Completed Charred Bones

(This is a thread from Mizahar's fantasy role play forums. Why don't you register today? This message is not shown when you are logged in. Come roleplay with us, it's fun!)

Not found on any map, Endrykas is a large migrating tent city wherein the horseclans of Cyphrus gather to trade and exchange information. [Lore]

Moderator: Gossamer

Charred Bones

Postby Rufio on February 10th, 2018, 2:31 am

Image
33rd Winter 517AV
2 bells' ride from Endrykas
At Noon


       The earth was dry and dusty, the grasses yellowed and bowed, brittle, rattling in the scarce breeze that meandered lethargically across the steppe. Syna was a warm, unbearable glow in the cloud-riddled Blue Above, and Semele's skin was cracked and splitting where the grasses had been so parched of thirst that they had withered away altogether, revealing bare dirt. Hooves clomped dully, grinding grit under, as strider and drykas made their way into the plains.

   Rufio's green linen clad legs hung loosely against her red dun stallion's sides, letting herself sway with his gait as he ambled with long strides up a light incline. Sweat licked down her back, dusky skin bare under the crochetted vest she wore and Rufio was beginning to regret the decision to wrap her thick, dark dreadlocks up in a scarf, hoping to catch whatever cooling relief Zulrav might have brough to the back of her neck. Now, her bare shoulders, slender arms and neck were searing pink in Syna's overgenerous rays.

        As the stallion crested the small hill the half-drykas lifted her heels and rocked herself backward lightly to signal a stop, which he did promptly, scuffing rocks under-hoof and flicking his ears back to hear her. She held her strider's charcoal mane gently before lifting her forearm to cast dappled shade over her eyes and freckle-scattered features for a tick. It was an ochre gaze that squinted against the brightness of the noon. Rufio frowned at the sight that greeted her.

    A waste of blackened and scorched land laid stripped bare before her. Grey smoke still curled up in hazy columns where embers hissed as they clung vehemently to the charred fauna. The remnants of a wildfire struck to life with the absence of the Goddess of Winter to temper the heat of Spring and Summer, and the dry Fall, which lingered now deep into the Winters. Loha snorted and Rufio stirred herself and dismounted. Well, better get to work. She thought, and murmured aloud. "So here we are."

      "How long will it take?" Asked a male voice behind her, a drykas man sitting atop a vibrant yellow-dun strider mare. Rufio smiled lightly at the hint of impatience in his baritone and looked back up at him. Wearing leather pants and boots, he was sweltering in the heat. At least he had left his chest bare, his broad shoulders painted in a layer of thick black to ward off the worst of sun-burn. Takes as long as it takes Rufio waved vaguely in sign.

  A frown made his heavy brow shadow his eyes further and his long face longer, cheekbones protruding, as the corner of his black painted lips turned downward. His grip readjusted on the long spear in his hands as he made to sheath it.

Keep sharp. Rufio warned gently. "If I were a coyote, or a wolf, here would be easy pickings."
The warrior grunted and waved dismissively. "My bruhs and I have chased out the worst. Now all that's haunting this place are the scavengers." danger past. He slung his spear into a holder on his yvas but caught the wary look Rufio gave him, so, with a sigh, he unhooked a composite bow from around his shoulder, hefting it into his big hands comfortably, and returned her with his own pointed look that said 'there, happy?'.

        A deep, reverberating male laughter broke in between the bickering duo as a midnight strider stallion clomped up the incline and Lodai appeared beside his scowling Ra'athi brother in arms. Rufio looked up at the bear of a man with his half-shaved head and a faux-hawk of braids woven down his back. He looked back, brows in a permanent scowl and eyes as dark as hers were bright, but a smile played within his scruffily clipped beard. He nudged his brother in arms with his massive shoulder. "Don't worry about Little Freckles here, bruh." More bark than bite—

    —his hands scarcely shaped the taunting grass-sign as the Ra'athi's lips puffed out in breath-held surprise. A sharp rock whizzed past him at eye-height, and the warrior wove and bobbed to dodge. Thanks to his instincts, the rock missed his cheek.

