Sha

Leader of the Narashan Canim's Hunters (basically the Canim equivalent to Cursors), having come over to assist Sarl and Nasaug in their attempted conquest of Alera. Has UndyingLoyalty towards both Varg and Nasaug, but also recognizes the weaknesses behind the Canim's ProudWarriorRace code of honor and works with Fidelias behind the scenes to help account for this as the Alerans and Canim form an EnemyMine against the Vord.
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* DidntSeeThatComing: He looks over at Tavi in visible shock after he [[NiceGuy sincerely thanks him and his fellow Hunters for saving his life]] in the Canea Vord Queen's hive. Keep in mind how most Canim regard Alerans as murder-happy "[[HumansAreTheRealMonsters demons]]" who enslave their own people ForTheEvulz.
* {{Foil}}: To Fidelias, to the point where Fidelias himself thinks of Sha as his opposite number among the Canim. Both are dangerously clever spies who have UndyingLoyalty to their home nations and peoples, and are willing to work outside of their peoples' codes of honor (informal or otherwise) for what they see as the common good. However, Fidelias is a WildCard who temporarily joined the rebellious Aquitaines before he turned back to serving the Crown while Sha has maintained his loyalty to Nasaug (and, by extension, Narash as a whole) for the entirety of the series.
* FriendlyEnemy: With the Alerans, most clearly shown in the OddFriendship he develops with Fidelias.
* LastOfHisKind: He is seemingly the only surviving Hunter remaining among the Canim as of ''First Lord's Fury''.
* MasterOfDisguise: He and his fellow Hunters are able to get the drop on the second Canea Vord Queen by dressing themselves up in makeshift suits made of scavenged Vord chitin. The disguises are skilled enough to fool her and her guards for just long enough that they can kill her PraetorianGuard and leave her open for Varg and Tavi to finish her off.
* NotAfraidToDie: He had his [[DueToTheDead blood song]] already sung for him when he became a Hunter countless years ago.
* OddFriendship: "Friendship" is admittedly pushing it a bit, but he and Fidelias form a remarkable camraderie together as they work behind the scenes to help preserve the Canim-Aleran alliance (most notably in how they sneakily kill Khral and hide his body so that the more reasonable Master Marok can take control of the surviving Canim Ritualists).
* OldMaster: [[invoked]] WordOfGod has all but stated that he will be helping train a new generation of Hunters and Cursors alongside Ehren and Fidelias at the new Academy.
* ShootTheDog: The literal purpose of the Hunters is to perform the necessary duties that a Warmaster or other Canim Warleader cannot bring themselves to actually do.
* StealthExpert: Despite being a {{Wolfman}} several feet taller than the average Aleran, he's still one to the level that impresses even ''Kitai''.
* StealthHiBye: One of his specialties as a Hunter. Most impressively, Sha and his compatriots Nef and Koh are able to get on top of Lararl's fortress in the dark during a torrential rainstorm without being noticed by Kitai.
* ThoseTwoGuys: Or, "Those Three Guys," to be more accurate; initially, he's only seen in the company of his other two Hunters, Nef and Koh. After they're both killed in the battle against one of the Canean Vord Queens, he's mostly seen either on his own or in the company of Fidelias.
* UndyingLoyalty: To his masters Varg and Nasaug. He literally tells Tavi at one point that his job is to die in the most efficient way possible for his leaders.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Sarl]]
!Bloodspeaker Sarl

A Canim ritualist, who is both Varg's political rival and (initially, at least) his office aid. Undermines Varg by seeking alliances behind his back including with the Vord.
----
!!Tropes that apply to Sarl:
* BigBadDuumvirate: Forms one with the Vord Queens (both the Awakened and Calderon specimens) for ''Academ's Fury'', and one with Kalarus in both ''Academ's Fury'' and ''Cursor's Fury''.
* BigBadWannabe: He wanted to be the BigBad [[HeroOfAnotherStory Of Another Story]] for the Canim. His plan was the Ritualists to take over the Canim lands and overthrow the Warrior caste. A solid EvilPlan overall... and then he just had to accept help from the Vord Queen, who got him what he wanted and then quickly turned on him, driving him out of the Canim continent. By the time he becomes the main story's BigBad in ''Cursor's Fury'', he's desperately fleeing from her with what amounts to a refugee fleet. He's also no match for the Warrior Canim leader Nasuag ''or'' Tavi, and dies after getting OutGambitted.
* BloodMagic: Like all ritualists. And like more corrupted ones, he uses the blood of sacrificed people and not his own stock.
* BurningTheShips: The first thing he does upon landing in Alera is burn the ships they arrived in. This way, Nasaug's forces would be commited to the fight, and would have no means of retreat or escape.
* DirtyCoward: Tavi knows it, and uses it to make him look like an idiot.
* EvilSorcerer: An evil SmugSnake who uses BloodMagic.
* IHaveYourWife: Sarl manages to force Nasaug and the warrior caste into following him over to Alera by kidnapping several families and holding them hostage.
* GeneralFailure: A downplayed example, but still evident. Strategically, Sarl is relatively solid. His overall plan to defeat the First Aleran in ''Cursor's Fury'' failed solely because one of his agents got pickpocketed by pure happenstance for reasons totally unrelated to suspicion or being discovered, and even then he almost totally crippled the army's chain of leadership in a single attack. Tactically, he's a complete mess. Misunderstanding his own race's basic advantages in combat and holding back a brilliant planner like Nasaug are just two examples.
* GoneHorriblyRight: He sought power to destroy Varg and the Alerans. He allied himself with the Vord and even helped the Queen escape to his lands in order to re-cultivate their power. The Vord helped him take over- and then started [[HordeOfAlienLocusts doing what the Vord do]].
