Hidden 4 days ago Post by PapaOso
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PapaOso

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The airship's dining hall was quiet, save for the faint hum of the engines below. The man sat at the polished mahogany table, a solitary figure amidst the fine dinnerware and utensils. He was an island of stillness in the otherwise bustling atmosphere, his posture impeccably straight, every movement precise. His cold, calculating eyes scanned the plate before him, a dish laid out with the sort of care one might reserve for a work of art: Karrnathi Ironplate. That is what the chef had called this masterpiece.

The seared meat strips glistened with a sheen of perfectly rendered fat, the edges caramelized to a rich brown. He inspected them first with the sharpness of a master, considering each piece's texture, the precise crispness that marked the perfect execution of a dish. His fork moved delicately, picking up a piece as though handling a precious artifact. Slowly, deliberately, he brought it to his lips, his pale mouth savoring the tender meat in measured bites, not a shred of it wasted.

The dark rye beneath the meat was thick and hearty, crusted with grains that cracked faintly under the weight of his knife. He sliced through it with an elegance that seemed almost ceremonial, as if he were performing a ritual. The crumbs fell in perfect, uniform patterns on the plate. No errant bits. No mess. As he dipped a piece into the butter, he studied the golden sheen of the herbs, his gaze lingering just a moment too long before bringing the morsel to his mouth with a slow, deliberate motion. It was as though he were testing the limits of his own restraint, every bite an exercise in control.

The pickled roots came next, their sharp, tangy aroma mixing with the richness of the meat. His fork pierced a root, lifting it to his lips with the same meticulous care. The bright, almost unnatural color of the vegetables stood in stark contrast to the dark tones of the plate, yet he examined them as if contemplating a philosophical question. The sharp vinegar bite hit his tongue, and for a moment, his eyes flickered in discomfort, but only for a heartbeat, before he suppressed it with a smooth, calculated breath.

The buttered herbed potatoes were the last to be touched, the soft, creamy interior broken open with a slight pressure from his fork. A perfect golden halo of crisp skin encased the potato like a delicate shell. He pressed the soft insides against the plate, then swirled them with the butter, watching as the herbs clung to the surface. With measured calm, he took a bite. There was no rush, no indulgence—only the barest hint of satisfaction that passed over his lips in the smallest of smiles.

His gaze never wavered from the plate as he ate, his movements so graceful and precise that it seemed he might have been orchestrating a lifesaving surgery. Not a single bite was messy. Not a single motion wasted. The entire meal unfolded like a performance—one that he was masterfully in control of.

Once the plate was empty, he set his utensils down with a soft clink, the quiet sound hanging in the air like a closing note. His napkin came to his lips, dabbing them with a clean, slow motion, and his eyes cast upward, almost as if savoring the silence that followed.

After a few moments, the man, satisfied with his meal, pushed the chair back with caution as he stood, returned the chair to its rightful and respectful place, left a handsome tip on his table for his waiter…and departed.

His footsteps echoed softly along the polished corridors of the ship. The faint scent of death—always present, no matter how much he tried to mask it—clung to him like a shadow, noticeable to those who might have been attuned to such things. As he reached his quarters, the door opened with a faint creak. Inside, the room was meticulously arranged, the furniture sparse but elegant, bathed in the faint glow of the sun through the windows.

He moved to a corner of the room, where an intricately carved wooden trunk sat—unassuming at first glance. He knelt before it with the same careful precision he had demonstrated throughout his meal, his hands moving with purpose as he unlatched the brass clasps.

Inside, the bag lay waiting—its contents hidden beneath layers of fabric. As he slowly unzipped it, the innards were revealed with an almost reverential touch.

A severed head, its face frozen in a grimace of despair, and several severed hands, their fingers still curling slightly as though trying to grasp at something just out of reach. The sight was unsettling, yet his gaze softened with something approaching joy. He ran a finger lightly across one of the hands, his expression filled with hints of subtle pleasure.

Without hesitation, his hand reached over and delicately picked up the severed head, bringing it slowly to meet his eyes. He studied its lifeless features, his fingers tracing the edge of the jawline as though he were reacquainting himself with an old friend.

"You’ve been quiet," he murmured, his voice soft, almost affectionate. "I missed our conversations. Do you remember the last time we spoke? Of course, you do." He tilted his head, as if waiting for a response, then sighed. "Always so stubborn."

His eyes narrowed slightly, and with a sudden, unsettling tenderness, he leaned in and kissed the head on the lips. The gesture was slow, deliberate, and disturbingly intimate—lips meeting cold, lifeless skin in a moment that seemed to stretch on unnervingly long.

The silence that followed was thick and palpable, and as he placed the head back into the bag with the same reverence as before, the air in the room seemed to grow heavier, more suffocating. But not for the man…not for that dreaded Necromancer. He was right at home.

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Hidden 3 days ago 3 days ago Post by Helo
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Helo Wonderlust King

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Race: Aasimar
Class: Paladin
Location: Stormrider; Top Deck - Sick Bay
Interactions: Liana @PapaOso
Equipment: His longsword; Retribution and a healing amulet. A backpack with supplies and his lute.
Attire: Clothing and gloves
Gold Balance: 48
Injuries: Old injuries include a missing eye, numerous iridescent scars, and a knee that aches when it rains.



“And here they say the age of good men has come and gone...”

Although Ezekiel had not heard her approach, he was neither surprised nor unsettled by the cloaked woman’s sudden appearance. “Then they are incorrect.” His response was soft but spoken in a tone that matched hers - a statement of fact. He had met many good men, they simply did not clamor for notoriety the way evil men did. Acts of goodness required no audience, did not need to be made a spectacle, and were not done for fanfare. Instead, they were often quiet, rarely noticed, and the only reward required was the warmth they gave to the recipient.

A simple dip of his head acknowledged her words, ones that might have sounded like a compliment from another’s lips but from her sounded as dry as data that had been observed. Ezekiel returned the amulet to its proper poctet, one near his chest that buttoned closed. Too close to him for anyone to steal it without his notice. He then slid his hand back into his glove; the familiar leather was far more comfortable than the open air.

“I watched you. Not just now.”

Even as he kept his gaze fixed on the space around her, avoiding the discomfort of direct eye contact, her eyes still met his. She did flinch from it like those seduced by wickedness so often did. This earned a bit of trust, despite her admittance that she had been watching him. A weird thing to tell a stranger, but he wasn’t unaccustomed to being watched. An Aasimar was a rare encounter in any part of the world, and most beings were naturally curious.

He, too, occasionally liked to people-watch, but he doubted she was here to tell him about a rather dull hobby. Entirely comfortable with silence, he simply waited for her to speak whatever it was that was on her mind. Her words were carefully chosen - she spoke with purpose.

“I have a task. A sensitive one. And I find myself in need of someone… like you.”

“And I find myself with time to spare.” He answered in a warm tone. Being asked to help brought him comfort and made him feel useful. It was the next best thing to feeling at home. “Lead the way.” He added, and followed the woman without hesitation.

“I am Ezekiel. And you are?” He asked as they walked.
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Hidden 3 days ago 3 days ago Post by Apex Sunburn
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Apex Sunburn Justified text enjoyer

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Location: Top Deck
Race: Dark Elf & Human
Class: Artificer & Rogue
Interactions: @Tae Meiyu; @Tracxyx Bobi; @PapaOso Gears
Mentions: @Potter Arya; @princess Phia & Korrak; @Funnyguy Miris (as Wendel); @PapaOso Bastion; @samreaper Menzai
Equipment:
Attire:
Gold: 55
Injuries:


Maybe the scary lady wasn’t so scary, after all. Maybe Vallena had been wrong about her.

That wasn’t to say that the girl wasn’t unsettled by her any less than before – something about the way her golden eyes never seemed to blink, and the way she kept touching her sword still made Vallena more than a little uncomfortable – but at least the urge to run far, far away was mostly gone, now! Scratch seemed to be getting along pretty well with the lady, too, so she couldn’t be all that bad.

They were getting along very well, in fact, Vallena noted. She hid quiet, playful giggles behind her hand as she trailed behind the two adults.

