kastil backstory
+ Show First Post
Total: 479
Posts Per Page:
Permalink

"I'm glad you came here first. All right," he adds to his staff (leaving it conveniently ambiguous if he's also issuing orders to Kastil's people), "everybody out, the Inquisitor has enough to worry about without you lot lurking and listening -"

Permalink

"Enric," he'll say quietly, and let the rest of his group slip out the door with them.

(Enric isn't a half-orc, isn't a woman, and can fade into the background almost as well as Silvio can.)

Permalink

"A man in Hulrun's mold," he says approvingly. "Right, well, I'm trusting you that your people won't repeat this to Count Arendae, that'd make my life very difficult. The man is very hard to work with. He's a drunk, he's a lout, he specifically loathes doing the right thing for the right reasons but is often amenable to doing the right thing for stupid reasons, he parties hard and likes people who party with him.You should stay away from him, yourself, but buy a couple of his whores and get regular updates, just so nothing takes you by surprise. One of the better ways to get him to do something useful is to put it about that you'd be very annoyed if he did it before you could yourself. The most important thing about Arendae is that he's not, in fact, important in Nerosyan, and letting on some contempt for him there is perfectly safe, though one wants to stop short of suggesting a problem big enough Galfrey ought to do something about it; she doesn't like it when people bring her problems, see. You'll be spending a lot of time in Nerosyan because they decide how much funding Kenabres gets, and brave veterans endorsed by Iomedae are the best people to secure our share. 

The other important local nobles are Gwerm, who is a straightforward and Abadaran man you'll have no trouble with, and Emeretta, who I think moved here thinking to catch Daeran's eye. It hasn't worked. Somehow he's yet to persuade her to give up, but maybe the sack of the city will have done it. If she does move out I think I can persuade her to leave her city estate on loan to the Church, so long as it is taken good care of. Of course perhaps you are of the school of thought that Iomedae's servants should take no pay and live in sack clothes when the situation is ill-suited to armor, but personally I think that's terrible for morale."

Permalink

"On my first visit to the Arendae estate," he says drily, "with demons walking the streets near-openly, his servants informed me that he was out but that he had a great many guards inside. I have no intention of repeating your words to him."

Permalink

"You'll learn to manage him, but he takes some managing. He does not actually participate in the day to day operations of the city in any way; on a good day, he sends a deputy, but good days are few and far between."

Permalink

"Mmm." When that isn't enough, "Tell me about Nerosyan."

Permalink

"Oh, that'll be a much longer conversation, especially as you're not from Mendev. There are a lot of people to keep track of, and they're naturally suspicious of outsiders - there are ways around that, but they take time. Have you considered picking up a Mendevian wife? It's the sort of thing that helps make people feel like you're putting down roots here, like you're not - frankly - an agent of a foreign power who'll happily betray Mendev for it, which is how people sometimes - no doubt mistakenly - see Lastwall's people.

Anyway, you'll have a hard time in Nerosyan, but it's impossible to do your duties here without some serious connections there. Some of Nerosyan's most important noble families..." And he can speak on this for quite a while, from a mix of personal anecdote and implications of important connections himself.

Permalink

Oh, Ettore is HAPPY to listen. He'd like to take notes but he can't, so instead he's trying to use his best mnemonics to keep it fresh and going over everything Oris says so he thinks he can get it down onto paper later and say "Mmm?" and "go on" a lot and look very interested, because he IS. (Hopefully Enric can provide a second voice on Ettore's reports, although this really isn't his specialty.) He's somewhat curious how many times Oris will admit to attempts to subvert the legal system in the speech, though he only really needs to do it once to arrest him.

Whatever the number is, once the speech is done, he'll say, "And what can you tell me about the situation inside the city?"

Permalink

"We need you very badly," Oris says. "I've been trying to hold things together - the city watch turned out to be riddled through with cultists, we'll have to hire all new people, which I'm in the middle of - the city's defenses are going to be very precarious without Terendelev, even without everyone going on Crusade, and many of the city's most trustworthy defenders are leaving on Crusade on top of that. We can endure without them! Kenabres has great strengths, often underestimated. But in the short term, it's a mess. We have one remaining city magistrate, and need to rapidly appoint several more just to get through all the damnable cultists. Frankly, what Hulrun always needed to do, and what you need to do now, is force everyone to testify to not being a cultist under a Zone of Truth, and convict everyone who won't. There's no way the city can return to normalcy when everyone's seen their neighbors turn out to be traitors. We were insufficiently paranoid, and can't afford ever to be so again. And we have to restore the faith of the public in the law, by having city guards out there in uniform who aren't criminals or cultists and who will actually do their jobs."

Permalink

"I understand," says Ettore. "- The Inquisition would be pleased to take the cultists off your hands, and I recognize that rebuilding a functional Watch must be a priority. What actions have you taken towards that goal?"

Permalink

"I brought in my own staff. I've vetted them, they're not idiots, and they can keep an eye on the new hires, make sure they're doing their jobs. I've been hiring suitable candidates as quickly as I can, though I don't myself have truth magic so they're all probationary hires, sent out only with my staff, until you can check them. If the Church never sent anyone I figured I'd have Rathimus do it, but the man charges an arm and a leg so I hadn't yet. People are used to going to the Eagle Watch with crime, but the Eagle Watch is leaving. You should tell Tirabade to refer them back to the actual city watch, once it's been verified that the city watch is no longer full of cultists."

Permalink

"How can you keep a Watch of the size needed for Kenabres paid, supplied, and disciplined?" Ettore is honestly curious what his answer is as much as anything else.

