Aug 30, 2023 12:02 pm
"It was an accident," Lissar said, shrugging.
Her companion looked at her skeptically. "You were raised into undeath, by Sylvanas Windrunner, the Banshee Queen, accidentally?"
"Sure. I mean, no one’s perfect." Lissar took a bite out of a shiny red apple and chewed meditatively, enjoying the flavor. Falvinor looked like he wanted to comment but didn’t have the energy. As if reading his mind, she spit the bite out over the side of the ship, then smiled and winked: silly death knight, food is for the living.
"She wanted my mother," she went on, sobering a little. "My mother was a respected ranger, you know. She’d served with Lad—Syl--, um … her." Lissar stumbled over what to call Sylvanas Windrunner, who she had quite a few pleasant, if not outright happy memories, of. She’d also jumped the shark so hard that she ended up in the Maelstrom, so there was that.
She took another bite and continued: "Anyway, my mother never came home from the war. At all." A polite euphemism for I’m pretty sure she was either turned into a mindless zombie or she got eaten for Falvinor’s benefit. He had issues with undeath.
"So the family plot stood empty, until I had the bad luck to die from … " she paused dramatically, narrowing her eyes to gauge his interest. Unable to tell, she went on: "… a summer cold!"
"Seriously?"
"No, I drowned in a lake. I’m not a very good swimmer." Fal looked skeptical. He often looked skeptical, but most people either looked skeptical or downright befuddled in dealings with Lissar, who was both an atypical dark ranger in skill set and personality. Still, they had travelled enough together that he’d seen her swim. Lissar nodded encouragingly then shook her head. And nodded once more. Grinning, she went on before how she died could ever be truly ascertained.
"I share my name with my mother. When the Banshee Queen went to the crypt, she found the correct name and thinking my corpse was my mother’s, she raised me instead!" Lissar laughed, because she frankly found the story quite funny. She couldn’t share it with most people, because outside of Forsaken, most people found it horrifying rather than humorous. Lissar suspected that Falvinor actually fell into the latter camp, but she had spent a lot of time trying to help Fal come to terms with his own undeath. She hoped that he would both appreciate the story for its absurdity and also be pleased that they were close enough friends to share such personal stories.
Her companion looked at her skeptically. "You were raised into undeath, by Sylvanas Windrunner, the Banshee Queen, accidentally?"
"Sure. I mean, no one’s perfect." Lissar took a bite out of a shiny red apple and chewed meditatively, enjoying the flavor. Falvinor looked like he wanted to comment but didn’t have the energy. As if reading his mind, she spit the bite out over the side of the ship, then smiled and winked: silly death knight, food is for the living.
"She wanted my mother," she went on, sobering a little. "My mother was a respected ranger, you know. She’d served with Lad—Syl--, um … her." Lissar stumbled over what to call Sylvanas Windrunner, who she had quite a few pleasant, if not outright happy memories, of. She’d also jumped the shark so hard that she ended up in the Maelstrom, so there was that.
She took another bite and continued: "Anyway, my mother never came home from the war. At all." A polite euphemism for I’m pretty sure she was either turned into a mindless zombie or she got eaten for Falvinor’s benefit. He had issues with undeath.
"So the family plot stood empty, until I had the bad luck to die from … " she paused dramatically, narrowing her eyes to gauge his interest. Unable to tell, she went on: "… a summer cold!"
"Seriously?"
"No, I drowned in a lake. I’m not a very good swimmer." Fal looked skeptical. He often looked skeptical, but most people either looked skeptical or downright befuddled in dealings with Lissar, who was both an atypical dark ranger in skill set and personality. Still, they had travelled enough together that he’d seen her swim. Lissar nodded encouragingly then shook her head. And nodded once more. Grinning, she went on before how she died could ever be truly ascertained.
"I share my name with my mother. When the Banshee Queen went to the crypt, she found the correct name and thinking my corpse was my mother’s, she raised me instead!" Lissar laughed, because she frankly found the story quite funny. She couldn’t share it with most people, because outside of Forsaken, most people found it horrifying rather than humorous. Lissar suspected that Falvinor actually fell into the latter camp, but she had spent a lot of time trying to help Fal come to terms with his own undeath. She hoped that he would both appreciate the story for its absurdity and also be pleased that they were close enough friends to share such personal stories.