Lost Letters
These peculiar cave carvings were found in the cave where the Disciple lived for a time, but the inscriptions and text appear to be made by an entirely different hand. Yes. She was very ann0yed at the time. It was funny.
|
The Disciple, infamous for continuing to spread the words of the Signless used her feral hunting skills to find remote caves wherein she could compose her Book of the Sufferer. These caves however, were not entirely uninhabited, and much of the contemporary attitudes towards the Signless message can be gleaned from examining the famous caves.
In one, it appears that the Disciple shared living space, however acrimoniously, with an amateur artist in their own right. Much lowblood irreverence can be seen in this particularly stunning mural carved into the rock face of two cave walls known to be used by the Disciple. Although her roommate appears to be a mystery, the imagery in the artwork suggests that the roommate might have been one of the Mirthful, given the propensity for falling meteors, a common depiction of the precursor to the Vast Honk, and other apocalyptic mummery. The poem and the use of personal symbols suggests a firm message was meant, though it remains a mystery as to whom was meant to see the message. These images were uncovered well past the fall of the Mirthful Church into its current degeneracy, and the common theory held that the roommate would have been a cultist on the run from Imperial forces, romantically forced to rely on the dubious protection of the Sufferer's adherent. However, given the exchange upon the wall, and a simple comparison of dates of the Disciple's probable death--well into the Golden Epoch of the Church--makes this theory unlikely. |