The Catacombs
Crypt of the Emperors:
A stagnant breath rushes past as the PCs enter this elevated chamber that feels hollow like the base of a tower. Stretching up into darkness are stacked dozens of lavish burial alcoves wrought with jade, glass doors and silver. Many of these covers are shattered, their shards glinting in the dust, as if punched out by the wrapped forms inside. Deeper within, set in depressions in the walls stand giant twin statues which are heavily armored skeletal forms resting on down-turned blades.
The bodies here were once emperors, tyrants of the highest degrees—all pretenders to the God-King’s throne.
Crypt of the Cowardly:
Compared to the other crypts you've passed through, this burial hall seems deserted. No pillars line the walls nor are there extraneous sculptures to be found, there is only the fetid smell of trapped air. Along the walls, the burial stacks are fitted with rotted shelves, cracked boards dusted with unbound yellowed debris and the occasional rusted iron tool.
This crypt holds cruel, lazy, false, traitorous servants. In other words, those who displayed a degree of fear and timidity which Caspian and others did not personally approve of. It should be noted that Caspian doesn’t despise cowards. Instead, he meets them where they are at. Often he urges frightened souls not to be afraid, but in other cases, je pulls them out of the circumstances that are causing their fear. He understands that humans are fragile creatures and it just doesn’t take much to disturb them.
Crypt of the Godless:
The walls here are covered in runes and ornate symbols, images that exude the delicacies of other worlds. Contoured to fit around these fantastic markings are hundreds of burial sites, that look as though their interiors are etched with lines of self-loathing and self-abasement. Every line is different, and repentant, no two alike At the room's center is a simple altar. Though it is crafted to appear ready for a ritual or sacrifice, it looks as though it never saw use.
This is the burial place of those who turned their backs on Caspian for petty reasons and who coaxed others from their devotion out of denial, arrogance and pride rather than genuine skepticism.