KillerClowns
Emperor
- Joined
- Oct 6, 2007
- Messages
- 1,139
KC: Don't suppose I can get you to work some of the Great People into your stories? Most of them are quite good and have a nice shot of making it into the Lore, so having a name which ties the world together better would be a bonus![]()
I've been looking for ways to figure out names more easily. I wasn't sure about some of them, you see. I've got a few people who I think I'll be giving a name change to...
EDIT: Anyways, a few notes. I thought about changing Father Moses' name to one of a Great Person, but I'm not sure it would fit; Moses isn't a particularly great person. Unless there's a must-have quote from him for a G.P. I'm leaving it as it is.
Dwayne got his name when he began to remind me of the shell-shocked gangster of the same name from GTA IV.
Despite the fact that my own religious beliefs are more Council of Esus than anything, I've always had an odd soft spot for the Order. The debate between Moses and Samuel represent my musings on the subject.
You've probably noticed it by now, but Samuel is a bit weak-willed.
@Monkeyfinger: I suppose my view of magic is influenced a bit too much by large doses of Oblivion. Although I'm sticking to my cards for now, I enjoyed your story and view of the subject. You've got a better mind for action than me. I shall be making sure that I have the benefit of suprise against any necromancers I attack... I like to keep my skeleton inside my body...
@Xienwolf: Got something from one
Anyways, I've ironed out the next few parts to my satisfaction:
Spoiler Part 4 :
Eric looked at Samuel with concern as they walked to a nearby hill. “What drove you to spend so much time listening to that idiot confessor? Next thing I know, you'll start ranting to every passerby who so much as litters that their souls will forever burn in hell for their failure to repent their crimes!” Samuel shrugged, then quietly said, “he was interesting.” “Interesting! You know who else was interesting? Dirty Tom the Mad Beggar! Remember how he used to rant about there being horrible creatures lurking beneath the waves, monsters demanding sacrifice, how 'that is not dead which can eternal lie,' all that crazy stuff? Just because someone's interesting doesn't mean they're worth listening to! Gods!” “Dirty Tom did predict that tsunami...” “Pht! He predicted a hundred tsunamis, and every time one didn't come, he said it was because he'd saved our town by offering sacrifice to his Overlords!' He got lucky, that's all! But enough about Dirty Tom and that Confessor. The way I see it, the biggest difference between the two is that one smells better.”
They had finally arrived at the hilltop, from which Eric looked upon the newly captured city for a few moments. They could see the entire city, and while Eric merely looked upon it like a conquerer, Samuel noticed new geometries in the city's design invisible at ground level. “You know what I really love about being a battlemage?” Eric said suddenly, and then answered his own question. “The freedom. I mean, obviously, you have to march with the armies, and take orders from your commanders, but otherwise, you're free to do as you like. Town mages have to keep all their spells running, smile for crowds, usually enchant weapons en masse... all we have to do is blow some stuff up and after that, we can run naked through the streets for all the army cares.”
Samuel nodded, but his mind wandered back to the incident with Father Moses. “You didn't have to be so rude to Moses. I didn't agree with a lot of what that confessor said, but he wasn't actually a bad person underneath all that religion.” “He'd thank me later for freeing him of his delusions,” Eric responded. “Religions are all the same. Con games. I think the Grigori are right. I'd even join with them, if they had a hope in the Hells of surviving their war with the Mercurians. What was it their leader, Cassiel said? Something about gods killing us for the fun of it. I'm not about to sacrifice my freedom and soul to some great being in the sky that doesn't care about me if I'm noy furthering his cause. From Agares to Junil, they're all the same. They won't let people be free. But that's all I want. Freedom and happiness, and if I have to choose one, give me freedom.”
“Freedom...” Samuel sighed. Freedom was one of the most important of Lanun values. Anyone hoping to reach any position of power in the Lanun empire had to be sure they didn't risk looking like they would take away any amount of freedom. “We live free,” many a Lanun said, “we die free!” The Lanun took great pride in this lifestyle, forgoing the comforts available to others on Erebus simply to know that they had freedom, when others lived as serfs or slaves in one form or another.
“You know,” Eric said, “they're afraid of us. The Bannor, I mean. They have mages, but their mages are carefully controlled, treated like creatures not to be trusted. Fear drives everyone's lives. Except ours. We aren't afraid of anything. We don't fear the unknown, because there is nothing to fear. We know what demons we can face, and which ones we cannot, but we don't fear any of them. That's the trouble with people these days. They're controlled by fear, but there's nothing out there to really fear! There are a million opportunities for greatness, but people dare not take them because they are cowards, who don't have the freedom to leave their comfortable lives and do something extraordinary simply because they're scared of the risk it requires them to take. They enslave themselves. That's how the gods like it, I say. They like mortals to be constantly afraid, so they don't get too great. So they don't think for themselves.”
