Moderator: Raleigh
Lanzerus wrote:>_> god...You leave for like ever, come back with a kick-ass story...you sir, make me green with envy...
muffinstud wrote:[whips out an industrial sized blow-dryer and aims it at Uberlurker's ideas]
Melt! MELT ALREADY!
I'm very glad you decided to continue with the Walk in the Park story. I've been waiting to see where you want to take this for a very long time. I see that not only has the wait been worth it, but that I desperately need to see more of it. Oh, and I actually like the no dialogue. It makes for an interesting perspective in the narrative.
Experience
Danny had just landed a high paying job as the head of a small IT firm, much to his chagrin.
Oh, the benefits were all there – vacation time, health, dental, flexible hours, retirement options – the trouble was that the place was located in a small town in the middle of nowhere. The man who had started the firm was a local who built it up from the ground, he was retiring but insisted that the company stay local.
With only his parents for family (Both passed away in an accident a few years back), and no real friends to speak of, Danny was unattached enough to accept the position and make the move. Still, he missed the wonderful nightlife of the big city he had left behind.
At only twenty-eight years of age, you would be hard pressed to find someone a man so successful already. He was athletic and his body was in good shape, thanks to his love of slow steady exercise like biking or swimming combined with his healthy diet. Just above an even six feet in height, his hundred and eighty seven pounds were mostly loosely toned muscle. He had a warm friendly face, with a smattering of brown hair that showed no signs of thinning out into baldness and calming deep hazel eyes. His handsomeness was no small part of his charisma, and had helped him do well in the business world.
He was beginning to consider getting married and maybe having a family. Although certainly not arrogant, he knew he was quite the catch and shouldn't have much trouble. In a town as small as this, however, he also knew that there were hardly any single women around. He sighed....
After a week of settling in and getting to know everyone at the office, he soon found himself bored. On a whim, he looked online and tried to see if there was a group of people playing any roleplaying games in his area. He doubted it, but it was worth a shot.
Danny had played all sorts of RPGs and would jump at anything he saw – and strangely enough as luck would have it someone was trying to get a group together to play Dungeons & Dragons. He lived about four miles out of town, and his name was Steve. Danny quickly sent Steve an email indicating his interest, and Steve told him there had already been three other responses, and that they would start next week!
The other players turned out to be from other small towns a bit further away, and Steve was kind of in the middle of nowhere roughly in the middle of them all, so they agreed to meet there every week to play. They decided to play on Saturdays, every week.
In no time at all Danny couldn't wait for the appointed time, and he spent hours working on a character concept. He loved his current life – how couldn't he, with his success? However, roleplaying was a fascinating opportunity to step into another world so different than our own and live a whole new life. It was fulfilling on so many levels. Danny had experience playing all sorts of archetypes, as well as some unique and strange characters. He was looking for something he had never done before.
Finally, he came up with something he liked. He would play as Eorla, a beautiful young human maiden who served at the manor of a great lord. Her mother claimed that Eorla's great-grandfather had been an elf of high standing, and passed down many elven songs to Eorla when she was a babe in the cradle. At sixteen now, Eorla had the voice of an angel, and was shy, demure and obedient.
One day when she sang the young lord's heir to bed under the eye of the lady of the house, something terrible happened. By accident, the arcane power latent in her elven blood surfaced, and her spellcasting abilities manifested themselves. She infused an enchantment into her lullaby, and instantly sent the crying babe into a deep sleep. Though it was harmless, the lady was furious at her revealed ability. The lady feared Eorla could weave a beguiling net around her husband, or that she could gain some hold over the mind of her vulnerable son.
Eorla was immediately cast out of the household in disgrace, and she had no place to turn to (Her mother dead a few years ago and her father gone long since) she found herself alone on the street. Danny decided that while Eorla had no fighting experience, she would turn out to be a natural with both swords and the bow. She was an unlikely adventurer, to be sure, which is part of the reason Danny thought she would be great fun to play as.
The long wait finally ended, and Danny approached Steve's place, character sheet in hand and ready to play. He couldn't wait to become “Eorla, level one human bard”....
(To be continued)
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest