Raiselig

The Raiselig Dossier: Demon's Eye

Hate. It was like a sauna inside her skull. Pressure. Hissing through leaks and cracks in the skin. Moist air flecked with sparks and flashes of venom and bile. Aversion. Desire. Inflamed. Hate. Years passed. Only once a year did she open her single eye, to gaze upon the black stalagmites and stalactites that were her prison. Her home. For centuries she saw nothing, and so for centuries she went hungry.

The Raiselig Dossier: Goblin

Raiselig was allowed a maximum of seven days of vacation a year. It was a paltry amount for most, but Raiselig constantly had trouble finding times and places to indulge. Relaxing was such an odd concept to Raiselig. When your being was your purpose, pausing in your efforts was akin to a kind of suicide, wasn’t it? If you weren’t working, then why were you? Calchona had tried to explain it several times.

The Raiselig Dossier: Whence Came Judgment Part 2

The courtyard of Doom Keep was little more than a pile of mud. There were no paths walked by mortal feet anymore, save the aimless drifting of the soulless bodies clad in rusting armor. They stared, unblinking, into the dark skies that rained with black ichor. Raiselig and Shosushai walked side by side down the slick stone steps, each holding onto the other so they did not fall. The corpses watched them pass.

The Raiselig Dossier: Whence Came Judgment Part 1

Fitting, that the thunder split the sky like a sword. Well did it suit the mood of the warlord that rain fell like arrows, piercing the heart with their chill. It was meet that the distant fogs billowed like acrid smoke towards the fortress gates. Drozior, the Dark Lord, Slayer of the Seven Moons and bringer of death and blood to the lands of Illshir, had slain thousands of men and women.

The Raiselig Dossier: In Shadows Lay

Deep in the darkest night it lay. It had learned, over the years, to be patient. Good things would always come to those who wait, and it had waited a very long time indeed. Empires rose and fell, languages came and went. Certain words fell in and out of fashion, and sometimes took on new meanings all together. Before long, it could feel the time was right… And it reached out a shadowy claw…

The Raiselig Dossier: The Spirit of Coldstone Part 2

It took only an hour for Raiselig and Vharpanu to prepare themselves. As it was in Vharpanu’s ancient nature to find things hidden, she acquired the necessary tools. A sprig of living holly and a twig of dead birch. Shavings from a newborn calf’s hoof. Three drops of innocent blood. A plank of wood from an old woman’s bed. It was makeshift, but satisfactory. Raiselig, for their part, sharpened their steel memory with the ancient laws.

The Raiselig Dossier: The Spirit of Coldstone Part 1

The clatter of teacups and china saucers filled the air of the Café Couronne des Prés. A perfumed bouquet of infusions from across the world tantalized the nose. Travelers and locals laughed and spoke of many things across tables of ivory and bronze. Cakes as soft as pillows and breads as tough as leather provided suitable accent to the marvelous tastes that sweetened every gullet in that marvelous Café. It was the one place in perhaps all the land that two Scriveners could meet in public without attracting undue attention.

The Raiselig Dossier: On the Day of Celebrations

The House of the Horned Serpent was bustling that night, loud cheers for more wine and women flowed through the air as freely as the liquor. To call it mirth would be a disservice. Raiselig was not taking part in the gaiety; or rather, they were not taking part in the noise. They were celebrating as loudly and as energetically as they ever did, which is to say they had a fresh and young bottle — young by their standards, at any rate — of a rich red Carménère, which they had been working through for most of the evening.

The Raiselig Dossier: At the River Wide

The boy’s name was Edvin Coineagan, and little else is known about him. That is, little else is known by the mortal men and women who tell the tale. More is known by the wise and learned Scriveners, for it is their tale as well, and their methods of telling tales are mysterious and inscrutable. There are countless things we do not know of the boy; such as what brought him to the misty moor that dark morning, what caused his breath to come in ragged sobs, and perhaps why he chose to run towards the woman when she looked at him, and not flee.

The Raiselig Dossier: A Freedom most Fit

“Name?” Raiselig didn’t bother to look at the guardsman, instead pulling a thin scrip out of their pocket and flashing it at him. “Ah. Scrivener, eh?” Now Raiselig looked. “I am Scrivener, Keeper of the Law and follower of Ritual. Bringer of order and Hand of the Seven Manifold Prayer. The Willow Scribe herself wrote my name in the Book of the Rite, and thereby granted me the rights and duties therein.