









































Burning of Arjun's Inn
“Your path to discovering Arjun’s Inn begins at the foothills of the Markehsha Mountains, a major crossroads of cultures. The majestic sight of Joramy volcano is just above the horizon.” - Ida Holly
Here lives a rich merchant, Arjun, who has fallen on hard times and has turned his large home into “Arjun’s Inn. The kind of boutique hotel that wealthier adventure travelers might seek out in Dawnfire. Traders, pilgrims, and crusaders have passed through this small, rural village, on a well-traveled road to Seagate snaking through the central north of the lands of Dawnfire. While travelers rest at the hotel, the owner and other families reside there. The décor, as well as the furniture, at Arjun’s Inn is an amalgamation of mismatched artifacts Arjun has collected through his years of travel across southern Crudilex.
Dawnfire culture believes that fire is sacred, The act of burning something is to send it into the divine realms to become one with their goddess. Ash and soot being the portion of that thing that are not sacred, unholy or deconsecrated. All that remains when every holy element is removed from a thing leaving behind only the portions the goddess does not wish to claim. Because of this many cultures throughout Dawnfire see touching of ash as a corruption, like staining your fingers with pure unadulterated unholyness.
“Your path to discovering Arjun’s Inn begins at the foothills of the Markehsha Mountains, a major crossroads of cultures. The majestic sight of Joramy volcano is just above the horizon.” - Ida Holly
Here lives a rich merchant, Arjun, who has fallen on hard times and has turned his large home into “Arjun’s Inn. The kind of boutique hotel that wealthier adventure travelers might seek out in Dawnfire. Traders, pilgrims, and crusaders have passed through this small, rural village, on a well-traveled road to Seagate snaking through the central north of the lands of Dawnfire. While travelers rest at the hotel, the owner and other families reside there. The décor, as well as the furniture, at Arjun’s Inn is an amalgamation of mismatched artifacts Arjun has collected through his years of travel across southern Crudilex.
Dawnfire culture believes that fire is sacred, The act of burning something is to send it into the divine realms to become one with their goddess. Ash and soot being the portion of that thing that are not sacred, unholy or deconsecrated. All that remains when every holy element is removed from a thing leaving behind only the portions the goddess does not wish to claim. Because of this many cultures throughout Dawnfire see touching of ash as a corruption, like staining your fingers with pure unadulterated unholyness.
“Your path to discovering Arjun’s Inn begins at the foothills of the Markehsha Mountains, a major crossroads of cultures. The majestic sight of Joramy volcano is just above the horizon.” - Ida Holly
Here lives a rich merchant, Arjun, who has fallen on hard times and has turned his large home into “Arjun’s Inn. The kind of boutique hotel that wealthier adventure travelers might seek out in Dawnfire. Traders, pilgrims, and crusaders have passed through this small, rural village, on a well-traveled road to Seagate snaking through the central north of the lands of Dawnfire. While travelers rest at the hotel, the owner and other families reside there. The décor, as well as the furniture, at Arjun’s Inn is an amalgamation of mismatched artifacts Arjun has collected through his years of travel across southern Crudilex.
Dawnfire culture believes that fire is sacred, The act of burning something is to send it into the divine realms to become one with their goddess. Ash and soot being the portion of that thing that are not sacred, unholy or deconsecrated. All that remains when every holy element is removed from a thing leaving behind only the portions the goddess does not wish to claim. Because of this many cultures throughout Dawnfire see touching of ash as a corruption, like staining your fingers with pure unadulterated unholyness.