Lilim Roles

By Emily Dresner-Thornber

**Flaming
Feather**

I'm not terribly fond of the "Lilim as a party girl" stereotype. The power of geas just goes to waste. Instead, here's just about everyone you'd every want to know about what kind of role your favorite Lilim can fulfill. This encompasses just about every kind of role possible -- or at least those I could think of right now.

It hasn't been edited, so if the sentences are kind of convoluted, it's because I'm learning Japanese.




Lilim Sworn to a Prince:

Most Lilim ultimately swear to a Prince. Either they are tired of constantly being hounded by other demons, the Game, or, more likely, they find the rewards of joining a Prince's hierarchy, including titles, retainers, and advancement, to outweigh the benefits of staying neutral. These Lilim tend towards zealous loyalty -- or, as loyal as any demon can be without the use of geases. They're treated as normal demons by most of Hell. These are the "common Lilim" and tend to embody the "party demon" stereotype.

These Lilim are equally as difficult to redeem as any other demon.

Free Lilim - Gone to Ground:

Free Lilim who have "gone to ground", or disappeared, are unlikely to continue participation in the War in any capacity. Except for their unnatural longevity and the one Level 1 Geas they own to Lilith, they are virtually indistinguishable from normal humans, and a careful one can escape detection for hundreds of years. These have often cut all ties with former comrades and no longer continue previous demonic or angelic activity. To them, the War is over.

There is a rumor that some Lilim who walked away from the War voluntarily are actually acting as master puppeteers, stringing along vast numbers of humans from their mountain fortresses and hidden islands in giant conspiracies acting against both Heaven and Hell. None have yet been captured and interrogated, so this rumor continues to be unsubstantiated. However, there are teams actively investigating this possibility.

"Free" Lilim/Free Lilim in the Service to a Prince:

Less common than Lilim bound to a Prince, Free Lilim must build their own reputation. While most wander from Prince to Prince, picking up jobs as contractors when they can, others take on more permenant roles, using their resonance as a tool instead of a weapon. These Lilim offer a rare service: honesty, trustworthiness, and enforcable contractual work in the pit of Hell. They come in three forms: Brokers, Mediators and Arbitrators, and they all use the contract as their main tool.

Building a Contract

The contract is built from several geases binding several parties. All Lilim who craft contracts between celestials follow the same basic practice, and use it as their primary negotiating tool. The details of each deal may be different, but the means are the same.

Two celestials come to the table with requests. They both want their requests met, and they can only get what they want from each other. However, since they are both demons, it is impossible to trust each other. Some Lilim use extra caution, and use tricks to encrypt or otherwise hide the negotiations of each party.

The Lilim gathers up the requests, and follows these steps:

  1. The Lilim crafts a contract, and waits approval from both parties for the contract. Party A and Party B both frame their requests as "The Lilim makes the opposite party do what I want" instead of "I want the opposite party to do what I want."

  2. After getting approval, the Lilim binds party A to the contract, with the promise of honesty and getting party B to bind to the contract. In return, the Lilim asks her price, and takes it. She activates the geas on herself and on party A.

  3. The Lilim binds party B to the contract with the promise of honesty and party A's compliance. In return, the Lilim asks her price, and takes it. She activates the geas on herself and on party B.

  4. Since party A must follow through the geas to satisfy the promise to the Lilim, and party B also must follow through the geas to satisfy the promise to the Lilim, they both act to satisfy each other's needs. The Lilim, offering trustworthiness and to bind the other parties, has already fulfilled her end of the bargin. Once complete, the geases expire on the Lilim and all parties.


Most geases used in contractual negotiations are Level 3 Geases unless the contract is extremely touchy or chaining is involved.

Chaining

Lilim may chain together requests to form a single giant contract. Client A wants a service that he wants from Client C, but the Lilim can only fulfill it through Client B. So, she finds something A and B can agree on, and B will bind himself to C so that C will fulfill A's original request.

A -> Lilim <- B -> Lilim <- C

A finds this advantageous because he gets a service from C he otherwise could not get, C finds this advantageous because he gets to extort a service from B, and B finds this advantageous because he gets a need fulfilled by A. The Lilim requires B to pay only once, and walks away with three kickbacks on a deal instead of two. In the end, everyone wins.

Rumors of giant chaining contests held in the Guildhall are, also, completely unsubstantiated.

Kickbacks to the Prince

The issue with working for a Prince is that he stands there with his hand out. The Prince will require either contracts to be crafted in such a way that they are slated toward his Word, or he will require a bit of graft to allow the Lilim to continue working in autonomy. Lilim who are particularly proficient often gain tremendous favor in the eyes of their Prince and are pressured to join "permenantly." Lilim who are not proficient do not have their contracts renewed.

Most Lilim automatically work their kickbacks into the payment when taking their piece.

Brokers\Agents

The most common role for a Free Lilim is the Agent or the Broker. This Lilim represents a large "stable" of demons. These demons pay the Lilim a fee, and in return, she finds buyers for their services. On finding a buyer, she constructs a contract, and binds both the represented member and the buyer to geases. The price for agents is outrageously high in Hell, especially in Shal Mari, because of the cost of the kickback to the Lilim's patron Prince. Pure Free Lilim contracts are pricier, because the Lilim guarentees "true objectivity" in return for her services -- although it is unclear how true or how objective she really is. It is easier for a demon to go through the Lilim on staff with the demon's Prince than to approach the Guildhall in search of a free Broker. That Lilim will likely have a large list of buyers on hand, or give marginal discounts to "members."

