Caius Faendryl

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Caius Faendryl
Storyline Tales of Wehnimer's Landing
Gender Male
Race Dark Elf
Culture Faendryl
Status Alive
Hometown New Ta'Faendryl
Alias/Title Mining surveyor
Affiliation(s) Agrestis

Caius Faendryl is a mining surveyor in the Agrestis of House Faendryl. He does "dowsing" work to map out irregularities in mana foci and the veil that are hidden below ground or inside mountains. This is ordinarily to identify hazards to mining operations in Rhoska-Tor, or possibly resource extraction in other valences. He was brought to the Darkstone Bay region in early 5126 Modern Era, along with other similar specialists, as part of an investigation task force into the shadowy Ithzir invasions and the lost Palestra Blade Aralyte Halanori Faendryl. He was primarily brought in to study Melgorehn's Reach, to make sure there would be no surprises for the Harrowers of the Extrachthonic Cartographer's Guild. He is fluent in Dark Elven but does not speak Faendryl well. He is a non-native speaker of Common, with a passable handle on it, which is part of why he was chosen for the expedition.

Caius was born into the rural lower class, but is now a tradesman in the mining sector, and a skilled technician of the lower middle class. He has solidly isolationist views regarding foreign policy, and a streak of populism, with a willingness to say things that are not politically correct in Faendryl society. But he is also parochial and accepting of Faendryl supremacy. He feels everyone should leave each other alone and live in their own places, even accepting things like elves not having rights in human lands as fair and balanced. Though he acknowledges others do not leave the Faendryl alone, he feels we can hit them back if they actually do something, but otherwise it's not worth it. It is neither important nor practical to get back with the other Houses.

Appearance

An Agrestis mining surveyor.

He has some worn banded coveralls and a pair of sturdy work boots.

Questions and Answers
Ashrim
Caius scratches his head and says, "Don't know why you'd be asking me about them.  They've been gone for thousands of years.  That's too bad, what happened with them.  I think old Rythwier was trying to be too clever by half, and the whole thing just blew up like nobody expected.  I doubt even the Nalfein would have done it, if they'd known how bad it would get, and how dangerous things would be between us because of it."

Caius continues, "Maybe it was all a big misunderstanding.  You're not supposed to say that, the Nalfein were 'practically and morally responsible' for it all.  Just seems really unlikely the Nalfein didn't have a secret thing going with the Ashrim that were against the whole thing.  But I guess that's the whole dispute."

Arkati
Caius says, "You all out here in the outlands are really weird with the religion.  You've got these family myths of how they're related, and you've got a bunch of myths of them coming out of Drake tears, then these 'spheres of influence' folks saying what we do or think changes and empowers them.  Meanwhile they let all these other cultures view them in totally different ways.  But, no.  You're the ones who know how it really is!  Why?  They told you so?"

Caius says, "Elves decided a long time ago the Arkati aren't being straight with us.  Folks in the Clerisy talk about them as 'spirit entities' and figure they spend much of their time in spirit planes.  Wouldn't surprise me at all if they're really extraplanar beings.  Granted, they have a special role in the order of the world, but if that's what makes a god you gotta worship a whole bunch of other nonsense like nymphs and elementals.  Nobody doubts they exist.  But why are you worshipping anything?"

Chaston
Caius says, "Chaston's Edict?  It's unnatural for men to rule over elves, I'll give the whingers that much.  But the serfs are descended from people who didn't have our backs after the Undead War, and those people get in bed so much with the Nalfein.  It's not like we let people who are not Faendryl own property."  He goes on, "The only thing wrong with it is that human empire dispossesses people who already own stuff as they expand.  Then enforce or not enforce the thing irregularly.  I mean, you're telling me the thing is revoked, but how can anyone believe it?  The next Emperor can just bring it back.  Way too soon to say anything's changed."

Clerics
Caius says, "We've got some of that, like in the Tresviri, and in the Armata.  You've got some folks trying to argue they're really doing magery manipulating their own mana or whatever.  But that isn't how that kind of magic works, they're obviously channeling from spirits.  We generally don't like being dependent on magic where you can get cut off from your power source, like with all the stuff we do in other valences.  I think you fortune hunter types have a warped view of things.  This 'resurrection' stuff isn't that useful in most situations.  You're just reviving people who are dying from some violence, which means you have to get to them within a few minutes."

Dowsing
Caius says, "That's what I do.  We've got important mining around Rhoska-Tor, but that's very dangerous, because of all the veil weaknesses and rifts and all the rest.  Plus, there's all those tainted mana focii, which are intensely corrupting.  It can be hard to keep track of where you are in that place, so surveyors like me are important to the Agrestis.  They brought me in here to check out all the hidden weird stuff in this mountain.  The Harrowers don't want to get surprised by anything."

Empire
Caius says, "Can't say I really care about what goes on out here in the outworld.  As long as our borders are secure, and nobody is trying to start stuff with us.  Which they do sometimes.  Not going to deny it.  But we're better off focusing on controlling other valences, where we get the resources we want, but don't have to be bothered with managing other races.  But I think wanting to do that is the whole point for people like Vespasius.  It's their flavor of power."

Half-Elves
Caius wipes his forehead with a rag, then looks at you strangely, "What was that, half-elves?  I'm not sure I've ever even seen one in Ta'Faendryl itself, pretty hard for them to happen in a closed city.  They'd be at a huge disadvantage in all kinds of ways, so they'd probably be trying hard to hide it."

Caius explains, "I don't have anything against them, personally.  That's a rough deal and they had no say in being deformed.  Obviously you don't want birth defected having kids with elves, but I don't see how it matters if they have kids with humans.  They'll outlive their kids.  It's a pretty selfish and irresponsible thing their mothers done to them by letting them be born.  Should have taken them out to the Wastes and exposed them.  Most of them probably get smothered."

Houses
Caius says, "It's to the narrow self-interest advantage of the other Houses to exclude us, so the deck is totally stacked against us ever getting back in with them.  That's without even considering the practical issues.  We're not giving up our territory in the south, just to take back our ancient territory, but then we'd have twice as much land as everyone else.  Then what about the borderlands along the mountains?  Why should we agree to be landlocked without leading an Empire?"

Mahkra
Caius says, "You mean those 'wandering Palestra' they just invented?  Weird thing to ask me about.  I have nothing to do with that stuff.  Obviously that is really unpopular with lots of people in Ta'Faendryl.  They spend decades in Palestra academies.  Many don't even get to do the trials.  Then you make this life experiences path, giving the same titles to fortune hunters, swinging a sword at the trials like it's all the same thing.  But you all just don't understand how the Basilica does things."

Caius explains, "Of course, deputizing a bunch of adventurers is going to cause headaches, making a bunch of folks mad!  That's the whole point!  It's going to justify expanding Palestra academies into the outlands later.  You hear people fret about, oh no, is the Patriarch making a mistake?  Has he not seen how one thing is going to be a problem for another thing?  It's all ridiculous.  Korvath knows exactly what he is doing, that is why he is the Patriarch."

Nalfein
Caius says, "Look.  I'm no foreign policy obsessed scion of the old money.  But I'll tell you how it is, from how I see it in the Agrestis.  The big thing with the Nalfein is that if we take back all our land, we'll end up way more powerful than them.  We are anyway, but it'll be conspicuous.  That's what they actually care about in the East.  How things look.  Which is what drives them to unite against us.  If we'd all just agree to leave each other alone, keep to our own stuff, there'd be no problem.  The humans and all them need to live somewhere, anyway, so what's the point of bothering with them?  They'll just complain about what we do for them."

See Also

The following were other bolded NPCs in the same period that at times provided automated interaction: