kastil backstory
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Understood. Then he's going to head over to the temple of Iomedae with a couple bodyguards (murdering any demons he sees along the way, obviously) to talk to the Church of Iomedae about getting him some support for his trials.

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The Church of Iomedae in Kenabres has a single surviving priest who hasn't been commanded to go with the Crusade, a bright-eyed young woman who has been a priest of Iomedae for less than a year. A week ago she worked for Terendelev and now she is wildly out of her depth. 

" - hi," she says to Inquisitor Castelloni, anxiously. "I mean. Inquisitor. What do you need."

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He would like to give a reassuring smile but anything he does will look sinister. "Select," he says. "I have an accused cultist of Baphomet who I suspect is guilty and who, if so, will be executed shortly thereafter. The laws for conducting trials say that if possible, he should have a spiritual comforter before he is executed to help him calm his soul, turn his thoughts towards atonement, and so reduce his odds of damnation. Can you fill this role yourself or provide or recommend someone to do so?"

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- blink blink blink blink blink. "- right. 

 

Do you have to kill him? There's a lot of Baphomet cultists around here - they should stop that but I don't actually see how it makes anything better if we kill them for it. I can talk to him about his soul but what'll really calm him down is - you know. Getting older. Never met a forty-year-old Baphomet cultist."

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"I see no other option," he says. "I do not have the manpower to guard him on his way to exile, he cannot be conscripted to the army so long as it marches against his god, and should he be a traitor then to pardon him or release him with a whipping or maiming would leave the problem, that of an active armed force hidden inside the city that attempted to take it by treasonous attack, unresolved." 

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She looks down at his feet. "Yes, Inquisitor. I will speak to him, if you like, though it might be wiser to get Kyado if my participation in the execution is also expected, because I would expect that to somewhat undermine anything I said to him."

Mediocre attendance by the rest of the empowered Church at Hulrun's executions was a point of contention, before the world ended. Terendelev said that she knew little about the form human justice ought to take and was too busy defending the city. Irabeth was also often frequently too busy. Hulrun thought it made the Church look weak and divided, and while no one could accuse Terendelev or Irabeth of sympathy for demons anyone else who missed one would probably be so accused. 

The old priest, Saatar, said it was worse before they were told to stop executing people by burning, because the Inquisition couldn't use Iomedae's divine power to light dozens of fires in a day and the clerics of course could.

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"No one's participation in the execution is required except the executioner," he says flatly. "I have been sent to relieve Hulrun because his procedures were not endorsed by the Church of Iomedae. Sympathy for demons is not a crime; Iomedae Herself possessed it. Supporting demons is, but the crime is the act not the emotion, which is a virtuous emotion if often ill-guided. If you believe Kyado will be better at the job, I will seek him out, if not, this is the sole duty I ask of you in my courts, unless you happen to see a crime against the Laws of Iomedae committed and wish to testify."

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Startled blink. " - oh. No, in that case I'll probably be better, Kyado's a wreck. 

I didn't mean to say anything against Hulrun. The city'd have fallen long ago without him."

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Ettore nods stiffly. "Hulrun's skills were considerable." But he's also absolutely terrible for the reputation of Iomedae and the Inquisition.

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Saatar used to say, it's cheaper for the goddess to see things when you look, so you look very hard with your eyes wide open, and it's cheaper for the goddess to do things when we ask, so you ask for everything, but ultimately everything's very big and very strange and you can't expect you'll get answers, or like the ones you get, and nothing's better if you don't serve Her. If that would be better She'd stop empowering you. 

 

She feels like she is supposed to have a question, but she doesn't know what it is. 

 

 


Oh, no, actually, it's obvious. "Am I supposed to have different procedures now? If the old ones were wrong?"

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"I do not know the procedures you follow, so I cannot say whether or not it is wrong. This -" he digs out his pocket copy of the Laws of Iomedae, he has spare copies and anyway he's got it memorized "- is the code the Church of Iomedae instructed me to enforce, but it presumes many features of government not present in Mendev, and ignores those that are there. What procedures do you presently follow?"

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" - I make clean water first for the city and then for farmers who'll pay for it, and I do channels at high noon and sunset, and I did house calls for the dying and for women in childbirth, back when we had Terendelev, and I used to teach a class after sundown in the room with the Continual Flame, about why to be Lawful Good, but we stopped it because people weren't safe in the streets going home after, and I read from the books at services and try to make them sound exciting, and I keep the church clean and respectable and I report common crimes to the Eagle Watch, though I guess I can't do that anymore because they're marching out, and I report suspected cultists to Hulrun - to you - and I give the collections money to Irabeth direct and tell her if the building's broken or if we're out of food and she gives me a bit back for that. 

