Do let me know what you think, [@Irredeemable]. [hider=Urdash][b]Name:[/b] [i]Urdash[/i] The name Urdash is not native to this tribe, instead being adopted from the outsider people known as the Ahwit that had been brought into the collective when some of their members had broken away. Since this break and subsequent adoption, the name has been continually passed on from the original owner, a sort of title and identity that simply is granted to a hunter of that line. Thus while there have been several called Urdash, there has only ever been one at any time, with each adopting the name until they bestow it upon another or pass on to the world of spirits. Limited only to those related by blood, The name Urdash has developed its own mythos about the powers it has, such as the rumor of tricking the beasts of the land and their spirits into thinking there is no purpose in killing the Urdash as the ancestors will return them to life; to those who have received the name, these superstitions and myths are critical in retaining who the Ahwit were as a people. Few of their customs were brought with them, but the process of naming and its spiritual significance has survived. [b]Role:[/b] [i]Hunter[/i] The Ahwit survive even now within their new home as a band of hunters, man and woman alike. Few are their number, they supplement what was already well established and largely keep to themselves, often willing to take upon their cult the more menial tasks when collaborating as a whole so that they might continue to retain some of their autonomy. The Urdash, despite being a particularly important figure, retains no real authority over the rest, perhaps at most being sought out as the in between of master of the hunt and shaman; someone who has been granted by the spirits gifts from both but obligated to use them in an unusual manner. This has made the Ahwit a complicated company to associate with, as their difference is expected and allowed, but not all feel that one can be somewhere between so many different identities. Thus, more often than not, the Urdash deals only with the Ahwit in the dabbling of medicine, invocation or animism rather than the rest of the tribe who rightfully view them as a separate cult. As a whole to all others, the Urdash is any other hunter and differs to the tribal leader or the chief hunter. [b]Age:[/b] 25 [b]Appearance:[/b] As with most Ahwit, Urdash wears his hair long and predominantly free whilst accompanying his face with a full beard, a few braids among them made to symbolize how many successes in the hunt were had. Of the rough hide clothing he wears, the thickest portion over the chest is made up of mammoth fur, accented by crude boots and bracers of the same material. The rest being loose, thin deerskin draped underneath and no longer than down to the navel, met by pants consisting of the rest of that animal's hide. A furred hood covers much of Urdash's face and is drawn up from behind the shoulders to help keep the sun from the eyes and protect against the elements whilst also being decorated with subtle ornamentation like that of a few gifted feathers. The Ahwit themselves are pale compared to other humans, preferring to keep themselves concealed by means of their dress and penchant for furs, but outwardly they are obvious relatives to [i]Homo neanderthalensis[/i] whom their people must have interbred with for a time in the past. Owing to this, Urdash has somewhat stout legs, a larger build, distinct brow, and a pronounced cranium, making him slightly more unusual among the normal members of the tribe. [b]Gender:[/b] Male [hr][b]Story:[/b] Urdash and the Ahwit have been outsiders for a few generations but have integrated themselves closely enough with the host tribe that there is a more mutual understanding of their purpose. Providing hunters and gatherers, Urdash was any other child to have served into adolescence handling the smaller beasts - those of which the men and Ahwit women would not busy themselves with on their actual hunts - but found himself so named by the passing Urdash for no reason he then could define. Now suddenly promoted beyond his station, it became a matter of learning for himself what the men and women of his people were to actually do. A student to this, he gained proficiency to become an accepted "hunter", but not long before the elder Ahwit took him away to mentor him in the basics of what his name too meant. Cultivating an understanding of primitive medicine was no small task, as was it no easy one to be taught the entire story of his name and what it must live on and up to; the perpetuation of the myth, provided the spirits were willing. Rightfully overwhelmed, Urdash learned not by any exceptional rate or means, yet instead rather through a great trial and error up until he was well into his adulthood. By then, having not only survived the dangers of the world outside the camp but having been initiated into the secret practices of the Ahwit's animism, the story had already begun to play out for him. Now the actual Urdash, he is a man who is part hunter, part healer, part adviser, and more importantly the mediary between all three of them in the Ahwit; the one who they look to first for understanding in that very moment. [b]Personality:[/b] Urdash is not a hardened man, instead of a more jovial and light soul. He has never experienced conflict like that of man against man, the same that drove the Ahwit from Nhuit some generations ago, thus all he can claim to understand are the ways of the world. For Urdash, like the others before him, all things are interconnected and must be understood as a whole, requiring him to ask a great number of questions and truly understand the people around him. No longer being shy because of this, Urdash is not unfamiliar to interacting with the tribe at large, which is seldom to occur with the largely introverted Ahwit. [b]Glory:[/b] Despite being the Urdash, the man has no real claim to fame. Some say he is many spirits in one, granted many gifts because of this, but because the Ahwit are careful to keep their culture and beliefs far from prying eyes, just how he manages what he does is a mystery. As such, when the Urdash brings back one of his wounded huntsmen he has treated and their party still manages a kill, none bat an eye and they simply say, "See how the land provides for the Urdash? The hunt was good, so no one was lost." [b]Skills:[/b] As a man who is tasked with three principals of character, the hunter, the healer and the holy, Urdash is a surprisingly skilled member in these trades. Not one superior to any master of them, but in his diversity he has great strength. Ahwit hunters look to him for the blessings before and after their undertaking, just as they expect him to drive the prey to their spears or to heal their wounds sustained in the process. What he lacks is experience beyond these.[/hider]