But anyway! That the dark elf was okay with the lady was a good sign. And that the lady was also fine with him was a better sign. After all, the white-clothed man from earlier – Eyepatch – had been nice to Scratch, and he was pretty nice himself. Therefore, since this lady was also nice to the dark elf, it was a reasonable guess to say that she had to also be a decent-enough person. One that was a little weird, though. But that was fine! Scratch was weird too, sometimes. And now that Vallena thought about it, the dark elf could also be really, really scary on occasion. He thought she didn’t know, but he didn’t know that Vallena knew more than she let on, and that she was sneaky enough to know a thing or two about what he did when–

The girl’s eyes flitted from Scratch to the lady several times. Nice, but weird. Scary sometimes, but nice. A smile curled her lips. Things clicked in her head. The lady was maybe, possibly somewhat similar, or close enough to Scratch! Vallena had nothing to worry about. Nothing at all!

Self-satisfied smugness washed over the girl’s face. Her smile turned into a grin, and she felt as if she had just grown a head taller. That was an impressive bit of logical deduction, if she dared say so herself!

But that brought her another problem. If the lady was scary, then she couldn’t keep calling her ‘scary lady’, could she? It simply wouldn’t make any sense. What to call her, though? Maybe ‘Snake eyes’, on account of her eyes? That was too obvious. And it also sounded almost like an insult. It wouldn’t do. But there was nothing else Vallena could think of to use as a basis for a name.

“…just as likely to draw its own blood."

Vallena blinked up at the lady. Without knowing it, she had slotted herself between Scratch and her, again, and worst of all, she had only caught the tail end of whatever it was the lady had said to her. Curiosity was mentioned, Vallena thought, and so was something about her nature, maybe? But what was all this about drawing blood? Whose blood? And what was doing the drawing? It was all so confusing. Like a…

“Riddle!” Vallena blurted out suddenly, pointing at the lady. “You’re Riddles!”

The moment it took for her to realise what she had just done was short. Very short. Shorter than the time it took for her to blink, even. But it may as well have been an eternity. Her cheeks heated up – Vallena swore they felt hotter than the fire elemental down below – and she wrung her hands so hard that it seemed as if she were trying to twist them off her wrists.

“Sorry!” Her voice turned to a mouse’s squeak. “I-I was thinking about…Other stuff. But yes! Even Scratch says that I’m really curious.” A nervous laugh bubbled from her lips as she tried to think up an answer with what little information she had. “I-I just like knowing things, and finding out about things, and also learning about the world from adventurers’ stories! They always talk about really interesting places. I-I’d love to see some of those places, some day, but for now just knowing about them is fine! Scratch says I need to be a little more careful with finding out stuff, though, but he’s just being Scratch! I-I mean, I am careful and I try to be really, really careful, but I think he just worries too much.”

Another nervous laugh. “Anyway, Scratch and I have work to do! It was nice meeting you!”

Without waiting for a reply from the lady, or even a single word from Scratch, Vallena pushed her way into the bar. Right away, she felt a strangeness in the air. She couldn’t say what it was, only that it reminded of times when she walked in on Scratch having an argument with someone. The awkward tension, the muted atmosphere, it was all too familiar. Vallena suddenly felt very small as she moved through the crowd.

But that feeling, along with the lingering embarrassment from earlier, vanished quickly, and without a trace, when she saw the various people – or peoples – gathered around Gears.

There was the warforged she had seen earlier, imposing and very noticeable amongst a crowd of smaller, fleshier people. But there were also so many others! There was a strangely-dressed woman with ears like Scratch’s, but skin that looked more human-like. What leaves were those that she was wearing? And what animal did those antlers come from? And beside her was a wolf-person. Or maybe a dog-person? Vallena wasn’t sure what the difference was, but she knew she liked the look of his ears. Would he let her scratch them? What would he feel? A muted giggle vibrated in the girl’s throat.

And of course, she couldn’t miss the hooded figure. Hoods meant mystery, and mystery always meant that there was a story to be told. What was their story? Where did they come from? And that bird that was with them, what type was it? Did it have a name? Vallena assumed so. It would be weird to have a pet, and not give it a name. Then, there was the dwarf. He looked old, with all that grey in his beard and hair, and so he had to have at least one interesting story to tell. Vallena was sure of it. Her eyes jumped excitedly between each of these new people. So many questions, so many things she wanted to do, and so little time!

“Val.” Scratch’s voice pulled her out from her mind. She twisted around and looked up at him, brown eyes meeting his knowing, crimson ones. He nodded towards the bar, then grinned at her. “I think this is a good opportunity for you to show me what you know. Go ahead and check in on Gears. Ask her the three starter questions, and we’ll go from there.”

“Really?” Vallena asked. Scratch had always handled warforged-related things from start-to-finish, but she guessed that he was giving her a chance to make up for failing his test earlier. He was nice like that.

“I don’t see why not,” Scratch said with a shrug. “You’ve seen me do it enough times, and we’ve gone over the procedure more times than that. You should know what you’re doing.” He looked at the bar again, then back at her. “Better decide quick, Val. Otherwise, Gears is going to be far too busy to entertain us.”

“I’ll do it!” Immediately after that quick reply, Vallena turned and bounded towards the bar, clambering onto the first empty stool she could find, which happened to be right beside Riddles. The lady was busy talking to another woman, and it took all of Vallena’s self-control to give the latter only the most passing – but still somewhat lingering – of glances before focusing her attention on Gears. Most of it, anyway.

The girl waved to the bartender. “Hello, Miss Gears!” She beamed at the warforged. Gears was nice, and it had always puzzled her whenever she overheard people – passengers or otherwise – say terrible things about warforged. Surely they couldn’t be as bad as what they said, if Gears was one of them? “I’m here to check up on you! Oh, and Scratch is here, too.”

“Thanks, Val.”

Vallena giggled at her little joke. “Anyway! I guess I’ll start. Do you have any…Stiffness?” She stole a look at Scratch. He nodded. Pride swelled in the girl’s chest. “And squeakiness! Do you have that? And the last one…” She paused, her face scrunching up as she scratched her temple with a finger. Just as quickly, her eyes widened in realisation and she smiled. “Oh! And general discomfort! Do you have any discomfort or, or unsteadiness?” She turned to Scratch again, an expectant look on her face. She definitely got this one, there wasn’t any other possibility.

Scaerthrynne chuckled and nodded his head. “No complaints from me, Val. Impressive.” He patted the girl on the shoulder. It was a simple thing, to ask the first three questions any engineer should ask a warforged. Squeakiness and stiffness would immediately identify an issue with the joints, which were the most common points of failure. General discomfort or unsteadiness would point towards a problem with internal systems, which would require some opening up to resolve. After Vallena's mistake with the manifold, Scaerthrynne thought she could do with a small victory to lift her spirits. She was just a child, after all. She could be afforded such a thing.

Leaning against the bar counter, he took a quick look around. Specifically, he looked at the corner where the hateful dragonborn had taken a seat. Not at him – that would have been too obvious – but just at the general area whilst still keeping him well within sight.

Vallena might have missed it, but Scaerthrynne had caught the last parts of his tirade. And to be honest, it wasn’t the contents that had irked him – after a few centuries of life, he had seen just about every stripe of bigotry a person could imagine, and even some unimaginable ones – as much as it had been the anger in the dragonborn’s words. Someone that vexed was liable to do something incredibly silly. That was the last thing Scaerthrynne wanted to happen. At least, not while Vallena and he were present.

But then again, they were surrounded by people who looked like they knew violence well. Maybe that was enough of an incentive for the dragonborn to keep his maw shut.

“Bridge told us you got caught in the rain some days back, Gears,” Scaerthrynne said to the bartender, his words and face amicable. Gears had always treated Vallena and he fairly, and she took enough nonsense from people who were less-than-friendly to her kind. Scaerthrynne had no desire to count himself amongst that inglorious group. “The Captain’s worried that you might be–” He stopped abruptly when he noticed the gnome behind the counter with her. “Hello,” he greeted with a nod, then turned back to Gears.

“I’m jealous, Gears,” he said with a mischievous grin. “Can’t believe the Captain let you hire a hand before letting me get my second assistant.” He threw another furtive glance at the dragonborn’s corner. “Anyway, as I was saying, the Captain wanted me to make sure that you’re fine. And since we’re here, you might as well ask for whatever you need before we go back to playing with the fire elemental. Oh, and–” He nodded towards the dragonborn. “If you’re having any trouble, I might as well take the chance to play Gods and do something about it, too.”
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Hidden 3 days ago 3 days ago Post by PapaOso
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PapaOso

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Bastion & Talis


Interactions: Meiyu @Tae


Talis was still smoothing her robes when she realized Bastion hadn’t left. He was just… standing there. Like a particularly polite statue.