- I guess my big problems are that I don't know who to bring the collections money or who to report crimes to, without the Eagle Watch."

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"All this sounds wholly reasonable," he says, in the voice of a Competent, Organized Person. "I do not yet know who to deliver money or report crimes to, but I expect I will tomorrow, and I can tell you then. In your place, I would wait to report minor crimes, report major crimes to me, and store money in a bank of Abadar, if there is one in the city."

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“Rathimus is leaving with the Crusade too,” she says. “- the priest of Abadar, who also ran their bank. If you’ll know tomorrow that’ll do, though. Inheritor’s blessing go with you.”

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"And with you."

And then he needs to go scream, but he cannot actually do this, because he's in charge. So his next step is...

... To track down Irabeth and ask her what the legal system looks like with her gone, and hopefully Rathimus. Then he can hold the trial and actually solve the problem.

(What he thinks they should do is get Count Arendae or his steward, Irabeth, him, and some of the merchant leaders to discuss what things will look like with them gone, and, yes, he is reinventing the idea of a city council. But he's still setting off traps wherever he places his feet.)

Blah blah blah find Irabeth blah blah blah shoot any demons between him and Irabeth blah blah blah?

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There are either very few demons left or word has gotten out about him; there is only opportunity to shoot one.

 

Irabeth says, a bit sheepishly, that the Eagle Watch were mostly functioning as a semiofficial city guard since the actual city guard was compromised and everyone knew it. "You'll have to hire them wholly anew, I suspect. It's not even that they're mostly cultists it's that they're on the take from everybody and his cousin, and lazy, and cowards. The city magistrates aren't as bad, but I never could guess how they were going to rule on things, unless money was in the picture. 

- a lot of this is Arendae's fault. There've been all kinds of wild incidents around him, and it hasn't gone well for anyone who looked into it, and you can see what sort of person that leaves behind."

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... He nods. "Wild incidents?"

(He can REALLY understand how Hulrun ended up practically running the city.)

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"I have not, myself, looked into it," says Irabeth dryly. "...but for an example, the Count was kidnapped, once, and his guards killed, and then he was rescued by some adventurers who killed all the kidnappers, and then he claimed he'd actually hired the kidnappers himself as a joke."

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Ettore Castelloni does not have enough Bluff to conceal that he finds this the most morally repellent thing he's ever heard, though he will try. "And faced no legal sanction for this, because of his noble status," he says flatly. "And because anyone who investigated 'had it go badly for them.'"

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"Yes," says Irabeth, tiredly. "Hulrun wrote his superiors in the Church - not just about that incident, about several different ones - and we got orders to leave the Count be. Hopefully because they have a specialist on it, but maybe because the Count is Queen Galfrey's cousin, or maybe because Lastwall's secretly run by Baphomet cultists by now, I don't know."

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"I am confident that Lastwall is not run by Baphomet cultists," says Ettore.

And then - "Are there any honest and competent people in Kenabres who are not being taken on crusade?"

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"I left sixty men back to hold the wardstone and its border under Elin the Tall, he's green but he's a quick study and a good man. They've got some good archers and good horses and six empowered paladins and it won't be the worst-defended segment of the border, though it sure isn't Terendelev. 

I think the main temple of Iomedae left someone back so the city still has healing and water. I don't know who they picked but the goddess chooses carefully, I'd trust any of them. 

I would've said Horgus Gwerm is a good man and an honest one but apparently he's...not even Horgus Gwerm, so I guess that says so much for my judgment. 

 Fyllemen Frulliatros, who runs the magic shop, is dead, but he was a rich man and had made arrangements so maybe he won't stay that way. He's a wizard and honest and does Steeds for the border every day and, as you might expect of the owner of a magic shop, passionately favors the rule of Law, and he's too old to go on Crusade.

....that's about it, though."

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"Thank you." He did, in fact, already trust the Select in question, but it's nice to know that there is another person, and maybe even another two people.

"... Horgus Gwerm?" He's half-dreading the answer.

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"Local nobleman, the only survivor of a demon attack on his family's estate when he was a child. He was wealthy and occasionally generous, hosted events for visiting important people, outfitted pretty much the whole of the Eagle Watch but in secret, Anevia had to figure out it was even him...

It came out two days ago that, firstly, Camellia was his illegitimate daughter, and secondly, that she was a crazed serial killer, and thirdly, that he knew and covered for her, and fourthly, that in fact he wasn't Horgus Gwerm and was a random servant's child who'd been the sole survivor of the attack on the mansion and decided to play Gwerm when found."

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Kastil will shake his head sympathetically, radiating an aura of I-am-too-tired-for-this-shit that he usually tries to keep suppressed. "... It came out how?"

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