* TheNoseKnows: Like all Cane, Sarl has an exceptional sense of smell. He was even capable of recalling the scent of a messenger boy he only met once two years prior, now standing before him in the guise of someone else. It almost gets Tavi killed, had he not lucked into the one item that could've possibly saved him from Sarl's magic.
* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: Subverted. Sarl's a Cane and therefore you'd ''expect'' him to be one of these, but he's really a coward who only fights after Tavi goads him into it because not going after Tavi when called a coward would make him lose major support.
* SmugSnake: Treats the Makers like trash, insults Nasaug and Tavi and generally believes himself to be far more powerful and intelligent than he really is.
* TheStarscream: To Varg.
* TreacherousAdvisor: Though Varg saw through him pretty well except for that bit with the Vord.
* UnskilledButStrong: Using other people's blood for his casting means that he has access to a lot of power but he tends to be sloppy in his application. While the attacks work (except for the fact that Tavi usually has a way of surviving the ones directed at ''him''), Morak gets similar results using much less power. Sarl tends to favor big flashy attacks that use a lot more power than is required so as to make himself look more intimidating that he really is.
* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: Thanks to his idiocy, the WarRefugees of the Shuaran and Narashan Canim are literally all that remains of their entire ''species'' after the Vord obliterated the entire continent of Canea.
* UnwittingPawn: The Vord played him for a fool, using him to get into a position where they could easily conquer the continent of Canea after initially appearing to be his ally. He also had his death easily arranged for him by Nasaug.
* VillainTeamup: Him and High Lord Kalarus. Together, their combined power and ingenuity almost brought Alera itself to its knees. High Lord Kalarus stationed his armies at key positions scattered around the country, and arranged for them to strike multiple fronts at the exact same time. Their signal? Sarl using his ritual magic to turn the entire country's skies red, filling them with acidic tentacle monsters to stop aerial communication, transport, and preventing Gaius from observing anything that happens in the realm. On Sarl's end, Kalarus' sister is stationed within the one Legion standing between him and the country. He calls a lightning strike down upon all the officers of the Legion while they're having a meeting, planning to leave the sister alive using a gem given to her that makes her immune to his magics. She would take command of the Legion as the sole surviving officer and retreat from the area, allowing Sarl's forces a solid defensible foothold in Alera. Presumably, Kalarus would then take most of Alera for himself while leaving Sarl to have his colony in the Amaranth Vale. The scope of this teamup takes the entire cast by surprise.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Morak]]
!Master Morak

One of the few decent Canim ritualists, who believes in the following the Old Way of using one's own blood for magic instead of another being's.
----
* AuthorityEqualsAsskicking: Shows the difference between a master ritualist and a novice when he beats a younger ritualist in a quick draw of spells and makes the Cane literally vomit up his guts. He doesn't even bother to ''turn around''.
* BadassBoast: "Clouds of acid are for amateurs!"
** To clarify for those not quite as familiar with the series, clouds of acid are a common Ritualist combat spell, which has seen ubiquitous use throughout the series. Morak, on the other hand, creates clouds of ''{{Eldritch Abomination}}s''.
* BloodMagic: Like all Canim Ritualists. Morak, however, only uses his own blood.
* DeadpanSnarker: Has his moments of dry wit, such as below when he's using an acid spell to help give the Free Aleran and First Aleran Legions time to strengthen their defenses.
-->'''Fidelias:''' (mildly) [[CallBack I thought you said 'clouds of acid were for amateurs'?]]\\
'''Marok:''' That was not a cloud. It was a ''wall''. (closes his eyes in irritation) [[UngratefulBastard Whining demon]]. You are ''welcome.''
* GoodOldWays: He uses his own blood to fuel his spells, not the blood of others like Sarl does. This is the original way the Bloodspeakers worked, before they discovered that they could use others' blood.
* GoodScarsEvilScars: His arms are covered with self-inflicted scars. For him (and other ritualists) his are a ''good'' thing, as it shows that they use their own blood instead of others' for their magic.
* GrumpyOldMan: Gives off this vibe. Most notably, his reaction to having to deal with an upstart adversarial Ritualist is not one of fear or surprise, but resigned annoyance and impatience.
* KlingonPromotion: A variation. He didn't kill Khral, the leader of the Ritualists just left on a sacred pilgrimage before Tavi's trial[[note]]In truth, Sha and Fidelias killed him and hid his remains, making it look like he just went off on the journey[[/note]]. As none of of his lieutenants wanted to step up in fear of Khral's return and displeasure at them taking his spot, the job fell to Morak.
* SelfHarm: Believes in harming only himself for his magic and incidentally carries around a lot of bandages as a consequence of that.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Was willing to listen to Tavi's side of the story involving the deaths of the makers and his solution to the problem and killed the Canim trying to use their deaths as an excuse to attack the Alerans.
* WeakButSkilled: He only uses his own blood for his casting, so he has a very low pool of energy. However, he's very efficient at using what he has compared to, say, Sarl, who just throws around power wildly. At one point, he's capable of causing another Cane to puke up his guts using only a couple drops of blood.
* WeHaveReserves: A variation. He is more than willing to give the Alerans some aide as it puts their forces more on the front line while protecting his fellow Canim. To his Aleran allies, this is considered a good thing.
* WorthyOpponent: To Varg. They are each other's ''gadara''.
[[/folder]]

%%[[folder:Khral]]
%%* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: To Sarl.
%%[[/folder]]

!!The Icemen
[[folder:The Icemen as a whole]]

Called the "Gadrim-ha" by the Marat, the Icemen are a race of "savage" and mysterious Bigfoot-esque humanoids organized into a series of wandering tribes. They live in the lands of the frozen north far beyond the rest of the Realm, but regularly travel south and attack the Alerans. As such, the Alerans have built the massive defensive construct known as the "Shieldwall" to protect the rest of the Realm from their raids, and have had the two Shield Cities of Antillus and Phrygia warring with the Icemen for as long as recorded history.
