Category Archives: Character Vignettes

Miscellaneous character history and stories for the Jade Regent campaign

Character: Kali

From the Life of Kali Nassim: Denea Borellan Nassim

Spring, 4709

Kali had finished packing up her room and was helping her mother with what was left in the study. The wagon that would move these final items to their new home in Magnimar would arrive before noon the next morning, and due to some delays in the deed transfer on the warehouse and office space there Akmal was unable to return to Sandpoint to help them finish. Denea was loath to hire help for crating up what was essentially a collection of sensitive and personal family items—Next time we move, we’re packing these first, she thought—so it was up to her and Kali to finish.

When giants and a dragon attacked Sandpoint the previous year several blocks of the city were damaged or destroyed, and while the family home escaped unscathed the warehouse for Nassim Goods had not. The fire that engulfed the theatre sent hot embers into the air and raining down across the waterfront, and one of those embers landed on the roof of the warehouse and set it ablaze. Fortunately, the roof structure collapsed before the fire could completely engulf the building, and the business suffered only a partial rather than total loss.

Akmal and Denea had less luck with the insurance adjuster, who argued that their policy did not cover “damage in times of war”. Reports from agents of Magnimar, who had been tasked by the Lord Mayor with investigating unrest in eastern and northern Varisia, had turned up evidence of organized giant activity under the command of an upstart leader named Mokmurian. “And that, you see, qualifies as war,” he said, emphasizing the final word by stabbing his finger on the desk where the copy of the policy lay. Denea did not have to look down to know that his finger had landed squarely on the word “war” on the parchment. The man had probably had this exact same conversation a dozen times in the past week. That he was still alive given how emotions were running in town said a great deal about Hemlock and Deverin’s commitment to law, order and security. It was not often that either Akmal or Denea admitted defeat, and even rarer for both of them to do so at the same time, but they knew a losing bureaucratic battle when they saw one. They ate the loss, and Akmal made the decision to move the business to Magnimar as soon as he was able.

The financial impact on the family was significant, far more than either of them was comfortable admitting. Coupled with the move expenses, 4708 and 4709 were very lean years and Kali had to wait until the latter to begin her schooling, but they were alive and on steady footing. A great number of families in Sandpoint were not able to say the same, including even the infamous Scarnettis. (Recognizing how fortunate they were, Akmal and Denea donated generously to the town’s emergency fund over the next year. “I never asked your father, and he never asked me. We just did it. It was the right thing to do,” she recalled while talking to Kali about it a few months later.)

Kali was clearing some papers out of the main desk in the study when she saw one that caught her eye.

“Mom…what is this?”

She was holding a letter addressed to Denea Borellan, from the Aneka University in Korvosa dated in early 4687, offering her a tenured teaching position and describing what that would entail. It went into some detail about salary, a stipend for living expenses, and even support for research and publication. Denea came around the desk to where Kali was sitting while she read. When she finished, Denea spoke in a light voice as she reminisced, half-smiling.

“That was the year your father asked me to marry him. He proposed just a month after they sent me this.”

Kali knew precious little about her parents from before they had met. She had the stories they told her, and what both sets of her grandparents had told her, to draw upon but they seemed to exist in a different place and time. She remembered that her mother had taught for a year—Or was it two?—before she and her father married, but she didn’t remember hearing anything about this. A tenured position? She knew that was significant. And mom would have only been, what, twenty-two? Twenty-three?

“You…you gave this up?”

It was the wrong thing to say and she immediately regretted it. The expression on her mom’s face turned hard in an instant. “That is what your grandparents think, yes,” she said sharply.

“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean—”

“Kali.”

Kali stopped and considered her mom. She’d known for years that she had a strained relationship with her own parents. Very strained. It became more obvious as Kali grew older, and that relationship was almost certainly worsening with each passing year. It was part of the reason they did not visit Korvosa very often anymore. If it weren’t for their granddaughter Denea may not have even seen her parents at all since leaving. She’d overheard bits of the arguments they’d held behind closed doors on more than one occasion and some of the things that were said were awful. She had always wondered what had caused their falling out.

I guess now I know, she thought.

Denea’s face softened, as did her voice.

“Even before I met your father, I was happy. I was researching and teaching Thassilonian history, and a little of world history after the fall of Thassilon. I was a socialite in a Varisian city-state. I knew what I wanted from my life. What I wanted was that.

“Then I met your father and I fell in love. And because of your father, I am happier than I ever was or thought I would be, I am discovering the world for myself instead of learning it from books behind a desk, I am a contributor to many of those same books that I used to read, I find and touch relics from history instead of seeing them in museums and sometimes I even put them there myself, my world is much larger than one city of modest influence and an inflated sense of its own significance, and most important of all? I have you.

