- Messages
- 338
- Character Biography
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He awoke to the sound of horse trotting along. This was a common sound now, people moving to and fro. The world, at large- seemed to be on fire. At any given time, in the west, there were rumors of the dead army, the hordes in the North, and now the coronation of a new Emperor. People were fleeing, moving, and hustling to and fro.
The spine, the literal dividing point of the world, between East and West, was constantly being bombarded with travelers. It was one such caravan that caught Arnor's eye. He could see them, the marks on their faces. As well as they could see his. They caught him during his morning routine, eating oatmeal and watching the passing of the carts on the busy street he had been lounging in.
The innkeeper had let him stay after he removed yet another would-be Necromancer. Which turned out to be the angry son of a jaded father. Arnor just beat sense into him and dragged him back to town. Much to his chagrin, the father scolded him, so Arnor beat him for driving his son away. Arnor was an equal-opportunity ass-kicker. As a thank you for preventing another ghoul problem, Arnor had been staying there, just South of Molthal in one of the many quaint, quiet villages that lay around the Spine.
The cart that caught his eye- was full of Nordenfiir. Not the ones he encountered some time ago, that told him that the Eternum marched, but these people seemed happy. He hailed them and they hailed back, and he approached. Out of habit, he stuck out his left hand. They smiled, commenting on that they were a little far south to be doing that.
Arnor couldn't help but finally smile.
Then something curious happened.
They asked him if he ran away, if he was a supporter of the King, if that's why he was outside of the Tundra. Arnor didn't understand. One of them, the younger woman, explained it all to him. The coup, the rebellion, the ascension to the throne. Arnor couldn't help but smile and feel the red-braid in his hair. He thanked them for their time- and for their trip, gave them a rather hefty sack of silver. Arnor, after all, was the mercenary lately for the Spine. His services were well rewarded and his reputation had proceeded him.
He got back into the inn, and with a nostalgic twinge in his heart, he asked the innkeeper- not an angry dwarf this time, but a gruff Orc, for pen and paper.
And then, in the solace of his room, he began to write.
Dear Maude,
I hope this letter finds you well. I feared after my enslavement that the worst of fates had fallen you. I haven't returned to the Tundra since. I have found ample work as a Mercenary in the Spine, after Knottington. I've heard great things about you, and your succession to the throne. I humbly can say that I knew a Queen before she rose to the throne.
I have included proof of life with this letter. I do hope to hear from you soon. Please return it with your reply if this finds you well.
Yours as always,
Arnor Skuldsson
He stopped, and reached to his hair. And for the first time in over a year, he cut the red-tinted braid in his hair out from his head, and tucked it into the papyrus envelope. He walked out, and found the local courier service, resting in the tavern. For two coins and a cock of his head, he mapped out the route, and charged him a few extra coins for the longevity of the route. But Arnor didn't care what the cost was.
It was all worth it, in the end.