Rabean Manyroff, the son of a human mother and half-elf father and eldest of five siblings, was raised in Chiry, a farming village a half-day's ride from the largest city in the province. The farming life was a simple one, but it suited Rabe and his family perfectly.
One day, Rabe was running errands in the city when a terrible storm swept in. Thunder rumbled, lightning cracked, and the streets became more and more dangerous as the winds picked up and began hurling debris. While running for cover, Rabe spotted a white-haired gentleman trapped beneath an overturned cart. As Rabe struggled to free the man, a pane from the window above shook loose and plunged to Earth right where they stood. Rabe raised his arm, hoping to shield them from the impact--but at the last second the window pane careened into the wall behind them and shattered. Rabe threw the cart aside, and the pair safely made it to shelter.
After the storm had passed, the gentleman--an Elf by the name of Kolm--insisted that he accompany Rabe to meet Rabe's family so that he might tell them in person of Rabe's heroism. Rabe was glad to oblige, but was flabbergasted--along with the rest of his family--when Kolm announced his intent to sponsor Rabe's tuition at an Arcane Academy. They survived the storm, he explained, not due to random fortune but to Rabe's spontaneous casting of a Shield spell, the first sign of a wellspring of magical aptitude. Kolm, as it turned out, was not only a wizard but an ambassador, and a wealthy one at that. Kolm explained that acting as Rabe's benefactor was an expression of not only gratitude, but his duty to foster the arcane arts wherever he could. He offered to act as Rabe's tutor one year, and pull whatever strings necessary to see Rabe enrolled in the finest magical institution on the continent. After a moment of stunned silence, Rabe and his parents accepted the offer with great joy.
* * *
Two years later, mere weeks before Rabe's first-year exams, he received a chilling letter: his parents had fallen ill, and would likely not live through the month. With hurried apologies to his professors, Rabe arranged for transport home as soon as he could--but it was too late. His mother had already passed, and his father was desperately clinging to life. That night was the saddest of Rabe's life, he and his oldest sister comforting their younger siblings, the five of them sobbing as their father's ragged breathing filled their tiny cottage.
* * *
Their father would eventually recover, but the illness would leave its mark: his lungs had been ravaged to the point where even a brisk walk would leave him breathless after mere minutes. With his father unable to mind the farm, Rabe had misgivings about returning to school, but his sister assured him that she and their siblings could take care of the homestead while he finished his degree. Against his better judgment, Rabe returned to school--and sure enough, several months later, he received a tear-stained letter from his sister: their property had been seized and their father thrown in debtor's prison. For the second time, Rabe abandoned his studies and returned home to find his family in a sorry state. He found his sister, now living with their siblings in a poorhouse, who explained that their father, despondent over the loss of his wife and his inability to work, took their savings and crawled into the bottom of a bottle. He was quickly unable to pay for his vice, and left his family homeless after their property was sold to pay his debts.
Desperate, Rabe wrote to Kolm, begging Kolm to take him and his siblings in. Kolm explained that he could not... but he knew of someone who could, a friend who had departed for the New World with the intent of starting a livestock business. Kolm assured the Manyroffs that if they could get passage there, Rabe and his siblings would be welcome hands for this venture and would gladly be given room and board in exchange for their assistance.
Upon arrival in the new world, however, this friend is nowhere to be found--and even more distressing, no one in town seems to have even heard of this purported entrepreneur. Thus far, the innkeeper of the Berda Trading Post has let them trade labor for a bed in the barn and whatever food can be spared, but her patience and larder are starting to run thin.
Rabe caught wind of an abandoned dungeon a few miles outside of town, a set out to explore it with the glimmer of hope that it might suffice as a temporary shelter--or that he might even chance upon enough forgotten supplies (or gold!) to fund an expedition to find Kolm's friend. But he was only a few steps inside when his exhaustion got the better of him and he tumbled into a pit trap laid long ago. He now sits on a cold stone floor, trapped within rusted iron bars and nursing a bruised behind.
Last edited June 12, 2017 2:01 am