“Now. Tell me, Kali. What have I given up?”

§

Character: Ivan

Storytime: The abduction of Ivan Milner

 

Sarenth 16, 4712 (Dusk)

On the way through Sandpoint as dusk approaches Ivan takes one of the back alleys on his way to watch the sunset. As he rounds the corner he sees this couple that appears to be having sex. He was about to take another path when he faintly hears a call for help, it was then that he realized that she was all beaten up and blood covered her mostly naked body. Ivan immediately slammed into this guy to get him off her and then proceeded to punch it out with him. Ivan saw her run out of the alley; the distraction gave the rapist time to round the corner and get away.  By this time help had arrived and they can now go after the rapist.

In a woman’s voice Ivan hears “filthy rapist” and then everything goes black.

As Ivan regains consciousness he finds himself looking up at a ceiling. His head is pounding and everything is still a little out of focus. The fire in the fireplace is providing the only light in the room as there are no windows. The door off to his left is closed and appears to be the only way in and out of the room. As Ivan attempts to move he suddenly realizes that he is sprawled out on a bed naked with his hands and feet securely tied to the ends of the bed. He quietly listens for any sounds from the other side of the door but he hears nothing. After several minutes of attempting to get free Ivan realizes that he is trapped!  Unlike the previous time he was tied to a bed naked Abby is not here to make sure he is safe. Over the next couple of hours of waiting Ivan could not help but wish that Abby would show up and free him.

The silence was broken as he hears people in the next room. The best he can guess there are several people in the next room and at least a couple of them are female. The door opens and he hears a female voice.

“Awe he is finally awake”

Three women walk into the room, the one talking is much over than the other two. Ivan is not sure but the other two look to be a few years older then he is.

Older woman says “There seems to have been a mix up here. Penelope says that you pulled Tobis Frederic off her and saved her. So I am sorry for hitting you on the head and tying you up. I have talked to the city guard and let them know of the mistake. We told them that you were injured and that we would take care of your injuries, It is the least we can do.”

Momentary awkward pause as Ivan waited to be untied but all three women just stood there. The younger two were clearly more interested in checking out the naked man then untying him.

Woman says “My name is Angela, this is my daughter Jennifer and her lover and life partner Samatha”

Short hesitation before Angela starts talking again.

“So we don’t actually currently have any of your clothes or equipment here at the house. With the rapist still on the loose it’s too dangerous for us to get them tonight and with the bump on your head it is just best that you stay here anyway. “

Pause

Angela “I have a confession. Samatha and Jennifer have never shown any interest in men at all and you are actually the first naked male that either has ever seen. Since you did not say anything when I asked and we already had you to tied to the bed naked I took this opportunity uh gently uh explore uh ” pause “with there hands”.

Angela “Ok I know that we should have waited and asked but I want Samatha and Jennifer to give me grandchildren.”

During this time Samatha and Jennifer are tracing the symbols on Ivan’s body with there fingers. In all of the confusion Ivan did not notice that Samatha and Jennifer were only wearing night shirts until they pulled them off.

Ivan’s eyes jump to the door as he wanted to get away but then back to the two naked girls. At that moment he realizes that this is no stranger then the shit Abby has been getting him into his whole life. He remembered one of Abby’s favorite Desna quotes “experience life in all its forms”. Clearly this qualifies.

Ivan “Ok then. You girls will need to get a lot closer”

Sarenth 17, 4712

After a night of passion all three of them slept in until mid morning. It was late morning before Ivan’s clothes and gear was returned. Angela informed Ivan is that

“The story told to the guard and everyone is that Tobis Frederic attempted to kill Penelope during a robbery. An unidentified man rescued Penelope and then slipped back into the shadows. It is all an exciting mystery. Penelope’s father has made everyone promise not to reveal the truth. Only Sheriff Hemlock knows the truth but none of his guardsmen no the real truth.”

Angela says “The Girls are right those are sexy tattoos” as she intently watches as Ivan checks to make sure all of his money and gear are accounted for. He puts his clothes and armor on then starts to head out the door.

Angela “They still have not caught Tobis Frederic so be careful in case he tries to get back at you”

Ivan heads over to the guard house to get the latest update on the status of Tobis”

Guard: “We haven’t captured him yet but if he is in town we will get him”.

Ivan starts walking towards the south bridge.

Ivan talking to himself “He must be heading to Magnimar to get away from the charges. He can only be a couple of hours ahead of me. I should be able to catch him before he gets to Magnimar and this time he will not get away.”

Ivan asks around to see if anyone has seen someone with Tobis’s description that headed out this morning.

Daviren of the Goblin squash stables “That sounds like the guy who paid for passage on the caravan headed to Riddleport. I think he said his name was Tobis. Can’t remember the last name he used.”

Ivan “do you mean Tobis Frederic?”

Daviren “Ya that’s it”

Ivan “Thanks”

Ivan continues to talk to himself as he walks away from the south bridge.

“Well I didn’t expect that. I would never be able to find him in Riddleport. At least Penelope should be safe now. I should tell her family that Tobis has left town. But how would I even no how to find them”

Ivan remembers that this morning after the final session with Samatha and Jennifer that they were telling him about the house that Penelope lives in with her parents. This was right after talking his ear off about how Angela and Sam are crazy about each other but neither will admit it.

With the general direction and description it takes Ivan about an hour to find the house. He knocks on the door and a woman answers the door.

“What. This is not a good time”

Ivan “I am here to check on Penelope and”

Out of know where this woman starts swinging at him.

Woman “You stay away from my daughter you bastard”

Ivan takes a step back and puts his hands out in front of him to defend himself as he makes his getaway.

Ivan “I’m going”

Ivan hears a woman’s voice from within the room “No Mom. Stop. He is the one who saved me”

Ivan backs up another step as this crazy woman leaps towards him with arms out stretched. This all happened so fast that Ivan wasn’t sure what was going on. The woman’s advance stops two feet away from Ivan and that is when he realizes she was trying to hug him. Ivan is now freaked out about this woman and he is very aware that an angry mother is very dangerous. He is just standing there waiting to get away.

The woman looks into Ivan’s eyes and says

“Your safe here. You can let go of my breasts now”

Ivan’s eyes shift from the woman’s face and begins staring to his hands now on her chest. He realizes that he had been using is hands to keep her away from him.

The woman starts to laugh saying “It’s ok I am not going to hurt you”

That is when Ivan realizes that he has not moved. Ivan jumps backward and drops his hands.

Ivan “I just want to tell you that Tobis Frederic left town. He paid for passage on a caravan heading to Riddleport”

Woman says “Well then come in and wait for my husband to come back. You deserve a reward for all that you have done. He is out looking for him and don’t worry we have lots of friends in Riddleport.”

Ivan “I don’t need a reward. I have to get going.”

Ivan hustled down the road to get some distance between him and that scary woman.

Ivan talking to himself “No good deed goes unpunished. I have earned a few drinks at the Rusty Dragon. Maybe Sparna will tell some great tale of his adventure in the real world. I need to remember to stay out of the alleys”

Ivan is walking through the street on his way to the Rusty Dragon.

Ivan hears Abby’s voice “Ivan STOP. Aren’t you going to help them?”

Ivan stops and looks around for Abby but his sister is no where to be found.

Ivan talking to himself “Great now what.”

The door 15 feet ahead of him on the right opens and two people walk out the door.

Jennifer “Hey Ivan. What are you doing here? Are you checking up on me or maybe you just miss me.”

Ivan hears Abby’s voice “You know what to do”

Jennifer “Are you ok Ivan? Oh this is my boss Sam.”

Ivan “So this is the Sam”

Jennifer “Yes”

Sam approaches Ivan and shakes his hand.

Sam “Glad to me you. I have heard a lot about you today. You know that Jennifer and Samatha are very special girls. “

Ivan “And so is Angela but she seems very lonely”

Sam “oh yes she is very special”

Ivan “So!”

Sam “She is special but I know that she is just being nice to me”

Ivan intimidates Sam “Look I know that you love her and the she loves you. She is not happy because she needs you in her life. You need to go to her and confess how you feel”

Ivan “Jennifer take Sam home to dinner and I will be there to make sure that these two idiots share how they feel about each other.”

Ivan continues walking down the street.

Ivan talking to himself “Fine if these idiots can’t confess affection for each other then I will force them. Oh my God. I just committed to going back to that house. “

Ivan continues talking to himself “Ok just take a deep breath. Everything will be fine if you keep your wits about you. You can do this. Just keep all your gear with you and make sure you have a clear path out the door.”

Ivan knocks on the door and Samatha motions for him to enter. He sits at the table taking the chair closest to the door with everyone in front of him. About 10 minutes later Sam shows up and is greeted by Jennifer. Ivan motions for everyone to sit for a minute.

Ivan “please sit down so we can talk for a minute”

Ivan waits for everyone to be seated and then begins to speak.

Ivan “Sam you know you are crazy about Angela and you need to tell her. And you Angela these girls tell me that you really like Sam as well. Life is too short to not be with the ones you care about”

Ivan “Sam do you trust these two to take care of your business tomorrow?”

