Haliat Kryze
Heroically seeking a cool nickname.

Location: Onderon Wilds
He’d been advised, and quite reasonably so, that the jungle was no place for an offworlder after nightfall. And Haliat Kryze was certainly inclined to heed the wisdom of the Beast Riders. He’d sought the people and their skills out of his own volition, after all, because while it was true that his people had come to Onderon in the past as invaders and even conquerors, the clans of the wild truly knew this world. Their ancestors had been cast out with nothing but the rags on their back from the safety of Iziz, to die in fear and pain. Instead, they had endured, tamed the very creatures which once preyed upon them at will, and built themselves a place in the natural order from literally nothing. And while those earliest days beyond the city walls were millennia ago, that legacy and the knowledge that came with it endured.
But skill had to work with the limitations that nature imposed even as it strove to overcome them. They had to sleep some time, the same as any noble who had never known a moment’s privation. And even when awake, they had to reckon with the reality that they were outmatched in the dark by this world’s more formidable predators. Within the confines of their villages, even those built on ground level, fire and palisades served as an effective barrier against hostile fauna prowling beneath the canopy while the canopy itself kept threats from the sky at bay until they could be faced on favorable terms.
But beyond that? That was a challenge only for the seasoned and the desperate.
Haliat had acknowledged all this, with thanks. But all the same, he had pointed out he was NOT an offworlder, not anymore. If the clan was to make this world their home, then they had to learn to be a part of it, with all the risk that came with it. And besides, he had far more than rags at his disposal, and the darkness might actually be of help to him. The beasts of this jungle had learned along with the human settlers, and they would have their expectations about the prey that walked about on two legs: crafty, but clumsy and half blind without the sun. Instead, they would find their prey had no soft skin exposed, could fly, and saw perfectly well in the dark with the help of a thermal/night vision overlay installed in the helmet. His only real concern was for his Vulpex, but Cya was no house pet. Her instincts were as sharp as his, and her senses a good deal more so. They both had to learn to thrive here, and they both would.
He HAD heeded another bit of advice the local clan had for him, though. When it became clear that Haliat intended to dive into the deep end of acclimatizing to this world, he’d been made privy to the existence and location of a cave in the area, one which offered shelter and a cache of supplies hidden away behind storage lockers too heavily reinforced for any animal capable of making it inside the space. Employing this refuge as a base of operations, he had just passed his second night out in the Onderonian wilds. Other than Cya as his constant companion, the only company in that time had served to keep his belly full, and this suited him fine.
And now, as the sun began its ascent through the sky, its light was visible through the canopy outside but only just. But Haliat had risen earlier, and now sat by the fire while a pitcher of black caf heated before him. He was considering something of a break from his explorations today, perhaps instead bringing something back to butcher and prepare that he might repay his use of the provisions by replenishing them in full. But these ruminations, as well as his vigil for the coffee to begin bubbling, were interrupted as Cya suddenly rose to her feet and began staring intently out past the cave mouth. And yet, whatever she had picked up on, she didn’t seem alarmed. Just…curious.
A few moments later, as less attuned human ears caught up, the canid’s curiosity was matched. Those were footsteps. Biped footsteps, and by a biped not lightly clad if he was any judge…which he frankly was. And when, at length, he got a visual to complement the sound, the new information did nothing to dampen his curiosity. When he spoke, his voice was as level as always, but the words followed a noted arch of his brow.
“Alor. You’ve come some way. Pray, sit.”
Last edited: