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Twitter: https://twitter.com/MolochQM
Questions: https://ask.fm/MolochQM
Character sheet: http://pastebin.com/TuHXz5Kp
Previous threads: http://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/qstarchive.html?tags=Northern%20Beasts%20Quest

”Sometimes, good men must sell their lives – after all, a scoundrel cannot be expected to offer theirs.” – Anton Sokolov, speaking on the virtues of sacrifice.

In the aftermath of violent acts, bloodshed and conflict and strife, words become meaningless. For those first few moments, there is only silence and stillness, without any of the gathered crowd daring to be the first to raise his voice.

With scattered flakes of red-tinted snow carried upon it, clinging to whatever carpets and tapestries they touch, the cold wind creeps through the shattered doorway. Whatever illusion of protection it had once offered is lost now, torn down by the monstrous, deformed child in its attack, and trampled underfoot in its retreat. No, not its retreat – the word implies defeat, disgrace – but its victorious withdrawal. Having spread chaos and dismay among the men, and taken Captain Bach as a trophy, the child had returned to whatever pit it calls home.

And finally, the silence is broken.
>>
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>>528443

“The Wehrlain Engine is intact and unharmed, functionality unhindered,” Wehrlain announces to the world, his voice trembling faintly with the effort of staying calm, “I suggest we return to our initial aim of searching-”

He doesn't get the chance to finish that sentence, his words choked off as you step close and grab is fur collar. Holding him tightly for a moment, it is only with a great deal of effort that you stop yourself from throwing him back into that damn machine of his. No matter how satisfying it might be, you know better than that. Taking your hands from Wehrlain's collar, you turn away from him in disgust. Even without looking, you can sense him trembling with rage. You're not the only one who can feel the bitter mood, for Lars steps forwards.

“A moment, Master Wehrlain, just one moment,” he pleads, taking you by the arm and futilely trying to drag you away. Resisting him for a moment, just long enough to make him nervous, you let him lead you aside. “I know how this is going to sound, but he has a point. The chances of Captain Bach still being alive-”

Are not yet zero, you interrupt, he still has time – less and less with every moment you waste here.

“Be that as it may, we have an opportunity here – a chance to finish our research while that thing is away... distracted. I don't like it much, I won't pretend that I do, but we have to be pragmatic. We can get back home without the captain, if that's what you were worried about. In either case... do you even have some way of surviving out there?” Lars pauses, glancing meaningfully across at your travelling case and the witch's idol that lies within. It was with you, silent and protective, when you boarded the Polaris, and you have faith that it'll do its job again... probably.

“All I'm trying to say is that you'll be alone out there, and that thing...” Lars shudders, after the pause, “Nothing we hit it with made it so much as flinch.”

“Ain't quite the case,” an uncouth sailor, shamelessly eavesdropping, butts in, “The damn monster shrugged off buckshot like it was spring rain, can't argue that point, but one of the boys drew blood with his harpoon. Drove it back a step, even. You gut the thing, I wager it won't be fit to cause any more trouble.”

Enough, you tell them both, you've made up your mind. You know what you must do.

>I'm going to kill that monster, and I'm going to bring Captain Bach home in one piece
>Bach sacrificed himself. Let's finish things here and make that sacrifice worth something
>Other
>>
>>528446
>>I'm going to kill that monster, and I'm going to bring Captain Bach home in one piece
Let's do the challenge!
We are a hunter after all.
>>
>>528446
>I'm going to kill that monster, and I'm going to bring Captain Bach home in one piece
I like Bach and that thing is just going to keep picking people off.
>>
>>528446
>I'm going to kill that monster, and I'm going to bring Captain Bach home in one piece
>>
>>528446
>I'm going to kill that monster, and I'm going to bring Captain Bach home in one piece
>>
>>528446
>>Bach sacrificed himself. Let's finish things here and make that sacrifice worth something
>>
You're going to kill that monster, you tell him, and then you're going to bring Captain Bach home safely – in one piece, if possible. This “opportunity” is nothing more than a false hope – if you let that bastard roam freely, it's just going to keep picking people off. Maybe Wehrlain is prepared to accept that, losing men in ones and twos, but you're not going to turn a blind eye to it. You're up for this challenge, and you won't leave the captain to die out there.

Lars is lost for words, but Wehrlain – as you pass him by – manages to find his tongue. “I won't stop you from going out there,” he offers, “But I can't recommend it. If you insist, though, I do have one request for you. If you should manage to kill that anomaly...” Turning away from you, he digs out a small tin box and hands it over. Opening it, you see a syringe and a number of glass jars, all safely secure in plush velvet. “Take samples – blood, tissue, whatever else you can. The chance to study something native to these parts doesn't come along every day, now does it?”

Laughing aloud, a bitter laugh, you tuck the sample kit into one of your deep pockets and start for the shattered door. Dragging your case, and the protective idol within, along with you, you pause only to take a harpoon from one of the sailors. He doesn't resist, letting you pluck it from his limp hands. Shamed perhaps, you consider, by his own inaction. Putting him out of your mind, you step out into the cold abyss.

Immediately, once there is a wall between you and the rest of the expedition, you crack open your case and throw aside the layer of clothes. You can't exactly carry the damn thing with you, but you need the idol's protection. It's hardly subtle, but you're past caring about such things. Tearing a spare shirt into strips, you fashion a crude harness and hoist the totem onto your back. It's bulky, but light enough to be no burden. The bristling thorns are no problem either, not with the thick coat protecting your bare back.

Looking like some primitive warrior, clutching his spear and trusting in a pagan idol for protection, you clear your mind and focus on the task ahead – on the hunt. First step, picking up the trail, is easily handled. Although the footprints are long gone, filled in with falling snow, the monstrous child left a faint trail of blood behind it, one that shines through no matter how much snow drifts down onto it. So, you consider, the land wants to make things easy for you – that's fine with you.

With the red moon leering down upon you like a single bloody eye, you set off into the cold night in search of your prey.

[1/2]
>>
I hope Artemis kisses us for one of the power ups.
>>
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>>528474

Even without the boon of your keen senses, not much duller than those of a beast, you can catch the child's scent on the wind. A sour, animal stink, one that is mixed with the strangely human smell of an unwashed body. That trace of humanity sickens you, reminding you of its tainted origins. Born of the forbidden union between the nameless northern gods and a formerly barren prostitute, this deformed child has no place in any world.

So you'll remove it, and wipe away its filthy presence.

Shifting the harpoon from one hand to the other, you look up from the trail for a moment to get your bearings. In what seemed like a short time, the Old University has vanished from sight completely, leaving you in a barren, near featureless wasteland. The only things around to break up the expanse of snow and ice are looming spikes, like pale trees shorn of all branches. No, not trees – ribs. The scattered ribs of some ancient, and truly vast, being. Hallucinations, brought on by the red moon's influence, or a real and true feature of this place? Upon resting your hand on one, it feels solid enough... but that too may be the work of a delusion.

No matter. Questions of reality or illusion mean little in a place like this, and the time you waste on them thins Bach's odds of survival. Looking away the rib – if that is truly what it is – you spy a dark form in the distance, a crumbled shape against the snow beneath. As you turn and hurry towards it, you glance left and right for any sign of the child. Nothing – it's nowhere to be seen.

For now, at least.

-

The dark bundle is human, a beaten and abused figure that you nevertheless recognise as Captain Bach. As you roll him onto his back, he coughs and opens his bloodshot eyes, the wavering gaze falling upon your face.

“Loomis, is that you?” he rasps, not recognising you for who you truly are, “I knew you wouldn't leave me... not this time. It's a tough scrape, but we've... we've been through worse, haven't we?”

Sure, you grunt as heave him upright, this is nothing. His leg, you notice, hangs limp and crooked as he rises – broken, or dislocated at the very least. Either way, the captain won't be walking out of here.

“It's coming, Loomis, it's coming back,” he breathes feverishly. As his words rush out, you hear a distant roar – coming, it seems, from all directions at once. Scanning the flat ground around you, though, you see nothing. “Give me a weapon,” Bach pleads, “I can still fend for myself!” With weak and grasping hands, he reaches for the hunting knife in your belt.

>Fine, take my knife
>No way, stay down while I find this thing
>We're not fighting – I'm getting you out of here right now
>Other
>>
>>528495
>No way, stay down while I find this thing
Dude is too wounded to help and we shouldn't give a weapon while he is this delusional.
>>
>>528495
Give him the knife but tell him it's only for emergencies - we'll be doing the real fighting here.
>>
>>528495
give him the knife AND the totem thing.

We're using a melee weapon anyway, and it'd kinda suck if the totem broke while the Child was raking our back or knocking us into some trees.
>>
>>528505
>>528495
I'll second this but we need to keep the fight near the totem
>>
>>528495
>>We're not fighting – I'm getting you out of here right now
>>
>>528495
>>No way, stay down while I find this thing
>>528498 has the right idea, we need to finish this up and drag his ass back to somewhat safety.
Nice to have ya back Moloch.
>>
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Setting him down once more, you take a long look around the landscape. As dead and desolate as ever, there's nowhere for a looming monster to hide – and yet, it has melted into the night with an uncanny ease. Short of squeezing its bulk into the cover of a single rib, there's nothing that might hide it from sight.

So you'll have to go looking for it.

Drawing your hunting knife, you kneel down beside Bach and offer him the weapon. When he reaches for it, though, you pull it back an inch. This is for emergency use only, you tell him in a warning tone, he's too injured to go looking for trouble. Is that understood?

“I know, I know,” he nods, and even that much exertion makes him look like he's about to pass out. Putting aside your doubts, you let him take the knife from you. He holds it close, like a mother cradling her precious child, and his expression grows a shade calmer. He may still be wounded, damn near crippled, but with a weapon in his hands he has some control over his own destiny. What more could a man ask for, in a place like this?

Before you head out to find the monster, you untie the makeshift harness and set the witch idol down next to Bach. It's too precious to risk on a hunt, when a single blow from the child might tear it apart and leave you defenceless. You can fight against a brute like that with muscle and steel, but not against the insidious influence of a demon moon. So long as you don't stray too far away from the idol, you needn't fear the moon's curse. Much.

“There it is, Loomis,” Bach's voice drops to a deathly whisper, and his quavering finger points into the night, “Watching. Waiting. Can't you see it?”

Following his finger, you see nothing but the night sky... at first. Then, gleaming like new coins, you see two points of light. Not quite motionless, they heave slightly with the rhythm of ponderous breathing. As your eyes lock onto those distant lights, their owner starts to lumber closer.

Stay down, you mutter to Bach as you take up your harpoon, you'll be back in no time.

-

Now that you have a target, prey within sight, you feel a strange calm drop over you like a shroud. There's nothing complicated about what you've got to do – just cut this thing open and be done with it. Simple, in theory at least. As the deformed child lumbers closer, though, you notice something unusual about it. Out here, it has none of the mad wrath that you saw earlier at the Old University. Out here, it has the air of a predator – confident, almost sadistic.

You'll see how long that lasts. Once blood has been spilled, you figure it'll show its true colours.

>Calling for a Physical Combat check. That's 1D100+15, aiming to beat 80/100, and I'll take the highest of the first three results.
>>
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Rolled 97 + 15 (1d100 + 15)

>>528544
>>
Rolled 51 + 15 (1d100 + 15)

>>528546
Ya nailed it Anon.
>>
>>528546
git rekt
>>
Rolled 62 + 15 (1d100 + 15)

>>528544
>>
Dropping low, the child beats its hands against the ground and lets out a gibbering howl, one that carries an almost victorious note. Celebrating its victory in advance, perhaps, heedless of the arrogance the act conveys. Using its knurled fists as a springboard, it launches itself into a sudden storm of motion, an animal charge that sees the distance between you vanishing into nothingness. In the face of such a charge, your calm hardens into cold precision – the kind that leave no room for doubt, hesitation or confusion.

As the charge nearly reaches you, you throw the harpoon to the side, leaping after it a second later. Without the long weapon to hinder you, you can roll neatly out of the beast's charge. The ground shakes as it pounds past you, a frustrated bellowing reaching you as the creature realises its error. Still, that much momentum can't just be ignored, and its charge carries it past you as you rise, snatching up the harpoon and moving into your own attack.

Brandishing it like a pike, you lower the harpoon and run across the open ground. As the child finally stills its motion, you close the gap between the two of you and lunge. The vicious point of your harpoon, all glistening steel and cruel barbs, punches deep into the back of the child's knee, bursting out the front in a welter of dark, tainted blood dirtying the snow before you. Already howling out in pain, the beast's screams reach a new height as you rip the blade free. As it turns to face you, the child stumbles and falls, its wounded leg – damn near hanging by a tendon – buckling under it. Even in falling, though, it swipes out at you with a clenched fist.

Blood flies in scattered droplets as you leap back, out of the beast's reach, to ready your next attack. Even crippled – about as crippled as Bach is, you notice with a distant irony – the creature is far from harmless. Wounded beasts, with nothing to lose, never are.

>Calling for a Physical Combat check. That's 1D100+15, aiming to beat 70/90, and I'll take the highest of the first three results.
>>
Rolled 64 + 15 (1d100 + 15)

>>528569
>>
Rolled 82 + 15 (1d100 + 15)

>>528569
Let's see if we can hit its eyes.
>>
Rolled 16 + 15 (1d100 + 15)

>>528569
>>
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Rolled 29 + 15 (1d100 + 15)

>>528569
>>
Rolled 63 + 15 (1d100 + 15)

>>528569
>>
My only gripe about this quest is the lack of agency during combat. Combat is well written but it's less compelling when we just roll a few times consecutively instead of making decisions. Just my two cents. Still one of my favorite quests though.
>>
>>528584
I'm pretty sure we're supposed to make suggestions. Hence my advising we hit the eyes.
>>
>>528590
>>528584
Sometimes there are options (Snake Great Beast Fight), sometimes it's just a roll.
>>
Drawing back for one last desperate lunge, the child puts its weight on its uninjured leg and leaves the crippled limb to drag uselessly behind it. Throwing itself forwards with its powerful arms, it reaches out to seize you, those same strong arms ready to crush the life out of your frail, human body. It dives for you, and you leap back out of the way. Hindered by its wounds, this is one competition that you win easily. Darting back out of reach, you watch as the deformed child lands heavily, its impact casting up a great mass of snow.

Piercing that veil of powered snow, you slip close and lash out with the harpoon. Although not a weapon designed for slashing, the harpoon nevertheless has a wicked point – a point that rakes across the creature's face and blinds it. Rearing back, clutching its hands to the ruin of its face, the child lets out a shrill, keening wail. In that defenceless moment, you throw all your weight behind the harpoon and thrust forwards, piercing its skull and plunging the point into its brain.

The creature's cry dies in its throat, and it slumps forwards to the snow. It takes a long time, and a great deal of effort for you to pry the harpoon free from the corpse.

-

Circling the corpse like a vulture, you draw the sample kit from your pocket and begin to take a few quick samples. Its hide resists the syringe's needle, and pushing hard only ends up in the thin point snapping clean off. In the end, you have to slice open its arm and let some of the sluggish blood drip down into a jar. Already, it's taking on the dull brown of old blood, and you can't help but wonder what Wehrlain could even learn from something like this. Well, you decide, that's his problem.

Joining the sample of blood, you sever a finger and drop it into the case to serve as a tissue sample. It's a far cry from the clean, clinical specimen's Wehrlain is used to dealing with, you're sure, and you eagerly look forwards to seeing his reaction. Spiteful, maybe, but after everything he's put you all through...

No point in dwelling on such things now – you've got to get the captain back to the Old University, and whatever relative safety might be found there. Making the short trek back, you find him asleep – lost in a kind of fitful doze, muttering and murmuring to himself. As you're strapping the idol back on, he wakes and looks slowly at you. His eyes are muddled, like those f a man unsure of where he has woken.

“Loomis?” he asks, “No, you're not... him. Hunter, is that you?”

Who else, you ask, would be fool enough to come out here after him?

“Hah, it IS you,” he grunts out a laugh, “Damn glad to see a friendly face out here. Last thing I remember, I was... we were all at the University, and there was a great crashing noise...”

[1/2]
>>
>>528596

Never mind that, you tell him as you haul him upright once again, you can't imagine it's too difficult to work out what happened. If it is, he could probably guess once he sees the entrance to the Old University... what's left of it, at least.

“Damnation,” Bach wheezes as you let him lean on your shoulder, “Was it bad, did we lose many men?”

A few, you reply, you didn't have time to count heads. You arrived just in time to learn that the beast had carried him off – maybe hoping to save a snack for later. Your gallows humour draws a dark laugh out of Bach, one that ends in a pained hiss as he tries to put some weight on his wounded leg. It's not a mistake he makes again.

“I suppose that snake made it out without a scratch,” he mutters as you hobble along through the wilderness, walking in what you think is the same way you came. Truth be told, though, you can't be exactly certain about that. “I know his type,” Bach continues, “The type to sit back and watch as others bleed, only to take the glory when things are over.”

That sounds like Wehrlain, you agree, and he's right – you saw him when you arrived back at the entrance hall, barely a hair out of place. More worried about his damn machine than anything else.

“Snake,” the venerable captain mutters the word, giving it all the bitterness of a curse. That's the last thing either of you saw for a while, silence descending as you march stoically through the snow. As you forge ahead, though, you notice Bach's breathing growing shallow, and his head starts to hang limply.

Hey, you order, no sleeping – not out here. At the sound of your voice, his head raises back up and some semblance of life returns to his eyes. All too quickly, though, he starts to fade again. With a mounting sense of hopelessness, you shake him awake once more and speak to him, your voice the hushed whisper of a conspirator.

>Hey Bach, who's Loomis?
>How about another one of your stories, old man?
>Wehrlain wanted to leave you behind, you know
>I had a question for you... (Write in)
>Other
>>
>>528618
>How about another one of your stories, old man?
Keep him talking.
>>
>>528618
>Hey Bach, who's Loomis?
>How about another one of your stories, old man?
The more to talk about the better
>>
>>528618
>>How about another one of your stories, old man?
He'll be alright, r-right?
>>
>>528640
He's probably exhausted.
>>
>>528618
>How about another one of your stories, old man?
>>
>>528618
>Talk about Vas
>Hell, talk about witchcraft. The totem, flat out. If it'll keep him awake, it's worth the risk.
>>
You've got to keep him talking, keep him from slipping into a deep sleep. You don't know if this is just the creeping chill of this place, or the time he spent outside of the Wehrlain Engine's protective influence, but there's something gravely wrong with him. For now, all you can do is keep him awake – keep him talking.

Hey old man, you grunt, how about another one of his old stories? You're always up for swapping a tall tale or two, and he's got plenty to share. He said that he'd been through some tight scrapes, didn't he, so how about he tells you about one?

“Enough of that “old man” talk...” he mutters, before coughing and spitting to the side. You glance across at where he spat, and you see a faint splash of dilute blood. Grimacing, you nudge the old man to keep him focussed. “I'm awake,” he grumbles, and he actually sounds like he means it, “A story, is it? You'll have to pay me back in kind, mind you. I don't just give them away for free.”

That's a trade you're more than willing to make, you reply, now stop stalling. How about a tale from his time as a young man – can he remember something like that?

“All too well!” the jibe works, and a new strength comes into Bach's voice, “South... we were travelling to the south, to the colonies. I was just a normal sailor in those days, serving under captain... I forget his name, now. We were off duty, slumming it in the awful pits that pass for bars in those lands, when we heard a rumour. Plantations fat with spice, all selling at a fraction of what we could shift them for back home. Supply and demand, my friend – they had too much supply, and not enough demand. Eager to make some extra cash – and a little drunk – we set off to find this place. Off into the jungle...”

As he pauses, thinking on his next words, you try to imagine the scene. Wading through deep and muddy water, as hot as blood, rather than the thick snow. Trees looming high around you, their waxy leaves offering much needed shade. A sky that actually held a sun, and not this single burning eye that is the red moon. As you picture these things in your mind, it almost seems like the land around you is shifting to resemble them – but only ever in the periphery of your vision. When you turn to look, you only see snow and ice.

“We had a local guide, fellow named... I don't know, something foreign,” with his free hand, Bach waves out a dismissive gesture, “Smart though, he spoke well. He agreed to lead us there for a small cut of the profits. Even a small cut would be a fortune for a man like him, you understand. So there we were, passing from the shade of the jungle to a darker place, a swamp. That was when we learned we were lost, hopelessly so.”

[1/?]
>>
>>528694

This isn't supposed to be an analogy, you ask as you look at the wasteland around you, for what you're currently going through?

“A what?” confused by your question, it takes a moment for Bach to pick up the thread of his tale, “We were... we were lost. And, of course, our “faithful” guide had vanished the minute our backs were turned. Smart, no denying it, but he was a slippery bastard. Gives the southern folk a bad name, his sort. We were lost, night was falling, and so we cut out a clearing and started a fire. Settled in for the night, in the hope that morning would show us the way.” Closing his eyes for a moment, Bach manages a small smile, as if recalling the foolish hope they had entertained.

So what happened, you ask, how did he get out of that scrape?

“Get out? We didn't get out – we all starved to death!” opening his bloodshot eyes, Bach heaves out a great bray of laughter, “The night... there's nothing like a night spent down there, in the jungle. It's never silent, not for a second. Birds, insects, things we never got the chance to see... a thousand little noises, all shrieking and squawking. Like nothing we'd ever heard before, like nothing I've heard since, either. Morning found us sleepless, hungry and confused. We never decided on a plan – we split up, in groups of two and three, and we just... wandered away. I don't think any of us expected to make it back to civilisation.”

But he did, you point out, he made it back. This is no different – you're both going to make it back as well. Anyway, he's not finished his story yet. How did he make it back to civilisation?

“I'll leave you guessing,” Bach gives you a wry smile, “You answer me something, and maybe I'll tell you. That spiny thing you've been dragging about... it's some kind of protection, isn't it? Ever since you brought it close, things have been... easier.”

You'll tell him, you grunt, but only if he keeps it quiet. You've got your good name to protect, and you don't want gossip muddying it.

“Good name, he says,” the old man laughs, before spitting again – that same frothy, blood-tinged mixture as before.

Ignoring his jibe, you slowly explain about the totem, about the witchcraft used to create it. Leaving out Alyssia's name, and anything else that might be able to lead back to her, you talk about cutting your hands on thorns, about stones painted with lurid eyes, about the strange vision you had. A vision of a whale, of scuttling insects and gold eyes. Two of those three, you realise, have already come true. How long before it becomes an even set?

[2/?]
>>
>>528727

As your own story winds on, you notice Bach's attention slipping. How much of it really settled into his mind, you have to wonder, and how much passed through like so much meaningless noise? When you call his name, he doesn't respond with anything more than a mumble. Cursing bitterly to yourself, despair reaches up from within you to choke your thoughts. Before you can fall too deeply into hopelessness, though, you see faint lights in the distance, lights that soon illuminate the blocky shape of an ancient building.

The Old University – you've made it. Looking around at Bach, you snap out the first question that comes to mind. Loomis, you nearly yell at him, who is Loomis?

“What?” the sound of the name rouses Bach once again, “Loomis... he was my brother, younger brother. We used to sail together once, before...”

Keep talking, you prompt, did he die?

“I don't think so,” screwing up his brow, Bach tries hard to think, “No, I... we argued. Fought, even. There was... money involved. How much was it again? I can't quite remember... I should track him down again, when we get back to Thar Dreyse.” He coughs a few times, so violently that you have to stop and hold him upright. This time, the blood that he coughs up is darker, more concentrated. “I'm never getting back to Thar Dreyse...” he mumbles, once the fit has subsided.

Yes he will, you snap, and you'll get the rest of that story out of him on the way. He'd better not leave you guessing, understood?

But Bach, his head hanging limp, has no response to that.

-

When you burst through the broken entrance of the Old University, it seems like every gun in the world is pointed at you. When the armed sailors see you – and their captain, held slack over your shoulder – they lower their weapons and usher you inside. With nobody else to turn to, you carry Bach to Wehrlain and call out the Scholar's name.

“So, he survived,” Wehrlain covers up a brief moment of confusion with a snide smile, “I had little doubt that you'd-”

Quiet, you bark, he needs help. There's something gravely wrong with him. Internal injuries, perhaps, or something... else. Perhaps it's the urgency in your voice, or your blunt words that do it, for the sly look drops clean off Wehrlain's face and his expression turns deadly serious.

“Set him down here, I can examine him,” crisp and clear, Wehrlain gives you instructions like a born leader. As you set the captain down and step back, Wehrlain pulls out some arcane device and starts listening to Bach's chest. “No bleeding in the lungs, it seems,” the Scholar mutters, “Ah, but what about...” With a surprisingly tender finger, he opens one of Bach's eyes to reveal a black abyss – all pupil and swirling blood.

“There's your problem,” Wehrlain nods, a trace of satisfaction in his voice.

[3/4]
>>
>>528749
>With a surprisingly tender finger, he opens one of Bach's eyes to reveal a black abyss – all pupil and swirling blood.

That's not Red Eye is it...?
>>
>>528749

“Correct me if I'm wrong, Hunter, but the good captain was outside of the Wehrlain Engine's protection for quite some time, was he not?” Wehrlain asks, gesturing for you to pick Bach up again, “Rhetorical question, I'm all too aware of the circumstances at work here. Come with me, carry him through to the laboratory.”

He was out there quite some time, you explain anyway, you couldn't say how long exactly. You're not even sure if it's possible to be exact about such things in this place. Saying this more to yourself than to Wehrlain, you follow the Scholar – who looks almost excited, now that the initial moment of seriousness has passed – through to the laboratory. As you walk, you pass boxes of old books and other items.

“We're packing things up, taking everything we can with us,” the Scholar remarks in passing, “Even the books we can't read might prove vital in time. Best not to leave anything, wouldn't you agree?”

You'd rather know what's wrong with Bach, you shoot back, he has some idea... right? It's not the Red Eye Sickness is it?

“No, not that,” Wehrlain shakes his head, “You'd see a reaction in both eyes, if that was the case. No, I believe this to be a reaction to the, shall we say, hostile conditions here. The same kind of symptoms were seen in the dead recovered from the first expedition north. Pressure on the brain, the leading theory goes. I might be able to do something about it...”

You have to force back the urge to stop dead in your tracks, forging ahead as Wehrlain sweeps into the laboratory and waves an indifferent hand towards a low table. So do it, you tell him, or is there a catch to this?

“Well, it might not work, and he might die,” the Scholar thinks, “Oh, and we don't seem to have much in the way of anaesthesia, so the operation might not be... clean. We were supposed to have a plentiful supply of laudanum, but someone must have been helping themselves. Oh well – no matter.” Shrugging, Wehrlain takes a pair of linen gloves from his pocket and pulls them on. “Hold him down, will you?”

Wait, you pause, he's going to operate without any pain relief?

“Would you rather watch him die?” Wehrlain shrugs again, “Now hold him down, or get out of my laboratory!”

>Get one of your lackeys to do it, not me
>Alright, I'll do it
>No, stop. No operations. Let him die peacefully
>Other
>>
>>528775
>Alright, I'll do it
>>
>>528775
>>Alright, I'll do it
>>
>>528775
>Alright, I'll do it
>>
>>528775
>Alright, I'll do it

Is the doll still hanging from our back?
>>
>>528791

>It would be, yes, now I think about it.
>>
>>528791
We strapped it on in full view of people last time. If anyone cares they've made no comment about it.
>>
>>528805
We explicitly did this outside, hidden behind a wall.
>>
>>528813
You're right. Must have skimmed.

If anyone asks I guess we can say we pulled one from that abandoned boat just in case.
>>
Looking at the laboratory, at the clinging dust and ancient grime, you choke back a faintly disgusted noise and focus. Not exactly ideal conditions, but not the worst you've ever seen either. There's no mud or filth, and there's nothing trying to kill you – under the circumstances, asking for more than that would have been churlish at best.

Alright, you tell Wehrlain, you'll do it. What kind of operation is this going to be, anyway?

“A simple one – I can do it myself, I should think. If our theories are correct, and this is a kind of pressure building within the cranium, all I'll need to do is...” pausing, Wehrlain rummages about a box of medical tools, pulling out what looks like a hand operated drill, “Release some of the pressure.” He finishes, with an eager grin. Far too eager, in your humble opinion.

As Wehrlain busies himself with gathering a few extra tools, you take the totem from your back and push it out of the way. No use hiding it now, but there's nothing to be gained from parading it about. Either way, you'll have to worry about that later – for now, you've got an operation to assist with.

You're not looking forwards to this.

-

As Wehrlain shaves a small patch on the back of Bach's skull, the captain manages to rouse himself a little, shifting on the table and muttering to himself. Murmuring an apology – you're not even sure if he can hear you, or if he can makes any sense of your words – you reach out and hold him down. As you pin him in place, Wehrlain soaks a rag in some acrid smelling liquid – disinfectant, you think to yourself – and wipes down the shaved head, before pouring more of the disinfectant onto the drill itself.

This, you realise, is not going to be a pretty sight.

“Remember, hold him very still,” Wehrlain warns you as he gives the drill an experimental spin, “Don't waste your time worrying about hurting him. I assure you, he'll have other things to think about.”

He's done this before, you ask Wehrlain, right? When the Scholar doesn't answer you, you assume the worst and move to the next question. He's studied the procedure though, you insist, hasn't he?

“Oh, I've studied it,” Wehrlain nods, “Just... in passing. Really, my focus is on machines. In terms of medicine, I'm really more of a... a dabbler. Still, it's not bad to try new things now and again, is it?”

This is not going to be a pretty sight. Not in the slightest. As Wehrlain gives his drill another test, you press down harder on Bach's shoulders. Again, you mutter a senseless apology to the man.

[1/2]
>>
>>528851

It doesn't take long for things to go wrong. As soon as Wehrlain touches the tip of the drill to Bach's shaven head, the captain rouses himself. Opening his terrible, mismatched eyes – one black with blood and ruin, the other wide and very white – he looks about in blind, senseless panic. His expression, one of confusion and terror, gives no indication that he really “sees” anything – anything grounded in reality, at least.

“Hold his head still please,” Wehrlain asks, with the polite tone of a gentleman asking for a fresh cup of tea, “Hold his shoulders with your elbows, if you have to.” Your breath hisses out through clenched teeth as you obey, pinning Bach down. He's weak, surprisingly so, and it doesn't take much to immobilise him. Just when it looks like the operation is about to begin, Wehrlain pulls the drill away. “Wait!” he cries, turning away as you splutter out a curse. When he returns, he has a worn strip of old leather, forcing it between Bach's teeth. “There we go,” he croons, “Safe and sound...”

You're really not sure about this, you start to say, he's certain that there wasn't any lau-

The drill bites into flesh, and Bach's muffled screaming drown out anything else you had to say. His weakness vanishes in an instant, and soon you have to throw all your strength into holding him down. The initial round of screaming doesn't last long – a small mercy – but the horrible gurgling groans that follow it manage to be worse, somehow. As if he hasn't noticed anything wrong at all – with all the nonchalance of a man drilling into solid wood – Wehrlain keeps going, even as blood flicks out to stain his clothes.

He's humming. The son of a bitch is humming to himself.

“Shouldn't be long now,” he assures you, looking up from his work and rubbing a hand across his sweaty brow, leaving a long smear of blood in its place, “I'm about halfway, I wager. You're hanging in there, aren't you captain?”

In response to Wehrlain's mildly worded question – mildly worded, but with a venom lurking behind it – Bach lets out another groan, his hands shuddering as he tries to fight you off him. Just lie still, you plead, just lie back and it'll all be over soon. His one good eye rolls madly for a moment before settling on you, meeting your gaze and holding it until you have to look away. Grimacing, you hear the squeaking of the drill start up once more, and another deep groan escapes Bach.

A few moments more, and then Wehrlain gasps out in satisfaction. As he steps back to admire his handiwork, you hear another sound – a wet bubbling sound, like air rising to the surface of a marsh. You really don't want to think too much about that.

[2/3]
>>
>>528889

“You should see this,” Wehrlain remarks, “I'll hold him down, if you want. How often do you get the chance to see a man's brain while he yet lives?” Even without looking at him, you can tell that he's smiling to himself, the self-satisfied smile of a general who led his troops to victory without ever approaching danger himself. “No, not interested?” he adds, when you hold your silence, “It's really very interesting. Quite a vivid pink colour.”

It's over then, you ask, when will you know the results? He's not dead yet, true, but has he been saved?

“Well, normally I'd say to wait a few hours and see how his condition has developed, but that might be meaningless here. So, I say to wait a while and see what happens,” Wehrlain shrugs, and then smiles slowly, “Of course, we're all dealing in theoretical matters here. Perhaps just spending time within the influence of the Wehrlain Engine would have cured him.”

This entire operation was pointless, you wonder aloud, just something for satisfy his ego...

“Better safe than sorry, wouldn't you say?” the Scholar counters, “Doing nothing could have led to his death. Would you have preferred that?”

No, you admit, not really. At least he didn't die on the operating table. That's one small mercy.

“Then we can call the operation a tentative success!” Wehrlain claps his bloodied gloves together, “Ah, I wish I had a glass of brandy to toast this occasion.”

Turning away in disgust, you turn your attention to Bach again. He's slipped into a merciful unconsciousness now, his breathing slow and regular. The worst has passed by now, it seems. What now, you ask, just leave him here?

“I have to take some notes on this. You keep an eye on him, and call for me if anything goes wrong,” Wehrlain strips off his bloody gloves and shoves them into his pocket, “Call me if he wakes up, as well – I'll see about that leg of his later. Are we in agreement?”

>Fine. Go write your damn notes
>I'd rather focus on searching the rest of the University
>I wanted to ask you something first... (Write in)
>Other
>>
>>528935
>I'd rather focus on searching the rest of the University
"You can write your notes while watching your patient. Have one of your scholars do it if you can't sit still."
>>
>>528935
>>I'd rather focus on searching the rest of the University
See if our possible buddy Lars can watch over Bach. I want to see if we can read some books.
>>
>>528935
>I'd rather focus on searching the rest of the University
>>
>>528935
>Other

"You should work on his leg now. When will you seal him back up?"
>>
>>528935
>I'd rather focus on searching the rest of the University
Got shit to do.
>>
>>528944
This, and dont they have any doctor kind of scholars in the party?
>>
>>528935
Seconding this:
>>528941
>>
You'd rather focus on searching the rest of the University, you tell Wehrlain, he can write his notes here can't he? Or, if he can't sit still for long enough, he can get one of his Scholars to do it. Lars could do it, you suggest, he's competent enough. You do have a few questions about Bach's treatment, though.

“Oh? I'll be sure to take your expert opinion into account,” Wehrlain spreads his hands, giving you a good view of the blood splashed onto his robes, “Go on then, ask away.”

Well first of all, you say as you point to Bach's skull, when is he going to seal that up?

“I could probably put a cover over it fairly soon – and, indeed, I probably should – but it'll be an improvised job,” The Scholar examines his fingernails, needlessly scouring them for any traces of blood – heedless of the smear decorating his forehead, “We don't have the facilities or the resources here for a more permanent job. Still, as long as we keep changing the dressings, it shouldn't be a problem.”

And the leg, you point out next, that should be sorted soon as well. It's not an open wound, but there's no sense in roaming around with injuries going untreated – not in a place like this, at least. Perhaps it would be a good job for a real doctor, you suggest mildly, one with more extensive medical training.

“I'm sure that can be arranged,” Wehrlain manages to look agreeable for a short moment before a hungry look descends over him, “Oh, and while we're here, were you able to recover any viable samples? I'd like the chance to study them here and now, to compare them with a later examination in the College proper. I have a theory that their properties might change once leaving this place.”

You got him some samples, you tell him as you pass the tin over, both flesh and blood. They're plenty fresh as well, at least they were when you harvested them.

“I'm sure they-” Wehrlain eagerly cracks open the case and looks inside, his smile faltering a little as he pulls out the severed digit, “How... generous of you to bring me this.”

Yeah well, you tell him as you're leaving, you made sure to get the middle one – you've been wanting to give him it for a while now.

-

Back out in the entrance hall, you run into Lars and give him a brief explanation of the situation. When the time comes to describe the surgery, he pales and suppresses a shudder. Before he can sink too deeply into his own thoughts, though, you send him up to the laboratory to keep an eye on Bach. You'll owe him a favour, you add, if he does this.

“No need for that, I'll do it, no strings attached,” Lars assures you, “Best to have someone else keeping an eye on things, just in case. You'll stop by later, won't you?”

Sure, you reply, you've got the end of a story to hear.

[1/2]
>>
>>528999
>you made sure to get the middle one
Based Henryk.
>>
>>528999

Your first stop is the Serpent wing – the long abandoned dormitories – to see if there was anything left behind. Judging by the steady flow of men moving in and out of it, the search has moved to focus on things there. At the entrance, you stop one of the more listless looking Scholars – a fat one, with watery blue eyes – and ask about the progress.

“Slow,” he grunts, “There's a lot of rooms, and a lot of clutter. We've got to check everything over, every individual item, to see what's junk and what's not. We're working hard here.”

Definitely, you remark, he really looked like he was putting in the long hours.

“Got to take breaks now and again,” he replies, sounding vaguely offended, “The eyes grow tired, you see, and the mind clumsy. Frequent breaks are a vital part of-”

Of course, of course. So, you ask in order to move things along, you're here to put in some time. Where should you start?

“Well, we've been working our way along, starting from the close by rooms. You could start at the far end, see if there's anything there. I think the furthest room might be significant, in some sense – back at the College, that's where the student representatives would have their quarters. Everything else here follows a similar pattern, so...” he shrugs ponderously, leaving the end of his offer to hang in the air.

With a shrug of your own, you get started on your way. You've got to start somewhere, and this is as good a place as any.

-

Moving past the occasional Scholar – and a fair few sailors who look more interested in looting than research – you head to the furthest section of the dormitories. Behind a heavy set of double doors, heavy enough that you have to throw your whole weight into opening them, you find an exceptionally cluttered room. Most of it looks like normal student clutter – fairly conventional books left where their stacks collapsed, mouldering rags that used to be items of clothing left in piles, that sort of thing – but one wall is taken up by numerous grainy photographs. Naturally, this display draws your eye more than anything else.

Most of the photographs are unremarkable as well, their quality too degraded to make out much. They might depict the Old University from the outside, with a cluster of blurry figures standing by it. Flipping one over, you read the faded ink on the back.

“Success! The Bartzov expedition finds its target!”

A message from kinder times, back when the explorers had some traces of hope and optimism. That couldn't have lasted very long. As you start to turn away from the wall, though, you spot an envelope. Inside, there's another photograph – folded in half - and a scrawled note.

[2/3]
>>
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>>529048

“This isn't the photograph I took,” the note reads, “I took a picture of the entrance hall, but this... I don't know what this scene depicts. Master Bartzof said it might have been the caverns beneath the University, but I don't believe that. I think I see the moon in these pictures, our familiar silver moon. Everything else, though, I cannot explain. I don't know if I want an explanation. From the moment I first developed this photograph, I fear what it depicts.”

That's all it says. Rereading the note – it's long on dread and short on explanation – you set it aside and move onto the photograph. Handling it with care, you unfold it and take a long look. True enough, you see something that might well be the sane moon – a disc of pure light up in one corner. The other orb you see, though, is far less recognisable. A giant, swollen... eyeball, maybe?

Folding the note and the photograph back up and returning them to the envelope, you start back to Lars and Wehrlain. Maybe they can offer some opinion on this.

-

“Anything of interest?” the fat Scholar – still on break, apparently – asks as you're leaving the dormitories, “Take it to Master Wehrlain if you have, he'll want to see it... and take credit for it, if you give him half the chance.”

You would never have guessed. Brushing past him, you hasten up the stairs to the laboratory and the Scholars within. Only Lars turns around at the sound of your entrance – Wehrlain is too busy gazing down the eyepiece of an ancient microscope and making odd humming sounds. Sparing him only the briefest of dirty looks, you move to Lars. He sits by Bach with a heavy book in his lap, ready to look up at the slightest reaction from the captain. He needn't worry about that – Bach looks, finally, like he's sleeping restfully.

“Hello,” Lars says quietly, “How are things on your end?”

>I'm not sure. What do you make of this photograph?
>I want to take a look at some of those books, see if I can find anything significant
>Has Wehrlain's research found anything?
>How's Bach doing?
>Other
>>
>>529115
>>I'm not sure. What do you make of this photograph?
>>I want to take a look at some of those books, see if I can find anything significant
>How's Bach?
>>
>>529115
>>I'm not sure. What do you make of this photograph?
>>I want to take a look at some of those books, see if I can find anything significant
>>
>>528449
kill those who cannot obey
>>
>>528446
>Bach sacrificed himself. Let's finish things here and make that sacrifice worth something
The value of the sacrifice endures and reveals itself throughout time...
if you can add value, your contribution is appreciated.
>pro tip, you probably cannot.
>>
>>529115
>I'm not sure. What do you make of this photograph?
>I want to take a look at some of those books, see if I can find anything significant

Wasn't the carving of the next Knight a orb or sun looking thing?
>>
>>529170
"oLnzlYse"
hey, I'm a samefag
surely someone(else) will post in this thread
soon
>>
I'm guessing that whatever madness plaguing Bartzov is the current Knight. Dunno if it has a physical form though.
>>
>>529181
>sane moon disc of pure light
>>
>>529187
Let's hope it has some kind of tangible form. We need a trophy after all.
>>
You're honestly not sure, you reply, you found a photograph and you're not sure what to make of it. Taking it out, you offer it to him. What does he think, you ask, has he seen anything like it? As Lars takes the photograph and studies it, he reaches up and rubs his stubbly cheeks. He looks like a man who doesn't take well to being unshaven, you think absently as he thinks to himself.

“Well,” he says eventually, “It definitely has a certain... impact. It looks a little like an eye, doesn't it?”

That's what you thought, you tell him, but not quite. It almost looks like it's starting to unravel – like a wound that's shedding its bandage. The note that came with it, it claimed that the photograph was supposed to be of something else.

“It's possible,” again, Lars touches his bristly cheeks as he thinks, “If the members of Bartzov's expedition were here without any protection, they would be fully exposed to this land's influence. That means we can't assume a logical order of events. This could well be a picture of something long past... or yet to come.”

