[Pathfinder][Worm] Rise of the Runelords

[X][Ally][Valeros]

[X][Class][Locker]

[X][Taylor][Rogue]

This'll be my vote. I do hope I'm not too late!
You weren't at the time, but voting is now closed. You did mess up slightly in the format. I assume that you means [Taylor][Locker] and [class][Rogue]. I will count those accordingly.
Adhoc vote count started by Stratagemini on Sep 25, 2020 at 8:04 AM, finished with 21 posts and 12 votes.
 
@Stratagemini
Something is wrong here.for some reason this tally is showing me as voting for post GM Taylor, Linzi, and druid. None of this is correct. Warlord Bard and Valeros are my picks. How did this happen? If others votes were messed with you might need to do a recount by post by hand.

Adhoc vote count started by Doccer on Sep 25, 2020 at 8:12 AM, finished with 25 posts and 12 votes.


Yeah this shows me in the correct place though it probably counts the votes after the cut off.
 
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I think there's something wrong with the tally. About four people voted warlord Taylor and one voted locker Taylor. And only about six voted Linzi.

Edit: First time Ninja'ed.
 
Okay, I counted the votes by hand:

[x][Taylor][Post-Gold Morning] 10
[x][Taylor][Just Stuffed in the Locker] 1
[x][Taylor][Warlord] 3

[X][Ally][Linzi] 6
[x][Ally][Valeros] 4
[X][Ally][Harrim] 2
[X][Ally][Laori] 1
[x][Ally][Jubilost] 1

[X][Class][Druid] 6
[X][Class][Kineticist] 3
[X][Class][Sorceror] 3
[X][Class][Bard] 1
[X][Class][Rogue] 1

The results were almost okay? But that Tally was... Not. I think we're going to have to Implement Plan voting going forward?

Anyway, Post-GM Taylor, with Linzi as an Ally, as a Rot-Warden Druid. I'll try and get the first story post up later today. The Opening of the Swallowtail festival! I should probably put together a stripped down sheet for Taylor as well. Stuff like HP aren't as important, but Stats and class abilities sure are.
 
Character Sheet(s)
The current Character Sheet will be visible. As Taylor Levels up Prior Sheets will be archived as Spoilers. Taylor's stats are not an optimal build, they are instead based off of her status at the end of Worm. Her Dex is lowered due to her One Arm. Her Charisma is raised due to her experience as a warlord. She has Diplomacy from her PR training, as well as training in both riding and flying from her use of Jetpacks and Atlas.

Name: Taylor Hebert
Class: Rot Warden Druid 1
Alignment: CN
Race: Human Medium Humanoid

Init +3; Senses Perception +0

DEFENSE
AC 9, touch 9, flat-footed 9 (-1 Dex)
HP 10 (1d8+2)
Fort +4, Ref -1, Will +5

OFFENSE
Speed 30 ft.
Melee Club +0 (1d6 x2)
Ranged Club -1 (1d6 x2, 10 ft.)

Druid Spells Prepared (CL 1st; concentration +4)
Orisons - 3 (Purify Food and Drink; Spark; Stabilize)
1st level - 2 (Goodberry; Summon Nature's Ally)

STATISTICS
Str 10, Dex 9, Con 14, Int 13, Wis 17, Cha 15
Base Atk +0; CMB +0; CMD 9

Feats: Improved initiative, Combat Casting

Skills (6/Level; Diplomacy, Fly, Handle Animal, Intimidate, Ride, Stealth; +2 to Survival and Know: Nature from Nature Sense (Ex))
Acrobatics -1, Appraise +1, Bluff +2, Climb +0, Craft +1 (untrained), Diplomacy +6, Disable Device [Untrained], Disguise +2, Escape Artist -1, Fly +3, Handle Animal +2, Heal +3, Intimidate +6, Knowledge [All Untrained], Linguistics [Untrained], Perception +3, Perform [Untrained], Profession [Untrained], Ride +3, Sense Motive +3, Sleight of Hand -1, Spellcraft [Untrained], Stealth +3, Survival +5, Swim +0, and Use Magic Device [Untrained].

