The game
Mordecai Letto


Age: 16 | Height: 5"1 (~155cm) | Race: Accepted | Nationality: Natural | Citizenship: Stormbreak
Level: 0 - Strg: 8 - Dext: 18 - Endr: 8 - Luck: 1 - Int:
Played by: Malediction Offline
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Posts: 13 | Total: 15
MP: 0
#1
Mordecai Letto
The little pawn shop tucked away between two abandoned buildings looked like it hadn’t been cleaned since it had opened. The faded sign above the door hung askew and pointed away from the shop as if to warn passersby against entering.

Mordecai knew better. He entered the shop and knew exactly how far to push the door open before it would slam into a mountain of trinkets. The owner was neither a neat or pleasant man, greedy and bent over with age like a rusty nail pulled from a rotten board.

The little man leered at him from his seat behind the counter as if he had known all along that Mordecai would be entering at that precise moment. "Close the door, it's drafty," Calder grumbled before he refocused his attention on a brass watch he'd been examining with a magnifying glass.

Mordecai obeyed in silence. He didn't come to the shop often, but every time he did the interior was different. Where there had once been a pile of chairs, tables and other furniture now lay a smattering of broken toys and books with strange designs on them, and the time before that he remembered there had been a big, ornate chess board and bits of silverware.

"What have you got?" Calder groused. He never wasted time with pleasantries.

Mordecai approached the counter and laid out his latest catch on it. A silvery ring beset with a gemstone, a silk handkerchief in garish pink, a pale green crystal-like stone, a wooden toy, and finally, a golden bracelet delicate like its former owner.

The shine of gold had an immediate effect on the little man. His bushy eyebrows jumped up and Mordecai thought he detected a faint twitch on the corners of the man's mouth, as though he were trying to remember how to smile.

"Where'd you get that?"

Mordecai bobbed his shoulders with feigned innocence. "Found it."

"Found it! Heh!" the old merchant scoffed. "Sure you did you little crook," he shook his head in disapproval. As if he gave one hoot where the trinkets people brought him or what dead fingers they'd been pulled from.

Mordecai knew better than to argue. he simply crossed his arms over his chest and waited while Calder studied everything he'd brought in. It didn't take long for boredom to overtake him and his eyes to start wondering, and then his hands followed suit. Yet despite his old age, Calder's claw-like hand came down quick and vicious when Mordecai made the mistake of picking up one of the other trinkets on the counter.

"Keep those grubby paws of yours where I can see them," he sneered. "There's enough here for you to risk the drop."

Mordecai leaned lazily against the counter and puffed his cheeks. "You'd hang too, old man. So are you going to take it or no?"

Calder considered the options briefly before he swept the ring, the bracelet, and the green crystal aside. "I'll take those, the rest is worthless."

"You can keep the 'chief," Mordecai said as he held out one hand and stuffed the wooden toy back in his with the other pocket. "Pink seems like your kind of color."

Calder muttered something into his greasy beard, yet despite his grumblings he still handed over a handful of diamond-shaped silver pieces. There was no favor Mordecai could ask of and old, grumpy man and he'd found that silver traded more easily for the sorts of things he wanted to get.

"Always a pleasure doin' business with you old man," Mordecai smirked.

"Get the hell out before I change my mind."

Mere moments later Mordecai was out of the smelly, decrepit shop, his pocket heavy with the new silver and his mind racing with all the things he could trade it for. He had promised he'd be home within the hour, and although he knew he should, he found himself wandering the silk's streets with a skip in his step. With his hands stuffed firmly in his pockets, he stopped before one of the gambling houses and wondered if he might become a richer man still if father luck favored him today.
Mateo Taliesin
Botanist

Age: 23 | Height: 5'7 | Race: Accepted | Nationality: Natural | Citizenship: Stormbreak
Level: 5 - Strg: 18 - Dext: 25 - Endr: 18 - Luck: 17 - Int: 0
Played by: Honey Offline
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Posts: 802 | Total: 16,669
MP: 3081
#2
Mateo isn't lost, so much as he isn't looking where he's going. And he isn't not looking, so much as he can't actually see. The snow in the Silk Houses is more like grey slush, and the salt and grit and sawdust on the cobbles makes it less treacherous to walk than it otherwise might be, but all of that means nothing to a child holding an enormous, scarlet plant.

This, the florist who lives next door has told him, is a poinsettia. Blooming in Deepfrost and hardy enough to withstand the cold, it makes a perfect gift or otherwise serves to brighten a dismal space in the colder season. And Mateo hates it. He has never hated a plant before, given his obsession affinity for them. But this is stupid. What's even the point of it, other than to get in the way and look garish?

But he's promised he'll take one to the Collegium, and it's an excuse to study it before he's meant to go back to dRaGoOn tRaInInG, something which fills him with even less joy than the poinsettia. And so, bundled in a coat and scarf and with fingers going numb from grasping the flowerpot, he's none the wiser as he takes one wrong turn, and then another, and soon finds himself in the midst of the Silk Houses.

People naturally ebb and flow around him, not wanting a poinsettia thrust up at them at chin height (a natural aversion, Mateo would claim if he knew), but he's unintentionally hugging the walls and shop fronts. As he meanders past a gambling house, fate dictates a sudden meeting of boyish and mischievous minds, and he walks directly into Mordecai.


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