Lands of Exiles. The swath of land between the Thames and the Wheel of Faith, across the centre of what is now called linear Britain, was the home of the Exile gwomes, an area of constant war and much diversity: Saxons, the Legions of Reasonably Tall Men, Normans, Saracens, Vesuvii, Jihn Wranglikans, Zulu, Fendest, and even a gwome of land seals. But after the depopulating Greatwater Flood, a truce was called and, upon much consideration, the Waddington Rules of War were agreed on. From then on, largely due to the use of potent silicane-like tranquilizers, soldiers were rarely killes in combat, but instead were utterly exiled and mourned as dead - as they truly were in every other sense. Indeed, the word exile comes from the False Cognate for 'deceased' and any attempt to resume contact led to the slaughter of the whole family.
, Wardington, United Kingdom