River's End, Mercoras
September 4th, 5128
11:49am
River's End--a good, peaceful town; it is a town that can scarcely be called a town, but that is beside the point. In River's End, everyone knows one another and life is good; dull, but good. It is a small town, with only a couple hundred people calling it home, but nobody goes hungry and most everyone tries to pull their weight for the good of the community. The river for which the town’s name is derived from runs directly through the middle, cutting River’s End in half; fortunately, it was nothing a set of bridges could not fix and if one follows the river to its literal end, they will find themselves before the wide-open ocean, and the local dock, which serves as the town’s lifeline to Mercoras--and Sigma, as a whole.
Originally, when River’s End was first settled, homes and businesses were built around a central location, not far from the mayor’s own home; however, as time went on and the population grew, development started to spread out: more and more homes were built away from the town center and closer to the dock, giving the town an outwards spiral-like design. Disregarding this unorthodox design, however, the town is pretty typical and otherwise uninteresting, save for one small detail: not far from the before-mentioned dock is a large, tower-like construct.
The tower is cylindrical and composed mostly of bricks, but reinforced with some iron, too. Up the length of the lighthouse is row after row of blue stripes, ending at a large light and balcony at the very height of the building. In no way is any of this peculiar, however; in fact, buildings of this type are pretty common all around the world. The oddity was in the fact that just a few hours prior, the lighthouse was a place of mayhem and sound: since River’s End was established and the lighthouse built, it has always been in the care of the Bernard family, and while that remained true, it was somewhat-kind-of-commandeered by the current keeper’s friend,
Roland Dufort.
Entering from the bottom floor of the lighthouse, the first thing to catch a person’s eye would be the countless youths passed out on the floor, some lounging on furniture, others sleeping in corners, and even some who had fallen asleep on one another. Local musicians with Greoul-imported instruments had somehow been talked (or threatened) into playing for the party and somewhere down the line a barrel of wine had conveniently ‘fallen off’ of a ship and found its way into the party, too.
In the end, when it came down to it, not many people knew or cared how the party started, but they couldn’t be faulted for it: life in River’s End was good and peaceful, but it was also pretty boring.
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FATAL KERNEL ERROR_
Mind link to COMP disconnected_