Post by The Steward on Dec 30, 2012 5:28:48 GMT -6
Full Name: The Steward, Gabriel Hawthorne
Nickname: The Painting of the Men's Smoking Room
Age: Unknown
Height (of Painting): 5'1"
Weight: N/A
Gender: Male
To gaze, gawk, or glance at this huge painting will give anyone the chills, make the air on the back of their neck stand up, and instinctively know that there is not no ordinary painting. The inscription beneath the huge piece details the painting’s name as “The Steward, Gabriel Hawthorne” and if this is a portrait of an actual person or simply a painting of the image of an intimidating butler, is unknown. What is known is the fact that this huge painting is the sole piece of artwork to adorn the walls of the Men’s Smoking Room. Once this room would have houses the men of the Manor and visiting male company as they conversed, exchanged news, drank liquor and spirits, and indulged on tobacco. Remnants of this colorful past are apparent in the room itself but whether or not this particular portrait existed at that point, is unknown as well.
Now, with the halls and territory of the Baudeau Plantation consumed and ruled by evil, guests of the Manor who happen to find themselves within the Men’s Smoking Room too better be male because…. All occupants of this particular room are always watched and females are not welcome. Boys and men will find no ill-will and danger within this room with its lasting aroma of tobacco and spilt whiskey, but women who think it safe to accompany their male companions are gravely mistaken.
If any female were to remain within the Smoking Room for any length of time, this painting will literally awaken. “The Steward,” a creature of darkness and malice, possibly born form the evil of the Manor itself, will step thunderously from its huge frame and give chase after any and all females who dared to intrude, and this expressionless brute will catch his prize one way or another. Though appearing as burly, this “Gabriel Hawthorne” is wickedly fast on his feet, able to take down his victim’s at an alarming rate and his methods of murder are simple, he seems to have a fetish for hair…. If his female victim has long enough hair for him to grab, The Steward will smash the fragile body of the woman against walls, furniture, stone, anything until she is broken with death, all by her hair. However, if the female has short hair, this dark masculine figure will proceed to break the limbs of the girl before finally smashing her head violently against any hard surface, rendering her dead.
The Steward cannot be harmed nor beaten once he has exited the borders of his picture frame. Once he returns to his domain, this menace can not do anything against any male who figures out that by destroying the painting completely will ultimately destroy Gabriel Hawthorne… Unfortunately, the male has to figure out this by watching The Steward come to life first to know that this is not your ordinary painting.
Nickname: The Painting of the Men's Smoking Room
Age: Unknown
Height (of Painting): 5'1"
Weight: N/A
Gender: Male
To gaze, gawk, or glance at this huge painting will give anyone the chills, make the air on the back of their neck stand up, and instinctively know that there is not no ordinary painting. The inscription beneath the huge piece details the painting’s name as “The Steward, Gabriel Hawthorne” and if this is a portrait of an actual person or simply a painting of the image of an intimidating butler, is unknown. What is known is the fact that this huge painting is the sole piece of artwork to adorn the walls of the Men’s Smoking Room. Once this room would have houses the men of the Manor and visiting male company as they conversed, exchanged news, drank liquor and spirits, and indulged on tobacco. Remnants of this colorful past are apparent in the room itself but whether or not this particular portrait existed at that point, is unknown as well.
Now, with the halls and territory of the Baudeau Plantation consumed and ruled by evil, guests of the Manor who happen to find themselves within the Men’s Smoking Room too better be male because…. All occupants of this particular room are always watched and females are not welcome. Boys and men will find no ill-will and danger within this room with its lasting aroma of tobacco and spilt whiskey, but women who think it safe to accompany their male companions are gravely mistaken.
If any female were to remain within the Smoking Room for any length of time, this painting will literally awaken. “The Steward,” a creature of darkness and malice, possibly born form the evil of the Manor itself, will step thunderously from its huge frame and give chase after any and all females who dared to intrude, and this expressionless brute will catch his prize one way or another. Though appearing as burly, this “Gabriel Hawthorne” is wickedly fast on his feet, able to take down his victim’s at an alarming rate and his methods of murder are simple, he seems to have a fetish for hair…. If his female victim has long enough hair for him to grab, The Steward will smash the fragile body of the woman against walls, furniture, stone, anything until she is broken with death, all by her hair. However, if the female has short hair, this dark masculine figure will proceed to break the limbs of the girl before finally smashing her head violently against any hard surface, rendering her dead.
The Steward cannot be harmed nor beaten once he has exited the borders of his picture frame. Once he returns to his domain, this menace can not do anything against any male who figures out that by destroying the painting completely will ultimately destroy Gabriel Hawthorne… Unfortunately, the male has to figure out this by watching The Steward come to life first to know that this is not your ordinary painting.