Lalalei2001
Explorer
I found this on a website, but it's so awesome and epic I had to post it. Credit goes to ThePessimist at Comic Book Resources Forums 
'I'm a bit of a writer, a published playwright in fact, so that when a buddy of mine decided to DM a DnD campaign he let me chip in on the writing- he had final say but he'd listen on ideas. We decided to do what at a glance looked like a sterotypical Half-Vampire-Dri'zzt-Clone-Undead-Hunter but actually used him to explore deeper themes like Revenge vs Justice, Forgiveness, and what exactly is the Soul.
One of the prouder moments I had with that character was using a Wish to figure out once and for all whether or not he actually had a soul, because nothing short of that would give a definite answer. The other PC's got kick-butt weapons or some new really handy gear, I got the world's equivalent of an angel telling my PC that the gods of light considered him at best a soulless parody of a mortal.
Even the God of Justice, who the PC's mother served faithfully and the PC has dedicated all his successful hunts to, sees him as nothing more then a usefull pawn to be used against the gods of darkness. Obviously this made Kuhl very sad and bitter, but he decided to at least stick by his mortal friends. This ended up leading to the 2 most epic moments our little group had ever seen, and they both happened in the same session.
The group of PC's were hired by a church of the gods of light to investigate a distant site that may house a legendary dark artifact. The PC's get there, and find that it's a legendary lost Great Temple to the God of Undeath. Three sessions later we've finally cleaned it out and tucked away in the farthest room we found the artifact. The cleric and paladin both believe it's dorment, the temple is so huge, and everyone is so bushed that we set up camp right there. Big mistake.
My PC experences a dream where the God of Undeath reveals that a being that is both alive and undead can only exist as an extension of a god's will, that he considers the PC his grandson, and commands him to kill his friends.
"No, I Refuse."
"Sure, Your Mind says no. But your Body. . ."
Kuhl snaps out of his vision to find out that he's been trying, and is extremely close to succeeding, to kill his friends for the last 20 minutes in game time. I'm not talking "Oops, Out of HP" kill, I'm talking "I'm going to gut you like a fish and dance with your entrails" kill.
He's eventually restrained and agrees to remain chained up for everyone elses safety, but I decided Kuhl wouldn't leave it just at that. The first night they make camp outside of the temple, he picks the locks on his chains, stealthily steals both the cleric's and the paladin's holy books along with everyone's holy water, writes a note to the effect that he's got one more thing to do at the temple and if they decide not to wait for him he'd understand, and sneaks out of camp.
By the time the other PC's figure out he's gone Kuhl is back at the temple and making arrangments to lay the biggest blessing on the dark altar he can muster. First he had to read some holy scriptures and pour holy water on himself, which has burned him like acid since day one. So this little speech is being given by an albino half-dead freak covered in acid burns in front of the altar of the largest temple to the God of Undeath this world has ever had.
"I hope I have your attention, because this might save your life. Morash, you said I exist only because you will it so and you see me as your grandson. I believe you, I really do. If you tell me that you let it be so solely because you wanted a family I might even believe you.
So here's a message from your grandson. You hurt me so deeply I'm not sure even you know how deep, but before you hurt me I was afraid of what I was. I still want to kill the man that was my father, but before I was so afraid of him that I'd probably never bring myself to face him. Now everything has changed. I will kill him and I now say that without fear, without emotion, just a statement of fact because of what you do to good and decent people like my friends. Like I wish I was.
If you put every single undead in all the planes of existance between me and you it may just barely buy you enough time to leave the planes and never return. Maybe.
You can't have me. Ever."
Then a lowly undead hunter universly despised by the gods of light named Kuhl used about a gallon of holy water to bless the heck out of one of the most evil altars in the mortal realm. Our DM stopped, gave me about 500 RP XP because "an Undead Hunter taking a swing at the God of Undeath makes perfect sense" and immedietely declared a break.
Then he came back with this little gem.
"It's unfortunate that no mortal will ever learn the true implications of what happened that day.
The God of Sunlight demanded that this soulless husk be struck down immedietely for daring to read from his sacred words.
The Goddess of Nature continued her complaint that this unnatural thing was allowed to exist in any sort of natural sense.
But what the God of Justice saw would change everything.
For the first time he saw someone who believed in Friendship so strongly he betrayed them so they would not feel a god's wrath.
For the first time he saw someone who held Hope in his heart so strongly he continued to stand against darkness even when the gods would belittle him.
And for the first time he saw someone who believed in Justice so strongly that he'd rather face the utter annihilation of a god then harm a single innocent.
Even the gods of light would never speak of the day in which the God of Justice found himself to have acted unjustly, but the restitution would resound in the halls of the gods of darkness forever.
No mortal can ever kill a god, all of creation knows this.
The God of Undeath watched as his mortal grandson poured holy waters onto himself, and he laughed at the foolishness.
The God of Undeath listened as his grandson spoke the words, and by the end he still saw it as nothing more then empty threats.
Then his grandson blessed his greatest altar, and the God of Undeath felt as though a spear had peirced into his heart.
