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Floridaman wrote:
I would love a backstory for a retired leonin lycanthrope hunter who lost his arm in a past battle with a werewolf. he was also raised by dwarves. he is a artificer fighter.
I enjoyed writing this. This might even be the first Leonin character I've written.
I enjoy setting up NPCs for a Dungeon Master to use... so I set up a villain...
As well as two friendly NPCs.
I'd love to hear ANY feedback - what you liked, disliked, whatever! Let me know!
It helps me and keeps the thread alive.
Enjoy!
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Floridaman wrote:
I would love a backstory for a retired Leonin lycanthrope hunter who lost his arm in a past battle with a werewolf. He was also raised by dwarves. He is a artificer fighter.
These golden plains have been the home to my people for centuries. Few travel into the plains due to the numerous hunters that have made their home here – dominated by my people, and our lion cousins, few enter without immediately being noticed.
We have protected our lands from the likes of goblins to ogres, to even giants; but there is one thing we have always struggled against; humans. Not because humans are stronger – no one is stronger than my kind – but because humans and their cities bring disease.
Among the diseases that first ran rampant in a nearby human city, just beyond the border of the plains, was lycanthropy in the form of wererats. Fitting that the disease would spread quickly among humans, whom my people often consider rats themselves.
However, the day would come where the disease of Lycanthropy began to infect humans in the form of creating werewolves. These werewolves were far more brazen than the wererat infected, and often joined packs of other wolves, including dire wolves that lived outside the borders of the golden plains. Influenced by the human werewolves, these combined packs began to hunt in our plains and killing out game. Each time they went deeper and deeper into our plains, coming closer and closer to our Pride.
When the news came that the pack of wolves had dared to attack one of our Gathers, I knew that they would not stop unless they were taught a lesson – a very fatal lesson. They needed to be put down and extinguished like the disease they were.
Council was held by the Pride and a “task force of Lycanthropy Hunters” was assigned. I was one of the Pride members assigned to the task.
We’d been out hunting the wolf-kin, following their tracks. We found several kills, where they’d killed our game for the sake of killing and moved on. They were taunting us. Each senseless kill only fueled the fire and anger. In our haste, driven by fury, we’d followed the tracks directly into a trap, near the base of the Black Iron Mountains. They emerged from the brush and stone at a higher position than us. One of the bastard human werewolves briefly took human form and laughed. His black hair and ice blue eyes had been the same color as his wolf form. “Today,” he smiled, as he slowly changed back to his hybrid form, “you will die at the hands of Elias Solemane and his pack!”
We found ourselves attacked by dire wolves while the werewolves maintained their distance attacking with thrown spears and bows and arrows – forcing us to try and move up the jagged stone face to reach them. I was one of the last to survive from my Hunters – two dire wolves had pinned me down, while the others of my Hunter Pride were being slain. The human, Elias Solemane came down to stare at me. “You failed and we will litter your corpses for your other Pride members to find. These lands are ours now.” He turned around and I heard him say, “Rend him limb from limb,” and the last thing I felt was a searing pain in my arms as the dire wolves tore away at my flesh. The pain was so intense I lost consciousness – I thought I died.
I woke up in pain – and a thundering sound in my head. The thundering sound had come not from myself – however the noise around me. I looked around, saw I was laying in a bed I did not recognize – one that I was clearly too large for.
“By all rights, you should be dead,” came a gruff, female’s voice.
When I turned my head – every nerve in my body ignited and I couldn’t help but cry out in pain.
“You have extensive nerve damage,” the female voice said, then stepped into the flickering light; a female dwarf. “Name’s Abighal Greystone and you’re quite fortunate that I had stepped out to gather plants and herbs needed for some of my potions. It’s the only reason I even saw you. Otherwise you would have bled to death, having lost your left arm as you did.”
I glanced down at my left arm – she had to be wrong – I could feel it. But, no – it was truly gone.
“Looks as if some animal ripped it right off you,” she said, placing the small vail in her hands and unwrapping the bandage. “But it looks like my potions have stopped the infection as well as the bleeding. You were very touch and go there for a few weeks.”
