The Heir wasn’t discriminatory when it came to recruiting help.
News had come to him in a flier, detailing a job that was equal parts repossession and extermination on a far off property, a skilled craft wasn’t necessary, but it had specified that survival and self-preservation was vital. Also that the carriage ride was free of charge.
News had come to him when he took to sleeping under a bridge, clearly he didn’t have anything to lose...That was months ago, how foolish of him to assume that. The job pushed his physical and mental capabilities to their absolute limits, as brigands and demons alike found it fit to assault both. His... condition made him tougher than most, but he liked to attribute a fair amount of his survival to how quickly he learned. They held no official rank here, so far removed from the pecking orders of society whose only purpose served individuals who relished in holding authority over others. They were all subservient to the Heir, each with their own talents to share.
Still, when they took to declaring him Master Abomination, he figured his experience thus far had counted for something. He held some form of pride in that...
“That mutant isn’t fit to be a master of the sewers!”
Perhaps, he was too quick to assume he’d garner respect for it.
A fresh recruit stomped over to where he stood, awaiting the notices on the board for the work the Heir would need done throughout the week. Some expeditions they handpicked the auxiliaries they wished to use, but other times, they allowed the mercenaries to work among themselves who would claim the lower-priority ones. As such, it made the made the main street of the hamlet busy with adventurers from every trade and varying experience.
But.... not to sound judgmental... Nesdin would be surprised if it came to light that this adventurer had been in the Hamlet for more than a week. His plate was polished and he couldn’t spy any dents or scratches to show that it had been used, to add, his blade seemed to be more fit for decoration than actual battle. He quickly surmised that he was noble made knight, pursuing some childish notion of adventure and prestige.
“I know that brand, trash. And how a degenerate like you can lord a so called title of master just because you’ve been here a bit longer is beyond me!”
He tried to make his way past him, but the young man was surprisingly good at restraining his advance by word alone. Nesdin found himself kept captive as he continued to rant on and on about his place in the Order, his adherence to the Code of the Flame, as well as his general disdain for him and all people like him.
To say Nesdin was uncomfortable would be an understatement.