----
!!Tropes that apply to the Icemen:
* [[invoked]] AlternativeCharacterInterpretation: Discussed in ''Princeps' Fury''. When Isana is looking at the great Shieldwall while on the northern side of the wall (the direction that the Icemen would regularly see), she muses how to the Icemen, it looks more like a prison wall cutting them off from the rest of the outside world than the immense defensive construct that the Alerans see it as.
* AnIcePerson: Doroga specifically comments on the incorrect Aleran theory that the Icemen follow the winter storms south when attacking the Shield Cities — in reality, the storms ''follow the Icemen.''
* BigfootSasquatchAndYeti: The descriptions given of the Icemen in first ''Furies of Calderon'' and later ''Princeps’ Fury'' shows that they strongly resemble the archetypal Bigfoot.
* ADayInTheLimelight: Isana's subplot in ''Princeps' Fury'' finally shines a light on the Icemen as she tries to arrange a lasting peace between Alerans and Icemen so that the Shield Legions can be sent south to help defend the Realm from the Vord.
* TheEmpath: Their watercrafting is so powerful that they can communicate among themselves with no speech at all, using their empathy-based telepathy instead. Their intense enmity for the Alerans comes largely from the mix of their water-based empathy with the minor firecrafting that Alerans use to stay warm in the cold northern regions. When fire and water are mixed it creates feelings of anxiety and anger, so just by being next to each other the two sides feed each other's hatred.
* EnemyMine: They sign an armisitice with the Alerans so that the Shield Legions can go south and fight their mutual enemy of the Vord. Additionally, the Icemen also help Tavi rapidly transport his forces along the Shieldwall.
* {{Expy}}: In many ways, they're one for the Forest People from ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles''. Both are an enigmatic race of {{Bigfoot}}-inspired humanoids with a long-lasting tradition of magic, and live far from human civilization while still operating under a more or less human psychology.
* FeelingOppressedByTheirExistence: Basically the root of the war between them and the Alerans. The Alerans won't retreat because they're sure the Icemen will take advantage of them leaving their lands unguarded, while the Icemen won't back down because they feel that they'll be invaded if they don't drive the Alerans far enough back from the Shieldwall. The reason this happens is because the interaction between the Icemen's natural water-based empathic magic and Aleran cold-resisting firecrafting encourages feelings of agression, anxiety, and anger, poisoning all relationships until Isana (a non-firecrafter) came along and figured out what was going on.
* ForeverWar: They've been fighting with the Alerans for at least three centuries.
* HatePlague: The use of both Aleran firecrafting (which ''legionares'' constantly use to stay warm) and the watercrafting-based telepathy of the Icemen in close proximity to each other sets up a mutually inimical resonance that makes both parties grouchy and uncomfortable. Since this happens every time Alerans and Icemen are in proximity, a tense first meeting where the Alerans were already scared of the Icemen helped spark a multi-century ForeverWar.
* HiveMind[=/=]MindHive: They exist somewhere between the two. Their empath powers are on such a level that they can freely express their emotions to each other, countless individual minds networked together into one united semblance of will.
* HufflepuffHouse: While the Icemen have been at war with Alera more continually than any of the other nonhuman factions ([[ForeverWar for about 300 years]] ''solid''), their attacks are confined to a particular region in the far north where the POV characters almost never go, meaning they get comparatively little pagetime and development.
* MasterOfOneMagic: They're an entire species of "only" watercrafters. This means that their empath abilities are so advanced that they're effectively all ''telepaths'', and their military movements are heralded by devastating blizzards.
* TheNicknamer: Given that none of then speak Aleran as their native language, they have a wide variety of terms they use to describe certain characters or locations. As an example, High Lord Antillus Raucus is called "Fire Sword".
* NotAlwaysEvil: After being built up for almost the entire series as vicious, savage barbarians that only desire to kill any innocent Aleran in sight, they turn out to be a very thoughtful, calm, and naturally peaceful people who are just as sickened and weary of the ForeverWar they've been waging as the Alerans are.
* NotSoDifferentRemark: The entire plotline involving the Icemen and Alerans in ''Princeps' Fury'' is mostly about Isana and her coterie realizing that their peoples are far more similar than either world like to admit. Both appear to be barbaric animals to the other but are far less villainous than they initially appear, and have fought each other for so long that most have long-since given up any sense of hope for a lasting peace being achieved between the two peoples.
* OurCryptidsAreMoreMysterious: They're basically an entire race of telepathic Yetis.
* OutOfFocus: It's not until the fifth book in this six-book series that a ''single'' Iceman appears on page, though they're very important to the overall story.
* QuantityVsQuality: A weird case where the Icemen follow ''both''. As a whole, the Icemen rely on the latter since they cannot hope to match the united might of an Aleran Legion except when in sufficient numbers. However, individually the Icemen fall into the former by far, being that any single Iceman can easily kill any single ''legionare'' without much effort thanks to their AnIcePerson powers, SuperStrength, {{Telepathy}}, and stamina.
* TheQuietOne: The Icemen very rarely communicate verbally with others, since their immense empath powers basically makes verbal communication moot.
* SuperStrength: They all showcase immense strength. When Isana first meets a group of Icemen in ''Princeps' Fury'', she notices that as crude as their weapons look, they're all designed to be so thick and heavy that an Aleran could only equip and use them by calling upon earthcrafting.
