- Messages
- 62
- Character Biography
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What was ordinarily a happy time in the city of Valenntenia, in which those loyal few who protected and served the remnants left behind by the Gods themselves to ensure the safety and peace of the Children of The Rune, had turned into one of the biggest headaches the againg Absalon Solomon Regis had ever dealt with. Usually by the end of the second night of Homecoming, he would be relaxing in a warm bath in The Tower while those who worked so hard under him enjoyed a well-deserved sabbatical from duty.
That changed when Fire's Guardian didn't show. Then, it changed even further when a veteran of the Vanguard reported him dead. Now Solomon was travelling from the medical facility where said Vanguard remained unconscious, and headed towards any place that could give him the first sip of alchohol he'd needed in almost five years.
The death of an active Guardian wasn't a new concept. Things happened out there, unfortunately. If battle did not kill you, insanity or a violent act of nature could just as easily. The reality of their title as Guardians was that they would be placed into danger, and they would be responsible for surviving said turmoil. So, what made this different? Well, nothing. Not on the surface anyways. There was more, though. There was always more. What troubled Regis so much about this latest loss was that it was not as spontaneous as everybody had been led to believe. There had been warning signs. Signs that pointed to this attack being a targeted one.
Whoever killed Fire had likely known about the Stone. More than that, it had been their objective to retrieve it.
That revelation had groundbreaking consequences. It changed how the whole situation could be percieved. For generations they had served in secret, without any outside of the city who truly knew of the capabilities of their birthright, The Runestones.
So it came down to one question, and it was a query that would change everything depending on its answer. Had the Stone been stolen under the assumption that it was a magical artifact worth selling? Or was the one who killed Fire aware of its true nature? The latter possibility would mean sweeping change amongst Guardian policy, and a full-scale mobilization to retrieve the Rune.
So it was understandable that Solomon did not mind the gazes of those civilians who sat and drank at Crying Heart, Valenntenia's oldest tavern. Though he stuck out amongst them in his now slightly soiled white robes, he paid none his gaze as he quietly sat at a table, waiting for Natassa, the lovely lass that she was, to bring him his usual.
If he'd been paying more attention, perhaps he'd notice that he was not the only Guardian in the building, nor the only one getting stares.
Konstantin
That changed when Fire's Guardian didn't show. Then, it changed even further when a veteran of the Vanguard reported him dead. Now Solomon was travelling from the medical facility where said Vanguard remained unconscious, and headed towards any place that could give him the first sip of alchohol he'd needed in almost five years.
The death of an active Guardian wasn't a new concept. Things happened out there, unfortunately. If battle did not kill you, insanity or a violent act of nature could just as easily. The reality of their title as Guardians was that they would be placed into danger, and they would be responsible for surviving said turmoil. So, what made this different? Well, nothing. Not on the surface anyways. There was more, though. There was always more. What troubled Regis so much about this latest loss was that it was not as spontaneous as everybody had been led to believe. There had been warning signs. Signs that pointed to this attack being a targeted one.
Whoever killed Fire had likely known about the Stone. More than that, it had been their objective to retrieve it.
That revelation had groundbreaking consequences. It changed how the whole situation could be percieved. For generations they had served in secret, without any outside of the city who truly knew of the capabilities of their birthright, The Runestones.
So it came down to one question, and it was a query that would change everything depending on its answer. Had the Stone been stolen under the assumption that it was a magical artifact worth selling? Or was the one who killed Fire aware of its true nature? The latter possibility would mean sweeping change amongst Guardian policy, and a full-scale mobilization to retrieve the Rune.
So it was understandable that Solomon did not mind the gazes of those civilians who sat and drank at Crying Heart, Valenntenia's oldest tavern. Though he stuck out amongst them in his now slightly soiled white robes, he paid none his gaze as he quietly sat at a table, waiting for Natassa, the lovely lass that she was, to bring him his usual.
If he'd been paying more attention, perhaps he'd notice that he was not the only Guardian in the building, nor the only one getting stares.
Konstantin