Board Thread:Roleplaying/@comment-25038310-20160303163426/@comment-25038310-20160327094751

ReDquinox wrote: Dunistair looked at the wide array of statues, wondering who they might be.

(Alright, I'm using my Lore Skill to see if Duni can recognise any of these figures as Immortals.)

Most of the statues were depicting normal, mortal people, but there were four larger statues standing in the very front of the church, who were outfitted with different attire that enunciated that they obviously had a higher status than the others. Four figures stood next and above the entrance of the church, and two otger statues were damaged beyond repair and it was impossible to make out who these were.

The first statue depicted a hooded and frail woman, a Divine, folding her hands together as if in prayer and a smile across her face that only served to portray the love she feels as she guards over the sanctity of marriage and the bethrotal of mortals. This Divine was murdered by an Undead Knight whose name was not written down by any of the civilized scholars back in the past or the present. Her death marked the epoch of a dark age, where hideous spawns of primeval beasts assaulted every bastion of civilization across the world, and her death turned the healthy town into the repulsive and odious swamp it was today.

The second figure was Knight-King Rendall, to whom it may still matter. The king's title meant little in present day, and his legacy is not remembered as much as his sinful deeds. The Knight was a prime example of fear being a bad advisor. He was directly to blame for throwing the mortals of Jehanna to the wolves, casting them out of 'his' city simply because he feared that mortals, once afflicted with Undeath, would turn upon their immortal lords. Rendall left all of them to die horribly by the spawns that lurked outside the city. Those who could escape would depart from the city on pilgrimage to Farrun for unknown reasons, which was an idea also conceived by this Knight-King, who claimed that they would be safe there. But this knight-king only sent these destitute peasants there in order to die in a vain attempt to nullify the chance of them being afflicted with Undeath.

The Knight-King's lieutenant and close advisor, was a close friend to immortals. Dunistair could recall little about this man, only that he was sent here by Rendall in order to trap the remainder of mortals.

The fourth figure was a sorcerer of some sorts, as his statue depicted him wearing a ragged cloak and an oval mask with a swirly, golden motif. This supposed sorcerer dabbled into the anatomy of beasts, including dragons of the neighboring lands and the beasts that spawned from hollow husks of wood.

_______

Abello walked up the stairs of the church as he placed his hand on one of the heavy oaken doors.

"Hmph. I will need some help with..-" he stopped in his sentence as he turned back to the group. To Aelwin, who was seemingly consumed in thought and Dunistair who was examining the architecture.

He briefly waited, unsure if he should interrupt them.

((Posting from an airport. Wont be able to post for for a day or so, probably. Might be able to get one more post in after this one, although they are a pain to write with my phone. Typos galore.))