They had finally arrived at the hilltop, from which Eric looked upon the newly captured city for a few moments. They could see the entire city, and while Eric merely looked upon it like a conquerer, Samuel noticed new geometries in the city's design invisible at ground level. “You know what I really love about being a battlemage?” Eric said suddenly, and then answered his own question. “The freedom. I mean, obviously, you have to march with the armies, and take orders from your commanders, but otherwise, you're free to do as you like. Town mages have to keep all their spells running, smile for crowds, usually enchant weapons en masse... all we have to do is blow some stuff up and after that, we can run naked through the streets for all the army cares.”
Samuel nodded, but his mind wandered back to the incident with Father Moses. “You didn't have to be so rude to Moses. I didn't agree with a lot of what that confessor said, but he wasn't actually a bad person underneath all that religion.” “He'd thank me later for freeing him of his delusions,” Eric responded. “Religions are all the same. Con games. I think the Grigori are right. I'd even join with them, if they had a hope in the Hells of surviving their war with the Mercurians. What was it their leader, Cassiel said? Something about gods killing us for the fun of it. I'm not about to sacrifice my freedom and soul to some great being in the sky that doesn't care about me if I'm noy furthering his cause. From Agares to Junil, they're all the same. They won't let people be free. But that's all I want. Freedom and happiness, and if I have to choose one, give me freedom.”
“Freedom...” Samuel sighed. Freedom was one of the most important of Lanun values. Anyone hoping to reach any position of power in the Lanun empire had to be sure they didn't risk looking like they would take away any amount of freedom. “We live free,” many a Lanun said, “we die free!” The Lanun took great pride in this lifestyle, forgoing the comforts available to others on Erebus simply to know that they had freedom, when others lived as serfs or slaves in one form or another.
“You know,” Eric said, “they're afraid of us. The Bannor, I mean. They have mages, but their mages are carefully controlled, treated like creatures not to be trusted. Fear drives everyone's lives. Except ours. We aren't afraid of anything. We don't fear the unknown, because there is nothing to fear. We know what demons we can face, and which ones we cannot, but we don't fear any of them. That's the trouble with people these days. They're controlled by fear, but there's nothing out there to really fear! There are a million opportunities for greatness, but people dare not take them because they are cowards, who don't have the freedom to leave their comfortable lives and do something extraordinary simply because they're scared of the risk it requires them to take. They enslave themselves. That's how the gods like it, I say. They like mortals to be constantly afraid, so they don't get too great. So they don't think for themselves.”
Spoiler Part 5 :
Their conversation was interrupted by the Lanun captain who was serving as de facto commander of the city. “Alright ladies. You can gossip later. You, Eric, you're on watch duty. Fry any Bannor armies that appear from out of the jungle. Samuel, you got the pleasure of guarding the Bannor dungeons.” “We're mages, not ordinary footsoldiers!” Eric complained. “Sorry,” the captain said, “'til the Land Admiral arrives, duties are chosen by lot. No exceptions.” Eric sighed. “Bloody stupid.”
The Bannor dungeons were remarkably clean. While most of the prisoners, and indeed, Samuel's fellow guards, slept, from the far end, Samuel could hear someone singing quite beautifully while playing a guitar. “So I fled the palace / ran as fast as I could / as the Balor rampaged...” then the singing ended, and the singer grumbled, “No, no... still needs work. What's a good rhyme for 'could?' Actually, I should probably rewrite that section...”
Samuel went over to the last cell in the row. The ones by it were all empty, and apparently had been for a while. “So, who in Tali's name are you?” asked the man inside the one occupied cell at the end. He was a short but good-looking middle-aged man, with a boyish gleam in his eyes. His cell was filled with books and instruments, more like an apartment then a prison cell. “Samuel.” “Nice to meet you, Samuel. Name's Ozziel. I'm a exile and traveling scholar. They gave up reforming me about the same time they realized I was totally insane. But I'm a Balseraph. It's what we do best.”
