Name: Marek Ovilion
Gender: Male
Race: Human
Age: 19
Profession: Artificer, Smith
Languages: Common & Infernal
Accent: A thick 'Southern States' accent...most times.
Physical Information
Height: 6'3"
Weight: 165
Body build: Skinny, and gaunt. Seemingly out of shape.
Skin type: Soft and smooth. A slight paleness to it.
Hair style: Shoulder length, appearing fine but disheveled most times.
Scars: None.
Tattoos: None.
Colouring:
- [b]Hair:[/b] Light brown. [b]Eyes:[/b] Jade. [b]Skin:[/b] Semi-pale. [/li]
Sunset. His eyes looked upward to the sky, seeing a purplish red hue lining the horizon. As he rubbed his head, he looked over to the hammer, and with the same diligence began hammering in the post. One after the other, he continued. He dug the holes, set the post, then pounded it in with his hammer. As the night darkness arrived in full, he spoke just a few simple words and his vision attuned.
A voice sounded from the small house, just a hundred paces away now from the young man.
"Marek! Get on in 'ere boy! It's too dark to be doin' that sorta work right now." the old man called from the doorway.
"I'll be jus' a few more 'ere pa. Don' worry none, I got it cinched up right good. Jus' got one more ta go." the young man replied.
The old man simply turned from the door, shaking his head. Marek found no fault in his hard work, he felt he owed it to his father and even should he have not felt so, there would be no food on the table if he didn't do the work himself. His father had grown old, well into his eighty first year. The oldest man in Featherdale it was rumored.
As Marek finished the last of the posts he brushed the dirt from his clothes and collected up his tools. In the distance, he heard a low bleating and turned toward the noise. It was so soft he couldn't place the sound. He faced the treeline now, listening more intently. Minutes passed then it came again. He walked slowly toward the sound, checking his pace, finding that his vision was attuned only to major shapes and even those appeared in a grayish blue haze.
Once more the painful cry could be heard. Marek followed it, easing his way over, a slight fear growing in his chest. As he got closer, he finally came across the macabre scene. Infused to the ground lay a large goat, half of its body missing. Its eyes were now visible to Marek as he inched closer. The goat looked to him with pleading eyes letting out a weak cry of pain. Marek dropped to the ground, unsure of what to do.
He just sat there, a small tear rolling down his face as he looked on to the goat. Each breath the animal took became more difficult and labored, until it finally with one last breath attempted to move and collapsed in a fit of spasms.
Marek, drunk with agony for the creature, dropped his head down to the ground. He interlocked his hands over the top of his head, his forearms wrapped about closing over his ears and sobbed into the earth. Long moans of agony that seemed endless.