Languages Common, Druidic, [An unselected Bonus language]

SQ One-Armed; Rest for the Wicked; Worldly; Nature bond [Giant Beetle] (Ex); nature sense (Ex); Vermin Empathy (Su)

Gear
Damaged Weaver Costume, Damaged Flight backpack, Undamaged Khepri mask, Ring of Sustenance (borrowed), Breastplate (cannot be used by Druids), Club. Shattered emerald on a silver ring, A small crystal vial holds a transparent liquid, Linzi says it's a potion that uses faint illusion magic.

Vermin Empathy (Su): A rot warden can improve the attitude of vermin as a normal druid can with animals. Vermin have a starting attitude of unfriendly. The rot warden can also improve the attitude of vermin swarms, but he takes a –4 penalty on the check unless the swarm consists of the same kind of vermin as his vermin companion or his current wild shape.

This replaces wild empathy.

Wild Empathy (Ex): A druid can improve the attitude of an animal. This ability functions just like a Diplomacy check made to improve the attitude of a person (see Using Skills). The druid rolls 1d20 and adds her druid level and her Charisma modifier to determine the wild empathy check result. The typical domestic animal has a starting attitude of indifferent, while wild animals are usually unfriendly.

To use wild empathy, the druid and the animal must be within 30 feet of one another under normal conditions. Generally, influencing an animal in this way takes 1 minute but, as with influencing people, it might take more or less time.

A druid can also use this ability to influence a magical beast with an Intelligence score of 1 or 2, but she takes a -4 penalty on the check.
Invoke Decay (Su): A rot warden can channel stored spell energy into specific spells he hasn't prepared ahead of time. He can "lose" a prepared spell in order to cast the following spells at the indicated levels: 1st—decompose corpse, 2nd—warp wood, 3rd—fungal infestation, 4th—explosion of rot, 5th—insect plague, 6th—swarm skin, 7th—creeping doom, 8th—horrid wilting, 9th—massacre.
Rest for the Wicked
Often forced to go without food or stimulation for days at a time, you have learned to use prolonged sleep as a means of escape and a way to heal your wounds. You heal temporary ability damage at a rate of 3 points per day of complete bed rest. A normal night of rest (8 hours) still heals you at a rate of only 1 point of temporary ability damage per night of rest.

Worldly
You have acquired an unusual breadth of life experience—more than others of your age, race, or culture. Once per day when attempting a skill check for a skill you're untrained in, you can roll twice and take the better result.
Vermin Companion: Hercules
Size: Small
Speed 20 ft.
fly 20 ft. (poor)
HP 15
Fort +4; Ref +4; Will +0
AC 18 (+1 Dex, +1 Size, +6 natural armor)
Attack +2 bite (1d6)
Ability Scores Str 13, Dex 12, Con 13, Int —, Wis 11, Cha 4
Skills: Fly +5; Perception +4
Feats: Intercept Blow
Tricks: Defend
SQ: Link; Share Spells; darkvision; CMD +8 vs. trip.
 
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Waking up
I looked up. My eyes were wet.

So many stars. The universe so vast.

We're s- so very small, in the end.

The first bullet hit me from behind, where my mask offered no coverage, and I slowly toppled. The second hit me before I could fall, before there could be any pain.

________

I never expected to wake up.

Even if I did wake up I expected to... I don't know, not be me anymore? I wasn't sure.

The waking world intruded on my rest slowly; in fits and spurts.

"... injury, but no idea what caused-"

Of course, I didn't realize that at the time.

I dreamed that I was dead; rotting.

It wasn't a bad dream. My mind sympathized with the bugs and the fungi and the bacteria. The insects that had been my agents for years now were no longer mine to control. I could feel them eating me, feasting on the arm that I had lost. My right arm. I was right-handed, wasn't I?

I remember thinking that that would have been hard to adjust to if I lived, so there was a bright side to dying.

"... can't ... her arm..."

"... head?"

It was a vivid dream. I died, I rotted, and was born again as new life from the rot and debris.

Green pulsed beneath me, embracing me as I became soil. I can't... quite remember what happened. It wasn't like a trigger vision, it was more like... Well? I'm not sure what to compare it to.

It was not entirely unlike the way that a fire can fill you with warmth on a cold winter day when you sit in front of it. But it was also not entirely unlike how a fire can fill you with warmth on a cold winter day when you sit inside of it.

Rotting wasn't a painless process, but it was an important one.

"... who she is?"

"... mystery. But isn't that fun?"

I couldn't feel my bugs. But in the same way, I could feel them. They were gone, but there was a sort of presence there, in my head, that reassured me of their presence.

All things died. Decay was a natural part of life. Hadn't Cauldron proved that in the fight against scion? That insects, for that's what we were to the thing that it was, could render down even a thing like Scion and make it useful.

My mind was making connections, seeing things from different angles as it... Well, I think I thought that my life was flashing before my eyes as I died? As much as I could consciously think, that was.

I called to one of the insects, a beetle. It stared at me and I stared at it, despite the fast that there really was no "I" anymore. I had died, and rotted and decomposed; but dreams make sense in the moment, so none of this occurred to me.

"... waking up."

"A Hero... when she's ready!"

I rotted once more, over and over, an endless cycle of death and rebirth from the soil, eaten by insects and fungi as my mind drifted aimlessly.

Until, suddenly, I didn't.

I opened my eyes and immediately regretted it. Red and gold light was playing across my face. I felt terrible. Everything hurt, and I was dressed in a itchy cloth with an equally itchy bandage around my forehead. My eyes felt like they were buried under an entire desert of sand and everything hurt. It hurt in a way I hadn't realized I could hurt for years.

I groaned.

That was a mistake that lead to an all new awareness of novel pains.

My throat was scratchy and dry, and my stomach was empty, and I felt like shit.

I groaned again, because apparently I hadn't learned my lesson yet.

The sound of leather soles slapping against a stone floor echoed through the... was I in a Cathedral? It certainly looked like one, but... The stained glass windows were filled with strange saints if I was. I wasn't catholic, but... I thought I'd remember a saint who had the head of a deer; or if an Angel had butterfly wings?

"You're awake!"

The man who arrived was dressed in blue robes, his hairline was receding, but well groomed, as was his beard and moustache. He looked like a priest, almost. But he lacked the collar, and he was dressed in blue, not black.

"Linzi will be pleased. She's been here every day since she found you. Thinks you're some epic hero from legend whose adventures she can write a book about. I've tried to dissuade her but... Well, you know how bards can be," he smiled, as if that was a perfectly normal sentence to have uttered.

'Bards' I mouthed, my throat too dry to speak properly.

"Oh! Right. You haven't had anything to drink for over a week, of course your throat is dry!" the man realized, as if that wasn't an equally bizarre sentence to have uttered. A week? A human couldn't live without water for a week! Then again, while a human could theoretically live through being shot in the head twice, that usually didn't happen either.

The man departed, the rhythm of his shoes against the stones of the cathedral telling Taylor he was hurrying.

When he returned, he had a bowl of water.

"Here, drink this," he offered, lowering it to Taylor's mouth so that she could sip it.

"My name is Father Zantus. I don't know yours, but that can wait until you've drank enough to sate your thirst. My ring kept you alive, but there's a world of difference between alive and properly fed and watered. Especially for someone recovering from the sort of wounds you sustained."

A ring? I looked down and there on the index finger of my left hand was a shiny gold band. I raised it to my face.

