Cataclysm mages live in the ruins of the past and the shadows of the future, paying the vagaries of the present little mind. Preoccupied with ancient knowledge, they fit perfectly into a campaign that features tombraiding and dungeon-crawling. Devoted to prophecies of the future, the cataclysm mage spends a good deal of time seeking to fulfill his personal prophecy, providing a natural reason for him to go exploring and to seek out the dangerous corners of the world.
Organization
The far-flung hierarchy of the cataclysm mages is loosely organized along lines of personal power. The Masters of Argent are in constant communication through sending spells, and they set the agenda for the order. It is not a strict agenda, though, for each master is focused on his or her personal goals as well as those of the society. For many high-level cataclysm mages, the main goal is simple survival, since an unusually high number of their fellows have been killed by foes more powerful than they were thought to be, or by freak natural accidents. Most suspect the dragons of engineering these “accidents,” but despite the threat of assassinations ordered to protect the dragons’ secrets, most cataclysm mages are too obsessed with their studies to abandon them for a safer profession.
The daily life of a cataclysm mage centers on his quest to fulfill a personal prophecy and his studies of the doomed civilizations of past ages—the Dhakaani, the giants, the demons, and the couatls. Because his personal prophecies often take him far into the field, a cataclysm mage typically maintains strong ties to adventuring groups. Airship pilots, thunder guides, and extreme explorers are all valuable contacts for a cataclysm mage, allowing him to travel wherever his prophecies take him, with his books safely secured in his haversack and the road stretching before him.
During the most recent convocation at Zaenya’s Well on Aerenal, whispers told of a group of cataclysm mages who were eager not only to study the cataclysms of the past, but to bring on the cataclysm that will end the Current Age. Members of this Flooding Dawn movement, as it is called, are said to believe that the Last War heralds a new age just as did the daelkyr-Gatekeeper war and the giant-quori war. What happened to Cyre, it is whispered, will happen to all. Virtually no one openly claims to be a member of the Flooding Dawn, though, and the conventional wisdom is that the Last War and the Day of Mourning are not linked to any coming cataclysm. After all, the elves and dragons have fought brief but vicious arcane wars on and off for centuries without heralding any imminent apocalypse.
NPC Reactions
Most citizens of the Five Nations are only dimly aware of the existence of the cataclysm mages. Those who have knowledge of the order tend to look on it with a great deal of suspicion. Decades of subtle dragon propaganda have seeded the universities and arcane colleges with doubts, questions, and fear concerning the mages’ activities. Focused as always on the past and the future to the neglect of the present, the Masters of Argent have failed to mount an effective campaign to counter this slander.
Beyond the Five Nations, virtually the only two groups aware of the order’s existence and purpose have histories that go back to the previous ages—the drow of Xen’drik and the elves of Aerenal. While the Sibling Kings and the Undying Court take no action against the cataclysm mages (some say they welcome anything that irks the dragons), the drow utterly despise the order. Just as they hate the giants for enslaving their race and shattering their lands, they view the cataclysm mages as successors to the giants and pretenders to the storm thrones of Cor’dran and Eshtarn. The drow reaction to a known cataclysm mage borders on frenzied bloodlust, and they attempt to kill members of the order as quickly and ruthlessly as possible.
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