Sam “Of course.They are like daughters to me”

Ivan “Sam you need to take Angela out for something to eat and then go somewhere and talk or what ever. Jennifer and Samatha will take care of the business so you can spend the whole day together!”

Sam and Angela get up take each other by the hand and head for the door. Sam turns around at the door.

Sam “No. I am sorry but there is something more important that we need to do first. Angela and I have already decided to get married and we both feel that our daughters come first! The midwife Hannah from Hannah’s told Angela that the next few days are ideal”

Ivan “No. I am leav”

Ivan looks down at the mug of ale that he has been drinking from and then all goes black.

Ivan slowly awakens with a headache. He opens his eyes to see a familiar ceiling. Again he finds himself once again sprawled out on the bed naked with his hands and feet securely tied to the ends of the bed. Samatha and Jennifer have there naked bodies press up against him. It appears that they fell asleep waiting for him or maybe they didn’t wait for him to wake up.

Ivan “Samatha and Jennifer wake up and untie me. I have to get out of here.”

Samatha and Jennifer begin untying Ivan.

Samatha “We didn’t want to tie you up but they insisted to make sure you didn’t lash out. The door is barred from the outside. Sam had it installed.”

Jennifer “we have enough food and water for the next 4 days. They will let us out in four days.”

Ivan gets up and checks the door. Clearly the person that installed this knew what they were doing. Ivan eats some bread and paces back and forth trying to convince Samatha and Jennifer to let him out. Samatha and Jennifer give Ivan a few minutes and then simply just pull him into bed.

Ivan “experience life in all its forms”

Sarenth 22, 4712

Ivan awakes as he hears a sound at the door. Looking over he sees that the door is open. Untangling himself from Samatha and Jennifer without waking them was a lot harder then he expected. He quietly moves into the next room where he found Angela holding his clothes.

As Ivan dressed Angela says “All of your stuff is there. Although we did lock you in it was for the greater good and clearly you are not worse for wear. Would you like some breakfast?”

Ivan looks up at Angela “No thank you, I am not hungry”

Ivan finishes dressing, picks up his bow and pack while heading out the door. After he gets to the next block Ivan checks to make sure he still has his money as he is going to need that this morning. He picks up his gear and heads straight for the Rusty Dragon.

Ivan talks to himself as he is walking to the Rusty Dragon:

“I am going to go have some drinks, get something to eat.”

“I have been temporarily blamed for a rape, Knocked unconscious, abducted, drugged, tied to a bed naked. Twice. And held against my will. Ok so I really didn’t try to get away but the door was barred from the outside. I could have just ignored Samatha and Jennifer. Who am I kidding being locked in the room with two naked women I didn’t have a chance.”

“I will get a room and spend it by myself. Tomorrow I will find a group of adventures and go do something exciting. No make that a group of male only adventures.”

Ivan reaches the door to the Rusty dragon and just stops.

Ivan “Who am I kidding. If I join a group of male only adventures it would just be my luck that that are all gay and I would have to watch my own backside. “

Narrator “And thus ends the story of The abduction of Ivan Milner”

Character: Kali

From the Life of Kali Nassim: The Swallowtail Festival

Rova 21, 4707

The first scream came just as Father Zantus started to speak. Kali, Ameiko and most of the crowd around them turned to see where it had come from when the second scream pierced the air. Ameiko focused on something in the distance, said “Goblin!” and then took off at a full run, darting and weaving through the crowd as a wave of panic rippled across the square from the southwest. Kali called out after her, but Ameiko neither turned nor slowed. Then, a chorus of shouts, yells and howls erupted from everywhere and true panic set in, several people running in any direction that took them away from the festival grounds. Kali lost sight of Ameiko in the chaos.

As the crowd scattered, Kali watched a small, dark shape slip behind a wagon parked next to Savah’s Armory. A small animal of some sort lay in front of it in the street, motionless in an expanding pool of blood. Strange, high-pitched voices—nonhuman voices—joined the cacaphony.

“Dad…?”

“We need to leave. We need to leave now!”

Akmal and Denea started to run but stopped mid-stride just as abruptly and Kali collided with her father, almost knocking them both down. Briefly irritated, she quickly saw what was wrong: a group of six goblins had appeared in the square, one jumping up on to the tables and scrounging for food while the others shrieked at disoriented stragglers.

“Go around, not through!” she heard her mother call out.

Denea grabbed Akmal’s arm and steadied him, then looked directly at Kali. Their eyes met, and Kali nodded. Let’s go! she thought.

