Barough was a Metis Black Spiral Dancers Ahroun who lived in the 19th century Mexico.
Biography[]
Barough was abandoned at birth, left to die by his Shadow Lord parents. He likely would have died, too, had the fools not left him at the edge of the woods leading to Harzomatuili's main cave entrance. Rather than let the chilled wretch die, the Black Spiral Dancer took the infant in, and after feeding it enough to live, promptly danced the Spiral with it. Though Barough might have eventually been a member of Garou society, what came back out of the Spiral with Harzomatuili belonged completely to the Wyrm. From his earliest days, the creature called Barough has been depraved and filled with a hatred for anything that looks too normal. In comparison to him, that means most things. The vast majority of his life has been spent in the caves of the Hell-Pit Hive, and most of the possessions he claims as his own have been found within the ruins of the ancient Aztec city.
Appearance[]
Barough is a very unpleasant sight in any of his forms. With his mangy gray hide, red eyes and malformed jaw, the Hive often sets him out front to intimidate their foes and rivals. Barough bears ritualistic scars, which he adds to every time he kills another enemy in battle. At present there are 17 deep gouges across his chest. Each of these has been sealed around a bone tube, giving the illusion that he is wearing a partial chest plate. He is never without the long obsidian blade that he uses in every battle.
Profile[]
- Physical: Strength 4 (6/8/7/5), Dexterity 4 (4/5/6/6), Stamina 4 (6/7/7/6)
- Social: Charisma 1, Manipulation 2 (1/0/0/0), Appearance 1 (0/0/1/1)
- Mental: Perception 5, Intelligence 2, Wits 2
- Talents: Alertness 4, Athletics 5, Brawl 3, Dodge 3, Intimidation 4, Primal-Urge 5,
- Skills: Melee 4, Stealth 3, Survival 3,
- Knowledges: Occult 1
- Backgrounds: Totem 3
- Gifts: Bite of the Bat, Cloud of Night, Razor Claws, Sense Wyrm, Foaming Fury, Rattler's Bite,
- Rage: 7
- Gnosis: 6
- Willpower: 8
References[]
- WTWW: Tales from the Trails: Mexico, p. 73-74