            Lodai stared, half-stunned, at his pavilion-sister, who was dusting her hands of charcoal and ash, grinning like a bob-cat. Lodai's partner, meanwhile, applauded, deliberately and loud. Happy to see the big warrior taken off-guard by the tiny freckled woman. "You were saying?" He chortled, earning a dark look from Lodai. Who was about to say something in retaliation when—

      "Quit antagonizing the Watch." A voice chastised, croaking out from behind Lodai's broad shoulders. Lodai swung his leg over the head of his ink-hued stallion, sliding to the dust with a considerable thump, revealing the elder sitting wrapped in black linens astride his horse. She peered at the trio with a contrasting gaze of white blindness and dark seeing from within a face so weathered by life her skin looked as creased and tough as leather. It was Ferem.

              "So here we are,"
  The elder echoed Rufio, adding sternly.
     "The bones won't read themselves."

      While Lodai lifted the elder down off his tall black stallion, Rufio began trudging down the hill into the ash desert to investigate.

            An unsettling prickle rose gooseflesh down the drykas' freckled arms as the blackened, bare twigs of grassland scrub scratched over her open palms and her sandals were a dull grind over the blanket of ash laid over the scorched earth. It was quiet.

      There were little noises of life, but only in the trio of drykas behind her when she listened. The creak of leather yvas, and the huff of the horses' breaths, the dull clomp of a hoof, and gentle grunting as Lodai lifted down the elder from the black strider. They were comforting. Rufio halted and cocked her ear toward them, ochre gaze cast down at her toes, whitened by the ash. Syna was gazing intently on the wildfire trail, warming the fortune-teller's shoulders.

         Rufio closed her eyes, senses ebbing with the disconcerting peace that lay within the quiet here. A haze that seeped into her, making heavy her limbs. Her breaths came shallow, as if the air had grown thick and congealed. It made her tired, a kind of weariness that clung to the bones. All she wanted to do was lay down. Just sleep, take a little nap. Her vision blurred and when she looked at the ashes, the white-grey powder looked light, like feathers, a tempting cushion for her head. If she just lay down, it would envelope her in its lightness, take away the heavy ache throbbing in her body. Rufio felt herself swaying, leering toward the ground, saw her hands reaching for Semele.

"Rufio!" Ferem's voice was sharp.
With a start, the half-drykas shook her head and blinked as her ochre gaze readjusted focus.
"Ferem...I feel strange..." Rufio murmured.
The sleepy haze lingering on her, its tendrils retreating like fog from her thoughts.
"It is the smoke." Ferem gestured to the greyish black swirling eddies that were rising steadily from the charred scrub. "Voodoo moss." The elder muttered. "It's a potent herb. When the smoke or the steam is inhaled it lessens pain, and it heightens other senses, but too much and it causes one to see things."
"Waking dreams." Rufio whispered, prickling with wariness now. Her sleepy mind was jarred by memories of a stranger she had met once, wandering in a stupor across the grasslands. A man she had not seen since, nor been able to find when she had gone looking for him in the tent city.
      A ghost.
   She half-believed.
      "Yes." Ferem peered at her apprentice a tick, something mystery playing behind that dark, penetrating eye, a faint smile flickering along her cracked and thin lips. Before the elder pointed at the scarf wrapped around the drykas' dreads. "Cover your nose and mouth." She instructed, and turned to call out to the Watchmen to do the same, and to be wary of the smoke.

      Rufio unwrapped her dreadlocks and knotted her scarf around her neck, pulling the wool up over her nose and mouth the way Ferem had done with the linen of her cowl. Rufio looked up to the Watchmen, sitting astride their horses. The sight of her pavilion brother watching over them was a comfort.

      "We must go deeper into the scar." Ferem muttered. She waded farther from the safety of the Watchmen, tiny dust clouds scattered by the elder's feet as she went ahead. Rufio noticed just now with a mild alarm mixed with intrigue that they were bare, the ash clung to her tough, wrinkled soles. Before she followed the old woman into the quiet.