As they dashed along the southern edge of the square, dodging scattering townspeople all the way, Kali caught sight of several heavily armed individuals confronting the goblins who were now advancing on the thinning crowd. She thought she saw Sedjwick and Kyras among them, but she did not recognize any of the others (and you could hardly forget, say, a half-orc carrying the largest battle axe she had ever seen). When they reached the southwest corner of the square, Akmal (now in the lead) almost ran straight along the narrow alley between buildings to Shell Street, but at the last second he saw something he didn’t like and yelled out “Right! Right!” and rounded the corner. Denea and Kali followed close behind. The battle in the square sounded fierce and brutal.

Now headed towards Church Street, the Kesk’s jewelry shop straight ahead, Kali glanced over and saw two goblins fall, slain by a pair of sword fighters. A large man and an equally large woman had nearly cut them in half. A priest was tending to a teenage boy who lay dying on the ground behind them.

Where is the town guard? she thought to herself.

Akmal called out “Stop!” just before they hit Church Street. The three of them came to a halt, hearts pounding and breathing heavily.

“What is it?” Denea asked him. Kali recognized the stressed tone in her voice.

“Something large, just past the Cathedral. I do not know what it is, but I see two animal eyes reflecting in the dark.”

Kali saw a glint of steel and noticed that her mother was wielding her dagger, and remembered seeing her draw it while they were running. I didn’t even know she was carrying that. Where does she hide it? She’d only seen her mom produce it like this a dozen or so times and it always gave her chills.

“Are you armed?” Denea asked her husband.

“No,” he replied.

“Idiot.”

“It was a festival.”

A huge ball of fire rose into the air on the far corner of the square. All three turned in unison and saw a wagon engulfed in flames.

“The fuel oil,” Akmal observed.

“More are coming. Can we make it to the house?”

Kali watched as several more goblins descended on the square. The group of would-be defenders—she counted seven of them now—met them head on. There was still no sign of the town guard. A furious skirmish erupted.

“That thing is still there. It is watching us.” Akmal replied.

“We’re probably safer near them.”

The fight in front of the Cathedral was over almost as fast as it had started. In less than half a minute the square was littered with the bodies of slain goblins. One of their wounded—Kali couldn’t see who—was sitting on the steps. Father Zantus had arrived and was reviving the critically injured teenager. The group held an agitated discussion that Kali could not hear, but she was pretty sure what they had decided: to the south, plumes of smoke were rising from the city center and there were sounds of distant fighting. They started moving that way when yet another scream rang out, this time from the northeast, near the city’s north gate. It was followed by the furious barking of a large dog.

“That thing is moving. It is headed towards the White Deer…” Akmal said. Unspoken—he didn’t have to say it because they were all thinking it—was, Next to our house.

The impromptu militia stopped, turned, and bolted up Church Street, running towards the source of the commotion.

“Go!” Akmal shouted.

Kali saw it happen and cried out “Wait!” but it was too late: a goblin sprinted out from behind a water barrel along Junkers Way heading in the same direction as the others, just as Akmal and Denea stepped into the street from alongside the building. Neither saw the other and the goblin collided with Akmal’s legs at a full run, sweeping them out from underneath him. Akmal went down hard onto his side, landing inches from the goblin that had been flattened onto its back, the wind knocked out of it.

Denea reacted first, bringing her dagger down with a sickening thud into the prone goblin’s chest. It shuddered and was still.

Kali watched this all unfold. Something in the back of her head told her she should have been frightened, but she wasn’t. It also occurred to her that, all around her, people had been panicking but she hadn’t done that either.

“Are you OK? Are you hurt?” Denea asked her husband.

“I may have broken a rib when I fell.”

He got up slowly. Denea handed him the large knife that the goblin had been carrying and he took it without question or comment. Up the street, the dog had stopped barking and they could hear another skirmish. From the sound of it, this one was much more fierce than the others.

“Through to Cliff Street?” Akmal asked.

Denea nodded and they moved, crossing the road more carefully this time, then slipping between the jeweler and the neighboring house. When they emerged on the other side they saw one of the town guard laying face down in the street on their left, almost certainly dead. His sword was not drawn and his hand had been clutching his crossbow when he fell. It looked like he had been stabbed from behind while readying his shot.

They went over to him and Akmal bent down to confirm what they already knew.

He added, “It is Garridan.”

Kali was staring at the crossbow on the ground. She looked up at her dad, to the sounds of the fight up the street near their home, and then at the glow from the fires burning in the city to the south.

And then she picked it up.

“Kali.”

She turned to face her father. He was holding something out in his hand.

“The quiver.”

§

 

Character: Kali

From the Life of Kali Nassim: Nualia

Spring, 4701

Kali scampered down Main Street, taking care to avoid running into a pair of guards leaving the garrison as she slipped between it and the town hall. She didn’t want to miss too much of the sunset over the water, but colliding with someone on the busy streets would guarantee that she’d not get to see anything at all. She rounded the corner with equal care, a right turn that took her to the cliffs overlooking the gulf. She could see the enormous glassworks a couple of buildings down on her left as she trotted out to the edge.