Brokers are largely accepted ways of life in Hell; they're safe, fairly reliable, and will only moderately gouge. Between trying to finagle a fellow demon into doing something reliably for free or paying a broker to find a buyer and geas them into doing it, the Broker's fees may actually seem reasonable.

Brokers maintain offices in the Lilim Guildhall or their patron Prince's cathedral. A few brave or down on their luck ones open offices in Shal Mari proper. This is a very popular avenue of career for Lilim who would rather not bind formally to a Prince.

The Game has suggested the licensing of Brokers so they can keep "tabs" on them, but this unpopular idea has gotten very little support from the Lilim community.

Mediators

Free Lilim who fill the role of the Mediator are the grease that keeps the graft flowing in Hell. They represent the Prince's interests, and bring those interests to the negotiation table. They work with demon groups to demon groups. Known for the rare traits of honesty and integrity, these Lilim are the little-mentioned underground diplomats between Hell's fiefdoms. They refer to themselves as "liasons." For example, they may be the "Dark Comedy Liason to the Media in Los Angeles" or the "Dark Comedy Lieutenant in Los Angeles." Without the ability to take on official ranks like Knight or Captain, they take other titles to mark them as demons of status.

These Lilim do the Prince's business. They will only work with demons when it is advantageous to their sponsor, and will not take disparate groups of demons as their clients. If they do work with two high ranking demons, their prices are high and their demands are large. If they work on a contract that may anger their patron, their fees are astronomical. However, Lilim Mediators are highly valued, since their contracts ensure that goods and supplies needed to complete various Earth-side manuevers are available, and are rarely tossed aside, even when they anger their Prince.

Princes provide their Mediator Lilim with convenient Role covers to keep assassin bullets and Game interrogations at bay. The Lilim may appear to be working in a normal capacity as just another contracted worker when, in reality, they are working purely for the Prince's interests in ways that may or may not work in the interests of Hell.

Baal employs a large group of Mediators to maintain his supply lines.

Arbitrators

An Arbitrator is a specific version of a Mediator. Arbitrators write and ratify contracts between angels and demons. These essential "peace pacts" enforce the necessary glue that keeps the War from breaking out into the streets. These contracts range anywhere from peace pacts with time limits to agreements for safe passage to the exchange of hostages.

Free Lilim who work as Arbitrators are at risk. Both the Game and Judgment frown on the use of Arbitrators in any capacity, and have the Lilim eliminated whenever possible to shut down negotiations. After all, angels and demons should not be cooperating in any capacity at any time, and doing so is heresy. However, more pragmatic warriors on both sides -- namely War and the War -- see these beings as essential to completing key military manuevers, and use them when necessary. Because of the risks involved in this role, Arbitrators often request bodyguards as part of their compensation package before coming to the table.

It takes a certain unique individual to fill the role of an Arbitrator. They must be both trusted by the angels and the demons, have a proven track record of trustworthiness, and have learned to craft geases that will bind both parties without loopholes. They must pass the "Malakite Test" -- i.e., be able to be in the presence of a Malakite lacking an automatic "kill all demons on sight" Oath without provoking it to violence. If they cannot pass this test, angels deem the Lilim unworthy of their trust, and do not use them to ratify their contracts.

Few Lilim fill this role for very long, and those that do often demand large compensation packages from both parties. They are cognizant of the danger and their shortened life spans. A few Princes keep Arbitrators on staff as Mediators so they can fly them into a particularly hot spot, under the nose of the Game, at a moment's notice.

Lilim who work as Arbitrators are targetted by angels for redemption. However, it is rare that a Lilim will willingly leave both her vaulted position as a known, trusted mediator and walk into a completely unknown world.

Free Lilim in the Service to Trade:

Occasionally, Lilim will take jobs from angels. Lilim understand the worth of more training, and there are few places where one can get more direct training crafting contracts, learning to navigate arcane laws, and absorbing the art of negotiation than in a stint under the angels of Trade.

These jobs are dangerous -- more dangerous than working as an Arbitrator, since now it is working directly for the enemy. However, Trade has been employing Lilim under the table for so long, they have codified process and procedure for using their services while protecting everyone's interests.

Often, after a long stint with Trade, Marc will make the offer to attempt a redemption to bring the Lilim on "full time." The Lilim will normally turn him down for a variety of reasons: a fear of Heaven, a disinterest in leaving their tangled lives, or a continued distrust of angels.

Bright Lilim:

Few Lilim become Bright, and a vast majority of those are ones who have spent their lives Free or Free in the Service. For most, there is too much lost for them to join the forces of Heaven. Some Free Lilim see it as tantamount as binding to a Prince. Others see it as leaving "the life," and no matter what pure lives they lead to keep up their underground contacts all over the map, they are loathe to leave it. Some simply are greedy, and do not want to leave the lives of luxury they have built.

Those that do become Bright are a diverse group, and they have their own reasons. Some would rather simply be able to live a life of honesty without the need to bind themselves to it constantly. Others simply do not want to deal with the give and take of other people's Needs anymore.

The Lilim who redeem to Trade are eager to get back on the horse again, and a vast majority of those who do redeem stick with Marc. Others lean toward other "lawful" occupations where their diplomacy skills and their art of the contract comes often into play.

A few, but very few, redeem and bind to Eli. No one knows why.

**Flaming
Feather**

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