"What are you looking for?" Rufio asked after some chimes had passed, noticing the way Ferem's white and black eyes were cast to the ground, this way and that, her shoulder bent as she picked her way around rocks and potholes. "The right place." Ferem muttered, as if it was obvious.

 Rufio frowned quizically and looked up—
 
Last edited by Rufio on February 27th, 2018, 10:01 pm, edited 8 times in total.
Rufio
Player
 
Posts: 392
Words: 286748
Joined roleplay: June 21st, 2015, 10:40 pm
Location: Endrykas
Race: Human, Mixed
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Medals: 1
Overlored (1)

Charred Bones

Postby Rufio on February 10th, 2018, 8:54 pm

Image
 

       C A H W !

  Rufio stumbled back and cried out, startled, heart skittering.

A raven screeched at her, perched on the skeleton of a charred tree, cocking its head to peer at her with one black glassy eye, feathers ruffled menacingly.

   "Do not mind the birds." Ferem chuckled quietly,
             "They are Dira's watchers."

   Rufio's freckles wrinkled as she scrunched her nose. She did not like ravens, they had always made her feel on edge. They gathered wherever there was death. Rufio wondered if death brought them or if they foretold of Dira's omen, and waited for the feast. "Do not mind the birds." Ferem repeated over her shoulder, almost sing-song like. Rufio glanced again at the raven reluctantly, who blinked back at her.

She noticed then the gleam of emerald, streaked through its breast plumage. Her breath caught at its beauty. She had never stood so close to one before.

  "Here, Rufio, this is where you will read the bones." Ferem announced, a dozen strides off, standing bowed in what was once a clearing amidst a few large rocks and a stunted tree now bereft of leaves. Its spiny fingers scraped at the blue sky above. Rufio got the unpleasant sense that it was still screaming, frozen in a desperate reaching out from the flames that licked it to death. "Let's begin."

      The elder said as she sat down in the ash, folding her legs and settling herself as comfortably as if she was sitting in her tents upon a cushion, the sweet scents of tea and spice of inscense wafting about her. Rufio looked at the elder and marveled at the woman's spirit—how she wore her aged bones the way the leather of a yvas softens and shapes to the curves of a strider's chest over time. The half-drykas looked about her and felt herself too small within that dusky, freckled skin. Too small and clinking around a little in pieces, like a china bowl within a sack that had been smashed on the journey of a bumpy cart.

With a deep breath, Rufio scuffled over to sit in front of the elder, settling herself down cross-legged, as Ferem had, and trying to make herself relax in the ashes. Peering over the scarf that clung to her cheekbones expectantly, waiting for Ferem to do something, or say something. The elder gestured impatiently at Rufio, the grass-sign almost possessing a sound in the thickness of the quiet, which made her startle slightly.

   Without hesitating she took a leather pouch from within her deep pockets and set it on the ground. As her fingers worked to loosen the drawstring, the contents inside clinked together melodically. Like little, excited voices. Rufio smiled lightly. She had not used this pouch at all in her fortune-telling, not since the nightmares that had haunted her with their first use. The memory dappled her smile with the shadows of fear.

       "Do not be afraid of the bones." Ferem teased.

Rufio flattened out the leather pouch with her hands, revealing the odd assortment of bones, shells, husks of nuts, and a single smooth stone of amber. The elder nodded with a smile that looked to Rufio like fondness. "I gave you these bones seasons ago now." Ferem reminisced.
Rufio nodded, a smile slipping into her freckles despite herself. "You did. I always wondered why."
At that the elder chuckled, her laughter grating and croaky, like stones scraping over a riverbed. "You have a gift for insight, Rufio. Your mother's cards are too..." The elder's gnarled hands gestured wordlessly in the air between them, seeking the right meaning to put into the sign. She tossed her hands in a drykas shrug that said it didn't matter the words. Rufio frowned, felt the bite of defensiveness crackle at her.

"The bones don't give you pictures and meanings to play with." The elder went on to explain. "You must draw the insights from your own meanings. Ferem lifted the amber piece and held it eye-level between her blind eye and Rufio's curious ochre orbs. "You assign the meanings to the bones, and then you reach deep within you, and you ask the ancestors...The answers come from a deep and ancient intuition."

