Difference between revisions of "Elimelech"
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− | '''History:''' | + | '''History:''' Elimelech was the husband of Naomi, as told in the Bible in the book of Ruth. He was attacked and Embraced by an unknown assailant. Naomi found her husband wandering in the fields – a cold, undead empty shell. She placed him in a shallow unmarked grave. Three nights later he rose up insane and suffering from a thirst no fountain could quench. |
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+ | He went out searching for his family, eventually finding them months later in another country. But his madness overtook him and Elimelech killed both his sons by ripping out their throats. When sanity returned Elimelech cursed himself and his abhorrent unlife. He sought solitude and hoped for a soul to come and end his existence. Time and again the Beast would overtake Elimelech and he would go on a killing rampage. He kept an eye on his wife and daughter, watching them live a terrible life working in the fields for meager sustenance. This only brought more pain into his unlife. | ||
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+ | Elimelech sentenced himself to a life of solitude, living off cattle and sleeping travelers. Generations passed and Elimelech realized his curse would never be over and the elder vampire’s already fragile mind lost hold of reality. He lost himself to the Beast for a span of centuries, killing everything, man or monster, in his path. He has degenerated to the point where only Cainite blood, not human, quenches his thirst. | ||
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+ | Elimelech’s travels eventually lead him to the Black Hand. He was too unpredictable to trust completely, but he was also too old and powerful for them to turn him away. Elimelech uses the Hand as a distraction to forget his past and his pain. The Seraphim accept him as a peer, let him in on their deliberations and hear his council when he is himself and send him to his cell in chains when he is not. All the elders of the Black Hand refuse to enter a room with Elimelech alone, for reason none will discuss. | ||
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+ | Little is know of how he became one of the Seraphim, other than the fact that he acquired the title by destroying his predecessor, Appius Claudius Corvus, in legitimate monomacy. Elimelech only explained that he felt moved by a sense of duty to an honorable fallen foe to take that foe's place as Seraph of the mighty and stalwart Black Hand. And that he, like Jalan-Aajav, would give his last drop of blood in defense of the Regent and her Peace. | ||
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+ | Elimelech bears a kind face wholly inappropriate to one of the most terrible vampires in the Sabbat’s Black Hand. Although his appearance is rumored to change when he keeps his own company, Elimelech typically appears as a grandfatherly man of Persian or Mesopotamian descent. He wears the same clothes as he did during the days he spent alive with Ruth in Moab: a simple linen shift and a pair of weathered sandals. Individuals familiar with him swear that his skin has darkened with age and that he is an Assamite, but Elimelech neither confirms nor refutes these claims. | ||
'''Recent Events:''' | '''Recent Events:''' | ||
* -- '''[[Elimelech's Statistics]]''' | * -- '''[[Elimelech's Statistics]]''' |
Latest revision as of 08:38, 10 October 2016
- Malkavian -x- Tal'mehe'Ra
Quote: And Elimelech, Naomi's husband died; and she was left, and her two sons. -- Ruth 1:3 -- As auspicious an entrance into the ranks of the eternal as any.
Sobriquet: The Twice Damned. Seraph.
Appearance:
Behavior:
History: Elimelech was the husband of Naomi, as told in the Bible in the book of Ruth. He was attacked and Embraced by an unknown assailant. Naomi found her husband wandering in the fields – a cold, undead empty shell. She placed him in a shallow unmarked grave. Three nights later he rose up insane and suffering from a thirst no fountain could quench.
He went out searching for his family, eventually finding them months later in another country. But his madness overtook him and Elimelech killed both his sons by ripping out their throats. When sanity returned Elimelech cursed himself and his abhorrent unlife. He sought solitude and hoped for a soul to come and end his existence. Time and again the Beast would overtake Elimelech and he would go on a killing rampage. He kept an eye on his wife and daughter, watching them live a terrible life working in the fields for meager sustenance. This only brought more pain into his unlife.
Elimelech sentenced himself to a life of solitude, living off cattle and sleeping travelers. Generations passed and Elimelech realized his curse would never be over and the elder vampire’s already fragile mind lost hold of reality. He lost himself to the Beast for a span of centuries, killing everything, man or monster, in his path. He has degenerated to the point where only Cainite blood, not human, quenches his thirst.
Elimelech’s travels eventually lead him to the Black Hand. He was too unpredictable to trust completely, but he was also too old and powerful for them to turn him away. Elimelech uses the Hand as a distraction to forget his past and his pain. The Seraphim accept him as a peer, let him in on their deliberations and hear his council when he is himself and send him to his cell in chains when he is not. All the elders of the Black Hand refuse to enter a room with Elimelech alone, for reason none will discuss.
Little is know of how he became one of the Seraphim, other than the fact that he acquired the title by destroying his predecessor, Appius Claudius Corvus, in legitimate monomacy. Elimelech only explained that he felt moved by a sense of duty to an honorable fallen foe to take that foe's place as Seraph of the mighty and stalwart Black Hand. And that he, like Jalan-Aajav, would give his last drop of blood in defense of the Regent and her Peace.
Elimelech bears a kind face wholly inappropriate to one of the most terrible vampires in the Sabbat’s Black Hand. Although his appearance is rumored to change when he keeps his own company, Elimelech typically appears as a grandfatherly man of Persian or Mesopotamian descent. He wears the same clothes as he did during the days he spent alive with Ruth in Moab: a simple linen shift and a pair of weathered sandals. Individuals familiar with him swear that his skin has darkened with age and that he is an Assamite, but Elimelech neither confirms nor refutes these claims.
Recent Events: