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'''Former Affilliations:''' Cleric of [[Bobil]]</p>
'''Former Affilliations:''' Cleric of [[Bobil]]</p>


<p>'''Early History:'''</p>
<p>Life in the city of [[Andarr]], the westernmost of the [[The_Seven_Cities|Seven Cities]], was good for the Dareau family. Their business was not one of the largest but the sheer volume of trade that flowed through the port meant even a tiny fraction of this was enough to be moderately wealthy. Jayem was almost certain to follow his father into the family business of acting as brokers between the southern states of Avlis and the [[The_Kurathene_Empire|Kurathene]] until this changed with the discovery of vile betrayal. </p>


<p>Jayem grew up as the son of a moderately wealthy merchant and was sure to follow his father into the family business until this business was lost through the betrayal of his father’s most trusted manager. Customers had been cheated and the manager vanished with as much gold as he could carry, which since he’d purchased magic bags was a lot. Jayem’s parents were left almost destitute, their home and all their belongings being seized to pay most of their debts and his father having to enter indentured service for five years to pay the rest. There was nothing for Jayem to do but leave and allow his parents to focus their efforts on his younger siblings while he made his own way in the world.</p>
<p>For years the most trusted of their managers had been embezzling from the firm and lying to their customers. An entire web of lies had been woven and just as this was about to part the manager vanished, taking a large amount of gold with him and leaving binding contracts on the firm behind. These contracts had been signed with some very powerful people and they wanted what they had been promised, whatever the cost to the Dareau family. </p>


<p>While travelling Jayem heard of the religion of Bobil. The idea that somewhere something had such perfect loyalty that it remained loyal to its master through so much, and that this loyalty was rewarded rather than betrayed, held a great attraction to Jayem. His father had thought the manager was loyal and had been loyal to the manager despite the clues to the manager’s true nature.</p>
<p>Jayem’s parents were left almost destitute with the business, their home, and many of their belongings seized to pay most of the debts and fulfil the contracts. His father accepted a five-year period of indentured servitude to pay the remaining debt. Jayem, his mother, and his siblings protested but their father was firm that he wanted to take this onto himself alone so that his children and his wife could act unconstrained by the limits that would bind him for those five years. </p>


<p>It was a long journey to study the philosophy of Bobil and it was full of peril only avoided by luck and a willingness to run. Eventually Jayem reached his destination and after dedicated study was ordained as a Cleric of Bobil. Jayem thought about what this meant to him and decided that just as Bobil had served [[Angadar]] so should Bobil’s clerics serve Angadar’s. He had heard of the great temple to Angadar in [[Elysia]] and decided that would be a good place to begin his service.</p>
<p>There was little that Jayem could do but accept this and leave to seek his fortune away from the stigma that, for now at least, was surrounding the Dareau name in Andarr. He hoped to find this fortune in the Kurathene and so took ship for the north. This was the first of many mistakes as he should have considered that some of the customers cheated by the manager had been Kurathene nobles. </p>


<p>Unfortunately the luck he had enjoyed on his journey to the place of study did not extend to his journey to Elysia. Jayem did not know what had happened, just that he had woken up naked and bleeding in a ditch with small animals sniffing at his bare feet and considering eating his toes. This experience persuaded him that while Clerics of greater Gods might enjoy protection due to bandit’s fears of divine retribution this might not apply as strongly to a Cleric of a demi-god such as Bobil.</p>
<p>After eking out a living for several months and having his attempts to improve his situation blocked at every turn by the influence of those nobles Jayem was becoming more desperate. While travelling though he heard of the religion of Bobil, the minotaur bodyguard to [[Angadar]] who had been loyal to his master and been rewarded with demi-godhood when his master rose to godhood. The idea that somewhere something had such perfect loyalty that it remained loyal to its master through so much, and that this loyalty was rewarded rather than betrayed, held a great attraction to Jayem. His father had thought the manager was loyal and had been loyal to the manager despite the clues to the manager’s true nature. </p>


<p>Upon reaching Elysia Jayem decided to seek additional combat training so that he would not be such an easy target in future. He regretted that this would slow his advancement in Clerical knowledge and prevent him achieving grace in Bobil’s eyes as soon but knew that if he was dead then he would never learn. </p>
<p>It was a long journey to study the philosophy of Bobil requiring Jayem to cross the south of the Kurathene, the north of [[Deglos]], and the width of [[Drotid]] to reach [[Grantir]] on the eastern shore. This journey as only survived with a lot of luck and a great willingness to run. Looking back on it Jayem could hardly believe he had made it, only ignorance of the dangers had given him the confidence to go on. </p>