Rufio nodded, curiosity stealing over her fears, thinking of the nightmares that always followed her throwings, she bit her lip a tick, before asking. "Is that where my nightmares come from?" Ancestors
The elder's face brightened with her smile and she nodded.
Rufio faltered. Fear licking at her.
"But I thought the ancestors reincarnate."
"They do." Ferem agreed, firmly, nodding. Then she gestured with her hands as she spoke. "But in each of their children they leave a piece of themselves." You your mother's skin, your father's eyes.
Rufio tilted her head, thinking on this, and then nodded, her hands swaying gently in understanding.
"We carry our ancestors with us." Ferem said, finality in her voice and the edge of a new topic as she roused herself a little. "Now, I want you to go out into the ash and pick a new bone to add to your collection."

      Surprise stole into her freckles then. "Pick a bone from here?" She queried, glancing about her at the waste. When her ochre gaze alighted on the raven, she started with a gasp, hands signing unconsciously watching. The elder glanced sideways at the bird, which cocked its head and cawed. She took in a breath to speak but Rufio already sensed what she was to say.

      "Don't mind the birds. Don't fear the bones." The half-drykas waved the elder off—I know, I know—before climbing to her feet. She dusted ash off herself, though it was to no avail. Coated lightly in a cloud of white, the Stormblood trod around the clearing with her eyes cast down, looking for a bone. Rufio had to pick her way carefully around the scorched waste, avoiding stumps of some bush half-eaten by the fires, and dips in the steppe half shrouded.

       "Ohw!"—she stumbled over and landed heavily on her hands, tossing up a great plume of ash, which spurred the drykas into a coughing fit that made her eyes water. Ripping the scarf down off her face, Rufio racked her lungs. When she managed to open her eyes—

           Dark, deep, empty leering sockets and a jaw of yellow teeth within a skull stripped of flesh screaming silently in return.

    Rufio scrambled back,
 til she was sitting on her heels.

Her heart was thrumming.

         This was a graveyard. Here lay the dead. The wildfire had caught the drykas by surprise, creeping up on them in the early bells, before most were awake. It was a miracle not more were hurt in the blaze. The Sea of Grass was as unforgiving as It could be full of plenty, and generosity.

Just like their gods.


                Rufio looked about herself and her gaze caught on something shining in the blackened roots of the skeleton tree, twisting and churning into the hard-baked soil. Rufio reached for it tentatively, glancing at the raven, as if seeking permission. The bird just blinked at her. So the freckled drykas picked up the piece, rubbing ash off it to reveal a charred hunk of bark. Within the cracks were strange opalescent veins. As if the bark had wrapped itself around a precious gem. It made Rufio smile, though she didn't know why for.

    Quickly she got up, hefting her new bone with her and adding it to the humble collection she had laid out before Ferem. As she settled herself opposite the elder again, the wise fortune-teller peered at Rufio with a grin. "Now you have a piece of this place, cast the bones."
"Why did I need the piece?" Intrigue caught in her shiber-tinged murmur.
"Because this place is where life was lost. It is where the souls of those who perished in the fire have entered into The Web. If you listen closely, you can feel it. The Web is our link to the Spirit realm, to the ancestors." Ferem muttered in an almost-chastise.
"Whose fortune am I reading?" Rufio asked quietly.
"Mine." Ferem's good eye gleamed as she produced two gold mizas from within the folds of her linen tunic and let the coins fall to the dusty ground.

Rufio stared at the coins and thought they shone too brilliantly, too clean, for a place like this, marked as it was by fire and death, before she closed her eyes softly.

        Laying her hands palm up on her knees, the Stormblood took deep, steady breaths. In, and out. In, and out. Each exhale brushed past her lips, each inhale strong and deep in through her nose, until her heart was soothed and her thoughts settled. Without her sight, the drykas felt Syna's warm caress against her shoulders, heard the raven ruffling through its feathers with its beak and the perceptible creak of the skeleton tree. As if its spirit still haunted its charred bones. She felt Semele's body firm and comforting beneath her bottom and her thighs, and the presence of the elder in front of her. Vaguely she became aware of the Watchmen, guarding the rim of the clearing off a way.

