Re:Outlawry = death

From: Rob Thornton <oblate777_at_W6LRgldbpvuHx-5dISzz3_28rfsshKhBytNn90yxPk54ASNu28ZNjpddQ2st6LcDdI>
Date: Tue, 6 Jan 2009 12:27:04 -0500


On Tue, Jan 6, 2009 at 12:00 PM, Neil Robinson <OrlanthiFool_at_yJ7QjF8gsfZIUmlJaHKkVApQOtk5e74JQ-OSV4f6_n-5D-fqqBRLoFKl7n_gYKvRgTsuSbtWgiftb4qrSsSv-Qc.yahoo.invalid> wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 6, 2009 at 8:25 AM, Rob Thornton <oblate777_at_bsEfx1dsFqQQGp0pwdixQSMG5S-us1VBPjZP6LjotJtDvYRNcdUw6Rug54M51tOPLekaRgDcghikUB08ew.yahoo.invalid> wrote:
>
> Which does bring up the situation where someone has been unjustly outlawed
>> (in the Full Outlaw sense). Is he or she permanently outlawed because the
>> clan decrees it? Does the severing of magical bonds only happen if Orlanth
>> (etc.) and the ancestors know the truth?
>>
>> Interesting gray area I think.
>>
>>
> Sounds like you have the start of story, or an action adventure TV series.
>

Oh yes, I like it. Say a Humakti is sworn to kill a man who has been unjustly outlawed. The only clue the falsely accused man has is that the Real Killer had a rather *unique* chaos feature....

rob t.            

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