174
HUTIJIN
Politics in the Nine
Hells are anything
but predictable
.Alliances
form all the time,
but most win
d up unravelingdue to
treachery. Neverthe
less, for all their
backbitingand
betrayal, the devils
do occas ionally
display loyalty,offering unwavering
service to
their masters. On
e suchexample is Hutijin
, a duke of
Cania and loyal servant
ofMephistopheles.Across the Hells, Hutijin
's name fills
lesser devilswith
fear and loathing
, for this duke
commands twocompanies
of pit fiends
, which make
up Cania's aristoc-racy. With
such soldiers under
his command,
Hutijincan easily
crush any rival
who gets in his way
, whilealso providing Mephistopheles
with
security againstarmies that might
seek to contest
his dominion. Hutijinhas amassed enough
power to challeng
e the lord ofCania,
but he has never
wavered in his support
for hismaster
-suggesting, per
haps, that Mephistopheles
hassome
hold over him.CHAPTt
: R 6 I BESTIARY. '
Outside
the Nine Hells
, Hutijin is a relativ
ely obscurefigure,
known only to the
most learned inferna
l schol-ars. He
has no cults of
his own, and his servants
are fewin number.
The reason
is simple: Hutijin
hates mortals.When summoned
from the Hells,
he repays the instiga-tor with
a long and agonizing
death.Mephistopheles
forbids
Hutijin from
making too manyforays
into the Mate rial
Plane, since the
duke's absenceleaves him
vulnerable to his
rivals. Other archdevilsknow how
much Hutijin despises
mortals and
havesecretly dis
seminate d the means
to call him
from theNine Hells
in the hope of di
stracting the archdevil
longenough
for them to assail
Mephistopheles.
Hutijin sendsdevils into the Mat
erial Plane to eradicate
mention ofhis name
and destroy those
who have learn
ed of him,but the
summonings still occur.
When called
from hispost,
he negotiates as quickly
as he can, usually
closinga deal
with little cost to
the s ummoner. However
, oncethe deal has been
struck, Hutij
in re pays the interruptionwith death.. ..