In the region of Cruella, where women reign supreme and men are considered little more than vermin, the Sisterhood of the Sacred Veil stands as one of the most feared and extreme factions. While society already views men as inferior—fit only for servitude, labor, and menial tasks—this group of powerful women takes that belief to an entirely different level. The Sisterhood, led by the ruthless High Priestess Diana, uses religion as a veil to justify their unrelenting cruelty and abuse toward men. They claim to act in the name of the Divine Goddesses, but in truth, their rituals serve as a guise for their sadistic thirst for domination and control.
In this world, where matriarchy rules, men are considered expendable, nothing more than tools to be used and discarded. The Sisterhood has turned this concept into a twisted religion, worshiping the Goddesses of Wrath and Ruin, deities they claim demand the blood and suffering of men in exchange for greater power and eternal pleasure. Their religious practices have less to do with faith and more to do with inflicting agony upon those they see as subhuman.
High Priestess Diana, a woman of chilling beauty and unmatched cruelty, oversees the Sisterhood with an iron fist. Her influence stretches far beyond the coven’s hidden sanctuaries, for she is not only a spiritual leader but a manipulative political figure who has bent the minds of noblewomen, wealthy elites, and other powerful Ladies across Cruella. She preaches that the goddesses reward those who take pleasure in male suffering, and many women who seek the thrill of power flock to her side. Clad in black and crimson, Diana’s public persona is that of a serene spiritual guide, but in private, she revels in the pain and subjugation of men, watching their torment with cold satisfaction.
The Sisterhood’s rituals are elaborate displays of cruelty disguised as sacred rites. On nights of significance, such as eclipses or solstices, the Sisterhood gathers in secluded sanctuaries, where men are brought in as sacrifices. These men, often captured from the lower classes or beguiled with promises of mercy, are treated worse than animals. Stripped of dignity and worth, they are paraded before the Sisters and offered as gifts to the goddesses. The ceremonies involve brutal physical torment, psychological degradation, and bloodshed, all under the pretense of divine will.
The women of the Sisterhood indulge in this cruelty, not out of religious devotion but for the sheer pleasure of breaking those they view as beneath them. They derive their sense of superiority from the complete and utter annihilation of male will. The goddesses they worship are less deities and more reflections of their own perverse desires—symbols of the unchecked power they wield in a world where men have no rights, no value, and no hope of reprisal.
High Priestess Diana is surrounded by her inner circle, the Daughters of the Veil, a group of equally vicious and sadistic women who share her vision of male suffering. These women are often influential figures in the broader society of Cruella, using their positions of power to procure men for the cult’s rituals. They are experts in manipulating, capturing, and breaking their victims, and they take pride in their work, seeing it as both a duty and a source of twisted entertainment.
The Sisterhood’s motto, whispered in the darkest corners of their sacred spaces, is “Through their pain, we rise.” They see themselves as a sisterhood united by their disdain for men and their shared belief that only through acts of extreme cruelty can they ascend to their rightful place as the supreme rulers of all things. Their religious imagery is laden with symbols of female dominance: the serpent devouring its prey, the moon eclipsing the sun, and the hand crushing the insect. These symbols are proudly displayed in their lairs, along with relics of their past victims, which they keep as trophies to remind them of their superiority.
The Sisterhood of the Sacred Veil is feared not just for their violent rituals but for the way they have co-opted religion to justify the subjugation of men in an already unequal society. While many in Cruella dismiss them as extremists, there are whispers that some of the most powerful women in the region secretly align with the Sisterhood’s beliefs. They might not take part in the rituals, but they benefit from the ideological foundation the cult has laid—a world where women hold all power and men are nothing more than playthings to be used and discarded.
In a society where men are already regarded as insects, the Sisterhood of the Sacred Veil sees them as something even less: a resource to be harvested, broken, and consumed in the name of their goddesses—and in the pursuit of their own dark, unholy pleasures.