- Messages
- 74
- Character Biography
- Link
As the sun painted a lazy line across the sky, so did Isander approach the hay-roofed hut on the outskirts of Svapna. He carried a saunter in his step, an ease about his crest. Routine, almost, some measure of familiarity guiding him.
Svapna sat on the frontier, a town of small layers stitched together with farmsteads scattered throughout the marsh and sprawling woods. Seldom a route for trade, it was a sturdy home for a determined few. They needed such strength to weather the Wilds. It often lent for a contentious relationship with travelers, occasioning even the western tax collectors to step warily along Svapna's cobbles.
These folk looked out for one another. No one else would do it for them. Reasonable folk, usually, but panic forewent sense.
Rumors had circulated earlier: accusations of thievery, acts of the foulest arcane, and the locals spared no breath decrying the nearby witch.
Ekaterina by name, she had lived a quiet life in the antecedent years, an almost fae existence that offered remedials and advice to any willing to lend an ear. Hers was a shoulder most acquainted with the tears of the bereft, eyes lidded with the tides of empathy. And still they accused her.
Not uncommon in the heart of the Valen, but it weighed heavy on Isander's shoulder.
In leather and maille, righting the sheathed spear crooked against an elbow, he gave his companions a nod and knocked at witch's door. His knuckles rapped dully, muffled to near silence with each subsequent thump.
"Mother," he said in the lilting notes of intonation, "we have come to your aid."
The door creaked open, a sliver then a crack, and a voice answered back:
“Knights,” she breathed.
“Knights,” she cackled.
“Knights,” she scoffed.
Her eyes a dawning blue, cracked and kaleidoscopic as she stared at once longingly and contemptuously at them. Swathed in velvet of blue and green, hair set in braided knots that ended in copper rings, the witch crooked a finger and invited them in.
Isaander, standing on ceremony, bowed his head and entered.
Svapna sat on the frontier, a town of small layers stitched together with farmsteads scattered throughout the marsh and sprawling woods. Seldom a route for trade, it was a sturdy home for a determined few. They needed such strength to weather the Wilds. It often lent for a contentious relationship with travelers, occasioning even the western tax collectors to step warily along Svapna's cobbles.
These folk looked out for one another. No one else would do it for them. Reasonable folk, usually, but panic forewent sense.
Rumors had circulated earlier: accusations of thievery, acts of the foulest arcane, and the locals spared no breath decrying the nearby witch.
Ekaterina by name, she had lived a quiet life in the antecedent years, an almost fae existence that offered remedials and advice to any willing to lend an ear. Hers was a shoulder most acquainted with the tears of the bereft, eyes lidded with the tides of empathy. And still they accused her.
Not uncommon in the heart of the Valen, but it weighed heavy on Isander's shoulder.
In leather and maille, righting the sheathed spear crooked against an elbow, he gave his companions a nod and knocked at witch's door. His knuckles rapped dully, muffled to near silence with each subsequent thump.
"Mother," he said in the lilting notes of intonation, "we have come to your aid."
The door creaked open, a sliver then a crack, and a voice answered back:
“Knights,” she breathed.
“Knights,” she cackled.
“Knights,” she scoffed.
Her eyes a dawning blue, cracked and kaleidoscopic as she stared at once longingly and contemptuously at them. Swathed in velvet of blue and green, hair set in braided knots that ended in copper rings, the witch crooked a finger and invited them in.
Isaander, standing on ceremony, bowed his head and entered.