<p>'''Arrival in Elysia:'''</p>
<p>Eventually Jayem reached his destination and after dedicated study was ordained as a Cleric of Bobil. Jayem thought about what this meant to him and decided that just as Bobil had served Angadar so should Bobil’s clerics serve Angadar’s. He had heard of the great temple to Angadar in [[Elysia]] and decided that would be a good place to begin his service. </p>


<p>Shortly after his arrival in Elysia Jayem was assisting the farmer Serion when he was spoken to by a female halfling in blue armour, the colours of Angadar. She introduced herself as [[PCs:Ven%2C_Shiloh | Shiloh Ven]] and offered to help him with equipment and with finding his way around Elysia and the surrounding area. With this assistance Jayem managed to progress in Bobil’s favour and take the necessary training to be able to use the Bastard Sword as he had planned.</p>
<p>Jayem passed his time in Elysia making friends and, far away from the Kurathene, being able to improve his situation financially as well as spiritually. As the memory of the betrayal by the manager faded and became less raw though he began to question himself again. The more people that expressed surprise at Jayem’s interpretation of Bobil the more he began to wonder whether he had a unique interpretation or simply a mistaken one. Eventually his doubts became too great and he realised he had lost his faith in Bobil, or rather had lost his faith that he was actually worshipping Bobil rather than only his own idea of Bobil. </p>


<p>Jayem also met another priestess of Angadar called [[PCs:Kisri_Aedia | Kisri Aedia]] who also helped him find his way around. This was a mixed blessing as she was in conflict with a powerful mage and Jayem twice found himself turned to stone as a result of one of these confrontations. However Priestess Aedia did also invite Jayem to participate in a small quest, which provided him some useful equipment and a significant amount of gold for other equipment, and taught him how to make basic healer’s kits.</p>
<p>He was not arrogant enough to assume his interpretation was right and everyone else, including the clerics that had trained him, was mistaken and with this realisation Jayem felt Bobil’s power withdraw from him.  For months Jayem drifted and studied other god’s beliefs. Being a cleric felt right but having forsworn one god already he did not want to rush into anything, to make another mistake of that magnitude. </p>


<p>As he continued questing and assisting and being assisted by Shiloh Jayem’s skills continued to improve but he did notice that Priestess Aedia seemed to have less time for him. Her attitude seemed to have cooled, her inclination less friendly, and Jayem began to wonder if Kisri had only been carrying out an obligation in her assistance.</p>
<p>Increasingly he harked back to the gods of his childhood but [[Hurine]], god of merchants, seemed inappropriate for what he had become. Senath though, as god of strategy in all aspects of life rather than just in warfare, seemed more fitting. A merchant needed a business strategy as much as a warrior needed a combat strategy so Senath had always been given some respect in the Dareau household and they had sometimes travelled to [[Bullwark]] to pray in the temple to Senath there. </p>


<p>Eventually the quest with Priestess Aedia was completed and Jayem gained a superb Darksteel Longsword, but this weapon although magnificent would require him to waste his training in the Bastard Sword and was too powerful for his meagre skills. After some thought he decided that he owed Shiloh Ven enough that this would be an adequate thank you gift. This turned out to be a wise decision as Shiloh managed to have this Longsword converted into a Feysteel Shortsword for herself and the Feysteel Bastard Sword which Jayem uses to this day.</p>
<p>Journeying from Elysia to [[Nutzdagezehesple]] Jayem sought an audience with the chief cleric in the War College of Senath there. As the man spoke Jayem felt more confident in his choice of deity to serve and managed to answer the cleric’s questions to his satisfaction and gain admittance into that church. Since then Jayem has continued to serve Senath and try to promote the use of strategy as Senath desires. He still doubts that he is as good a cleric as he should be, that he has been aggressive enough in giving advice rather than providing it mostly only when asked. </p>


<p>'''Artefact Smugglers:'''</p>
[[Category:PCs|Dareau,Jayem]]
 
[[Category:ElysiaPCs|Dareau,Jayem]]
<p>As a new arrival in the south Jayem had little connection or history with groups there and so had a clean record. This seemed useful to [[PCs:Aerill_Ailpera | Aerill Ailpera]], Archmage of the Blue, and Jayem along with other people with clean records was recruited for an investigation into the smuggling of magical artefacts. As this investigation proceeded though the emphasis changed.</p>
 
<p>Due to the sensitive nature of this investigation little can be said of it, as the more that is known the more likely retribution would become.</p>
 
