Mathell: Difference between revisions
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It was pointless to resist, and he had nothing to remain behind for. | It was pointless to resist, and he had nothing to remain behind for. | ||
Hours passed in a slow, prolonged agony. His lungs tightened as each breath grew more difficult to take in. His mud-covered sunny skin was burnt beneath the grime with | Hours passed in a slow, prolonged agony. His lungs tightened as each breath grew more difficult to take in. His mud-covered sunny skin was burnt beneath the grime with rashes and terrible marring welts. Every second was a lingering flare of displeasure, and every minute become a hope that the predestined end awaiting him would come soon. | ||
His eyes drew closed after a final, terrible breath of plague scented air. | His eyes drew closed after a final, terrible breath of plague scented air. | ||
The forms around him grew gray and blurred as each eyelid slipped further down, his last view of the world in the throes of his agony one of complete indifference. All things were the same, colorless and without life. | The forms around him grew gray and blurred as each eyelid slipped further down, his last view of the world in the throes of his agony one of complete indifference. All things were the same, colorless and without life. | ||
And he would be joining them. The morbidity of his thoughts brought a restful smile over his | And he would be joining them. The morbidity of his thoughts brought a restful smile over his bleakly chapped lips. | ||
It was the same moment that he realized his hope for an ending must be near, that he very abruptly realized he was still not gone. He had felt a certainty in that when he closed his eyes this time, all things would change. | It was the same moment that he realized his hope for an ending must be near, that he very abruptly realized he was still not gone. He had felt a certainty in that when he closed his eyes this time, all things would change. | ||
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The Kelemvorite priests had spent tireless weeks in quarantining villages and towns rife with the illness, instructing local law enforcement and militia on the proper procedures. This particular village was but one among the frenzy. | The Kelemvorite priests had spent tireless weeks in quarantining villages and towns rife with the illness, instructing local law enforcement and militia on the proper procedures. This particular village was but one among the frenzy. | ||
Many, many of the villagers were granted a quickened end. | Many, many of the villagers were granted a quickened end. | ||
A | A calming farewell and reassurance of what was to come, before a painless ending to hasten their departure. Mathell would not be one of them. | ||
The leading priest of the outfit had noticed the gaunt boy the moment they arrived. Every living figure squirmed and pleaded for aid, with that one child as the only exception. He could feel his breath from a distance, the tightened chords of his throat gasping for the last | The leading priest of the outfit had noticed the gaunt boy the moment they arrived. Every living figure squirmed and pleaded for aid, with that one child as the only exception. He could feel his breath from a distance, the tightened chords of his throat gasping for the last strained intake of life. | ||
And Kelemvor spoke to him, a soft whistling of melancholic winds through the disease heaved street. That child was one to be saved, his time long yet in the coming. | And Kelemvor spoke to him, a soft whistling of melancholic winds through the disease heaved street. That child was one to be saved, his time long yet in the coming. | ||
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Since his earliest time as an acolyte of Kelemvor's church, Mathell has been a well-known figure for his unshakable devotion to his god. | Since his earliest time as an acolyte of Kelemvor's church, Mathell has been a well-known figure for his unshakable devotion to his god. | ||
Not without a sense of irony, his faith has undergone countless severe trials in his time in Sundren, many pushing him to the edge of his patience and willpower. | Not without a sense of irony, his faith has undergone countless severe trials in his time in Sundren, many pushing him to the edge of his patience and willpower. | ||
Though he has remained intact spiritually throughout these trials, the stubborn strength to overcome such is a notable problem-causer besides the rest. | |||
Mathell is | Mathell is -often- perceived as an overly prideful, even arrogant young Knight with a morose fascination for warfare and death combined. | ||
This is a truth he passionately defends against. | This is a truth he passionately defends against. | ||
The young Doomguide lives by the strength of his faith in Kelemvor, and the tasks he performs on his behalf. As a Knight of the Eternal Order, this commonly equates into the hunting and complete annihilation of near-to all cases of undeath, and those who conjure them. An obsession with no end, Mathell | The young Doomguide lives by the strength of his faith in Kelemvor, and the tasks he performs on his behalf. As a Knight of the Eternal Order, this commonly equates into the hunting and complete annihilation of near-to all cases of undeath, and those who conjure them. An obsession with no foreseeable end, Mathell has made himself zealot with the words of his god as his only moral compass. | ||
The raw passionate hatred he poises against all undead, including those otherwise accepted by his church, such as Undead Scriveners of Jergal, or Baelnorn of Sehanine Moonbow are under equal threat from Mathell's drive as a frenzied vampire or unintelligent zombie. While this stance has potential to create no end of trouble for his church, the matter has carefully been avoided by the young Doomguide's inexperience in such | The raw passionate hatred he poises against all undead, including those otherwise accepted by his church, such as Undead Scriveners of Jergal, or Baelnorn of Sehanine Moonbow are under equal threat from Mathell's drive as would be a frenzied vampire or unintelligent zombie. While this stance has potential to create no end of trouble for his church, the matter has carefully been avoided by the young Doomguide's inexperience in such confrontations. In the case of a battle pending with such beings, he has always found himself distracted long enough to let the subject in question escape or a greater threat arise. | ||
Timely intervention it seems, still | Timely intervention it seems, still watches the Knight. | ||
While a strenuous word from a superior in the Order or a temple-head could potentially dissuade some of his misguided enthusiasm, such has yet to be seen. | While a strenuous word from a superior in the Order or a temple-head could potentially dissuade some of his misguided enthusiasm, such has yet to be seen. |
Revision as of 05:34, 5 January 2010
Name: Mathell
Title(s): Doomguide of Kelemvor
Home/Location: Temple of Kelemvor, Sestra
Birthplace: N/A
Age: 23
Race: Human
Gender: Male
Patron Deity: Kelemvor
Alignment: Lawful Neutral
Appearance:
Mathell has been called sobering, melancholic and even gloomy at first sight.
