Asura Levi
Sage
I'm developing further an old idea/plot and I've became stuck in a important point. So, let me explain.
That is three people, cursed with immortality for some reason that is not relevant. They are a warrior, a sorcerer and a third one that in the original concept is a thief.
At some point in the very distant past, the warrior got tired and went 'sleep'. Now, eons later, he wakes up and find that his weapon, which also contain his soul, is missing.
The story goes on and he find it, but once he tries to summon his power, the weapon stuns him because it doesn't recognise him as the 'owner any more.
He figure out that the sorcerer might have tampered it and decides to look for his old companion (the real reason goes more for the 'warrior did it to himself').
The problem, the warrior doesn't feel anymore the presence of the sorcerer (one can feel the relative position of the other). But that can happen only if the sorcerer is dead, but it also cannot be.
Then he discoverer, that far away in the past, the 'heroes of justice' fought a malevolent sorcerer and tried to kill him, but not even fire would consume him, so the only possible outcome was to 'dismember' the sorcerer and hide away its 'parts'.
The sorcerer could be return to 'proper life' by assembling back his body. And here is where the problem lies.
How can the warrior find the pieces again. He can feel it if he is close to it but can't feel from afar.
He is considered a traitor by the third one (that is why he believes the sorcerer messed with his weapon) and even being able to find him, would not get any help.
The easier solution was to, hide somewhere, be a old scripture with the location of the parts in riddles. But common, this is very stupid. Why would the heroes write down the location of something they do not want reassembled? Even if that is some traitor between them, by no means he would have all the information.
So here is where I'm stuck, how can the warrior find it. The head is the most important as could be awakened in order to know the location of the other body parts (one always knows where its hands are).
That is three people, cursed with immortality for some reason that is not relevant. They are a warrior, a sorcerer and a third one that in the original concept is a thief.
At some point in the very distant past, the warrior got tired and went 'sleep'. Now, eons later, he wakes up and find that his weapon, which also contain his soul, is missing.
The story goes on and he find it, but once he tries to summon his power, the weapon stuns him because it doesn't recognise him as the 'owner any more.
He figure out that the sorcerer might have tampered it and decides to look for his old companion (the real reason goes more for the 'warrior did it to himself').
The problem, the warrior doesn't feel anymore the presence of the sorcerer (one can feel the relative position of the other). But that can happen only if the sorcerer is dead, but it also cannot be.
Then he discoverer, that far away in the past, the 'heroes of justice' fought a malevolent sorcerer and tried to kill him, but not even fire would consume him, so the only possible outcome was to 'dismember' the sorcerer and hide away its 'parts'.
The sorcerer could be return to 'proper life' by assembling back his body. And here is where the problem lies.
How can the warrior find the pieces again. He can feel it if he is close to it but can't feel from afar.
He is considered a traitor by the third one (that is why he believes the sorcerer messed with his weapon) and even being able to find him, would not get any help.
The easier solution was to, hide somewhere, be a old scripture with the location of the parts in riddles. But common, this is very stupid. Why would the heroes write down the location of something they do not want reassembled? Even if that is some traitor between them, by no means he would have all the information.
So here is where I'm stuck, how can the warrior find it. The head is the most important as could be awakened in order to know the location of the other body parts (one always knows where its hands are).