“Weeks?” I blurted out, loudly.
“Weeks,” she nodded. “If it wasn’t for some of my potions, you would have withered away. But you were barely conscious enough to understand you had to drink what I was giving you. Couldn’t give you solid food for fear you’d lapse into unconsciousness again and choke. And cleaning up after you, well, that’s not been my favorite thing to do.”
As she resealed the bandage, she said, “As for the arm… Well, ol’ Sverin Firestar believes he can create an artificial one. He’s … what does he call himself… an artificer… while most of my kind simply create weapons and armor out of beautiful steel… he seems a little more eccentric in the things he creates.”
I’d spent almost two years with the dwarves – primarily staying with Abighal and learning from Sverin. I had not stayed two years because I’d wanted to – but it took that long for my body to truly recover. I could only walk small distances, do small things before then. The effort of getting off the bed to cross the room and open the door felt like running across the plains for hours – my chest would burn, my legs would quake, my strength felt drained of me.
But finally after two years, I was able to move about normally thanks to the care Abighal had given me and I had learned much from Svrein.
Now I would find Elias Soleman and hunt him and his kind down for the rest of my days.
Captainkorv wrote:
Race: Shadar-kai
Name: Brykten ShadowShield
Class: 3 Paladin Vengeance
Background: Knight of the order
Hair: black Skin: ashen grey Eyes: Grey
Proficiencies: Lute, History, Persuasion, insight, intimidation, and perception
Languages: Common Dwarvish Elvish
Rough idea:
Brykten is an old retired werewolf hunter of the order of the Moonwatch. his family was killed when he was a boy and he was told to run to a nearby dwarvish mountain he was raised like a son by the king and eventually became a werewolf hunter, he was one of the best werewolf hunters but in the last 6 years of his career he lost his arm in a fight to a werewolf. he then opened up a blacksmithing shop but it has fallen on rough times.
Crazy, as the person right before you also wanted a Werewolf Hunter that had lost their arm.
As a result, I am going to loosely tie these two origins together.
After writing this, I fell in love with the NPC I created (for both) named Abighal Greystone and made a note to include her as an NPC in one of the games I run! LOL
I would love to hear what you think - it's slightly different that what you'd mentioned for a rough idea (but took the same concept - family killed - you become a werewolf hunter)...
Tell me what you liked, or disliked, or whatever!
It all helps me - and it also keeps the thread bumped and alive!
As always - Enjoy!
Because Abighal Greystone said to enjoy it. lol
===
My name is Brykten ShadowShield and I am a part of the Shadar-kai. Like the rest of my kind, I was born in the Shadowfell, my lineage drawn there long ago by the Raven Queen. Many of my people still serve the Raven Queen, but I had a new mission – and in order to complete it, I had to go to the Prime Material Plane – there was someone I wanted to find there. Someone I had very personal business with.
Upon my arrival onto the Prime Material Plane, I was thrust through the portal like discarded waste and immediately, I realized how similar the Prime Material Plane was to the Shadow Realm – but my eyes, my body – I never truly got used to the rising sun. I found its light irritating at best.
I found a deep cave at the base of the Black Iron Mountain, as they called it. Golden plains bordered the southern half of Black Iron Mountain – and in those plains I’d seen creatures like I never imagined possible – tall, towering humanoids that resembled lions – known as the Leonin. During the night, I would hunt near the plains, killing and eating the likes of deer and elk. During the day, I would go as far back as I could in the cave and avoid the sunlight.
While I’d been sleeping during the day, at the back of the cave, I heard a grinding sound and quickly awoke to see a panel of stone moving and a female dwarf exiting, closing it behind her, and heading out into the world beyond the cave. She returned several hours later smelling of various plants and herbs and I could see she had a basket where she’d gather numerous floral. Because of the ashen grey skin, I had blended well with the stone and effortlessly followed her when she reopened the passage and closed it behind her.
I followed her for almost an hour, descending deeper and deeper into the mountains – until a large, dwarvish city lay before me – massive forges burning, lava rivers, and the constant hammering of anvil and stone.
