| Full
Name |
Milo the Magnificent |
|
| Race |
Human |
|
| Classes/Levels |
Sorcerer 3 |
|
| Gender |
Male |
|
| Size |
Larger than Life |
|
| Age |
32 |
|
| Special Abilities |
Ego of Destruction |
|
| Alignment |
CG |
|
| Deity |
HA! |
|
| Occupation |
Shady Merchant |
|
| Strength |
10 |
|
| Dexterity |
14 |
|
| Constitution |
10 |
|
| Intelligence |
12 |
|
| Wisdom |
10 |
|
| Charisma |
17 |
|
About Milo the Magnificent
A steadfast agent of Andoran, Milo poses often as a merchant. That is when he's not running errands for the Pathfinders. His duties as an intelligence operative for the Andoran freedom fighters require him to keep a low profile so, naturally, he's as loud and obnoxious as possible. He's pushy, egotistical to the extreme, boisterous, and can be quite disagreeable at times. These very qualities, however, allow him the freedom to go about his true purpose relatively unnoticed, as he's quickly dismissed by most and avoided by others.
All the bravado he displays is a ruse, however. Milo works incessantly to oppose any and all Chelaxian agendas he encounters. He's a faithful servant to Andoran's cause and can be counted upon by his fellow Pathfinders as a dependable and stalwart ally in the field of battle. When things get tough, Milo is all business.
It's quite likely this is due to the loss of his wife and daughter to a Hobgoblin slave merchant who encountered the pair unaccompanied outside the city limits and decided to turn a coin by capturing and selling them at the chelaxian slave markets. Little is known of what happened to them after that.
Unable to locate his wife and young daughter on his own, Milo sought help among the Andoran freedom fighters.
Among the many pieces of gaudy jewlery he sometimes wears is a small unobtrusive locket which holds two minute paintings of both of the missing women. He never takes it off. Though they're both probably long dead, some part of him still believes that as long as he carries their pictures with him, he can still ask each person he sees if they've seen either of them, though he rarely does anymore. And, there-by hold out some hope that he might one day find them again.