She peeked up at him.

“You don’t have to keep watching me, you know,” she mumbled politely, brushing a curl behind her ear. “I’m not going to fall again. Probably.”

“I am verifying,” Bastion replied, as if this were obvious. “You said it was part of your character development. I am unsure if your character is to be developed further in this way.”

That made her snort. Like, full-on shnort. She clapped a hand to her face immediately, as if she could cram the sound back in.

“No sequels, promise!” She assured him through her fingers. “I think the arc is complete. Unless there’s a spin-off where I fall off a different piece of furniture.”

Bastion looked at the bar stool.

Then at her.

“Perhaps you should refrain from spinning off of this seat,” he said with gentle sincerity, completely misunderstanding her reference. “I could hold it while you sit, if that would help.”

“That’s… very thoughtful. But I think I’ll take my chances.”

She eased back onto the seat with exaggerated care. Bastion watched the whole time, scanning her movements with not an ounce of subtlety.

When she was finally settled, she offered him a small, grateful smile.

“You’re very… thorough.”

“Yes,” he said simply. “I was made that way.”

She hesitated. Looked down at her lap. Her fingers tightened slightly around the strap of her satchel. That same look returned—something between worry and full on exhaustion.

“Sometimes I wish I’d been made differently,” she murmured, mostly to herself.

Before Bastion could ask what she meant, another voice cut gently into the moment.

“You seem uneasy,” the woman said, her voice calm and precise. “Is it the company, or do you always carry something that makes you nervous?”

Talis startled slightly—again—then twisted awkwardly toward the new speaker. Her eyes flicked up and caught a striking gaze: elegant, unreadable…she was beautiful in the same way as a lightning storm; equal parts gorgeous yet dangerous.

“Oh! Uh, I—I didn’t mean to look...nervous,” she lied, terribly. “I’m not nervous. Just—thirsty! That’s all. I haven’t hydrated. Very unhydrated over here.”

She pointed to her throat like it might explain something.

“Also the bar stools are taller than they look. Sneaky things.”

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Hidden 3 days ago 3 days ago Post by PapaOso
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PapaOso

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Gears


Interactions: Phia @princess, Meiyu @Tae, Val & Scratch @Apex Sunburn

The bar was getting louder by the minute, and Gears was fairly sure her napkin-to-chaos ratio was officially unsustainable.

Steam hissed softly from her arm vents as she tidied a corner of the bar that didn’t need tidying, just to give her hands something to do while Phia unleashed yet another round of wonderfully unique questions her way.

She was really starting to take a liking to the girl; naivety and all.

Phia’s next words hit with full force, though.

“You are… for war? You are a warrior? That’s why you have covered yourself in armor, Miss Gears!”

Gears blinked. Slowly.

She opened her mouth. Closed it. Considered. Then gave a little shrug and leaned a hip against the counter.

“Well, darlin’, I suppose you’re not wrong. I was built for war, sure enough. But I prefer pourin’ liquid peace these days.”

She reached across the counter and gently set down a refill of water—mostly to make sure Phia was staying hydrated.

“And this armor?” Gears knocked on her own chestplate with a soft tink-tink. “Came with the frame. Can’t take it off, not unless someone’s lookin’ to do some real invasive tinkerin’, and sugar, I’m not exactly a tea kettle.”

Gears paused after the next words out of Phia’s mouth, just for a second.

The noise of the bar faded around her, the clinking glasses and shouting voices softening under the weight of Phia’s words.

“You are a blessing upon us all, Miss Gears. Continue to be kind, and the spirits will favor you.”

That one settled deep—right behind her reinforced plating, somewhere dusty and quiet she hadn’t touched in years.

She didn’t say anything at first. Just reached for a clean towel and polished a spot on the counter that didn’t need polishing.

Then, with a slow smile that reached her optics, she looked back at Phia.

“Well now... ain’t that the kindest thing anyone’s said to me in a long while,” she said, voice low and warm like a lullaby by lantern light.

She leaned in a little, her tone turning to that gentle hush you use when handing someone something precious.

“Thank you, sweetheart. I’ll tuck that right next to my spark core where it’ll stay warm.”

A smile bloomed, not performative or polished—just real.

“Kindness don’t cost much, but it sure carries far. If the spirits are watchin’, I hope they see you first.”

Before Gears or Phia could say more, a familiar tension crackled in the air. She didn’t have to look far to find the source.

Her optics narrowed.

The dragonborn bastard was still seated, but he’d made himself plenty known—and it hadn’t gone unnoticed. Several nearby patrons had already bristled. Some were stepping in.

Her optics flicked once—up, past the crowd—and landed on the little girl sitting beside the man, blue-scaled and clutching a marble like it was a lifeline.

Gears' jaw clenched just slightly, then relaxed.

“Count your blessings, you dumb bastard,” she muttered under her breath. “If that kid weren’t watchin’, I’d have given you a real teachin’—one you could feel in your tail.”

She made no move to step in. Not this time. Others were already making their opinions known of the man. And the star-skin girl—Ayra—well, she wasn’t alone.

Gears exhaled a little puff of steam, cleared a few empty glasses, and let the moment settle. Though she had to admit, seeing her new friend Phia go from sweet as sugar to a force to be reckoned with like that in an instant was not only impressive, but it drew an urge in her to join in. Even now, a few years away from her last battle…that feeling bubbled just beneath the surface. That silent cry for her original purpose.

Then came a new presence, and gear’s thoughts and feelings recalibrated back to normal.

Smooth. Steady. Not loud—but somehow impossible to ignore. She turned just in time to catch the woman’s gaze—poised, unreadable, and sharp as a winter wind.

Gears met it calmly. Respectfully.

“Something strong, when you have a moment,” the woman said.

Gears gave her a slow nod and a soft smile, already reaching for the unlabeled bottle from under the counter—the one she reserved for customers who didn’t need to brag.

“Mmm. Say no more, sweetheart. I got just the thing for a lady who doesn’t waste words.”

She poured with precision, slid the glass forward without a clink, and gave a subtle gesture of approval. The woman leaned against the bar like she belonged there, and Gears had no interest in challenging that.

And then—

“Hello, Miss Gears!”

That voice. She’d know that voice in a crowd of hundreds.

Gears turned to see Vallena clambering up onto a stool like a squirrel on a mission.

Her face immediately softened. There was something about Val that cracked through the morning’s weight like sunlight through shutters.

“Well hey there, sugar,” she said with a grin. “You’re lookin’ bright as ever.”

Then came the questions.

Squeakiness. Stiffness. General discomfort.

Gears held still, amused, letting Val finish her full checklist with all the seriousness of a field medic.

When it was over, she tapped her chin thoughtfully.

“No stiffness,” she said playfully, rolling her shoulder. “Joints feel smooth as churned butter.”
“No squeakiness,” she added, giving a little knee bounce. “Though I think the popcorn machine behind me’s tryin’ to steal my thunder.”
“And as for discomfort—” she winked, “not unless you count emotionally, sugar.”

She gave Vallena a warm nod. “You done good, hon. Looks like someone’s been payin’ attention to their lessons.”

Then came Scratch—quiet, calm, pleasant…at least to her. He spoke without fuss, kept an eye on the room like he always did. Gears liked that about him. She never had to guess his angle.

“You tell the Captain I’m dry as driftwood and twice as sturdy,” she said easily. “Rain didn’t do more than mess my shine.”

Her optics shifted toward the gnome he had referred to as a hired hand. She gave a small shrug.

“As for the this fella—don’t get jealous, hon. The Gnome’s not here for a long time, just a good time I’d wager. He’s just a passenger who got a little too enamored with my curvature.

The bar bustled, the clouds rolled on outside, and in her little corner of the sky, Gears kept everyone steady—one drink, one dry quip, and one warm smile at a time.

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Hidden 3 days ago 3 days ago Post by Potter
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Potter

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Race: Tiefling
Class: Ranger
Location: The Bar
Interactions: @FunnyGuy Wendel
Mentions: @Samreaper Menzai @princess Phia
Equipment:

Attire:
Outfit
Hair
Gold Balance: 10
Injuries: Scars on body, old chain marks on wrists, ankles and neck, tattoo on wrist with number

Arya watched the situation play out–from the wolf defending her, the pink haired half-elf, and the unapologetic dragonborn. Everything happened fast–too fast for her to respond or react. Stella’s gaze never left the dragonborn, not until she had relaxed. Instead of shame and guilt for existing, she found her heart warmed by how Menzai and Phia stood up for her. She made a mental note to thank them when she could. For now, she’d address the dwarf speaking to her now. Her eyes met Wendel’s and for a moment, she couldn’t speak. Her instinct told her to recoil, to expect sarcasm, or another insult tucked behind a false smile. There wasn’t any volatility; just warmth – real warmth, like cookies fresh out of the oven. Her gaze softened and her shoulders loosened. Stella stared between Wendel and her, and waited to see how she reacted before jumping to conclusions.

“I…” Arya faltered, unsure how to accept something so gentle. The past decade was a blur of anything but warmth. It was as if she had been dunked in frigid waters and abruptly had a towel wrapped around her. How did she earn or deserve this kindness? “Thank you,” she finally managed, her voice quiet and careful. “Most people… They don’t say things like that. Not to me,” She gestured to the general vicinity and sighed.

Stella peered at Wendel and nodded with approval. So far, so good.

She looked back to Wendel. A hesitant smile touched her lips. “You have a good heart, Wendel--thank you,” she added shyly and briefly met his gaze, then looked down. “Vrexen sounds like he might be scary. I suppose he'd stand up for himself though."

Her fingers brushed the rim of her teacup, which she held in her hands delicately, as if it might shatter. She sipped it carefully, then continued speaking. “I’m Ayra, and my eagle companion is Stella,” She nodded to Stella to inform her companion this was safe. The eagle remained on guard for any other wrongdoers, though she curiously looked at the dwarf. “It’s nice to meet you.”
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Hidden 3 days ago 3 days ago Post by FunnyGuy
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FunnyGuy

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Miris


Race: Changeling
Class: Part-Time Fighter
Location: Upper Viewing Lounge, Airship to Khorvaire
Interactions: Arya, Gears, Meiyu @PapaOso, @potter, @Tae
Mentions: Bastion @PapaOso
Equipment:

Attire: beige trousers, brown tunic, and worn brown boots
Gold Balance: 5
Injuries: None currently
Current Persona: Wendel




The dragonborns’s insults had been designed to pierce old Wendel with how sharp they were. One might even add some serrated edges to them too for some extra sting. However, this dwarf had a tough hide, not even displaying so much as a wince as the far removed dragon spawn spat at him with his fiery hate. His expression was that of a scowling statue, just waiting for a sudden action that might provoke him to place a firm grip around the lizard's neck.

If only he was a decade or two younger, he wished, but perhaps being older and so tempered was for the best. He only watched the beginning of the dragonborns's departure before he turned himself back to Arya.

The young tiefling was hesitant as she stammered but at the very least, she was successful at getting out what she intended. Besides, if Wendel was anything, he was patient… and observant. All his life, he could do nothing to help being the latter. It was more than often a helpful aspect of his but sometimes, such as this, it keyed him in on things he probably did not have business paying attention to.

Faded impressions of an oppressive past wrapped around Arya’s neck. Wendel could have pretended it was from some wardrobe malfunction or perhaps peculiar form of birthmark but his many years would not permit him to be ignorant of such a horrific indicator. As she spoke, his expression softened more than it should have in reaction to just her words. The hooded cloak he hadn’t cared about was now a piece of evidence to the starry-skinned Tiefling.

“It’s nice to meet you and Stella as well, Ayra.” He nodded with a smile but his melancholy tone betrayed him and would likely seem out of place. “If you need anything, I'll be here… at least for now. Vrexen and people like him are good at standing up for themselves… but sometimes it's good to have people that'll support you.” He peered downward, reminiscing a similar conversation he had so many years ago with a hopeless and lonely young girl.

“For someone like you, I don't think it'll take any time at all.” He returned his gaze to her, appearing to have recovered from the short lived slump. Like the star-shaped patterns upon Arya’s skin, Wendel was sure there was something bright in her wake.

As for him, however…

With a deep breath, Wendel turned himself toward the bar to face none other than the amber hued treasure he had inquired about. The mead!

They do have it! the dwarf beamed with raised eyebrows and an appreciative smile. He took a quick whiff without even touching the tankard, the sweet scent of the beverage removing any negative thoughts of everything that had recently transpired.

“Mmm” Wendel’s shoulders lowered as his body relaxed on the barstool. Then without hesitation, he dug his hand into his considerably light coin pouch and retrieved not one, but two gold coins! He didn't even have to taste the mead before he placed the coins on the counter and slid them forward toward Gears. “Thank you, sweetheart. I truly do appreciate this.” He appeared as if he could cry for joy in being able to enjoy his mead after all he had to deal with this morning. He was about to grab the tankard before he heard an unfamiliar woman's voice from beside him.

It was at this moment that he realized Bastion had not returned from talking to the yeeping young woman. In his place now was… her. The woman he had looked upon previously… twice! She was here! Right next to him! He felt as if his eyes had grown thrice their size as he took in her appearance up close. He tried not to draw attention but he visibly and unintentionally gulped. He parted his lips to speak but he must have swallowed all of his words just then! She was looking now, expectantly. There had to be a word! A sound maybe?! Something! Come on! With every ounce of determination he had, he dug deep and forced whatever he could out. Chin up, chest, out, he finally spoke.

“hi.”

The word came out sounding like a short and sharp grunt that one did when physically exerting themselves. Just as quickly as it left his mouth, he turned back toward the mead, now wondering if coming to the top deck was such a great idea. It was great, and then it wasn't, and now it's incredible… but was it wise for him to make himself so vulnerable to change?

If any of us can keep their wits about them, it's me. Wendel took a shallow breath before he grabbed the handle of the tankard and brought his earned drink of sweet goodness to his lips. He didn't sip either. Wendel was going to need at least a few good gulps.

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Hidden 3 days ago 3 days ago Post by Apex Sunburn
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Apex Sunburn Justified text enjoyer

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Location: Top Deck
Race: Dark Elf & Human
Class: Artificer & Rogue
Interactions: @PapaOso Gears; @Tracxyx Bobi
Equipment:
Attire:
Gold: 60
Injuries:


Well, that went almost exactly as Scaerthrynne expected.

“Thought so,” he replied, trying hard to keep the frustration from both face and voice, and knowing full-well that he probably wasn’t succeeding in either regard. But who could blame him? He had already lost count of the number of times he had tried explaining to the crew that warforged, contrary to their beliefs, weren’t like regular machines, and liable to regular problems. Rain wouldn’t do anything to them aside from – as it was so eloquently put by Gears – messing with their shine. After all, which idiot would construct something meant for war, and leave them so vulnerable to the elements?

And besides, Gears wasn’t like the other pieces of equipment on the airship, dumb and helpless. She had an actual personality, and could find him on her own if she needed any help.

Scaerthrynne glanced at the gnome again, a smirk drawing across his lips. Curvature, is it?” Amusement dripped from his words, and he looked at Gears. “He’s got good taste, I’ll give him that.” Then, he gave the gnome a teasing grin before saying to him, “Give it up. Gears’ not an easy lady, and I can tell you that from experience. I’ve been trying for a good time with her, and I’ve got the advantage of being stuck with her on this airship for a long time, but still no luck. She’s got actual standards and class.”

He kept his tone light, as light as his wry words would allow. This was just banter between crew, albeit with a gnome caught in the midst of it.

A tug on his sleeve caught his attention. He looked down his side at Vallena. “Scratch, I’m hungry. Can we get something to eat?” The girl fidgeted on her stool, and her fingers tapped an erratic beat on the smooth, varnished counter.

Scaerthrynne shrugged. “Sure, why not. Anything you want?”

“Something sweet!” Vallena chirped. “We brought some honey aboard at our last stop, right? I remember I saw them loading that stuff into the hold!” She turned to Gears. “Can I have something with that? Oh! And fruits, too. I don’t know what, though. I only saw the boxes. But they definitely, certainly had fruits in them! I got close enough to smell them–”

“That’s…Interesting,” Scaerthrynne interrupted her, shooting her a questioning look, his brow raised. “And especially so, since you’re not supposed to go anywhere near the cargo hold on your own. I remember the Captain telling you that personally after the cake batter incident.”

Vallena blushed. “Oops. I-I mean, I got lost! And wandered to the hold by accident. I wasn’t going there on purpose or anything, Scratch, honest!”

Scaerthrynne chuckled and shook his head. “Right, of course,” he said with a shake of his head, turning to Gears. “Give the girl what she wants, and I’ll just have an egg sandwich. You can put it all on the Captain’s tab.” The man owed him at least that much, considering how little he paid Scaerthrynne for the amount of work he was expected to do. The dark elf up and down, along the counter. “Don’t suppose I could convince you to put everyone’s bill on the Captain’s tab?” He asked Gears, half-seriously. “You know, as a little joke to give the man some excitement.”

“Oh right!” Vallena suddenly cut in, rapping her knuckles on the counter for attention. “You said something about…Emotional discomfort? Something like that? Is something wrong?” The girl looked at the warforged bartender with concern in her large, brown eyes, and almost half her body leaning over the bar.

Scaerthrynne calmly pulled the girl back into her stool by her shoulder. The girl landed on her perch with a quiet ‘oof’. “Easy, Val,” he said. Then, he turned to Gears. “I was about to ask you that, myself. Anything at all bothering you, Gears?”
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Hidden 2 days ago Post by PapaOso
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PapaOso

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Mentions/Interactions: Ezekiel @helo

She led him with graceful ease, her stride fluid, the kind of effortless confidence that made her movements feel more like a glide than a walk. Her presence was magnetic in that quiet, unspoken way—like candlelight in a still room. She didn't try to charm, yet there was something undeniably alluring about her: the softness of her voice with that ever so faint rasp that adds eccentricity, the way her gaze lingered a heartbeat too long, how her fingers trailed lightly along the rail as they descended the next flight of stairs.

They walked down a narrow, lesser-used corridor that curved toward a maintenance stairwell—one of the many veins in the ship’s vast body that most passengers never even glanced at. The buzz of life above faded, replaced by the ship’s pulsing heart: the hum of arcane engines, the faint hiss of pressure valves, the creak of wooden bones with metal joints.

Finally, she paused beside a closed hatch. She turned to face him fully, her voice lower now, almost intimate.

“There are two people in the cargo hold. A man and a woman.” Her eyes searched his face, and something like vulnerability passed through her expression. “They’re very sick. Fevers. Coughing blood. Too weak to move.”

She hesitated, just enough to seem unsure, then looked down briefly before continuing.

“They’re not on the manifest. Stowaways.” She glanced back up, voice soft, confessional. “That’s why I haven’t gone to the ship’s medics. I’m afraid if I report them, they’ll be thrown off at the next port or left to die in a locked room. But if someone like you… someone with healing hands and no need to judge… were to help them quietly…covertly”

She let the implication hang, unfinished.

Her eyes held his again. No flicker of deception. No twitch of guilt. Only that same unnerving stillness, cloaked in certainty.

"Please...they are my parents. 
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Hidden 1 day ago Post by Helo
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Helo Wonderlust King

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Race: Aasimar
Class: Paladin
Location: Stormrider; Top Deck - Sick Bay
Interactions: Liana @PapaOso
Equipment: His longsword; Retribution and a healing amulet. A backpack with supplies and his lute.
Attire: Clothing and gloves
Gold Balance: 53
Injuries: Old injuries include a missing eye, numerous iridescent scars, and a knee that aches when it rains.




She did not acknowledge his question.

She neither gave a name nor offered a reason for withholding her name. There was only silence, and Ezekiel followed her anyway.

She moved like a ghost. Her feet barely touched the ground, her hand barely touched the banister, and she carried herself with a certainty beyond confidence. Her eyes held the weight that her movements did not: piercing, detached, and watchful. A gaze that lingered too long.

A collection of traits that were strange but not concerning.

His footsteps echoed down a quiet corridor. Hers made no sound. They ended up in a secluded part of the ship. Quiet enough thet you couldn’t hear the noise of other passengers. Enough mechanical sounds in the background that the stillness was comfortable and isolating.

“There are two people in the cargo hold. A man and a woman.”

She spoke so softly he had to lean in to hear. The cargo hold was off limits. The heavy security there made that very clear. The closeness was uncomfortable.

“They’re very sick. Fevers. Coughing blood. Too weak to move.”

A vague collection of concerning symptoms that was probably beyond what he could heal. Coughing blood wasn’t good. Very possibly contagious. He thought of numerous plagues that had popped up during the war. Disease that consumed a person inside and out. Fevers that burned too hot and caused blood to flee from the body. The faded and ill who spent their last moments hollow-eyed and gasping.

“They’re not on the manifest. Stowaways.”

Ezekiel’s expression shifted into disappointment but didn’t fall enough to become a frown. Stowaways. Just another type of theft. Less forgivable than what a bored child does. Not even understandable, like stealing food to survive. This airship was a luxury. There were cheaper ways to travel. He could guess what she wanted his help with.

“That’s why I haven’t gone to the ship’s medics. I’m afraid if I report them, they’ll be thrown off at the next port or left to die in a locked room. But if someone like you… someone with healing hands and no need to judge… were to help them quietly…covertly”

Her eyes found his again, she wore a look so certain that she was about to hear something he wasn’t going to say. She and her parents are criminals. Their crime was not severe enough to deserve death, but being dropped off at the next port was not so bad. Ports had medics and facilities better equipped to handle contagions. The cargo hold was going to need to be thoroughly cleaned. The crew had to know.

"Please...they are my parents.

It stung, knowing he was probably about to disappoint her.

“That is likely beyond what I can heal. It would be best to allow the ship’s medics to handle this. The consequences for stealing passage on this vessel is preferable to…allowing this illness to go untreated. Ezekiel picked his words carefully, said them with enough weight that it was clear he thought this could be fatal if allowed to fester. From what Scratch had said earlier, he was certain they weren’t going to be tossed off ship or left to die out of spite.

“And it could be contagious. Could put other passengers at risk if this stays hidden. What I can offer is to make sure the crew treats your parent compassionately.”
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Hidden 1 day ago Post by Tae
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Tae

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Race: Yuan-ti
Class: Rogue Arcane Assassin
Location: Bar
Interactions: @FunnyGuy Wendel, @PapaOso Bastion, Talis, & Gears
Mentions:
Equipment:

Attire:
Gold Balance: 51
Injuries: None currently, but has numerous faded scars on her body



Meiyu’s gaze drifted to the dwarf beside her. He looked as if the mere act of existing next to her had dislodged his soul from his spine. His nervous gulp was audible, his posture stiff as a board—and that greeting? A singular, strangled *hi* that might’ve been a war grunt in another life.

Her smirk was slow, deliberate.

“Hello,” she replied, her voice low and velvety, a beautifully raspy thing that purred with amusement and power, reminiscent of stormy shores and siren songs. It was the kind of voice that lingered in the ears and stirred something beneath the surface.

She turned her gaze back to Talis, expression unreadable as she considered the woman’s flustered attempt at deception. Unhydrated? A poor lie, but an amusing one. Her eyes flicked to the satchel again, then back to Talis’ face.

“Thirst, is it?” she murmured, voice smooth as silk yet edged with quiet challenge. She pushed two coins toward Gears with a lazy grace. “Then I’ll take a water as well.” A smirk curled at the corner of her lips. “Just to see if that truly solves your problem. Dehydration can be a silent killer, after all.”

She leaned against the bar once more, her presence effortless, watching Talis with quiet amusement but not cruelty. There was something to her—Meiyu wasn’t sure if it was naivety or something else entirely—but she wanted to peel back the layers to see just what she was about.

Her gaze lingered just long enough to be felt. Then it shifted, without warning, to the Warforged still looming beside the girl.

She studied him openly, without flinching. Something about him—his stillness, his presence, the unwavering focus on the girl—reminded her of temple statues she once saw as a child. Monuments to loyalty. Tools shaped like men.

“Your scarf, it seems cozy. It suits you.” She stated simply before taking a sip of her drink and letting the warmth seep in slowly.

Around her, the bar continued to buzz and hum with lives too loud or too quiet. But Meiyu remained at ease in the tension, as if she belonged exactly where she was: between secrets, stares, and subtle challenges.

Her gaze shifted back to the dwarf again.

Still flushed. Still recovering.

Still cute, in a panicked sort of way.

She didn’t smile this time. But her eyes gleamed with quiet mischief as she leaned against the bar and waited for the rest to unfold.
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Hidden 1 day ago 1 day ago Post by PapaOso
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PapaOso

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Bastion & Talis


Interactions: Meiyu @Tae


Talis wasn’t sure if it was the voice or the eyes. Maybe both.

Either way, she was definitely melting again...and not in a romantic way. More so in a "my spine has been replaced with warm oatmeal and my thoughts are escaping through my ears" kind of way.

She nodded stiffly at Meiyu’s remark about dehydration, feeling very much like the flight in fight or flight was calling her name.

“O-of course,” she said, her voice hitching halfway through the first syllable. “Hydration is crucial. Vital, even. I...uh...always say, better water than… than not water.”

Great. Incredible. Not suspicious at all.

She was actively dying inside when Meiyu’s gaze shifted to Bastion, and her breath caught again. He was still looming...not in a threatening way, just…present. Solid. Like a silent lighthouse trying to understand fog.

Talis blinked rapidly as Meiyu commented on his scarf.

“Your scarf, it seems cozy. It suits you.”

Bastion blinked, looking down at his scarf. Then up at Meiyu.

Then down at the scarf again, as if trying to determine what she meant. “Cozy” was a strange descriptor for something he technically couldn’t feel.

“It is... important,” he replied after a moment, the faintest hint of pride creeping into his voice. “It was a gift.”

Talis, meanwhile, was shrinking into herself like a melting marshmallow. Her satchel strap was now indented into her shoulder from how hard she was gripping it. Her foot twitched nervously. Her pupils might’ve been vibrating.

Bastion noticed.

He had been watching her since the conversation began, his internal systems tagging every change in her behavior: increased breathing rate. Tension in the jaw. Shifting posture. Minimal blinking. Defensive clutching of bag. A subject under distress.

But why? He looked at Meiyu again. She hadn’t raised her voice. She wasn’t threatening. Still, Talis was afraid. And Bastion, whether it be programming or compassion, didn’t like that. She needed to be protected.

From what, he wasn’t sure. But something in him stirred...a directive buried deep in his core programming. Protect the charge. Maintain safety.

He scanned the situation…Dehydration had been mentioned, and she had said she was thirsty. Perhaps it was time to escalate.

Talis was just about to speak again when suddenly…she was no longer seated.

“Wha...?!” she yelped as Bastion’s large arms gently but confidently lifted her from the barstool.

He held her like one might hold a particularly anxious cat...awkwardly, but with great care.

“Bastion?!” She asked, her words coming out more confused than afraid. Her hands immediately moved to secure her satchel against her protectively.

“You said you were thirsty,” he explained calmly. “You are exhibiting signs of increasing physiological distress. This suggests imminent collapse. I am resolving the issue.”

He turned to Gears with mechanical precision, grabbing the tall glass of water she had just slid their way.

Then, still holding Talis with all the delicacy of a man transporting a sacred relic, he tilted the glass toward her face.

“I highly recommend you drink this. For your safety.”

Talis squinted up at him, somewhere between scandalized and short-circuiting.

“You’re giving me waterboarding energy right now,” she whispered through clenched teeth.

“That does not sound hydrating.”

“It’s not.”

There was a pause. A very Bastion type of pause to be exact.

Then, slowly, resignedly, she took the glass with both hands, sipped it like a very offended raccoon, and muttered, “There. Crisis averted. Thank you, you big terrifying sentient teapot.” Despite her nerves, despite not particularly enjoying being picked up and force fed water like a baby…she couldn’t help but smile. Something about it all just felt…pure.

Bastion nodded solemnly.

“You are welcome.”

He gently lowered her back to the stool.

For a moment, there was silence...Talis awkwardly sipping water, and Bastion watching her like she was a mission objective.

Talis blinked into her glass and muttered, mostly to herself, “This is fine. Everything is fine. I love airships. I love bars. I love being held like a sack of emotional potatoes.”

Bastion’s head tilted.

“You are not a potato,” he said helpfully.

Talis didn’t respond right away. Then, finally:

“...Thanks.”
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Hidden 22 hrs ago Post by PapaOso
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PapaOso

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Mentions/Interactions: Ezekiel @helo

He spoke. A denial wrapped in measured tones. A reasoned refusal, not unkind, but absolute. She listened and said nothing for a moment. But eventually, it was time to speak.

“Ah,” she said simply.

There was a moment of pause in between her words as Liana’s bourbon eyes looked over him as though she were seeing him for the first time.

“I misjudged you.”

Her tone wasn’t disappointed in the emotional sense. It was diagnostic. A recalculation.

“You helped the boy. Without asking who he belonged to. Without worrying about whether the bitch who broke his arm would be punished. There were rules broken then too. But you didn’t stop to report it. You just… acted.”

She tilted her head ever so slightly, studying him anew.

“I assumed that meant you cared more about people than procedure.”

She stepped in, slowly, deliberately, and placed a gloved hand against his chest. Not pushing. Just resting there, like the weight of a single truth.

“But I see now. That wasn’t principle. That was convenience. The child was a victim, so you acted. Here? It’s harder. Riskier. So you choose safety, not kindness.” Her gaze was cool and direct.

“You call it wisdom. I call it cowardice dressed as righteous policy.” Then, she pulled her hand away.

“I’ll find someone else. Someone willing to help the dying without getting so lost in their own minutia.

She started to turn away, but paused...just long enough to glance back over her shoulder.

“I really didn’t think you were going to be the disappointment you’ve turned out to be. But for what its worth… They aren’t contagious. They were cursed. There isn’t a threat to the other passengers… Only to the lives of two people who deserved better. Neither of them even know that they are stowaways. That sin is entirely on me, but it was the only way. Yet, you condemn them anyways with your conveniently placed sense of virtue. I hope your god is proud.”

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Hidden 16 hrs ago 16 hrs ago Post by samreaper
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samreaper Laughing Imp

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Race: Silver-Wolf Shifter
Class: Arcane Mystic
Location: Bar
Interactions: @princess Phia, Korrak
Mentions: @papaosoBastion, Talis, @Tae Meiyu, Gears, @Apex Sunburn Scratch/Vallena, @Funnyguy Wendel (Miris)
Equipment:

Attire:
Gold Balance:16
Injuries:


"Thank you," she whispered softly, clutching the marble protectively. "It's beautiful."
Then the girl scampered off to return the marble to the girl he had pointed out.

The wolf remained knelt with a solemn calmness as he gave a soft acknowledging nod of his head. A slight smile twitched his lips watching the young child scamper off towards the bar.

"You think your pathetic snarling frightens me?" he spat, voice dripping with venom. "Keep your self-righteous preaching. You’re nothing but a stray animal who forgot his place."

The dragonborn venomous words dripping with unashamed and undeserved superiority drew Menzai to casually glide his way to stand upright where he merely glowered back up at him with fiercely rippling dark eyes burning with restrained crimson disdain.

A slight tensing fluff of white ears, nostrils flaring at the lizard’s foul breath befouling the air with biting insults flung shamelessly by that rotten tongue diseased in cruel temper and close-minded bigotry. Every poisoned word spat like wicked fire fueling the wolf’s predatory urge to bite the rancid muscle straight from his maw and then force him to eat his hateful tongue.

Then the racist drake had unjustly directed their detestable attitude towards the dwarf, Wendel for merely making some minor slight comment. The trembling in his body refused to stop as his rankling rage in a constant flux of holding his bestial hunger to silence this hateful beast.

He stepped forward slightly, looming threateningly, anger sparking dangerously in his eyes. "Perhaps you’d like to share the Tiefling’s humiliation, tiny filth."

The soft crunch of a single footstep pulled Menzai to glare back at the Dragonborn with a snarling intensity, his body pulsing with a growing need to sink his fangs into his throat till it crunched wickedly with a satisfying gurgling snap.

* Kill….rip…tear!* A snarling rasped in his head as blood crept from the corners of his eyes.* Make him scream! Rip his putrid tongue out!* A Twitching compulsion of hidden claws held down as if by invisible restraints that clacked from the pounding in his chest thrashing to let loose a predatory fury normally kept at bay, but the constant flurry of new sights and scents was proving more challenging than the snow wolf could prepare for.

No longer catching what the babbling lizard said for they would only serve to anger him more. The knowledge of this dragonborn being a father and where they currently well helped Menzai wrestle back the dark desires yet with every exhale of the man’s repugnant odor that nearly left his sensitive nose missing the cheese gnome.

"Everyone!" she declared firmly, raising her chin with purpose. ”I have decided something important. It is unacceptable that someone dares disrespect a goddess of the night sky in our presence! Such rudeness must be corrected swiftly, or surely, fate will grow cross with us all."

Phia’s sudden unexpected voice broke through then as she declared such disrespect towards the night sky goddess not be tolerated.