Permalink

"The bad news is, half the city's Baphomet cultists. The good news, half the city's Baphomet cultists and so it's not going to be hard to pay the men out of confiscated property. I'm supplying them out of my personal stores, right now. Consider it a favor to you and to the Church. I'm far from made of money but I know when it's badly needed. And I've always been of the school of thought that public executions do wonders for discipline."

Permalink

"I understand your position," he says. This is probably not an attempt to bribe an inquisitor.

(He does, actually, understand all of this. It makes perfect sense...)

(... Also he suspects that Rathimus would pay lower prices if he liked Oris more.)

"Explain Irabeth and the Eagle Watch to me."

Permalink

 

"Eagle Watch did their jobs, for the most part. They wouldn't look half as good if anyone else had done their jobs at all, but I can't blame Tirabade for that. Politically, the woman is a liability and a half - can't fundraise, picks fights everywhere she goes, barely gets on with the rest of her own church, and - look, there's no kind way to say it, but she's got the face of a pug and the skin tone of a grasshopper so she can't get anywhere with the Mendevian nobility. Folks don't believe in the mixing of the races, around here. I don't care myself, except that everything diplomatic she wouldn't leave to Hulrun fell apart. It is great news that she's marching out, much as it leaves a mess for us to pick up. The front is a better place for her."

Permalink

"Mmm. Why did no one report crimes to the Watch?"

Permalink

"The city watch was full of cultists, and letting criminals go free. Hulrun knew it, and was trying to deal with it, but the thing cultists do is they learn the rules you have to follow and then try to strangle you with them. Just made sure he never had enough of an excuse." Oris looks sad. "I told him he had enough of an excuse, that the people who weren't cultists wouldn't mind being asked. - anyway, who's going to report crimes to a police force riddled with traitors? No one. This is how you get crime gangs, incidentally, when the guards' hands are too tied, and now we have crime gangs. I can tell you who's in them, though only if you'll actually string them up, I'm not going to make enemies like that if you have to tell me my word isn't enough."

Permalink

"So I see."

"What can you tell me about the new Knight-Commander and his sister?"

Permalink

"I've heard the same gossip as the whole rest of the city. All of it's unbelievable and probably only half of it is false. I have some men learning more, and I'll tell you what I hear, when I hear it, but it might be a few weeks. The new Knight-Commander has a lot of new friends, and it'll take some time to get anything interesting. - he's definitely Tien, and definitely good with a sword, and definitely the kind of blazingly heroic sort you want marching out in front of your crusade, if you're Galfrey."

Permalink

He nods.

"Then my next question for you, Oris Chet, is, by what legal authority did you take command of the City Watch?"

Permalink

 

"Inquisitor, when there's homes being robbed right in front of you, the first thing you do is have your men stop the robbers, and the second thing you do is go check the state of the city watch, and if the answer is 'went over to the side of the demons', then you tell the folks who haven't gone over to the demons that you'll get them a paycheck, and you make the city safe.

 

I'm not gonna tell you you can't come sweeping in here after it's all over with paperwork, but that's what you're doing, sweeping in here after it's all over with paperwork. You wanna call them Oris's private security working for free as a favor to his city, and not the city watch at all until someone tracks down Emeretta to sign off on it, sure, I don't care, so long as the streets are safe."

Permalink

This is, actually, a fantastically hard decision for him to make. The choice isn't between good and evil; hard decisions never are. It's between two different strategies that might succeed; between a dream for a brighter future that may well be a delusion, and offending someone who comes offering the hand of friendship and who may well be True Neutral the way Aroden was Lawful Neutral, because he paid the price too many times.

He bows a moment, in prayer. He doesn't expect a miracle to relieve him of the choice. He doesn't get one.

Ultimately, it's a choice between trying to do something very hard...

... And doing what he knows will never work.

"Your immediate decisions have been wholly understandable, in the emergency. I cannot condemn you for your efforts to rebuild the City Watch, and I commend you for your expenditure of your own resources towards it."

"Nonetheless, you misunderstand two things: The Iomedaean Inquisition is Good. And the Iomedaean Inquisition is Lawful. The streets must be made safe, and the confidence of the people in the law must be restored, but this confidence was not lost yesterday. It was lost when Inquisitor Hulrun attempted to burn a child who came from Kyonin to help crusade on the suspicion of witchcraft - a child who participated in the battle against Minagho yesterday - and then when he attempted to arrest the entire church of Desna for warning the city of an attack."

"The reconstruction of this trust will not come with hangings on the word of one man, nor the arrest of the entire city with every child too frightened to speak being hanged. It will come when citizens believe that the watch is more likely to guard them than beat them, whatever their wealth or heritage, and so the innocent truly have nothing to fear."

"Oris Chet, I am placing you under arrest on suspicion of the crimes of bribery and subversion of the state. I sincerely hope you are innocent, and should you be I will apologize to you personally. If not, justice will be meted out by the Laws of Iomedae. Will you come peacefully?"

Permalink

 

"Inquisitor," he says, as a man scolding a child. "Kenabres can't afford for you to be rash, here. If you have some specific allegation of some specific error I would be honored to assuage it. If you want to try to pin everything that's happened since the Third Crusade on me, because the Church can't bear for those to have been Hulrun's decisions - well, I've known Iomedae's church a long time. At its best, it's better than that. His calls, every one of them, and you're not going to make it long here until you understand why he made them, and why the goddess stood by him."

Permalink

"Hulrun is under investigation by the Iomedaean Inquisition," he says. "They were his calls, every one of them."

And Enric will whistle sharply, and then they will have a Hold Person available if they need one.

Permalink

"Well, that's how to lose a war in short order but I can't fault you for consistency. Do you have any specific allegation or do you mean to arrest me and then find one."

Total: 479
Posts Per Page: