- Messages
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- Character Biography
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"I'm telling you, damned savages cannot be trusted," said one wagon driver to another. He was careful not to point or gesture toward the topic of their conversation, long running over the course of multiple days. Their subject remained unaware of the conversation, and that was likely a good thing for the pair. The second driver shook her head, rusty hair flying as she did. "You think they going to put the fox in charge of the coop, Drevor? You're a mistrustful idiot."
Aeyliea leaned against the wooden post holding the roof up over the porch of the general store of Stray. Today was a moody day, the sun hidden behind thick grey clouds that threatened to bring rain - or maybe snow, given the chill in the air. Most likely rain, though. It was too early in the year for the first frigid blasts to pound their way across the Sea , but it was no longer oppressively hot. Barely even warm, when it came to it. The wind blowing out of the north kicked up dust in skirls of grit that peppered her face and that of the dozens of people out and about on this frontier town.
The wagons and carts were lined up in the street, the caravanserai idle as the final preparations were mode to move. Wagons loaded with textiles, dyes, silks, and spices; leathers and iron and copper ingots that weighed the wagons down til the axles creaked. As unremarkable a shipment of goods as there ever was, with as unremarkable an assortment of people tending wagons and standing guard. Most of the drivers were human with the odd orc or elf thrown in - drivers, with a handful of the merchants whose goods were in transport. Those worthies were easy to pick out by their brighter, more finely crafted clothes.
Also the fact that they lifted not one finger to help with anything.
The No'rei snorted as she looked at the group. A dozen wagons and a handful of carts, their teams hitched and ready to roll out. She was but one of ten that had been hired on to protect the group. Had she been fluent in common, she might have laughed aloud at the drovers' conversation, and mostly because it was true. The Sundered were right to be afraid of the faithful, after all. Ten thousand years could not erase the memory of their betrayal, and the thirst for vengeance still burned within the People to this day.
In fact, nothing would have suited her better than to slaughter the entire lot of them. Only one thing held her from doing so...the ghostly images that danced in her head, and the even more tenuous voice that seemed to echo down through the ages. Coupled with the strange weather and events that sought to prevent her westward travel, and she had been left with little choice.
The concept of a contract was wasted on her. The pay they offered her - round bits of metal with images stamped into them - meant even less, nevermind the fact that they had paid her as much as they would pay one of the carters to drive a wagon, but in the capacity of sticking her neck out to defend the 'van from raiders. It had been easy to take advantage of her, and the 'van master knew it. Knew there was some reason he was even approached by one such as she in the first place.
The No'rei did not treat with outsiders. Why, then, this one?
"You sure that going to be enough, woman?" She looked away from the wagons and the people attending them to one of the other guards. A komodo, the man towered over her, the scales on his body far more widespread than the smattering on her arms. Though their ancestry might be similar, far enough back, the faithful still considered the wandering Komodi to be Sundered like the rest outside the Sea. "Won't stop an arrow, that," he added.
She shrugged. She only understood one word in three, but the body language was easily understood. The 'van guard thought leather trousers and a leather jerkin with itchy wool undershirt were not enough protection. The fellow did not, however, take into account the assortment of charms and focuses she carried about her person. Her flowing white hair she had braided loosely, and had incorporated the feathers of raven and hawk, the bones of small animals, and beads fashioned from pretty stones in a broad assortment of colors. They were not the best offerings, but since the Aniri had taken all of her proper artifacts from her months before, they would serve.
She had an unstrung horn bow on her back, and a short stabbing spear as well as a bullhide buckler. At first glance it would appear impossible that she could wield such; her left arm, wrapped in cloth so that none of her flesh showed, was nevertheless misshapen, the fingers on that hand cruelly hook. She did very little with it, and mostly seemed to try to hide it from others as it detracted from the rather exotic beauty it was clear she knew she had. Of middling height, with skin a burnished bronze and eyes and scales of grey-blue stone, hard as the mountains themselves, she cut an imposing figure. "The Seven all needed," she replied brusquely, those ice-cold eyes locking with his.
