Memnoh, the Physician
Royal Physician of the Golden Court
Khdtiih entered the clearing that the letter had demanded, the serene surface of the moon spreading out in every direction. Instead of a collection of foreign gods waiting to parley, she found only one figure. A familiar form, crumpled on the ground. Khdtiih rushed to the side of the body, confirming her feats. Her lover, Memnoh, lay there; her eyes forever closed. Khdtiih's sorrow burned brighter than the sun, yet she had to grip it and shove it away as a sharp bark in a language she did not know sounded from above.
Six gods, in chariots lead by and upon the backs of animals made from fire and lightning, circled above like vultures. Each wore an expression of cruelty, their weapons standing against the starry sky above like brandished fangs.
A god of the Golden Diwahn, Memnoh was the lover of Khdtiih the Golden Shahr, the head of the original Djinn pantheon.
Memnoh, as her title suggests, was a doctor and medical professional to her fellow gods, and was said to be able to heal any injury, mortal or divine. All the more ironic that her tragic death at the hand of foreign invaders during the Brasslamp War means that the eternal wound suffered by Khdtiih at the hands of Memnoh's murderers remains untreated and ever painful.
Mental characteristics
Employment
Born to the Djinn gods of knowledge and research, Rathiah and Yasfe respectively, Memnoh spent a long time without an easily defined nature, at one point taking the role of a minor diety that assisted her parents in their respective tasks. In her mother's library, however, she would eventually discover ancient medical texts and develop a deep love for the field. It did not take her long to develop a reputation in the court and myth of the Djinn, eventually resulting in her being taken on as an official physician by the majority of the gods.
The death of Memnoh, alongside the other Djinn gods that died, would bring about the introduction of several 'crafted' gods, introducing the human god-industries to Dhalazzam alongside all of the cultural implications that carries. The result is a

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