"A ring of Sustenance. It belongs to the church, we use it for patients who will not awaken to feed themselves, like you."

A tinker then, I thought, still drinking. And... medical care from a church for coma patients? This must be a more primitive Earth then.

I finished the water in the bowl. It had tasted clean and clear, though it was the same temperature as the surrounding air.

"Taylor Hebert," I introduced myself.

Father Zantus smiled. "I'm glad that you can speak. Head injuries are notoriously hard to heal, and even with Linzi's aid my magic was sorely taxed in helping you. Your arm was beyond either of our abilities to treat."

Magic? Well, parahuman powers probably would look like magic to a primitive society. Protesting would probably just start a fight, and there was no reason to upset the man who'd saved my life. So I let it be, for now.

"According to Linzi, you fell through a doorway in the air. Are you a wizard then?"

I blinked, uncertain how to respond. "Maybe? What's a wizard?"

"your memory must have suffered then," Zantus realized. "I'm sorry, I got ahead of myself when you remembered your name. Memory loss is sometimes a symptom of head injuries as severe as yours. Do you know where you are?"

"No," I replied.

"What year it is?"

"2013?" father Zantus looked at me in pity as if I were speaking nonsense.

"You're in the village of Sandpoint, in Varisia. The year is 4707 Absalom Reckoning," Father Zantus explained. This didn't bother me too much, I already knew I wasn't on an Earth that was anything like my own, that they had different nations and different calendars didn't bother me too much. Still... I wasn't sure how to deal with this. Father Zantus and my injuries had given me the perfect cover story for my ignorance, but it was just that, a cover story. Should I play along? Or tell the truth about my extra-dimensional origins?

[][Father Zantus][Play Along]
[][Father Zantus][Tell the truth]

_______

Ring of Sustenance gained. For now.

No need for discussion so Voting will start now and continue for ~10 hours, ending at 21:30 Eastern US Time, or 1:30 GMT.
 
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[X][Father Zantus][Play Along]

Gather information first. We don't know his trustworthiness, and we don't know a single thing about this world. Keep using amnesia as excuse for everything.
 
[X][Father Zantus][Play Along]

Lets find out what's going on around this place before we tell anyone anything.
 
[X][Father Zantus][Tell the truth]
It might be somewhat metagame, but Golarion has it's share of plane-hoppers, and I prefer honesty as a policy in this case.
 
[X][Father Zantus][Play Along]

its a little weird she didn't think at all about her current mental state vs what it was right before she was shot. and yeah play along i guess. it probably doesn't matter to much atm. we could also always tell the truth to Linzi later who's already predisposed towards liking us i suppose, or this guy when we're more sure of our situation
 
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[X][Father Zantus][Tell the truth]

I don't know anything about the setting but better to say the truth now and accept the head injury made her crazy than be caught in a lie later.
 
I'll abstain from voting for now - I'm not familiar enough with the setting to make a good decision.
 
[X][Father Zantus][Tell the truth]

Remember when Taylor was good at maintaining a cover?
Yeah, me neither.
Her successful people skills events have always been when she goes with brutal honesty
 
[X][Father Zantus][Tell the truth]

This is Post-GM. She may not have had time to truly gain her equilibrium, but I think at this point she is either too tired or just out of f*s to give. Trying to come up with a cover story, even if just playing along, is too much effort for multiple reasons.
Also, while not bad at bluffing per say, Taylor has never been good at lying. She is great at being intimidating though!
 
[X][Father Zantus][Tell the truth]
More fun with the truth, and Taylor always felt bad when she had to lie to people who were kind to her.
 
I'll abstain from voting for now - I'm not familiar enough with the setting to make a good decision.
You can ask, and I'll try to answer.

Basically, Golarion is a fantasy kitchen sink setting. Varisia specifically is an area which used to be an ancient empire ruled by seven Evil Wizards called Runelords. Sandpoint is your typical starting adventure town.
 
Adhoc vote count started by Stratagemini on Sep 25, 2020 at 9:55 PM, finished with 15 posts and 13 votes.


But it looks like Tell the Truth won! 9 to 4. not as nice as 9 to 5, but it should do.
Should we tell the mods that the tally vote thing is screwed up?
 
A Conversation About The Nature of Reality
"I haven't forgotten anything," I explained, and wasn't that an interesting fact. What kind of powers did they have here that could make sure that even memories stored in damaged grey matter were healed? "but where I came from, it was the year 2013, and while I'm not actually sure where I was before I was shot and tossed through a portal, I'm pretty sure it wasn't anywhere near Sandpoint. I don't think this is my Earth."

"My Earth," Father Zantus said as if tasting the phrase. "That's a fascinating way of saying it. Normally around here we say 'my land'."

I blinked. It took a second to understand how I'd been misunderstood. "We use 'my county,' but that's not what I meant. I meant that this planet wasn't the same dimensional equivalent of my planet, which is called Earth."

Now it was father Zantus' turn to blink. "Well now," he smiled. "You certainly are a traveler aren't you? What an auspicious omen right before the Swallowtail festival."

He seemed, pleased, and not at all befuddled.

"As a cleric of Desna, I have some experience in the knowledge of the spheres, be they planets or the outer planes. I can offer you some food while we try and pin where you from are down."

This was certainly not something I had expected to run into in a place as seemingly primitive as this. I looked at my fingers again, at the tiny ring that had kept me alive through my coma. Then again, any sufficiently advanced technology could look like magic. Wasn't that a Star Trek episode? Where they thought that they were visiting a primitive and superstitious society but actually they were so ridiculously advanced technologically that it looped all the way back around to looking like magic?

I nodded, and he offered his hand to help me up off the cot I was resting in.

His hand was rough. Calloused in a way that I wouldn't have expected in a priest. It reminded me more of the men that worked at the Dockworker's association. Father Zantus worked with his hands, but I couldn't tell how.

We walked out of what I was quickly coming to realize was whatever this world's equivalent of a novice's cell was, and I followed him, a bit unsteadily, down the hall into his office.

The office was covered in charts and maps. Each one was hand written, and each one preserved in a frame under a panel of remarkably clear glass.

Some maps were familiar enough; there was a map of the what sort of looked like Europe and Africa if you centered it on the Mediterranean, and squinted really hard. There was also a map of Sandpoint and the surrounding areas. A map of Varisia. Even an armillary sphere of a solar system; a device I only recognized because one of my mother's colleagues had one on his desk and explained to me what it was one time when I visited her at work.

But there were some maps that looked completely new; a map of a single city, set on a globe that seemed to be able to shift around as if driven by a complex clockwork mechanism; a painting of something called "the river of souls" that looked like it was half educational diagram, half LSD-induced fever dream; and a map of two spheres, set inside each other like a Russian nesting doll, but the inner sphere was layered like a gobstopper, and the outer sphere was something like a diagram of a hollow earth, with cities and natural features scattered across the inside.

It was this last map that Father Zantus took off the wall and placed before you, before heading off to start a fire in a small oven in the corner, so that he could put a small saucepan on, filling it with some water and salt.

"That needs to come to a boil before I add the oats," Father Zantus explained, returning. "This, is a map of the inner and outer spheres. I assume you're familiar with them?"

I shook my head. I was not, and pretending knowledge where I'd already committed to truth would have been counter productive.

Now shock colored Father Zantus' expression. "How? he shook his head interrupting himself. "Never mind. I suppose I can explain. The inner sphere is the realm of mortals, more or less. At the center is the positive energy plane, where souls are forged. Surrounding that is the material plane, and on the... opposite side of the Material plane, except also taking up the same conceptual space and simultaneously existing as its opposite is the Shadow plane, at the center of which is the negative energy plane, the source of all undead. By center, I mean that the material and shadow planes are wrapped around the positive and negative energy planes respectively. They aren't at the center of our universe. Probably?"