Then he watched as his grandson's soul was born, and the light burned away his eyes forever."

'I'm a bit of a writer, a published playwright in fact, so that when a buddy of mine decided to DM a DnD campaign he let me chip in on the writing- he had final say but he'd listen on ideas. We decided to do what at a glance looked like a sterotypical Half-Vampire-Dri'zzt-Clone-Undead-Hunter but actually used him to explore deeper themes like Revenge vs Justice, Forgiveness, and what exactly is the Soul.
One of the prouder moments I had with that character was using a Wish to figure out once and for all whether or not he actually had a soul, because nothing short of that would give a definite answer. The other PC's got kick-butt weapons or some new really handy gear, I got the world's equivalent of an angel telling my PC that the gods of light considered him at best a soulless parody of a mortal.
Even the God of Justice, who the PC's mother served faithfully and the PC has dedicated all his successful hunts to, sees him as nothing more then a usefull pawn to be used against the gods of darkness. Obviously this made Kuhl very sad and bitter, but he decided to at least stick by his mortal friends. This ended up leading to the 2 most epic moments our little group had ever seen, and they both happened in the same session.
The group of PC's were hired by a church of the gods of light to investigate a distant site that may house a legendary dark artifact. The PC's get there, and find that it's a legendary lost Great Temple to the God of Undeath. Three sessions later we've finally cleaned it out and tucked away in the farthest room we found the artifact. The cleric and paladin both believe it's dorment, the temple is so huge, and everyone is so bushed that we set up camp right there. Big mistake.
My PC experences a dream where the God of Undeath reveals that a being that is both alive and undead can only exist as an extension of a god's will, that he considers the PC his grandson, and commands him to kill his friends.
"No, I Refuse."
"Sure, Your Mind says no. But your Body. . ."
Kuhl snaps out of his vision to find out that he's been trying, and is extremely close to succeeding, to kill his friends for the last 20 minutes in game time. I'm not talking "Oops, Out of HP" kill, I'm talking "I'm going to gut you like a fish and dance with your entrails" kill.
He's eventually restrained and agrees to remain chained up for everyone elses safety, but I decided Kuhl wouldn't leave it just at that. The first night they make camp outside of the temple, he picks the locks on his chains, stealthily steals both the cleric's and the paladin's holy books along with everyone's holy water, writes a note to the effect that he's got one more thing to do at the temple and if they decide not to wait for him he'd understand, and sneaks out of camp.
By the time the other PC's figure out he's gone Kuhl is back at the temple and making arrangments to lay the biggest blessing on the dark altar he can muster. First he had to read some holy scriptures and pour holy water on himself, which has burned him like acid since day one. So this little speech is being given by an albino half-dead freak covered in acid burns in front of the altar of the largest temple to the God of Undeath this world has ever had.
"I hope I have your attention, because this might save your life. Morash, you said I exist only because you will it so and you see me as your grandson. I believe you, I really do. If you tell me that you let it be so solely because you wanted a family I might even believe you.
So here's a message from your grandson. You hurt me so deeply I'm not sure even you know how deep, but before you hurt me I was afraid of what I was. I still want to kill the man that was my father, but before I was so afraid of him that I'd probably never bring myself to face him. Now everything has changed. I will kill him and I now say that without fear, without emotion, just a statement of fact because of what you do to good and decent people like my friends. Like I wish I was.
If you put every single undead in all the planes of existance between me and you it may just barely buy you enough time to leave the planes and never return. Maybe.
You can't have me. Ever."
Then a lowly undead hunter universly despised by the gods of light named Kuhl used about a gallon of holy water to bless the heck out of one of the most evil altars in the mortal realm. Our DM stopped, gave me about 500 RP XP because "an Undead Hunter taking a swing at the God of Undeath makes perfect sense" and immedietely declared a break.
Then he came back with this little gem.
"It's unfortunate that no mortal will ever learn the true implications of what happened that day.
The God of Sunlight demanded that this soulless husk be struck down immedietely for daring to read from his sacred words.
The Goddess of Nature continued her complaint that this unnatural thing was allowed to exist in any sort of natural sense.
But what the God of Justice saw would change everything.
For the first time he saw someone who believed in Friendship so strongly he betrayed them so they would not feel a god's wrath.
For the first time he saw someone who held Hope in his heart so strongly he continued to stand against darkness even when the gods would belittle him.
And for the first time he saw someone who believed in Justice so strongly that he'd rather face the utter annihilation of a god then harm a single innocent.
Even the gods of light would never speak of the day in which the God of Justice found himself to have acted unjustly, but the restitution would resound in the halls of the gods of darkness forever.
No mortal can ever kill a god, all of creation knows this.
The God of Undeath watched as his mortal grandson poured holy waters onto himself, and he laughed at the foolishness.
The God of Undeath listened as his grandson spoke the words, and by the end he still saw it as nothing more then empty threats.
Then his grandson blessed his greatest altar, and the God of Undeath felt as though a spear had peirced into his heart.
Then he watched as his grandson's soul was born, and the light burned away his eyes forever."