Like a crashing wave of comforting light, the bloody urge was drowned allowing the snow wolf to regain his composure. Closing his eyes to block out the overwhelming stimulations where he took a few slow steadying breaths.

His ears flicked to the elven maiden gentle marching footsteps that caused his soothing body to tense once, now replaced with worry upon sensing the growling jungle elf before she approached, giving the Dragonborn her own way of stern talking too.

"You," she growled fiercely, eyes blazing, "have insulted a goddess who walks among us. Do you understand what that means? Disrespect to her is disrespect to the very stars, the spirits, and every ancestor who came before you."
He observed with a mixture of concern and immense pride to see sweet Phia boastfully reprimand a dragon with her own personal form of Oruna fire. Seeing her act so bravely and caring for strangers did much to help get his mind back in order; a hint of shame in his eyes for coming so close to losing control, when they’ve only just set off.

A dismissing shake of the head shrugging off the thoughts and doubts.* Enough! I am not here to draw needless attention or waste my claws on any ignorant fool simply over a devil forked tongue.* Menzai gave a reaffirming inhale in reminder then exhaled the pointless rage from his still flared nostrils for Phia’s grand reprimanding had led to her practically challenging the dangerous drake.

The blossoms on her staff glowed vibrantly, reflecting her simmering anger. "Choose carefully," she warned, her eyes locked unflinchingly onto his, "For your next action decides your fate."

She had issued the challenge before he could interject, his unstable body left him momentarily hesitating in this lapse of confusion, but the glow of the staff gave him the bit of jolt needed to get his mind collected and prompted him into a readying posture, a wolf ready to pounce if a battle were to break out. Any words at this point may serve to ruin all of Phia’s efforts and stand as her silent protector behind his elven charge.

"Enough!" Korrak snarled bitterly, his voice dripping with venom. He pointed a sharp claw accusingly. "I won't waste any more breath on fools like you. But mark my words—I'll remember this insult. The day will come when you'll regret embarrassing me."

Even as the Dragonborn shouted this business finished having endured enough of the accusing stares and unexpected reckless challenge from the jungle duo and began departing, he did not relax his posture. Watching as the daughter ran over to join him, giving a glint of a blue marble had his harsh face soften with a bittersweet pity.* Carry it well, young princess. May it protect that kind curiosity from the vile serpent’s views.* A forlorn sigh, taking in the shape of Korrak’s shrinking back taking this last fleeting look to memorize as much details as possible.

* These claws are not meant for such ilk like you…but a lesson will be taught.* Eyes glowering an self-made target on their back.* You will learn to mind your tongue...* A lapsed bloody snarl of the eyes before turning away with a closing of the eyes and a settling shake of the head as that must be put aside for now.

A tired sigh left his lips while turning to Phia with a relieved heart that nothing more came of this exchange.” That was very brave, Sweet Phia. Perhaps a tad too…grandiose in approach and I must remind you that we are not here to start fights.” A pained biting tsk of his own tongue knowingly when he had been the one to rush first.” Your intervention had been most timely, however, though, for future sake, we need to be careful and cautious when it comes to declaring such challenge.” A gentle comforting squeeze to Phia’s shoulder not wanting this to appear as if reprimanding.

We will need to discuss what our plans going forward will be soon. But for now, there is an extra meaty dish waiting.” Turning his gaze back to the bar briefly catching Arya talking with the dwarven Wendel who now had the Snake beauty joined in a chat.” Let us return, all this…distasteful talk has left the stomach unsettled. And it seems our new tiefling friend has become more open to chatting.” An appreciative nod of thanks as he motioned towards the bar and then started back towards the bar. A brief pause as he took in the number of new individuals with Bastion having rejoined at the bar while holding a small adult female drinking water, their constitution demonstrated signs of dehydration, another sign of the warforged kindness. Then there was the male dark elf whose garb and scents told of a doctor or physician and a human child seemingly asking questions of Lady Gears.

Halting as he took in the crowded bar, his body still reeling from the intense overexcitement he had been pushed to endure just now. A pounding ache in his head took his sore chest place as he strode quietly back to his seat and settled back down.

Menzai sat gazing down at the mule tea prepared with a perfect coloring blend and the small whisps of steam indicating it had not cooled off too much. A thankful flick of the ears as he gingerly grabbed the teacup’s handle, the faint rustling of the sleeved arm; moved with a graceful, careful ease to avoid spilling.

A gentle raise to hover it just beneath his nose where he took a slow, drawled-out sniff of its strong calming aroma and with it was hit with a flush of numbing relaxation, a telling sign of the tea’s handling. A testament to Madam Gears' skilled robotic hands.

There was much he needed to do and think about, but the snow wolf only sought to get things properly in order first and quietly enjoyed sipping his tea letting its magical liquid soothe his riled heart.

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Hidden 14 hrs ago Post by princess
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🌸 Race: Half-Elf 🌸
🦋 Class: Druidic Mystic 🦋
🍄 Location: The Bar 🍄
🍃 Interactions: Menzai @Samreaper Arya @Potter 🍃
🌼 Equipment: 🌼

🪷 Attire: Outfit 🪷

🪞 Gold Balance: 23 🪞
🌸 Injuries: Faint Scrapes on Shins & Knees 🌸


Phia watched Korrak’s back as he retreated, her staff still clutched tightly in her hand. She gave a final, defiant “hmph!” under her breath, puffing her cheeks out slightly like an indignant squirrel.

"Coward." Her chin rose, eyes narrowed with fire. "He must have caught a whiff of his future defeat." She nodded to herself as if affirming a great truth of the universe, then spun on her heel, clearly under the assumption that her very presence had sent the lizard boy packing.

She came face-to-face with Menzai, eyes wide with indignant purpose, her brows furrowed like a child who’d been told “no.” He reminded her gently again (this was not the first time he had to remind her this) that she was not here to start fights. Her lips puckered into a dramatic pout.

But as his hand squeezed her shoulder with that familiar grounding touch, her expression melted into a tender smile and adoring gaze. She reached up and patted his hand affectionately, "You are correct, precious Menzai, that my meat awaits..." Her eyes darted longingly back toward the plate she’d left behind before snapping back to him with sudden gravity. "...But if a goddess is insulted and we do not seek forgiveness—then what if the stars stop glowing? What if the moon crumbles to ash? What if the other Gods—or even this one—strike vengeance upon this ship!"

She gasped at her own suggestion, then immediately got distracted by a glint on the floor before catching herself and refocusing. "...No, no… we must apologize on his behalf. We must!" Phia insisted solemnly, placing a dramatic hand over her heart.

With that, Phia made her way over to Arya and gave a dramatically low bow and held the position a beat too long. Then she straightened and clasped her staff like it was the only thing keeping her from floating away. “Great Goddess of the night sky,” she began, very seriously, though her eyes kept trailing off toward the nearby plate of meat, “...on... behalf of the lizard-man who has rocks in his brain... and... a sour smell in his clothes, I humbly ask for your forgiveness.”

She placed a shiny pebble at Arya’s feet as if it were the highest offering. “He does not understand divinity when he sees it. His tongue was clearly cursed. Please do not smite us all.”

Then Phia stood there perfectly still with her hands folded and eyes wide... For a good ten seconds before she started rocking on her feet. She peeked up at Arya with hopeful, shimmering eyes, anxiously awaiting divine judgment or, at the very least, to be formally dismissed. But then.... THEN her eyes flicked back to the plate. Her meat. It shimmered in the sunlight like a greasy beacon of salvation. Her lips parted. Her fingers twitched.

Finally, she broke. Phia suddenly spun around and practically crawled back onto her stool like a starved goblin. She grabbed the slab of meat with both hands and chomped into it like she had been starving. She held the meat aloft between bites.


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Hidden 13 hrs ago Post by FunnyGuy
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FunnyGuy

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Miris


Race: Changeling
Class: Part-Time Fighter
Location: Upper Viewing Lounge, Airship to Khorvaire
Interactions: Meiyu @Tae
Mentions: Bastion and Talis, Phia, Arya @PapaOso, @princess, @potter
Equipment:

Attire: beige trousers, brown tunic, and worn brown boots
Gold Balance: 3 (on hand)
Injuries: None currently
Current Persona: Wendel




Wendel had shut his eyes as he gulped down the long-awaited mead. For a few seconds, only a few, Wendel could have mistaken his stool for a grand seat within the confines of a heavenly abode overlooking a grand sparkling lake. Snowcapped mountaintops crested the sky, painted with scattered fluffy white clouds that travelled ever so slowly across it.

