Preachers in the Underground
One of the many peculiarities I remember in all my years living in these tunnels is the sheer number of recruiters from new religious movements here and there. There’s at least one or two of them in some corner of every station (major converging stations can have up to 15). The first time I encountered them was traveling with my friends Aurelia and Todd about six years ago, who at the time lived in the same capsule hotel as I did. Aurelia told me to dodge them, as she finds them exceptionally bothersome. They usually were in loose communion with the Order of Sigismund, a council of polytheistic sects.
Aurelia is Pascalese and Todd is a Meridian, practicing their own religions that they feel very strongly about. Aurelia is an ardent follower of Pascalese monotheism, a religion heavily tied to the Pascalese cultural identity; she doesn’t take too kindly to new religious movements, claiming them to be cult-like, but that may also be because it jibes against her monotheistic sensibilities.
Todd tends to avoid talking to them as much as he can; he is a Mapotherian, lapsed when he first came here but gradually became more observant as time went on. Mapotherians and members of the Order of Sigismund are not known to get along all that well due to a colourful history of discrimination and persecution between the two that gets flipped depending on who was the minority at the time and place. Outside major cities like the Galt metropole, Mapotherian discrimination is even stronger due to anti-Meridian sentiment; Mapotherianism is the state religion of the Meridian Empire.
I personally don’t have that much to say about the recruiters themselves, only that I tend to avoid them for convenience’s sake. Admittedly, I only ever paid lip service to my own religion so I’m not really the one to judge others, nor do I show too much interest.