It might be a look into the future, you muse, really?

“I don't think any of us can say for sure,” Lars shrugs, offering a faintly hopeless smile, “But I don't see anything like that lurking around here, do you? Though, it does make me think...” Reaching into a box beneath his chair, Lars takes out another book and starts to leaf through it. Stopping at a blank page – blank, save for a number of scrawled drawings – he hands the book over.

Eyes. The page is covered in scratchy images of eyes, several of them trailing crudely drawn hands or fingers. How old is this, you ask slowly, is this from Bartzov's expedition?

“Earlier than that,” Lars tells you, “But I couldn't be any more specific than that. Not with any degree of certainty, at least.”

Taking another long look at the page, you hand the book back to him. You'd like to take a look at some more of these books, you tell him, see if there's anything significant in them. Is that a possibility?

“Uh, wait, let me think,” Lars glances across to Wehrlain for a very brief moment, “The books we've collected have been divided up into two groups – the fragile specimens, I'm afraid, can't be handled. Everything else, though, you can help yourself with. If you don't mind me saying, however, I'm not sure...”

How much you'll get from them, you ask wryly, how much you'll understand?

“Well, yes,” the Scholar gives you an awkward shrug, “No offence intended. I won't stop you looking at them, of course. Would you like to see what we've got?”

In a moment, you tell him, you wanted to know how Bach was doing first.

[1/?]
>>
>>529212

“Bach, yes,” a dark look flashes across Lars' face, and he gives Wehrlain's back another fearful glance, “Come with me, I wanted to show you something. Don't worry about leaving Bach alone for a moment – he's sleeping. He'll come to no harm.” Standing, Lars slips his book back into the box and leads you out. Back in the entrance hall, looking out at the softly humming Wehrlain Engine, Lars sighs.

So, you press him, what did he want to show you?

“Nothing. Sorry about that,” he shakes his head, “I wanted to talk to you in private, that's all. Bach IS fine... which is to say, he's alive. He woke up briefly, and he could talk. His mind was intact, and his memory has only a few very minor omissions. He doesn't remember the... the operation, if you call that a mercy. Still, he has suffered some lasting – permanent – consequences.”

Sounds bad, you suggest, is it?

“His pupil collapsed, and that's not something we can do anything about. He won't lose the eye, but he's lost all sight in it,” Lars covers one eye with his hand, “He'll likely suffer headaches for a long time as well, crippling ones. He was in a great deal of pain when he woke up, but I gave him a dose of laudanum and he-”

Laudanum, you almost shout, but there wasn't any! Wehrlain said that someone had stolen it all, and that's why the operation had to be performed without any anaesthesia. Would he lie about that, you ask as a dark suspicion forms in your mind, just because Bach had argued with the Scholar in the past?

“...Maybe,” Lars lowers his voice, growing a shade paler, “If you believe the rumours, Wehrlain has certain... undesirable traits, a severe lack of empathy among them. It wouldn't be entirely unexpected if he-”

A cry, dry and choking, rises up from the laboratory. Exchanging a panicked look with Lars, you both hurry back through.

-

Bach has woken from his drugged sleep, crying out in fear upon arriving in this hostile world. Still too weak to rise fully, he struggles to turn and look at you as you enter the laboratory. In the background, as if no noise had ever been made, Wehrlain continues his “important” work. Upon seeing you, fixing his one good eye upon you, Bach seems to calm... slightly. At the very least, he lets himself slump down again.

“Are you hurt?” Lars asks, his voice clipped and efficient, “Are you in any pain?”

“Not too much,” Bach whispers, “Thirsty, that's all.”

“No water, not yet,” there is an apology in Lars' voice. As he checks Bach over, you circle the table and look at the back of his head. A white square of gauze covers his wound, faint stains rusting the cloth.

“Lars,” Wehrlain announces, rising to his feet, “A word please. Outside.”

The look that Lars gives you before leaving is a helpless one.

[2/3]
>>
>>529275

“I knew a sailor, once, who said that no captain was complete without an eye-patch,” Bach speaks slowly, as if every word has to be forced out, “I thought it was just a foolish joke. Looks like he's going to have the last laugh.” What you assume was supposed to be a laugh ends in a feeble cough, one too weak to bring up any blood. “Get me into a chair, will you? I can't stand lying here like an invalid.”

Against your better judgement, you help Bach into the chair that Lars recently vacated. Sitting upright seems to do him some good, for his intact eye manages to clear a little. How's the head, you ask him, is the pain bad?

“I've had worse hangovers,” he rasps, “Some of them, you know, they feel like people are trying to drill into your skull. Now those are bad...” Trailing off, Bach looks around in confusion before returning his eye to you. “I was supposed to tell you something,” he says suddenly, “I promised you I'd tell you... something. What was it?”

The end of his story, you tell him, he never told you how he made it out of that jungle. His party had split up into smaller groups and fled, you explain, but he never got to the part where he reached civilisation safely. You've been wondering – how did he manage that?

“Luck, my boy,” Bach tells you, with a pained smile, “We stumbled across a wild animal, red in tooth and claw, and we ran like lunatics. We ran and ran, and when we finally stopped running... there we were, standing at the border of that miserable little port town. The grace of fortune – that's what brought us home safely. Disappointed?”

Well, you hesitate, a little.

“That's life for you,” leaning back, the old captain closes his eyes and lets out a faintly nostalgic sigh, “And we never made a single coin out of it either. Now THAT was a disappointment.”

Not every story can have a happy ending, you suppose.

>I think I'll have to stop things here for today. I'll pick things up tomorrow, and I'll stick around in case anyone has any questions or comments
>Thanks to everyone who contributed today!
>>
>>529328
Thanks for running Moloch.

Add another eye to the counter.
>>
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>>529328
>>
>>529328
So uh...is a Nameless God going to be pissed about us killing it's kid?
>>
>>529328
Thanks for running Moloch. Wehrlain is definitely going to get his just deserts right? Maybe we can ditch him here so he can hang out with Bartzov.
>>
>>529340
>>529358

I couldn't resist it

>>529363

I wouldn't worry about it, they don't really have enough of a conscious mind to take these things personally.

>>529366

I wonder. Wehrlain is a pretty unpleasant guy, so he might earn an equally grim fate. He doesn't have many friends, either, even among the other Scholars.
>>
>>529328
Well, I'm all for beating the crap out of Wehrlain.

Good to have you back Moloch.
>>
>>529382
We could always just toss him overboard after putting a knife through him a couple times, on the way back.
>>
>>529464
He's a prick but murdering him like that is overkill. Just punch him in the face real hard.
>>
Wehrlain is a gigantic asshole, but he's also a genius. The engine he made and will improve could be a huge benefit for humanity. By killing him you'd be fucking over everyone.
>>
>>529473
>>529579
Hey. Remember how he waited until after the surgery to tell us Bach could have recovered without it?

And when he hid the Laudenum from us so that it wouldn't affect his data from the surgery, even though using painkillers for stuff like that can really help recovery?

And even though Bach survived so far, there's not a good prognosis for his future recovery?

Like damn dude. He's a pretty evil cunt at this point. And like one of you said, still a genius so there's no way I'm leaving him alone to become more of a monster.

Besides. Turns out the totem we have does the same thing and also doesn't drive men mad from lack of sleep and possibly worse.

I feel like Wehrlain might have spent too much time around his engine and it's ruined him as a person.
>>
>>529620
Still stabbing him and throwing him overboard probably won't go over well nor should we easily commit murder just because he is gigantic cunt.

That said though, I'd put money on him joining whatever the thing Bartzov is part of if it would give him knowledge/be remembered forever so you might get your wish.
>>
>>529473
No No you see we don't kill him, We have the crew hold the cock sucker down, Then we take that drill of his, And we slowly and without anesthetic Drill through his palms,
>>
>>529643
People fall overboard at sea. It's a thing ththat happens. If you're not a strong swimmer, like if you were a scholar that spent his days studying for instance, you could drown.

It does happen a lot more often to unpopular people, it's true.

Regardless. He needs to feel he's in control of us until we move, otherwise he'll probably fucking poison us or something.
>>
>>529661
Glad we're on the same page here Anon, I was just thinking something similar. Maybe we can knock him out and toss him outside for a while so his eye gets fucked up like Bach, then we can drill his head real nice and gentle like.
>>
I get being vindictive, but don't do anything stupid yeah?
>>
Wehrlian WUZ A GOOD BOI!

HE DINDU NUFFIN
>>
>>529741
that's really the hard part: getting some proper revenge without massive consequences.

And we can't NOT do it, not after knowing that he's perfectly okay with witholding anaesthetic. I'm 50/50 on whether the surgery should have taken place at all, though. It's not like the totem was helping much, so I doubt putting faith in the machine alone would have been wise.
>>
>>529770
Bach was exposed with out the machine or totem for bit before we caught up.

Surgery did save his life. Dude was a cunt not giving him anesthetic but he did save Bach's life.
>>
>>529775
He could have improved but Wehrlain didn't tell us that was an option so he could do the surgery.

Dudes going to go full Mendel. We need him to maintain the machine to protect everyone, but once we're close to port . . .

And he's simply too dangerous to try and get some form of revenge that leaves him alive.
>>
>>529780
We'll see how it goes. Shit hasn't gone all tits up yet (and you know it will) and the whole situation can change in an instant.
>>
>>529786
Yeah. That's why I said we should do it later.
>>
Wehrlian: Hey this engine is necessary so I'm testing it now to get y'all used to it

Hanson: FUCK YOU FAGGOT! YOU'RE A PIECE OF SHIT! TURN THE ENGINE DOWN!

Wehrlian: . . . Alright, I'll turn it down but I'm telling you there will be visions.

Hanson: FUCK OFF! HALF POWER YOU SNAKE!

*5 minutes later*

Hanson: TURN THE ENGINE BACK TO FULL POWER! THESE HALLUCINATIONS SUCK!

[Urge to Mad Scientist Intensifies]
>>
When Lars had told you that the books had been divided up into two separate groups – the fragile collection, not to be touched by inexpert hands such as yours, and the intact collection – you had been expecting the fragile collection to be the majority. After all, these are ancient books, held in uncertain conditions for an abstract length of time – a span of years both unknown and unknowable. That's why, when Lars – still uneasy from whatever “discussion” he had with his superior – let you through to the library, and the considerable stacks of books left there, you you realise how much work you have ahead of you.

“We were surprised as well,” he offers dryly, “And that wasn't the only thing that took us by surprise. You remember the first time you were here, don't you?”

Damn near every book you came across was written in an unknown language, you tell him, a language they couldn't even begin to read. But one that you could, you think to yourself, thanks to a certain goddess.

“That's right. Now, though...” Lars takes a book at random, and opens to an equally random page, “I'm certain that they're changing, slowly resolving themselves into something we CAN read. I have a theory that eventually, if we stayed here long enough, these books would end up written in our own printed word. How this happens, though... I can't tell you that, I can't even begin to understand it myself.”

The world is changing to better accommodate men like him, you muse, but why? As a trap, to encourage them to stay longer, or as something less malicious – a natural response?

“I dare say we won't get the chance to find out. There's already talk of leaving, of getting out of here as soon as possible,” Lars lets his gaze play out across the strange library for a moment as he considers this, “I can't say I disagree. We've got supplies to last out a while longer, but... well, I suspect that the will to remain here won't last nearly so long. I already heard some of the sailors talking about mutiny. While Captain Bach is... resting, Wehrlain holds total authority here, and the men just don't respect him. I fear the situation could get ugly, if Wehrlain insists on remaining here much longer.”

You wanted to talk with him about that, you begin quietly, about Wehrlain. Here, in this land without League regulations or moral laws, he's allowing himself to indulge his every whim. First by running the Wehrlain Engine early, and driving the crew to despair-

“I won't defend him,” Lars interrupts, “But if he hadn't done that, he would never have been able to make his later refinements. It's experimental technology he's dealing with, and that's always going to involve risks.”

[1/2]
>>
>>530929

Maybe so, you accept the point with a grudging nod, but what about the surgery? The operation might have been completely senseless, and to perform it without any relief for the pain...

“That... I can't defend,” Lars admits, “Oh, I'm sure he'll have a good reason for not using any anaesthesia – maybe there was a risk that Bach's weakened state couldn't take it, maybe it would have interfered with the operation itself, I don't know. Wehrlain will have a reason, a nice smooth explanation to bat away any criticism... he always does. He's played this game for a lot longer than you or I, he knows how to come out on top.”

Maybe so, you repeat, but you're starting to wonder if he's the real danger here. The land is hostile, true, but it has the unthinking neutrality of nature. Wehrlain, on the other hand, is malicious – spiteful and prepared to answer any slight against him. While he's around, and holding authority, you've got one extra problem to deal with.

“You know, Wehrlain doesn't have many friends among the Scholars here,” Lars thinks aloud, “He has their respect – as one thinking man respects another – but I dare say not many here would raise a voice in his defence. If anything, a fair number of the Scholars here – and I may include myself in that number – would stand to benefit from his, ah, removal from power. When Bartzov was disgraced, it left a power vacuum that was quickly filled by eager men – the same may apply here.”

So what he do, you ask Lars, what's his ideal way of resolving this mess?

“I wouldn't kill him, if that's what you're asking,” the Scholar takes a long time to think, running his fingers along the spines of several nameless books, “I'd ask him to stand down, to surrender his leadership for the good of the College. Then, upon arriving back home, I'd give full account of his crimes and let the proper authorities deal with him.” Turning back to you, Lars gives you a surprisingly cold smile, “Why bother dirtying my own hands?”

A careful, measured approach to the situation, as expected of a Scholar. Say Wehrlain refused to stand down, though – what then?

“Then,” Lars' smile doesn't waver, “I would have to insist. If he stands down willingly, he can remain a valued part of this expedition. If not – if he was forced out – he would not nearly be so fortunate. Of course, that's just what I'd do. What about you, Hunter?”

>You've got a good plan. How about making it happen?
>Even that allows him too much freedom. We're putting him under arrest, as soon as possible
>No arrests or deals – he deserves to die for what he's done
>Other
>>
>>530930
>>You've got a good plan. How about making it happen?
>Other

Wehrlian was a good boy and he dindu nuffin.
>>
>>530930
>You've got a good plan. How about making it happen?
>>
>>530930
>You've got a good plan. How about making it happen?
>>
>>530930
>>You've got a good plan. How about making it happen?
>>
He's got a good plan, you admit, but how about making it happen? Talking about a change in leadership is all well and good, but putting it into action is another thing entirely. Is he prepared to take that step?

“I think so,” Lars muses, “But I want to be sure – I want to speak with a few of the others about this before making a move. I wager that most of them feel the same way, but it doesn't hurt to make sure. If they're already in Wehrlain's pocket when the times to make a move, we'd be high and dry.”

And Wehrlain isn't the type of person to ignore a slight like this, you remark, as Bach could attest to. No, that makes a lot of sense – get the other key players on side first, and then confront Wehrlain with a united front. So what's the plan?

“This, ah, might be a delicate issue, one best discussed one Scholar to another. Would you mind waiting here while I test the waters?” Lars looks a little awkward, as if he fears this bad news might jeopardise the entire plan. “You wanted to take a look at these books, didn't you?” he adds, “Well, I can't promise there's anything useful in them, especially with the language barrier taken into account, but...”

You'll be fine here, you tell him, there's just one thing you want him to remember.

“Oh?” Lars raises a curious eyebrow, “And what would that be?”

Be careful, you warn, be discreet. The last thing either of you need is Wehrlain getting wind of things early. Lars considers this and then, with a solemn nod, leaves you alone in the library. Sighing, listening as your voice fills the empty room, you look at the rows and rows of books.

Where do you even start?

-

Picking a book out at random, you weigh it in your hands – as if there is some knowledge that can only be divined through the physical feel of the object. Holding it for a moment longer, you eventually open up to a random page and let your eyes wander across the inhuman words. As the translation springs, unbidden, into mind, you learn that it's a collection of myths – old northern legends, the kind that would normally be passed down through the family. Likely, they would never see the printed word if not for the nameless, ancient Scholar who collected them.

Now you think about it, this all started with a book of old stories – a whimsical tale of twelve noble Knights and a wicked goddess. How far you've come since then, and in a relatively short space of time.

Flicking through the pages, you reach the start of a new section. Less a tale and more a set of facts, it speaks about a mystical northern land. At first, you wonder if it's talking about the same lands you travel in now, but then you realise your error. The tale speaks of an uncharted land, one beyond even the oldest map.

[1/2]
>>
>>530962

If the lands you now tread – considered the sacred lands, in this text – are the border between mankind and the divine, the book reads, then this northernmost land is wholly the realm of the gods. If time is mutable in the sacred lands, then it ceases to be entirely in the northernmost land. A land said to be populated only by those who have left behind every attachment to the mortal world, shedding even their names and pasts.

Quite understandably, this all remains an unproven myth. No map leads the way to these inhuman lands, and no-one has ever seen them with their own eyes. No-one who has returned to tell of them, at least.

When you hear a firm knock at the door, you close the book and look around. Expecting to see Lars, you are instead greeted by one of the sailors. An old fellow, his eyes practically lost in a sea of creases and folds. He carries a tin can, and the smell of warm food surrounds him. Taking a moment to clear your head – tales of ancient lands are soon replaced by a curiously muted hunger – you wave for him to come in,

“Thought you might be hungry,” the sailor explains, setting down the can on the table with a battered metal fork, “Though, not many of the men have been complaining about it. How long since we last ate, do you think? I can't tell the time in this hellhole...”

It's been a while, you reply vaguely as you take the food, that's about all you can say. The food – beans and some unknown meat in sauce – is only lukewarm, but you eagerly gulp down a few mouthfuls. As you eat, the sailor lingers in place for a moment longer, a question hanging on the end of his tongue.

“You brought back the captain, aye?” he asks, forging ahead before you can answer, “Only, there's talk – men saying you came back with a bit of witchcraft strapped to your back. Sailors are superstitious sorts, you see, and it doesn't take much to rattle them.”

And are they rattled, you ask cautiously, disturbed by your presence here?

“There's been talk,” he repeats, “Folks here, they don't know what to make of it. All they know is, you brought the captain back alive and... mostly well. That's keeping you in their good graces. Captain Bach, he's well liked – for him, I wager the men are willing to overlook just about anything. Still, I... I figure if I had something to tell them, something to put an end to this wild talk...”

It might keep them settled, you ask, keep them calm and put them at ease?

>I found that thing out there, and I brought it back for study – that's all
>It's witchcraft, I won't deny it, but it keeps me safe out here
>Just tell them not to worry – it's no risk to them
>Let them talk, I'm past caring
>Other
>>
>>530975
>>It's witchcraft, I won't deny it, but it keeps me safe out here
They might get spooked with the first choice and the other two are sketchy.
>>
>>530975
>It's witchcraft, I won't deny it, but it keeps me safe out here
If anyone takes issue with me then they're welcome to try to do something about it
>>
>>530975
>>It's witchcraft, I won't deny it, but it keeps me safe out here
>>
>>530975
>It's witchcraft, I won't deny it, but it keeps me safe out here
"I sure as hell wasn't going to place all my faith in Wehrlain's engine out here, so I researched alternatives before we started this expedition. Seems to be working out considering it allowed me to rescue Bach without the Engine.

Go tell your crew that if for any reason the Engine stops working they come find me and stick with me alright?"
>>
It's witchcraft, you tell him carefully, you won't deny that. However, it's what kept you safe out there – and it kept Captain Bach safe as well. You're saying this in the interests of being honest and open, rather than hiding it like a dirty secret. This is something you prepared, just in case the Wehrlain Engine failed – you were never going to trust that thing completely – and it's served you well so far. If the machine should fail on the journey home, tell the men to stick close to your quarters, that should keep them reasonably safe.

Your voice is calm, quiet and unhurried, as you say this, but the sailor's eyes widen a fraction anyway. When you're finished talking, he swallows nervously before forming a reply. “I see...” he begins, “I can't say how much comfort that'll bring the men, but if you're prepared to offer them another shield... I dare say a fair few would take you up on that offer. I thank you, sir, for your honesty. Seems to be a rare thing in these parts.”

And if any of them feel disconcerted by it, you add, they're welcome to come and speak with you personally. It's an innocent sounding statement – you don't need to weigh your words down with threats – but the implicit meaning is clear.

“I'll be sure to tell them that,” the envoy nods awkwardly, “But I wager you won't have any trouble with them. When Captain Bach is on his feet again, it'll do wonders for their peace of mind. I'll tell them, then.” He starts to leave, but then lingers at the doorway. “And... many thanks,” he adds, “For not leaving the captain out there. Brave thing you did, going after him.”

He's a friend, you reply simply, you weren't going to abandon him. The sailor weighs your words for a moment before nodding and letting himself out.

Hopefully, that's the last you need to worry about that matter.

-

“We're good to go,” Lars says, skipping past any formalities or pleasantries and getting straight to the heart of the matter, “I have it on good authority that the majority of the Scholars here are in agreement with us, and most who disagree are willing to step back and let us take action. That's the best outcome we could have hoped for.”

No catch, you ask suspiciously, nothing you need to worry about?

“Nothing,” Lars assures you, “All of the important figures are with us. If Wehrlain still refuses to cede leadership, we'd be perfectly justified in forcing him to stand down. How about we get this show on the road?”

