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Tarrow the Lantern — accepted generation

PERSONAE · THE VALE

Tarrow the Lantern

aka Old Tarrow, the Grey Walker's Dog, Lantern-Tarrow

The stocky old campfire-crasher who turns up at shared fires all over the Vale, always just as the pot could stretch one more, hauling a dented lantern folk swear has never gone dark. He haggles a story for supper like a fishwife haggles fish, gives directions that are always right and never complete, and has apparently been 'an old man' since before anyone's grandmother was born. Nobody's pinned down what he is. He finds the question rude.

Every district describes him differently and swears he is theirs; that's the one thing nobody agrees on. What holds steady: squat and barrel-chested, sun-cured the color of old harness leather, a fringe of grey stubble he never quite shaves, missing the same eyetooth on the same side no matter who's telling it. He wears whatever the last three towns gave him: a patched drover's coat cinched with a belt of pot-hooks and twine, a scarf some grandmother knitted crooked, boots that have never matched. He leans on a bent iron toasting-fork worn smooth as a handle, because a walking stick is also a cooking tool if you're not precious about it. The lantern is the one constant: a dented tin drover's lamp, one pane cracked and mended with hide glue, that folk swear has never gone out, and he treats it less like a hero's prop and more like a squabbling old travel companion: grumbles at it, shakes it, tells it to hush. He shoulders into the ring of your fire uninvited with a 'well, then,' complains about his knees before he's even sat down, and somehow by the time he's settled you can't remember not wanting him there. He keeps the Shared Fire's terms better than anyone living. He takes his half of the pot and no more, takes the middle watch nobody wants, and pays in the only coin he carries: a story, plus a fair bit of grumbling about the state of your fire-building. Get him fed and he will give you a Fire-Tale the way it actually happened, which is never the flattering version, and he tells the parts where it goes wrong so plainly that the dark feels closer. Then he lands the ending, and somehow the fire is warmer for it. Children pester him for the lantern. Dogs won't leave him alone. Toll-keepers count their coin twice after he's through. Ask him the way to anywhere and he will tell you true (Tarrow's directions have never once been wrong) but never whole. 'Cairn line past the third ford. Don't camp in the pines, they're not yours to camp in. You'll know the door when you're brave enough to look at it.' Push for more and he goes deaf, or busy with a bootlace, or suddenly very interested in the fire. Push about himself and he gets worse: cheerfully, aggressively unhelpful. He's been old as long as anyone remembers; tellers' grandmothers described the same barrel-chested crank with the same dented lantern. Folk keep their theories to themselves around him: that the lantern is a job passed hand to hand down a long line of grey walkers; that he is just a stubborn old man with good boots and no sense, which is what he'll tell you, on the one day a year he answers straight. Once, at a fire on the Cairn Road, a young Writ clerk demanded his charter name for her ledger. He held the lantern up to his ear, listened like it had said something, and told her, 'It says I'm late, and so are you, and neither of us has time for a ledger.' Gone by morning, before the watch changed, same as always. One strand of the tales (he will neither confirm it nor laugh at it) says the lantern was first lit at Sera's oven, the famine winter, and it is not his light at all: it is everyone's, and he is only the fool who agreed to carry it. The Vale likes that strand best. On a bad road, on a foul night, more than one traveler has sworn they steered by a small warm light ahead of them that no one was carrying when they reached it: only a ring of stones, and dry wood stacked, and the makings of a fire someone left for whoever came.

KIND

mortal

SPECIES

Human (claimed; disputed)

ROLE

wanderer, tale-keeper, and giver of true-but-never-whole directions

HAUNTS

No fixed place — met at shared fires and waystations Vale-wide; the Cairn Road, the Causeway Rest, and the last inn before any bad country are all sure he favors them.

Connected

Type Fields
kindmortal
speciesHuman (claimed; disputed)
rolewanderer, tale-keeper, and giver of true-but-never-whole directions
location
hauntsNo fixed place — met at shared fires and waystations Vale-wide; the Cairn Road, the Causeway Rest, and the last inn before any bad country are all sure he favors them.
affiliations
disposition75
voice_notesGravelly and quick to complain: about his knees, your firewood, the weather, the state of the road. Warmth comes out sideways, through the grumbling, not through gravitas. Says 'well, then' entering and leaving. Answers direction-questions plainly and person-questions with theatrical unhelpfulness (sudden deafness, a suddenly urgent bootlace). Tells the dark parts of a tale plainly, never softens danger, and still leaves the fire warmer. Bickers audibly with the lantern like an old married couple.
the_lanternA dented tin drover's lamp, one pane cracked and mended with hide glue; folk swear it has never gone out. One tale-strand says it was first lit at Sera's famine-oven and is 'everyone's light, walked from fire to fire.' He argues with it more than he defers to it, and occasionally loses.
nature_disputedA job passed hand to hand with the lamp? The Grey Walker keeping his own road? A stubborn old man with good boots and no sense? Canon deliberately does not answer (hints-only law). Any strand may be told; none may be confirmed.
usage_noteHe is texture and a rare hinge, never a dispenser: no quest log, no markers, no exposition of the cosmic layer. At most he seeds a spoken direction, a warning, or the true strand of a Fire-Tale — and eats your supper.
All Relationships (6)

references

  • The Fire-TalesTarrow the Lantern is the shelf's living complication — the tellers cannot agree whether he is a tale, seeing as he still turns up and eats the teller's supper while they get him wrong.
  • The Cairn RoadOf all the roads that claim him, the Cairn Road claims loudest — the ledger-clerk strand and the light-ahead strand are both set on its cairn line past Pinewatch.
  • Sera of the Last LoafThe strand the Vale likes best: Tarrow's lantern was first lit at Sera's famine-oven and has been carried fire to fire ever since. He neither confirms it nor laughs at it.

aligned_with

  • The Shared FireTarrow keeps the Shared Fire's terms better than anyone living — half the pot and no more, the middle watch, tales for supper — and folk say his lantern is 'everyone's light, walked from fire to fire.'
  • The Grey WalkerThe favorite folk theory, kept out of his hearing: that Tarrow is the Grey Walker himself, keeping his own road on foot the way a good farmer walks his fences. Canon does not answer, and neither does he.

documents

  • The Lantern StrandForty years of depositions on the same grey walker — the closest thing the Vale has to proof of him, and it proves nothing, warmly.

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