- Messages
- 52
- Character Biography
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The merry crackle of the fire and the cheery glow was a welcome reprieve from days spent trudging through the forest. The crackle was a counterpoint to the muted roar of the rain as it came down in a deluge. A quieter version of the thunder the growled low and melancholy as the grey skies themselves.
The former inquisitor sat at a table near the fire and soaked in the warmth, drying out dark hair and body by degrees. The steel helm he customarily wore sat on the table in front of him alongside water and an empty plate with the juices of beef and the crumbs of bread left behind. For the moment, he was alone in the common room of this traveler's haven. There were only a handful of tables. This was a place people passed through going from one place of note to another, and its traveling lodge reflected that.
Forgotten. Filled with forgotten people who lived quiet lives. Or had lived quiet lives.
Erin recognized the look. The town held maybe few hundred people within its walls and in the surrounding woodlands; the palisade that surrounded it was in a sorry state. Maybe it had been in a sorry state before the troubles had begun. Who could say? He wasn't blind though. No, never that; he had spent all of his life in service to the Grey Lady as one of her Seekers, after all. His whole life had been seeing things others wanted hidden.
To his detriment, as it turned out.
He considered the weapon laying across the table before him as well. The proprietor had regarded it with unease, although he was uncertain as to why. A great, blunt slab of steel that occasionally had enough of an edge to maybe cut someone. Taken in with the heavy steel armor her wore it made him look more like a knight than a brigand.
Erin knew the gleam of fear. He had seen it reflecting in the eyes of the old man that ran this place, and in the step of his daughter (or granddaughter) who had served his meal. And it wasn't fear that was directed at him or his massive frame. There were other things the Seeker had noted when he had walked into town. Here and there the charred remnants of buildings. The watchful eyes of the few people he had seen outdoors.
Seemed far too few, even with the weather.
He paused at the sound of shouting outside somewhere, drink halfway to his lips. The eerie silence of this town he did not even know the name of was unsettling.
The former inquisitor sat at a table near the fire and soaked in the warmth, drying out dark hair and body by degrees. The steel helm he customarily wore sat on the table in front of him alongside water and an empty plate with the juices of beef and the crumbs of bread left behind. For the moment, he was alone in the common room of this traveler's haven. There were only a handful of tables. This was a place people passed through going from one place of note to another, and its traveling lodge reflected that.
Forgotten. Filled with forgotten people who lived quiet lives. Or had lived quiet lives.
Erin recognized the look. The town held maybe few hundred people within its walls and in the surrounding woodlands; the palisade that surrounded it was in a sorry state. Maybe it had been in a sorry state before the troubles had begun. Who could say? He wasn't blind though. No, never that; he had spent all of his life in service to the Grey Lady as one of her Seekers, after all. His whole life had been seeing things others wanted hidden.
To his detriment, as it turned out.
He considered the weapon laying across the table before him as well. The proprietor had regarded it with unease, although he was uncertain as to why. A great, blunt slab of steel that occasionally had enough of an edge to maybe cut someone. Taken in with the heavy steel armor her wore it made him look more like a knight than a brigand.
Erin knew the gleam of fear. He had seen it reflecting in the eyes of the old man that ran this place, and in the step of his daughter (or granddaughter) who had served his meal. And it wasn't fear that was directed at him or his massive frame. There were other things the Seeker had noted when he had walked into town. Here and there the charred remnants of buildings. The watchful eyes of the few people he had seen outdoors.
Seemed far too few, even with the weather.
He paused at the sound of shouting outside somewhere, drink halfway to his lips. The eerie silence of this town he did not even know the name of was unsettling.