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!
"No, we really don't." Sam said with a sad chuckle, though he didn't think he could ever be close enough to Evie to call her 'my Evie'. Even if they spent years together, he thought the phrase would sit uncomfortably in his mouth; perhaps though that was because he could not think of her without thinking of the hundreds of barbs and insults that had passed between them in the years, the endless contest of favouritism that she always won.
Jigano's musings on being a bard were a sort of miserable beautiful, and Sam listened quietly, pressing his lips together and absentmindedly watching Mia and Isuma play. It had to be sad for Jigano, didn't it? To be so cut off?
"Oh. I suppose I can understand that...is that...is that why you never told me.." Sam sighed and shook his head. "No, never mind. I shouldn't pry too much. I'm trying to improve myself." With a new resolve he looked back up to Jigano and changed the topic. "Did you have things like marriage in your world? Not that I'm suggesting you and Rory will, at least not so soon, but I am curious...sometimes there are more differences than similarities between Outlander worlds and Caido, but sometimes I find myself surprised at how alike they are."
Samuel
He took a step but then felt tired
He said, I'll rest a little while
But when he tried to walk again
He wasn't a child