            With a tug, Rufio reigned in her thoughts towards the bones laid out bare and waiting on the soft leather before her. She focused on these, brought to mind each individual trinket, remembering how smooth and cool each felt in her hands. Until her thoughts settled on the new chunk of bark she had added to the collection. Her mind filled with it. The roughness of the bark, dark and earthy, blackened by fire. The pearly substrate trapped within the cracks, licked open by the flames, freed.

        Dark earth, Leth-like l i g h t within.
              Rufio smiled softly. A peace settled in her. The feeling reminded her of Ixzo, and what The Bond has felt like.

  When she opened her eyes, she reached for the bones, piled them up in a fistful, and held them, letting her palms squeeze over the relics, before she
                    t h r e w
                    them
                     at the
                      ground.
 
Rufio
Player
 
Posts: 392
Words: 286748
Joined roleplay: June 21st, 2015, 10:40 pm
Location: Endrykas
Race: Human, Mixed
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Medals: 1
Overlored (1)

Charred Bones

Postby Rufio on February 12th, 2018, 9:33 pm

Image
 

" I can't read these." Rufio complained, hands reaching into her pockets and tugging out a deck of cards wrapped with a leather thong, "Let me use the cards instead." familiar, skill, competent
Her plea made the elder frown and shake her head.
"They are your bones. Listen to them, they have voices,
l e t t h e m s p e a k,
see what they say."


          The fortune-teller sighed her frustration as she looked down at the bones laying brazen and bold across the ground. She took up a short stick and stabbed the earth, scraping a circle into the ash around the scatter, before tossing the stick aside. "I..." She began, and faltered. She glanced up at Ferem with a childish frown, but the elder was not looking at the bones, she was looked at Rufio.

   Waiting.

            The drykas sighed, but resolution lay across her shoulders this time, as she bowed and took to the work of listening to the bones. Her ochre eyes darted from a few molar teeth to the fang of a wolf, to the breat-bone of some bird of prey, to the amber stone and then the latest addition to the lot, the bark with the pearly cracks. The fortune-teller groaned, "Where do I even begin?"
"Begin with what you know, and the intuition will come." The elder advised her.
"You are old." Her lips pulled into an upside-down smile, as she glanced up at the elder, expectant of anger to chase her words.
The elder just rapped her head and gestured at the bones. "Good, and what else?" Was all the retribution she gave.

        Rufio looked at the bark. Old, cracked by the hardship of the wildfire, but possessing a strong core, and a light within that looked a bit like hope. Hope shrouded in the earthy darkness of mystique and unknown. Ferem Rufio named the piece, assigning meanings to the objects, just as the elder had instructed.

      Next her gaze took in the wolf fang that was laid next to the wood, the sharp curve pointing outwards. Rufio usually took the wolf fang to mean a bad omen, for wolves haunted drykas' night-time tales. They stole children and lambs in the night. They represented a bad omen, a warning, greed, or... Rufio began instead to assign meaning to the way the tooth lay away from the symbol of the elder, rather than touching the bark, or crossing it, or pointing in toward it. Inspiration struck her. Rufio chuckled lightly. "You bring bad omens to others."

She waved teasing in her sign but the elder nodded and rocked lightly in agreement. "Divination is a heavy mark to bear. When I look into a person's future, it is not always joy that greets my eyes."

 Rufio marveled, not for the first time, at the elder's gift.

       Taking a breath to refocused herself on the task at hand, her gaze took in the next closest item in the lay. Just a pile of molars. Rufio frowned and shook her head. "I don't know what this says." She gestured to it. The elder peered down and seemed to think on it, too, which made Rufio feel better. At least it was not glaringly obvious, even to a master fortune-reader.

