Lost Scrolls of Sabreyl
Written in Elvish, this scholarly tome copies and analyzes fragments of eight ancient scrolls left behind by a sun elf wizard who taught magic to the cloud giants of Ostoria, a bygone empire that collapsed 40,000 years ago.
When we think of cloud giants today, we acknowledge their magical prowess. But latest findings indicate that their magic might not be as innate as we thought. We found eight scrolls dating back to Ostoria, written apparently by a sun elf by the name of Sabreyl. They claim they spent decades teaching cloud giants how to harness and master the arcane.
The first scroll details the Cloud Palace under Nicias’ rule. The second scroll explains the symbiotic relationship between the cloud giants and the sun elf tribes with the focus on the giant’s fascination with elven magical abilities. The third scroll is the longest and includes several iterations of the curriculum Sabreyl prepared for the giants. The fourth scroll lists several generations of Sabreyl’s students and evaluates their progress in mastering magic. The fifth focuses on a specific group of disciples who were chosen by Sabreyl to continue their work – we speculate these might be the first of the smiling ones, perhaps linking the masks to elven visage. The sixth and seventh scroll are more akin to a journal with several personal recordings of events, including an explicit sexual encounter with a giantess. The eighth and last scroll is an unfinished treatise on Cloud Palace’s architecture that Sabreyl seemed to write in their free time over the years.
When we think of cloud giants today, we acknowledge their magical prowess. But latest findings indicate that their magic might not be as innate as we thought. We found eight scrolls dating back to Ostoria, written apparently by a sun elf by the name of Sabreyl. They claim they spent decades teaching cloud giants how to harness and master the arcane.
The first scroll details the Cloud Palace under Nicias’ rule. The second scroll explains the symbiotic relationship between the cloud giants and the sun elf tribes with the focus on the giant’s fascination with elven magical abilities. The third scroll is the longest and includes several iterations of the curriculum Sabreyl prepared for the giants. The fourth scroll lists several generations of Sabreyl’s students and evaluates their progress in mastering magic. The fifth focuses on a specific group of disciples who were chosen by Sabreyl to continue their work – we speculate these might be the first of the smiling ones, perhaps linking the masks to elven visage. The sixth and seventh scroll are more akin to a journal with several personal recordings of events, including an explicit sexual encounter with a giantess. The eighth and last scroll is an unfinished treatise on Cloud Palace’s architecture that Sabreyl seemed to write in their free time over the years.
Comments