Corsen Mon Duur: Difference between revisions
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'''Corsen Mon Duur''' was a [[Dwarf]] summoned by a planeswalker and left behind. Corsen made his way to [[Grover]]’s where he found [[Loot]]. There, he told Loot that he had been attacked by kobolds at the Peregrinator Complex and that there was a woman ther by the name of Anayatha who looked a lot like Loot. This turned out to be a lie. | '''Corsen Mon Duur''' was a [[Dwarf]] summoned by a [[planeswalker]] and left behind. Corsen made his way to [[Grover]]’s where he found [[Loot]]. There, he told Loot that he had been attacked by kobolds at the Peregrinator Complex and that there was a woman ther by the name of Anayatha who looked a lot like Loot. This turned out to be a lie. | ||
==At the Peregrinator Complex== | ==At the Peregrinator Complex== | ||
[[Dreadfang]], a kobold, held Corsen’s brother and nephew and forced Corsen to lure Loot to him. Dreadfang needed Loot to defeat a powerful curse guarding a treasure trove within the complex. The kolbold sought a suit of armor that would heal his body but dared not take it because of the curse. Loot, without a name, Dreadfang reasoned, should be immune to the curse which read: | [[Dreadfang]], a [[kobold]], held Corsen’s brother and nephew and forced Corsen to lure Loot to him. Dreadfang needed Loot to defeat a powerful curse guarding a treasure trove within the complex. The kolbold sought a suit of armor that would heal his body but dared not take it because of the curse. Loot, without a name, Dreadfang reasoned, should be immune to the curse which read: | ||
''Wary must be he who steps yet closer'' | ''Wary must be he who steps yet closer'' | ||
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The party made to leave the complex, Corsen’s kin being no worse for the wear, when the dwarfs began to drag their feet. They claimed that it pained them to leave so much treasure behind. Loot gave the matter a little thought, then claimed that the rest of the treasure was indeed ''trash'', and not ''loot'' at all, and that they ought to clean the trash out. | The party made to leave the complex, Corsen’s kin being no worse for the wear, when the dwarfs began to drag their feet. They claimed that it pained them to leave so much treasure behind. Loot gave the matter a little thought, then claimed that the rest of the treasure was indeed ''trash'', and not ''loot'' at all, and that they ought to clean the trash out. | ||
''Source: What's in a Name? by Michael A. Stackpole from the [[Tapestries]] Anthology'' | ''Source: What's in a Name? by [[Michael A. Stackpole]] from the [[Tapestries]] Anthology'' | ||
[[Category: Characters]] | [[Category: Characters]] | ||
[[Category: Prerevisionist]] | [[Category: Prerevisionist]] | ||
[[Category: Storylines]] | [[Category: Storylines]] |
Revision as of 20:33, 31 May 2006
Corsen Mon Duur was a Dwarf summoned by a planeswalker and left behind. Corsen made his way to Grover’s where he found Loot. There, he told Loot that he had been attacked by kobolds at the Peregrinator Complex and that there was a woman ther by the name of Anayatha who looked a lot like Loot. This turned out to be a lie.
At the Peregrinator Complex
Dreadfang, a kobold, held Corsen’s brother and nephew and forced Corsen to lure Loot to him. Dreadfang needed Loot to defeat a powerful curse guarding a treasure trove within the complex. The kolbold sought a suit of armor that would heal his body but dared not take it because of the curse. Loot, without a name, Dreadfang reasoned, should be immune to the curse which read:
Wary must be he who steps yet closer
To this treasury filled with things of fame
Enter here and steal just one,
And Cursed will be all of your name!
Corsen checked on his shackled kin, while Loot did as he was told and retrieved the armor. A short battle ensued in which Loot attacked Dreadfang, only to slip and fall. Then Loot got to his feet with a smile, claiming the blow to the head had restored his memory and that he was a planeswalker. Dreadfang did not believe, but was soon dead.
Corsen, along with the cat warriors Kyyrao and Shinra, knelt before the god.
Loot explained that because his name was ‘Loot’, the treasure was cursed, that he was not, in fact, a planeswalker.
The party made to leave the complex, Corsen’s kin being no worse for the wear, when the dwarfs began to drag their feet. They claimed that it pained them to leave so much treasure behind. Loot gave the matter a little thought, then claimed that the rest of the treasure was indeed trash, and not loot at all, and that they ought to clean the trash out.
Source: What's in a Name? by Michael A. Stackpole from the Tapestries Anthology