Thornwatch Courtyard - AI-generated fantasy Building

Thornwatch Courtyard

Thornwatch Courtyard is an open-air yard inside Thornwatch Keep, shaped more for utility than comfort. It serves as a drill ground, a gathering space, and a place for quick movement between wings of the keep. During a violent storm, the party breached the courtyard and found hobgoblins training there in harsh weather, which turned the open space into a chaotic melee. A small gazebo along the edge later yielded a pinned list of names, a broken spearhead, a pouch of gold, and a recovered Thornwatch crest, all of which point to quiet intrigue beneath the keep's military order.

Thornwatch Courtyard
CourtyardWeather-beaten but serviceable, with slick stone, water damage, and signs of recent battle and occupation.Large enough for drill formations and quick skirmishes, but enclosed enough to feel like a trap once the gates are shut.

Thornwatch Courtyard

Cold, wet, and tense. Rain hammers the flagstones while lightning flashes across the yard, turning every shadow into a threat. The space feels exposed and militarized, with the smell of damp stone, iron, and churned mud lingering after the fighting.

Description

Thornwatch Courtyard is an open-air yard inside Thornwatch Keep, shaped more for utility than comfort. It serves as a drill ground, a gathering space, and a place for quick movement between wings of the keep. During a violent storm, the party breached the courtyard and found hobgoblins training there in harsh weather, which turned the open space into a chaotic melee. A small gazebo along the edge later yielded a pinned list of names, a broken spearhead, a pouch of gold, and a recovered Thornwatch crest, all of which point to quiet intrigue beneath the keep's military order.

Proprietor
Thornwatch Keep garrisonCurrent custodians

Hard-edged, watchful, and suspicious of anyone who lingers too long in the open.

Architectural StyleFortified northern keep design with heavy stonework, narrow drainage channels, and a practical central layout built for troops and harsh weather.
Notable Features
Open-air stone yard with no roof coverage
Drain channels cut into the flagstones to carry off heavy rain
A small wooden gazebo set against one wall
Low walls and walkways overlooking the yard
Weather-darkened stones scarred by boots, blades, and recent combat
A place where lightning makes the whole courtyard flash white for a moment

History

The courtyard was built when Thornwatch Keep was expanded to house a larger garrison and withstand sieges in poor weather. It has long been used for weapon drills, inspections, and public punishments. In recent days, it was occupied by hobgoblins who treated it like a training yard, suggesting either conquest, infiltration, or an uneasy arrangement with whoever still claims the keep. The storm-soaked battle in Session 9 marked the first time the courtyard's hidden edge was searched closely enough to uncover its private evidence.

Customs and Use

The courtyard has no formal worship function, but the storm and the old keep stones make it feel like a place where vows are tested. Soldiers use it to swear oaths before drills, and servants avoid speaking too loudly when lightning rolls over the walls. Old keep hands say that promises made here are remembered by the stones, though that is more superstition than law.

Defenses and Weak Points

The main danger is exposure. Rain pools fast in the flagstones, turning the yard slick, while the lightning rod on the roof of the nearby tower draws strikes that can rattle loose masonry. The gazebo offers the only meaningful cover, but its posts are old and easy to hide behind. Gates to the courtyard can be barred from the inside, and low walls make the space hard to defend against archers if the keep is already compromised.

Military Notes

The hobgoblins used the yard as a drill ground, suggesting they valued discipline over comfort and wanted every recruit to learn in bad conditions. The list of names found in the gazebo may record deserters, targets, or a roster of people marked for questioning. The broken spearhead pinned through the paper looks deliberate, like a warning left by someone who expected the list to be found.

Hidden Clues

The gazebo is the quietest corner of the courtyard and the place most likely to hide a private exchange. The small pouch of gold suggests payment, leverage, or a reward for delivering information. The recovered keep crest implies someone with access to Thornwatch symbols used the courtyard for covert dealings, perhaps to disguise orders as official business.

Denizens

Thornwatch Keep garrison Current custodians

Hard-edged, watchful, and suspicious of anyone who lingers too long in the open.

Rulvek Hobgoblin drillmaster

A disciplined hobgoblin drill leader who keeps the yard in motion even in bad weather. He values order, endurance, and obedience, and likely knows more about the list of names than he admits.

Mera Voss Courtyard steward

A practical keeper of the keep's outer grounds who notices everything and says very little. She would have seen who used the gazebo, who carried the gold, and who had access to the crest.

Rumors & Plot Hooks

  1. 1.The names in the gazebo are people marked for arrest, not a roster.
  2. 2.The gold was payment for someone inside the keep who is still feeding information to the hobgoblins.
  3. 3.The broken spearhead belonged to a Thornwatch officer who staged the warning before vanishing.
  4. 4.When lightning strikes the courtyard wall, you can hear armor moving where no one stands.
  5. 5.The crest recovered from the gazebo matches a seal that should have been locked away years ago.

Classified Entry

The list of names is a quietly maintained purge ledger, naming people judged disloyal by someone with legitimate Thornwatch authority. The gold was meant to pay an informant or executioner, and the broken spearhead was used to pin the list where the next shift of soldiers would find it. The crest proves the operation had inside help, not merely hobgoblin occupation.

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