Samuel looked dubiously at the fellow. He seemed pretty harmless, although Samuel knew better then to trust a Balseraph. “So, what's that song you were singing? It's not bad...” “No, it's really a work in progress.” Ozziel insisted. “It's a song about that night I spent with Keelyn, old Perpentach's daughter. She's blossoming into a beautiful woman, let me tell you. But she's still got the mind of a little girl. If I wasn't such a pervert, this might have made me avoid her. Unfortunately, this just made me more interested. I suppose I got what I deserved, really. You see, once we were done with our 'bedtime game,' I said I had to go home. She wanted me to stay forever. I refused, and she threw a tantrum, three fireballs, and a Balor. Turns out Keelyn's one hell of a sorceress. I can't show my face in the Balseraph empire any more, she's got enough followers and political power of her own to see to it I end up fighting orcs in the Jubilee Arena. She's been quite a naughty girl when Daddy's away... So I ran, ended up here. Managed to lay low for a while, but then I met the governor's daughter. Charmed her, wooed her with song, used her father's bed, got caught red handed and totally naked. At least she didn't sic a demon on me.”
“So that's how you got in here,” Samuel guessed. “Yep.” Ozziel said, grinning unrepentantly. “The governor wanted my head, literally, but old Father Moses comes up and reminds him of the exact punishments for my crime. After all, she invited me in. I didn't rape her. Hell, I didn't even take her innocence... some lusty young Bannor boy beat me to that. Honestly, I'm sure a good portion of the young lads in this town have seen her bedchambers. She wasn't a hard catch. I sung her some sugary Kuriotate love song and she melted. I like the Balseraph love songs myself, but they're a bit explicit and tend to freak out non-Balseraphs with their... creativity.” Samuel decided he didn't want to know what Ozziel meant by “creativity,” so let him continue. “Luckily, I wasn't the first to get caught, so the town wasn't too shocked. So Father Moses lays down the law, tells me my exact jail term. He ain't bad, for one of those Order Confessors. Although I might just be saying that since he, you know, saved my life and all. He tried reading to me from the Code of Junil. But I'm a scholar, specialist in religions. Knew it almost as well as he did. Good thing he's the kind of guy who doesn't mind a debate or two; some Confessors would have found an excuse to execute me.” He laughed, pulling out a heavily annotated copy of the Code from one of the shelves in his cell. “I don't think much of organized religions, funnily enough. I'm no Grigori; I love disorganized religions, and good old Tali has probably saved my hide many times in thanks for my frequent offerings to his middle-of-nowhere shrines. But enough about me. I heard that the Lanun were attacking the city? So, who won?”
“We did,” Samuel said, and then added, “the Lanun.” “Praise the winds! So, I'm just a harmless scholar... you wouldn't mind letting me out of here, would you? I'll try to leave your women alone, or at the very least I'll make sure I teach them something they can show you.” “Sorry,” Samuel said. “Not my decision.” Tohrnir strummed out a mournful series of notes, but quickly perked up again. “So I've told you everything short of who my father is, and I'd have probably given you that if I knew. What's your story?” Samuel decided it couldn't hurt to tell. “I'm a battlemage for the Lanun. Me and my friend, Eric, signed up to make some quick money. That captain of ours decided the best way to hand out tasks was by lot, and I got this.”
“Fair enough,” Ozziel said. “but why become a battlemage? You mentioned quick money, but risking your hide on the front lines when you could get fat and lazy sitting in some town doing research? You seem like the kind of guy who'd make a better healer than a battlemage.” Samuel though about it. “The freedom...” Ozziel scoffed. “You want freedom? There's an entire world to see. Have you been to Jubilee during the Revelry? Visited the Amurites and toured the Catacomb Libralus? Or my personal favorite, have you spent a week in the heart of the Kuriotate Republic, sampling foods you never imagined existed and meeting creatures you'd find nowhere else? A wandering mage can go where he wants wants, when he wants, and do what he wants, paying his way through good deeds... or bad ones, if that strikes his fancy. A battlemage must follow an army. If you see the Kuriotate Republic, it will be as it burns. No, only two types go into the battlemage business. Raving patriots, and those seeking fame and power. Be honest. Which one are you?”
Samuel considered Ozziel's question, deciding whether or not to answer honsetly. Ozziel waited patiently, skimming through his copy of the Code of Junil with a pen in his hands. Suddenly, Ozziel stopped. “Here, I know this book by heart and have notes on practically every page. It's not for me, honestly. But you might find it worth keeping around.” Samuel accepted the book, then said, “but won't people laugh at me, think I'm some sort of acolyte?” Ozziel shrugged. “Claim the margin notes are yours, if it bothers you. It'll make you look like a heretic, and that could be a good thing in your situation.” Samuel opened the book and read one of the notes at random. It was beside a law about social order and read, in the stylized script preferred by the Balseraphs: “why is disrupting the social order seen as more of a crime then thievery? Judging by the themes of the Code, it may be that the acts of thieves are seen as mere symptoms, and disruptions in the social order are the disease. Perhaps Junil assumes that while thieves merely suffer from a weakness that can be cured, rebels are the causes of this infestation and must be eliminated. Indeed, much of Junil's thinking appears to be medical, looking at humanity as an organism and looking out for its wellbeing as a whole, sometimes at the expense of the parts that make it up... in this case, individuals.” The other marginal notes maintained this scholarly and subtly heretical pattern of politely questioning of the Code of Junil.
Samuel decided he liked Ozziel, and continued his story. “You asked me why I became a battlemage. Really, it was my friend's idea. I just followed along... against my better instincts, if you must know. My friend, Eric, he also mentioned something about seeking greatness...” Ozziel jumped up. “I told ya! Of course he seeks greatness. And he seeks it by becoming a battlemage. He seeks greatness for himself. Religions, as I've said, are my specialty, but I've studied a bit of history as well. Do you know what I think? All that have sought greatness have either been destroyed, or found it by climbing a stair made of the broken bodies of their enemies. He may be a good man now, but I wonder if he would rather be great then good. Stick with him, and he shall be true to you... but in doing so, you may not be true to yourself. Be sure you do not become this Eric's enemy.” Samuel looked at Ozziel suspiciously. Was this some sort of Balseraph mind game, to turn him against his friend for Ozziel's amusement? Or should he heed the scholar's words?
The Bannor dungeons were remarkably clean. While most of the prisoners, and indeed, Samuel's fellow guards, slept, from the far end, Samuel could hear someone singing quite beautifully while playing a guitar. “So I fled the palace / ran as fast as I could / as the Balor rampaged...” then the singing ended, and the singer grumbled, “No, no... still needs work. What's a good rhyme for 'could?' Actually, I should probably rewrite that section...”
Samuel went over to the last cell in the row. The ones by it were all empty, and apparently had been for a while. “So, who in Tali's name are you?” asked the man inside the one occupied cell at the end. He was a short but good-looking middle-aged man, with a boyish gleam in his eyes. His cell was filled with books and instruments, more like an apartment then a prison cell. “Samuel.” “Nice to meet you, Samuel. Name's Ozziel. I'm a exile and traveling scholar. They gave up reforming me about the same time they realized I was totally insane. But I'm a Balseraph. It's what we do best.”
Samuel looked dubiously at the fellow. He seemed pretty harmless, although Samuel knew better then to trust a Balseraph. “So, what's that song you were singing? It's not bad...” “No, it's really a work in progress.” Ozziel insisted. “It's a song about that night I spent with Keelyn, old Perpentach's daughter. She's blossoming into a beautiful woman, let me tell you. But she's still got the mind of a little girl. If I wasn't such a pervert, this might have made me avoid her. Unfortunately, this just made me more interested. I suppose I got what I deserved, really. You see, once we were done with our 'bedtime game,' I said I had to go home. She wanted me to stay forever. I refused, and she threw a tantrum, three fireballs, and a Balor. Turns out Keelyn's one hell of a sorceress. I can't show my face in the Balseraph empire any more, she's got enough followers and political power of her own to see to it I end up fighting orcs in the Jubilee Arena. She's been quite a naughty girl when Daddy's away... So I ran, ended up here. Managed to lay low for a while, but then I met the governor's daughter. Charmed her, wooed her with song, used her father's bed, got caught red handed and totally naked. At least she didn't sic a demon on me.”
“So that's how you got in here,” Samuel guessed. “Yep.” Ozziel said, grinning unrepentantly. “The governor wanted my head, literally, but old Father Moses comes up and reminds him of the exact punishments for my crime. After all, she invited me in. I didn't rape her. Hell, I didn't even take her innocence... some lusty young Bannor boy beat me to that. Honestly, I'm sure a good portion of the young lads in this town have seen her bedchambers. She wasn't a hard catch. I sung her some sugary Kuriotate love song and she melted. I like the Balseraph love songs myself, but they're a bit explicit and tend to freak out non-Balseraphs with their... creativity.” Samuel decided he didn't want to know what Ozziel meant by “creativity,” so let him continue. “Luckily, I wasn't the first to get caught, so the town wasn't too shocked. So Father Moses lays down the law, tells me my exact jail term. He ain't bad, for one of those Order Confessors. Although I might just be saying that since he, you know, saved my life and all. He tried reading to me from the Code of Junil. But I'm a scholar, specialist in religions. Knew it almost as well as he did. Good thing he's the kind of guy who doesn't mind a debate or two; some Confessors would have found an excuse to execute me.” He laughed, pulling out a heavily annotated copy of the Code from one of the shelves in his cell. “I don't think much of organized religions, funnily enough. I'm no Grigori; I love disorganized religions, and good old Tali has probably saved my hide many times in thanks for my frequent offerings to his middle-of-nowhere shrines. But enough about me. I heard that the Lanun were attacking the city? So, who won?”
“We did,” Samuel said, and then added, “the Lanun.” “Praise the winds! So, I'm just a harmless scholar... you wouldn't mind letting me out of here, would you? I'll try to leave your women alone, or at the very least I'll make sure I teach them something they can show you.” “Sorry,” Samuel said. “Not my decision.” Tohrnir strummed out a mournful series of notes, but quickly perked up again. “So I've told you everything short of who my father is, and I'd have probably given you that if I knew. What's your story?” Samuel decided it couldn't hurt to tell. “I'm a battlemage for the Lanun. Me and my friend, Eric, signed up to make some quick money. That captain of ours decided the best way to hand out tasks was by lot, and I got this.”
“Fair enough,” Ozziel said. “but why become a battlemage? You mentioned quick money, but risking your hide on the front lines when you could get fat and lazy sitting in some town doing research? You seem like the kind of guy who'd make a better healer than a battlemage.” Samuel though about it. “The freedom...” Ozziel scoffed. “You want freedom? There's an entire world to see. Have you been to Jubilee during the Revelry? Visited the Amurites and toured the Catacomb Libralus? Or my personal favorite, have you spent a week in the heart of the Kuriotate Republic, sampling foods you never imagined existed and meeting creatures you'd find nowhere else? A wandering mage can go where he wants wants, when he wants, and do what he wants, paying his way through good deeds... or bad ones, if that strikes his fancy. A battlemage must follow an army. If you see the Kuriotate Republic, it will be as it burns. No, only two types go into the battlemage business. Raving patriots, and those seeking fame and power. Be honest. Which one are you?”
Samuel considered Ozziel's question, deciding whether or not to answer honsetly. Ozziel waited patiently, skimming through his copy of the Code of Junil with a pen in his hands. Suddenly, Ozziel stopped. “Here, I know this book by heart and have notes on practically every page. It's not for me, honestly. But you might find it worth keeping around.” Samuel accepted the book, then said, “but won't people laugh at me, think I'm some sort of acolyte?” Ozziel shrugged. “Claim the margin notes are yours, if it bothers you. It'll make you look like a heretic, and that could be a good thing in your situation.” Samuel opened the book and read one of the notes at random. It was beside a law about social order and read, in the stylized script preferred by the Balseraphs: “why is disrupting the social order seen as more of a crime then thievery? Judging by the themes of the Code, it may be that the acts of thieves are seen as mere symptoms, and disruptions in the social order are the disease. Perhaps Junil assumes that while thieves merely suffer from a weakness that can be cured, rebels are the causes of this infestation and must be eliminated. Indeed, much of Junil's thinking appears to be medical, looking at humanity as an organism and looking out for its wellbeing as a whole, sometimes at the expense of the parts that make it up... in this case, individuals.” The other marginal notes maintained this scholarly and subtly heretical pattern of politely questioning of the Code of Junil.
Samuel decided he liked Ozziel, and continued his story. “You asked me why I became a battlemage. Really, it was my friend's idea. I just followed along... against my better instincts, if you must know. My friend, Eric, he also mentioned something about seeking greatness...” Ozziel jumped up. “I told ya! Of course he seeks greatness. And he seeks it by becoming a battlemage. He seeks greatness for himself. Religions, as I've said, are my specialty, but I've studied a bit of history as well. Do you know what I think? All that have sought greatness have either been destroyed, or found it by climbing a stair made of the broken bodies of their enemies. He may be a good man now, but I wonder if he would rather be great then good. Stick with him, and he shall be true to you... but in doing so, you may not be true to yourself. Be sure you do not become this Eric's enemy.” Samuel looked at Ozziel suspiciously. Was this some sort of Balseraph mind game, to turn him against his friend for Ozziel's amusement? Or should he heed the scholar's words?
Spoiler Notes :
You might notice that Ozziel is not, at first glance, a typical Balseraph. This is not the last you've seen of this old scholar and his philosophies on religion. As you've guessed, "Dirty Tom" is a Zealot of the Overlords. At this point, the Overlords religion hasn't yet become mainstream among the Lanun. And if anyone finds a picture for Ozziel that seems to fit him perfectly, but doesn't quite match my description, I can easily change it. Like it never even happened...