In a life like his, where he wasn’t sure where or when he’d find himself, the small comforts like this one were what helped him keep his wits and sanity. If only he could indulge in the way he desired. Now that would be a dream. Instead, he’d have to settle for a moderate intake of his preferred alcoholic beverage. He convinced himself to have just one more second. One more second of heaven.

“Hello,” the almost eerie voice of the beauty beside him dragged him down and back to the bar deck of the Stormrider airship. His eyes shot open, and the rim of the tankard left his lips, presenting him with only the reality of his situation. He almost sighed, but instead only his shoulders lowered. The burden of responsibility and maturity had called. Wendel set the tankard down on the bar counter and slightly turned his head toward the woman who had replied. She had been conversing with the woman Bastion seemed to have taken a liking to. Good for him. People like him need friends and she seems-

“Ohh!” Wendel let out as he witnessed Bastion scoop the yeeping woman up while insisting she take a drink of water. Wendel raised an eyebrow, wondering what he had missed in his short trip to paradise that would lead to such a thing.

He knew Bastion did not mean any harm, but Wendel could not find the justification for his actions. However, the scene didnt fail in putting a smile on the old dwarf’s face. The innocent awkwardness of the two was a precious thing, a rare thing in these times. Awkwardness. Wendel could at least relate to that feeling as gaze met Meiyu’s amber slitted eyes once more. At first, there were no words to this second exchange, yet this time it was not because he was failing to speak. What he was failing at was his ability to get a read on the woman. Not breaking eye contact, she leaned against the bar. In the same moment, Wendel could hear the voice of the young half-elf woman giving some sort of odd apology to “Ayra.” It was the perfect opportunity to escape but Wendel quickly refused the temptation of it. Instead, he grabbed his tankard again, raising it toward the woman with a friendly smile.

“Lively morning, isn’t it? There’s plenty that has happened on this airship already, it seems. To safe travels at least,” he toasted before taking the one second he had missed out on. “My name’s Wendel, by the way. I… I don’t think I’ll be finishing this mead, so… If you’re still thirsty and don’t mind the germs of an old dwarf, it’s all yours.” He felt a tinge of relief, finding talking to her easier than he originally imagined.

Though this was still only the start...


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Hidden 11 hrs ago Post by Helo
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Helo Wonderlust King

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Race: Aasimar
Class: Paladin
Location: Stormrider; Top Deck - Sick Bay
Interactions: Liana @PapaOso
Equipment: His longsword; Retribution and a healing amulet. A backpack with supplies and his lute.
Attire: Clothing and gloves
Gold Balance: 58
Injuries: Old injuries include a missing eye, numerous iridescent scars, and a knee that aches when it rains.




As expected, she did not like his advice.

“...Without worrying about whether the bitch who broke his arm would be punished…”

“That is an unkind word.” It was a quiet interruption. A knee-jerk reaction to language he was not fond of hearing. It was also an unnecessary interruption, words that should’ve stayed a thought, for they did not help the situation.

He did not see the similarities between the two situations. Helping a boy with a broken arm put no other passengers at risk. Ignoring protocols around potentially dangerous diseases could put others at risk. But maybe it was only the cloaked woman’s tone that was calm and practical, and beneath her demeanor was a mix of distressing emotions that prevented her from looking at her scenario rationally. It seemed the most likely explanation.

His focus lingered on her unwelcomed hand as it briefly rested against his chest.

Her hollow compliments became accusations. Words likely meant to wound or spark some type of argument. Ezekiel paid them no mind. His conscience was a matter between him, the holy Flame, and the gods.

The woman removed her hand from him as he took a small step away from her, out of her reach.

“The arm-breaker offered a full and honest account of what happened. Gave her word that she would cause no further harm on this ship. No escalation was needed.” He addressed her earlier statement and offered his view on the situation. The issue had been resolved without a need for punishment. If anything needed to be reported, then Scratch could make that call, and Ezekiel would leave the matter to the surgeon’s discretion.

“In your case, I gave you the best solution I could offer based on the sparse details you gave. I cannot take information you did not share into consideration. If this is a curse and not a disease, and your parents put no other passengers at risk, I need not report this either.” He wondered how two people could remain unaware that they were stowaways while hiding in a cargo hull. If he were to help, he would need more details than this.

“A curse is the work of evil forces. My faith demands I help with that, but I will need the full truth of what is going on. Not just the convenient parts.” He added. There was little he could do for a mysterious illness that was near the end of its course, but a curse was something he might be able to help with.

“Or you can shop around for healers.” He made no move to stop her if she chose to continue on her way.

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Hidden 3 hrs ago Post by Tae
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Tae

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Race: Yuan-ti
Class: Rogue Arcane Assassin
Location: Bar
Interactions: @FunnyGuy Wendel, @PapaOso Bastion & Talis
Mentions: @Apex Sunburn Vallena
Equipment:

Attire:
Gold Balance: 51
Injuries: None currently, but has numerous faded scars on her body



Meiyu’s amusement simmered beneath the surface like coals beneath silk–warm, glowing, patient. She watched the trembling little woman clutch her satchel like it might open a portal and suck her into escape. She was curious about the girl, more than she had anticipated. But curiosity came easily to Meiyu; people were puzzles, and this one looked like it might sing if you pressed the right pieces.

Her gaze shifted lazily toward the Warforged again as he responded.

“It is... important. It was a gift.”

Click.

A puzzle piece clicked into place.

Her brow lifted a fraction. The pride in his voice was subtle, but it was there. Sweet, almost. Like watching a mountain try to explain the sentimental value of moss.

Meiyu had just raised her drink again when, without warning, Bastion moved.

Like a sudden landslide wrapped in politeness, he lifted the small woman off her stool with the kind of solemn care reserved for sacred rituals and injured cats. She blinked, once, slowly, as the spectacle unfolded beside her.

“You’re giving me waterboarding energy right now.”

“That does not sound hydrating.”

Meiyu let out a sound she rarely gave anyone: a laugh.

It wasn’t a sound that belonged in a tavern or a marketplace or even this plane of reality. No, her laugh was like bells chiming through mist–clear, silver, and strange, with a haunting melody that curled in the air and hung there like perfume. It started soft, disbelieving, but grew into something rich and melodious. It rolled with silk-wrapped mirth, seductive even in its hilarity, yet oddly childlike in the unguarded joy it carried.

Heads turned.

Her hand moved to her mouth, the first two fingers pressing gently to her lips, as she tried halfheartedly to smother the sound. Her eyes glittered, fangs peeking ever so slightly with the curve of her grin as she looked between Bastion and the scandalized raccoon-in-human-form now clutching a glass of water like it might bite her back.

“You may be the most terrifyingly sweet thing I’ve seen all week. Well, next to Vallena over there.” She said to the Warforged while gesturing briefly towards Val. Her eyes flicked back to Talis, her tone still warm with the glow of laughter.

With that, her gaze shifted smoothly back to the dwarf. Wendel had raised his tankard, voice warm and friendly in a way that grounded the moment. Her expression softened at the gesture, a rare thing. There was something charming about him—a storm-weathered tree in a forest of saplings.

“To safe travels,” she echoed, lifting her own glass in turn. But when Wendel offered his half-finished mead, she paused only briefly.

“Generous,” she murmured, brow arching in amusement. “Not many would offer a stranger their drink, especially not one with eyes like mine.”

Her tone held no accusation, only intrigue. Her fingers closed gently around the tankard he offered. Then, with unhurried grace, she brought the tankard to her lips and drank. Not a dainty sip, but a full, effortless pull from the vessel, as if tasting something ancient and familiar. She set it down with a soft clink, exhaling through her nose in satisfaction.

“Wendel,” she repeated, tasting the name like it was a spice. “A pleasure. You’ve got good taste,” she said, lips curving. “And a bold heart, offering drinks to girls with fangs.”

Then her eyes slid back to Talis, still clinging to that satchel like it might sprout legs and flee. “You’ve got the look of a smuggler. Or a sorcerer. Or maybe just a scholar with questionable life choices.” She smiled, soft as silk and twice as dangerous. “So, little sparrow… what’s in the bag?”

A beat.

“Wendel, want to place a wager? I say it’s cursed. Or alive. Or cursed and alive.”

Her tone was playful, but her eyes were hunting.
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