yzard
First Post
Sounds good, Shayuri - let's roll with that.
Bharhash is a fighter through and through! He loves the battle: the sounds, the strategy, the face-to-face combat and the victory. The camaraderie he experiences with his fellow soldiers is felt deeply and sincerely. Because of that he gives his all to help whomever he is fighting with: be it through word or deed he tries to be an example to others...and he hopes it is a good one.
Though not particularly religious, he does hold to the Gods and a sense of justice and equity. He couldn't be a mercenary because his zeal for the battle comes from his sense of right and wrong, and no amount of money could put him on the 'wrong' side.
He left his position as leader of the local town guard in search of adventure, plain and simple. His simple sense of morality isn't troubled when the enemy is a monster!
Bharhash is a fighter through and through! He loves the battle: the sounds, the strategy, the face-to-face combat and the victory. The camaraderie he experiences with his fellow soldiers is felt deeply and sincerely. Because of that he gives his all to help whomever he is fighting with: be it through word or deed he tries to be an example to others...and he hopes it is a good one.
Though not particularly religious, he does hold to the Gods and a sense of justice and equity. He couldn't be a mercenary because his zeal for the battle comes from his sense of right and wrong, and no amount of money could put him on the 'wrong' side.
He left his position as leader of the local town guard in search of adventure, plain and simple. His simple sense of morality isn't troubled when the enemy is a monster!
