OOC Note: This thread is for a major citywide announcement. Feel free to post your reactions to the announcement if you wish. Anytime after the 1st of Winter, its contents will be common knowledge throughout Zeltiva. This will be the kickoff of a major quest, but your PC does not need to post in this thread, or even be in Zeltiva on the 1st, in order to join the quest. You can think of this as the prologue.
1st of Winter, 512 AV
The first of winter was an important day throughout Mizahar, but it was particularly notable in Zeltiva. It was a major holiday, marking as it did the birthday of Kenabelle Wright, greatest of the city’s heroes. It was a time of joy and community, of celebration and cheer.
There were often, in addition to the usual festivities, speeches and proclamations. One of these was taking place today in the Sailors’ Guild Hall, though it was open to the entire public. The room was packed, and with good reason – the person at the front of the hall was Charm Wright, and when Charm Wright spoke, people listened.
Not that she did much speaking anymore – those days were largely over for her. But when she did, people paid attention. After all, she was someone worth paying attention to.
She was, as far as these things went, a sort of Queen Mother figure in Zeltiva. She was the younger sister of Kenabelle Wright – and yet, she had pursued a career in the Sailors’ Guild on her own merits, serving a full apprenticeship, becoming a full member, achieving the rank of Captain, leading the Great Eastern Expedition, and finally, becoming Senior Member of the Administrative Committee. Her daughter, Jocylinda Wright, currently was the Senior Member, and her granddaughter Teresa Wright Allwave was a notable musician and writer. After the deaths of Timothy de Octans and Stephanie Brooks, she was the last living link to the Golden Age of Zeltivan Exploration, a noble figure from a more noble time.
Charm had been retired for over a decade now, writing her own memoirs and editing her sister’s papers. She seemed to have little interest in continuing to influence public affairs, preferring to let her daughter stand on her own. She was still relatively hale and active, but she was pushing eighty years old, and each of those years showed in her careworn face. It had been some eight years since she had even spoken in public, and so when she was announced as a speaker for this year’s holiday, her appearance had attracted intense interest.
As she approached the lectern, the crowd grew still. Everyone wanted to hear what Charm had to say.