Sounds good, you tell him, you're ready.

“Alright then,” nodding, Lars glances at the book you had been flicking through and smiles faintly, “Good book?”

You just looked at the pictures, you reply.

[1/2]
>>
>>531027

Moving with purpose, you and Lars leave the library and head upstairs to the laboratory. Outside, waiting for you, are a pair of Scholars. One is the fat gentleman from the dormitories, and the other is a bookish, aged fellow. Shaking hands, you realise that these must be your co-conspirators.

“This is Haight, an expert in linguistics,” Lars nods to the bookish man, “And Kranz, who manages... I suppose you could say he's a teacher by nature.”

“Meaning, the students do what I tell them,” Kranz explains, a faintly sly smile touching his face, “I know that I'm not the most important man here, but I hold a good deal of influence. Fortunately for you, I see the sense in removing Wehrlain from his position. He's... too enamoured with this place, I fear he would try to keep us here longer than strictly necessary.”

“Well then, gentlemen,” Haight adds, “No sense in waiting around. Shall we get started?”

Everyone nods their agreement, and those nods feel like the signatures placed on an arrest warrant. Hopefully, it won't be an execution warrant as well.

-

“Quite the gathering we have here,” Wehrlain remarks, a snide note in his voice, “To what do I owe this honour?” He sits facing you, with his back to the research he had been so devoted to, and there isn't a trace of concern or surprise on his face. Sitting not so far away, Bach sleeps peacefully.

A shame that he'll miss this – you figure it's the sort of thing that he'd enjoy watching.

“After much debate and careful consideration, questions have been raised over your position here,” Lars begins, phrasing everything in carefully formal language. Should Wehrlain resist, you expect the politeness to fall away completely. “And so, we've come with the majority view – a request that you stand down immediately, and give your position of authority to a representative of the College, to be chosen at a later date.”

Meaning, you tell him, he needs to stand down and let someone else call the shots.

“And you're all in agreement?” Wehrlain looks between you. Kranz looks away, avoiding his gaze, while Haight stares him dead in the eye, a distant smile on his lips. Lars tenses up, but he doesn't back down. “I see,” the chief Scholar decides, “Then I have no choice. As I've said before, I bow to the will of the majority, no matter how ill-informed or poorly advised it may be. I ask you, what will become of me once I step down?”

“You'll be treated as a member of the College, one with no special authority,” Haight explains coldly, “You will have the freedom to continue your own studies. We're not taking you prisoner, Wehrlain.”

Sitting back, as content as you've ever seen him, Wehrlain considers the “offer”.

>Let him think
>Add something to the discussion... (Write in)
>Other
>>
>>531056
>>Let him think
>>
>>531056
>Add something to the discussion... (This place is dangerous, more so than you realize. It is best to gather what we can and leave, soon.)
>>
>>531056
be prepared for Barztov to butt in with his own comments/invitations
>>
>>531056
>Add something to the discussion... (Write in)
"A leader needs to keep the well being of his followers in mind. While I can understand the logic of some of your previous actions, doing something as petty as withholding anesthetic during Bach's operation makes me sure that you are not up to the task."
>>
>>531075
>>531056
If we are going to say something, do it it on behalf of the sailors. Point out that his initial refusal to help Captain Bach, and the fact the he lied about the laudenum - whether by omission by accident, or because he had his reasons and simply didn't want to explain - combined with his previous attitude towards them . . .

While he might be an excellent Scholar, he needs more qualities than just that to lead the expedition. A new person in authority would go a long way to keeping the sailors from doing something possibly drastic and even more "ill-informed or poorly advised" than this.
>>
You'll give him one piece of advice, you tell Wehrlain as he considers the issue, this place is dangerous – more dangerous than he realises. The best thing to do would be to gather whatever materials there are to gather in this place and leave quickly. Lingering here would do good.

“I have no intention of lingering here, no matter what you might think,” Wehrlain leans back and looks up at the ceiling, staring hard at a single point, “However, neither do I have any intention of leaving before I'm ready. This is not a place you can just casually visit, after all. I'm prepared to stay here for as long as it takes, regardless of the danger.”

While you can respect that commitment, you reply, you have to point out that there's more than just him to consider. A leader must remember to keep the well-being of his followers in mind at all times. Some risks are acceptable, but callous acts with withholding Bach's pain relief are not. That kind of spite is what leads you to doubt his leadership.

“I suppose that does reflect badly upon me,” the Scholar doesn't sound particularly put out by the idea, and he definitely doesn't sound guilty over his abuse of power, “So I can well understand why that has shaken your confidence in me.”

It's not your confidence he needs to worry about, you explain, there are the sailors to consider. He's been alienating them since the very first days of this expedition, and they hold their captain in high regard. They won't happily follow his orders, if they follow them at all. With someone else in a position of leadership, they'll be far more likely to obey their instructions. For the good of the expedition as a whole, he has a duty to step down.

“Very well,” Wehrlain lowers his head to look you in the eye, “I have little desire to see this expedition end in a disastrous failure – better than I return as one small part of a successful party, than I not return home at all. I concede your point, and I willingly surrender the mantle of leadership. Who wants to take it on in my place? You, Lars?”

“That will be determined in due time,” Lars says patiently, not rising to the faint taunt, “Thank you, Wehrlain, for making this easy. You've done the right thing.”

“I wonder,” the deposed leader gives you a faintly mocking smile, “Now then, I believe we have work to do – we're yet to search the caverns beneath the University, are we not? I would be honoured if you bring me along – I have a theory, a hunch you might say, that we'll find interesting results down there.”

You trade a look with Lars, then you glance to Haight and Kranz, before nodding towards the door. This deserves discussion.

[1/2]
>>
>>531107
We should casually mention as well that we were reading the books when we first got here.

Shrug it off as a quirk of the blood maybe, we didn't think it was important given the nature of the place.

Then use that excuse to say there were mentions of the dude we're here to shank. The Many or whatever.
>>
>>531125
Eh rather not. We'll reveal things if necessary like we did the witchcraft.
>>
>>531107

“Gentlemen, I leave this choice with you,” Kranz is quick to speak up, passing the responsibility onto someone else, “For what it's worth, Lars, I'll support you if you want to make a claim for leadership. I think a lot of people would do the same.”

“I certainly would,” Haight agrees, “You've shown aptitude for direct leadership, and a prudent judgement of when to use it. I wonder, though, how much that has to do with your present... associations.” He glances your way as he says this, rather like a man regarding a dog that might not be fully trained.

“This is irrelevant,” Lars says, his voice quiet but firm, “I'm not going to waste time on a leadership challenge, when every moment we spend here poses a risk. We're going to check these caverns over, and then we're leaving. The books are boxed up and ready, the laboratory has been searched, and we've even recovered samples from the local life – thanks to our good Hunter, here. We're DONE here.”

He'll get no arguments from you on that count, you tell him with a nod, but that doesn't resolve the matter of Wehrlain. He agreed too easily for your liking, and he's shown himself to be the kind of man to nurse a grudge. Now that he's asking to descend into the caverns with you, you've got to wonder if there's a reason – some nasty surprise he has waiting for you, perhaps.

“If there's a danger there, wouldn't he stay well away?” Kranz asks, “For his own safety?”

Logically, yes, but then he'd miss out on the chance to watch you die. You wouldn't trust Wehrlain to pass up that chance.

“Let's not get paranoid,” Lars warns you all, “I agree that it's suspicious, but if Wehrlain is to be treated like any other member of this expedition, we have no right to bar him from coming down with us. Besides... would you rather leave him up here, without anyone to keep an eye on him?”

That... is a good point. Either you bring the snake with you, or you offer him your exposed back. Neither option seems particularly ideal.

>Fine, he can come with us. Better to keep him where we can see him
>No way, he stays up here. His part of this expedition is over
>Other
>>
>>531138
>>Fine, he can come with us. Better to keep him where we can see him
We can always use him as a meat shield if he tries something funny.
>>
>>531138
>Fine, he can come with us. Better to keep him where we can see him
I'm curious about this hunch he's got.
>>
>>531138
>Fine, he can come with us. Better to keep him where we can see him

We'll kill him when he suddenly but inevitably tries to kill us.
>>
>>531138
>Fine, he can come with us. Better to keep him where we can see him
Do these choices have any significance to the red moon? Is this all some battle of wills to maintain a sense of community?
>>
>>531138
>Fine, he can come with us. Better to keep him where we can see him
>>
Fine, you decide, he can come with you. If they're looking for your opinion on the matter, then there it is – better to keep him where you can keep an eye on him, after all. What do they think?

“I respectfully decline from voting,” Kranz actually backs off a step, physically retreating from the debate, “I won't be going down with you – it's no work for an... unfit man like myself – and so it wouldn't be right for me to offer an opinion. I wish you luck on your endeavours, however!”

“I am of the opinion that he should come along, if he sincerely wishes to,” Haight answers, “As has been said, we have no justification for preventing him coming along. No matter what sins he has committed, he remains an excellent Scholar. So long as he doesn't try to kill us, he may prove a useful asset in any investigation we have to carry out.”

“Then we have two votes to allow him along. I'll throw in my support as well, making things unanimous,” Lars decides, “I'm glad we're all in agreement – it would be a poor show of leadership if we immediately descended into squabbling, wouldn't it? So, it's decided – we'll allow Wehrlain to join our party, and deal with whatever risks may arise from it when they show themselves. If he's wise, he'll know better than to start any trouble.”

And if there's any other trouble down there, you add, you can throw him into its teeth. Let him serve a useful purpose that way.

Your fellow conspirators laugh awkwardly at that, before realising that you weren't joking.

-

Upon hearing that he has been allowed into the exploration party, Wehrlain is cautiously pleased, covering up any extravagant display of satisfaction with a decisive nod. Just as he reaches for a pack, though, Lars stops him. Taking the leather case, he takes it aside and carefully scrutinises the contents.

“Paper, several pens, various pieces of surveying equipment... and a pistol,” Lars takes out the decorative weapon – it makes his artistically crafted gun look austere by comparison – and examines it, “Not an usual thing for a man to carry in a place like this. I have my own, after all, and I wager Haight has one as well.” Sighing, Lars put the gun back in the case and hands the entire collection back to Wehrlain. “I can hardly send him down below without anything to defend himself.”

He'll be slow on the draw as well, you add, if his gun is tucked away like that. If he thinks to draw it on you, he won't get very far.

“So, am I permitted to join you?” Wehrlain asks, with mocking politeness.

Fine, you tell him as Lars hands him the pack, but you'll be watching him.

[1/2]
>>
>>531138
>Other

Dude has to stay up here to maintain the engine.

Also I want to be able to take our totem down with us somehow.

We should also really remind everyone that Bartzov is still around and a concern, and you doubt that his students would have allowed whatever happened to them to be done without conflict, so there's danger there as well.

Quite frankly, if he dies while we're here then we're quite possibly all Fucked.
>>
>>531182
Aw shit. Too late to dissent..
>>
>>531177

For the descent into whatever lies beneath the Old University, Lars – who has defaulted to a position of leadership, to no overt objections – decided on a small group. If the tunnels are tight and cramped, a smaller group will move easier. If they are vast and expansive, sending for extra numbers will be easy enough. The group number six – Lars, Wehrlain, Haight, yourself and two more Scholars who don't bother to introduce themselves. As indifferent to them as they are to you, you set off on your way.

It drew a few eyes, but you decided to take along your protective totem – there's no telling how deep you might be descending, and you want to stay protected regardless. Preparing flashlights and pistols, you arrive at the first door – this one leading down into a storage cellar. It looks, you have to admit, uncommonly study for a normal cellar door. Haight, apparently stronger than he looks, throws open the door.

Wait, you tell Wehrlain as you grab his arm, don't go running ahead. If his invention suffers any problems later, you'll need him alive and well to repair it. He's too valuable to go running ahead. You'll let him come along, but he's going to stay nice and safe in the middle of the group. Not far enough ahead or behind to get lost or isolated. If he doesn't agree to those terms, he can stay right here.

“I agree to your terms,” waving you off, Wehrlain takes his place in the midst of the group, “Don't think to dictate my every move, Hunter – I'm still a man with thoughts of my own.”

And valuable thoughts they must be, you grunt, now stay close.

-

“Look,” Lars murmurs, his voice reaching you from the front of the group, “Up here.” He points his flashlight up to the ceiling to reveal a tightly bound cluster of wires entering into a hole. From there, they'd run up into the entrance hall, and then...

The speaker system, you ask, is that what he's thinking? If so, following this bundle of wires-

“Would lead us to whoever “kindly” greeted us, yes,” Lars finishes, “Maybe it IS Bartzov, but I won't – I can't – believe it until I see him with my own eyes.”

It's curious, you remark slowly, he never spoke again after his welcoming message. He was able to answer your questions, so it wasn't a recording, but he hasn't made contact since – unless he spoke while you were out recovering Bach?

“No, not a word,” Lars shakes his head, and Haight agrees, “Very strange, very strange indeed. Maybe he had nothing to say.”

“If you knew Bartzov, you wouldn't suggest that,” Werhrlain offers, “He always had something to say.”

A ripple of uncertain laughter stirs the air, your party following the stairwell deeper into the bowels of the Old University.

[2/3]
>>
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83 KB JPG
>>531211

When the staircase levels out into a flat corridor, you come across another doorway, this one empty and hollow. The bundle of wires leads into the room beyond, a storage chamber large enough that your lights are dim by the time they reach the far walls. Before entering into the chamber beyond, you turn back and point your light up the stairs you just walked down. Close by, your light falls upon the doorway. Too close by – far too close, considering how long you were talking for.

Distance, and not just time, has started to degrade. Swallowing nervously, you join the others in forging ahead.

Inside the storage room, you feel a cold wind coming from somewhere, a wind that carries a very distinct copper stink. Playing your flashlight beam about, you try to find the source of that breeze, but you can't see anything. There's nothing down here – no crates or barrels, no shelves or storage containers. Nothing at all, at least at first. Haight is the first one to find something, his light falling upon a body. A corpse, judging by the sunken grey skin. The body sits in a low chair, while the rope of cables reaches down like a noose.

The cables reach down, and they end buried in the back of that corpse's skull. Muttering a faint curse, you slowly approach it. With the others lighting up the scene, you reach out to touch the body.

It looks up. It speaks.

“Are you seeking wisdom?” it rasps, “Like so many who came before you?”

That voice – that's Bartzov's voice. Cursing again, this time aloud, you start to jerk away from it – him – but then the old Scholar's hand closes around your wrist, as tight as a vice. Grunting in pain, you slam the butt of your pistol into his side, but the blow goes unnoticed. You might as well have hit a sack of dirt.

“Below, further below. You wish to speak with the moon, do you not? The nameless god that WE have bound here?” his voice, dry and dusty, takes on a desperate intensity, “Share your mind, share your wisdom... no one mind is vast enough to hold all knowledge, but with unity, perhaps...”

>You're mad, deluded – that thing is no god
>Perhaps what, old man?
>Let go of me, or this time I'll shoot you
>Yes, I come seeking wisdom. Answer me this... (Write in)
>Other
>>
>>531255
>>Yes, I come seeking wisdom. Answer me this... (Write in)
The blood that provides us boons, that now can run rampant turning men's bodies and minds against themselves, is there a way to fix it?
>>
>>531255
>>Perhaps what, old man?
>>
>>531255
"I don't need all knowledge. Just some."

>Perhaps what, old man?
"Am I even talking to Bartzov or just something wearing his face? Maybe some Bartzov is a part of perhaps?"

"Tell me about this 'moon' you think is a god."
>>
>>531261
supporting
>>
>>531255
>Perhaps what, old man?
>>
>>531272
>some
something*
>>
>>531255
> Rip the wires off it.
>>
>>531295
That'll just give us a corpse and no information. I imagine all this guy is, is a 'physical terminal' to a hivemind/unified mind.
>>
Dimly, thinking with a kind of detached wonder, you realise that the others should be stepping in right now. Stepping in to do something, to pry you free of Bartzov's dessicated corpse or to question the lich for themselves. Yet, nobody interferes, nobody steps forth, and the darkness of the cellar seems to close in around you. Shockingly intimate, the world shrinks until only you and the cadaver exist.

Once more, you try to pull away, and once again, that grip tightens. You can feel the bones in your wrist grinding together, straining against the inhuman strength lurking within those withered muscles. Thin lips peel back to reveal rotting teeth, and Bartzov's face slowly becomes a terrible thing indeed. You almost try to pull back for a third time, but some desperate act of will stops you.

Perhaps what, you ask through gritted teeth, perhaps what old man? No sooner has the question left your lips than the grip on your wrist eases, and Bartzov's face sinks back into something close to human normality.

“Perhaps there may yet be a mind large enough to hold all the knowledge in the world,” the undead thing answers you, with something that approaches politeness, “An enlightened oracle that can answer any question. A god, bound by human will. Is that not something to strive for? Would you not offer up your mind as sacrifice?”

You don't need all the knowledge in the world, you snap, just some of it. You've come seeking wisdom, so maybe he can answer you this. The blood that grants men boons, but now runs rampant through their bodies and minds – can it be cured?

“Only through the source, the universal panacea, the blood of the Ancient Giants,” Bartzov, or the thing that wears his face, tells you, “We found no other answer. Perhaps the nameless gods, who makes beasts of men and men of beasts, could rip the tainted blood from our veins, but only the least of their number answered our call. It must be nurtured...”

That's the “moon” he's talking about, you ask, right? The moon that he calls a god – can he tell you about it?

“Even as the least of their number – close enough to man that we could communicate with it – it had so many secrets to share. It could tell us more, if only it could grow larger. It MUST grow larger,” a fresh insistence comes into Bartzov's dry voice, and his grip tightens once more, “More minds, more knowledge, you must give yourself to it! Eternal life, the impurities of your blood boiled away within that vast cauldron. That was what you sought, is it not?”

Not like that, you reply, not at that cost.

[1/2]
>>
>>531320

“Then you are a fool,” Bartzov rasps, slumping back slightly as if that outburst drained what little life remained within him, “Blind and deluded, like so many others. Some of them fought, you know, when I... when I... What did I do?”

What did Bartzov do, you retort, is that what he means?

“Bartzov... yes,” the undead thing repeats the name, “I know... I remember...”

Are you even talking to Bartzov, you ask, or just something that wears his face? Something that hides within his skin and uses his voice? Some greater power – a larger mind, perhaps?

When you ask that question, a change comes across the thing's face. Once again, the features grow sunken and ashen, bones gleaming through rotting skin. You get a curious impression as the change overcomes it – not the shedding of a disguise, but the forceful suppression of a personality. What you had been talking to, you're certain, was what remained of Bartzov. This new creature, though, this is something else. Something far older, and far more malicious.

“You speak of greater minds, as though you could possibly comprehend them,” the hissing voice pronounces, “You, a single candle, compared with a raging bonfire. If you wish to see a true mind, a true intellect, you will descend. Cast the scales from your eyes, and submit. Take your place in the legion. Return your flawed form to the source, to the blood that spawned it, and merge with the legion. Puny, incomplete being... seek wholeness, as you must, as all things must...”

And the terrible thing is, you really do feel some faint tug in the back of your mind, some treasonous desire to sacrifice your life. The more this thing talks, the more you fall under its spell. The more it talks, the less you can resist. Pulling back rewards you with nothing more than a tightening of its grip, and so you lunge forwards. Dropping your pistol, you grab the bundle of cables – hot, as warm as blood – and tear them out of the thing's skull. Sparks fly, and a shrill scream sounds pierces your mind.

The world turns white.

-

“I think he's coming around,” the voice drifts down, and the white veil slowly retracts to reveal Lars, concern painted across his features. “There you are, awake,” he murmurs, “What happened to you?”

You... you're not sure, you ask, what did he see happen?

“We were searching this place, and we found Bartzov's body. You started to examine it, so we looked elsewhere. There's a wind here, can't you feel it? We were looking for the source,” he gives you a strange look, “Do you have a different version of events?”

And you didn't say anything, you ask, he didn't hear any voices?

“None. You were completely silent,” the Scholar frowns, “At least, until you cried out and collapsed. When we came back, those cables were loose. We thought maybe an electric shock...”

[2/3]
>>
Passage from the book we read last thread in case anyone forgot:

>That which is incomplete shall always seek to become whole, but that which is shattered can never become of one mind again. Each mind becomes part of a legion, never quite united, but ever shielding the black heart. As is formed from the blood, so too can the legion be returned to the blood. The chant is as follows, unchanged from countless generations
>>
>>531308
> Trusting what he has to say
>>
>>531387
>Not getting all the information available and coming to your own conclusion on it's legitimacy.
>>
>>531393
Sure. Why don't we also leave our totem also be go outside to stare at the moon so we know what's going on as well.

Risk vs. Reward.
>>
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>>531398
Someone's cranky~
>>
>>531355

Slowly rising to your feet, you look at the skin around your wrist. It should be bruised and aching, especially after that vice of a grip, but there isn't a mark on it. Not even a hint of stiffness or pain either – nothing that might indicate an injury. Nobody else touched the corpse, you ask Lars, right?

“No. You were the only one to touch it,” he confirms, “You're starting to worry me – something happened, didn't it?”

