By day this bar was the colour of market oranges, it has that polished look, aided by the light streaming in from the windows. The buzz of the street pours in from the open doors along with the aroma of fresh baked meat pie from behind the counter. The town itself was an underwhelming sight. You could find a hundred carbon copies in this hill sloped region. A taste of normal was fine, for the first three days. By the fourth day, the smithy was starting to miss the taste of hearth smoke between his teeth and the bioluminescent light of the crystals back in Diredenn. And his bed, his oversized, overstuffed bed. Unlike the cramped cot at the inn he had been sleeping at.
“Back again, love?” He turned in his chair towards the voice. The barista had tired eyes, yet there was that glimmer, a give away of her good heart. Over the days he’d come to know that she was one of those surviving sparks, one of the ones who held on to who they really are. He asked for a refill, apologizing amid his own tired smile, "Sorry, miss, I know your run a tight ship ‘ere. You ‘eard anythin’ about that?”
The look over either of her shoulders gave him immediate hope. In what he assumed was her way of being subtle, she gestured towards the archway that divided the common area where Dalton sat from the more quiet section towards the back. Leaning back in his chair, the wood groaning precariouly under his weight, he spied it.
Blue skin, bright as a berry, littered with scars. A long braid down the bow of their back, tattered pants, no shoes... certainly fit the description.
“Much obliged, miss.” A few coins made their way into her pocket. She muttered something about dealing with those, “tiefling devils” as she scooted off back towards the kitchen. Dalton remained leaning back in his chair, chewing on the end of his bent cigarette. The embers having died at the other end a while ago. Was this really the guy? He looked rather mellow compared to the picture Imbala had painted.
Well, there was one sure fire way to confirm his suspicions....
Taking a moment to brace himself, the halfbred giant groaned to his feet, ducked under the archway, and made a beeline for the tiefling. Lumbering around him until he could see the whites of his sidelong glare. "You, are you this... blue bitch I’ve been hearing about?"



















