Emilly
Emilly | |||||||||||||||||
Emilly, from Ultima V: Lazarus | |||||||||||||||||
Species: | human | ||||||||||||||||
Appearances | |||||||||||||||||
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Emilly is, together with her husband Windmire, the keeper of the lighthouse of Stormcrow during the events of Ultima V.
Description[edit]
The Avatar met her during Ultima V. At first talking about her job, she soon mentioned that her husband had been an excellent sailor, until a horrible accident had happened, his best friend dying in a storm. Since then, her husband had dedicated his life to guiding ships, so he'd erected the lighthouse and the docking area near Minoc.[1]
Ultima V: Lazarus[edit]
This is an Ultima V: Lazarus-related article or section. The information within may not apply to Ultima V or other Ultima games.
In Ultima V: Lazarus, Emilly ran the lighthouse of Stormcrow along with her husband Windmire. She told the hero how the job was not a difficult one, but necessary, for even during the day the fog in Lost Hope Bay was often thick.[2]
Emilly had grown up in Minoc, but admitted she did not care for the town as much as she used to, noting that the guards had begun to disturb her and sometimes the place felt dark with a change overcoming the population. Even though the guards did a good job of maintaining order, she felt they were not good for much else, and that the Oppression had much blood on their hands. Emilly personally thought there were more important virtues than just maintaining order in society. Still, she had to sometimes venture into town for supplies not obtainable elsewhere.
Emilly had recently noticed that her husband had been brooding over his old friend Scotty, which she attributed to Captain Blyth’s recent rise in prominence. She noted that her husband blamed the shipwright on his friend's death, feeling that the ship began to break up long before it should have. The fact that Captain Blyth was doing so well with the Oppression only made matters worse.
Trivia[edit]
- Emilly will mention that her husband's dead friend was named "Scotty" and he'd spoken about a "beam". A reference to “Beam me up, Scotty” from Star Trek.