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Character of the Season
Frail in body but dangerously quick of mind, Nikandr is the sort of character who proves that curiosity can be just as perilous as any weapon. A necromancer, inventor, and problem-solver with more ambition than self-preservation, Niki approaches the world like a puzzle box begging to be opened, even when what’s inside has teeth. Blunt, dry-witted, fiercely independent, and carrying a history best left partially buried, he has a knack for making even failure feel fascinating. Whether he’s raising the dead, moving across Caido to King's End, or experiencing a hangover for the first time, Nikandr brings a wonderfully strange spark to Caido, and we can’t wait to see what trouble his brilliant mind wanders into next.
Congratulations, Niki!
Credits
Court of the Fallen was created in October of 2018 by Odd, Honey, and Crooked.
OG Skinning provided by Kaons, with functionality and many custom plugins made by Neowulf!
I know it's been a long time coming I'm angry and I know that's weak
Damien rolled up his sleeves, gloved hands brushing against the edges of his shirt to shake off any lingering sawdust. He crouched beside Kaisel, eyes narrowing slightly at the mortar smeared along the brick edges, assessing the work with a practiced precision. “Alright,” he said, voice low but steady and unintentionally in unison with Kaisel's. He added, “We’ll get it done.”
He dipped a cloth into a bucket of warm water Noah had left nearby and pressed it gently against the rough patches, dragging along the edges to lift away the excess grout without smearing the carefully set bricks. Each swipe was measured, slow, methodical, matching the rhythm Kaisel had set with the mortar. Damien moved in sync with him, wiping a strip, pausing to glance at the alignment, then circling back to smooth over a stubborn smear.
“Careful there,” he murmured once, tilting the cloth at an angle to reach a corner Kaisel’s hand had missed. There was no teasing, no impatience—just the quiet attention of someone who understood the value of doing it right. Even the small, repetitive task became something deliberate, almost meditative.
When the last streak of grout had been lifted and the bricks gleamed against the warm glow of the cabin, Damien leaned back on his heels, flexing his fingers. He let himself take a small, approving nod at their combined work, then met Kaisel’s eye and gave the briefest of acknowledgments, a quiet camaraderie in the shared labor. “Looks solid,” his tone carried the weight of satisfaction without any fanfare. “We did good.”
Then, dipping the cloth once more, he began a final pass along the edges, leaving nothing undone, nothing sloppy—his way of saying, silently, that he had their back.
G r o u t
And I'm longing out that open window For whatever it is I seek
So when the heavy hand of death is here to take me away
I'll be the solid grip of time
Damien and Kaisel set to it together, their efforts falling into an easy rhythm. Where one steadied, the other followed through; where one paused, the other filled the space with purposeful movement. The work, which might have dragged with only a single, lonely set of hands working, moved smoothly instead between the two of them.
Stone by stone, seam by seam, the hearth regained its shape. The gaps closed, the foundation grew firm again, and it began to resemble something trustworthy as when it was first built. When the task was finished, Noah stepped forward. He crouched at the hearth, stacking kindling with practiced ease before striking flint to steel. Flame bloomed quickly, dancing along the dry wood, its warmth spreading into the cabin. The repaired fireplace breathed new life, glowing with firelight.
“Good work,” Noah said, watching the flames climb. “Drinks on me at the Kraai.”