          What say it to you? The elder signed eventually, and Rufio's heart sank lightly. She had hoped the elder would help her out. The question wasn't helpful, she had no idea what molar bones meant to her. Nothing. Until she looked at them and began to speak her fleeting observations aloud. "Nothing, they...they are hard and, er, they help us eat"—take in sustenance, life—"We lose them once when we are children and then we grow a second set. But once we have these, they do not come back. When we lose them, we..." Rufio's eyes widened. "I'm describing the phases of life!"

Ferem grinned, baring her own, worn nashers. "Yes! And?-"
Rufio looked again. "Yours are behind you." Her fingers hovered over the molars, neatly fallen in a row, and then tapped the air above the piece of bark she had named Ferem. When her eyes followed the trail she was creating through she noticed a few molars were before the bark too, and added. "But you still have much to do." Life's purpose, not end yet.

Rufio beamed, and the elder smiled with her. "And?" The elder gestured for Rufio to keep going, encouraging and impatient. Excitement, too, Rufio noticed in the lean of her shoulders, which made her smile deepen. "I...see..." She hesitated, and she was stumped, her inspiration fled now that she had dealt with what she knew, and sought a deeper reading.
 
Rufio
Player
 
Posts: 392
Words: 286748
Joined roleplay: June 21st, 2015, 10:40 pm
Location: Endrykas
Race: Human, Mixed
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Medals: 1
Overlored (1)

Charred Bones

Postby Rufio on February 27th, 2018, 9:50 pm

Image
 

        The things that she did not know.

        Rufio frowned and looked down at her crossed ankles and her ash-stained hands sadly. Ferem could look into a soul and see the mirage of their path, as could Embry. The elder worked with runes, while Embry worked with the palms. Rufio's nose wrinkled. Why could she not possess gifts of magic? See into the spirit realms?

She kicked herself up, slapping the ground with her palms as she rose. "I don't have your gift, Ferem, how am I meant to know things I do not know? My cards give me messages and I tell a client, and they know the things that they need to hear, or recognise, or acknowledge...but I never know. I only tell what I see." She looked down at the elder, who looked surprised at Rufio's frustrations, for once. Which made the Stormblood smile, feeling a little proud on the heels of her tangent.

     The elder grinned at her and took a deep breath from under the fabric she wore that held the vapours of voodoo moss at bay. "Breath, child, just breath." The elder murmured, her voice low and rasping, like the scraping of the wind over the bones. The sound was faraway, distant somehow, and Rufio realised with a light start she had forgotten to put back her scarf over her mouth and nose. Alarm dwindled though, as the voodoo moss snaked its way into her lungs, it was hard to feel fear and frustration.
 So she
   b r e a t h e d.
  Lifting her chin, she inhaled a deep lungful of the moss-smoke air.

   "Tell me what you see now." calm, focus.

      Rufio looked at the crow. Silent, and watchful. Then she looked down at her sandal-clad feet, and the bones scattered there in the ring of ash. She squinted her eyes and felt dizzy. The vapor sneaking into her, making heavy her lids and her heart. It felt like her skull was liquid lead as she tried to think.

          Thinking was not what she needed, feeling was. And the moss smoke invoked something in her, the way that liquor did, but the heaviness of it did not drag her down like mead or ale. Rufio felt a prickle lick up her chest. Amidst the haze realised it was laughter. It was hers. When she looked at the elder, with her dark, black eye and white eye staring back, Rufio saw the crow flicker over, and beneath it, the shadow of a skull.

            Startled, the Stormblood collapsed to her seat again, a cloud of ash shrouded her for a tick. When it settled, the fortune-teller finally gave in to look at the bones. In them she saw the amber piece, forgotten. It was Rufio's favourite, though she had never wondered why. As she let her ochre gaze linger on its smooth surface, she began to hallucinate.

     Fire flickered in the orange of the stone and Rufio sucked in a breath of surprise as her mind conjured up the heat that must have engulfed this place. Sweat licked down her back and made her palms humid. "I see fire..." She murmured. Her brow furrowed and she looked around at the clearing in which they sat. The skeleton tree reared up out of the dull ash. Stark and screaming. As if Zulrav's fingers were raking across the grasslands, howling a high-pitched whistling. "There's fire!"

