A Phoenix, husband to Princess Loudin. In Five Hundred Years After, Paarfi of Roundwood depicts Lord Vernoi movingly as a concerned husband and father, anxiously approaching Khaavren in the street. He asks Khaavren if Loudin should be sent out of the city, given that, to the right, she is "great with child" (and so ought not to travel much if it can be helped), but to the left, he is gravely worried about the troubles in Dragaera City, which at that time include economic troubles, riots, and a potential military uprising by Adron e'Kieron.
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| - A Phoenix, husband to Princess Loudin. In Five Hundred Years After, Paarfi of Roundwood depicts Lord Vernoi movingly as a concerned husband and father, anxiously approaching Khaavren in the street. He asks Khaavren if Loudin should be sent out of the city, given that, to the right, she is "great with child" (and so ought not to travel much if it can be helped), but to the left, he is gravely worried about the troubles in Dragaera City, which at that time include economic troubles, riots, and a potential military uprising by Adron e'Kieron.
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| - A Phoenix, husband to Princess Loudin. In Five Hundred Years After, Paarfi of Roundwood depicts Lord Vernoi movingly as a concerned husband and father, anxiously approaching Khaavren in the street. He asks Khaavren if Loudin should be sent out of the city, given that, to the right, she is "great with child" (and so ought not to travel much if it can be helped), but to the left, he is gravely worried about the troubles in Dragaera City, which at that time include economic troubles, riots, and a potential military uprising by Adron e'Kieron. Khaavren responds by telling him to have Loudin leave at once, which, as best we know, is how she survived Adron's Disaster.
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