Something happened, you grunt, but you couldn't say what. You touched the corpse, and you – your mind, perhaps – went somewhere else. You spoke with something, with several things, but you're not sure how much was true or false. Maybe it spoke both truth and lies, all mixed together. If it really is a beast of countless minds, each pulling in its own direction, it might well speak with many tongues as well.

“Wait, slow down,” Lars shakes his head, “You're not making much sense. How about you explain everything, and you take it from the top?”

Swallowing hard, you manage a wry smile. How long does he have, you ask, not that time means much down here.

-

In the end, you don't explain everything – that would be too much, and you're not even sure where you'd start. Speaking quickly, to an attentive audience, you explain your theory. What Bartzov found beneath the Old University was something old, something powerful enough that he mistook it for a god. A thing of countless minds, never merging fully, it devoured his students and used him as... some kind of mouthpiece. The real mastermind is somewhere below, deeper still.

“Deeper...” Lars murmurs, before looking sharply around at the body. Hurrying over, he begins to examine the bundle of cables. “It branches here,” he announces, “There's a smaller wire – no wonder I missed it, it's so thin – that leads into the wall.” With mounting excitement in his voice, he presses his hand to the cold stone wall. “Air flow,” the newly appointed leader declares, “There's air coming from here, we need to break this wall down. Hunter, go upstairs and get a few strong men, if you would. Have them bring hammers.”

Scholarly research is one thing, you think to yourself as you head back up, but sooner or later you always need a hammer.

-

Upstairs, you relay your orders in a clipped, efficient tone, and you're heartened to see the sailors leaping to obey. Wehrlain never commanded such enthusiasm. As they head downstairs, you pause and look out across the entrance. The Wehrlain Engine hums away, prickling your mind with its energies, and boxes of books clutter the room. Something nags at your mind for a moment.

Probably nothing.

>Return downstairs
>There's something you have to do here... (Write in)
>Other
>>
>>531412
>>There's something you have to do here... (Write in)
find the book with this >>531358 passage
>>
>>531412
>There's something you have to do here... (Write in)

Maybe grab the tome that had >>531358 this passage in case it has any other insights on how to kill Lunatic.

Otherwise
>Return downstairs
Armed and ready.
>>
>>531423
>>531419
>>531412
Agreed
>>
>>531412
We don't have anybody guarding the machine? That seems . . . Risky.
>>
>>531475
agreed
>>
No, it wasn't nothing. It wasn't nothing at all. All that talk of legions and retuning to blood – it had been strangely familiar at the time, but your thoughts were too scattered to make any sense of it. Now you're here, looking at all these boxes of books, you remember where you saw those words. There was a chant there, one that claimed to return the legion to blood – whatever that means. Even if the chant does nothing, there might be some other secrets in it that you could use against this being.

You've just to find the book. Finding a specific snowflake in the middle of a blizzard might be easier.

Or perhaps not. Though the book itself had no special markings, nothing that might help you look for it, you find yourself drawn to a specific box. One of the fragile samples, apparently, but there's no-one here to stop you from helping yourself. The sailors certainly don't care enough to bother you. Opening the study box, you let your fingers run across the worn leather spines, setting on one in particular. What it is about this particular volume that cries out to you, you couldn't say, but you're certain that it's the right one. Taking the book out, you flip through the pages until you see the chant.

You still don't have the faintest idea how to pronounce any of them, but looking at them... you feel your lips shifting to form sounds. Not words, but sounds.

Good enough, you mutter as you tuck the book under your arm, as good as you're going to get. Thus armed – whether you're ready or not remains to be seen – you head back to the stairs. Looking back, you call out to a few of the sailors. Look lively, you tell them, that machine needs people to protect it. A chorus of voices return to you, men barking out acknowledgements as they seize their weapons and stand ready.

It's good to be in charge.

-

The wall is already halfway to destroyed by the time you arrive, and the hammers have been set aside. All the sailors need to do is pull, and the crudely built wall crumbles that little bit more. The Scholars, save for Lars, watch with varying degrees of pain writ across their faces. Lars, on the other hand, looks alive with the thrill of discovery.

“I was wondering who built this wall,” he remarks as you return, “I mean, someone had to put it up, correct? Not Bartzov or any of his students, not if they wanted to lure people down here – so who could have built it?”

Good point, you muse, you're not really sure. Maybe it was a defensive measure, something to protect whatever is down there?

“Interesting theory,” Lars takes a step over the low wall, “But I have an alternative. Come on, I'll explain as we go.”

[1/2]
>>
>>531500

“Did you see how poorly built that wall was?” Lars asks as he leads you into the tunnels beyond. Wehrlain skulks by your side, while Haight and the other two Scholars bring up the rear. The tunnel walls are bare stone, slick with a thin layer of ice. “It crumbled right away,” Lars continues, “We barely needed the hammers to bring it down.”

So it was built in a hurry, you guess, that doesn't explain who built it.

“Actually, it gives us evidence. The northern folk, you see, don't have a long tradition of stonework. It's not alien to them, but neither is it particularly common,” Lars sounds rather pleased to play the role of teacher, “My theory is, a group of northerns stumbled across this place, but they were able to resist the urge to explore below. Scared – it doesn't take much to rattle a superstitious mind – they chose to seal up this wall and retreat. It works, wouldn't you say?”

You never get the chance to answer him. As you consider his theory, the cave walls open out, and the ceiling first soars higher before vanishing completely. It's an impossible thing to behold, you know that, but you can see the sky – a normal human sky, with a blameless silver moon above you. It feels like so long since you've seen it, the sight takes your breath away.

A shame, then, that the beauty is spoiled by the lake beneath – a lake of thick, red blood. Something like blood, at least.

-

“This is impossible, quite impossible...” Haight murmurs, looking around you. Not quite a cave, and not quite a forest clearing, you can't think of an appropriate word for a place like this. Taking a cue from Haight, you settle on “an impossibility”. As you're looking around, it takes you a moment to realise that Wehrlain had slipped past you, heading straight for the bloody lake. Slumping down at its shore, he stares into the still surface.

“Do you hear anything?” he whispers, “I think I can hear... a voice. Of course, of course... You would benefit from a great mind like mine, wouldn't you? And the secrets you have to share...”

Slowly, with a trembling hand, he reaches out to touch the surface of the lake.

>Stop him
>Let him touch the lake
>Other
>>
>>531557
>start the chant against the legion now
>>
>>531557
>>Stop him
Whoa there.
>>
>>531557
>Stop him
No joining the evil collective consciousness for you.
>>
>>531557
>Stop him
Naw man
>>
>>531557
>>Stop him
>>
>>531557
>>Stop him
>>"If you touch that lake I am forced to end your carreer."
>>
>>531557
>Stop him
Nope.gif
>>
>>531557
>>Stop him
>>
File: Lunatic Beast.png (966 KB, 592x800)
966 KB
966 KB PNG
No way, you're not having this. Whatever fate or punishment Wehrlain has earned, you'll see it come at human hands. Not like this, giving himself up to whatever ancient intelligence lies within that lake. Even as the thoughts race through your mind, though, you're already moving. First at a run, and then a sprint, you close the gap between you and Wehrlain in what seems like an instant. At some point, the book slips from under your arm, but you barely notice – you don't have time to notice, much less to stop and pick it up again. Grabbing Wehrlain by the shoulder, you pull him back away from the lake and throw him down to the ground.

He touches that lake, you pant, and you'll be forced to end his career once and for all.

“My career?” he murmurs, his voice thick and confused like that of a man rising from a deep sleep, “What are you talking about?”

Once again, you're not given a chance to answer. Before you can even put an answer into words, a deep rumble grips the cave, or whatever it is, and sets a ripple spreading across the surface of the lake. Both you and Wehrlain start to rise, but you quickly push the Scholar back down. Best he stays out of the way for this. When he doesn't move, you start to reach for your book only to remember, with sudden vividness, that it fell.

As your eye falls upon the book – lying discarded like a piece of rubbish – the tremors reach a new peak. With a slow crash, like breaking through a frozen lake, the beast emerges from its hiding place. Looking back, you see the thing in all its terrible glory – it really does look like a vast eye, one that bleeds trailing hands and shadowy fingers. They sway and wave, clutching at thin air, and their every movement seems to be accompanied by a chorus of whispered voices.

It takes a moment, and then you realise you've been staring, hypnotised, into the beast's burning eye. There's no sanity in that eye at all, and nothing that you even recognise as thought or emotion. Nothing at all... or perhaps too much. Looking away, you snatch up the book and leaf through the pages in search of the ancient chant. Just as you find it, the beast shudders and shoots something.

Like all the heat of the sun, concentrated into a single line, it draws a blazing path across the cave floor, spreading fire in its wake. It has firepower like that, while you have a book.

>Try the chant regardless
>Fight normally. Ancient words won't help you now
>Other
>>
>>531734
>Try the chant regardless
>>
>>531734
>>Try the chant regardless
>>
>>531734
>>Try the chant regardless
Coming for you Lunatic~
>>
>>531734
>>Fight normally. Ancient words won't help you now
>>
>>531734
>>Try the chant regardless
>>
>>531734
>>Try the chant regardless
>>
>>531734
>Try the chant regardless
Let me see that 'black heart'
>>
>>531734
>Try the chant regardless
>>
Your book might not be much of a weapon, but what else do you have? A bullet would be like a raindrop against something like that, barely noticeable and nowhere close to lethal. You could empty every magazine you've got into the thing, even into the centre of that madly rolling eye, and it wouldn't shake it.

No, they might just be words on the page, but you'll have to put your faith in magic this time. As another ripple of power builds within the Lunatic Beast, you let the book fall open in your hands – of course, it opens to the page you needed. Grimacing at the sight of the gnarled arcane runes, beyond such childish concepts as “words” and “letters”, you give yourself over to a more primal instinct. Abandoning control, you feel your lips twisting to form the sounds.

It hurts to speak aloud, and the sound that you create is one that you could never, under normal circumstances, form. Forcing the pain aside, you press on and let the inhuman sounds flow through you. At the second one, you taste salt in your mouth, and by the third there is blood leaking from one corner of your mouth. Drawing in a shuddering breath, you cough out the forth sound – a dusting of your own blood staining the page you read from. If the poisoned sounds are hurting you, though, they're killing the beast.

With every sound you force out, the Lunatic Beast shudders, pulsing like a heart and unravelling like an ancient scroll. As its form unwinds, the grasping limbs start to boil away into blood and fall back to the lake. The more that falls away, the more you can see something coiled up inside the beast, curled up like a child clinging desperately to the womb. A frail, blackened figure, malformed and ageless, you nevertheless sense a deathly malice radiating from it. A malice... and a desperate hunger.

Through a mouth torn by inhuman energies, you keep forcing out the harsh sounds. Even as the breath heaves and rasps in your lungs, you force out the last few pieces of the chant. As the sounds are drawn from your body, and the last shreds of the Lunatic Beast boil away into blood, the blackened heart stands revealed. With a single yawning, empty eye-socket, it turns to look at you.

And the world drops away, leaving the two of you to hang – perfectly suspended – in a black void.

“I can offer you much,” the beast hisses, “Anything you want, any knowledge you seek. No catch, no sacrifice... only let me live. Burn that book, and you may drink deep of my power.”

Yet there are other voices, too hushed to hear properly, too loud to ignore. So many voices...

>Accept the offer
>Decline – violently
>Try to communicate with the being
>Other
>>
>>531859
>Decline – violently
>>
>>531859
>>Try to communicate with the being

Let me teach you the song of my people
>>
>>531859
>Decline – violently
"I got a job to do 'Number 6'."
>>
>>531859
>Keel eet
>>
>>531859
>>Decline – violently
"You shall devour no more Lunatic Knight. Requitasce in Nihilo, Artemis sends her regards.
>>
>>531873
>Requitasce in Nihilo
kek
>>
>>531859
>Decline – violently
>>
>>531859
>>Decline – violently
"Prepare to become whole."
>>
>>531859
>Decline – violently
>>
>>531859
>>Try to communicate with the being
>>
>>531916
YEEEAH BOI!
>>
For a moment, you think about trying to communicate with the beast – it can think, enough to plead for its life, so perhaps there's something you can learn from it. As you consider the idea, and your thoughts grow close to those of the beast, those mindlessly babbling voices come into sharper focus.

Die die die die die die die die, they hiss in a moment of rare unison, Die die die die...

So much for trying to negotiate. Sorry, you tell the beast, but you'll have to decline his offer. You've got a job to do, and he's just number six on a long list. He's devoured enough men already, and you're not about to let him add any more victims to his tally. Letting go of the book, letting it drift away into this open void, you pull out your pistol and point it at the beast's expressionless skull of a face.

“No!” it screeches, blind rage and frustration boiling over. Its cry is mirrored by every single one of those babbling voices, different languages, accents and cadences all repeating the same furious denial.

Give your regards to Artemis, you tell it coldly, and it'll be whole again soon. You'll see to that. It has time to screech out one last denial, and then you pull the trigger.

-

In an instant, the world rushes back in to fill the black void. One by one, sensations return to you – the solid ground beneath your feet, the weight of the pistol in your hand, and the awful copper stink of blood in the air. The lake is clotting, drying into a dusty brown crater devoid of any decorations – any, save for the withered skeleton emerging like a dying tree. Moving slowly, not quite prepared to trust the ground under your feet, you creep down into the crater and approach that skeleton.

It's dead, completely and utterly, its cyclopean skull broken by a single bullet hole. Reaching down, you take the skull – it's almost childish, shrunken and ill-formed – and wrench it free.

This, you think, will make a fine trophy.

>I think I'm going to pause things here for today. I'll pick things up on Monday, can't do Sunday this week, and I'll stick around for any questions or comments
>Sorry for the slow replies today!
>>
>>531949
Thanks for running. Given I'll likely be working Monday I was miss most of the thread, like the Tuesday and Friday ones. Still thanks for running!


What'd the others see and hear? Was that the stillborn monster the whore gave birth too?
>>
>>531949
Thanks for running.

What was that like from Lars' perspective?
>>
>>531949
Didn't expect a numbered beast to be behind that. I also think you did well with Wehrlain. It would've been so easy to just let him drift off to join the legion then kill it and shrug off any blame or suspicion for his death. He's just been progressively more annoying and shitty in attitude but then we got to see that he can be dangerous too. Well played.
>>
>>531975
>Was that the stillborn monster the whore gave birth too?
That was the thing that tried to take Bach which we killed in the beginning of Friday's session.
>>
>>531949
Aww, yeah. Great session Moloch.
>>
>>531975
>>531978

While we were having a little chat with the beast, Lars and the others would have seen Henryk and the beast staring each other down, until Henryk drew his gun and shot the thing. The conversation was entirely mental.

And, to confirm, the child we fought was separate from the beast itself.

>>531980

It would have been easy, I think, to let Wehrlain become part of it. I genuinely wasn't sure what people would have gone for there.
>>
>>532004
But did Lars see us coughing up blood chanting like a wizard from out magic book and Lunatic bleeding away?
>>
>>532035

Oh, yes - that would have been noticeable. He might have a few questions about that later, but that's a whole other bridge to cross
>>
>>532045
How hard would the fight have been if we forgot to bring the book?

Just use Beast's Blood and fight it conventionally, hoping for the best?
>>
>>532045
Did they also see the giant beam of light? Cause that seemed pretty real.
>>
>>532060

That was pretty real, yes. It was basically a laser, but I wanted to avoid using that specific term.

>>532058

It would have been more of a conventional fight without the book, having to tear through its outer layers in order to get a shot off at the creature inside. The beast itself would be easily killed, but getting to it would be less so
>>
>>532074
I'm super glad people voted the way I would have after passing out! I don't think you should be surprised at Wehrlain getting saved. We do still need him to run the engine.

Would that also help us convince the other Scholars to ignore the whole Totem and Chanting thing?

Did the totem help in any way?
>>
>>532074
Huh. I figured shootyshooty wouldn't be that bad.

But the creature inside was different....
>>
im really happy that
you guys didnt let Wehrlain join with that blood
would have given the beast the info about the machine he built that was keep people safe from it
>>
hy life got crazy and i just got done ctching up from thread #5

great quest so far moloch, really amazing stuff

good job anons there weresome brutal rolls i those threads

>excited to get to participte this quest has been solid
>>
>>531949
>>528596
Gotta say Henryk is definitely earning his keep as the Hunter of this expedition.

>Hire Hunter on to kill stuff to protect us up in the North
>Captain gets captured by monster that can shrug off buckshot.
>Hunter chases after it almost immediately and kills it without a scratch, bringing the Captain back to safety.
>Giant eye that shoots lasers rises from a blood lake
>Within minutes Hunter kills it utilizing the monster's hard counter that he brought because he was prepared for this eventuality.

Give that man a raise.
>>
>>536511
Also the whale parasite.
>>
>>536511
The tradition for "gets shit done" MCs continues
>>
Like a funeral procession, like a joyless parade, the men of the expedition trudge through the wasteland and leave the Old University behind them – not without a trace of subdued relief. You share both that relief and that restraint, unwilling to let your guard down until you're back on the Fomalhaut and sailing swifty away. Even then, it'll be a long time before you can truly rest calm. As long as the red moon looks down upon you, there can be no peace or respite.

The trail of sailors and Scholars, winding like a great serpent, moves steadily onwards. Burdened by crates of books, laboratory instruments and other trophies, the pace is a slow one. Even without the cargo weighing the men down, though, the pace would never get above sluggish – this is an army that marches at the speed of its slowest. Supported by a good number of his crew, reminding you of an ailing but still treasured patriarch, Captain Bach lurches forwards. Though clouded with a faint haze of sedation – the laudanum supplies seem to be flowing freely once more – his good eye is hard and determined.

If Bach is growing stronger, recovering from the abuses heaped upon him, then Wehrlain has been left diminished by his experiences here. Other than a few murmured words as his invention was born aloft, he is yet to say anything. He wanders along, eyes fixed on the ground, and pays no mind to the sailors around him. For their part, the sailors are only too happy to return the favour – they don't even jostle him in passing, such is their disdain.

Your case rattles as you drag it – and the totem within – along, approaching Wehrlain. Whether it's pity or just common curiosity that drives you, you reach the Scholar's side and speak up. No problems, you ask quietly, with the device?

“Hmm? No, no problems,” he thinks for a moment before shaking his head, “The Wehrlain Engine is functioning as intended. I do not foresee any trouble on the journey home.” He falls silent at that, the mention of home, as If considering everything that might be waiting for him. Somehow, you suspect it will be a long way from the victorious homecoming he had envisioned.

“Believe it or not, Hunter, I consider this expedition to be a success,” a faint trace of Wehrlain's old arrogance creeps back into his voice as he seems to read your thoughts, “I'm all too aware of what is waiting for me back at the College – censure, perhaps even arrest and persecution – but that changes nothing. I was prepared to risk my life on this venture, after all.”

And what about his reputation and status, you reply, is he prepared to risk those?

“Less so,” he admits, “However I am remembered as a man, I hope that my work is seen in its own light. That would be enough for me.”

[1/3]
>>
>>536850

From the head of the convoy, a shout pierces the gloomy mood – a shout of relief, given voice as the Fomalhaut looms into sight. Seeing it now, with your own eyes, you feel some of the tension lifting from your mind. The sight of the ship seems to invigorate the sailors, lending extra haste to their steps, and it isn't long before the air is filled with a rumble of excited voices. Men mutter to one another what they'll do upon returning to the Free States – drinking mostly, and chasing women – while others talk about the families they left behind. The mood, incredibly, starts to lift.

It doesn't last. With every step that takes you closer to the Fomalhaut, the conversations dim and die off, winking out like fading candle flames. The Fomalhaut's hull is discoloured, stained by creeping rust and marred by a thick skin of grime. It looks more like the Polaris should have looked – a hulk, long abandoned and left to rot at sea. As the conversations died off, so too does the good pace you had established, men slowing until they are not moving at all.

“Alright men, that's enough staring!” Captain Bach is the one to break the silence, raising his voice so that every man can hear him, “Once we're aboard, I want bodies down in the engine room, checking every inch of the machinery. Anything that needs fixed, I want it fixed! Anything that's stopping us leaving here, I want it dealt with!”

There is a long pause as his words sink in, and then a single voice rises up in response. “Aye captain!” one sailor cries, and soon there are countless more voices mirroring his. Slowly but surely, the expedition starts to crawl forwards once more.

-

“Almost feels like it doesn't want us to leave, wouldn't you say?” Lars asks you later, as you're both standing on the Fomalhaut's deck. The engine still lies silent, and the crew has filtered off to their designated stations. Bach has retired to his personal quarters, and so has Wehrlain. Until Lars had joined you, you had been alone on the deck, alone under the light of the red moon.

“Anyway, I heard that the engine could be started up soon – they were just giving it a very careful examination before trying anything,” the Scholar continues, “So there's no need to worry... yet.”

You're not worried, you assure him, not yet at least. What about things on the bridge, how are they looking?

“Not as bad as we were expecting. Some surface rust and corrosion, and a few of the more sensitive instruments might not be perfectly reliable, but...” letting his words trail off, Lars shrugs, “Well, so long as the engine fires up, it should be enough to get us home.”

So long as the engine fires up, you repeat.