              Ferem rocked where she sat and waved her hands over the bones to break Rufio's trance. Enough "Put your scarf over your mouth, Rufio." The elder said softly, and went about the struggle of climbing to her aged feet. Rufio did as she was bid and closed her eyes as she took a moment to beath in clearer, filtered air. When her head felt a little less light, she quickly gathered up her bones and wrapped them up in their leather pouch.

    Taking a chime to admire the piece of wood she added to the collection, before it, too, was stowed and she shoved her mother's tarot cards into her pockets with her bones.

"Ferem?" Rufio scrambled to her feet, looking up to realise that the elder was already making her way back towards the Watchmen. "Ferem, did I do something wrong?"
The elder waved a hand don't be silly "You read the bones." The elder muttered. When Rufio caught up to her side the fortune-teller was surprised to find the elder was grinning like a cat. She asked tentatively, "What does that mean?"
The elder set a heavy hand onto Rufio's shoulder, reaching up since the Stormblood was taller than her, and leaned on her as they made their way towards Lodai and his Watch-brother. "It means you are ready to leave us now."

         Rufio's brow furrowed, confused. She had done what Ferem asked, and faced her fears. She had read the bones and let the sway of herbs help her hear the message. Why was the elder now saying that she had to leave them? What did she mean? Rufio never got to ask, as they approached the Watchmen, she felt hesitant to reveal what had happened. Anxiety roiled in her gut at the thought of Lodai hearing what she, or Ferem, had said.

   Though, as she looked up at the large man atop his black stallion, the Stormblood saw that Lodai wore troubles of his own across his dark, strong brow. His deep eyes were faraway as he looked out across the scar the wildfire had left. The fortune-teller looked over her shoulder at the ashes and her spine prickled. Lodai saw spirits, was he seeing spirits now? She wondered. His partner seemed quiet, too, as if he did not want to disturb the spiritist.

With a gentle, yet firm, touch, she laid her hand on his thigh on her way passed him to her own red-skin strider grazing a little off. The big man looked down at her with a frown and a furrowed brow for a tick. Rufio looked right back. Then a smile flickered in the corners of his lips and a grin danced into Rufio's freckles.

         "Stare down the wolf." He said gruffly, and Rufio nodded. Courage, honour, duty in the flash of her sign before she skipped off to mount her strider, a lightness in her she had not felt since she had arisen that day. So the odd entourage made their way back to Endrykas where the hustle and bustle of the living was loud and comforting after the unnerving quiet of the Syna-stripped grasslands.
 
Rufio
Player
 
Posts: 392
Words: 286748
Joined roleplay: June 21st, 2015, 10:40 pm
Location: Endrykas
Race: Human, Mixed
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Medals: 1
Overlored (1)

Charred Bones

Postby Anuk on March 6th, 2018, 10:42 pm

Image
S E L F
G R A D E



XP

Observation +3
Leadership +1
Brawling +1
Wilderness Survival +1
Socialization +1
Philosophy +1
Rhetoric +3
Scavenging +1
Meditation +2
Fortune-telling +2


Lores

Leadership: Being insisting in your bossiness
Voodoo Moss: Inhaling smoke or steam lessens pain
Voodoo Moss: Causes hallucinations
Cover your nose & mouth to protect your lungs against smoke
Crows are Dira's messengers
"We carry pieces of our ancestors with us"
Drykas Culture: The Web connects the drykas to their ancestors
Meditation: Breathing techniques
Meditation: Herbs may be an aid
Fortune-telling: Begin with what you know
Divination: A heavy mark to bear
Bone Casting: Assigning meanings to the bones
Bone Casting: Interpreting the lay of the bones
Bone casting is more elusive than tarot cards
Lodai: A spiritist


Rewards

+ 1 Bark piece added to Rufio's casting bone collection  
User avatar
Anuk
Player
 
Posts: 51
Words: 13460
Joined roleplay: December 25th, 2017, 1:01 pm
Race: Kelvic
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests