Franklin Castle is a very interesting person.
He was born in the largest and most important city in the world. His parents were very devout lay brethren in a powerful church. Franklin himself was never particularly interested in the tenets of his parents' religion, but he paid their God lip service because it wasn't too hard a thing to do.
Franklin became aware, when he entered adolescence, that he was different from his few friends, and even from his parents. He often woke in the night sweating from some strange dream, wherein his mind reached out to strange realms beyond the world he knew and was touched by its inhabitants in return.
The glimmerings of insight this contact imparted to Franklin changed his life forever. He was already capable of things none of the people around him could do. Now, finding out more about the place he visited in his dreams became the sole purpose of his life. He travelled far and wide in search of answers to the questions that burned inside him. His parents' church couldn't help him very much. Nor could the wisest and most learned people he could find. They could teach him a little but never exactly what he needed to know. So his search continued.
It took Franklin many years, but eventually he found some answers. He found a group of people not unlike himself who, recognising his inner kinship with them, initiated him into their mysteries, answering all of the questions he had asked in his heart and in his dreams since he was a boy. He found a kind of closure there, a kind of completion, that he treasured dearly.
Such peace was not Franklin's ultimate destiny, unfortunately. Eventually, new questions and ideas and desires bubbled up inside. He needed to learn more, to see more, to do more than he could with his mentors and friends. He felt he had to leave and continue his search, and so he did.
It took many more years of travelling, but finally Franklin was able to achieve his heart's greatest desire. After careful preparation, Franklin managed to transport himself - for the briefest moment only - to the realm where he had hitherto only walked in his dreams. Although he stood there for only an instant, he underwent a profound and remarkable change, even greater than that which he had experienced as a child when dreaming of this place for the first time.
The alien nature of this other realm impressed itself upon his very psyche, and it effected an irreversible change in the way Franklin viewed the world around him. Now he saw it as a thing of impermanence, an island of stability and sanity in a universe which made so very little sense when viewed from the perspective of the realm Outside. Even the roiling forces of chaos and randomness only existed within this world in opposition to the principles of order and rationality. Without this world concepts such as chaos and order had no meaning, no relevance. This other realm was a place of which the mind could not possibly conceive. This was the place which Franklin carried within his skull, now.
Naturally, to others Franklin now seemed mad. Alternately frighteningly rational and disturbingly random, and accompanied everywhere by a faithful companion - the raven, Munoth, which like Franklin itself seemed to the casual observer somehow touched with the senseless lack of meaning of the universe - Franklin continued his journeys now, seeking out new experiences and even more arcane and occult lore than before. He made friends of a sort - the ambitious performer, the devout but wicked priestess, the obessive and hateful hunter - but while they were his companions they knew not the secret desires and passions of his soul.
Franklin experienced something very like death in a torrent of fire; Munoth was lost but returned a part of him forever. Alliances were forged, affording him the semblance of interaction with those around him, but all was to an inscrutable goal that, perhaps, not even Franklin understands. What the future holds now, as Franklin's path leads him in pursuit of a "holy" charlatan accused of mocking the noble principles which he is supposed to embody, no one in the world can say.
But perhaps those Outside can.
He was born in the largest and most important city in the world. His parents were very devout lay brethren in a powerful church. Franklin himself was never particularly interested in the tenets of his parents' religion, but he paid their God lip service because it wasn't too hard a thing to do.
Franklin became aware, when he entered adolescence, that he was different from his few friends, and even from his parents. He often woke in the night sweating from some strange dream, wherein his mind reached out to strange realms beyond the world he knew and was touched by its inhabitants in return.
The glimmerings of insight this contact imparted to Franklin changed his life forever. He was already capable of things none of the people around him could do. Now, finding out more about the place he visited in his dreams became the sole purpose of his life. He travelled far and wide in search of answers to the questions that burned inside him. His parents' church couldn't help him very much. Nor could the wisest and most learned people he could find. They could teach him a little but never exactly what he needed to know. So his search continued.
It took Franklin many years, but eventually he found some answers. He found a group of people not unlike himself who, recognising his inner kinship with them, initiated him into their mysteries, answering all of the questions he had asked in his heart and in his dreams since he was a boy. He found a kind of closure there, a kind of completion, that he treasured dearly.
Such peace was not Franklin's ultimate destiny, unfortunately. Eventually, new questions and ideas and desires bubbled up inside. He needed to learn more, to see more, to do more than he could with his mentors and friends. He felt he had to leave and continue his search, and so he did.
It took many more years of travelling, but finally Franklin was able to achieve his heart's greatest desire. After careful preparation, Franklin managed to transport himself - for the briefest moment only - to the realm where he had hitherto only walked in his dreams. Although he stood there for only an instant, he underwent a profound and remarkable change, even greater than that which he had experienced as a child when dreaming of this place for the first time.
The alien nature of this other realm impressed itself upon his very psyche, and it effected an irreversible change in the way Franklin viewed the world around him. Now he saw it as a thing of impermanence, an island of stability and sanity in a universe which made so very little sense when viewed from the perspective of the realm Outside. Even the roiling forces of chaos and randomness only existed within this world in opposition to the principles of order and rationality. Without this world concepts such as chaos and order had no meaning, no relevance. This other realm was a place of which the mind could not possibly conceive. This was the place which Franklin carried within his skull, now.
Naturally, to others Franklin now seemed mad. Alternately frighteningly rational and disturbingly random, and accompanied everywhere by a faithful companion - the raven, Munoth, which like Franklin itself seemed to the casual observer somehow touched with the senseless lack of meaning of the universe - Franklin continued his journeys now, seeking out new experiences and even more arcane and occult lore than before. He made friends of a sort - the ambitious performer, the devout but wicked priestess, the obessive and hateful hunter - but while they were his companions they knew not the secret desires and passions of his soul.
Franklin experienced something very like death in a torrent of fire; Munoth was lost but returned a part of him forever. Alliances were forged, affording him the semblance of interaction with those around him, but all was to an inscrutable goal that, perhaps, not even Franklin understands. What the future holds now, as Franklin's path leads him in pursuit of a "holy" charlatan accused of mocking the noble principles which he is supposed to embody, no one in the world can say.
But perhaps those Outside can.
