- Messages
- 385
- Character Biography
- Link
"If its work you are looking for, girl, I have none to offer," said the proprietress in a flat voice. She stood in the common room with both hands on her hips, a disapproving sneer on her face. The effect lost a little of its punch when considering that she had to look up at the erstwhile 'girl'.
The object of derision and denial stood before her, ratty red hair a knotted mess. Her clothing, while not dirty, was not clean either; old stains washed out time and again were apparent. Some of them were suspicious in nature; maroon-brown faded with many washings spattered across the threadbare shirt and pants. At least she didn't stink, but it was also clear that she was a transient of some kind. The proprietress had never seen her before today and - with the grace of the heavens - would not see her again afterwards.
For her part, Maranae smiled and turned away. "Okay," she said without a trace of disappointment or discontent. Back into the room she went, heedless of the eyes that followed her and back out into the street.
She did not really understand the concept of work. She did not really understand the concept of money, either; some tenuous link between the idea of work and money was all she knew, and that people expected to be given money in exchange for things. Valuation was not a strength of hers. In fact, her only real strength seemed to be the ability to survive in the wild places, places where men did not live. With a constitution similar to a komodo, it wasn't as if survival was a particular challenge; she could drink tainted water and eat rotting meat (preferred fresh killed, though), and the elements - at least here on the plains - proved little challenge.
She could happily live out the days of her life in the wilds, never coming close to human habitation...were it not for the burning questions in her mind.
Who am I? Where do I come from?
She was not a very bright girl. All she knew was that she had been in a bad place, and that bad place had wanted to make of her some kind of weapon. The concept of weapon was easy enough for her to understand; the claws that tipped her fingers and toes served well, better in some cases than her rudimentary understanding of blades and bows. She was a chimeric creature, although she did not really know that. She just knew that she had been made.
That should have been that. A creature made for war, to do what she was told and not to think, to postulate, to opine on her existence. But, as with so many things that people had a hand in making, she was flawed. They did not get the unthinking beast they wanted, but rather some broken creature that could think for itself in some limited fashion. Enough to question and to fret about simple concepts, but not enough intelligence to make any progress on the burning questions that plagued all of humanity.
There were...memories. Memories of a time that she did not know, fleeting images of a place. Of faces, of the idea of being loved and loving in return. Vel Anir, whispered some nameless voice in her head. Home. Whatever home was.
The sun outside was a fair bit stronger today, and provided enough warmth that the clothes she wore weren't necessarily needed. Resistance to the elements did not equate to immunity, and while she could withstand the cold it was not necessarily pleasant. The wind out of the south brought with it the scent of the turning of the season, a welcome thing after recent months. It also kicked up dust and grit she had to squint against the dirt rain that pelted from the dry streets. Even the manure of horse and ox had dried out; it had been months since the last moisture had fallen here.
Not much longer, though. The wet season was on the horizon.
One place denied her, but there were at least a half dozen such places in this seedy trade hub. Didn't matter to her that they would all likely turn away a threadbare vagabond; she hadn't thought that far ahead. There were trades here that she could get at the drop of a hat, but she was not really wired that way and might never be; lascivious looks were lost on her, and even assuming such an awakening ever came, it would be to breed and little else.
So the tall redhead worked her way up the street to the next place where they could tell her no, and was blissfully unaware of the heavily armed bounty hunter trailing her a few dozen yards back. The fellow had his mind on his money and his money on his mind, and it was walking ahead of him in blissful ignorance.
The object of derision and denial stood before her, ratty red hair a knotted mess. Her clothing, while not dirty, was not clean either; old stains washed out time and again were apparent. Some of them were suspicious in nature; maroon-brown faded with many washings spattered across the threadbare shirt and pants. At least she didn't stink, but it was also clear that she was a transient of some kind. The proprietress had never seen her before today and - with the grace of the heavens - would not see her again afterwards.
For her part, Maranae smiled and turned away. "Okay," she said without a trace of disappointment or discontent. Back into the room she went, heedless of the eyes that followed her and back out into the street.
She did not really understand the concept of work. She did not really understand the concept of money, either; some tenuous link between the idea of work and money was all she knew, and that people expected to be given money in exchange for things. Valuation was not a strength of hers. In fact, her only real strength seemed to be the ability to survive in the wild places, places where men did not live. With a constitution similar to a komodo, it wasn't as if survival was a particular challenge; she could drink tainted water and eat rotting meat (preferred fresh killed, though), and the elements - at least here on the plains - proved little challenge.
She could happily live out the days of her life in the wilds, never coming close to human habitation...were it not for the burning questions in her mind.
Who am I? Where do I come from?
She was not a very bright girl. All she knew was that she had been in a bad place, and that bad place had wanted to make of her some kind of weapon. The concept of weapon was easy enough for her to understand; the claws that tipped her fingers and toes served well, better in some cases than her rudimentary understanding of blades and bows. She was a chimeric creature, although she did not really know that. She just knew that she had been made.
That should have been that. A creature made for war, to do what she was told and not to think, to postulate, to opine on her existence. But, as with so many things that people had a hand in making, she was flawed. They did not get the unthinking beast they wanted, but rather some broken creature that could think for itself in some limited fashion. Enough to question and to fret about simple concepts, but not enough intelligence to make any progress on the burning questions that plagued all of humanity.
There were...memories. Memories of a time that she did not know, fleeting images of a place. Of faces, of the idea of being loved and loving in return. Vel Anir, whispered some nameless voice in her head. Home. Whatever home was.
The sun outside was a fair bit stronger today, and provided enough warmth that the clothes she wore weren't necessarily needed. Resistance to the elements did not equate to immunity, and while she could withstand the cold it was not necessarily pleasant. The wind out of the south brought with it the scent of the turning of the season, a welcome thing after recent months. It also kicked up dust and grit she had to squint against the dirt rain that pelted from the dry streets. Even the manure of horse and ox had dried out; it had been months since the last moisture had fallen here.
Not much longer, though. The wet season was on the horizon.
One place denied her, but there were at least a half dozen such places in this seedy trade hub. Didn't matter to her that they would all likely turn away a threadbare vagabond; she hadn't thought that far ahead. There were trades here that she could get at the drop of a hat, but she was not really wired that way and might never be; lascivious looks were lost on her, and even assuming such an awakening ever came, it would be to breed and little else.
So the tall redhead worked her way up the street to the next place where they could tell her no, and was blissfully unaware of the heavily armed bounty hunter trailing her a few dozen yards back. The fellow had his mind on his money and his money on his mind, and it was walking ahead of him in blissful ignorance.