Grave
Contents
The Origins
Grave is a relatively new magic, created some time before the advent of the Dunash, around the year 4500. Forged by Y'shendra, it was created as an offering to her most ardent followers, a tool through which they could both spite the Living Gods and supplement her will. Like Sigilic Pyromancy, both Grave and its Ascension were originally confined to the boundaries of a Holy Order, though with time the magic bled out into the cracks of Atharen and Icheron, becoming appropriated by magi like those in the Daravinic Entente. Now, Grave is an uncommon but well-documented magic, and an essential weapon in the artillery of both clerics and those who wish to wield the might of the undead.
Concepts
Nightorch: The Nightorch is the conduit through which most Engraving is done, acting as a secondary and essential component to perform the magic's many feats, alongside ether. As is established in Druidism, the majority of healing done on Atharen requires a transference of life from one entity to another. While Druidism largely relies on siphoning the life of plants, Grave utilizes a taboo source of energy: mortal souls. Early on in the magic, the Engraver learns to harness souls from the recently dead, siphoning them into their lantern: the Nightorch. This lantern, one with a regulating lid that allows for the transference of souls and energy in-and-out, is the Engraver's most fundamental tool.
Vitescence: While many Engravers rely on the Nightorch as their source of vitality for both healing and reanimating corpses, the most enthralled of practitioners tend to source from a tertiary component known as Vitescence. Vitescence is one's own vitality, though with little risk of death through its overuse. Instead, Vitescence is often referred to as the 'vibrance' and 'liveliness' of one's body, and its consumption to perform abilities rarely results in lethal consequences, but instead a temporary, withering decay of one's health. As one utilizes more and more Vitescence, they begin to appear more corpse-like and shriveled, their skin greying, their features becoming more bony as their skin deepens into their face. They become physically weaker and more frail, though many would argue the usage of Vitescence is worth it.
Vitescence, while not mandatory to use, allows for one to exceed their limitations in both healing and resurrecting the dead, augmenting one's capabilities without expending much in the way of additional ether. When one's supply of souls is depleted from the Nightorch, or they are suffering from the jaws of Overstepping, Vitescence presents itself as an attractive tool to continue to push the Engraver towards their limits.
Initiation
To become an Engraver, the new initiate must allow their master to bind a small fragment of their soul to a Nightorch. The result of even this minuscule facet of their soul being sealed within the lantern is immediate, reality receding around the initiate and becoming replaced by a world of blackness and decay. In order to survive the initiation, the initiate must follow what sounds almost like the distant sound of church bells, wading through the pitch black darkness with their lantern as the only source of light. Even those with exceptional darkvision will only be illuminated by their lantern, and all who endure this initiation will become slow, weak and skittish, harrowed by the process as their body becomes more gaunt, almost as if they were to overuse their Vitescence. Most of the time, the journey towards the ringing bells takes around three hours to complete, and the path there is often tumultuous; it is an unfamiliar landscape, with slopes, thicket and riverbeds that require the finding of a bridge to cross. The source of the sound looms far in the distance, and appears to be an effigy of Y'shendra, the bell-like sound emanating from a gold-glowing, beating heart within the effigy's chest. Touching the effigy will end the initiation, spelling the mage's success.
As the mage endures their initiation, they must be careful not to run or lose their lantern, as physically disconnecting from it at any point will result in them failing the initiation. Those who fail will forever lose the fragment of their soul instilled into the Nightorch. Considering the soul is an organ that holds back the dangerous excesses of magic, creating a pore within it will allow for the Raw Ether of the initiation to leak into the initiate's body, immediately placing them into Severe Mageblight.
If the initiate succeeds, their soul will return to its normal state, only with the addendum of the Mark of Grave: an onyx-colored, gothic cross, often appearing between the mage's clavicles. In addition, the Nightorch the initiate held in their vision-like state will materialize with them in the mortal plane, and can be both dematerialized and conjured within their grasp at will.
Overstepping
The drawbacks listed below do not always come in pairs, and certainly not simultaneously. Some may come and others may not.
Lesser: Nausea, fatigue, headaches, muscle spasms, dehydration
Moderate: Bleeding through the nose, eyes and ears, intense cramps, seizure-like shocks and spasms, internal bleeding, vomiting and weakness
Severe
Containment: WIP.
Mutations
Abilities
Engulf: Novice. After being initiated into Grave, the Engraver becomes capable of viewing souls as they rise from the body. A soul appears as a semi-transparent, glowing pearl glob, often referred to as 'Ectoplasm' by Engravers. As it is rising from a recently deceased body, the Engraver is able to open their Nightorch and infuse it with ether to draw the soul in, engulfing it within the lantern to act as a source of vitality for healing and reanimating undead. Typically, souls completely depart from bodies within three hours of their death. Often, Engravers have a small bell on their Nightorch that can be rung to encourage the soul to leave the body earlier, at which point it may be retrieved as it flows upwards towards the atmosphere.
Engravers can retrieve both animal and mortal souls, with most animals providing significantly less vitality and energy to the Nightorch. The Nightorch has a maximum capacity that is determined by the Engraver's mastery, with its reserves easily determinable by how brightly it glows when primed to by a circular knob at the top. As one heals and animates more undead, its reserves will diminish, the Nightorch becoming dimmer and dimmer until it completely goes out.
Imbue: Novice. Tapping into the Nightorch, the Engraver will create a flowing white tether between the lantern and an intended person or corpse, drawing on its reserves to heal both deep and superficial wounds. Imbue can either restore an entity gradually or rapidly, with a brighter light cast between the Nightorch and the intended target with a more intense application. Imbue draws on both ether and ectoplasm, though given both components it is capable of dramatic healing. At Novice, it is largely only capable of healing one layer of injury at a time, and is mostly applied to superficial wounds. At Apprentice, it can heal multiple layers at a time. At Journeyman, it can heal wounds beneath the most superficial layers, such as mending broken bones beneath skin. At Expert, it can mend limbs or organs that are nearly completely destroyed. At Master, Imbue can mend limbs or organs that have been completely lost.
Agony: Novice. Agony requires the implantation of ether into a corpse, which can be done either through touch or through ethereal lines at Journeyman and above. What Agony does is excite the neurons of a corpse, hastily resurrecting them in a state of immense pain as their body reckons with its horrific state of imbalance; maggots crawling through their bowels, fragmented bones, torn skin. This hasty resurrection sends a throbbing recognition of this pain alight, forcing the husk into a state of fight-or-flight, angrily attempting to maul at whatever it can grasp. The Engraver is able to direct the rage of the tortured undead to whomever they desire, commanding them until the animated corpse runs dry of the energy used to excite its impulses. Depending on exertion, a husk may persist for as little as two hours, or can endure for up to three days at Master.
Spectate: Apprentice. Spectate allows the Engraver to tap into the senses of their husks, allowing them to see, feel and experience their surroundings, so long as those senses are physically available to the husk. For example, you cannot see through the eyes of a husk that has severely damaged ones. Spectate requires a low amount of ether to utilize, and no ectoplasm. For this reason, it is a useful and frequent scouting tool by Engravers. Spectate can be done within 500 meters at Apprentice, 1000 meters at Journeyman, 5000 meters at Expert, and across any distance at Master.
Hound: Apprentice. Utilizing a similar procedure to Agony, the Engraver stimulates remnant cognition and vestigial echoes of consciousness within a corpse to force them to reveal information. Hound requires physical contact between the Engraver and the corpse to be kept at a constant, as their mind needs to be continuously stimulated with a narrow stream of ether to excite their memories. The Engraver will shout inquisitions at the corpse in a deep, unnatural tone, their voice lowered and made more monstrous by magic, the specific pitch tuned to resonate with the corpse's decayed mind. The corpse will be forced to answer all questions truthfully to the best of their ability, and they may be interrogated amidst great pain for hours until the mage eventually runs low on ethereal reserves.
Winnow: Apprentice. Winnow is the only ability that allows the Engraver to draw Vitescence from another that is not themselves. They may only do so through touch, and the Vitescence drawn must immediately be transferred either into a healing spell or undead reanimation. As the Engraver touches the target, their hand will emanate a white glow with black, smoky flecks, the target slowly but noticeably appearing to weaken and decay throughout contact. This ability costs almost no ether to perform, but is ultimately more costly in ether than drawing from your own Vitescence.
Burnbright: Journeyman. Lift the Nightorch high, causing it to gleam brightly as white tendrils of energy pour across the immediate area to heal numerous allies. WIP.
Gloam: Journeyman. Bring down a shadowy wind, reanimating all corpses within a certain radius to serve you. WIP.
Unmold: Journeyman. Reshape a corpse from within, turning tissue and organs into new ones, such as changing lungs into functional wings. WIP.
Repose: Expert. Sustain the damage of wounds over a longer period of time, enduring their initial trauma in favor of a more prolonged, but less extreme response. WIP.
Nightshade: Expert. Through pure soul energy from the Nightorch, generate a ghost-like thrall to serve your will. WIP.
Ghast: Expert. Stitch multiple corpses together with magic, rearranging their parts before reanimating them into one powerful undead. WIP.
Brightbane: Master. Emit a pulsating white light, one which rolls slowly over the area and continuously heals all allies tethered to it, allowing for constant regeneration. WIP.
Dark Knight: Master. Revive an elite undead, transferring knowledge of all of your own skills onto it. WIP.
Effigy: Master. Instill a corpse with permanence, allowing you to maintain them indefinitely. WIP.
Blacksworn Abilities
Forsaken: A black wind rolls over the field, reanimating every single corpse within miles to be controlled by the Blacksworn. WIP.
Tresspasser: Project your self into a corpse from a long distance, giving them your capabilities (including magic). WIP.
Novice
Apprentice
Journeyman
Expert
Master
Ascension: The Blacksworn
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