- Messages
- 2
- Character Biography
- Link
It was a miserable day. Grey light filtered through low clouds pouring out a dreary rain. Water ran through the gutters on the street and out of downspouts and off the eaves of rooves. A chill of the changing season hung in the air like an unwanted visitor.
Sasha'niel walked the street with her hands beneath her cloak, trying to ignore the cold and the wet. It had been years since she had left her native lands, but even now it was difficult to acclimate to the cold and the wet. She was tough, though. The desert and grasslands were not kind places to live. They killed the weak as surely and swiftly as a knife to the heart. She was No'rei, and even if she did not believe the tripe peddled by the Seers any longer, something had built her and her kin of sterner stuff than most.
Case in point, her side still ached where she had been hit. It had been a lucky blow - for her, at least; the point of that bastard's blade had sheared off in the brief round of swordplay. The thrust should have ended her life. Instead, it bruised her ribs.
The bounty hunter wouldn't bother her any longer. There were no half measures on the Sea. He raised a blade to her and she could do no less than ensure that the threat was ended forever. So it had been for a decade, and yet the kril'ach kept coming and throwing themselves on her blades. Why couldn't they simply leave her alone and let her fade into the world and be forgotten?
She slipped off the street and into a local watering hole. This was the Shallows, but even though rough sorts hung around every corner most had the good sense to keep away from the shrouded woman. She carried herself with a lethal grace and the barely constrained aura of violence common to her kin.
The interior was smoky and filled with the murmur of hushed conversation and the occasional round of drunken laughter. Many of the patrons looked up as she passed through the door - careful, assessing looks that quickly found somewhere else to pry. Tall, she cut a lean figure shrouded in her travel stained cloak - now with spatters of darkening blood on it. She threw the hood back as she came in, shaking rain from it as she did. Silver hair and gleaming gold eyes swept the room.
It might have been the blood, or it could have been the arsenal she wore. The bulge of heavy knives under the cloak were easy to see, as was the hilt of a sword with a well-worn grip. Her other accoutrements were back in the room she had stayed in the past few days. She would have to get them and her horse eventually, but so soon after yet another failed attempt by a bounty hunter, she did not feel comfortable returning.
Taking a seat at an empty table so that she could see the door to the kitchen and the entrance to the common room, she sat bolt upright with her arms crossed in front of her chest and waited. It did not take long before a boy - a teen, and as rough as the rest of the patrons and denizens of this part of town - came to take her order with only a hint of wariness.
"Water," she said in a clipped accent that practically carried dust from the desert on it. "Meat I will have and water will I have with it," she said. She reached into a coin purse at her waist and dug a handful of copper out and set it on the table.
"Water?" The boy seemed surprised. This place was a tavern, and it was usually beer that was asked.
"Drink in mixed company I will not," she said bluntly. "My coin, take and go."
After a moment, the boy shrugged and scooped up her money and left. She sat stiffly, eyes roving the room. It was not panic or fear that drove it. Merely readiness and awareness of her surroundings.
Sasha'niel walked the street with her hands beneath her cloak, trying to ignore the cold and the wet. It had been years since she had left her native lands, but even now it was difficult to acclimate to the cold and the wet. She was tough, though. The desert and grasslands were not kind places to live. They killed the weak as surely and swiftly as a knife to the heart. She was No'rei, and even if she did not believe the tripe peddled by the Seers any longer, something had built her and her kin of sterner stuff than most.
Case in point, her side still ached where she had been hit. It had been a lucky blow - for her, at least; the point of that bastard's blade had sheared off in the brief round of swordplay. The thrust should have ended her life. Instead, it bruised her ribs.
The bounty hunter wouldn't bother her any longer. There were no half measures on the Sea. He raised a blade to her and she could do no less than ensure that the threat was ended forever. So it had been for a decade, and yet the kril'ach kept coming and throwing themselves on her blades. Why couldn't they simply leave her alone and let her fade into the world and be forgotten?
She slipped off the street and into a local watering hole. This was the Shallows, but even though rough sorts hung around every corner most had the good sense to keep away from the shrouded woman. She carried herself with a lethal grace and the barely constrained aura of violence common to her kin.
The interior was smoky and filled with the murmur of hushed conversation and the occasional round of drunken laughter. Many of the patrons looked up as she passed through the door - careful, assessing looks that quickly found somewhere else to pry. Tall, she cut a lean figure shrouded in her travel stained cloak - now with spatters of darkening blood on it. She threw the hood back as she came in, shaking rain from it as she did. Silver hair and gleaming gold eyes swept the room.
It might have been the blood, or it could have been the arsenal she wore. The bulge of heavy knives under the cloak were easy to see, as was the hilt of a sword with a well-worn grip. Her other accoutrements were back in the room she had stayed in the past few days. She would have to get them and her horse eventually, but so soon after yet another failed attempt by a bounty hunter, she did not feel comfortable returning.
Taking a seat at an empty table so that she could see the door to the kitchen and the entrance to the common room, she sat bolt upright with her arms crossed in front of her chest and waited. It did not take long before a boy - a teen, and as rough as the rest of the patrons and denizens of this part of town - came to take her order with only a hint of wariness.
"Water," she said in a clipped accent that practically carried dust from the desert on it. "Meat I will have and water will I have with it," she said. She reached into a coin purse at her waist and dug a handful of copper out and set it on the table.
"Water?" The boy seemed surprised. This place was a tavern, and it was usually beer that was asked.
"Drink in mixed company I will not," she said bluntly. "My coin, take and go."
After a moment, the boy shrugged and scooped up her money and left. She sat stiffly, eyes roving the room. It was not panic or fear that drove it. Merely readiness and awareness of her surroundings.