Adom lets himself be dragged inside and tries to sort through his feelings as the others talk.
He had failed utterly. His cries to the spirits of the departed had not simply gone unheeded, they had called down their hatred upon himself. The chill in his bones still lingers, and the breath he had used to try to calm the crowd has not yet returned to him. The crowd had turned on him as well. The bedrock of his faith had been tested, and he had been found wanting.
As he leans against the door behind him, he looks over at Tefri who is standing nearby, still with a shoulder under Adom's arm. Adom withdraws his arm from the man with a grunt, but it is the priest who lowers his eyes to the ground as he does so. The man had thrown himself into the teeth of the crowd to give Adom time to finish the rites over the dead woman. The priest would have one spirit on his conscience rather than two, and it was thanks to the sl... this man. And without hesitation... Tefri... had dragged him to safety. He mutters a low
"thank you" to Tefri low enough that only the sl... the man himself can hear him.
Sabra's diatribe brings his attention to the elf. There is a heft to his words as he speaks them that tells of a great weight upon his soul. And what he says makes a certain amount of sense. There
had been something strange about the spirits that had spoken to him as he had made his clandestine preparations before the consecration of the tomb's foundation. If it was true that the spirits of the dead here were not all men, what agendas might they have lingering after their descent into the underworld? It is a profoundly disturbing thought. The dead have always simply been the dead for Adom, but the thought that there could be spirits and
spirits of some other sort is... not something he is prepared to accept lightly. Whatever that rampaging thing had been, it had been real enough to take the lives of innocent people in the street.
He opens his mouth to comment upon Sabra's claim to being a "simple elf" when Ipwet makes it for him. The woman, though clearly of an inferior social status, breeding, and upbringing, was... refreshingly direct. It was a strange thought for him. Normally that sort of bluntness would simply get someone killed, or make enough enemies to ensure that they would live a life devoid of prospects for advancement. And he supposes that given her current situation, she has dug this hole for herself. But as much as he enjoys the games of fanciful speech and fencing with words and hidden meanings, it is exhausting, and leaves you paranoid at times. Finding himself giving in to the temptation to drop his guard, and the pretenses, himself, if only for a moment, he looks at the three of them and says
"We all knew the moment we came together that this would not be easy. I have been... unkind to each of you. I do not apologize for my opinions, but you have proven several wrong already and I anticipate you will yet do the same with more of them. Tefri, amongst ourselves, act as you see fit. I owe you my life as much as Sabra and Ipwet." He gives the man a solemn nod.
Turning to Sabra and Ipwet, he says
"I do not yet know where we stand. But each of you acted without thought to keep the innocent from meeting the Lord of the underworld before their time. And you did the same for me, when I had given you no reason to love me." He looks down at his hands.
"I... do not know what to do. But if we can learn more about who or what that thing out there represented, we may be able to track down the problem. I have no special love for elves... but I do not hate them, Sabra. I do not hate you. And... if the Lord of the underworld is the keeper of the souls of your people as well, then it is my duty to see that they go to their long deserved rest undisturbed. Even... even if that means..." The sentence trails off. He is unwilling to finish the thought.
OOC:
Does Adom know where he can find research materials that might be pertinent?
Last edited September 11, 2016 4:06 am