[center][color=darkgreen][h3]Linkle[/h3][/color] [color=darkgreen][b] Level 5[/b][/color] - (2/50) + 1 [color=darkgreen][b]Location:[/b][/color] Lumbridge ~ The Land of Adventure - Outside the Guild Hall [color=darkgreen][b]Word Count: 400 [/b][/color][/center] [@ProPro][@Lugubrious][@DracoLunaris][@MULTI_MEDIA_MAN][@Stern Algorithm] [hr] Linkle walked back out of the guild hall with the rest of the group, passing Agoston on the way, and back into the warm sunlight. She thought it was awfully nice of this Geralt fellow to agree to help Bowser on the quest he'd chosen. Big and bad as Bowser held himself to be he wasn't invincible. It always paid to buddy up on an adventure. "You think we should go see her to?" She asked 6. "That way we could be on the lookout for anything Bowser needs while were out saving people from wriggling fish monsters." Before she could get her answer though Din came walking up with a new friend in toe and told them she had performed a dance in the town square. "Aww man, a real performance and I missed it?" Linkle said, disappointment played across her face. She'd never really seen Din's skills for real what with being caught up in the fight. It was a shame, because judging from the way Din's wallet was jangling when she came up it was a real sight to see. Linkle looked touched, but pensive, at the thought of Din helping her out with the money she'd earned. After all, even if Din had gotten those cool new wings out of the ordeal it was Linkle that had started the whole thing. It was still ride to refuse such an earnest gift though. "Thanks Din! We're about to go out and make some money too. Turns out they pay you for doing heroic deeds around here. We were just getting ready to set out. Geralt here," she said, presenting the white haired man and keenly noting that shy smile she'd given him. "Gallantly offered to help us out a little, since he's a local." In that case Din's new fortune teller friend was a real boon. Fortune tellers could see the webs of destiny that bound all things, especially the bonds between people, or at least that's what grandma had told her. Getting her fortune told by a real professional might come in handy. Though, of all the fortune tellers she had ever heard of she didn't think any of them were quite as beautiful as this one. She smiled at her. "This is so cool! I've never had anyone tell my fortune before." She, of course, already knew her destiny in the broad, unspecific terms, but it always paid to be pointed in the correct direction.