Theme for this entry.
My name is Isolde.
It has become increasingly clear to me that my final days may yet be upon me, and I find myself somewhat chagrined by the thought that I will be remembered as nothing more than a beast and bloodthirsty animal and not a rational, thinking creature. Though I will fight the final death to my bitterest end, I feel compelled to put into writing some form of memoirs, so that should the unfortunate finally occur, perhaps some measure of my being may be better understood.
I was born a noble's daughter to a wealthy mercantile family in the glorious City of Splendors. In my youth, I did not want for much. My every whim was catered to, my every desire reasonably fulfilled. I could scarcely deny that I was a spoiled creature of youth and I exalted in such trappings. I was haughty, arrogant, and entitled. Father was always away on business, and my Mother was as enthralled in the wealthy life as I was, perhaps more so, always spending thousands of coin on the most frivolous of things, her ears and neck constantly dripping with the latest most expensive jewelry, a practice I must admit I never truly fell into. My vice was books.
I was a frail and bony youth, a trait I carry on to this day, and my lifestyle only lent itself to an indoor existence. I was home-schooled, and so I rarely spent any meaningful amount of time outside. The outdoors was a life not for me. I bruised easily, so I shunned physical sports and play, sniffing at such things with disdain. Outdoor physical activity was anathema to me, and so I turned inward, to the cultivation of the mind. I readily admit I was a rather gloomy sort, always ready with a sharp word for the foolish and undistinguished alike. My studies were primarily in theology, religious texts, philosophy, and more occult and arcane works. I spent long hours candleside, my head buried in books of obscure and complex works, dreaming haughtily of how much better and more educated I was becoming, how mighty my intellect when compared to the dregs of the world that waste their lives in the meaningless scurrying of ants. I was better than all of them, so I believed.
It was not until well into my adult years that my arrogance began to wan in the light of my meaningless existence. Soon I was to be married off, to increase the wealth and prestige of my own house, and inexplicably a feeling of utter despair and hopelessness overtook me like a black tidal wave. The prospect of marriage did not bother, indeed, like my parents before me, I simply saw it as another predetermined aspect of my life and thought little of it. No, it was the grand sweeping plain of my existence spread before me that overwhelmed me. I saw in my future an endless procession of meaningless petty noble politics, parties, and maneuverings, all of which my highly vaunted education would be wasted upon, as in this world, the mind and intellect of a woman is second, at best. Again, the scurrying of ants comes to mind. The name given to shape this despair is purposelessness. I had no purpose.
Despite all my studying and wide-eyed optimism at how much better I would become in my education, I would truly have no purpose in this life. I was destined to be the wife of some ambitious nobleman, a piece of furniture to be placed about his home for its pleasing aesthetics, and my mind would rot to nothing. I saw my mother, wasting her life on meaningless, purposeless pursuits, destined to die forgotten in the shadow of greater beings. I saw this as my destiny, and so I despaired. I was never much for religion, our own house payed barely more than lip service to Siamorphe, the Goddess of Nobility, but in those days of my coming pre-destiny, I prayed. Prayed to any that would hear me. To give me something, some purpose. A reason to exist, and not be a pretty flower to be placed in the vase that is my prison, destined to wait and wilt in the roll of years.
And so I was answered.
I cannot recall precisely how it first occurred, only that at the height of my despair, as I contemplated suicide, an unreasoning anger came over me at the meaninglessness of it all, and I lashed out at a nearby servant girl, only to discover I had somehow killed her with my briefest touch. There was much confusion in this time and the servant girl's body was quickly and discreetly destroyed, the incident hushed and promptly forgotten. In those next days, I spend a great deal of time in study and contemplation. I discovered that my touch could mean death as flowers wilted in my hands and small pets spasmed to death at my determined concentration. In the deepest of my meditations, visions of death and the dead came to me. Feelings of loss and longing and vengeance filled me like the empty vessel that I was. I finally came to understand what I had become. A conduit of death, a chosen of a dead God, seeking rebirth.
To this day, I still do not know why I was chosen. Perhaps a happier less gloomy mind would have panicked at this sudden revelation, but in it, I finally saw my chance to claim my purpose. I had been chosen by a dead God of the dead, to be the vessel of his rebirth. A true divine purpose. Suddenly the trappings of wealth, prestige, and nobility were nothing before the destiny of death that I had inherited.
The distant pulling of the dead God soon came to me, and I abandoned everything to pursue it. With naught but the wealth I secured from the selling of some of my mother's jewelry, I began my trek north, directionless, but not without direction, seeking the source of the pulling in my heart. My wanderings were not without danger or incident, and it is in those misadventures that I met the first true friend that I would possess. But perhaps that is for another time.



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