Malkalotl
Malkalotl

Malkalotl

Malkalotl

Prime aasimar — actually a couatl [he/him] / Harmonium / LG

Spot this brightly adorned, rainbow-hued ‘aasimar’ gentleman on the streets of Sigil, and you’d be forgiven for thinking he was the brother of the Peacock Lord himself. In fact, he’s called Malkalotl, and he’s a Hardhead Mover Three; a high-up in the Harmonium faction indeed! The cutter’s eyes are of an ever-changing colour, and he’s nearly always wearing a cloak [Caruther] which has a similar tendency to adopt different shades reflecting his mood, the weather, and the time of day.

Though few cutters outside his faction realise it, Malkalotl is actually a couatl, a near-legendary winged snake of great beauty and goodness. ‘Course, in Sigil is doesn’t often pay to make one’s true nature too obvious, and the radiance of the couatl’s true form is such that it’d only attract unwanted attention. So for informal occasions or when working the streets as a Hardhead, Malkalotl adopts his colourful aasimar form using a natural ability to polymorph.

Malkalotl in his natural form

Malkalotl’s a prime who’s made a new life out on the planes. He first came to Sigil after his mate and young child were slain in a Blood War battle that spilled out of the Lower Planes and into the Aztec prime world of Maztica he called home. Without a family (for once a couatl mates, it is for life), Malkalotl thought himself worthless, and was guilt-ridden that he had been away when the fiends had appeared. For a lesser mortal the guilt might’ve been unreasonable, but for couatl, who are considered living gods by some civilisations, the unexpected should always be anticipated.

Feeling dejected and worthless (a sick state indeed for a proud couatl), Malkalotl wandered the planes until he appeared in Sigil, following the nycaloth who he’s branded as the culprit; he’d heard the sod boasting about how good his choice of battleground had been as the straggling yugoloth mercenary survivors limped their way back to the Lower Planes.

Too wise to simply slay fiends in retaliation, Malkalotl joined the Harmonium, and works tirelessly in the faction to promote Good. In this respect he’s trying to put the squeeze on Factol Sarin to push the baatezu out of the faction altogether. ‘Course, this brings the couatl directly into conflict with another Harmonium high-up, Mover Four Durkayle. This blood employs more baatezu in his staff than a member of the Dark Eight, the chant goes, and he ain’t one bit keen on the couatl and his meddling ways.

With powerful enemies, one needs powerful allies, and fortunately Malkalotl has ’em by the score. His main compatriot opposing the fiends is Christopher Verdue, the faction’s star psychic detective. The prime psionicist also has a healthy dislike of fiends; tanar’ri in his case, but as they say, â€˜a yugoloth’s as good as a tanar’ri to a Cager’. It was Malkalotl himself who introduced Verdue to the faction after catching him clueless in the Cage, trying to wipe out the tanar’ri race single-handedly. Well, after suggesting Verdue get a grip on reality, the pair have become firm friends.

The psionicist has also been able to confirm Malkalotl’s suspicions that the nycaloth Garroth the Blinded was indeed responsible for the massacre in Maztica. Ever since then, Malkalotl’s been watching the nycaloth like a hawk lord; any evidence of wrongdoing and the couatl’d jump on him like a lurker. Frustratingly, the yugoloth’s been keeping his hands clean of late, though Malkalotl suspects he’s up to something really big and treasonous…anyone who associates with the githyanki Djhek’nlarr has got to be two modrons short of a Great March. Despite his best efforts, however, he’s not been able to catch the yugoloth at anything nefarious, and not been able to catch the githyanki at all! Sometimes the couatl wonders if there’s some stag-turner in the faction tipping the pair off…

Until he has some solid evidence that the Guvners can use to convict the yugoloth, however, Malkalotl is restricted to plotting his terrible revenge, and trying to hold himself back from carrying it out in cold blood (which surely wouldn’t do his standing as an officer of the law much good). For a justifiably angry couatl, self-restraint can be a difficult thing to maintain.

Another cutter that Malkalotl’s concerned about is Berchta. The couatl’s suspicious of her actions, and believes she might be up to something illegal, though he has no more than his instincts to back this up…could be something to do with the way the yikara looks at him whenever they meet by chance in the street — a kind of ‘I know something you don’t, and I’m not telling’ look which chills the couatl to his core.

Malkalotl as an colourful aasimar

Yet another of Malkalotl’s sworn foes is the crimelord Tang Kii-Chow, who’s the head of many of Sigil’s most notorious gangs. The couatl recently stated he’d put the basher down or die trying, but Tang’s as slippery as an Abyssal slug and twice as good at covering his tracks.

Most recently of all, however, Malkalotl got himself into a fight with a goristro who’d gone barmy in the Lady’s Ward and started smashing buildings and Cagers down. Malkalotl and his entire entourage of Hardheads (while Malkalotl’s too high up for watch patrol, he still conducts official business in Sigil’s streets) was slain by the furious fiend, and when the dead couatl reverted to his natural form the goristro carried his corpse off, doubtless intrigued by its pretty colours.

Furious at the loss of one of their high-ups, the Harmonium combed the Cage to no avail; Malkalotl’s body had well and truly vanished. Imagine their surprise then, a week later, after a ceremony of honour in his memory, when Malkalotl returned to the Cage, healthy and very much alive, accompanied by the Soul Usher Laurelli Tantarella. First thing he did was look for the blood who’d resurrected him, but of course the faction didn’t have his corpse so it can’t have been them.

This in turn sparked a rather bizarre turn of events. Usually when a cutter’s murdered the Hardheads are charged with finding out who did it, but this time they sodding well knew who did the killing (the goristro was banished from Sigil for 1001 years) and were rather trying to work out who did the resurrecting. So far, there’s not a scrap of evidence to point to any one priest. The temples all deny it, and since resurrection ain’t a cheap proposal at the best of times, it’s completely dark which bigwig with jink could’ve funded it…

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Source: Jon Winter-Holt, mimir.net

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