Players: Noravennsalar, Sserapelham
Location(s): Zinrah’s Tunnels and Ruins, The Jungle Wilds
Time Stamp: 26-27th Summer 512 A.V.
The voices echoed down the east tunnel the Dhani party was to meet at. A mother had only now taken notice that her son was missing in the Jungle Wilds, and a request was set out immediately. Her family, as the nest now knows, denied her request, calling her a fool for having let her son stray so far from her sight, and more foolish yet for suggesting a party of Dhani go searching for him! Ha! The life of a snakeling, worth that of four, maybe five other, able bodied Dhani? Never! Still, the fools gathered in their own company. Their names echoed throughout Zinrah, as well as their reputations.
To be brief with introductions, the party was headed by the snakeling’s mother, Svanri. Besides being incredibly stupid in her suggestion, she was known to be as spiteful as they come. She wasn’t a total failure in Siku’s eyes. Volunteers from other families came as well. There was Katashk, an avid hunter and aspiring pupil of the sword. His times in the Jungle would serve to guide the party and keep them alive. There were only rumors that the Queen herself suggested an able bodied Dhani with a sensible mind go along to make sure everything was kept covert, and the Dhani worth keeping alive. Jyaharis was the last of the party to have already arrived. The Training Gallery was short a mace that evening, the Dhani thinking it smart to bring a weapon along. She was right, not that she could use the thing well. Her life is perhaps the one the Queen hoped to protect though, as she is young and an aspiring priestess with a strong mind on her shoulders. Her skills in medicine and herbalism have saved a few hunters who have felt Myrian stings.
They had been speaking, or at least the women were chattering, long before the late comers were arriving. Their voices shamelessly rang through the east tunnel to the whole of Zinrah. Their voices, thankfully, did not break through the ruins.
“Where are they?” asked Svanri impatiently. The mother’s anger and frustration were to be a first challenge to overcome in this whole ordeal.
“They were coming, I saw them. Have patience, mother Svanri.” Jyaharis sought to calm the mother’s mind and guide her down a path of patience. The aspiring priestess had the proper mind set for the task at hand.
Katashk looked back toward the dark end of the tunnel. He heard them coming long ago. Giving a glance to Svanri, her visage masked in shadows as the last streaming rays of twilight blackened her face; the mother approached the new comers.
“You took your time. Your names? Speak quickly, my child’s life hangs in the balance!” The demands of a mother echoed down the tunnel. She gestured to Salar first, the young male leading the way down a tunnel he has passed through many times in his short life. Katashk looked back out the tunnel observing the last of Syna’s rays to graze the canopy before falling behind the living silhouette. Jyaharis shared Svanri’s curiosity and greeted the rest of the party with a firm nod, and mumbled prayers.
“We move soon. Twilight is upon us,” said Katashk, ever vigilant. His tone was low and his words concise. “Be quick with your introductions.”
Location(s): Zinrah’s Tunnels and Ruins, The Jungle Wilds
Time Stamp: 26-27th Summer 512 A.V.
The voices echoed down the east tunnel the Dhani party was to meet at. A mother had only now taken notice that her son was missing in the Jungle Wilds, and a request was set out immediately. Her family, as the nest now knows, denied her request, calling her a fool for having let her son stray so far from her sight, and more foolish yet for suggesting a party of Dhani go searching for him! Ha! The life of a snakeling, worth that of four, maybe five other, able bodied Dhani? Never! Still, the fools gathered in their own company. Their names echoed throughout Zinrah, as well as their reputations.
To be brief with introductions, the party was headed by the snakeling’s mother, Svanri. Besides being incredibly stupid in her suggestion, she was known to be as spiteful as they come. She wasn’t a total failure in Siku’s eyes. Volunteers from other families came as well. There was Katashk, an avid hunter and aspiring pupil of the sword. His times in the Jungle would serve to guide the party and keep them alive. There were only rumors that the Queen herself suggested an able bodied Dhani with a sensible mind go along to make sure everything was kept covert, and the Dhani worth keeping alive. Jyaharis was the last of the party to have already arrived. The Training Gallery was short a mace that evening, the Dhani thinking it smart to bring a weapon along. She was right, not that she could use the thing well. Her life is perhaps the one the Queen hoped to protect though, as she is young and an aspiring priestess with a strong mind on her shoulders. Her skills in medicine and herbalism have saved a few hunters who have felt Myrian stings.
They had been speaking, or at least the women were chattering, long before the late comers were arriving. Their voices shamelessly rang through the east tunnel to the whole of Zinrah. Their voices, thankfully, did not break through the ruins.
“Where are they?” asked Svanri impatiently. The mother’s anger and frustration were to be a first challenge to overcome in this whole ordeal.
“They were coming, I saw them. Have patience, mother Svanri.” Jyaharis sought to calm the mother’s mind and guide her down a path of patience. The aspiring priestess had the proper mind set for the task at hand.
Katashk looked back toward the dark end of the tunnel. He heard them coming long ago. Giving a glance to Svanri, her visage masked in shadows as the last streaming rays of twilight blackened her face; the mother approached the new comers.
“You took your time. Your names? Speak quickly, my child’s life hangs in the balance!” The demands of a mother echoed down the tunnel. She gestured to Salar first, the young male leading the way down a tunnel he has passed through many times in his short life. Katashk looked back out the tunnel observing the last of Syna’s rays to graze the canopy before falling behind the living silhouette. Jyaharis shared Svanri’s curiosity and greeted the rest of the party with a firm nod, and mumbled prayers.
“We move soon. Twilight is upon us,” said Katashk, ever vigilant. His tone was low and his words concise. “Be quick with your introductions.”