Anubis
Anubis is a jackal-headed judge Eidolon who appears on a marble throne to weigh accused individuals against the feather of Ma’at.
Appearance
Anubis has a jackal head. He appears seated on marble throne. He materializes the feather of Ma’at in his palm during judgment proceedings. He possesses another palm large enough for accused to climb onto.
Judgment Process
Anubis looks down at accused from his throne. His eyes narrow when observing immature or defiant attitudes. He materializes feather of Ma’at in one palm, then invites accused to climb onto his other palm for weighing process.
The weighing determines verdict based on actions and attitudes of accused. Factors considered include whether accused surrendered without resistance and whether they accept responsibility for actions. Refusing to run from responsibilities goes in favor during weighing.
Temperament
Anubis responds to attitudes displayed by accused. When young defendants show disdain or defiance, his eyes narrow. Bad attitudes, particularly those blamed on youth, result in verdicts that teach lessons.
Judging Young Bravos
392 AC - Circuit Court Weighing
Unknown observer (detective who tracked and brought offender before circuit court) leaned against colonnade awaiting sentence. They liked to see consequences of their actions rather than becoming indifferent. For them, becoming apathetic or uncaring would be worse crime.
Anubis suddenly appeared on marble throne. Observer caught themselves holding breath. Jackal-headed Eidolon looked down at accused. Young Bravos clenched fists, tense and defiant. His actions had put companions in danger - he acted without consideration for wellbeing and safety of peers.
Observing immature adventurer’s disdain, Anubis’s eyes narrowed. Bad attitude probably blamed on youth. If kept up, defendant would definitely be given verdict teaching lesson.
Eidolon materialized feather of Ma’at in palm, then invited Bravos to climb onto other palm, which he did. At least he was not type to run from responsibilities. That fact, and that he surrendered without kicking up fuss, would go in his favor during weighing.