“You might as well come out of hiding,” the dwarf woman said, without turning to face me. “You may be an elf of some kind, but here in the land of stone, not even your kind can hide. Our eyes know the difference between flesh and stone.”
She finally turned to look directly at me, though I was still deep in the shadows. “I was curious why you were in the cave and why you followed me. I was ready for you to attack me if you were some kind of Drow elf.” She held a small dagger just under her palm, barely visible, except for the glint of steel against the lava rivers. “I know the Drow love their poison. Well, making poisons, herbs and potions is my specialty. You would have had maybe three seconds to realize you’d been cut before your entire body seized up.” She put the dagger away. “But clearly you’re no Drow – and you’re young – even for an Elf.” She extended her hand, “My name is Abighal Greystone.”
Her confidence and self-assurance was … overwhelming. The demeanor in which she spoke, stood, and carried herself – I could almost believe she could single-handedly kill the Raven Queen if she so desired.
I stepped out of the shadows and introduced myself, “My name is Brykten ShadowShield. I am new to this area.”
“First time you’ve been down here,” she shrugged, pointing out the flaw in my statement.
“Here as in the Prime Material Plane,” I corrected.
“You’re one of them fancy wizard-types then?” She looked me over; her eyes seem to be piercing me somehow. “But you’re like no wizard I’ve seen. You’re carrying things wizard don’t carry. The armor is clunky – bares some odd symbol – tells me you’re a Paladin. The crest on your chest is whatever deity it is your follow.”
“The Raven Queen,” I replied.
“Sure,” she shrugged, disinterested. “So, who or what are you looking for and why are you trying to sneak into our Dwarven home?”
“I wasn’t trying to sneak into your Dwarven home,” I replied.
“Sure seemed like it, sticking to the darkness, never once shouting out a greeting to me as you followed me,” she countered.
“I am just trying to learn about the Prime Material Plane,” I confessed.
“Sneaking around like a blasted thief is no way to do that,” she barked. “A proper hello, greeting and introducing yourself is going to get you better results.”
“Where I come from, trust is hard to come by,” I replied.
“Well if all you do is sneak around, it’s no wonder,” she shrugged. “So what is it you’re doing here?”
“I am looking for a human,” I explained.
“The world is full of them,” she snorted, “too many, I dare say. But you won’t find any of them down here. Very few humans live beneath the mountains. They mostly live on the surface world.”
“Then I suppose you do not know Elias Solemane?” I asked. This was perhaps the first – and only time – I’d even seen a chink in the invisible armor Abighal Greystone’s wore around her confidence.
She stared at me – glaring intensely into my eyes. “What business do you have with Elias Solemane?” she asked her voice cold.
“He had entered the Plane of Shadow – the Shadowfell – and gained a dark promise with someone in the Plane of Shadow. He only had one thing to do to get this power – attack the people of Kallen Dahl and murder them,” I explained. She looked at me, waiting for me to explain further. “Kallen Dahl was the name of my village. Elias Soleman and his brigands ran through and murdered my people – my parents, my siblings, all of them – while they slept. I was only ‘spared’ because in their attack, the wall of my home collapsed on me and they never saw me. Now I’ve sworn to the Raven Queen that I would get revenge for her and for my family and find this Elias Soleman and kill him.”
She spun on her heel and barked, “Follow me,” and did not even wait or turn to see if I had. As she quickly walked, fuming as much as the furnaces of this Dwaven City, she said – again, never looking back to see if I was even behind her, “Forget your quest, Elf.”
“I cannot,” I responded. “I am the weapon of vengeance for my Raven Queen.”
“Then your Raven Queen is sending you to your death,” Abighal Greystone’s tone was matter-of-fact. “Let me guess – this ‘dark gift’ – is it lycanthropy?”
“Yes,” I replied. “Then you do know him. I saw your expression…”
“I don’t know him,” she cut me off. “I know of him.” As I followed her through the Dwarven City, I saw many pause to look at me – no one stopped me or questioned me – and almost seemed as if it was because I was with Abighal Greystone, this was perhaps normal for her to be bringing in unusual guests.