All of the above are generally true.
His naturally fair skin is blemished and covered in reddened sunburns, a testimony to many hard days beneath the sun. Both his hair and beard are an untidy display, each a deep-settled black to go with his attire. That he is not an overly attractive man by natural means is not aided by the ragged exhaustion his face displays. Purplish black bags weigh heavily beneath the faded emerald tone of his eyes, his lips commonly chapped and the cheeks surrounding them gaunt with overexertion.
All of this only adds to the frightening display of his armored suit. Heavy, well-fitted custom plate-mail in tones of black and gray adorn very nearly the entirety of the young Doomguide's frame. A large symbol of the Lord of the Dead sits neatly in the exact middlemost position of his breastplate, decorated in gold tones.
Background:
Mathell has very little to share about himself with the majority who may ask. He speaks readily enough of his station as a Paladin of the Eternal Order, as well as the more practical title of Doomguide of the Judge of the Damned. How he obtained such and his childhood before it, however, is often a mystery.
It took a fellow member of the Eternal Order to piece together the larger scale of his history, and it was lost shortly after as he fell in a battle near Baldurs Gate. Such stories are held now by Mathell alone, though for what he did tell, they would be something close to this:
Very early on his childhood, Mathell was an orphan in the city of Neverwinter. Surviving as any street urchin and child beggar may, he found himself in eventual dispute with a children's gang of thieves and bullies. Unable to defend himself against the near constant taunting of the other children in the docks district, he found himself confronted by two obvious choices. The first was the most natural; to prostrate himself to the older and larger children, and play errand-boy to their whims until he himself was allowed into the gang. The second was the closer to unthinkable. To leave the city entirely, as there was no other district that could afford the oversight of his ragged state.
As a testament to Mathell's curious mindset and spirit even at such a young age, he opted for the second course. It was a small child's naivety and hope that led him to believing life could be better out of the city, and that there existed something more for him. Tragically, only a week and a half out of Neverwinter city, he learned how unfortunate and cruel reality could be.
A six year old child had been allowed to ride in the back of a caravan traveling east from Neverwinter, stopping at the odd hamlet and trade village as they would. The caravan master was an elderly fellow, a childless man but with many nephews and nieces that he was very fond of. He considered allowing the boy to travel with him a sort of endearing gesture to all children, and he after all did not cost a great deal to keep at the back. It was the unnamed caravan master's generosity that led to the scarring of the child Mathell's earliest memories, and also his step into a greater life.
The caravan made the fatal but unknowable error of stopping for several nights in a village recently struck by the traveling plague. The last day in, the first of the villagers began to show symptoms of the illness. It was a natural reaction that the tradesmen' loaded their wagons and set off within the same hour. It was the natural oversight that their boy companion was left behind.
Mathell had gone fishing. A pastime he had discovered on his first day in the village with a few of the other local children, and had immediately taken to. He found himself gleefully bobbing a line in one of the local streams when the caravan left without him. It was hours before he had realized they were gone. It was a full day before they realized he was. Unable to turn back for fear of the plague, and the boy unable to follow, Mathell found himself in the very center of a dying village.
And he too, caught the sickness.
The dead and the dying lay in the village's main street, some stacked over the others and some solitary souls clinging to the walls of houses and barns. The freshly trampled mud of the morning rain littered the faces and frames of everyone in sight. Some were silent but most called out, a terrible, lingering wail of pain and injustice. The children he had shyly played with days before sat crumpled in the arms of their mothers and sisters, lifeless eyes drooped in an accusing stare towards whatever material object had caught their eye before the end. And the stench.. Was terrible.
It was beyond what a child could take in. He felt he should cry out, as so many of the others had. He knew he should cling to life, as they -all- had. Confronted with the inescapable truth of his mortality, and those around him, the strangely spirited boy took a shift towards something far stranger still. Everyone had gone before him. The pleasant cheerful father of one of the local girls, the obnoxious older boy that had chased him about with sticks. Every face he saw was wrought with the truth of human fatalism. It was pointless to resist, and he had nothing to remain behind for.
Hours passed in a slow, prolonged agony. His lungs tightened as each breath grew more difficult to take in. His mud-covered sunny skin was burnt beneath the grime with rashes and terrible marring welts. Every second was a lingering flare of displeasure, and every minute become a hope that the predestined end awaiting him would come soon.
His eyes drew closed after a final, terrible breath of plague scented air. The forms around him grew gray and blurred as each eyelid slipped further down, his last view of the world in the throes of his agony one of complete indifference. All things were the same, colorless and without life. And he would be joining them. The morbidity of his thoughts brought a restful smile over his bleakly chapped lips.
It was the same moment that he realized his hope for an ending must be near, that he very abruptly realized he was still not gone. He had felt a certainty in that when he closed his eyes this time, all things would change. He would find himself elsewhere, or nowhere at all.
He understood something very different had taken place, when gentle hands roused him and pleasantly soothing lights caressed his frail frame. He was alive, and the gray figure before him had done the unspeakable and impossible. Those soothing lights had roused an ounce of his body's unshared desire for life, and he had returned once more to the battle with the sickness.
The Kelemvorite priests had spent tireless weeks in quarantining villages and towns rife with the illness, instructing local law enforcement and militia on the proper procedures. This particular village was but one among the frenzy.
Many, many of the villagers were granted a quickened end.
A calming farewell and reassurance of what was to come, before a painless ending to hasten their departure. Mathell would not be one of them.
The leading priest of the outfit had noticed the gaunt boy the moment they arrived. Every living figure squirmed and pleaded for aid, with that one child as the only exception. He could feel his breath from a distance, the tightened chords of his throat gasping for the last strained intake of life.
And Kelemvor spoke to him, a soft whistling of melancholic winds through the disease heaved street. That child was one to be saved, his time long yet in the coming.
Mathell followed the priests to their temple when all was said and done.
They stored him in a backroom with a few of the very rare line of villagers that had survived the wandering epidemic. He later learned the caravan had perished much further eastwards on the road, as well. It was the boy's good fortune to have been at a site the priests could have reached, and the tradesmen misfortune to have made such great distance from it.
He slowly accepted life once more, as his body retook it's strength and the depth of his experience gradually dawned on his adolescent mind. He quickly became inducted as an acolyte thereafter in their temple along the northern Swordcoast, wherein the boy transitioned from priest of the Death Clergy to the abrupt and unexpected shift of Knight of Kelemvor's Eternal Order.
A title he maintains in the today, along the devoted calling of a Doomguide.
Character Personality:
Religion speaks for the entirety of Mathell's being. Since his earliest time as an acolyte of Kelemvor's church, Mathell has been a well-known figure for his unshakable devotion to his god. Not without a sense of irony, his faith has undergone countless severe trials in his time in Sundren, many pushing him to the edge of his patience and willpower. Though he has remained intact spiritually throughout these trials, the stubborn strength to overcome such is a notable problem-causer besides the rest. Mathell is -often- perceived as an overly prideful, even arrogant young Knight with a morose fascination for warfare and death combined.
This is a truth he passionately defends against. The young Doomguide lives by the strength of his faith in Kelemvor, and the tasks he performs on his behalf. As a Knight of the Eternal Order, this commonly equates into the hunting and complete annihilation of near-to all cases of undeath, and those who conjure them. An obsession with no foreseeable end, Mathell has made himself zealot with the words of his god as his only moral compass. The raw passionate hatred he poises against all undead, including those otherwise accepted by his church, such as Undead Scriveners of Jergal, or Baelnorn of Sehanine Moonbow are under equal threat from Mathell's drive as would be a frenzied vampire or unintelligent zombie. While this stance has potential to create no end of trouble for his church, the matter has carefully been avoided by the young Doomguide's inexperience in such confrontations. In the case of a battle pending with such beings, he has always found himself distracted long enough to let the subject in question escape or a greater threat arise.
Timely intervention it seems, still watches the Knight.
While a strenuous word from a superior in the Order or a temple-head could potentially dissuade some of his misguided enthusiasm, such has yet to be seen. This is undoubtedly largely by Mathell's efforts to veil his desire to battle such delicately-discussed cases from the larger church.
However, there exists still two sides of his chosen faith.
For all his exuberant passion on the field and the great fervor in which he lays undead to rest, Mathell could be equally well known for his practiced, sincere tending to the dead and dying. That he is not is again, largely by his own abrasive personality in displaying the one before the other.
Significant Relationships:
The most notable relationships Mathell has achieved in his time in the valley undeniably consists of the law enforcement he works alongside with, as well as the Triadic and Helmite representatives he commonly strikes out towards the region's threats beside. It is however commonly respected that such is a shallow face, as it is shared knowledge a Doomguide stays only where needed.
And Mathell has every intention of ridding Sundren of it's need for his presence.