Bloodrose
12-23-09, 11:32 PM
Closed to Duffy Bracken and/or any of his alts.
The stretch of road in front of him was well beaten dirt - wide enough for a single cart to travel easily, but too narrow for two carts to pass each other comfortably. Travel south and the road eventual led a wandering soul to Underwood; the enclave at the center of Concordia forest. Travel north by north-east and the road emptied like a tributary into the larger, cobbled South Road that served as the main thoroughfare in these parts. Farmers, craftsmen, and laymen from the surrounding area were known to frequent this road, as it made traversing the rough country south of the Comb Mountains and north of Concordia much easier. In this sense - the fact that the locals relied heavily on it - the road was important. Unfortunately for those same locals, however, this nameless stretch of road wasn't so important that the Rangers paid much attention to patrolling it...
Teric poked at the smoldering embers of his small fire absently, his gaze lazily following the brown, hard packed surface of the road as it trailed off into the distance. There was a slight breeze, and it wafted wisps of grey smoke into the mercenary's eyes, and so the older man spent his time alternating between shielding his eyes from the smoke and shielding his eyes from the harsh noon-time sun overhead. Briefly, Teric contemplated shifting his position to the shade of one of the oak trees growing away from the road, but was forced to dismiss the notion for the third time since the sun had peaked out from behind the clouds. None of the trees were close enough to the road to offer a clear vantage point in both directions, and if the aging mercenary were to sit and relax in the shade on a day like today, odds were good that he would drift off to sleep.
Forgetting the orange, dying embers for a moment, Teric adjusted the black bandana tied over the lower half of his face. Since it covered his nose and mouth, the garment was stifling, and so the mercenary pulled the lower corner up out of the collar of his shirt so cooler air could waft up between the cloth and his chest. The relief was almost immediate, as that first breath of fresh air tasted of smoke and dry summer grass as opposed to sweat and damp, dirty bandana.
I suppose I could take this thing off. The veteran grumbled silently, his eyes again following the road to its vanishing point in either direction. With no one on the road, it didn't make much sense to be constantly wearing the thing, but a mercenary's luck dictated that as soon as he took it off, Teric would see someone approaching; meaning he would just have to put the bandana back on. And the reason that he was wearing the bandana in the first place, of course, was that Teric was keen on robbing anyone with the misfortune to travel this particular road today.
Three farmers and a logger heading south had already emptied their pockets at the mercenary's feet today, and if he was lucky, Teric would see more people as the day wore on. All and all his haul wasn't impressive (as one might have anticipated judging by his choice in prey), but the couple dozen Coronian marks, chincy bronze pocket watch, and steel hunting knife piled unceremoniously at the old man's feet were more than just loot to Teric; they were trophies of sorts.
Money wasn't the end game of today's criminal enterprise, as nearly any other road in Corone would have likely yield fatter, richer targets than the simple folk who lived in this area. The point of today's activities also wasn't to harm people for no reason, as Teric liked to think of himself as being above the maladjusted sort of individual who derived a sick sort of pleasure from randomly harming others. One might be forced to ask then, why would a veteran mercenary loiter on a long stretch of back road and rob people?
The answer, as it turned out, was simple vanity.
Imagine a lone dog picking needless fights with other dogs just to prove its own alpha status to itself, and you've just imagined Teric in this situation. Outwardly the mercenary was a stalwart rock of self-confidence, as one might expect to be if one is as strong and limber as Teric is at his age. Secretly, however, ever since his hair had started to grey, the veteran was nagged by this little voice in the back of his head that whispered dark things to him at night. The voice liked to tell him that younger people didn't take him seriously anymore - that despite his vastly superior physical abilities, the mercenary was somehow losing his edge...
Parting people with their worldly possessions through brute intimidation alone was Teric's way of getting that voice to shut up for a little while.
I knew it! The mercenary snorted as his gaze scanned the road yet again. As if summoned by his thought of taking off the bandana, the shadowy silhouette of a traveler in the distance had come into view. At this range it was too far to tell what sort of individual this was - be he farmer, laymen, or other - but Teric didn't really care in the least. Whoever it was, they were about to have a much less pleasant day than they'd probably woken up expecting, and the veteran wasn't going to waste any time lazing about for them to come to him.
Fire and weapons forgotten behind him, Teric strolled off down the road in the direction of the approaching traveler.
The stretch of road in front of him was well beaten dirt - wide enough for a single cart to travel easily, but too narrow for two carts to pass each other comfortably. Travel south and the road eventual led a wandering soul to Underwood; the enclave at the center of Concordia forest. Travel north by north-east and the road emptied like a tributary into the larger, cobbled South Road that served as the main thoroughfare in these parts. Farmers, craftsmen, and laymen from the surrounding area were known to frequent this road, as it made traversing the rough country south of the Comb Mountains and north of Concordia much easier. In this sense - the fact that the locals relied heavily on it - the road was important. Unfortunately for those same locals, however, this nameless stretch of road wasn't so important that the Rangers paid much attention to patrolling it...
Teric poked at the smoldering embers of his small fire absently, his gaze lazily following the brown, hard packed surface of the road as it trailed off into the distance. There was a slight breeze, and it wafted wisps of grey smoke into the mercenary's eyes, and so the older man spent his time alternating between shielding his eyes from the smoke and shielding his eyes from the harsh noon-time sun overhead. Briefly, Teric contemplated shifting his position to the shade of one of the oak trees growing away from the road, but was forced to dismiss the notion for the third time since the sun had peaked out from behind the clouds. None of the trees were close enough to the road to offer a clear vantage point in both directions, and if the aging mercenary were to sit and relax in the shade on a day like today, odds were good that he would drift off to sleep.
Forgetting the orange, dying embers for a moment, Teric adjusted the black bandana tied over the lower half of his face. Since it covered his nose and mouth, the garment was stifling, and so the mercenary pulled the lower corner up out of the collar of his shirt so cooler air could waft up between the cloth and his chest. The relief was almost immediate, as that first breath of fresh air tasted of smoke and dry summer grass as opposed to sweat and damp, dirty bandana.
I suppose I could take this thing off. The veteran grumbled silently, his eyes again following the road to its vanishing point in either direction. With no one on the road, it didn't make much sense to be constantly wearing the thing, but a mercenary's luck dictated that as soon as he took it off, Teric would see someone approaching; meaning he would just have to put the bandana back on. And the reason that he was wearing the bandana in the first place, of course, was that Teric was keen on robbing anyone with the misfortune to travel this particular road today.
Three farmers and a logger heading south had already emptied their pockets at the mercenary's feet today, and if he was lucky, Teric would see more people as the day wore on. All and all his haul wasn't impressive (as one might have anticipated judging by his choice in prey), but the couple dozen Coronian marks, chincy bronze pocket watch, and steel hunting knife piled unceremoniously at the old man's feet were more than just loot to Teric; they were trophies of sorts.
Money wasn't the end game of today's criminal enterprise, as nearly any other road in Corone would have likely yield fatter, richer targets than the simple folk who lived in this area. The point of today's activities also wasn't to harm people for no reason, as Teric liked to think of himself as being above the maladjusted sort of individual who derived a sick sort of pleasure from randomly harming others. One might be forced to ask then, why would a veteran mercenary loiter on a long stretch of back road and rob people?
The answer, as it turned out, was simple vanity.
Imagine a lone dog picking needless fights with other dogs just to prove its own alpha status to itself, and you've just imagined Teric in this situation. Outwardly the mercenary was a stalwart rock of self-confidence, as one might expect to be if one is as strong and limber as Teric is at his age. Secretly, however, ever since his hair had started to grey, the veteran was nagged by this little voice in the back of his head that whispered dark things to him at night. The voice liked to tell him that younger people didn't take him seriously anymore - that despite his vastly superior physical abilities, the mercenary was somehow losing his edge...
Parting people with their worldly possessions through brute intimidation alone was Teric's way of getting that voice to shut up for a little while.
I knew it! The mercenary snorted as his gaze scanned the road yet again. As if summoned by his thought of taking off the bandana, the shadowy silhouette of a traveler in the distance had come into view. At this range it was too far to tell what sort of individual this was - be he farmer, laymen, or other - but Teric didn't really care in the least. Whoever it was, they were about to have a much less pleasant day than they'd probably woken up expecting, and the veteran wasn't going to waste any time lazing about for them to come to him.
Fire and weapons forgotten behind him, Teric strolled off down the road in the direction of the approaching traveler.