* {{Telepathy}}: In a sense. The Icemen are such master watercrafters that they can easily project and recieve their emotions to one another, to the point where they only seem to speak when talking to someone who can't access their "mental network". Below is a good example of how it is shown to work when Isana and her cotiere are meeting with the Icemen to arrange a peace treaty after their "war-chief" Red Waters cuts Isana's cheek with his spear and the "peace-chief" Sunset gets angry at him:
-->[Sunset] [[DeathGlare turned his gaze on Red Waters]], and Isana felt a sudden, uncomfortably sharp spike of disapproval. Red Waters evidently felt it even more intensely than Isana had. He swayed slightly under the force of it and took a step back to stand beside Big Shoulders again, radiating a mild sense of chagrin. Amusement flowed around the circle of Icemen.\\
The Icemen, Isana realized, had just had their own version of the scene that had played out between her and Aria. Sunset had slapped Red Waters down -- and the entire time, they ''never spoke.'' They hardly ''moved.''
[[/folder]]


!!The Vord
[[folder:The Vord as a whole]]

A HordeOfAlienLocusts accidentally awakened from the Wax Forest at the beginning of the series.
----
!!Tropes that apply to the Vord:
* AdaptiveAbility: The Vord Queens will design new types of Vord to adjust to and counter whatever their enemies are currently throwing at them, as noted below under EvilEvolves.
* AliensAreBastards: They're extraterrestrial in origin according to the author, and have a literal genetic imperative to wipe out all life that isn't fellow Vord.
* AlienBlood: The Vord bleed a greenish mucus in lieu of actual blood.
* AlienInvasion: [[invoked]] As per WordOfGod, they're actually aliens and the Alerans & Marat just don't have the proper words for "impact crater" in their vocabulary to describe the Wax Forest when referring to it as their origin.
* AlwaysChaoticEvil: Inverted. They are a very ''lawful'' evil, especially the current Queen who would honor deals struck with her. The others under her rule are also lawful, justified by being part of a HiveMind.
* AnimalisticAbomination: The Vord types that aren't designed to specifically resemble their foes (like the vordknights resembling the Knights Aeris of Alera and the various Cane-forms resembling the Canim) will typically take forms that resemble a nightmarish parody of the local wildlife. To wit, Tavi spots huge frog-like Vord leaping at the fortifications of Shuar in ''Princeps' Fury'', while a plurality of Vord forces in Alera are described as resembling garim (basically Komodo Dragons), gorillas, and praying mantises.
* ArchEnemy: The Marat hold a special level of hatred towards them since the Vord originally caused the collapse of the Marat's ancient Alera-esque advanced civilization (the {{Barbarian Tribe}}s encountered in the present are TheRemnant of that civilization's few survivors).
* BigBad: Of the whole series.
* BigCreepyCrawlies: Vord not controlling an Aleran, Canim, Marat, etc. are usually gigantic bugs. Queens, of course, excepted.
* BlueAndOrangeMorality: As evidenced below with their Queens, the Vord simply do ''not'' get basic psychology and operate on a fundamentally different wavelength. To the Vord, the only importance is the propagation of their species - Anything else, like art, individuality, or basic morality are considered to be deluded lunancies shared by non-Vord.
* BugWar: The Vord conquered virtually all of Canea [[GreatOffscreenWar between the second and fifth novels]], and their invasion of Alera proper is the primary focus of the last two novels in the series.
* CaptainErsatz: They are directly inspired by the Zerg of ''VideoGame/StarCraft'' fame.
* CivilizationDestroyer: Basically the Vord's entire hat as a species. They destroyed the original Marat civilization prior to the series, reducing the survivors to a barbarian existence. They also wipe out all but ''two'' of the Canim's ranges - namely, Shuar and the few surviving refugees of Narash - and would've done the same to the Alerans if not for the protagonists.
* DarkIsEvil: No matter whatever form they take, the Vord are almost always coverd in the same midnight-black chitin.
* DeathOfPersonality: There is no coming back for someone once they've been [[PuppeteerParasite Taken]] by the Vord. After being Taken, the individual in question will display even less humanity than one of Kalarus' [[LaserGuidedTykeBomb Immortals]].
* EvilEvolves: The queens constantly breeds new forms to adapt to changing conditions and correct any weaknesses. Face them with Knights Aeris? You get flying vordknights. Face them with a legion shieldwall? You get mantis warriors that attack over the top of it. Need to take down nine foot tall wolfmen? You get bigger and bulkier soldiers. Face them with defensive fortifications? You get giant vordbulks that can plow through them.
* EvilIsNotAToy: As the rebellious Canim ritualists learned to the detriment of their whole continent and nearly everyone on it, the Vord are single-mindedly focused on being the only living things alive. The Queens are smart enough to play nice in order to establish a power base, but the instant they judge themselves capable of reliably taking you out, they ''will''.
* HiveMind: Vord are only intelligent around a Vord Queen. Otherwise, they act just like any other animal.
* HoistByHisOwnPetard: A ''very'' downplayed case, but their AdaptiveAbility bites them in the rear in both ''Princeps' Fury'' and ''First Lord's Fury''. For the former, the fact that the Vord made themselves look like the Canim they were fighting made it so that the ''croach'' had to grow in a thicker variation to support their weight without breaking... making it remarkably easy for the lighter Alerans to sneak across it when they go to assassinate one of the Canea Queens near the end of the novel. And for the latter, the Aleran Vord [[CripplingOverspecialization who have specialized themselves to fight against Aleran shieldwalls]] find themselves ''completely'' out of their depth and subjected to multiple {{Curb Stomp Battle}}s when they're forced to face Canim cavalry charges.
* HordeOfAlienLocusts: It's even implied that they came from space (unlike the other residents of Carna, who are "lost travelers" that came through wormholes by accident and were deposited here).