When we reached her home, she bid me come in and slammed the door behind me. She looked at me sternly – the way a mother would her own child that she was about to scold. “Elias formed a pack – other infected humans like himself – perhaps the same brigands who attacked your town – but he’s also joined with Dire Wolves. He terrorized the southern plains on the surface world, killing for the sheer pleasure of killing. He is brutal in his methods – sometimes leaving victims to die slowly rather than kill them outright – as a matter of fact; rendering arm from limb seemed to be his preference rather than outright killing his victims. I treated a Leonin about sixteen years ago who had been attacked by Elias and his pack. My understanding is Elias has moved on to other areas – but leaves a pack behind, infected humans and dire wolves, as his thugs.”
“I will start there then,” I bowed. I looked around. “Could you kindly escort me back out?”
The entire time Abighal Greystone tried to convince me to turn away from my mission, that it would cost me my life. For the next two years, I lived among the dwarves – hiding from the sun, and at night venturing out – and listening to the howl of the wolves. I began to slaughter any wolf I came across – whether wolf, dire wolf, or werewolf. The werewolves were all a part of Elias Soleman’s pack – he’d spread the infection of lycanthropy far and wide bestowing his “dark gift” to others who had hearts as black as the Shadowfell. I went to great lengths to extract information – a path I never saw myself going down; a dark path that there seemed to be no turning back from.
Each time I came back to the dwelling of Abighal Greystone during the day, she shook her head and said something about the ‘darkness in you growing – soon your heart will be as black as Elias himself.’
One fateful night, while killing wolves, I heard a howl – followed by another, then another, then another – these howls were wolves – but much darker, deeper. Before I had finished the fight with the wolves I’d been slaughtering, I found myself surrounded by wolves – larger than any dire wolf I’d seen. One of them changed his form – and my mind flashed. It was Elias Soleman.
“You’ve been killing members of my pack,” he said. “I don’t know why. I don’t care why. I am just here to see it stopped. You know what to do boys.”
And before I could do anything, the werewolves leaped on me, their fangs tearing into my flesh.
I heard Elias say, “Rend.”
And then I felt my arm ripped for my socket.
I screamed in horror and pain.
Elias came to stand over me. “If you don’t find help soon, boy, you will bleed out. Go on, run to where ever you go at night. My boys will have your scent and murder anyone who has been helping you.”
I laid there, ready to die, rather than lead Elias’ men back to Abighal Greystone and the Dwarves. For hours, I did not move, feeling life ebbing from me as I bled out. In the morning, vultures from the golden plains circled above me.
Then I heard, “I told you this would happen.” It was a voice I knew. Abighal Greystone. Had I already died?
“Found your blasted dying corpse on the field thanks to the vultures circling your arrogant hide,” she forced me to sit up and bite on some kind of root. I looked around me and saw six dead werewolves. I looked at her and saw she was covered in blood – but there were hardly any wounds on her.
I spit out the root. “You killed them?” I looked around again.
“It wasn’t easy with you going in and out of consciousness like you were,” she confessed.
“You killed six werewolves, alone?” I spurted, even though I could barely feel anything but pain through every inch of my body. “Who are you?”
She stopped, looked at me and shook her head, “Someone who doesn’t like to get involved.” She shoved the root back in my mouth. “Now suck the damn juices of the root. It’s going to make you dizzy, but it’s also going to stop your nerve endings from feeling like they’re on fire so you can get up and walk, you blasted elf.”
It took a year to recover; in that time, I worked with a good friend of Abighal Greystone – a fellow dwarf name Sverin Firestar. He worked a forge – like other dwarves – but he often created unusual items, the likes of which I’d never seen. With my arm torn from my body, I felt that my days hunting down Elias Solemane were over and I found a new place among the dwarves. Though Abighal Greystone was not royalty of any kind, when she spoke on my behalf, even the King of the Dwarves bowed to her words. She was a remarkable woman, and though I had failed at killing Elias, perhaps there was a reason for all of this to happen as it did…