Ashmoor: Secluded Village of Tides and Shadows
Waves crash against the rocky shore, their ceaseless roar a constant companion to those who call this place home. Weathered wooden docks stretch into the gray waters, welcoming ships that carry more secrets than goods. Trade happens in hushed tones, hands exchanging coin with practiced ease, but few ask questions. The village survives by keeping its head low, its business its own.
Behind it, the forest looms—a silent watcher, its tangled roots and mist-laden paths as unwelcoming as the villagers themselves. Outsiders are met with cautious glances, conversations drifting to murmurs as unfamiliar faces pass. Here, trust is not given freely, and those who linger too long often find the salt-laden air growing heavy with unspoken warnings.
A land of endless fire and restless earth, the Cinderscar is a scar upon the world, where the ground bleeds molten rock and the air burns with the sting of sulfur. Towering obsidian cliffs rise over rivers of fire, while jagged craters mark the scars of past eruptions—some ancient, others unsettlingly fresh. This place is volatile, unstable, and undeniably alive.
Yet, there is power here, buried beneath the cracked and smoldering terrain. Some say the flames are fueled by more than natural forces, that the ember of an older world still smolders beneath the ash. Scholars seek its secrets, warlords crave its strength, and zealots fear what may awaken if the fire is left unchecked.
But Cinderscar does not care for mortal ambition. The flames rise, the ground trembles, and the past refuses to stay buried. Those who come seeking power must tread carefully, for in this land, fire does not grant—it consumes.
The sea wind tugged at her sleeves as she stood at the balustrade, chin lifted, gaze fixed on the white sails dotting the horizon. "I used to think nobility meant ballrooms and banquets," she said softly, fingers tightening around her wine glass. "But no one tells you about the waiting. The silence. The smiling through rot."
She turned then, eyes sharp as glass. "They pity me, you know. The abandoned wife. The aging beauty. But they forget—flowers bloom again in salt and sun. Even thorns."
He walks the world with scrolls he can no longer read, chasing echoes of things he’s sure he once knew.
"I had it written down," he says softly, fingers brushing the edge of a torn seal. "It was important. I remember that much."
He squints at the parchment, then offers it up like a gift. "Would you mind reading it to me? Please?"
Salt-stained docks, guarded secrets, and unwelcome guests.