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Knargz

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Knargz
Knargz
Name Knargz
First Tribal: Bloody Beginnings
Creator Tony James Nelson II
Alias The Bote
Species Human
Gender Male
Occupation Messenger; Enforcer; Senior authority in Nebu
Affiliation Nebu; Alpha’s inner circle; Family of Alpha and Utrea
Title Bote
Family Family of Alpha and Utrea
Relatives The Dark Alpha / Conri (brother); Utrea (sister); Zuberi (brother); Kavumo (brother); Doctor Polezah (nephew); Rimitorry (niece); Eshari (niece); Zafira (niece); Sakori (nephew); Khalembo (nephew); Reonniz (nephew)
Nationality Nebu
Status Alive

Knargz, also known as the Bote, is a fictional character in Tribal: Bloody Beginnings by Tony James Nelson II. He is one of the highest-ranking figures in Nebu and serves as both messenger and enforcer for the Dark Alpha. In the Book, the Bote is portrayed as cold, precise, feared, and powerful enough that even his role as “just the messenger” implies a terrifying level of force.

The Bote occupies a unique place in Nebu’s hierarchy. He is not an ordinary wolf, and the Book explicitly states that wolves are marked except for Alphas, Botes, and Commanders, placing him in one of the Tribe’s rarest and highest categories.

He is also part of the older generation of the Family of Alpha and Utrea, making him brother to Alpha, Utrea, Zuberi, and Kavumo, and uncle to the fractured younger bloodline.

Overview

In the Book, the Bote functions as:

  • Alpha’s voice when Alpha does not speak
  • a senior operational authority
  • a hunter and field enforcer
  • a visible reminder that Nebu’s hierarchy does not end with Alpha alone

He is often shown in shadow, near the throne, or at the edge of violence rather than at its center, which makes him more unnerving rather than less. The Book repeatedly frames him as someone whose calm is not softness, but disciplined menace.

Role in Nebu

The Bote is one of Nebu’s top-ranked figures. His status is reinforced by the rule that Botes, like Alphas and Commanders, are exempt from the marking system that applies to ordinary wolves. This places him above the standard warrior structure and marks him as a role of institutional authority, not merely battlefield usefulness.

In practical terms, the Bote serves as:

  • a direct representative of Alpha’s will
  • a field enforcer trusted with sensitive operations
  • a figure whose words carry nearly the same weight as judgment

When Thirty-Two finishes interrogating Tia Washington, it is the Bote — not Alpha — who announces that “his lordship is pleased,” orders body disposal, and commands the elimination of Tia’s family “in the name of Nebu.”

Relationship with Alpha

The Bote’s identity is inseparable from Alpha. He often speaks in Alpha’s presence, relays Alpha’s decisions, and occupies a place inside Alpha’s innermost power structure. Early in the Book, Thirty-Two sees Alpha on the throne with the Commander to one side, Harpies in position, and the Bote lurking in the shadows near the wall — a placement that makes clear he belongs to the innermost ring of Nebu power.

In another scene, Alpha sits with only the Bote present, no Harpies, no Doctor, no Commander, which further emphasizes the Bote’s importance. He is not decorative court furniture. He is one of the few people whose presence alone is enough in a room with Alpha.

Messenger of judgment

One of the Bote’s most distinctive functions is speaking when Alpha chooses silence.

This happens repeatedly:

  • He announces Alpha’s pleasure after Tia’s interrogation.
  • He rebukes Thirty-Two for failing to eliminate Tia’s family quickly enough.
  • He informs Thirty-Two that the Harpies already handled the family and turns immediately to the question of what should be done with him.

This gives the Bote an especially chilling quality: he is often the mouth through which punishment becomes official.

Capture of Rimitorry

The Book shows the Bote directly leading the operation that captures Rimitorry. When the throne room uses a page of the Tribal Bible to observe her flight, the vision later shows twenty Nebu wolves forming a perfect semicircle around her hiding place, with the Bote leading them. Rimitorry sees him at the front and immediately understands the danger.

This scene is important because it shows the Bote not only as a court authority but as a field hunter. He does not merely pass orders down to others. He personally leads the capture of one of the most dangerous women in the Book.

Place in the family

Knargz belongs to the older family generation surrounding Alpha, Utrea, Zuberi, and Kavumo. Along with them, he helps form the deep family structure behind much of the Book’s older conflict.

He is therefore uncle to the younger generation that includes:

His importance is not merely administrative. He stands at the point where bloodline and state structure overlap.

