Template:Noah Hawthorne/Relationships: Difference between revisions

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|[[File:Cassicon.jpg|75 px]]
|[[File:Cassicon.jpg|75 px]]
|[[Character::Cassidy Cain]]
|[[Character::Cassidy Cain]]
|Little Miss
|Little Miss of the Missing Littles
|Pending
|Mercurial, reckless, deeply driven people with a taste for excitement and a real horror of dropping anchor: at first glance they're an awful lot alike, separated in character by deeper and less obvious but certainly fundamental qualities. The first time they met she probably saved him from drowning after he was dragged down into the bowels of a sinking riverboat by a half-dead Mercy Killer. Of course, ''she'' was the reason the boat sank and the Mercy Killer, who stabbed Noah in the leg, was originally after ''her,'' so if asked he'd say it's a wash as far as favors owed. They were on the Mamma Mia for different reasons, but in the end they both got what they wanted, even if the same can't be said for anybody else who was on board at the time. Chances are good that repeat encounters will produce the same results, with the world around them taking the brunt of the consequences for whatever exothermic reaction inevitably follows their occupation of the same space.
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|[[File:Vinicon.jpg|75 px]]
|[[File:Vinicon.jpg|75 px]]
|[[Character::Vin Barrett]]
|[[Character::Vin Barrett]]
|IMPOSTOR
|'''''IMPOSTOR'''''
|There are these terrible books out there about this really over-the-top, ridiculous character called Jack Dove, see, and the author of these books claims that they're based on a real-life Drifter whose exploits were so absurd, so impossible, so bizarre that while she'd wanted initially to write them as a series of biographies, she'd been forced into the bodice-ripping adventure genre because no sane member of the public would ever buy that they were true. She remains mum about the identity of the inspiration for those novels, but recently the covers have started to feature Vin Barrett's face. And Noah, for no reasons he is immediately forthcoming about, finds this ''supremely irritating.''
|There are these terrible books out there about this really over-the-top, ridiculous character called Jack Dove, see, and the author of these books claims that they're based on a real-life Drifter whose exploits were so absurd, so impossible, so bizarre that while she'd wanted initially to write them as a series of biographies, she'd been forced into the bodice-ripping adventure genre because no sane member of the public would ever buy that they were true. She remains mum about the identity of the inspiration for those novels, but recently the covers have started to feature Vin Barrett's face. And Noah, for no reasons he is immediately forthcoming about, finds this ''supremely irritating.''
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Revision as of 08:04, 25 April 2017


He Chose...Poorly

Face Who What Why
Ambrose Montagu Professor Ambrose Montagu, Professor at the University in Linga, has been an unusually stable fixture in Noah's otherwise fluid circumstances, a presence that goes back years -- long enough that he's known Noah by other names and heard him spin a hundred different stories about who he is and where he really came from. Montagu's unwillingness to aim his professional interest in ancient history at Noah's own past plays no little part in that longevity of association, and there seems to be some real and genuine fondness between them, though it's a relationship built on affection and exasperation in almost equal measure. For a man of well over sixty years of age, he manages to keep pace with his young friend more ably than most might expect.
Cassicon.jpg Cassidy Cain Little Miss of the Missing Littles Mercurial, reckless, deeply driven people with a taste for excitement and a real horror of dropping anchor: at first glance they're an awful lot alike, separated in character by deeper and less obvious but certainly fundamental qualities. The first time they met she probably saved him from drowning after he was dragged down into the bowels of a sinking riverboat by a half-dead Mercy Killer. Of course, she was the reason the boat sank and the Mercy Killer, who stabbed Noah in the leg, was originally after her, so if asked he'd say it's a wash as far as favors owed. They were on the Mamma Mia for different reasons, but in the end they both got what they wanted, even if the same can't be said for anybody else who was on board at the time. Chances are good that repeat encounters will produce the same results, with the world around them taking the brunt of the consequences for whatever exothermic reaction inevitably follows their occupation of the same space.
Morganicon.jpg Morgan Newkirk Adventurer's Guildy Noah doesn't limit himself to Adventurer's Guild jobs -- he crosses the line of the law regularly -- but the Guild is still a steady source of income for most drifters, and it was through the Guild that he first met Morgan Newkirk, some handful of years ago. Their relationship has been for the most part passing, but Morgan's had enough experience with Noah Hawthorne to expect trouble whenever he turns up. ...Not that it requires much in the way of experience, really.
Vinicon.jpg Vin Barrett IMPOSTOR There are these terrible books out there about this really over-the-top, ridiculous character called Jack Dove, see, and the author of these books claims that they're based on a real-life Drifter whose exploits were so absurd, so impossible, so bizarre that while she'd wanted initially to write them as a series of biographies, she'd been forced into the bodice-ripping adventure genre because no sane member of the public would ever buy that they were true. She remains mum about the identity of the inspiration for those novels, but recently the covers have started to feature Vin Barrett's face. And Noah, for no reasons he is immediately forthcoming about, finds this supremely irritating.