That only raised a lot more questions, and I was no longer certain whether I was getting a geography lesson or a religious one. Either way though, the information might end up important in the future, so I paid attention.

"Now, behind the material plane, in a direction that is simultaneously perpendicular and parallel to the shadow plane, which it is also touching, is the First world, The realm of the fey. They... aren't really part of the river of souls. Death doesn't quite... stick properly there. Well, at least not for its native inhabitants. For visitors it's still quite fatal. The fey don't seem to understand that of course, or perhaps they just don't care. Either way, the first world is mostly irrelevant, but I have included it for the purpose of completeness."

Father Zantus paused. "You have questions."

"You said visitors? People actually go to these other planes?" I asked.

"Quite often, and sometimes the denizens of other planes visit us here. Planar travel is not exactly commonplace; it takes high level magic, or access to... tears in reality. But it does happen."

Tears in reality. Lisa had created one of those. By itself it was on the way to revitalizing the economy of Brockton Bay. The fact that they were more common here made me wonder what the true military and economic power of this society really was.

"Any other questions?" Father Zantus asked.

"None quite yet," I replied.

"Now, surrounding the material plane, and the shadow plane, but not the first world, are the outer layers of the inner sphere. The elemental planes. In order, they are Air, Water, Earth, and Fire. They're sort of like layers of glaze on a pot, except that they're all equally easy to access from our material plane because the Ethereal plane connects them all to us, as well as to the Shadow Plane and the first world. It's a transitive plane, somewhat like the Astral plane which surrounds the inner sphere and allows transport to the planes of the outer sphere. The Ethereal plane connects the inner sphere together, like a needle stitching multiple layers of a garment together."

"So, there was the first world, then it was set aside and the material and shadow planes replaced it, and we're surrounded by the four elemental planes of elements and all connected by the ethereal plane?" I asked, trying to make sure to that i understood this correctly.

"Sort of. But yes. Close enough. Since I you're not an Outsider, you must be from the material plane," Zantus expressed in a way that yet again left only more questions.

"An outsider?" I asked. There had been a shift in tone on that word that indicated it was a term of art, not a general term for someone from far away.

"A denizen of another plane; like a fire elemental, or an angel, or a demon. Their bodies... are basically blends of souls and the quintessence of their native plane. Or perhaps their souls are the quintessence of their native plane? They're... a complicated issue, but to explain my point, there are certain spells which only work on humanoids. They do not function on outsiders. Since Linzi was forced to employ a scroll of one to get you here in time to save your life, and since the spell functioned as intended, we can therefore deduce that you are from the material plane."

None of this matched what I knew about... Planar cosmology? Was that the proper term?

"Are you sure this is correct?" Taylor asked. "It doesn't fit what I know about how all this works."

Father Zantus perked up at your response. "Really?" he asked. "Please then, tell me about your travels, and I'll try to figure out what's happening."

"So I come from a planet called Earth. Specifically Earth Bet. There are... probably millions? Of this planet all occupying the same space in different dimensions, all of them slightly different from each other. My Planet is... was called Earth Bet because another Earth contacted up a few decades ago."

"Another earth? Was it not another planet fixed in Desna's firmament?" he asked, motioning to the armillary sphere, a hint that was enough for me to understand that Desna's firmament probably meant outer space.

"No. The landmasses were all identical to our Earth's as of 3 or so years prior to the contact. after that.... There were some changes between our two worlds."

"Fascinating..." Father Zantus mused as he considered the problem. "A demi-plane maybe? Or, no. Wait, You said millions of earths? That's beyond any mortal wizard to create I think. A naturally-occurring phenomena that creates Demi-planes then. Did you ever leave the bounds of your world? Step on other planets?"

I blinked. That was.... not a question I expected from a society that believed in magic and did not seem to believe in electrical appliances.

"We landed some people on the moon, before the Simurgh came," I shivered involuntarily at the name. She had worked with us, at the end, but... Nothing would ever get me used to her.

"Your moon," Father Zantus chewed on his lip. "No, that might still be within the range... It might be different if you'd explored the entire solar system, certainly different if you'd gone beyond that, but a planet and its moon? that... should be possible?"

It was clear he was guessing, but it looked to be an educated guess.

"What do you think?" I asked.

"I think that you lived in a naturally occurring phenomenon that spawned off demiplanes of your world. It probably emulated the rest of the night sky for the material plane from the edge of the demiplane. you never would have known unless you traveled far enough to hit the edge."

Father Zantus paused.

"You might actually be from the actual Material plane itself, or you might be from one of the demiplanes. It would be hard to tell either way, but if you aren't from the material plane, and there are indeed millions of worlds, you might have trouble going back."

I winced. "Are you sure this isn't also an Earth?" I asked.

"How many planets were in your solar system? And how many of them were inhabited?" Father Zantus asked swiftly, fetching the Armillary sphere and handing it to me.

"Nine, and... none of them?" I replied.

"Then we cannot be the same planet." Father Zantus replied. "Akiton," he pointed to the fourth ring in the system, "is also inhabited. You can see it with a powerful enough telescope," he paused. "Actually, according to the teachings of Desna, all the planets in our solar system are inhabited, even the diaspora," at the last term, the pointed to the 6th ring of the armillary, which seemed to depict an asteroid field.

Father Zantus got up to add the oats to the boiling pot. "Feel free to acquaint yourself with any of the maps. I will say though that the map of Sandpoint is probably the most useful of my maps. "Once this finishes cooking, I'll have to leave you to your own devices. The Swallowtail festival is tomorrow, and I have preparations to make. Linzi should be here shortly. I'm sure she'd be happy to accompany you to anywhere in Sandpoint if you tell her a bit about your travels so far."

With that, the conversation devolved into silence as I studied Father Zantus' maps. By the time Linzi arrived I had planned out my day.

I was going to visit:

(Pick 1 Only)
[][Junk Beach]
-Linzi Explains that the local dung sweeper regularly tosses Junk off the cliff and onto to Junk beach, bits of scraps, lightly used tools and weapons, and perhaps the occasional treasure could be found there, but most likely what you'll find is a bunch of broken crap. of course, all it takes to comb through the beach is time; and if you don't take the junk, the ocean will.
[][The Garrison]
-Linzi explains that the garrison is the headquarters of the town's militia, but also its sheriff, Belor Hemlock. Maybe it would be useful to introduce yourself to local law enforcement?
[][Town hall]
-The mayor, Kendra Deverin can usually be found here. Maybe she can give you an overview of the town? or maybe a task to earn some money? Or maybe she's just too busy.
[][The house of Blue Stones]
-A monastery dedicated to Irori, the ascended god of self-perfection. Linzi explains that the place also has a library. It's open to all worshipers of Irori, but unless you are one, and you aren't; you'll probably need to turn on the charm to let her let you in. Still, by all accounts the library is well stocked with knowledge of both history, and the planes.
[][Vernah's Fine Clothing]
-Your clothing is itchy, and as a tailor, Linzi explains, maybe you can help out there in order to get some new clothing? You are a tailor, aren't you?
[][The Hagfish]
-A pub. For just 1 silver, you can try and drink an entire tankard of "water" from the hagfish's tank. If you win, you'll be able to carve your name in the beam behind the bar! Linzi excitedly explains. She also happens to mention that winners will get to keep the pouch that contains all the prior entry fees since the last winner. Linzi can spot you up to three silver, but you'll have to pay her back once you win! The fact that you could lose never seems to enter her head.

Voting will last 12 hours, until Noon (eastern US Time) tomorrow.
 
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