Board Thread:Roleplaying/@comment-5262726-20140704231751/@comment-25286356-20140728194222

( Your morality. Not theirs, or mine, yours. Did headsmen ever refuse to carry out an execution? No. They knew what they were in for.

Fear is the best loyalty. Enemies will perceive mercy as a weakness, and morality as a restriction to the extent of your wrath. That's what killed Balgruuf. Some might rise, but others will run scared from the horror you inflicted upon their minds. I didn't see them objecting to desecrating and hanging their own brothers, yet refuse to slaughter strangers?

A man is convicted only by the laws he abides to. What soldier is innocent from murder? What man, woman or child is innocent from being in the enemy's camp?

This is morality. Not the codes you abide to, but the codes your enemy obeys. Your organs are worth more than your soul. If your enemy slaughters your hunters, slaughter his cattle. If your enemy slaughters your soldiers, slaughter his civilians. )

Freeze the lock using a frost-based spell, then strike it sharply with a bound sword. Upon congelation state, metal becomes weaker, more fragile. Striking it with a sharp object inevitably results in breaking it.

Have Marcurio talk Laila's ear off by asking why Tacitus was jailed, while the other two take positions on their respective end of the dining table.

Ignore the Foresters and leave them to resume their duties. Have the army stand at the ready and Thieves Guild retreat back to the Ragged Flagon.