- Messages
- 13
- Character Biography
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Unfortunately, when one was already within the city, further up its incline, one could not experience that sweet golden finish of which was The Golden Apple Pub. Fortunately, there were other taverns, for Highlanders were nothing if they did not have plenty of opportunity to drink, whether or not the intention was to get drunk.
Thus, somewhere in between the fortress atop the hill and its base, amid stone structures of shops and houses and towers in the greater town, there was one such pub named The Green Old Dog. It wasn’t as popular as the former but it was no less of a tavern, offered its own variety of food and drink, meat and mead, wine and ale and, if you caught the kitchen at the wrong hour, well, potentially bread served stale.
However, the charm of this pub in a number was its simpler character when it came to architecture. It did not exist as a building all on its own like its predecessor but was built within the terraced structures. A brown door was on the outside, a black sign above it with the name, and a symbol that swung in the wind which depicted the head of a green dog. Though no one knew the true story behind it or the owner. Such was the fun of rumors, especially when drunk.
Inside The Green Old Dog you might find some drunken patrons all right, day or night. A number Highlanders this high up, though not limited to their kind by any means. There were other types of residents, even visitors, who were familiar with this tavern or simply looking for one and it was closest or on the way. Whatever the case, it was a good place.
One man thought so, at least. He sat in no corner but at a center table, round and brown, wooden as the owner, but not his server. Lizzie was her name, a comely young lass, enjoyed this man’s company, and wasn’t much her senior.
“Another?” She asked, gesturing toward the empty glass before the man.
“Sure,” the man grinned. “A second after the first. If the kitchen doesn’t come quick with my lunch then I might just have a third.”
“Quickly,” corrected Lizzie. “Come quickly, not quick.” She giggled and walked off.
Green eyes followed her. Emeralds, his mother called those eyes. Evergreen, his father said. Their son, who was modest enough, he liked to think, didn’t have much of an opinion. Yet he did know that they claimed the fair eyes of women. As did his head of red hair.
At the moment, however, Tuncan MacKraser had not come to this tavern as a single man to mingle. Rather, despite being a knight, he had a simpler outfit besides his armor, but he was armed with his sword as fit his sworn service, as he waited for another, younger man who had, in a manner, entered into his own service.
Cosmas (Aldric Pembroke)