Now that the three gangs have been dealt with, Raoden’s storyline has had some major resolutions. The increasing pain of his wounds, however, is something I introduced into the book for fear that he wouldn’t have enough pressing conflicts. As stated in previous annotations, his personality is uniquely strong and stable amongst characters I’ve created, and I figured that giving him a small problem in the area of self-confidence wouldn’t be remiss. He feels that he’s worse at deal with the pain than everyone else, and that makes him worry that he isn’t the leader he should. We’ll have more on this later.
My explanation for the slime, admittedly, relies a bit heavily on ‘fantasy writer’s license.’ Usually, I resist overdoing things like this. (I.e., simply explaining away events in the world with magical answers.) Though there is a slight logic to Raoden’s explanation, it isn’t something that would have been intuitive to a reader, given the facts of the novel. That makes it a weak plotting element. However, the slime explanation isn’t part of any real plot resolution, so I decided to throw it in. Its place as an interesting world element, rather than a climax, gives me a few more liberties, I think.
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