When Yashia awoke in the morning, she felt right away that something was amiss. The fair haired human woman sat up in her bed at the Sundren Comfort and looked around, observing the room that had been hers for some time now, and which was already lit by the symbol of one of her favored deities: the rising sun. The fire was out, all was quiet and the sheets on the other side of the bed had remained unstirred. She was alone.
With haste and with some degree of clumsiness caused by a half-sleeping stupor, Yashia prepared herself to set out and discover what was going on. This was the first night she had given him the keys to her room so he could go out and return to be with her when her eyes would open again, and the first morning he wasn't actually there. Having equipped her armor and gathered her things, she left the room and stormed down the stairs with a clear just rolled out of bed look still about her. At first she wanted to rush out of the inn's doors immediately, but then she stopped and turned around to face Ol' Betty.
"Betty?" she asked in a worried tone, rubbing the sleep out of one eye. "Have you seen the elf who usually comes in here with me enter the inn last night?"
Betty shook her head a little. "No, miss Yashia. I'm afraid I haven't."
The ranger bit her lip and took a deep breath, as if to prepare herself for the answer she would receive to her next question. "Has anything... significant happened in the time I was asleep?"
"Oh, why yes..." the old innkeeper replied with a firm nod. "Something terrible, actually..."
Ol' Betty explained to her what she had heard from Tamryn's testimony. The Necropolis, the undead, the battle... and most importantly: the abductions.
Her gut feelings had been right, something had indeed gone terribly wrong. He had gone with them and had suffered the same fate. Yashia needed no confirmation of her thoughts on what had transpired. She felt it. She knew.
"Not again?!" She thought to herself in an urge of desperation. "Again I set in motion the demise of one close to me... Is this my punishment for giving my heart away while it already belonged to another? Have the gods forsaken me? Why? ... Why will it never end?"
The fallen paladin was in as miserable a state as she had been right before she was enlightened by those of the Healing House of Lathander in Scornubel. Before she had become a holy warrior. Again, she wished for her life to be forfeit, for the pain to come to an end. She cringed, and shivered... and wanted to cry as she did all those years ago, when she was still a teenage girl.
But just before Old Betty could move in to comfort her, the shivering stopped. "No..."
Yashia rose up, conquering her grief and more than regaining her composure. Breathing slowly and controlled she sternly looked upon the innkeeper.
"A night darker than any has passed and the morning has come. It's light still shines dimly, but we must keep our faith so it will tower above and vanquish all the shadows that now still seem to hold sway over many of our hearts. There is still hope, and I will fight for it until my dying day. I shall not sleep until the darkness is undone. That is my promise, and it's a promise I will keep."
A silence fell in the lobby that was unusual even for this early hour of the day. Until it was broken by the divine champion who had just spoken herself.
"Thank you." she said to Betty with a slight, almost invisible nod. She smiled warmly at the old woman, who sighed in relief and returned the smile to her.
Yashia turned around and headed for the door as she had wanted to do in the first place, though now with an entirely different mindset. She smirked.
"I will be back when I find my key."
With haste and with some degree of clumsiness caused by a half-sleeping stupor, Yashia prepared herself to set out and discover what was going on. This was the first night she had given him the keys to her room so he could go out and return to be with her when her eyes would open again, and the first morning he wasn't actually there. Having equipped her armor and gathered her things, she left the room and stormed down the stairs with a clear just rolled out of bed look still about her. At first she wanted to rush out of the inn's doors immediately, but then she stopped and turned around to face Ol' Betty.
"Betty?" she asked in a worried tone, rubbing the sleep out of one eye. "Have you seen the elf who usually comes in here with me enter the inn last night?"
Betty shook her head a little. "No, miss Yashia. I'm afraid I haven't."
The ranger bit her lip and took a deep breath, as if to prepare herself for the answer she would receive to her next question. "Has anything... significant happened in the time I was asleep?"
"Oh, why yes..." the old innkeeper replied with a firm nod. "Something terrible, actually..."
Ol' Betty explained to her what she had heard from Tamryn's testimony. The Necropolis, the undead, the battle... and most importantly: the abductions.
Her gut feelings had been right, something had indeed gone terribly wrong. He had gone with them and had suffered the same fate. Yashia needed no confirmation of her thoughts on what had transpired. She felt it. She knew.
"Not again?!" She thought to herself in an urge of desperation. "Again I set in motion the demise of one close to me... Is this my punishment for giving my heart away while it already belonged to another? Have the gods forsaken me? Why? ... Why will it never end?"
The fallen paladin was in as miserable a state as she had been right before she was enlightened by those of the Healing House of Lathander in Scornubel. Before she had become a holy warrior. Again, she wished for her life to be forfeit, for the pain to come to an end. She cringed, and shivered... and wanted to cry as she did all those years ago, when she was still a teenage girl.
But just before Old Betty could move in to comfort her, the shivering stopped. "No..."
Yashia rose up, conquering her grief and more than regaining her composure. Breathing slowly and controlled she sternly looked upon the innkeeper.
"A night darker than any has passed and the morning has come. It's light still shines dimly, but we must keep our faith so it will tower above and vanquish all the shadows that now still seem to hold sway over many of our hearts. There is still hope, and I will fight for it until my dying day. I shall not sleep until the darkness is undone. That is my promise, and it's a promise I will keep."
A silence fell in the lobby that was unusual even for this early hour of the day. Until it was broken by the divine champion who had just spoken herself.
"Thank you." she said to Betty with a slight, almost invisible nod. She smiled warmly at the old woman, who sighed in relief and returned the smile to her.
Yashia turned around and headed for the door as she had wanted to do in the first place, though now with an entirely different mindset. She smirked.
"I will be back when I find my key."

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