Previous Posts: Variations of Research and Questions in Faith
Darcy slid to the floor behind the counter she'd taken over at Unstoppable Forces. On the shelf to her right sat molding pieces she used to make full plate armor and heavy shields. On the one she was leaning against, a few pots of random dyes, and collapsed crafting dummies: one for human males, one for human females.
She carefully clenched and released her hands, trying to work out some of the sharp pains that came with too much smithing. Her arms and back were sore as well. The power she still carried let her make the pains subside for a time, but she really needed to lay the hammer aside at least for a few days if she wanted to really heal.
She thought about a realization she'd had a year and a half earlier: adventures in Sundren did not respect death. She did not recall who she'd been speaking with at the time, but she'd admitted to whoever it had been that the possibility of Myrkul's return might be a good thing, that perhaps those that failed to respect death under Kelemvor would learn to respect it through the fear Myrkul would impose.
Somehow, though, it seemed she was wrong. Death was not feared, it was not respected. Her god was dead now, if she died then she would be subjected to whatever special and terrible fate awaited all Kelemvorites at Myrkul's unmerciful hand. Everyone else, though, seemed to continue on as they ever did before.
She slipped the hidden holy symbol out from under her armor and held it before her eyes. The skeletal arm holding scales hung from the same cord it always had, though now she had to hide it. She should hide herself, as well, but she just couldn't do it. She didn't want to leave the valley again, and she would not lay down her hammer. So her name was out there, and if the wrong person with a long enough memory saw it, she could find herself dead quickly. For her, there would be no coming back.
Darcy slid to the floor behind the counter she'd taken over at Unstoppable Forces. On the shelf to her right sat molding pieces she used to make full plate armor and heavy shields. On the one she was leaning against, a few pots of random dyes, and collapsed crafting dummies: one for human males, one for human females.
She carefully clenched and released her hands, trying to work out some of the sharp pains that came with too much smithing. Her arms and back were sore as well. The power she still carried let her make the pains subside for a time, but she really needed to lay the hammer aside at least for a few days if she wanted to really heal.
She thought about a realization she'd had a year and a half earlier: adventures in Sundren did not respect death. She did not recall who she'd been speaking with at the time, but she'd admitted to whoever it had been that the possibility of Myrkul's return might be a good thing, that perhaps those that failed to respect death under Kelemvor would learn to respect it through the fear Myrkul would impose.
Somehow, though, it seemed she was wrong. Death was not feared, it was not respected. Her god was dead now, if she died then she would be subjected to whatever special and terrible fate awaited all Kelemvorites at Myrkul's unmerciful hand. Everyone else, though, seemed to continue on as they ever did before.
She slipped the hidden holy symbol out from under her armor and held it before her eyes. The skeletal arm holding scales hung from the same cord it always had, though now she had to hide it. She should hide herself, as well, but she just couldn't do it. She didn't want to leave the valley again, and she would not lay down her hammer. So her name was out there, and if the wrong person with a long enough memory saw it, she could find herself dead quickly. For her, there would be no coming back.
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