What do you get when two ruthless assassins raise their daughter travelling through the wildest reaches of Caido? Take one look at Theea and you'll get a pretty good idea. Cheerful and tenacious in equal measure, and curious beyond all else, she began her journey on a mission to find those her mother once called family. And find them she did, soon rubbing elbows with demigods, leaders and even ghosts from the past. Her determination is resolute, her thirst for knowledge unmatched. We can't wait to see where her next adventure takes her!
Congratulations, Theea!
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!
Vervain had been warned, and she had heard the stories, and she still had questions. Was it bravery or foolishness that took her on quiet feet through the snowy dark? Only time would tell. The Glade's shrine appeared, eerie in the moonlight through a cover of skeletal branches. Vai approached carefully, her thick curls loose about her shoulders to keep her neck warm.
From the depths of her furs she withdrew a single white candle, leaning down to place it in the centre of the circle of stones. Lighting it was difficult with the weather, but Vai was able to stay the wind away from the little flame.
"Ludo," she said. "I would speak with you, please."
The wind whipped around her with a magical malfeasance the former air-elemental could likely sense. It snuffed out the candle and blew harshly against her skin, and then suddenly, it all stopped—
—the wind stilled, the area grew silent, and ... was the candle about to re-light?
Was that a scrap of fabric high above in the tree, about to filter down towards the huntress and—
Vervain was unsure whether nothing was a good thing or not. On the one hand, she left with as many answers as she had arrived with. On the other, based on what Remi had told her about Ludo, receiving nothing from it was the kindest gift of all. Still, Vai lingered for a few more minutes with the breeze drifting about her, standing in the moonlight of a blank candle.
Then, nodding as if to say she understood, she left the shrine with her head held high and her hands buried in her furs. The gods did not wish to receive her. It was frustrating that they continually interrupted her loved ones' lives, but when it came to herself, Vervain was happy with the arrangement.