The Mortal Lands · A ruined merchant who died a soldier
Feyre's Father
The father who could not save them — until, at the end, he could.
A wealthy merchant ruined into poverty and lameness, who let his daughters sink into hunger in a cottage at the edge of the wood. Years later he crossed the sea, raised a mortal army, and brought it north to die for them.
At a glance
The merchant who came back
The mortal lands · A man emptied out
The father in the cottage.
He was a merchant once, with ships and a fine house, until his creditors came and shattered his leg when the fortune collapsed. After that he sat by the cottage fire and carved small wooden figures while his three daughters went hungry, and it was Feyre — the youngest — who learned to hunt so the family would not die. He loved his children, but the will to provide had gone out of him; he could not rise from his chair to feed them. Feyre's resentment of him is one of the first true things we know about her: she despised his idleness even as she went on keeping him alive.
The turn · Ships and a late courage
What the sea gave back.
While Feyre vanished into Prythian, her father did the thing he had failed to do for years — he stood up. He took to the sea again, rebuilt the family fortune, and made himself a man of standing among the mortals once more. When word of the coming war reached him, he did not hide behind his recovered wealth. He sailed the Continent, gathered ships and soldiers and the support of mortal rulers, and raised an army of humans to march north against a power that could have erased them all without effort.
The last act · A debt repaid in full
The death that redeemed the chair.
He brought his mortal host to the final battle against Hybern, and there — in defence of the daughters he had once been unable to feed — he was killed by the King of Hybern. It is a death heavy with everything that came before it: the man who could not stand from his fire died on his feet, leading others, having crossed an ocean to make himself worthy of the children who had saved him first. His redemption is small and human and late, and it costs him his life, which is exactly why it counts.
Bound to
The threads of the merchant's house
Continue
Feyre Archeron →The daughter who learned to hunt to keep the family alive — and who he crossed an ocean to die for.
The Mortal Lands → Nesta → Elain →