Commissions! Simple illustration of Sahir for @yourundead Simple full body of Victor for @theravenprince Simple full body of Lio for @jagged-edge-and-mess Detailed full body and icon of Finarus for @peachiree Detailed fullbody Starfinder commission for @Remenes123 on twitter Random Roll dnd character for @k-howsartblog (story under read more!) Thank you everyone for letting me drawing your amazing characters!!
commissions!|kofi
Soar’s tongue was, rather a double edged sword. Of course it was quick, sharp and clever (as many could attest to, they would add with a wiggling eyebrow) as a storyteller’s should be and it earned them the laughter and tears and coin they well deserved. It was a shame that all those qualities also often earned him well deserved…lets say, enemity. For Soar's most prized sword, though clever, did not stop to consider the consequence of it’s actions, the cuts and jabs it made, and who would bleed.
It was an honest mistake, Soar would say, that the piggish brutish creature in his most famed tale, a monster who ransacked villages, stole the livelihoods of their people and rolled around in the stolen riches (and their own leavings) was certainly not a metaphor for the Duke of Wingholm. Certainly not. True, the creature was often dressed in purple, silks that turned rotten on the monsters foul skin, and it was often that the Duke himself wore the same colour when being paraded around the city streets, on palanquins that kept his precious feet from the dirt and his face from the eyes of those he ruled. Perhaps. But purple was but a colour, but another detail to Soar’s prose. True, the storyteller mentioned a particular mole on the creature’s face, almost perfectly mirroring one that perched on the nose of the Duke, a man who taxed the poorer people of the city far greater than the richer. But a thread in the tapestry of the tale, nothing important. And perhaps truest of all, the creature spoke in precisely accented, sharp tones, snipped and strangely soft, a voice that could seem familiar to those who were forced attendance to the Duke’s great speeches, speaking of the greatness of the city whilst ignoring the hunger and pain in the eyes of the people watching him. But also very true, was the fact that Stories were much more interesting when the teller did voices, was just a fact. And Soar was very good at voices. And it was an interesting story, Soar was talented at his work and the people listened. The people of the city, poor and tired and broken heard how the Villagers came together, supported one another and broke the chains of their master before slaying it, screaming in that strange whispy voice in the remains of its wealth and filth. And the people passed it on. Soar was vaguely aware that their words were growing, rising and was proud. They could see some of the effect, enjoyed the claps on their back, the extra coin. But Soar’s mind, unlike their tongue, had never been the sharpest of tools. Soar was easy to track down as the author of the tale. They had never denied ownership and despite the rebellion rising, there were still people who would happily point the way to Soar's rented rooms for a few coins, but it was still a surprise to the storyteller when their door was broken inwards late one night by badly disguised royal guards and they were beaten half to death. Luckily they got the Orc half, Soar would later joke, being tended to by their landlady, a small dragonborn who had sadly, seen worse in this city. The orc half can take the beating. Soar didn’t mention that they thought it might have been full death if they hadn’t played possum part way through. That wasn’t worth joking about. The beating wasn’t what broke Soar though. It was what the goons had taken. They’d ransacked the room while Soar bled out, and it had been the hardest thing to do in their life, to stay still, silent, but staring through one swelling eye as one of them took their Lyre, the final gift from their mother. She’s been a great bard in her time and had told them, as a child on her knee, that it was a lucky charm, that it’d be passed down to them when it was time. They remembered, she’d smiled so lovingly at them when she said that, and to watch it vanish into the coat of a goon for hire was more than Soar could bear. The loss left Soar bereft, unwilling and unable to do anything more than lay in their bed as they recovered. Luckily, his landlady Ora, was willing. She had been watching, had heard the rising tide of rebellious whispers. Ora was born and raised in this city and in her heart, hoped her renter's half arsed rabble rousing would do it, be the thing to start it going but she didn’t want to see the idiot killed either. So she sent a letter to her cousin, out of the city, someone who could teach the flamboyant fool a little secrecy, a little cunning to go with their free thinking. And, she added to Soar, as she got them ready to leave the city now roused to the action that had left them broken, someone who could teach them how to get stolen things back.









