GlassEye
Adventurer
Presuming Maui consents to being led back to the caravan the ride will take a short while.
Meanwhile, Boots and Sylla examine the site. It is clear what happened here: bandits attacked with flaming arrows, destroying one wagon. It also looks like when the residents of the wagons resisted they were slaughtered, looted, and left upon the grasslands for the scavengers. What is not clear is why the village visible off to the east didn't notice the attack or the vultures and flocks of crows or if they did, why they have done nothing since then to tend the dead.
Sylla's critical eye notes that most of the deaths are from arrow shot though it does look like some of the people were cut down with sword or small axe. The intricate carving and painting of the wagons makes the elf think that they are likely worth a bit more than a normal wagon but she isn't sure how much exactly. She also spots a glint in the burnt wagon. Probably something missed by the bandits because of the fire. When she investigates she discovers a half-melted statuette in silver.
Boots' investigation is laden with smells: the bouquet of advancing decay of the bodies, unique to each individual, the carrion stench of vultures, crow but with a residue of something he can only identify as power, horses, unwashed men, and, oddly, a faint scent of deep caves.
Meanwhile, Boots and Sylla examine the site. It is clear what happened here: bandits attacked with flaming arrows, destroying one wagon. It also looks like when the residents of the wagons resisted they were slaughtered, looted, and left upon the grasslands for the scavengers. What is not clear is why the village visible off to the east didn't notice the attack or the vultures and flocks of crows or if they did, why they have done nothing since then to tend the dead.
Sylla's critical eye notes that most of the deaths are from arrow shot though it does look like some of the people were cut down with sword or small axe. The intricate carving and painting of the wagons makes the elf think that they are likely worth a bit more than a normal wagon but she isn't sure how much exactly. She also spots a glint in the burnt wagon. Probably something missed by the bandits because of the fire. When she investigates she discovers a half-melted statuette in silver.
Boots' investigation is laden with smells: the bouquet of advancing decay of the bodies, unique to each individual, the carrion stench of vultures, crow but with a residue of something he can only identify as power, horses, unwashed men, and, oddly, a faint scent of deep caves.