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The Storm-Tossed

The Storm-Tossed (The Traveller, The There-and-Back) is the zeroth Hour of the Second Fansus, represented by the Fool. It was born of the Sea of Mists, the oceanic wasteland where Nowhere meets Somewhere. It forever skims the boundaries of the world - between Wood and Mansus, sea and shore, existence and non-existence - wherever the storm is, the There-and-Back will be as well. Its aspects are Moth and Edge. It rules over wanderers journeys, the tides of fate and chance.

The Storm-Tossed
FNORD.png
Origin Mist
Titles The Storm-Tossed
The Traveller
The There-and-Back
Names FNORD
Aspects Moth Edge
Date of arrival FNORD
Owner(s) Will, A Poor Lunatic

Contents

History

Once there was the Goldsmith. In its lust for the Glory it stole the creations of the Bright Tapestry, and the two Hours found themselves at each other's throats. The Goldsmith lost the confrontation, and in its death throes it fell into the Sea of Mists. There Blood and Light and Stone met Mist and the raw, elemental hate the Goldsmith and the Bright Tapestry felt for each other, and two new Hours emerged: the Storm-Tossed and The Gale-in-Flight

Appearance

The Storm-Tossed is usually depicted as a great albatross flying at the edge of a storm, or over a great grey sea.

Principles

The Storm-Tossed is Moth, for it seeks, it yearns, it moves ever onward. It is also Edge, for it struggles against fate, against the sea-winds, against the great trees of the Wood that would hinder its flight.

It is the Hour of itinerant wanderers. It guides migrations to warmer climates, it sets the course for treks into the unknown, it judges those who survive at the edges. It is not a merciful Hour, for only the tough and strong and canny will survive the storm. It is forever pursued by The Hunter, and when it is caught at last, all hunts shall be over, all wanderings finished.

Worship

Cult

The Storm-Tossed is not the most popular Hour for mortal cults to worship. It is more often revered as one of many. However, there are a a number of individuals who take the There-and-Back as their patron, and they are rewarded with new lands to discover, new sights to see, and new obstacles to test themselves against.

Mark

FNORD

Servants

FNORD

Locations

FNORD

Relationships: