Teen Hobbit Boy
MinorGlasses perch on a pinched face, his skinny frame buzzing with half-formed chants. Hobbit-small, he kicks with surprising venom, voice cracking on ancient words. There's a desperate spark in him, wild and untaught.
In the 'Mons Viridis Magicus' series, the Teen Hobbit Boy bursts onto the scene in Book 1 as a chaotic minor antagonist, a skinny, glasses-wearing youth whose feeble szarm chants and face-kicking antics embody the reckless perils of underaged guślarze thrust into magical conflict. Handcuffed and screaming in court after a swift punch-down, his brief but explosive role underscores the story's themes of youthful hubris and swift justice. With no further appearances across the series, he remains a one-book wonder, frozen in infamy as a symbol of impulsive sorcery gone awry.
Physical Description
Skinny 12-14 year old hobbit-like boy with oversized glasses magnifying wide eyes, frail and underdeveloped build. Short stature clad in ragged guślarz apprentice robes, face pinched in concentration. He exudes a frantic, underdeveloped menace.
Evolution
Antykwariat Pod Salamandrą
The Teen Hobbit Boy is a minor antagonist, a skinny glasses-wearing youth chanting feeble szarm 'Meus deus cosmateus', kicking faces before being handcuffed, screaming, and punched. Handcuffed in court, he embodies the reckless young guślarze thrown into conflict. His brief chaos highlights the story's underaged perils.
- Chants feeble szarm 'Meus deus cosmateus' as a minor antagonist.
- Kicks faces in reckless display of youthful aggression.
- Gets handcuffed after chaotic confrontation.
- Screams in court while restrained.
- Embodied as punched-down symbol of underaged guślarze perils.
Book Appearances
Antykwariat Pod Salamandrą
First appears Ch 9