Balomew
Active Member
OOC
I'm very sorry for not posting before now. I wasn't received notifications for whatever odd reason.
I had no idea what to do with the letter, so I went with a random mission of sorts. I'll explain more later, unless you want me to now. Either way!
12th of Sun's Height 4E 201
"The Khajiit in Whiterun." Khamundar turned around in her seat to find a Redguard man matching his voice in an effect. He had set a sealed envelope in front of her. "You must be Khamundar," he continued. "I have a message from your friend Ri'saad."
"This one saw Ri'saad earlier," she replied, the words not a complete lie. "Why did he.. Thank you for the message. Does this one know when he wrote the message?" She held the envelope in hand, fiddling with a corner. Ri'saad had never mentioned a letter - perhaps it was to be a surprise, or else he was elsewhere, or had meant to send it later purposefully. She supposed that it didn't matter in the end.
She caught the sound of flame beneath the table, originating from Tsee-Keth. Placing a fur-laden hand over his, she then withdrew it, glanced at the Redguards for a second, and opened the envelope. Unfolding the letter, she stared at the contents. Tsee-Keth wondered aloud what it was about. Khamundar, silent for a moment, then responded: "This one is sorry, she needs to leave soon." Ri'saad must have sent the letter a while back. He spoke of a Khajiit in the homeland, allied with his caravan company. The Suthay-Raht woman, Kahsera, had found issue and needed help. He knew that Khamundar, being as she saw, would be ready for the adventure. Solitude it was, then. Simple a job though it would be to mercenaries, the Suthay took the matter with a second grain of salt. This is where she excelled at.
She looked at Tsee-Keth, and wondered if her new friends would be good for this kind of mission, where the blade is in the words, not the hands. Orvar might be tired from his small mission and Baroth might be tired as well. She knew Tsee-Keth enough, by now, to believe that he would be up for it. It was his restraint that she worried about.