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- Character Biography
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Near the Cairou river, Anirian Territory, Western frontier
"Don't try and go near that keep, master carpenter. That infernal place be cursed - sure as the sun sets and rain falls. People that wander down there don't return these days, believe you me."
The old farmer adjusted a laced shawl over her shoulders, anxiously glancing past her farmstead to the castle of black stone lurking in the distance. Hugo turned away from the door leading from her humble porch into the cottage, pushing himself up by his hands and shading his eyes against the afternoon sun, following her gaze. The castle nestled deep inside a great cauldron of earth, allowing only its tallest structures to protrude, like some great splinter scarring the rocky plains where no crops could grow.
"Your door ought be in a right state now, Madame Ailore." He said this while his gaze lingered on the keep, before he remembered that he should demonstrate the validity of his words, and went straight back to her door, pulling down its handle and opening it. "See? New side of the frame here. Fits like a charm now. Took the liberty to oil these hinges too."
"Thank you, stranger. Well, you've certainly earned your keep, but you still haven't listened to my words, now have you?"
"'Course I have, madame. It's simply that I'd never dare approaching that keep in the first place, so I don't see why I should need such words." He brushed his hands off dirt and sawdust, then rewarded himself with a swig of ale from a nearby mug given to him by his host. This farmstead offered the best viewing point to Basilicus Keep by a mile. He was so close now he could feel his bones tingle with the anticipation.
"You're not the first scavenger to come through here, you know. Lots of 'em around, loitering, poking through rubble. Ever since his lordship fell into a great silence and barred his gates. We haven't heard from him in nearly a year, and it no doubt spawned all sorts of rumour. People claiming he up and left the keep with his whole retinue - to others blathering about dark magic being afoot, gripping the keep in some sort of sleeping curse or turned them all into blithering stone!"
Hugo smiled wanly at the venerable woman, tugging at his own beard in faux suspense.
"Who knows? Could all be true. I even heard the lord had cursed himself after betraying his fallen comrades. The very soldiers who had fought tooth and nail to conquer this castle for him, claiming it from the Cortosi. Some of those souls," he went on, planting his mug on the railing more harshly than intended, "are even said to haunt him to this day."
A pregnant pause emerged between them, where the woman stared at him as if he had gone mad. Hugo cleared his throat, deciding to make it plain that he was speaking in jest - clearly it hadn't been plain enough, so he added:
"It's either that, or he could be a devout royalist."
"Bah!" She threw her hands in the air, derision dripping from her stance and words. "None of those things, I'd wager! Nay, I suspect it to be much more devious. People talk too much, too often in the day and too full of themselves! Empty barrels boom the loudest, that's what me father used to say. Everyone's a bloody poet these days, I swear. But now you listen here, you'd best avoid those shady strangers. You might not wish to tell your name - and I have respected that wish - but you seem an honest, hardworking lad. Don't throw in your lot with those basket-breakers, these hedge-sleepers and twiddling ne'r-do-wells, you hear? It'll bring nothing but trouble for you, so praise the Republic."
Hugo drained his mug in a long, few gulps while she boomed her speech, then went to pick up his black beret - the one thing he hadn't been able to relinquish for his secret stash of equipment. It might have jeopardised his role as a simple carpenter, but fortunately for him, here in the far-flung Anirian reaches the farmers couldn't tell the difference between an old officer's hat and an artisan's headwear. He donned his hat with millitaristic precision, turning his head away from her so its insignia didn't gleam too brightly in the sun.
"No need to worry on that account, madame. I'll grant them a wide berth. I don't imagine them to have any need of my services. Farewell now, be certain not to let any rot fester again in that doorframe." As he departed, leaving the farmstead and heading towards the cave that held both the old tunnel, his meagre camp and the rest of his hidden equipment, Hugo muttered to himself: "But perhaps I could have need of their services."
"Don't try and go near that keep, master carpenter. That infernal place be cursed - sure as the sun sets and rain falls. People that wander down there don't return these days, believe you me."
The old farmer adjusted a laced shawl over her shoulders, anxiously glancing past her farmstead to the castle of black stone lurking in the distance. Hugo turned away from the door leading from her humble porch into the cottage, pushing himself up by his hands and shading his eyes against the afternoon sun, following her gaze. The castle nestled deep inside a great cauldron of earth, allowing only its tallest structures to protrude, like some great splinter scarring the rocky plains where no crops could grow.
"Your door ought be in a right state now, Madame Ailore." He said this while his gaze lingered on the keep, before he remembered that he should demonstrate the validity of his words, and went straight back to her door, pulling down its handle and opening it. "See? New side of the frame here. Fits like a charm now. Took the liberty to oil these hinges too."
"Thank you, stranger. Well, you've certainly earned your keep, but you still haven't listened to my words, now have you?"
"'Course I have, madame. It's simply that I'd never dare approaching that keep in the first place, so I don't see why I should need such words." He brushed his hands off dirt and sawdust, then rewarded himself with a swig of ale from a nearby mug given to him by his host. This farmstead offered the best viewing point to Basilicus Keep by a mile. He was so close now he could feel his bones tingle with the anticipation.
"You're not the first scavenger to come through here, you know. Lots of 'em around, loitering, poking through rubble. Ever since his lordship fell into a great silence and barred his gates. We haven't heard from him in nearly a year, and it no doubt spawned all sorts of rumour. People claiming he up and left the keep with his whole retinue - to others blathering about dark magic being afoot, gripping the keep in some sort of sleeping curse or turned them all into blithering stone!"
Hugo smiled wanly at the venerable woman, tugging at his own beard in faux suspense.
"Who knows? Could all be true. I even heard the lord had cursed himself after betraying his fallen comrades. The very soldiers who had fought tooth and nail to conquer this castle for him, claiming it from the Cortosi. Some of those souls," he went on, planting his mug on the railing more harshly than intended, "are even said to haunt him to this day."
A pregnant pause emerged between them, where the woman stared at him as if he had gone mad. Hugo cleared his throat, deciding to make it plain that he was speaking in jest - clearly it hadn't been plain enough, so he added:
"It's either that, or he could be a devout royalist."
"Bah!" She threw her hands in the air, derision dripping from her stance and words. "None of those things, I'd wager! Nay, I suspect it to be much more devious. People talk too much, too often in the day and too full of themselves! Empty barrels boom the loudest, that's what me father used to say. Everyone's a bloody poet these days, I swear. But now you listen here, you'd best avoid those shady strangers. You might not wish to tell your name - and I have respected that wish - but you seem an honest, hardworking lad. Don't throw in your lot with those basket-breakers, these hedge-sleepers and twiddling ne'r-do-wells, you hear? It'll bring nothing but trouble for you, so praise the Republic."
Hugo drained his mug in a long, few gulps while she boomed her speech, then went to pick up his black beret - the one thing he hadn't been able to relinquish for his secret stash of equipment. It might have jeopardised his role as a simple carpenter, but fortunately for him, here in the far-flung Anirian reaches the farmers couldn't tell the difference between an old officer's hat and an artisan's headwear. He donned his hat with millitaristic precision, turning his head away from her so its insignia didn't gleam too brightly in the sun.
"No need to worry on that account, madame. I'll grant them a wide berth. I don't imagine them to have any need of my services. Farewell now, be certain not to let any rot fester again in that doorframe." As he departed, leaving the farmstead and heading towards the cave that held both the old tunnel, his meagre camp and the rest of his hidden equipment, Hugo muttered to himself: "But perhaps I could have need of their services."
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