[2/3]
>>
>>536851

With the conversation reaching a natural end, you half expect Lars to retreat and leave you to your solitude, but he lingers around for a few moments more. The conversation, it seems, is not as over as you'd thought. Turning your back on the Old University, and the moon looming overhead, you look Lars in the eye. There's something bothering him, you guess, so what is it?

“I wouldn't say that it was bothering me, so much,” Lars shuffles his feet uncomfortably, “But I'm a Scholar – I like to understand things, to be able to reduce my experiences down to base facts. You see where I'm coming from, don't you?”

You're not sure if the world works that way, you tell him, but you understand his viewpoint. His problem, then, is that-

“What happened down there, in the caverns below the University,” he cuts you off, “I can't understand that. I simply have no theory that accommodates everything I saw... or everything that I thought I saw. Officially, if I'm called upon to give a report, much of what happened here will be considered a hallucination. Unofficially though...” with a shrug, Lars meets your gaze, “Anything you can tell me?”

That depends, you reply, but you might not have an answer that will satisfy him.

>Honestly, I'm not sure what it was. It worked though
>Just a bit of witchcraft, nothing to worry about
>It was a hallucination, that's all. Better this way
>Other
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>>536855
>Honestly, I'm not sure what it was. It worked though
>>
>>536855
>>Honestly, I'm not sure what it was. It worked though
>>
>>536855
>Honestly, I'm not sure what it was. It worked though
"Chalk it up to following my Hunter's instinct on how to kill that thing."

5 bucks the rust and grime on the boat is natural and even though it felt like a day or two at most it's been months in reality.
>>
>>536855
>Honestly, I'm not sure what it was. It worked though
Just think of it as a previously unobserved phenomenon.

>>536860
>tfw we return and Lize is all grown up and in mourning
>>
>>536855
>Other
We could tell him about the book and what the passage said. All signs were pointing to some kind of 'legion of minds' creature so we brought the book with us and it worked. Though don't tell him we know the language and tell him the book auto translated for us like the other books seem to be doing, only at a faster rate.
>>
In all honestly, you tell him, you're not sure what it was. In that regard, at least, you're not so different. Where you do differ, though, is that you're quite happy to admit this failure of your knowledge. As you said before, the world isn't always something that can be broken down into objective fact and studied. If it makes him feel any better, he can call this an unobserved phenomenon – something that few men have ever had the chance to see, or study, before.

“I'm not quite sure if that does help,” Lars manages a small smile, “But how did you know it – whatever “it” is, in this case – would work?”

You didn't, you think to yourself. You trusted your Hunter's instincts, you say aloud, and everything worked out okay in the end. It wasn't a complete guess at least – you found a book talking about this “legion of minds”, and the pieces seemed to fit. You took a gamble, and it paid off.

“Indeed?” Lars voice retains a faint note of uncertainty, almost scepticism, “Do your instincts often guide you well?”

When it comes to killing things, you reply with a cold smile, it does. That's what Hunters like you are for, after all.

“Very pragmatic,” wandering forwards a little, Lars leans on the railing a little – testing the rusty metal – before putting his whole weight on it, “Oh, I wanted to talk to you about Wehrlain, while we're here. I'm drafting up a report on him, on his various... misdeeds. I can't promise that it'll see any significant results – I'm certain that Wehrlain has friends looking out for him – but it's worth a shot. After all, I can't just do nothing. Even if all it achieves is blackening his name a little, I'd consider that a victory.”

Harming his name like that, you think aloud, might be what hurts him the most. Well, maybe not – a knife in the gut would probably hurt more, but that option is off the table now. Too many watchful eyes around here, too many witnesses. Anyway, you-

The engine, howling like a wounded beast, roars into life from below deck. Chugging a little, at first, it soon evens out to a smooth, healthy rumble. A few moments of that unbroken noise pass, and then the Fomalhaut grinds into motion. Like a beast roused from hibernation, it slowly starts to draw back from the island. Holding your breath, you wait for something to go wrong, for some last disaster to still your escape. When none comes, you let out a sigh of relief – one that Lars mirrors.

“Looks like we're in the clear,” he says, “I won't miss this place, let me tell you.”

The feeling, you assure him, is mutual.

[1/2]
>>
>>536879

“We had to clear out the whole engine system,” Bach explains later, as you're sitting in his cabin with a meal you don't feel like eating. Nobody seems to, with the plates of lukewarm food left mostly untouched. The air in the room is stifled, awkward and uncomfortable, and it's not hard to guess why. For some reason that eludes you, Bach invited Wehrlain to dine with him once more, along with you and Lars.

Perhaps it's an attempt at rebuilding bridges between you all – or perhaps it was an attempt at making Wehrlain uncomfortable. If the latter is the case, it seems to have misfired. The Scholar barely paid the meal any mind, instead focusing on the cabin itself. Every spot of unnatural dirt or decay holds his attention, while your words fall on deaf ears. Maybe that's why you don't have an appetite – with Wehrlain buzzing around like a fly, you can't concentrate on anything.

“As I was saying,” Bach continues, raising his voice a little as Wehrlain mutters something, “We found roots and vines, of all things, growing within the engine itself. Easily cleared, once my boys took the thing apart, but they're still talking about how it grew there.”

“A consequence, I'm afraid, of taking the Wehrlain Engine ashore with us,” Wehrlain declares, without turning to face the table, “The ship was left exposed to the, ah, influence here. I believe that to be the source of this advanced decay as well.”

Not the first time you've seen a ship with vines growing in the engine, you remark, but that was further south – not something that the red moon brought about.

“If my theories are correct, the Wehrlain Engine should be able to protect against that – the more, shall we say, deliberate growth. In future, every ship the Free States builds will have my invention aboard,” Wehrlain gloats, any trace of his former humility burned away, “Travellers here will have nothing to fear from the northern barbarians. This little expedition has proved my device to be successful – true, there are a few side-effects that bear further study, but those are trifling matters. Even if they can never be erased fully, the Wehrlain Engine will prove invaluable to the League.”

You share a look with Lars, and you can tell that you're both thinking the same thing. The device will be invaluable, and its inventor will be above reproach. At worst, all he has ahead of him is a token punishment. At best – praise and further advancement.

Maybe, you think half-heartedly, you should have let him die down in those caverns.

[2/3]
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>>536874
I kind of want Lize to be all grown up so she can come along on more adventures and be helpful, but I can't say I won't miss miniLize. Her growing up saves us from a time skip and a training arc since she probably handled that herself.
>>
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>>536897
>You share a look with Lars, and you can tell that you're both thinking the same thing.
>>
>>536897
Looks like someone needs a reminder that his machine didn't keep him from trying to commit suicide. First by pissing off everyone else in the expedition, and then again in the lake of blood.
>>
>>536897

“Regardless,” Bach announces, a hard edge in his voice getting all of you – even Wehrlain – to pay attention to him, “I think we can regard the expedition as a success. It was not without sacrifice or hardship, but nothing is. The men who lost their lives will have their families compensated, and those who survived... they will do so as rich men. Rich by the standards of sailors, at least.”

“Really?” Lars asks with a smile, “Will it take them two weeks to drink away their pay rather than one?”

“I'd give them a week and a half,” Bach corrects him, “Ah, but what a time it will be! Gentlemen, a toast.” With his blackened eye staring blindly out at you all, Bach refills your glasses with dark wine. “What should we drink to, do you think?”

To never coming north again, you suggest, once was enough.

“I'll drink to that!” Lars agrees. With a chime, you tap your glasses together and drink. Wehrlain, you notice, does so without much enthusiasm.

-

Cutting through the water like a blade, the Fomalhaut forges a path south. With every moment it spends at sea, without any unexpected problems, the men grow more and more cheerful. Even with the Wehrlain Engine burning away at the backs of their minds, the crew can summon the energy to drink and boast of their success. A large part of their cheer is because of what lies ahead, what could show its face any day now.

An honest, silver moon. That's all you, and so many others here, want to see. Until you've seen it, you won't be home – not really. As long as that terrible red moon fills the sky you're in hostile territory, and you won't be permitted to forget that. For some petty reason, you want to be the first one to see the moon, and so you spend much of your time on deck, braving the cold wind and blowing snow. It's no hardship – nothing you're not used to, at least.

You're up on deck, as usual, when Lars finds you. No doubt, this was the first place he looked. Greeting you, he joins you in looking up at the sky for a while. The moon, slowly but surely, has been getting smaller, retreating higher up into the sky. It won't be long now, you mention.

“What?” Lars pauses, “Oh, the moon, right. Good thing too.”

Yeah, you agree, you've been waiting.

“Well, I don't want to take up too much of your time,” he pauses again, watching the sky as if the change might happen any minute now, “I finished a report on Wehrlain. Would you like to add anything to it? Even just signing it as a witness might help my case.”

>I'd rather not get involved in your politics
>Sure, I'll sign. Not sure how much good it'll do, though
>Other
>>
>>536918
>Sure, I'll sign. Not sure how much good it'll do, though
Yeah I don't know how much weight a Hunter's word goes within the College but it can't hurt. I imagine we are considered just muscle to most of them.
>>
>>536918
>I'd rather not get involved in your politics
>>
>>536918
>>Sure, I'll sign. Not sure how much good it'll do, though
Surely nothing bad can come from signing a sheet of paper!
>>
>>536918
>>I'd rather not get involved in your politics, but I'll sign. Not sure how much good it'll do, though.
>>
Can we at least skim it first?
>>
>>536918
>>I'd rather not get involved in your politics
>>
>>536918
>Sure, I'll sign. Not sure how much good it'll do, though
>>
>>536918
>>536945
>I'll need to look it over first.
>>
You're not exactly sure how much good it'll do, and you'd rather not get too deeply involved in their politics – you know a power struggle when you see one – but you'll sign it. It's just a name on a piece of paper, how badly could that come back to haunt you?

“Excellent, I'm glad to have your support,” Lars slaps you on the shoulder, the gesture aiming for “comradely” and falling only slightly short, “Come with me, I've got my papers in my quarters.”

Like you said, you tell him as he leads the way, you're not sure if it'll do much good. Would the College really put much faith in the word of an outsider – especially a Hunter like you? You're just the muscle in this expedition, not a thinking man like the rest of them.

“Even Hunters have eyes – they can bear witness to a crime, and give testimony,” Lars explains as you delve below deck, “You've seen more than most of us, perhaps because you're an outsider. Wehrlain, in his own way, I think he trusted you. Which is to say... he saw you as a reliable tool, one unlikely to turn on him. Hubris, of course, but that comes all too easily to men like him.”

Well, either way, you'd like to read this report before you put your name to it. At the very least, you want to skim it over and make sure you're not signing anything overtly... seditious. Nothing that could come back and land you in trouble.

“Sure, sure,” Lars waves away your concern, “It's just an account of everything that might go against League regulations. I'm not even making any overt accusations – I'm simply laying out the facts, as I witnessed them, and the proper authorities can make up their own minds. It's fine, it's nothing to worry about.”

For some reason, that just makes you more worried.

-

Lars' quarters are perfectly plain, austere if not for the large number of books scattered about. Some are old – recovered from the Old University and held close at hand for safe keeping – while others are newer, reference materials that he brought with him. Mixed in with the dry texts, you can't help but notice, are a fair few trashy novels. Something to help pass the long hours at sea, perhaps.

“Don't mind the mess, I've got everything right here,” Lars takes a slim folder and holds it out to you, “Read it over, as much as you like – I'm no desperate hurry to get it finished. You never know, I might need to add something to it before the journey is over.” He laughs a little, a forced laugh, just to show that he's joking.

At least, you think he's joking.

[1/2]
>>
>>536970
Changin to this
>>
>>536973

Written in a dry, scholarly fashion – as if anything else was to be expected from a Scholar of the College – Lars' report is a carefully composed thing. It opens by praising Wehrlain for his efforts in forming the expedition and thanking him that Lars was allowed to take part. That introduction, you sense, has the air of a necessary evil – like polite small talk before launching into darker business. Letting your eyes skip across the platitudes, you move onto the more important matters.

Breaking the expedition down into smaller chunks – the week long trip to Port Steyr, the journey to the Old University and the exploration itself – the report wastes no time in listing Wehrlain's crimes. Starting with the excessive use of the Wehrlain Engine along the first step of the journey, Lars gives a careful account of the crew's suffering. It is only a short amendment, reminding a reader that the Wehrlain Engine was still being tested, that keeps the first section from becoming an overt attack.

From there, the report leads into Bach's surgery, and the “accidental” absence of any anaesthesia. Again, an addition that blames the absence on “supply problems” keeps the section from being too blatant, but the intent is clear – Wehrlain, under dubious conditions, drilled into a man's skull without any other qualified Scholars to assist him. That alone would be a serious offence under League regulations.

Overall, the report concludes that Wehrlain acted in an irresponsible manner, one that suggests he is ill-suited to a position of authority. What it doesn't delve into, however, is Wehrlain himself – his malice, arrogance and spite. Looking up from the report, you mention this to Lars.

“Well, those are largely subjective, not something to build a case around,” he shrugs, “And, speaking honestly, any Scholar reading that report wouldn't need to be told about them. They'd know already. What do you think, then?”

>I'll sign this, sure
>No, I've changed my mind – I don't want my name involved
>I have an amendment to make... (Write in)
>Other
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>>536999
>I'll sign this, sure
>>
>>536999
>>I'll sign this, sure
We're already down here, might as well sign it.
>>
>>536999
>I'll sign this, sure
>>
>>536999
>I'll sign this, sure
This is totally going to come back and bite us some day huh?
>>
>>536999
>>I'll sign this, sure
>>
I think he should make an addendum where the Hunter report things from his perspective.

Like the fact that the crew nearly muntined during the trip and it was only thanks to the efforts of the captain and some of the scholars that the situation didn't boil over.

Just a simple, "if you want to send an ass like him on dangerous mission be sure to place able negotiators in the crew or the next ship will never reach it's destination."
>>
You'll put your name to this, you tell him, certainly. As you've said, you're not sure how much of a difference it'll make in the long run, but it's better than just doing nothing. Besides, you're down here anyway – it'll have been a wasted journey if you don't sign the thing.

“Good, great,” Lars hands you a pen, the corroded metal marking it out as something he left behind in his cabin. Taking the report, he turns to the back page and hands it back. “I've been collecting signatures here, a little bit like a petition. After all, the authorities can't ignore a petition!”

He is not, you suspect, being entirely serious when he says that. Regardless, you look down the rather short list of names. Haight and Kranz have signed it, and so has Captain Bach. Those are the only names you recognise, but there are about a dozen more – some of the more senior Scholars, if you had to guess. A few of the others have added short notes along with their names. Kranz writes that Wehrlain showed little concern or guidance for the younger students, while Haight offers a grudging word of defence – the expedition bore fruit, after all, and the Wehrlain Engine was not a failure.

At the bottom of the page, you scrawl your own name and a short note regarding Wehrlain's leadership. The crew nearly mutinied under his leadership, you explain, and the situation required the efforts others to defuse. As the report suggested, you have to question his suitability for a leadership position. With the report signed and sealed, you hand it back to Lars, who eagerly reads over your addition.

“Everything seems to be in order,” the Scholar assures you with a nod, “It means a lot to me. I only hope that this affair hasn't spoiled your perception of the College too much. We're not all like Wehrlain, you know, and there are people trying to bring about reform. These things take time, though, and change always invites resistance.”

Not to worry, you tell him, this hasn't changed your opinion at all. What you choose not to tell him, though, is that you didn't exactly have a high opinion of the College in the first place – it's always been a nest of vipers, eager to stab each other in the back and devour the weak.

But saying such things would be impolite, and you've got other matters to focus on. There's a fair commotion coming from up on deck, and you've got an idea what it might be.

[1/2]
>>
>>537065

Following the noise, a growing murmur of excited voices, you leave Lars' quarters and head for the upper deck. You're not the only one with this idea, it seems, and it isn't long before you're being swept along with a flow of bodies. The energy is contagious – even though nobody is yet to so much as cast their eye skywards – and you feel a rare smile growing on your face. Forging ahead, up metal steps that bear the scars of your time in the north, you rise up to the open deck.

It's dark, up here, and very cold. True darkness like this, like the midnight sky, is something that you've not seen in what feels like a very long time indeed. The sky is utterly featureless, the leering presence of the red moon replaced by an unbroken layer of cloud. Thick clouds, mind, the kind that threaten snowstorms, but nobody seems to care about that. Everyone here, every sailor and Scholar you see, all look to the sky and wait for the same thing.

Eventually, moving at their own unhurried pace, the clouds part like a vast set of curtains. The moon that they reveal is almost disappointing – a sliver of a thing, with the dusty sheen of a forgotten ornament – but is undeniably YOUR moon. An innocent, blameless moon, one that belongs to a saner world. At the sight of that moon, it seems like a single gasp – countless voices united as one – rises up from the crowd. A single gasp, and then the cheering begins. Through the surging wall of cheers, one single voice – rendered harsh and mechanical by the decaying speakers – blares out.

“Cutting power to the Wehrlain Engine now,” the voice announces, “Repeat, deactivating the Wehrlain Engine now.”

You hadn't thought it possible for the cheers to get any louder, but that declaration renews and reinvigorates them. Suddenly old news, the moon is forgotten, and the surging crowd starts to descend below deck once more. Sailor and Scholar alike, casting aside Wehrlain's attempt at maintaining segregation, the men head for their makeshift bar. Even before they – and you, for you found yourself moving automatically with the crowd, by extension – have arrived, metal flasks full of burning spirits are being passed around.

A bawdy drinking song, the first of many, starts up, and things start to get a little blurry from there. No, you'll be honest, they get more than a little blurry – the rest of the night melts away into a single featureless void.

[2/3]
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>>537155
We only took one casualty for the whole expedition right? That sailor that got smashed by a rock and dragged off when we first arrived at the University.
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>>537176

>There were a few others injured or killed, I believe, when the child attacked and took Bach. Other than that, though, there were remarkably few losses
>>
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>>537155

When normal sense returns, and you can think clearly once more, the first thing you see is blackness. Groaning in bitter anticipation, you crack open one eye and look up at your cabin ceiling. Only... you don't see a ceiling at all. What soars above you is the open sky, featureless and infinite. Opening your other eye, you roll onto your side and look out at the scene around you.

Your gaze is met, and returned, by a single vast eye – rising, half-drowned, from a pool of shimmering water. Crying out at the sight of that mindless, maddened eye, you scrabble up and rise to your feet before recognition sets in. That's the coiling, ever shifting form of the Lunatic Beast – or rather, the legion of minds that it cloaked itself in.

“Ugly, isn't it?” Artemis, placing one cool and calming hand on your shoulder, says softly, “And the way it stares – ugh!”

You weren't expecting to see all of it here, you manage to say, just the blackened heart. That would have taken up a lot less space, at least. Then again, you consider, space isn't exactly something she's short on around here.

“Even so,” Artemis complains, “It doesn't do much for the mood, does it? I was all prepared to celebrate reaching the halfway point with you – and to celebrate our reunion – but it's ruined now.” Turning, she gives the new arrival a bitter look before muttering to herself. “Ruined!” she repeats.

Halfway finished, you say to yourself, you're making good progress. Of course, next up...

“The Sibling Knights, I know,” Artemis waves a dismissive hand at the watchful eye, putting it out of her mind as best she can, “Seven and eight – reluctant and eager, craven and raging. Nasty characters, both of them, but in very different ways. Well, anyway, that's something to worry about later – I believe we have our usual... transaction to worry about.”

The usual offer – one hand red with blood, the other white and pristine. Either way, an offering of strength... and a hastening of your eventual doom.

>Accept the gift of Bloodshed
>Accept the gift of Civilisation
>Decline her gifts
>Other
>>
>>537235
>Decline her gifts
Want to give this a shot.
>>
>>537235
>>Accept the gift of Bloodshed
>>
>>537235
>>Accept the gift of Bloodshed
That +20 looks really tempting. We just need enough firepower to take down a giant if we can find one and we won't have to worry about our eventual doom.
>>
>>537252
Seconding
>>
Rolled 1 (1d3)

>>537235
>1 Blood
>2 Civs
>3 Nah
>>
>>537235
>>Other
"Let's compare notes. How long was I out of contact for, for you?"
>>
>>537277
We'll need to know, for sure. But can she give us a reliable account on how much time passed? She kinda reacted quite badly after being cut off to test the engine.
>>
>>537289
Maybe not reliable, but she might give us an estimate.

We'll know for sure once we reach Steyr.
>>
>>537235
>Accept the gift of Civilisation

I'm already forgetting the bonus for this, but we have no diplomacy so I guess that's not it.
>>
>Closing the vote on which gift to choose, and writing the next post. Looks like we're going with Bloodshed this time.
>>
>>537235
>>Decline her gifts
>>
>>537309
It's a bonus to everything except the combat stuff which is like three things.
>>
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Knowing what lies ahead of you, what risks and dangers, you know what you have to choose. Even if you'll pay for it with the years of your life, you need to be ready for what's coming. After all, you might never see those latter years in the first place. Few Hunters do. Reaching out, you take Artemis' bloody hand in yours, holding it close and feeling the warm blood burning into your skin. When you let go of her hand, it is as clean and white as its opposite number.

