PeterZ wrote:Indeed so, Don. Recall that Archbishop Maikel stipulated in he sermon establishing the policy, he stipulated those Inquisitors that willingly serve Clyntahn. I recall his also mentioning that Inquisitors that stopped serving Clyntahn would be spared. Those caveats sound like guidelines for the local authorities to act using their discretion.
So, if the Inquisitor actually serves Clyntahn, he dies. The best example is the Inquisitor that refused to kill the Charisian POWs on the ship Sir Dunkin captured. That Inquisitor was not a sadist but was honestly serving Clyntahn. This compared to the sadist bastard on the other ship.
I believe the rule of thumb had been to kill all Inquisitors unless there was clear evidence that the Inquisitor rejected his orders somehow.
Agreed. I'm just saying that this element of the story has always bothered me. Most of those intendants in the TL armies were serving as chaplains and monitoring the loyalty of the troops which really isn't criminal. If we make whether or not they were serving Clyntahn the marker, you could make a strong case for saying that that everybody in a TL army is "serving Clyntahn." Yet nobody proposes to massacre entire armies.
Don
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