* HostileTerraforming: The Vord spread the alien ''croach'' with them wherever they go. It chokes out and "digests" anything organic placed inside of it, and turns it into a nutrient-rich slurry that other Vord feed on between battles. As a result, it kills off all other life around it. Notably, it's subtly implied that the Vord themselves are ultimately "just" a bioweapon created by a more advanced hostile species for the purpose of xenoforming a planet into a state more suitable to colonize themselves.
* InsectoidAliens: They're a HordeOfAlienLocusts whose HiveMind is governed by powerful Queens (who are also {{Explosive Breeder}}s), and practice both WeHaveReserves and ZergRush in their battle tactics (albeit with more thought given to strategy than what is typically seen elsewhere). Additionally, the majority of the Vord strongly resemble a certain insect/anthropod/crustacean species from Earth/Carna, as evidenced with the Takers (scorpions), wax spiders (spiders, [[CaptainObvious natch]]), vordknights (dragonflies), "basic" warriors (lobsters/crabs), hornets (hornets/wasps), and mantis warriors (praying mantises).
* KeystoneArmy: Get rid of the Queen and you get rid of their threat. This normally wouldn't be too much of a problem since the Queens can reproduce quickly, but of the three non-sterile Queens, the Maratea and Calderon Queens are dealt with in ''Academ's Fury'' and the Awakened Queen can't produce children whenever she wishes because they inevitably try to kill her, and she eventually dies in the last book without any more heirs. Both Canea Queens are sterile, and one gets killed off in ''Princeps' Fury'', meaning that the Vord are now permanently this.
* KnightOfCerebus: Virtually ''nothing'' is funny about them, and the story always takes a darker turn whenever the Vord appear.
* LightIsNotGood: The wax spiders (also known as the "Keepers") are a subspecies of Vord specifically tasked with tending to and spreading the ''croach'', and are covered in bone-white chitin.
* MalignantPlotTumor: They're introduced in a SideQuest in the first book and appear to be dealt with as a threat in the second – only to come back with a vengeance later on, now on the verge of world domination.
* MeatMoss: The ''croach'' is the equivalent to the Zerg's creep. It serves as a security measure (if you break its surface, the Vord come running), sustenance (digesting organic matter into a nutrient soup for the Vord to feed on), and reproduction (almost all new Vord are spawned from it).
* MonstrousCannibalism: When the Awakened Queen's store of ''croach'' in the ruins of Riva is destroyed by Tavi's forces, she suddenly finds her remaining forces in the Calderon Valley severely malnourished and at threat of starvation. Her solution? Have her surviving forces devour the weakest and most severely injured tenth of her remaining forces. Both Isana and even ''[[TheSociopath Invidia]]'' [[EveryoneHasStandards are visibly disturbed by this display of the Queen's sheer callousness towards her own kind]].
* OurZombiesAreDifferent: Those Taken by the Vord become Parasite Zombies. Most disturbingly, NoKillLikeOverkill typically has to be applied to them since despite ostensibly being {{Technically Living Zombie}}s, Taken ''will'' always fight their way through injuries that would otherwise completely cripple or kill the original host.
* OutsideGenreFoe: The Vord would come straight out of science fiction -- almost literally, as the Wax Forest is an impact crater from the spaceship that they crash-landed on Carna according to WordOfGod -- but find themselves overrunning the very high fantasy Carna.
* PuppeteerParasite: Their Takers crawl into your mouth and take control of your body.
* RaisingTheSteaks: As evidenced by a Taken grass lion Amara is forced to kill in ''Princeps' Fury'', the Vord aren't just limited to sentient life in terms of Taken infection.
* RogueDrone: An interesting variant. Because Tavi and Kitai first "awoke" the Awakened Vord Queen in ''Furies of Calderon'', the non-Queen Vord treat the two of them as other members of TheHorde and ignore them unless they directly attack them. Additionally, the Awakened Queen becoming IntriguedByHumanity causes her to be viewed as a Rogue Drone by her own Daughter Queens, all of whom try to kill her.
* SicklyGreenGlow: The ''croach'' is often described as glowing with an unsettling greenish light.
* SlayingMantis: After being stymied by Aleran shieldwalls in the previous book, the Awakened Queen comes up with "mantis warriors," which basically resemble praying mantises but the size of a man. With their scythe-like claws, mantis warriors can reach right over a shieldwall and strike at the unprotected soldiers behind it.
* SurprisinglySuddenDeath:
** Once the Queen dies, most of the horde simply starves to death in about six months.
** Averted with the Vord the Awakened Queen gave to the Alerans who surrendered to her and asked for amnesty. They are mentioned as continuing to follow her commands to protect the holders even after her death, to the point where they're seen defending the surrendered Alerans from "wild" Vord.
* TheVirus: Vord Takers basically turn their victims into zombies.
* WorfHadTheFlu: The Awakened Vord Queen offhandedly mentions in ''First Lord's Fury'' to Invidia that Carna should've been completely consumed by the Vord in less than five years after she was accidentally awakened by Tavi and Kitai in the Wax Forest. However, her being IntriguedByHumanity has caused each of her Daughter Queens to try and kill her, with her being seen as "defective." This severely crippled the Vord's strategic abilities since the Awakened Queen couldn't rapidly create multiple Daughter Queens to properly manage their forces, ultimately giving Alera and her newfound allies a fighting chance.
* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Big on this. It actually bites them in the rear with Brencis Minoris, since he keeps the secret of making powerful slave collars for the Vord because he knows that he's dead if he's not indispensable. Thus, when Amara kills him, the Vord are out a powerful asset that they can't possibly replace.