The Komodo was used to her stand-offishness by this point, though. It had been three days since hiring, and on the eve of their departure he had already been rebuffed by her on several occasions. "Suit yourself," he said, and shrugged. "We'll be gone, soon. Get ready," he said, and then walked off.
To which she said nothing.
Aeyliea leaned against the wooden post holding the roof up over the porch of the general store of Stray. Today was a moody day, the sun hidden behind thick grey clouds that threatened to bring rain - or maybe snow, given the chill in the air. Most likely rain, though. It was too early in the year for the first frigid blasts to pound their way across the Sea , but it was no longer oppressively hot. Barely even warm, when it came to it. The wind blowing out of the north kicked up dust in skirls of grit that peppered her face and that of the dozens of people out and about on this frontier town.
The wagons and carts were lined up in the street, the caravanserai idle as the final preparations were mode to move. Wagons loaded with textiles, dyes, silks, and spices; leathers and iron and copper ingots that weighed the wagons down til the axles creaked. As unremarkable a shipment of goods as there ever was, with as unremarkable an assortment of people tending wagons and standing guard. Most of the drivers were human with the odd orc or elf thrown in - drivers, with a handful of the merchants whose goods were in transport. Those worthies were easy to pick out by their brighter, more finely crafted clothes.
Also the fact that they lifted not one finger to help with anything.
The No'rei snorted as she looked at the group. A dozen wagons and a handful of carts, their teams hitched and ready to roll out. She was but one of ten that had been hired on to protect the group. Had she been fluent in common, she might have laughed aloud at the drovers' conversation, and mostly because it was true. The Sundered were right to be afraid of the faithful, after all. Ten thousand years could not erase the memory of their betrayal, and the thirst for vengeance still burned within the People to this day.
In fact, nothing would have suited her better than to slaughter the entire lot of them. Only one thing held her from doing so...the ghostly images that danced in her head, and the even more tenuous voice that seemed to echo down through the ages. Coupled with the strange weather and events that sought to prevent her westward travel, and she had been left with little choice.
The concept of a contract was wasted on her. The pay they offered her - round bits of metal with images stamped into them - meant even less, nevermind the fact that they had paid her as much as they would pay one of the carters to drive a wagon, but in the capacity of sticking her neck out to defend the 'van from raiders. It had been easy to take advantage of her, and the 'van master knew it. Knew there was some reason he was even approached by one such as she in the first place.
The No'rei did not treat with outsiders. Why, then, this one?
"You sure that going to be enough, woman?" She looked away from the wagons and the people attending them to one of the other guards. A komodo, the man towered over her, the scales on his body far more widespread than the smattering on her arms. Though their ancestry might be similar, far enough back, the faithful still considered the wandering Komodi to be Sundered like the rest outside the Sea. "Won't stop an arrow, that," he added.
She shrugged. She only understood one word in three, but the body language was easily understood. The 'van guard thought leather trousers and a leather jerkin with itchy wool undershirt were not enough protection. The fellow did not, however, take into account the assortment of charms and focuses she carried about her person. Her flowing white hair she had braided loosely, and had incorporated the feathers of raven and hawk, the bones of small animals, and beads fashioned from pretty stones in a broad assortment of colors. They were not the best offerings, but since the Aniri had taken all of her proper artifacts from her months before, they would serve.
She had an unstrung horn bow on her back, and a short stabbing spear as well as a bullhide buckler. At first glance it would appear impossible that she could wield such; her left arm, wrapped in cloth so that none of her flesh showed, was nevertheless misshapen, the fingers on that hand cruelly hook. She did very little with it, and mostly seemed to try to hide it from others as it detracted from the rather exotic beauty it was clear she knew she had. Of middling height, with skin a burnished bronze and eyes and scales of grey-blue stone, hard as the mountains themselves, she cut an imposing figure. "The Seven all needed," she replied brusquely, those ice-cold eyes locking with his.
The Komodo was used to her stand-offishness by this point, though. It had been three days since hiring, and on the eve of their departure he had already been rebuffed by her on several occasions. "Suit yourself," he said, and shrugged. "We'll be gone, soon. Get ready," he said, and then walked off.
To which she said nothing.