The Silver Tor at Llyncross

The Silver Tor was founded thirty years ago by an O'Sallach ancestor who bought the small stone inn beside the Llyncross cut and commissioned the torc sculpture to honor a drowned sister. Over the decades it has been the site of treaty signings between local clans, the wedding feast of Llyncross's mayor, and the occasional clandestine truce between smugglers and the marsh-wardens. Branwen took over when her father retired to the standing stones and has elevated the inn into a refined house where both nobility and the well-off commoner meet on equal footing.

Tavern

The Silver Tor at Llyncross

The Silver Tor was founded thirty years ago by an O'Sallach ancestor who bought the small stone inn beside the Llyncross cut and commissioned the torc sculpture to honor a drowned sister.

5Amenities10Menu Items7Known Patrons6Plot Hooks
Branwen O'Sallach

Tavernkeeper

Branwen O'Sallach
Half-elfBard

Keeper's Species

Half-elf

History

The Silver Tor was founded thirty years ago by an O'Sallach ancestor who bought the small stone inn beside the Llyncross cut and commissioned the torc sculpture to honor a drowned sister. Over the decades it has been the site of treaty signings between local clans, the wedding feast of Llyncross's mayor, and the occasional clandestine truce between smugglers and the marsh-wardens. Branwen took over when her father retired to the standing stones and has elevated the inn into a refined house where both nobility and the well-off commoner meet on equal footing.

Quirks

A single silver torc hangs above the main hearth—no one in Llyncross touches it, and patrons often leave small trinkets beneath it for luck. The tavern's nightly music follows an unwritten rotation: mournful airs at dusk, lively reels after the second bell, and hush-lullabies after midnight.

Lore

Locals insist the torc above the hearth is fashioned from metal taken from a wreck in Llynmere that once carried gifts from the Sidhe; it is said to protect the room from bad fae. The standing stones outside town (the Grey Bole) were once a road-marker for ancient druids; stories claim that once every few decades the stones permit those who drink at the Silver Tor to hear voices of ancestors in dreams. The town's Celtic-influenced rites and songs linger in the tavern's music, and many patrons still leave offerings of honey or coins at the hearth to secure a safe voyage or a fruitful harvest.

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