The sun was just above the horizon, still bright but turning a fiery orange as it sank slowly to the water. She sat down on a comfortable grassy spot just a few feet from the edge that had become her favorite viewpoint, so caught up in her routine that she did not realize at first that she was not alone.

She recognized Nualia, of course; Kali knew who Nualia was within days of moving to Sandpoint. Everyone knew Nualia. At barely eleven years old she’d been fortunate to see more of the world than most people would in their entire lives. She’d seen humans from nearly every continent and humanoids of all types, but Nualia with her silver hair and purple eyes stood out among all of them. Not that she hadn’t come across others with a distinct or unique appearance, but those were all cross-breeds of some sort. Nualia looked both human and otherworldly at the same time.

What did mom say she was? Aas-something?

“It’s not polite to stare.”

Kali turned her head away quickly, feeling embarrassed. She could tell her cheeks were flushing as she said, meekly, “I’m sorry.”

Nualia was laying on her side in the grass just off to her right, one hand resting on her abdomen. Quite a few people in Sandpoint came out this way to watch the sunset every now and then, but this was the first time Kali had run into her here. For some reason it made her uncomfortable.

Nualia turned to face her.

“You’re Kali.”

It wasn’t a question, but Kali answered as if it was.

“Yes, miss.”

For just a fleeting moment Nualia looked annoyed and Kali was embarrassed again.

Dummy! Just talk to her like she’s normal.

People did weird things around Nualia. Not so much the ones living in Sandpoint, but those in the farmlands out to the east. They would ask to stroke her hair, or to have a lock of it, and to touch her face or hand. Some even asked her to kiss their children. Once while she was out with her parents Kali saw someone kneel at Nualia’s feet in supplication, and beg or pray for something. She wasn’t sure what because she couldn’t hear the words, but her mom was very annoyed and remarked harshly about the farmers being superstitious. Her dad was more reserved, but she could tell he found it terribly rude and he was shaking his head as they walked away.

“Other kids pick on you.”

Also not a question. This time Kali didn’t say anything. Yes, some of them did; she was getting used to it, and was learning who to avoid and who to ignore. That didn’t mean that she wanted it pointed out to her. Uncomfortable under Nualia’s gaze, Kali looked down. Her eyes found a path of dirt on the ground.

Nualia turned away, staring out over the gulf where the sun was dipping into the water, slowly turning from orange to a deep red.

After a couple of minutes she said, matter-of-factly, “It gets worse.”

The sun set in awkward silence.

§

Character: Qatana

Prelude: Qatana’s journal entry

Moonday, Gozran 16, 4712 Sunrise
Seerspring Garden

Spring is my favorite time to be in Magnimar.

The cold darkness of winter with its barren trees and washed out hues has given way to the pale green of awakening plants and the riot of blooming flowers. People reflect their surroundings, and heavy dark clothing has been shed to reveal the bright colors beneath. The chill in people’s hearts has also thawed, and kindness is now the rule rather than the exception.

The sun is just peeping above the horizon, highlighting the dew laden leaves with fire, and the webs strung between twigs glow with anticipation of the day’s warmth.

This is my favorite place in all the city, sitting with my back against a mossy stone wall as I gaze east over the tranquil garden and the still sleeping metropolis.

Nearby, the spire of the Church of Pharasma juts above the tree line, clad in brown, gray and blue shingles of slate. Had fate proved different I would be there still.

The soft voices of my friends remind me that I have some place else to be this morning, and that I had best be on my way. I stand and pick up my pack, heft the flail that lay at my feet, and head to the northern gate.

The time has come to leave Magnimar, and I shall miss it.

Moonday, Gozran 16, 4712 Sunset
Lost Coast Road

We are moving slow, but I suppose that is to be expected. On horse back you can make Sandpoint in a day from Magnimar, but it is 50 miles of hard riding. Most folks take two days for the trip (or longer if on foot) to spare the horses and their lower back-sides.

Originally I thought to hire a horse and make the trek in a day, but then Takoda suggested going up as part of a group. “Find a caravan in need of a guard. The extra coin won’t hurt, and you said you were after change, and you have been alone for so long this change will do you good.”

I wasn’t so sure how much good the addition of people would be, but he had a point: I was looking for a change. What was I going to do with my life? The world was a big place, and the maps I had seen in Magnimar showed nearly limitless possibilities. Kali told childhood tales of exotic and far away places she had already visited, and I found the idea of extensive travel appealing.

But for starters I wanted to return home to Sandpoint for perhaps one final farewell.

