Once upon a time, a sailor crashed upon a shore. Soaked and bedraggled he crawled up on the sand. Weakly he lifted up his head and searched the beach. He saw a bearded man not far from him, writhing in agony, pain stamped across his features. His brow was furrowed and the sailor could hear him gasping for the smallest breaths. So he picked himself up and hurried to aid the older man.
As he got closer, he noticed the man wore armor and that there was a sword strapped to his side. When the bearded man spotted the sailor he rasped out with much effort, “Help me, please, I’ve been poisoned. I need yarrow”! The sailor knelt beside him and brushed the sweaty hair out of the warrior's face. A whoosh of air cooled his head, but wait; there was not a breeze for his entire body to feel. Stunned the sailor whipped around just in time to be lifted from the ground by a small blue dragon. Struggling, the sailor panicked and all thought fled his mind save to be free of this monster's clutches. Flailing about he found a small dagger on his person that had not been lost in the sea. Hastily snatching it from its scabbard, the sailor reached up and plunged it into the belly of the ferocious beast.
Downward they plummeted, the sailor and the dragon, until they hit the beach with a loud thump. Blood splattered and slightly quivering, the sailor stood up and pulled his dagger from the dragon’s belly. Setting his jaw grimly he forced his trembling legs to run for the yarrow plants that was only yards away. Stooping he caught at a stalk and without stopping, made his way back to the coughing man lying in the sand. Putting the bitter yarrow in his mouth, he chewed it up and then pushed it down the sickly man’s throat. The bearded man managed to sputter out a feeble thank you before collapsing on the cold sand.
Slowly the winded sailor stood and gathered his thoughts. He didn’t remember where he came from, or how he ended up here. The last thing he remembered was a fierce wind and the sting of rain pelting his face. Who am I, he thought to himself? From whence do I hail? Where are the people who would call themselves my family? Do I have one?
The sailor stood musing on the shore when it came to his attention that he was letting the sickly man on the ground before him, freeze out in the open. So he hastily made a fire and sat the older bearded man beside it. He took off his shirt and laid it on the sand to dry. It was hours later when the old man awoke and rasped for water. “Thanks are given to my savior”, he mumbled through his facial hair. “I thought I was certainly lost.”
“Think nothing of it, replied the sailor, I have a duty to help people where ever they are, whoever they may be.”
“This is a good thing, this land has a need of brave heroes like you, we have run into trouble with outlandish warriors and monsters of the like I doubt you’ve ever seen. Our master Maclir resides in his castle and worry creases his brow by night as well as by day. He is in need of strong warriors to help vanquish this unholy threat from these lands. They have invaded our mining tunnels and we can scarce make a decent living anymore. The people of Lirs Reach grow leaner with hunger every day; the children cry in the streets. Not even our dead are safe; the acolytes have desecrated our cemeteries and raised our dead to do the bidding of their masters. It is unsettling and we’ve taken to building pyres for our deceased loved ones. It is a pagan thing, yet we are forced to operate under these settings because of this evil. I fear that their souls may become lost in the smoke and not find their way into Valhalla. It is a dreadful fate to face in the end, and we will all come to one eventually. It causes our mothers to cry, knowing that their children will suffer when they come into this world and some have given up in childbirth and taken the babes with them into the heavens.
The sailor stood and spoke as one possessed.
“I will go to the castle and speak to your Lord Maclir; this land will have its freedom.”
“You cannot go without proof that you are indeed a great hero. Take with thee this scroll, it will teach you the art of the dagger, and go ye to the lighthouse where my lady will point you in the right direction. But be cautious, dark flame bringers lurk around the beach and may attack you. They are fearsome.”
And so the Sailor took his leave and went searching in the direction the Beaded man waved.
He was certain to face great peril and endure much pain, but, he was determined to end the suffering of the people of Lirs Reach.
For a continuation of this story, please let me know how much you liked it. Thank you for Taking the time to read this
How the Rogue set off on his Journey
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Last edited by Avante on Fri Mar 28, 2014 12:05 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Avante: Rogue 58 Crom
Please support me so I can carry you.
Much love to all of Crom <3
KRILL IS AWESOME!!
Please support me so I can carry you.
Much love to all of Crom <3
KRILL IS AWESOME!!