"They are not ally of mine. Not yet. Should they refuse my offer, I will kill Ghendra. I have not decided if I would do so while he stands in front of me in parley, or on the battlefield. I will kill him." I keep the reasons to myself. They don't need to be wrights form by the chains carving scars into my heart.
"I have given thought to our company. We each follow a agenda dictated by our needs. You are a servant of your rigid goddess, the fallen knight is blinded by his centuries of grief, and Aliron caution. So wrapped up by our desires, we become blind to who we have become. Let me remind you of our crimes. Then I would ask for you to judge us.
"We have slain the mother of Branwen. You may make the case that it was in self defense. To that, I would say think of the mountain goat and the wolf. Do you think the wolf deserving of death for taking the goat's life. It is the cycle of life. In our conceit we think such laws don't apply to us.
"You may say Branwen is better off with us. That she will grow into her elven heritage. Who has granted you the power to foresee her fate? How can we be certain this will be fact?
"Somewhere a young lady mourns the loss of her lover. She wasn't evil. Tommem seemed reluctant to attack us. We never ascertained his motives. He could have been coerced, turned to a life of crime out of need. You will say we judge on his actions and deeds, yet we keep a self-proclaimed thief in our company. No one bats an eye at Aliron.
"I have killed a priest that threatened Branwen. You clerk my actions a crime, tell me you had plans of sneaking out of town should things look bad for her, but what if the gnolls? If you escaped this village, what of the date of these children who would have faced these gnolls without our intercession. Would we not be as guilty as the gnolls for allowing the children to die? Did killing the priest not grant us an opportunity to defend this village?"
"I have given thought to our company. We each follow a agenda dictated by our needs. You are a servant of your rigid goddess, the fallen knight is blinded by his centuries of grief, and Aliron caution. So wrapped up by our desires, we become blind to who we have become. Let me remind you of our crimes. Then I would ask for you to judge us.
"We have slain the mother of Branwen. You may make the case that it was in self defense. To that, I would say think of the mountain goat and the wolf. Do you think the wolf deserving of death for taking the goat's life. It is the cycle of life. In our conceit we think such laws don't apply to us.
"You may say Branwen is better off with us. That she will grow into her elven heritage. Who has granted you the power to foresee her fate? How can we be certain this will be fact?
"Somewhere a young lady mourns the loss of her lover. She wasn't evil. Tommem seemed reluctant to attack us. We never ascertained his motives. He could have been coerced, turned to a life of crime out of need. You will say we judge on his actions and deeds, yet we keep a self-proclaimed thief in our company. No one bats an eye at Aliron.
"I have killed a priest that threatened Branwen. You clerk my actions a crime, tell me you had plans of sneaking out of town should things look bad for her, but what if the gnolls? If you escaped this village, what of the date of these children who would have faced these gnolls without our intercession. Would we not be as guilty as the gnolls for allowing the children to die? Did killing the priest not grant us an opportunity to defend this village?"
Valar Lord
Grandmaster
Mythic Scribe