Tal 39-dorei | Campaign Setting Reborn
Behind them, the first guards fell to a wave of freed slaves wielding broken shackles. The rain of the Scar of Lamentation began to fall clean for the first time in a century.
Lirien smiled. It was not a nice smile. "I'm not taking it off. I'm giving it back." tal 39-dorei campaign setting reborn
The system. The Reborn campaign—that's what the slavers called this new age. After the God Wars, when the old empires collapsed, the Dorei had been reshaped. Their magic-suppressing collars were no longer iron. They were will . A Dorei could only be freed if a free person bought their contract and chose to break it. And the Guild—the Silent Ledger—had turned that into the most profitable economy in the broken world. Behind them, the first guards fell to a
He reached up and grabbed the iron collar with both hands. The poison-trigger flared—he felt it, the black rot surging toward his heart. But three years of stored pain? He redirected it. The collar didn't just unlock. It screamed , a sound like a breaking bell, and the rot reversed course. It flowed out of his veins and into the collar's magic circuitry, overloading it. It was not a nice smile
The rain over the Scar of Lamentation never fell clean. It dripped oily, smelling of rust and the faint, sweet rot of old magic. Kaelen stood on the ridge, watching the slave caravan crawl through the mud below. Forty-seven Dorei—pointed ears dulled by iron collars—shackled in a chain that snaked toward the mines of Veth-Kar.
The collar around his neck hummed. The Guild had reborn him with a single gift: Collateral Transfer . Any pain, any wound, any death he inflicted—he could shunt it into his own flesh, store it, and release it later like a coiled spring. For three years, he'd stored. Every cut he'd taken on missions. Every beating. Every time a client betrayed him and he smiled and walked away. It was all inside him now, a screaming knot of agony waiting to be unspooled.