<p>This quest took Jayem, and the others, to many places and was rather challenging at times which required improvements to their equipment as well as their skills. Jayem’s large shield was first improved and then replaced by a Tower Shield. He was also given new armour, but was reluctant at first to accept this. The armour he was wearing had been a gift from Shiloh and it seemed ungrateful to replace it.</p>
 
<p>Thankfully Eric Buzzard kept this armour between one meeting and the next and so Jayem was able to accept it the second time rather than having made a serious mistake. This armour continues to serve him, though it has been painted and repainted several times as well as having had the spikes removed.</p>
 
<p>At the end of this quest, which had changed from being a simple investigation to becoming peripherally involved in a centuries old religious conflict there, was a final thank you. Jayem was quite worried when his Feysteel Bastard Sword was taken away and was a little underwhelmed when it was returned. It had been improved and given the name Glory Breaker but much of the improvements would only be useful in rare circumstances and it, being even more distinctive, seemed to potentially mark him as a target.</p>
 
<p>'''Crisis of Faith:'''</p>
 
<p>During the investigation into the artefact smugglers and afterwards Jayem had been beginning to doubt his faith. As time went by and the anger and pain of his father being betrayed dimmed Jayem had begun to wonder how this had affected his judgement. He had always been aware that his interpretation of Bobil as representing loyalty had been unusual but he was beginning to realise how little this opinion was shared.</p>
 
<p>On a grand scale the fact that Angadar, who Bobil served, was regarded as an evil god had not bothered Jayem. On the more petty day to day scale of the tension between the Avariel and the Dragonari, who blamed the winged elves for the loss of their own wings, this did begin to bother him.</p>
 
<p>Eventually his doubts became strong enough that one final incident between Avariel and Dragonari was enough to make him realise he had lost his faith in Bobil, or rather had lost his faith that he was actually worshipping Bobil rather than only his own idea of Bobil. Without the self-confidence, or arrogance, to believe that his interpretation was right and others were wrong Jayem had nothing.</p>
 
<p>For months Jayem drifted and studied other god’s beliefs. None of them seemed to speak to his heart and he wanted to be sure of himself and of them before he made another commitment after his mistake with Bobil. Increasingly he harked back to the gods of his childhood but Hurine(link), god of merchants, seemed inappropriate for what he had become. Senath though, as god of strategy in all aspects of life rather than just in warfare, seemed more fitting. A merchant needed a business strategy as much as a warrior needed a combat strategy so Senath had always been given some respect in the Dareau household.</p>
 
<p>Although the fact the only Temple of Senath close by was a War College did give Jayem pause he felt confident, as he had not felt for a long time, in his choice. Travelling there he managed to answer the questions posed him by the interviewing cleric to that man’s satisfaction and gain admittance into that church.</p>
 
<p>'''Sidekick:'''</p>
 
<p>Some time before his crisis of faith Jayem had met a three-quarter Ogre called [[PCs:Gaklah_the_Stone | Gaklah the Stone]] and during this crisis Gaklah had been most helpful. He had even been there, providing moral support, when Jayem was admitted to the Church of Senath. Jayem had become accustomed to spending time in Gaklah’s company but it slowly began to dawn on him that he was always spending this time helping Galkah rather than it being Gaklah helping him.</p>
 
<p>The problem, if problem it could be called, was that Jayem did not actually require much help. From the smuggler investigation, from other quests, and from his own purchases Jayem had managed to gain what he regarded as good equipment. From his own efforts he was able to craft his own crossbow bolts and healer’s kits and so replace that way what he expended. He had not joined a guild so he did not have to spend any time on attempting to fill quotas.</p>
 
<p>Even with saving towards having sufficient fortune to make a return north worthwhile Jayem found himself living quite cheaply and that a single trip to mine precious metals, which he did not require assistance with, was enough to pay several month’s rent and significantly add to his savings.</p>
 
<p>So as there was nothing Jayem needed to do in particular but Gaklah, as a helpful hero of [[Dra'Nar]], needed gold to replace that he had given away and needed, as a member of [[ROTE]], to fill his quotas Jayem found that he and Gaklah were normally doing what Gaklah suggested. A situation made “worse” by having had to help Gaklah in his quest for love.</p>
 
<p>Realising he had become a sidekick gave Jayem some doubts. He had been in Elysia, and the surrounding areas, long enough to have potentially become a leader rather than a follower. Was all his training and study merely to trail around after a three-quarter ogre like a stray puppy? After some thought Jayem decided that perhaps it was.</p>
 
<p>Gaklah had a good heart and his wisdom belied his lack of intellect. He knew how to help people and so by helping Gaklah help them Jayem was doing good. Together they could do more than either of them could alone.</p>

Latest revision as of 00:02, 13 January 2007

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Jayem Dareau

Race: Human
Class: Cleric / Fighter

Affilliations: Cleric of Senath
Former Affilliations: Cleric of Bobil

Life in the city of Andarr, the westernmost of the Seven Cities, was good for the Dareau family. Their business was not one of the largest but the sheer volume of trade that flowed through the port meant even a tiny fraction of this was enough to be moderately wealthy. Jayem was almost certain to follow his father into the family business of acting as brokers between the southern states of Avlis and the Kurathene until this changed with the discovery of vile betrayal.

For years the most trusted of their managers had been embezzling from the firm and lying to their customers. An entire web of lies had been woven and just as this was about to part the manager vanished, taking a large amount of gold with him and leaving binding contracts on the firm behind. These contracts had been signed with some very powerful people and they wanted what they had been promised, whatever the cost to the Dareau family.

Jayem’s parents were left almost destitute with the business, their home, and many of their belongings seized to pay most of the debts and fulfil the contracts. His father accepted a five-year period of indentured servitude to pay the remaining debt. Jayem, his mother, and his siblings protested but their father was firm that he wanted to take this onto himself alone so that his children and his wife could act unconstrained by the limits that would bind him for those five years.

There was little that Jayem could do but accept this and leave to seek his fortune away from the stigma that, for now at least, was surrounding the Dareau name in Andarr. He hoped to find this fortune in the Kurathene and so took ship for the north. This was the first of many mistakes as he should have considered that some of the customers cheated by the manager had been Kurathene nobles.

After eking out a living for several months and having his attempts to improve his situation blocked at every turn by the influence of those nobles Jayem was becoming more desperate. While travelling though he heard of the religion of Bobil, the minotaur bodyguard to Angadar who had been loyal to his master and been rewarded with demi-godhood when his master rose to godhood. The idea that somewhere something had such perfect loyalty that it remained loyal to its master through so much, and that this loyalty was rewarded rather than betrayed, held a great attraction to Jayem. His father had thought the manager was loyal and had been loyal to the manager despite the clues to the manager’s true nature.

It was a long journey to study the philosophy of Bobil requiring Jayem to cross the south of the Kurathene, the north of Deglos, and the width of Drotid to reach Grantir on the eastern shore. This journey as only survived with a lot of luck and a great willingness to run. Looking back on it Jayem could hardly believe he had made it, only ignorance of the dangers had given him the confidence to go on.

Eventually Jayem reached his destination and after dedicated study was ordained as a Cleric of Bobil. Jayem thought about what this meant to him and decided that just as Bobil had served Angadar so should Bobil’s clerics serve Angadar’s. He had heard of the great temple to Angadar in Elysia and decided that would be a good place to begin his service.

Jayem passed his time in Elysia making friends and, far away from the Kurathene, being able to improve his situation financially as well as spiritually. As the memory of the betrayal by the manager faded and became less raw though he began to question himself again. The more people that expressed surprise at Jayem’s interpretation of Bobil the more he began to wonder whether he had a unique interpretation or simply a mistaken one. Eventually his doubts became too great and he realised he had lost his faith in Bobil, or rather had lost his faith that he was actually worshipping Bobil rather than only his own idea of Bobil.

He was not arrogant enough to assume his interpretation was right and everyone else, including the clerics that had trained him, was mistaken and with this realisation Jayem felt Bobil’s power withdraw from him. For months Jayem drifted and studied other god’s beliefs. Being a cleric felt right but having forsworn one god already he did not want to rush into anything, to make another mistake of that magnitude.

Increasingly he harked back to the gods of his childhood but Hurine, god of merchants, seemed inappropriate for what he had become. Senath though, as god of strategy in all aspects of life rather than just in warfare, seemed more fitting. A merchant needed a business strategy as much as a warrior needed a combat strategy so Senath had always been given some respect in the Dareau household and they had sometimes travelled to Bullwark to pray in the temple to Senath there.

Journeying from Elysia to Nutzdagezehesple Jayem sought an audience with the chief cleric in the War College of Senath there. As the man spoke Jayem felt more confident in his choice of deity to serve and managed to answer the cleric’s questions to his satisfaction and gain admittance into that church. Since then Jayem has continued to serve Senath and try to promote the use of strategy as Senath desires. He still doubts that he is as good a cleric as he should be, that he has been aggressive enough in giving advice rather than providing it mostly only when asked.