Apparently there was a glut of guards (or people posing as such) looking for caravan duty, and it was doubtful at first if I’d even be hired. I suppose I should have cleaned up some before the interview to make an impression. But what do you want in a guard, the smell of soap and bathwater, or someone who can fend off attackers? And so what if it had been a week or so since I last washed my clothes — and Timber, there is no need to snort “or so” as if to imply it was any longer… or much longer, anyway.

Fortunately Badger reminded me to tell the caravan owner I was a cleric (I do not look much like one), and so he’d be hiring both a guard and a healer for the price of one. That did the trick, and I was signed on. Clever Badger!

I rode in one of the wagons, which was comfortable enough. I told the leader that I could ride a horse, but he took one look at my two handed flail and said, “That’s no weapon for a rider!”

Well, duh! It’s not like I planned to fight from horse back — the poor dispirited animals they brought along wouldn’t be much good in combat anyway. But I held my tongue (thanks for the reminder, Huffy), and silently climbed aboard.

Fortunately the driver was neither inquisitive nor talkative, which gave me ample opportunity to think about the future, and to rest (I have the late night watch).

Toilday, Gozran 17, 4712 Sunset
Sandpoint

Last night was mostly uneventful. Some time after midnight the horses became uneasy, and there was a loud screech in the distance. I thought I saw a winged horse silhouetted by the moon, which brought to mind the old tale about the Sandpoint Devil, but nothing more happened.

Camp was broken and we headed out at a steady walk north.

The road headed west, and climbed over the rolling hills and down into various river valleys, and then slogged back up again. Clouds rolled in at mid day and graced us with a stady downfall for half an hour, after which they broke apart and went along their way, leaving us to our own.

By afternoon we were crossing over the Foxglove River and into the lands of my youth. A battered and weathered sign on the far side of the bridge announced “The Misgivings”, with an arrow pointing off to the left. Tacked below this on tattered parchment was a warning in faded ink:

WARNING

The house has been looted, but the evil remains

– Olithar –

Shalelu had mentioned something about this place some time ago — some story her bard friend, Sedjewick, liked to tell (or sing, more likely).

As we continued northward my heart began to rise. It had been some while since I had last been to Sandpoint, and each bend in the road revealed a familiar vista that triggered memories from my youth.

And as the sun began to set we crested a hill and found the quaint harbor town of Sandpoint quite the same as I had last seen it. Or so it at first appeared, but as we approached I could see new construction mixed with the old, and the remains of charred pilings poking up from the water in the warehouse quarter.

“It’s just as I remember it,” quipped Pookie. Yes. Well, Pookie claims she stowed away on caravan in her younger days and has seen most of Varisia, but I only half believe her.

We brought the wagons through the south gate and over to the market houses, where the goods were unloaded and I collected my pay.

I’ll ask around to see if Shalelu is about, or if worse comes to worse I can ask at the Rusty Dragon… but Ameiko has put conditions on my visits to her establishment.

Character: Kali

From the Life of Kali Nassim: In Jalmeray

jalmerayWhen her parents announced that they would travel to Niswan just a few weeks ahead of her 11th birthday, Kali could hardly contain her excitement. It had been over five years since she had last seen her grandparents or the city where her father was born, and she could recall very little of her time in Jalmarey with any clarity. Some of that was simply the nature of a young child’s memory, but in the years since then the Nassim family had also been to the foreign ports of Kalsgard, Azir and Merab, numerous smaller settlements in Cheliax, and even briefly—very briefly—to the docks of Promise in Hermea (speculating about why Mengakare wanted those items would be a family pastime for many years). After the move to Sandpoint and the settling in at her new and now permanent home, those memories of what she saw as a young girl of six in Niswan were competing with others more recent and far more vivid.

She read a great deal about her father’s homeland in preparation for the journey and the more she read the more obsessed she seemed to become. At first, Akmal was concerned that the Kingdom would not live up to her expectations, but Denea quickly pointed out how unlikely that was: Niswan was a city that was formed, and still shaped by, the elementals and genies weaving magic in service to the Vudrani rajahs. Jalmeray was the west-most Impossible Kingdom and in this case it’s name was no exaggeration: the Kingdom itself would not and could not exist if not for the outsiders that were instrumental in its creation. One evening, Kali had asked if it was true that there were palaces “where the fountains flowed with wine instead of water”. Her father replied, nodding, “I have seen it”. How was it possible to be disappointed with such a place, when the reality was so much more fantastic than any story could convey?

