Foreigners Hall
A poem famous beyond the borders of Styx speaks of the sound of the golden bells of the Grand Temple welcoming the downtrodden masses from far and near and as much is true.
Styx has a great number of immigrants, refugees and travellers flowing into its gates and streets and for those that have no personal contacts in the city their next stop is the Foreigners' Hall.
At the edge of the town near where the Eastern Serpent flows into the abyssal depths of the Chasm of Umbrae is the Foreigners' Hall, the building that houses the offices of the Union of the Marginalized.
The building itself is unassuming and run-down with cracked bricks and soot stained windows but its halls are warm and welcome all those who come from far away seeking refuge in the Stygian Republic.
The Foreigners' Hall is a shelter for all those that are not from Styx be they travellers, refugees or immigrants who have yet to find permanent lodgings.
There is a trend among the unhoused of Styx to pose as refugees, travellers or immigrants to obtain bread and lodging in the Foreigners' Hall as regulations on substance use are nonexistant here whereas they are heavily restricted in state-sanctioned shelters for the unhoused.
Styx has a great number of immigrants, refugees and travellers flowing into its gates and streets and for those that have no personal contacts in the city their next stop is the Foreigners' Hall.
At the edge of the town near where the Eastern Serpent flows into the abyssal depths of the Chasm of Umbrae is the Foreigners' Hall, the building that houses the offices of the Union of the Marginalized.
The building itself is unassuming and run-down with cracked bricks and soot stained windows but its halls are warm and welcome all those who come from far away seeking refuge in the Stygian Republic.
The Foreigners' Hall is a shelter for all those that are not from Styx be they travellers, refugees or immigrants who have yet to find permanent lodgings.
There is a trend among the unhoused of Styx to pose as refugees, travellers or immigrants to obtain bread and lodging in the Foreigners' Hall as regulations on substance use are nonexistant here whereas they are heavily restricted in state-sanctioned shelters for the unhoused.