>[Combat bonus increased to +20]

“Men such as yourselves have your limits,” Artemis explains as you look down at your hands. Stained red with blood, they slowly reclaim their normal colour. The sensation – faint burning, and raw strength – remains long after the blood has faded away. “To lift you higher than this could prove dangerous. Not impossible, mind, but dangerous.”

You thought it was dangerous already, you remark.

“Not like this,” shaking her head sadly, Artemis turns away from you and looks out across Nihilo, at the beasts you've gathered to her side, “It would not be something you could... control. Trust me, Henryk, when I tell you this.”

Not quite sure what to make of the subject, you set it aside for now and focus on a matter that's been bothering you for a while. How long has it been, you ask Artemis slowly, since you last spoke? How long were you apart for?

“A very long time,” the goddess replies, her eyes growing a fraction wider, “I wish I could be more precise, but it was almost too long for me to stand!”

That gives you pause – it's vague, and not in a good way. Times flows strangely in the northern lands, but could it really have been that different to normal reality? Was it months, you ask with a mounting dread, or even years?

“Almost two weeks!” Artemis guesses, “Too long by far, would you not agree?”

Two weeks, you repeat incredulously, but that's not long at all! The way she'd been talking, you'd started to fear the worst.

“It seemed longer,” she says, in a faintly petulant voice, “It always does, with nothing else to do here. It's not like I have anyone else to talk to, you know – anything to do at all, even! I sat here, and I waited – two weeks like that would seem like a long time to anyone!”

Alright, you sigh, that's fine. At least you're not going to come home to your own grave – that's about all you could have hoped for. It won't nearly be so long next time, you tell Artemis in a vague attempt at cheering her up, you're not planning on hanging around any Wehrlain Engines for a long time – for the rest of your life, if possible.

“Good,” she does, at least, look a little happier at that, “Oh, how I hate those wretched things. Why do people like that always try to push boundaries? Some places are not meant for men to trespass, doesn't he realise that?”

[1/2]
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>>537383
>“Men such as yourselves have your limits,” Artemis explains as you look down at your hands. Stained red with blood, they slowly reclaim their normal colour. The sensation – faint burning, and raw strength – remains long after the blood has faded away. “To lift you higher than this could prove dangerous. Not impossible, mind, but dangerous.”

Does that mean overall, both lifting Civ or Bloodshed higher, is dangerous or taking Bloodshed past +20 is dangerous?
>>
>>537383
>To lift you higher than this could prove dangerous.
That sounds like a challenge, is that a challenge? We're totally going to go for it right?
>>
>>537395

>It would be more dangerous than average to lift Bloodshed higher than +20, but we can still raise Civilisation higher without any excess risk
>>
>>537399
Going higher might be a detriment to our job and interacting with people.

Rather work on Civ for a bit/stop taking gifts.
>>
>>537383

Enough about Wehrlain, you tell her, you spend enough time thinking about him when you're awake. You'd rather not waste your time here talking about him as well. You've got more important things to talk about.

“Quite so,” Artemis nods decisively, “As I said earlier, we have the Sibling Knights next – if you find one, the other will never be far. At least, far in a metaphorical sense. A great distance may separate them, or it may not, but there will always be a tie that binds the two of them. You saw it at the temple, didn't you?”

The sword and crown – what Lize claimed was a decisive battle.

“Exactly,” nodding again, Artemis beams at you, “The pair are bound by this upcoming moment – a shift in the balance of power. One of them will reach out to claim it, while the other will shy away. Attack or retreat, risk all or slink back into the shadows – I wonder, Henryk, which would you choose?”

She already gave you that choice, you remind her, and you chose to step up and fight. You chose to hunt her great beasts, and to seek greater strength. Whether that was the right choice or not, you might never know, but it's the choice you made. Generally speaking, you're not in the business of backing down from a challenge.

“Exactly the answer I was hoping to hear!” Artemis grins, revealing white teeth – perfectly formed, but sharper than you remember, “One day, Henryk, we'll stand in an ocean of blood with a choice ahead of us. On that day, I hope you're as bold as you are now.”

An ocean of blood, you ask, a new choice?

“Oh, never mind,” laughing faintly, Artemis waves away your questions, “Things yet to come, I wouldn't worry too much just yet. Now, what were we discussing?”

>The Sibling Knights, I believe
>You said something about a danger. Can you explain a little more?
>I think we were finishing up, actually
>I had a question I was meaning to ask you... (Write in)
>Other
>>
>>537428
>>The Sibling Knights, I believe
>>You said something about a danger. Can you explain a little more?

>An ocean of blood
It hasn't even begun.
>>
>>537428
>>You said something about a danger. Can you explain a little more?
We also should hug her before we leave.
>>
>>537428
>>You said something about a danger. Can you explain a little more?

>sharper than you remember
Artemis a cute, especially with shark teeth. Ocean of blood sounds scary though, hope that blood doesn't belong to anyone we actually like.
>>
>>537428
>The Sibling Knights, I believe
"These ones will be human more or less this time around right? Your Hunter that got the farthest was killed by the law due to that right?"
>You said something about a danger. Can you explain a little more?
>>
>>537433
Come on mang. Henryk ain't the one that initiates hugs. Not in his character. He *gets* the hugs, whether he is willing or not.
>>
She was talking about the Sibling Knights... you think. It's a little hard to keep track sometimes. Other than the fact that they're linked by destiny, what can she tell you about them? What about the Knights she knew?

“Oh, they were inseparable. Perhaps it's arrogant of me to say, but their little destiny... why, I think it might have been me!” with wide, innocent eyes, Artemis gives you a disbelieving look, “Two rival Knights, brought together to lay me low – it's almost romantic, in a way. The right hand and the left hand, that's what they called themselves, I believe, once they set aside their real names. Ironic really, considering what happened later, consider what they...”

Which parts of her they devoured?

“Well, you needn't say it so crudely!” she pouts, “But... yes. They had their little feast, and then they fell upon one another, biting and rutting. Filthy creatures, true beasts – even now that they've crawled into human skin, they can't wash that stain away... and that, dear Henryk, will be your greatest boon. By their marks, you shall know them.”

So she's saying they'll look human, you deduce, but they'll have some mark that reveals them for what they truly are. A birthmark, say, or some deformity.

“Exactly so. Of course, I'm not suggesting you go chasing down everyone you meet who happens to have a scar or a birthmark. That would be foolish and, dare I say it, self-defeating,” reaching across, Artemis touches one of your scars, a memento from when you visited her temple, “No, it's something to keep in mind, but not something I'd trust enough to rely upon. Oh, but there's another thing to consider – the Sibling Knights were of royal blood, and that remains true to this day. Status comes naturally to them, you see.”

Hence why her old champion was executed for hunting one of them, you guess, they got in some fair trouble by killing someone important. That's just one more thing for you to worry about.

“Oh, you'll be fine,” Artemis assures you, “Remember, these “people” will have earned their deaths by the time you come to hunt them down. Maybe not everyone will see it that way, but you needn't concern yourself with that. You are a wolf, Henryk, you needn't think about what the ants say!”

You're not so sure about that, and you're particularly unsure about writing people off as ants, but you decide against mentioning that little fact. No, what you're more interested in is that danger she mentioned – perhaps she could explain a little more about that? Just for the same of transparency, you add, so you don't make any rash decision in future.

“Well then,” Artemis sighs, tapping a finger against her lips, “Let me think...”

[1/2]
>>
I'm liking her less and less
>>
>>537484

“You see, men have their limits – the human body can only be pushed so far before it starts to break down,” Artemis begins, “Likewise, there's a balancing act to maintain. Too much beast, and not enough man, and you get... well, that's when things start to go wrong. Blood-drunk lunatics, paranoid tyrants, mindlessly babbling sages and... the others. I could describe every curse and doom that the Dragon's Blood has to offer, but we'd be here all day. Not to say that I wouldn't welcome your company, Henryk, but you have your own business to attend to.”

So it would bring your doom yet closer, you ask, is that the risk she was talking about?

“Yes, technically, but there's a far worse side to it, something that would make losing a few years seem like a distant worry. No, you'd start to lose the present. Stressful moments – or any moment at all, if you're unlucky – might cause your inner beast to rise to the surface. A brief moment, perhaps, but it doesn't take long to kill a man... or many men,” with a grave voice, Artemis continues, “And don't think they'd necessarily be your enemies either.”

That does sound like quite the risk, you agree after a long pause, not... really something you want to involve yourself in. Not yet, at least, not unless there's no other choice ahead of you.

“Anyway, I prefer you as you are now – sane,” Artemis nods decisively, “More or less, I mean. You're interesting, in a way that a raving beast is dull and boring.”

You're going to take that as a compliment, you sigh.

“As you well should!” Artemis steps close, poking you in the chest to make her point, “For it was meant at such! Well, anyway, we don't time to debate the exact wording. I think you're going to wake up soon.”

So she claims. There's just one last question, you ask, what was that about an ocean of blood?

“Imagine it, Henryk!” Artemis slips one lithe arm around your waist, sweeping the other across the horizon, “Won't it be beautiful?”

That doesn't answer your question, you say as you put an arm around her shoulder, but you weren't really expecting an answer. Not really. Still, you close your eyes and try to picture it in your mind – a stretch of open waters, as red as newly spilled blood. Closing your eyes like this, you can almost hear the waves.

-

You CAN hear the waves. Not in a dream or a fantasy, but in reality. Slowly, with all the agony of a bad hangover, you force your eyes open and stare up at the sky. The... sky? Not the roof of your cabin?

Slowly lurching to your feet, you find yourself wondering just how much you drank last night. Too much, certainly.

[2/3]
>>
>>537517
Is it too late to get Lars to add Wehrlains breakdown by the lake of blood to his report?

Because I feel that most of all would be damning, an indication that he is losing himself to the doom of Scholarly Senility and that he might not be reliable for stressful positions in the future.
>>
>>537534
Seconded
>>
>>537534
Truth be told the blood lake and and Lunatic Knight might be filed away as hallucinations. I don't know if anyone back home will believe it.
>>
>>537548
That's actually better you see. After all it's not whether or not you have hallucinations but also how you act under them.

None of the other scholars tried to drown themselves.

The idea being that we don't deny his genius but we point out that his fragility makes him less appropriate for leadership roles.
>>
>>537534
>>537540

>That is something we can get the chance to do later, yes. Not immediately, mind. Next post in a few minutes, in either case
>>
>>537517

Shuffling like an invalid, like an old man brought low by some withering disease, you move across to the railing and lean out over the water. Drawing in a lungful of sea air, you vomit profusely over the side of the ship. With that out of the way, you actually feel a lot better – well enough to face the day ahead of you, at least. Before you can turn away from the railings, though, you see something that catches your eye.

A ship, small and swift, cutting through the waters as it approaches the Fomalhaut. Fixing your bleary eyes on it, you spy a Ministry flag, and a sinking feeling starts to form in your gut – one that can't be blamed on your hangover.

“Looks like trouble,” a rumbling voice catches your attention, and you turn to see Captain Bach looming over you – looking fairly rough himself, “You don't get Ministry ships this far out without a good – or a bad – reason. Look, no harpoons, they're not here for whales.”

So what, you ask, they're here to arrest you all for something?

“Maybe,” Bach mutters darkly. With that grim warning delivered, he lurches off towards the bridge. Leaving him to march off, you lean over the side of the ship and watch the new vessel circle you. It's a small thing, but big enough for a decent crew. Definitely up to no good. As you watch, the Fomalhaut slows to a halt, drifting languidly in the still waters. As you continue your lonesome vigil, and as Bach lurches back down, a few crewmen start to kick down ladders.

You're being boarded. Ministry soldiers, clad in protective gear and armed with heavy rifles, emerge from the ship and start to climb the ladders. Almost by instinct, your hands go to your weapons – a pistol and blade, nothing but a bad joke compared with the rifles on proud display. Heaving a heavy sigh, you slump against the railings and wait for the worst. Anything else feels like too much effort.

-

The first soldier that arrives on deck grabs you by the shoulder – his hand is covered by a thick leather glove – and spins you around. The heavy pistol, aimed squarely at your stomach, deters any word of protest you might have said. His face is masked, but his eyes are hard. Not without fear, though, you note with passing interest. Then a new face arrives on deck, and your interest shifts.

Camilla Borghild. It's been a while.

“Hunter,” she says coldly, reluctance peeking through the steel of her eyes, “I have orders to take the crew of this vessel into custody. All of them – you included.”

I'm sorry, her eyes seem to say.

>On what charge, exactly?
>Very well. You have your duties to perform
>No way, we didn't come this far just to get arrested
>Other
>>
>>537586
>On what charge, exactly?
We just got back to normal waters. Didn't really have a chance to commit any crime.
>>
>>537586
>>On what charge, exactly?
Where is our totem? We probably should have done something with it and look slightly less suspicious.
>>
>>537586
>On what charge, exactly?
>>
>>537586
>>Very well. You have your duties to perform, oh and on what charge, exactly?
>>
>>537594

>Currently, it'll be in our cabin with the rest of our luggage. Safe for now, but a thorough search would uncover it.
>>
>>537586
>On what charge, exactly?

Let's write off the totem as something we found there if caught with it.
>>
>>537614
Souvenir and all that.
>>
Arrested, you reply, on what charge? You've only just arrived in saner waters, you've not had time to commit any crimes. At least, that's what you hope – a gang of drunken sailors will always find a way of getting in trouble. The more you consider that possibility, the more a worry starts to form in your gut. Just what did you get up to last night, in that drunken haze?

“You're not under arrest,” Camilla corrects you, “You're being taken into custody. It may not be of much comfort to you, but there IS a difference. Regardless, the reason is clear – this ship is to be considered a contamination risk, and the crew are no different. You do look somewhat ill, if you don't mind me saying.”

You're hungover, you reply, that's all. There is no illness here, no disease for them to contain.

Camilla looks you in the eye for a moment before looking around at her fellow soldier. “Geralt, get below deck with the others. This situation is under control, and they'll need as many men as they can get down below.”

“Understood,” the soldier grunts, lowering his pistol and leaving the two of you alone. Camilla watches him leave before sighing heavily, holstering her own pistol.

“Thank you, Henryk, for not doing anything rash,” she tells you, her voice hushed, “As far as I'm concerned, this is just a precaution – a formality. So long as you all play along, you'll be moved to one of the platforms outside Port Steyr and held, under guard, for a few days. So long as nobody dies of a strange disease, you'll be allowed to go free.”

Sounds simple enough, you mutter, but you're still not sure about this. They got here pretty fast – if you didn't know any better, you'd say they were expecting you.

“We got our orders – along with a good number of reinforcements, at last – not long after you left. Apparently, someone didn't like where you were planning on going,” Camilla's eyes smile faintly at the mention of the reinforcements, “We've been waiting out here for a few days now, hoping to catch you before you could reach Port Steyr. Looks like we got lucky.”

She's got a pretty strange definition of luck, you've got to say. There does seem to be a silver lining in all this, though – it looks like she's been given a promotion since you last saw her.

“Funny, Henryk, very funny,” Camilla sighs, “Please, just work with me on this. A few days in isolation, that's all I'm asking.”

>Very well. A wise precaution
>Turn your back for two minutes, Camilla. That's all I need to slip away
>I need to ask you something... (Write in)
>Other
>>
>>537625
>Very well. A wise precaution
"Just don't treat the men too bad. It was rough up there and we just got back to saner ground."
>>
>>537625
>>Turn your back for two minutes, Camilla. That's all I need to slip away
I'd rather not risk getting caught and roped into something that could lead to jail time of death. 'Sides, we'll be aiming for a noble person next right? That will probably be enough to land us in some trouble anyway, might as well get in trouble from the start. Maybe.
>>
>>537632
this, also find time to dispose of the talisman
>>
>>537625
>>I need to ask you something... (Write in)
Have your men avoid my luggage. If I have to recalibrate my guns and other tools, I'll take a chuck out of someone's ass, and not in the fun way.
>>
>>537635
They aren't going to kill everyone on the boat. If they were they wouldn't have Camilla in charge. She is too honorable for that.

Also being a fugitive would be *worse* for killing the Sibling Knights as we have less room to maneuver.

>>537645
I think that'd just make her more suspicious. Just toss the totem overboard when we have a chance. It did it's job.
>>
>>537645
"Oh, what was that? I have something incredibly suspicious in my bag so please don't search it? You got it best friend!"
>>
>>537625
>Very well. A wise precaution
>>
>>537625
>Very well. A wise precaution
>>
>>537625
>I need to ask you something... (Write in)

If we could get a name about who would have ordered this. It might be a bit political, and while hopefully because of Werhlain there is a non-zero chance it could be for you.

Also we have a trophy that we took that might cause confusion, and if it's going to be a cause for concern you'd rather take the opportunity to get rid of it.

If it is political because of you, then what would normally be a non-issue could be used against you, she should know what that's like.
>>
>>537658
Um.. This!
>>
>>537658
A good idea I think.
>>
I'm actually surprised we didn't get the 'You were gone for months!' twist.
>>
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Very well, you tell her, you'll play along. It might be baseless, but a few days in quarantine is a wise precaution considering how badly things could go if there was an infection. In the interests of keeping the peace, you'll go along with this. Still, you'd like to ask her a few things about this whole affair.

“I'm not at liberty to discuss everything – which is to say, there are things that I don't know – but I can talk,” Camilla looks about the deck for a moment, checking for anyone listening in. Fortunately, the hungover and surly crewmen down below are keeping the soldiers busy. “Go ahead, ask away. I'll tell you what I can.”

You want to know who ordered this, you tell her quietly, it might be political – dangerous even – but you want a name. If this is a setup, you'd give it good odds that Wehrlain is the target and not you, but you'd like to be sure.

“I don't have a name to give you, but these orders came high priority,” Camilla glances around again, “Someone in the Ministry – someone high up – wanted this ship intercepted, and they were willing to send up a number of elite troops to make it happen. If they arrived a few days earlier, I'm willing to bet that they wouldn't have let you leave. I suspect you've noticed by now, but there are a few tensions between the Ministry and the College at the moment – they're straining in different directions. I'm willing to bet that this is just another jab in their little struggle. If you're caught in the middle of it, I've got some advice for you.”

Oh, you ask, and what's that?

“Get out of it,” Camilla's voice is earnest, utterly sincere, “Focus on killing beasts, and let these scheming bastards stab each other in the back. Life's easier that way.”

You'll keep that in mind, you tell her, but you can't promise anything. You've got a way of finding trouble, now more than ever. Speaking of finding trouble, you've got something to ask of her – a favour of sorts.

“You don't ask for much, do you?” shaking her head, Camilla looks out over the still waters, “Go ahead.”

[1/2]
>>
>>537709

There might be a certain item amongst your luggage, a trophy you took in the north. In the interests of avoiding a misunderstanding, you'd rather it remains unseen. It's nothing dangerous, and nothing that risks spreading disease, but it would make your life very difficult if the wrong person should find it. Is that something she could take care of for you?

“We didn't have any plans to search your luggage until we arrive at the platform,” Camilla says slowly, “So there might be time for certain items to get lost overboard. I'll have to admit, though, I'm rather curious about this “certain item” now. Dare I ask?”

She can ask, you reply, but she's better off not knowing. It's not dangerous, and it's not contagious – that's enough, isn't it?

“I suppose I'll know it when I see it,” she muses, “Alright Henryk, you've scratched my back enough in the past, so it's about time I returned the favour. Consider this item – whatever it is – to be as good as gone. Now, I really can't stick around much longer, or it'll look suspicious. I've got a job to do, after all. There's just one last thing...”

Oh, you ask, and what's that?

“Welcome home, Henryk,” Camilla tells you, her eyes offering you a humourless smile.

It's good to be back.

>I think I'll stop things here for today. I'll pick things up tomorrow, and I can stick around for a while in case of any questions or comments
>Thanks to everyone who stuck around today!
>>
>>537722
Thanks for running Moloch.
>>
>>537722
Man, are we going to have a story to tell her.

We should make an effort to have it be consistent with Lars' hallucination explanation when we get to the beast by the lake. Or that maybe it was trained to react to the words from the book or something.
>>
>>537730
I figure if she asks we can ask if she wants the unofficial or official story.

Official we give her Lars' report, unofficial we tell her mostly what happened omitting some details if necessary.
>>
>>537745
Nah man. You make lies believable by convincing yourself and through repetition. Nobody gets the truth except Liz and neighbour witch.
>>
>>537759
But why? It's just telling a story to a friend. Not like anyone who doesn't know us will believe it.
>>
BTW Where is our trophy from Pygmi? And what conditions can the RE parasites survive?
>>
>>537818

The trophy from the parasite would have been kept in our luggage as well, in a flask of preservative. I'll mention it in more detail at the next session, but Camilla will keep hold of it for now.
The parasites found out in the wild don't usually live very long outside of a host body. Extreme cold can keep them alive, but in a kind of suspended animation - they come to life once their temperature rises above a certain point and seek out a new host.
>>
>>537838
So it isn't an infection hazard any more?
>>
>>537850

It's not, no. Nothing dangerous about it, although it might raise a few questions if the wrong person found it. Still, properly contained as it is, it doesn't break any League regulations.
>>
Seems like the more we choose the gift of bloodshed, the more bloodthirsty Artemis becomes
>>
>>538785
Could just be that since we killed so many beasts, she's already started to get more of her power and previous nature back.
>>
>>538785
>>538857
Probably both
>>
>>537383
>“Almost two weeks!”

