Characters Stories
Posted: Thu Dec 17, 2015 5:08 pm
Stirling wrote:Vhing awoke with a fitful jerk, the cold water shocking his face. An extra kick in the ribs from a deputies' hobnailed boot brought him to his senses soon enough.
"Okay rascal, the mayor put a call out for those with a degree of 'civic pride' and your green arse just fits the bill nicely. Your extortion racket was brought down but now you're going into the 'protection' business on this side of the law, or god help me, the sheriff will judge you down and you'll join the press-ganged labourers until the next blue moon. And with that lot boy, just don't drop the soap in the shower..." and with those words ringing in his ear and many other curses, Vhing was thrust out of the jail gates. A moment later, the door opened again and an arm threw a stained sooty cloak at him, along with a rather large chopping axe and a satchel of rusty tools and a leaking skin of wine. Fingers pointed up the road to a distant meeting point and then the gates shut. Vhing could hear from behind the gates, voices gambling on his return to the jail, surviving the Salts or just plain absconding altogether.
So much for loyalty, Vhing had been promised a 'bail' would be paid for him but it proved someone needed to be a scapegoat and who better than this skinny 'greenarse'. It had all started so well. He traced in the dust a silhouette of a bird with wings spread.
The 'Firebirds' were a' Flame Retardance' protection racket. Households and businesses bought a small raven which carried a numbered tag. In the event of a fire, the bird was released which flew back to the roost. Subsequently a cart was despatched with the 'Firebird' team who would go in and put the fire out, rescue damsels in distress and of course liberate a few extra 'gucci' items specifically targeted, from the property before it was burned to ashes in the ground. It was all a scam of course. But who would miss them when you're fleeing like a burning stick being snatched from the fire. That's what you pay the insurance for ain't it? That was until woefully that antique vase or gilded necklace pops up going cheap on the local bazaar and questions get begun to be asked.
As an half-orc, Vhing and his kin were still not widely accepted. Tolerated but not entertained. The racket seemed a good thing going for a while. Heroic ventures forth into the flame and out, clutching babes, pups and portraits, elevated him to a previous status in the community foreign to him. He had enjoyed all the 'fringe' benefits too. A nice uniform, the appreciative nodding of heads, the occasional twinkling of a maidens' eye. Ditched by the defunct racketeers, scorned by the folk, ignored by bro's, Vhing looked up the street and saw a chance to redeem himself. Vhing is kitted out in a soot covered, camel skin cloak. A fiery red bird is embroided within a white circle on the back. Some motto, mostly unstitched, hems the garment. His axe, useful for knocking down doors or hacking through walls is blunt but functional. His tools of the trade are basic, small hammer and pitons, penknife, crowbar, wire cutters and skeleton keys. In a hidden cleft of his boot heel , he has a meagre stash of copper pieces.
Vhing Cranepool, disgraced Half-Orc fireman, reports for duty, knocking hesitantly upon the administrators door...