Post by SlothfulCat on Aug 3, 2008 11:05:07 GMT -5
To the Council of Isinhold,
I have recently learned that the merchant, Rigrin, valantly put himself in danger to rescue a woman from certain doom at the hands of the known assasain and murderer who goes by the name of Wynter. Instead of being appropriately thanked for his heroic act, the good sir now sits in a cell next to the murderess who will likely seek revenge on him for stoping her slaying of her most recent target.
This sort of injustice atop other attrocities commited to the very adventurers Isinhold chooses to welcome into its walls leads me to pen this letter of protest. How could such a sentencing be considered lawful or just? The hin was protecting a woman and those standing witness including the villagers within eyesight from a near certain doom. At the time the woman Wynter began her malicious attacks she then forfieted the protected status we are each suppose to enjoy under the law; and upon hearing the measures taken to restrain her... I cannot but protest that there was no excessive force used. The woman is incredibly quick, and if still mobile while under the spell used to momentarily halt her attack, could not reasonibly be assumed in a state during which anyone save another monk of power could bind her to prevent her continued attacks.
I'd ask that each of you council-members look into your own hearts and ask yourselves if this is right. Ask yourself if you'd punish a man for saving your own wives, daughters, mothers, husbands, brothers, and sons from being slain by such villans which you yourself allow to walk among them. It is actions such as this sentencing of good men for noble deeds which causes angst among the goodly, reasonable and just peoples about what sort of future awaits the village of Isinhold when it cannot be differentiated from Zhentil Keep by the behavior of its protectors.
In ireful protest to this latest injustice,
Zoriya Afsanah, Paladin of Sune
I have recently learned that the merchant, Rigrin, valantly put himself in danger to rescue a woman from certain doom at the hands of the known assasain and murderer who goes by the name of Wynter. Instead of being appropriately thanked for his heroic act, the good sir now sits in a cell next to the murderess who will likely seek revenge on him for stoping her slaying of her most recent target.
This sort of injustice atop other attrocities commited to the very adventurers Isinhold chooses to welcome into its walls leads me to pen this letter of protest. How could such a sentencing be considered lawful or just? The hin was protecting a woman and those standing witness including the villagers within eyesight from a near certain doom. At the time the woman Wynter began her malicious attacks she then forfieted the protected status we are each suppose to enjoy under the law; and upon hearing the measures taken to restrain her... I cannot but protest that there was no excessive force used. The woman is incredibly quick, and if still mobile while under the spell used to momentarily halt her attack, could not reasonibly be assumed in a state during which anyone save another monk of power could bind her to prevent her continued attacks.
I'd ask that each of you council-members look into your own hearts and ask yourselves if this is right. Ask yourself if you'd punish a man for saving your own wives, daughters, mothers, husbands, brothers, and sons from being slain by such villans which you yourself allow to walk among them. It is actions such as this sentencing of good men for noble deeds which causes angst among the goodly, reasonable and just peoples about what sort of future awaits the village of Isinhold when it cannot be differentiated from Zhentil Keep by the behavior of its protectors.
In ireful protest to this latest injustice,
Zoriya Afsanah, Paladin of Sune