Bastion Teodorus Raines

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Teodorus Raines is the founder and current leader of the Lawful Evil Nevuchar Springs Sect of the Church of Ezra. He speaks a fire and brimstone message of an impending apocalypse, for which drastic and dire action must be taken to keep the Legions of the Night from dragging down Ezra's faithful.

History

Teodorus Raines was born in Darkon in 723 BC. Prior to the the Great Upheaval in 740 BC, he traveled to Borca to study Ezra’s teachings under the Home Faith.[1] His demeanor was tense and suspicious demeanor; his vision dark and foreboding. He maintained strict adherence to the letter of Ezra’s scriptures, and was granted his shield of Ezra as one of her clerics. The young warden was advised by some of his teachers, however, not to present Ezra’s teachings in such bleak terms. Perhaps overly influenced by the legends of his homeland, Raines spoke of the Legions of the Night as if they were eternally clawing at the very doors of the Great Cathedral of Levkarest. The Great Upheaval lent weight to Raines's words. He argued that it was nothing less than an attempt by the Mists of Death to expel Ezra from their ranks, the first omen of a coming age when the Legions of the Night would scour the world clean.[1] Although the Church elders did not see the world in Raines’ apocalyptic terms, Praesidius Raskolka summoned a Bastions' Council. With the agreement of Bastions Denisovich of Mordentshire and Secousse of Port-a-Lucine, the Praesidius declared that Ezra’s anchorites had an urgent duty to spread the word of Ezra to the four corners of the Core, even to those lands where existing religions stood in opposition to that word. Even more than had been the case before, young anchorites were encouraged to travel the Land of Mists. There were worthy works to do in Ezra’s name and there were new temples to establish in her honour.

Warden Raines was part of this new wave of evangelical anchorites. He returned to Darkon in 740 BC and began to preach Ezra’s message to any who would listen.[1] His efforts met with stiff opposition. Darkon’s spiritual heart was in the grip of two state-sponsored religions: the Faith of the Overseer, widely embraced in Martira Bay, and the Eternal Order[1], somewhat begrudgingly adhered to throughout the rest of the land. The young anchorite was threatened repeatedly by priests of the Eternal Order and on one occasion even had his lips sliced open. Still, he persevered. His survival owned much to the fact that his influence was negligible. By the time the Great Cathedral was completed in 745 BC, Raines had already traveled through half of Darkon, never finding a receptive audience to his fire-and-brimstone sermons. Meanwhile, visiting anchorites sent back word to the Home Faith that Raines had altered his proselytizing style since leaving Borca. Claiming that Ezra herself was granting him prophetic visions, Warden Raines now spoke of a coming apocalypse that he called the Time of Unparalleled Darkness. He insisted that ranks of the Legions of the Night would swell until they overran the land. The Mists of Death, sickened by their creations, would then destroy the world, wiping the slate clean. Ezra would spare all she could from this final doom, but her pact with the Mists of Death would only allow her to save those who had accepted her message into their hearts. Two additional factors made Raines’ end-times sermons all the more disturbing. First, he declared that if anyone not included among Ezra’s pious followers, stood among the Legions of the Night. Second, he claimed the Time of Unparalleled Darkness would arrive within a single generation. The Home Faith was distressed by Raines’ extreme interpretation of the scriptures. However, he continued to receive the shield of Ezra, the only sure sign that an anchorite was indeed serving Ezra in the Grand Scheme. Thus the Home Faith allowed him to continue his proselytizing, though they lent him very little support.

By 750 BC, Raines was literally at the end of his map. All of Darkon stretched behind him, and he had not established a single new temple in an entire decade. His failures merely made him all the more determined to spread Ezra’s word before it was too late. By the end of the year, Raines had settled in Nevuchar Springs and could count his converts on one hand. When most Darkonians listened to Raines prophesy a time when the unholy forces of evil would rise up to destroy the world, they heard only the paranoid ranting of a madman. Then the city of Il Aluk was destroyed in the Requiem, and a pall fell over the whole of the newly-dubbed Necropolis. Suddenly, Raines’ horrific prophecies seemed all too real, and he found his audience at last.[1]

Raines drove the priests of the Eternal Order from Nevuchar Springs, seized their temple, rededicated it to Ezra, and named it the Last Redoubt.[2] Early in 751 BC, Raines returned briefly to Levkarest, accompanied by half a dozen of his followers. He graced his superiors with his nightmarish visions in the form of the Fourth Book of Ezra[1] He also revealed to them that he and the anchorites that he had trained had been granted a new shield of Ezra, protecting them from the insidious corruption of the Legions of the Night. The Rite of Revelation was fulfilled. Raines returned to Nevuchar Springs as the Bastion of the fourth sect of Ezra.[1] Currently, Raines uses the catacombs of the Last Redoubt to imprison and torture any of Darkon's monstrous inhabitants that have the misfortune of falling into his hands.[2]

Mangrum's Notes

"I’ve been tired of the "evil 'Black Myth' Inquisitors" stereotype for years. Like the Nevuchar Springs sect of the Church of Ezra, I wanted Wyan's inquisition to be dangerous and flawed -- but possibly, ultimately, right. Thus the emphasis on showing that Wyan's a good man, just misguided. He's made far fewer mistakes than most adventurers, I'd wager."

Stats

Human male, Cleric 5 / Anchorite of the Mists 2, Lawful Evil[1]

References


Data from the Ravenloft Catalogue

Ravenloft Third Edition

Ravenloft Gazetteer Volume II - p31

Ravenloft Gazetteer Volume II - p39

Ravenloft Third Edition - p17 Heroes of Light - p56
Ravenloft Gazetteer Volume II - p30