And Denea was proved right in the end, as she often was when it came to her daughter. The almost eleven-year-old Kali was in awe of Niswan’s wonders. She walked on streets of red stone, between ornate pagodas several tiers high, silken streamers on their roof tops flowing in the wind. And the marble was everywhere: buildings, statues, fountains…some of them a pure white that gleamed int he sunlight. Niswan was a delight for the eyes, and there were many delights for the other senses as well. Now that she was old enough to appreciate it all she found the city to be nothing short of majestic.

Young as she was, though, she was also very keen and it did not take more than a few days for her to suspect that, aside from the culture, something about Niswan was very different from the other cities she had seen. It nagged at her. There were some obvious contrasts. The streets of Niswan were not just clean, but immaculate. The city itself was busy and bustling, yet also quiet and distinguished. It even seemed to have an effect on her mother: normally outspoken and rarely hesitant to offer her opinion on matters, Denea was reserved and deferential here (some might even call her behavior “polite”, though perhaps not within earshot). Yes, those things were obvious, but there was something else. Something much more subtle.

It was a couple of days before it came to her. Every city had its social and economic divides and Kali was under no illusions as to where she and her family fell on these scales. While the developed world might consider Sandpoint to be little more than a backwater settlement, her family’s life there belied its means. Children her age, or of any age for that matter, did not as a general rule travel the world, much less with her frequency. Most people did not leave their own country except to flee for their lives or as (unwilling) property of another. She knew, even at this age, the privilege under which she lived and a large part of that understanding came, surprisingly, from her mother. Denea not only didn’t shelter Kali from the harsh realities of poverty, at times she deliberately exposed her daughter to it. “Your father’s influence,” she would tell Kali many years later. “I wanted to raise you better than I was.”

What Kali saw in Niswan was a city like any other, except…there were no impoverished. There were poor, for sure, but she had yet to see what had been a common sight in every city of any size: the desperately poor, with no money and no prospects, surviving only at the generosity of others. There were no beggars, no homeless, no squatters and no squalor. When she broached the subject with her mother that evening, just as she was going to bed, Denea kissed her forehead and said, “You are an observant and clever young lady. And it is too late to talk about this tonight.”

Her father woke her very early the next morning, before dawn. “There is something I need to show you,” he said.

Two white horses were tied at the post in front of her grandparents’ home with reigns and saddles for riding, and Akmal helped her up onto the smaller one before untying them and mounting his. Once he was satisfied that Kali was ready, he said only, “Follow me,” and trotted off.

Akmal led her through the city as day broke. Whatever questions she had he was not ready to answer, and she eventually gave up on asking them and rode behind her father in silence. After nearly three quarters of an hour they had left the city proper, traveling along a small road on a grassy hillside overlooking the water. Down below, a rough path emerged from the brush and trees just above the shore, which it followed to austere wooden docks.

Akmal stopped, dismounted, and motioned for Kali to do the same. She eyed two  baqaara, ornately decorated as she had come to expect from Niswan (and in stark contrast to the docks where they were moored), sitting in the perfectly still water. Two men—a boat captain and a dockhand, Kali presumed—were preparing one of them for launch.

“Now, we sit and wait.”

In time, four hooded, cloaked figures emerged from the trees below, following the path to the docks. They approached the readied boat, greeted its captain, shed their cloaks and stepped aboard.

Kali gasped audibly.

“What happened to them?”

“This Kingdom was born from elemental magic 4,000 years ago, shaped by the will of the Maharajah Khiben-Sald. The magic of the genies still serves the rajahs today, alongside that of powerful sorcerors. This magic is responsible for the wonders around us, including the unnatural order you have seen in Niswan where even the lowest caste is provided for. But all these things…they come at a cost.”

The four figures took their seats, two choosing oar positions along with the captain.

Akmal continued, “All of this magic from hundreds of spells flows around us like the wind, and like the wind it is harmless…except on rare occasions when it is not, and causes these afflictions. This is the toll levied on a city created by, sustained by, and bathed in powerful magic from both our world and beyond.”

Kali watched in silence as the dockhand untied the baqaara’s mooring lines.

“If you are wealthy, or well connected, or simply have a large family of even modest means, you can pay to be cured. If you have none of these things…” He paused before continuing. “A lucky few are not severely stricken and may even recover in time. Most, however, are like this. They eventually become burdens on their families. When they have nowhere left to turn, they turn to the island of Gho Vella.”

The baqaara shoved off and its captain steered it away from the shore as the oars were lowered into the water.

“These men who ferry them. They do not ask for payment. No one knows why they choose to do this; if you ask them they will not say. We call them ‘The Curse Shepherds’.”

The boat picked up speed now, the captain and oarsmen rowing unsteadily at first but eventually smoothly and in concert. It was several minutes before Kali spoke.

“Why Gho Vella? What’s there?”

“I don’t know. Very few people do; I imagine that even fewer care.”

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