Threat level

The Book strongly implies that the Bote is extraordinarily powerful.

Thirty-Two has a moment of realization after witnessing the capture vision: if the Bote is that strong and he is only the messenger, then what must Alpha be capable of? This line matters because it uses the Bote as a measuring stick for the reader’s fear. He is powerful enough that his existence makes Alpha feel even worse.

The Bote is therefore one of those characters whose full strength is partly defined by implication. The Book does not need to give him twenty pages of theatrical combat. Everyone else’s reaction already does the work.

Personality

The Bote is cold, exact, contemptuous, and emotionally disciplined. His speech is clipped and unforgiving. He does not waste words, and when he speaks, it tends to be in the language of correction, judgment, or instruction.

Thirty-Two repeatedly experiences him as icy and precise, never theatrical, never flustered. This makes the Bote more intimidating than a loud brute would be. He feels like a man who has already done the math and found you disposable.

He is also deeply hierarchical. The Bote does not speak like a free agent. He speaks like someone whose identity has fused with the machinery of Nebu’s command structure.

Abilities and traits

  • Elite authority within Nebu
  • Field leadership over Nebu wolves
  • High implied combat and tracking ability
  • Trusted operational messenger of Alpha
  • Psychological intimidation through control and precision
  • Exempt from the wolf-marking system reserved for ordinary ranks

Though the Book does not fully dump a stat sheet on him, it clearly frames him as:

  • stronger than ordinary wolves
  • more trusted than most officers
  • important enough to be a category unto himself

Relationships

The Dark Alpha

Alpha is the central authority the Bote serves and also his brother. The Bote often speaks for him, stands near him, and carries out his will. Their dynamic suggests deep trust, long familiarity, and a family hierarchy fused with state power.

Utrea

Utrea is Knargz’s sister and one of the core elder figures of the bloodline. He is caught directly inside the older family fracture surrounding Eshari’s being left behind.

Zuberi

Zuberi is Knargz’s brother and counterpart in Nebu’s upper hierarchy. Where Knargz serves as the Bote, Zuberi serves as the Commander. Together, they form two of the most important supporting pillars beneath Alpha’s rule.

Kavumo

Kavumo is Knargz’s brother and part of the same older family core. Kavumo’s loss and later restoration define much of the older generation’s pain and hidden history.

Thirty-Two

Thirty-Two experiences the Bote as one of the first true faces of Nebu’s inner cruelty. The Bote orders him to dispose of bodies, eliminate Tia’s family, and later rebukes him for the mistakes surrounding that operation. In many ways, the Bote is one of the first senior authorities who teaches Thirty-Two what life as proctor under Alpha really means.

Zuberi / the Commander

Zuberi and the Bote occupy parallel high-ranking positions in Nebu. Both are exempt from ordinary wolf marking, both stand in Alpha’s inner circle, and both function as upper-tier instruments of command. The difference is tonal: Zuberi often reads as military structure, while the Bote reads as delivery of will.

Rimitorry

Rimitorry is one of the Bote’s major targets in the Book. He leads the wolves who close in around her cave and bring her back into Alpha’s orbit. This makes him one of the direct agents of her capture.

Themes

The Bote is closely tied to several of the Book’s major themes:

  • Hierarchy as identity
  • Judgment delivered without emotion
  • Power through obedience
  • The machinery of empire
  • Fear generated by structure rather than chaos
  • Family embedded inside command

Narrative importance

The Bote matters because he helps make Nebu feel like a functioning power-state instead of a one-man tyranny. Alpha may be the center, but the Bote is part of what allows that center to operate.

He gives the Book:

  • a messenger who is terrifying in his own right
  • a hunter who can personally lead elite captures
  • a high-ranking institutional figure who makes Nebu feel layered rather than flat
  • a family elder whose role binds bloodline and empire together

Without the Bote, Alpha’s power would still be immense. With the Bote, that power gains sharper administrative teeth.

Trivia

  • The Bote is one of the few Nebu ranks exempt from ordinary wolf marking, along with Alphas and Commanders.
  • He tells Thirty-Two to eliminate Tia Washington’s family “in the name of Nebu.”
  • He rebukes Thirty-Two for leaving Tia’s family alive long enough to file a missing persons report.
  • He leads the wolves who capture Rimitorry.
  • Thirty-Two explicitly uses the Bote’s strength as a way to imagine how much worse Alpha must be.
  • He is part of the elder generation of the Family of Alpha and Utrea.

See also

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