* ZergRush: Although, oddly enough, ''without'' HollywoodTactics.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Vord Queen]]
!Vord Queen

[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin The leader(s) of the Vord]]. There are a few distinct Queens: The Awakened Queen is the one woken up by Tavi and Kitai; she absorbed some of their blood, mutating her and making her into a nonstandard Queen. The Calderon Queen tries to attack Calderon Valley in ''Academ's Fury'', with a previous Queen in Maratea having been already wiped out by an alliance of Marat tribes just prior to the novel's events. The three Canea Queens are the ones born in Canea, with one previously killed by the Canim before the events of ''Princeps' Fury''. The Junior Queen is born in Alera during the events of ''First Lord's Fury''. Every single one of them is absolutely terrifying.
----
!!Tropes that apply to the Vord Queen:
* AbsurdlySharpClaws: Their claws are sharp enough to carve cleanly through Legion steel and Canim hide alike.
* AlasPoorVillain: The death of the Awakened Vord Queen is surprisingly tragic, with her bitterly admitting that the emotional bonds humanity forms with each other makes them superior to the Vord before she quietly tries to FaceDeathWithDignity.
* AlienBlood: It's greenish.
* AntiVillain: The Awakened Queen only attacks Alera because that is the only way she believes she will be able to survive the inevitable war with her daughters. She spends most of her time trying to understand Aleran customs. Tavi actually feels sorry for killing her and assures her that he will make it as quick as possible.
* AuthorityEqualsAsskicking: She is the leader of the Vord and the most powerful of them. The Awakened Queen is also far more powerful than the Junior Queens.
* BareHandedBladeBlock: Fast and durable enough to pull this off, though they tend to favor deflecting [[AbsurdlySharpBlade metalcrafter swords]] rather than blocking them outright. At one point in ''Princeps' Fury'', the Awakened Queen blocks a knife thrust from Amara this way, then proceeds to stab the Cursor ''with her own dagger'' a moment later.
* BatmanGambit:
** The Queen that attacks the Calderon Valley in ''Academ's Fury'' anticipates where the sick and wounded after battle will be put so she could send in her body-snatching Takers and claim more of them.
** The Awakened Queen is fully aware Invidia will betray her. It is simply a part of her nature, like a slive has poison, and so allows her to plot behind her back to bring in most of the remaining High Lords and Ladies to kill her knowing she would turn on them to secure herself a better defense against the remaining Citizenry. She just set a trap to benefit her in the end.
* BigBad: Of the series as a whole, though they're only really that prominent in the second half of the series. The Awakened Queen herself is the direct Big Bad for all of ''First Lord's Fury''.
* BigBadDuumvirate: It varies depending on the book. The Awakened and Calderon Queens are the ultimate antagonists of ''Academ's Fury'', but both Kalarus and Sarl are the main instigators of that novel's events. Meanwhile, the two surviving Canea Queens and the Awakened Queens share the role of BigBad for ''Princeps' Fury''.
* BishonenLine: When we first see the Awakened Queen, she's buggy and "unfinished" looking. When we meet the Calderon Queen, she looks like an Aleran girl with fangs, chitinous skin, and glowing eyes. The Canea Queen looks like a green version of Kitai with some of Tavi's features. The final form of the Awakened Queen looks almost human - except for her BlackEyesOfEvil.
* BlackEyesOfEvil: One of the things that gives away the Awakened Queen as nonhuman.
* CreepyChild: The Awakened Queen has extremely creepy childlike aspects to her. As Invidia notes, she's only nine years old, and her "doll house" is a steadholt deep in Vord territory she created to [[IntriguedByHumanity try and comprehend humanity]]. It's just as scary as it sounds.
* CuteMonsterGirl: [[invoked]] She ''tries'', [[UncannyValley but...]]
* DeathByIrony: The Vord Queens believe that individuality is a weakness. The second Canea Queen is killed by a gambit that only works ''because'' of individuality (namely, using Tavi as a stalking horse).
* DyingRace: The prime Vord Queen creates sterile "daughters" deliberately because they inevitably rise up and attempt to destroy her. With her death in the final book, the only queen left, in Canea, does not have the ability to produce more.
* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes:
** The first Queen does care about Invidia, the Junior Queens, and her horde, even if the other Queens would kill her for having such affections.
** The Canea Queen loves and is loyal the first Queen as a mother, even if she will attempt to kill her.
* EvilCannotComprehendGood: All the Vord Queens, to greater or lesser degrees.
** The Calderon Queen dies because while she can ''technically'' understand the concept of sacrifice, she can't understand why anyone would actually ''do'' it. This means she leaves herself completely open to a suicide attack from Amara (who has decided that her death would be worth it to save Alera from the Queen's threat).
** The Awakened Queen is pretty self-aware about her troubles with comprehending good, and ''tries'' to understand it (like by observing human daily life and performing social rituals like a communal dinner), but she doesn't succeed too much.
** The Junior Queen from ''First Lord's Fury'' fits this to a T. When she's told that the dinner they're participating in is for the purpose of [[ThePowerOfFriendship creating bonds between them]], she wonders [[LiteralMinded why they need restraints]].
* ExplosiveBreeder: A single Queen can apparently produce ''hundreds of thousands'' of offspring in a matter of months--and not just generic "worker" creatures, but whole strains of specialized minions that incorporate different physical traits and tactics to battle specific threats.
* FaceDeathWithDignity: The Awakened Vord Queen has this surprisingly poignant statement - "I know how a Vord Queen dies. I am ready."
* FanDisservice: The Vord Queens go naked except for cloaks, but their HumanoidAbomination nature means that their nakedness just serves to make them seem even more alien.
* FlyingBrick: The Awakened Queen takes all the [[LightningBruiser inherent physical power]] of the other queens and adds in the ability to fly via windcrafting. Her first fight scene sees her [[CurbStompBattle completely annihilate]] [[PersonOfMassDestruction High Lord Rhodes]] in a midair battle, though she might've also had some help from Invidia.
