Elizadon's Story
Elizadon, known as 'Liz' to her colleagues, was born around 1500 years ago
to a low class elven family in the so-called "Gateway Colonies" after the
mouth of the Chrysocolla Sea. This area is currently known as Feylin. The
landscape was very different at the time. There was no Fae Glen, the Mage
Blight was much larger and the jungle extended much further East than it
currently does. Much work was being done to contain the mysterious
blighted lands in accordance to the Principle of Duty (an elf's duty is to
protect the world from the mistakes of the mortal races). The principle
that Liz was most interested in, however, was the Principle of Destiny.
The Principle of Destiny states that an elf is fated to live as long as
they continue to learn. A bored elf is an aging elf and Liz was worryingly
bored as a young adult. She made the decision to assist in containing the
Blight in a more academic way; by joining the survey team tasked with
discovering the root cause of the problem. She traveled all over the
region, undertaking the dangerous work of studying plants and animals
affected by the scourge, taking samples from blighted undead and learning
a variety of spells that assisted her in these endeavors. It wasn't until
her team finally reached the epicenter of the Blight that they were able
to piece things together.
At this point their objectives changed. The colony's scientific leaders
made the decision to abandon the surveys in order to establish an
institute that would research and test methods of bending the thin fabric
between this world in the next in order to form a wall around the Mage
Blight. If the obelisk was a magical sink, perhaps blocking magic from
entering the area would effectively contain it. With this reasoning her
team set to work creating such a barrier. An abandoned orcish temple to
the north was used as a test site. A miniature magical sink was placed
inside and tests were performed by imbuing the physical walls with
different types of magical insulation. A reoccurring issue they ran into
was the formation of a sort of magical vacuum within the temple, which
would cause the containment to collapse as the pressure built outside. The
solution: a selectively permeable membrane that could allow controlled
levels of magic to enter the temple when the pressure built too high.
Using this method, the researchers were able to keep the artificial Blight
in a state of equilibrium. This solution was quickly deployed around the
Mage Blight, and the orcish temple was sealed forever, to be monitored at
intervals as a long-term experiment.
With this the Temple of Knowledge had achieved its purpose, but certain
discoveries regarding the nature of time and space made during the pursuit
granted Liz and her colleagues a whole new frontier to study.
It is this period of time that must be omitted, regrettably. Many more
discoveries were made and much was sacrificed, needless to say. In order
to circumvent the Principle of Unity (that no elf be permitted to kill
another of their kind), Liz allowed herself along with several of her
colleagues to be injected with experimental reptilian genetic material
that altered her brain's biology. The serum was revealed to grant a
secondary effect as well, replacing her need to learn and greatly
extending her life, at the cost of her ability to procreate.
These breakthroughs never left the Temple, however, as the elves on the
outside declared the work to be blasphemous. They claimed the academics
had severed their connection to Tir Frig and as Liz examined what she had
become, she couldn't argue. The only recognizable piece of herself left
was her ambition, and it tasted like dust on her forked tongue. The things
she had done in the pursuit of the truths of the universe could never be
forgiven, but still she chose the path of atonement. What remained of her
colleagues were sealed away along with her. Enchantments were placed on
the temple to bind her to it forever and she contented herself with a new
Principle of Duty: to protect the world from her own mistakes, and those
of her people.
Liz does not consider this fate to be a bad one. She studies, reads,
experiments, hibernates, and sometimes, if she's sure it's safe, she'll
open the seal and watch the stars, recording how they've changed over the
eons. Her rewired brain is incapable of boredom and although
her body has continued to mutate over time, she's managed to reclaim a
part of herself she had once feared lost forever, and this is her greatest
solace.