24th of Summer, 518 AV The pale moon cast Tarn’s face in an eerie light as he stalked the dark streets of the Castle Commons. The Sun’s Birth rarely patrolled this far outside of their domain, and when they did, it was posturing, displays meant to be seen by their rivals, not real attempts at quelling the rampant thievery and occasional murder in the area. That was why Tarn walked alone. The very thought of trying to convince anybody else to join him on night patrol filled him with dread. Regardless of good intentions, or the relative difficulty of procuring accompaniment, what he was doing was dumb. Dumb enough to get him killed and strung up as a message to his organization if he wasn’t careful. If you couldn’t be careful enough to keep yourself from walking into life-threatening situations, you had to at least try to be careful enough to get out of them. It was funny, in a way. Just a few months ago, what he was doing would have been unthinkable, but now, with a sunburst seared onto his hand, he felt safe doing this? Well, not exactly safe, but it was necessary. Several large Sunberth rats scampered away as Tarn approached, their feet tapping the cobblestones with audible clicks. As he walked, Tarn’s eyes were drawn to the sky. Brilliant stars filled his vision, arrayed in fantastical patterns. The dull warm glow of the Slag Heap was just visible in the distance as well, an omnipresence in Sunberth at night. Despite the ever-looming threat of death from walking these streets alone at this time, it was quite peaceful. While still laden with the scents of the city, the air was just a bit clearer at night, and there were far fewer people. There were others that roamed the more dangerous streets of Sunberth at night, and few of them benign. Most of these people would avoided Tarn, wishing to go about their business in private. Others would examine him briefly before fading back into the night at the sight of the spear he carried. In Sunberth, even those that didn’t make a habit of thievery would take up the trade if they saw an easy target. Tarn tried to walk quietly, but each step he took rang out, announcing his position to anybody within earshot. A small voice in the back of his head begged Tarn to return to the Barracks, and to his warm cot. He shushed the voice. He had joined the Sun’s Birth out of a desire to help the city. If the leaders he served under would not use him effectively toward that goal, Tarn would have to do it in what time he could find, and it just so happened that the longest stretch of time uninterrupted by any of his duties to the Sun’s Birth was nighttime. As he continued, Tarn passed familiar streets and buildings. While he purposefully avoided the vicinity of his old home, he had roamed much of this area as a young boy, conniving with his friends to cause minor mischief. As long as you were careful about who you messed with, there was a world of opportunity for causing trouble in an anarchy like Sunberth. Tarn didn’t look too close at any of the paces he had the fondest memories of. He preferred to leave those memories in his mind in their untarnished state, free from the touch of the corruption he now saw everywhere. A sound reached Tarn’s ears that broke his reverie, snapping him back to the present. It was an alarmed shout, resonating from a street just ahead of him. Tarn took off toward the sound at a dead run, hoping he wasn’t getting into something he would live to regret, but hoping dearer that he would at least live to regret it. Weekend Marathon Post Word Count: 635 Total: 4879 Job Thread Total 635 |