[Liam has made a habit of ignoring the accusations against him - villain, genocider, warmonger - so long as he knew the truth: that he was a hero, and that his cause was verifiably just, blessed by the only true Gods themselves. But to have been recruited into a legion of supervillains, as though he were some moustache-twirling cartoon character? That stung, and the displeasure is plain on Liam's face. He was a hero; a liberator on the right side of history.
His complaints have fallen on deaf ears, and now he's certain there's no correcting this mistake. Fortunately, Liam has no intention of dying in such an idiotic way, and if he needs to kill to survive, he may as well choose a victim who deserved it. You'll catch Liam inspecting your rap sheet quite carefully. Any sins you'd like to defend - or boast of?]
The monitor displays footage of a much younger version of the man standing before you, protected in the safety of a space suit as he opens the release valve of a bioweapon on a lush, earth-like planet. The children of his unsuspecting victims die first, brutally and quickly in flowering, fungal husks, soon followed by the elderly and frail. In a matter of days, the entire planet is infected, their numbers dropping in an exponential decay. On a spaceship above, a hero faces Liam, fighting tooth and nail for the only antidote. After felling his enemy, the hero releases the antidote to Liam's shock and horror before making his escape into interstellar space.
In the next clip, 20 years later, the Liam of today finds the man who stopped him and shoots him point-blank. The hero's head explodes in an almost comical burst of brain matter and fluids. In the immediate present, Liam shakes his head in frustration, bowing his chin to gaze at the monitor in a fixed, glowering stare.]
No. I had my reasons.
This does not make me like the rest of you.
[He's quite adamant that he does not belong here, in spite of all evidence to the contrary.]
Liam Ferohn-Gau | Gods Will Be Watching (Final Chapter)
[Liam has made a habit of ignoring the accusations against him - villain, genocider, warmonger - so long as he knew the truth: that he was a hero, and that his cause was verifiably just, blessed by the only true Gods themselves. But to have been recruited into a legion of supervillains, as though he were some moustache-twirling cartoon character? That stung, and the displeasure is plain on Liam's face. He was a hero; a liberator on the right side of history.
His complaints have fallen on deaf ears, and now he's certain there's no correcting this mistake. Fortunately, Liam has no intention of dying in such an idiotic way, and if he needs to kill to survive, he may as well choose a victim who deserved it. You'll catch Liam inspecting your rap sheet quite carefully. Any sins you'd like to defend - or boast of?]
3 - Tenacity Spanning (CONTENT WARNING: child death, non-graphic descriptions of gore)
[Now it's Liam's turn to own up to his sin.
The monitor displays footage of a much younger version of the man standing before you, protected in the safety of a space suit as he opens the release valve of a bioweapon on a lush, earth-like planet. The children of his unsuspecting victims die first, brutally and quickly in flowering, fungal husks, soon followed by the elderly and frail. In a matter of days, the entire planet is infected, their numbers dropping in an exponential decay. On a spaceship above, a hero faces Liam, fighting tooth and nail for the only antidote. After felling his enemy, the hero releases the antidote to Liam's shock and horror before making his escape into interstellar space.
In the next clip, 20 years later, the Liam of today finds the man who stopped him and shoots him point-blank. The hero's head explodes in an almost comical burst of brain matter and fluids. In the immediate present, Liam shakes his head in frustration, bowing his chin to gaze at the monitor in a fixed, glowering stare.]
No. I had my reasons.
This does not make me like the rest of you.
[He's quite adamant that he does not belong here, in spite of all evidence to the contrary.]