* GeniusBruiser: One of the scariest things about the Vord Queens in general is how incredibly ''smart'' they are. The first Queen is so intelligent she's almost like a Zerg version of [[Franchise/StarWars Grand Admiral Thrawn]].
* TheGhost: The Maratea Queen and both the first and third Canea Queens are never seen.
* GlowingEyesOfDoom: The Calderon Queen is described as featuring these.
* GreenSkinnedSpaceBabe: Both the Awakened and Canea Queens look like a green-skinned, black-eyed cross between Kitai and Tavi's aunt. Unsurprising since Kitai and Tavi's blood is what awoke the former. However, it's deconstructed in that their physical attractiveness is completely lost due to their [[BlueAndOrangeMorality fundamentally alien psychology]].
* HiveQueen: [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Well, duh.]]
* HumanityIsInfectious: The primary/Awakened Vord Queen. This makes her defective in the eyes of her daughters, who are genetically programmed to kill her for deviating from the Vord standard.
* InnocentFanserviceGirl: [[invoked]] Subverted - The fact that the Awakened Queen and her Daughter Queens tend to go around totally nude except for cloaks just highlights how [[UncannyValley unsettling]] they really are.
* IntriguedByHumanity: The Awakened Queen is quite interested in the bonds humans form between each other and spends most of ''First Lord's Fury'' trying to study them.
* LastOfHerKind: By the end of ''First Lord's Fury'', the only Vord Queen left in Carna is the second Canea Queen. She's sterile, so there will never be any more.
* JabbaTableManners: The Junior Queen. This is meant to emphasize how different the Awakened Queen is from standard Queens -- while the Awakened Queen eats daintily, the Junior Queen just grabs portions of food and stuffs them in her mouth.
* LethalChef: The Awakened Queen doesn't really ''get'' cooking. It doesn't help that she's trying to cook ''croach'', which is only technically edible.
-->'''Invidia:''' On a scale of one to ten, ten being the most revolting and one being almost edible, I believe that rating this recipe would [[BrokeTheRatingScale require the use of exponents]].
* LightningBruiser: Each of the Queens are this. Swords barely scratch them. They are as fast as a decent Windcrafter, and as strong as an Earthcrafter. And that's ''before'' the Awakened Queen learns how to furycraft.
* LiteralMinded: The Junior Queen, partially because she ReallyWasBornYesterday, and partially because EvilCannotComprehendGood.
* MadeOfIron: Balest bolts bounce off the Awakened Queen's skin. Balest bolts can, for reference, go all the way through two heavily armored ''legionares''. It ultimately takes the raging furystorm of '''two''' Great Furies - Garados and Thana - to wear her down to the point where Tavi can kill her.
* MamaBear: Pretty much everything the Awakened Queen does in the entire series is purely because she has an overwhelming ''need'' to make sure her "children" are safe.
* OffingTheOffspring: The Awakened Queen kills the Junior Queen. Of course, the Junior Queen attacked first. And according to the Awakened Queen, this has happened with every single one of her daughters unless she's gotten out of Dodge fast enough to avoid them.
* OverarchingVillain:
** She or the threat of her was something brought up in most every book before her major assault on Alera. Her presence in the first book was only as a larval creature Tavi had just woken up by accident.
** Tavi plans on using the last Canea Queen as this in a GenghisGambit to help bring together the good races of Alera into a better and stronger union.
* PetTheDog: When the Awakened Queen is in a position to completely exterminate humanity, she sets aside areas where they can live freely, safely and under their own government, the only condition being they let her sterilise them. Considering her Vord instincts are continuously screaming at her to immediately wipe out every non-Vord, the fact that she's willing to slowly establish Vord dominance by preventing new human life rather than immediately causing death and suffering to those who are already alive says a lot about her. Note that while this does indeed weaken the resistance against her she has the numbers to crush them completely if she wanted to, and this offer is not a trick; she fully keeps her word to them to the point that even after she's killed, the Vord she assigned to protect the surrendered humans continue to do so, even from other Vord.
* PragmaticVillainy: The Awakened Queen spares many cities and settlements in Alera rather than destroy them outright, but only because she knows she'll waste time and resources fighting those people. Instead she allows them to live, with the only price being that they are not allowed to bear children.
* PreMortemOneLiner: The Awakened Vord Queen calmly muses aloud that "Individuality is counter-productive" before tearing open Rook's throat once it becomes clear that the former bloodcrow is of no more use to the Vord.
* PsychicPowers: All Vord Queens have them, with mind reading and [[MasterOfIllusion illusion crafting]] as specialties.
* PsychopathicManchild: The Awakened Vord Queen is shown to be this in ''First Lord's Fury''. Not only is Tavi utterly sickened when he realizes that she's taking an active ''delight'' in savaging the First Aleran's camp, but she frequently goes into fits of childish rage whenever she's arguing with either Isana or Invidia.
* QuizzicalTilt: Whenever the Queens encounter examples of heroism in the face of their alien ruthlessness, they're often described as tilting their heads in confusion "like a hawk fascinated with the lunacy of their prey."
* RapunzelHair: The "Green Kitai"-form Canea Queen has waist-length white hair.
* SealedEvilInACan: Who gets unsealed accidentally by Tavi and Kitai towards the end of the first book, thus setting the stage for the rest of the series.
* SpockSpeak: Part of what makes the Vord Queens so creepy is the chillingly clinical and LiteralMinded tone they use when talking to not-Vord, as if it's meant to serve as yet another reminder of what an OutsideGenreFoe they are. For instance, the Awakened Queen seems to be only able to refer to her nightly meals with Isana and Invidia as "the dinner ritual," she calls parents "progenitors," and love is "emotional non-material bonds."
