Delarc used to dig into the sand shores of West Lake as a small child. He would sometimes dig up Elvin pottery. Thin and extremely fragile pieces. Again and again he would try to dig a egg shell thin pot out of the wet sand and clay only to have it crumple under this efforts. These artifacts where too far gone for anyone lacking the skills of a Southfield monk to recover. But he had a life long obsession with finding artifacts of Elvin culture and he amassed a great collection by the time he was middle aged. Here's a list of his artifacts:
- mobile made of prehistoric shark teeth and spider web woven stronger then twine.
- Lots of arrowheads and spearheads covering the eighteen thousand plus domain of the Elves here.
- A pair of ladies panties made from woven Elf hair from the time of the great purging on Elf kind. Made by humans.
- Coins. A nice pile of pretty Elf coins, ranging from last period metal to earlier rock and crystal. Delarc had 39 coins.
- lots and lots of crystal bottles. He bought or found them all his life. Many are cracked stained or shattered, others is perfect shape.
- A complex whistle. Made out of bone parts. A short whistle with only four holes. But it had a 27 note range when the complex sliders and buttons where manipulated. Delarc took it apart when he was 13 and he could not get it back together again, so it was displayed in pieces.
- Pre-Elvin idols and fetishes. Some of them probably carved or clay fired by the Green Ancients. Unhuman creatures holding unknown objects. Strange animals like something out of a nightmare. He had four of these objects in his collection.
- A water lamp. A elegant blue crystal curved tube. You pour water into the opening on top and as the water slowly pours a spiral path down the lamp it lights up a dreamy blue hue. It lasts four minutes per fill. Then you flip the lamp upside down and start to process over again.
- Three mummified Elvin heads. Human made. The Elves where killed in a horribly painful way to get these awful grimaces on the mummified heads that used to be popular some thirty years ago.