Abuyin Ibn Djadir Ibn | Omar Kalid Ben Hadji Al Sharidi
Abuyin is a walking archive of water rights, blood-debts, and trade routes erased from official maps. He mediates disputes between oasis clans, smuggler rings, and sun-scorched monastic orders. His signature is binding: once he writes a covenant in salt-ink on cured lizard hide, both parties know that breaking it means thirst (literal or metaphorical).
Lean and weathered, with skin etched by fifty dry seasons. Abuyin wears a patched indigo robe over a brass-scaled vest—his only nod to a warrior’s lineage. He carries no sword, but a scribe’s case of carved acacia wood, and around his neck, a compass whose needle points not north, but toward water no longer there. abuyin ibn djadir ibn omar kalid ben hadji al sharidi
Born the third son of Djadir, a camel-breeder turned rebel poet, and Omar Kalid, a wandering hadji who claimed direct descent from a drowned sultanate. Abuyin grew up in the shadow of two fathers: one who taught him to read the stars for betrayal, another who taught him that mercy is the first debt. After a clan massacre by the Ashen Caliphate’s tax-armies, Abuyin fled into the Erg of Ghosts, where he lived for seven years among dune-scorpions and broken cisterns. There, he claims, the desert spoke to him—not in prophecy, but in forgotten contract law. Abuyin is a walking archive of water rights,
Tracking down a missing water treaty signed 300 years ago, which could prove that the Ashen Caliphate illegally diverted an entire river system. If found, the treaty would upend the current power balance across three desert nations—and put a price on Abuyin’s head larger than any oasis lord’s. Lean and weathered, with skin etched by fifty dry seasons