Odanda, Harrowgate
"First Dreamer... I'm sorry."
The First Dreamer shook. The temple was silent. A few dreamers attended the wounds of their peers, but the rest either mourned or slept. The First Dreamer, in the absence of drink, had been skulking and thinking angry thoughts at Odanda.
"I've got nothing to say to... Did you just apologize?"
The First Dreamer heard the Whisperer sigh. "Yes, I apologized. I was wrong. I put my followers in danger, and they suffered for it, with nothing to show for their sacrifice." Her voice took on a shaky quality in his mind. "I felt them die, Dreamer. It was like losing a piece of my mind. So I'm apologizing. I did everyone wrong, you most of all. You've been loyal, obedient, and necessary. An equal."
"Um... Yes, good, right."
"And as an equal, I need you to help me. I need you to gather up the dreamers, make yourself look respectable, and turn yourself in to Swalsby."
"My Lady... If I might, as an equal, speak frankly, your plans don't have a great record of turning out the way you want them to."
"I don't have a plan. I have no idea what he'll do. All I know is that it'll get me another chance to convert him, and if worst comes to worst, well, public executions always make large crowds." Her voice softened. "Please. I'm putting myself into as much danger as you are. I need this."
The First Dreamer knew he couldn't turn her down. So he gathered up the functioning dreamers, made them wash and dress, and marched them out the door. Within the hour, the First Dreamer and his followers found themselves in the throne room, surrounded by guards and facing a very confused Lord Swalsby. The First Dreamer took a breath, and, with the Whisperer feeding him words, rose to speak.
"My Lord, you know me in many ways. A petitioner, a rioter, a fellow connoisseur. I come here to confess our crimes, but also to tell you what they are in service of. I am a servant of a greater being, a goddess of dreams and thought. I am her prophet, sent to spread her word, and all we have ever done has been to accomplish those goals. So while we throw ourselves upon your mercy, but we hope you will welcome hers."
"Really," Swalsby said incredulously, "That's your story. You are a prophet. In service of... What was it? A goddess of dreams and thought?"
"I know you don't believe it," the First Dreamer said, "but it is the truth. Open your mind to her, and you will understand."
And at that moment, Odanda reached out, praying, though she did not know to who, that Swalsby would fall to her.
"First Dreamer... I'm sorry."
The First Dreamer shook. The temple was silent. A few dreamers attended the wounds of their peers, but the rest either mourned or slept. The First Dreamer, in the absence of drink, had been skulking and thinking angry thoughts at Odanda.
"I've got nothing to say to... Did you just apologize?"
The First Dreamer heard the Whisperer sigh. "Yes, I apologized. I was wrong. I put my followers in danger, and they suffered for it, with nothing to show for their sacrifice." Her voice took on a shaky quality in his mind. "I felt them die, Dreamer. It was like losing a piece of my mind. So I'm apologizing. I did everyone wrong, you most of all. You've been loyal, obedient, and necessary. An equal."
"Um... Yes, good, right."
"And as an equal, I need you to help me. I need you to gather up the dreamers, make yourself look respectable, and turn yourself in to Swalsby."
"My Lady... If I might, as an equal, speak frankly, your plans don't have a great record of turning out the way you want them to."
"I don't have a plan. I have no idea what he'll do. All I know is that it'll get me another chance to convert him, and if worst comes to worst, well, public executions always make large crowds." Her voice softened. "Please. I'm putting myself into as much danger as you are. I need this."
The First Dreamer knew he couldn't turn her down. So he gathered up the functioning dreamers, made them wash and dress, and marched them out the door. Within the hour, the First Dreamer and his followers found themselves in the throne room, surrounded by guards and facing a very confused Lord Swalsby. The First Dreamer took a breath, and, with the Whisperer feeding him words, rose to speak.
"My Lord, you know me in many ways. A petitioner, a rioter, a fellow connoisseur. I come here to confess our crimes, but also to tell you what they are in service of. I am a servant of a greater being, a goddess of dreams and thought. I am her prophet, sent to spread her word, and all we have ever done has been to accomplish those goals. So while we throw ourselves upon your mercy, but we hope you will welcome hers."
"Really," Swalsby said incredulously, "That's your story. You are a prophet. In service of... What was it? A goddess of dreams and thought?"
"I know you don't believe it," the First Dreamer said, "but it is the truth. Open your mind to her, and you will understand."
And at that moment, Odanda reached out, praying, though she did not know to who, that Swalsby would fall to her.
Inspire a single mortal for the duration of his life DC 5 [1 AP +2]