* SelfMadeOrphan: All of the Daughter Vord Queens will try to kill the original, their mother, because she isn't pure Vord.
* VillainBall: While she's otherwise brilliant, the Awakened Queen holds it briefly by not searching Araris carefully enough, which led to him being able to ward off the numbing effect of her prison: because of his hidden dagger, he could use metalcrafting and stay alert while stuck in the ''croach''.
* WaifFu: The Awakened Queen is able to tear through nine-foot tall Canim warriors, shred a Legion shieldwall, and take on the mightiest crafters in Alera with casual ease. She's also only about as tall as Tavi and Kitai.
* WeHaveReserves: The Queens will throw hundreds if not thousands of forces against a foe because they can create more so quickly. It is even weaponized in Canea when the horde constantly attacking the last surviving Canim range of Shuar for so long was a distraction while she had another group slowly dig a tunnel into the settlement.
[[/folder]]

!Other
[[folder:Alera]]
!Alera

Probably the greatest and most powerful fury in existence, and effectively the incarnation of the entire continent. She's taken a fondness to the House of Gaius, acting as a SpiritAdvisor to them and causing effects on a massive scale when they ask and it suits her. However, she will not directly aid one side over another; using her power effectively relies on setting up situations where some outside influence helps your side more than the other.
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!!Tropes that apply to Alera:
* ActuallyPrettyFunny: She's clearly trying not to laugh when she learns of an angry Kitai's LysistrataGambit towards Tavi in the prologue of ''First Lord's Fury''.
* AlasPoorVillain: A variant. While they were never actually "villains," she expresses sorrow to Tavi for his ancestors having wiped out the other sapient races on the continent before the present day, referring to them as having been just "lost travellers" like the Romans/Alerans/humans, Marat, Canim, Icemen, and Vord all are.
* AllPowerfulBystander: The most powerful fury to have ever existed, but she never gets directly involved or favors one side over the other in the many conflicts of her world. Though she does favor the House of Gaius, she only helps them when they politely ask her and doing so suits her.
* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Technically all furies would be this for the elements of nature, but Alera's the most human and comprehensible of them, having interacted with the House of Gaius for centuries and is essentially the embodiment of the entire continent of Alera.
* BishonenLine: Of the Great Furies we see, Kalus is a giant volcano, Garados is a hideous mountain beast, and Thana is a vast, gaunt shape composed of countless windmanes. Alera, on the other hand, is very humanlike until you get to her eyes.
* DeathOfPersonality: As noted below, the destruction of her mosaic in Alera Imperia causes her personality that was formed by the ancient Alerans to slowly disintegrate over the course of the last novel.
* KaleidoscopeEyes: They cycle through just about every color imaginable. But then, she's a PhysicalGod...
* LackOfEmpathy: She's amiable enough, but the combined factors of being an impossibly old PhysicalGod, and not even a human one at that, mean she does not process thoughts and emotions the same way others do. She understands them well enough, though.
* LaserGuidedKarma: In a particularly twisted sense. As she muses below, her DeathOfPersonality is partly justified since she (in the form of furystorms and the like) had killed more of humanity than anything else in the history of Carna before the Vord came.
* TheMentor: Her TrainingFromHell is all that gets Tavi anywhere near normal skill levels at crafting. She also grimly notifies of him of the terrifyingly high stakes and dangerous situations he will have to deal with along with trying to best educate him on how to deal with them (to the point where she outright asks him if he's ready to do [[WellIntentionedExtremist whatever it takes]] to finally wipe out the Vord and save his people).
* MentorOccupationalHazard: Sextus' destruction of Alera Imperia destroyed the mosaic that called her into being as a discrete existence, and she's already fading away when she first meets Tavi. Despite this, she continues helping Tavi and Kitai throughout the book and she doesn't die until after the epilogue.
* MightMakesRight: While she can put on a facade of empathy and kindness, being a NatureSpirit means that [[NatureIsNotNice she has this mindset as a fundamental part of her psychology]]. See below when she and Tavi are describing how the original Gaius Primus bloodily conquered the other Alerans after a millennia of strife and suffering to bring about the Realm:
-->'''Alera:''' Laws. Justice. Art. The pursuit of knowledge. It all came from a single source.\\
'''Tavi:''' ''(sickened)'' The ability to kill.\\
'''Alera:''' ''(grimly nods)'' Strength is the first virtue. This is not a pleasant fact. Its distastefulness does not alter the truth that without strength to protect them, all other virtues are ephemeral, ultimately meaningless.
* MrExposition: A variant, with her helping inform Tavi of some details related to the Romans who would go on to eventually found Alera along with various facets of furycrafting.
* PhysicalGod: Her power is effectively unlimited. However, actually using them can have continent-wide and potentially worldwide repercussions. For example, requesting moderate weather in one part of the realm spins off violent storms elsewhere. Tavi's stunt with the ice-sledding ships will cause a global ice age a few thousand years in the future.
-->Until the Vord came, I and my kin had killed more Alerans than any foe your folk had ever faced.
* SpiritAdvisor: To the House of Gaius. She usually limits herself to just the ruling First Lord, but because of Tavi's bond with Kitai and him telling Kitai before being told not to, she extends her advice to Kitai.
* TechnicolorEyes: Her eyes are described as resembling constantly-changing mineral veins rather than anything else.
* TimeAbyss: She is '''billions''' of years old, although she's only existed as herself for as long as the mosaic in Gaius Sextus' meditation chamber has. Really, she might be one of the foremost examples of this trope: "Entire species come and go, like the sparks rising from a campfire."
[[/folder]]
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Races]]
[[/index]]

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