COPOUT
>>
>>537511
Get off this ship then and die cold and alone
>>
>>537586
>I'm sorry, her eyes seem to say.

Carmilla mournfully executing Henryk doomed love fanfic when?
>>
You've got to admit, you're really getting sick of the sight of rifles and medical gear. Geralt, Camilla's sullen second in command, seems to have taken a particular dislike to you, following you about the ship no matter what other duties he might have otherwise had. Even when a brawl broke out among some of the sailors, and the other Ministry soldiers waded in with batons and rifle butts, he kept his steely eyes fixed on you.

Some men can sense danger, real danger, and Geralt is one of them. While the crew bluster and protest against their confinement, your calm acceptance of it has made you a target, someone to keep an eye on. A troublemaker, because of how well behaved you are – it sounds like a bad joke. Regardless, you suffer through the rest of the journey under his hostile supervision, and you do so with a smile.

A cold, humourless smile, but a smile nonetheless.

-

With the cold sea air ruffling your clothes, you stand on the deck and look out at the approaching platform. You're not alone, and the deck is lively with murmured complaints or shouted orders, loud enough that you can't think straight. Ministry soldiers swagger up and down the rows of crewmen – prisoners, or so you can't help but think of them – with their weapons ready for use. The slightest show of resistance or attempt at escape, and this deck could be awash with blood.

Even the most pugnacious crewman can sense that, and not even the most foolish crewman is willing to risk it. Grumbled complaints are all they offer. As you wait for the Fomalhaut to reach its new home, Camilla saunters up to you and speaks, her voice so low that her mask almost completely muffles it.

“Thorns, right?” she asks, “Your little secret, it had thorns?”

Right, you mutter back, she didn't prick her fingers did she?

“Thick gloves, I was safe. It's ash now, nothing to worry about. Oh, but I did find something else,” glancing about, she eases a small flask out of her pocket, “What is this, some kind of insect leg? I took it for a medical sample, or some kind of specimen at first. I'll hold onto it for now, make sure it passes inspection, but you want to tell me what I'm hiding?”

A trophy, you tell her, that's all. Something that a friend asked you to collect. It's pretty important, though, so you'd like it back later. She might have also found a certain... skull, you add lamely, something that looks like a skull.

“Another trophy? You've been spending too much time in the north, Henryk, you're acting like a barbarian.” she sighs, “I'll keep it safe. I mean, I'm already incriminating myself, so I might as well go all in.”

Thanks, you mutter, you owe her one.

[1/3]
>>
>>539307

What becomes immediately clear, from a simple look at your new – and thankfully temporary – home, is that it was a rushed job. The corridors still reek of disinfectant, and the crudely prepared rooms, cells, are almost completely barren. A door that locks from the outside and a cot bed – that's all you've been provided with. Perhaps the only comfort is seeing Wehrlain treated the same as everyone else – manhandled and shoved into an austere box for the foreseeable future.

Needless to say, he didn't care for the experience.

Miserable surroundings aside, your time in isolation starts off well enough. Even though you didn't realise it at the time, you had a great debt of tiredness to pay off, and even the hard bed you were given served its purpose. Sleeping for almost half a day, you're woken by the sound of someone hammering on your door. Rolling over, you grunt out something that might be a word, a query.

“Just checking you're still alive,” Geralt's snide response is muffled by the metal door, “Get up. There's a doctor to see you. Not scared of needles, are you?”

-

If the Ministry soldiers you've seen are hardened, rough men prepared to act with violence, then the doctor who examines you is soft, fearful and on the verge of passing out. His eyes are red-rimmed and exhausted, while his hands often shake. You wouldn't trust him to perform even a simple procedure, but your opinion doesn't count for much while you're still under quarantine. At least the tests are mostly perfunctory ones – he takes your temperature, measures your pulse and draws a sample of blood.

“Everything seems fine so far,” he tells you as he goes about his work, his voice ragged with fatigue, “Nothing that indicates a contagion.”

Has there been anything found in the others, you ask, anything at all?

Before answering this, the doctor glances around to check if anyone is listening in. There is a guard in the room, but he's far enough away that you have some privacy. A small concession, but a welcome one. “A few minor infections – the kind that sailors are prone to getting, if you understand my meaning, but nothing that could cause an outbreak,” the doctor tells you, “Three days – our orders are to hold you for three days, even if no symptoms manifest. A formality, you understand?”

Nothing to be done about it, you say as you offer the doctor a placid smile.

“Ah, there is something we can do, if it helps,” the doctor looks at a clipboard for a moment, “If you have any family, we can see that they're contacted and informed of the... general situation. A small comfort, I know, but it's all I can do.”

Considering the issue for a moment, you give the doctor a short nod. It's not much, but you'll take it.

[2/3]
>>
>>539310

The rest of the examination is quickly dealt with, and then you confirm your address with the doctor. You've got a relative lodging with you, you tell him vaguely, and they'll want to hear about how you're doing. He accepts this without even a single flash of suspicion, and before long you're being ushered out. He's too busy to be suspicious – even as you're leaving, the next patient is being brought in.

As you're being escorted back to your cell, Camilla steps out from a secluded room and stops you. “I'll take it from here,” she tells the soldier leading you, “New information has come to light. By virtue of his trade, this Hunter may have been exposed to additional risks of contamination. I need to ask him a few questions, just to be clear.” She frowns at the guard until he relents, leaving you with the Ministry officer.

“Sorry about that,” she offers, once the office door is tightly shut behind her, “I needed a good excuse. The situation has developed since we last spoke – I have new orders.”

Sounds ominous, you mutter, you knew there'd be a catch to all this.

“Don't worry, we're not firing up the crematoriums just yet,” Camilla shakes her head, “I've been ordered to gather as much information as possible on the leader of this expedition. Wehrlain, I believe. Officially, this is for the purposes of evaluating the expedition as a whole, but unofficially... I'm to dig up the dirt on him, something that could really hurt him. Someone in the Ministry, and I wager it's the same person who gave me these orders, wants to see him fall from grace. I've got a little over two days for this, not nearly enough time for a full investigation, so I'm asking you for help. You know this expedition better than I do – you'd know where to start.”

Didn't she tell you, you point out, not to get involved?

“True,” she admits, “And I'm not asking you to get involved, not really, I'm just asking you a few questions – it's my investigation, as far as the official records are concerned. Regardless, if say that you know nothing, I'll believe you.”

>I'm sorry Camilla, but I don't know anything about this
>There's a Scholar here – Lars – with a document. Everything you need is in there
>Wehrlain is unstable, erratic – more so than the average Scholar
>I have to ask – why is Wehrlain so important all of a sudden?
>Other
>>
>>539311
>There's a Scholar here – Lars – with a document. Everything you need is in there
>Wehrlain is unstable, erratic – more so than the average Scholar
"Long story short the guy is an asshole that would gladly let you die if it helps progress his field. Not someone that should ever be in a leadership position.

All that said though his machine did keep us all safe and we were able to complete our expedition with only a few losses."


>I have to ask – why is Wehrlain so important all of a sudden?
>>
>>539311
>>There's a Scholar here – Lars – with a document. Everything you need is in there

>Other

Wehrlian

Dindu

Nuffin

But if you want Henryk's personal opinion
>Wehrlain is unstable, erratic – more so than the average Scholar
>>
>>539317
Supporting
>>
>>539311
>>Wehrlain is unstable, erratic – more so than the average Scholar
>>I have to ask – why is Wehrlain so important all of a sudden?
I don't know about giving Lars' name, feels a little too sneaky even if his report does have the best summary of events.
>>
>>539311
>There's a Scholar here – Lars – with a document. Everything you need is in there
>>
>>539311
>There's a Scholar here – Lars – with a document. Everything you need is in there
>He's too willing to risk lives to be a leader. But for all his "logic", it's not in pursuit of the truth. He's just all too sure that he's right, and ready to bet lives to prove it.
>>
You're prepared to help her, you begin, but you're really not the right person she should be talking to. There's a document that should contain everything she needs, written by one of the Scholars on the expedition – you've got a name, but you're not sure about sharing it. There could be recriminations.

“Not from me,” the Ministry agent promises you, “I might not even need to bring him into this. If I know where to look – whose belongings to search, in other words – I could get the report without ever involving your contact. A little underhand, I'll admit, but it would keep his name out of anything official. What do you say?”

You consider her point in silence for a while, drumming your fingers against the battered metal table. Alright, you say eventually, his name was Lars.

“Lars, Lars, let me see...” Camilla frowns a little, digging a small notebook out of her pocket and flicking through the pages, “That would be... Lars Tuborg, correct? I'm not seeing any other Scholar with that name.”

He never gave you surname, you tell her, but that must be it. He was writing a report with exactly the same aim as her unnamed employer – taking Wehrlain to task for his crimes. He didn't have much hope for it though, even going through official channels.

“Well, I don't blame him. These kinds of things have a habit of getting lost in the system, especially when they're criticising important people. Working like this, behind the scenes, isn't really to my tastes, but I can't deny that it's often more efficient,” snapping her book shut, Camilla slips it back into her pocket. “But if this report was meant for official use, it would have left certain things out, correct? Anything that might indicate a personal grudge or bias, say – speaking unofficially, is there anything you'd like to add to it?”

Wehrlain was behaving erratically, you tell her, showing signs of instability – more than the average Scholar, at least. The report may mention certain hallucinations, ones that invited men towards suicide in the hopes of joining something greater. Delusions, of course, but Wehrlain was the only one to fall prey to them. Nobody else felt their pull quite so strongly. You're no expert, but you'd say that he's falling into the Scholarly dementia sooner than average.

“Which would certainly cast him in an unfavourable light,” Camilla muses, “Nobody wants to invest in a dying animal, after all. I see – it feels like a low blow, but that's something I can report. Anything else?”

Where do you start?

[1/2]
>>
>>539348

He's a little too prepared to sacrifice those under his command, you begin in a low voice, he would have left you all to die in the north if it helped his own status. Worse, the sacrifices he makes... they're not even logical ones – he would offer lives for little more than proving himself right. No, it's not that, it's more that he can't comprehend being wrong. A man like that, with no room for caution or care, has no place in a position of authority. He'd be a disastrous leader – he's already a disaster.

“Don't pull your punches,” even with the surgical mask covering her mouth, you can tell Camilla is smiling, “So that's your personal opinion on things?”

Personally, you add, you think he's an asshole. That aside, you have to admit that his machine worked – the Wehrlain Engine is not without its side-effects, but it kept the expedition mostly safe. You went into a hostile land, and you came back with only a few losses. For all Wehrlain's sins, that's something you'll freely testify to.

“Hmm. I see,” Camilla nods, her unseen smile dimming, “I don't think it'll protect him, mind. Someone out there is sharpening their knives, and one successful invention won't be enough to deter them.”

Alright, you've answered her questions, so it's about time she answers some of yours. Just why is Wehrlain so important all of a sudden, you ask, what's painted this target on his back?

“His invention brought a lot of attention, even among people who – officially, at least – knew nothing about it, or the expedition. As far as certain elements of the College seem to be concerned, he's a rising star,” a flash of bitterness touches Camilla's eyes, “Which means, of course, he has enemies. This is just a persona theory, mind, but I think someone high up in the College pulled a few strings and set this whole thing up, just for him. Somehow, though, I get the feeling that this is more than just a squabble among researchers. With a little luck, I'll be wrong.”

She doesn't sound confident, you point out. If anything, she sounds like someone facing down a great deal of bad luck.

“That's my job,” she replies with a shrug, “We walk different paths, you and I, and this is where mine leads. I don't always like it, but I've made my choice.” Standing, she smooths out her uniform and gives you an unreadable look. “Just a few days, Henryk, and you're free to go. Hang in there.”

You'll be free to go, her bleak voice seems to say, but she'll still be here in this labyrinth.

[2/3]
>>
>>539360

The time you spent in isolation is no great hardship. Indeed, it barely feels any different to enduring a long and monotonous journey at sea – crawling endlessly across unnaturally still waters. You eat drab meals in your austere room, and spend long hours sleeping. Halfway through your imprisonment, the quarantined men are herded, in groups, to mass showering facilities and washed down. That's the closest thing to excitement you get until the final day, when you're subjected to a second round of testing.

Even more tired than the first time you saw him, the same doctor as before takes you for testing. He's the only man here, you think, who seems to be in anything less than perfect health. Some people are like that – pallid and sickly looking, even without a good reason. With the fewest words possible, he runs you through the same tests as before. When it comes to drawing blood, though, he pauses.

“There were a number of... abnormalities with your first sample,” he murmurs to you, “Nothing that requires further testing, I should say, but it was curious. You have the blood of an older man, if you don't mind me saying so. Especially potent.”

Curious, you mutter back, but not something you can explain. You've been very busy lately, that might offer something of an answer.

“Truth be told, I'm no expert in these matters,” shaking his head, the doctor finishes up drawing your blood, “If you're worried, you could always arrange for a proper set of tests once you're back in Thar Dreyse. Though... you might not like the answers you get.” A faintly awkward silence descends as the doctor packs away his instruments, a silence only broken when he yawns immensely. “Sorry,” he mumbles, “It's been a busy three days. They've been working me like a dog.”

>I won't take up any more of your time, then
>You don't think there's anything odd about all this?
>Is there anything else you can tell me about my blood samples?
>Other
>>
>>539371
>Is there anything else you can tell me about my blood samples?
>>
>>539371
>>You don't think there's anything odd about all this?
Dude needs a rest.
>>
>>539371
>>You don't think there's anything odd about all this?
>>Is there anything else you can tell me about my blood samples?
>>"I've had my hunches about that."
>>
>>539371
>"blood's on everybody's mind these days."
>"I've had to kill some pretty dangerous beasts lately, it's no surprise that I've shaved a few years."
>>
>>539371
>You don't think there's anything odd about all this?
>>
>>539371
>You don't think there's anything odd about all this?
>I won't take up any more of your time, then

The thing about the blood is something we've known about for a while. Lets see if he can spill anything useful.
>>
A thought occurs, as you're watching him sway in place – exhaustion circling him like prowling wolves. Are any other doctors here, you ask curiously, or is he alone here?

“Just me, I'm afraid,” a faint hint of bitter amusement creeps into his voice, “So if you were hoping for a second opinion, you're out of luck.”

Doesn't he think there anything odd about all this, you lower your voice as you ask this question, about this entire affair? Taking over a whole oil platform, but only sparing a single doctor? The soldiers manning the place are just barely holding things together as well, their numbers spread desperately thin. It all seems very strange to you.

“I'm not being paid to think about that,” the doctor offers, throwing a nervous look over his shoulder at the distant guard. When he's certain that the soldier isn't paying you any attention, he tugs the surgical mask down to reveal a surprisingly young face. His thinning hair gave him the look of an older man, but he's probably younger than you are. “You're not wrong, though – we're buckling under the stain here. Even with double the men, we'd still be struggling. It's either a massive mistake, or a deliberate attempt at... something.”

Keeping the number of witnesses as low as possible, you muse, less tongues to wag when everything is over and done with.

“But that's just a theory,” the young man says quickly, pulling his mask back into place before the guard can notice his breach of regulations, “Idle speculation, nothing to take too seriously. Was there anything else you were wanting, while you're here?”

He mentioned your blood, you remind him, was there anything else he could tell you about it? These days, it seems like everyone is talking about the stuff – bloodlines and curses, heritage and inheritance. It almost seems like an obsession, one on a grand scale.

“Well, as I said, I'm no expert in these matters – for a long time, you know, the noble families tried to keep all knowledge of auspicious bloodlines sealed away. Something about maintaining their own grip on power, or... something,” he shakes his head, a few loose strands of hair flapping, “Of course, that's all in the past – blind superstition has been replaced by scientific study. That brings me back to the matter of your blood, of course.”

Of course, you repeat, so maybe he'd like to get to the point.

“Right, yes, well,” clearing his throat, “There's been a new theory of late, claiming that more than just age has an influence on the potency of someone's blood. Those who are pushed to improve themselves, challenged and threatened, are said to manifest more significant traits. That's the theory, at least, and this sample might support that theory. Can I ask...”

[1/2]
>>
>>539405

If you've got any ideas, you ask, any explanation to offer? You're not exactly a Scholar, unless he needed reminding, so you're hardly the right person to ask about this. Either way, you'd rather not become part of some grand science experiment.

“I understand that,” his face falls a little, “Still, do you have any theories of your own?”

You have a few hunches, you tell him, but nothing that you could call a theory. You've been facing a great many dangerous beasts lately, and overcoming the challenges you've been set against – according to his theory, that should explain things, shouldn't it?

“Perhaps, perhaps,” mumbling to himself, the doctor scribbles a few aimless circles on a pad of paper. Before he can do anything else, though, the soldier guarding the door barks out an order and causes the young man to jump.

“Got to keep working. Other patients to see,” he says to himself, “Busy as usual...”

Suddenly, your side of this arrangement – lying in bed for a few days and waiting for the all clear – doesn't seem to bad.

-

The Fomalhaut will never sail again. Rusted out and corroded, its future lies in being salvaged for scrap metal, whatever little can be pulled from its corpse. After that, a watery grave.

Captain Bach takes this with remarkable dignity, watching as the Ministry ship parts him from his vessel for the last time. The crew, finally released from quarantine, is being shipped back to Port Steyr in small groups. You share a group with Captain Bach and, interestingly, Wehrlain himself. The Scholar looks particularly indifferent to everything – the Fomalhaut's fate, his time in isolation, whatever might be waiting for him at Port Steyr – and speaks to no-one.

You couldn't say exactly how you feel as you watch the Fomalhaut slowly shrink into the distance. You have little love for the time you spent on the ship, or even for the ship itself, but it still feels like bidding farewell to a comrade. Maybe not a friend, but a fellow fighter – one you would have trusted with your life.

“I've been compensated generously for it,” Bach rumbles, his voice low enough that it reaches you and you alone, “Too generously, if you ask me. They were buying something else, these Ministry types, and I wager you can guess what they were after.”

His silence, you offer, right?

“Her last damn voyage,” the captain curses to himself, “And I won't ever get to tell anyone the tale. That's the real sting, let me tell you.”

More bought silences, more dirty deals. You'll be glad to put this whole mess behind you.

[2/3]
>>
>>539418

No-one, least of all Wehrlain himself, is surprised when your little gathering of crew is approached by a number of hardened Ministry soldiers. Before you've even so much as recovered your belongings, they descend upon you like keen-eyed vultures. All you can do is step back and watch, hoping that their unwelcome announcement is meant for someone else. As one mind, the crewmen all shrink back from Wehrlain, leaving him high and dry.

If the Scholar takes offence at this, or even notices it, he gives no indication. With his head held high, he waits for the Ministry soldiers to speak.

“Professor Tobias Wehrlain?” the first soldier asks. When Wehrlain nods, he continues his grim proclamation. “You are hereby under arrest, on charges of misuse of College resources, of trespassing on forbidden ground without Ministry supervision, of performing surgery without the required licenses and resources, endangering junior members of-”

“Yes, yes,” Wehrlain breaks his silence, waving away the charges with a dismissive hand, “Can you get to the point?”

Swallowing hard, with a flash of cold fury in his eyes, the Ministry soldier takes a moment to gather his thoughts. “Are you prepared to come quietly?” he asks, “To surrender yourself to League law?”

“I am, yes,” with a faint smile on his face, Wehrlain offers his wrists, “Do your worst.” No sooner are those words out of his mouth, the soldier throws a heavy punch – quick and spiteful – into the Scholar's gut. Folding in half, gagging and gasping for breath, Wehrlain almost collapses there and then. The only thing that keeps him upright is the chief soldier, seizing the Scholar by the arm and dragging him away.

“Funny,” Bach mutters, “I thought that would be more satisfying to watch.”

-

With their freedom regained, the sailors flood out into the grey streets of Port Steyr, looking for amusement, trouble, and everything in-between. You're somewhat slower to move, slinking away into the first bar that catches your eye. Slumping down into an ancient seat – you can't help but wonder how many backsides have graced it before yours – you order a single glass of beer. You'll take your time with this one, savouring it. When you're halfway finished, someone sets a fresh glass down before you.

“Heard you were back in town,” Vas says, sliding into the opposite seat, “Wasn't quite sure if I believed it or not. Good to see you, Henryk.”

The feeling is mutual, you tell him, it's good to see a friendly face.

“So how was it?” he wastes little time getting to the heart of the issue, “I want to hear this from a sober man, not some exaggerating drunk.”

>It feels like a dream now. A bad dream
>Business as usual, nothing more
>How have things been here? Anything interesting happened while I was away?
>Other
>>
>>539442
"Not something I'd volunteer to experience again any time soon, but it was interesting and more than a little weird. That far up north the rules of reality change."

>How have things been here? Anything interesting happened while I was away?
>>
>>539442
>It feels like a dream now. A bad dream
>How have things been here? Anything interesting happened while I was away?
>>
>>539442
>>"Not something I'd volunteer to experience again any time soon, but it was interesting and more than a little weird. That far up north the rules of reality change."
>>Business as usual, atleast as I'm concerned
>>How have things been here? Anything interesting happened while I was away?
>>
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>>539360
>You'll be free to go, her bleak voice seems to say, but she'll still be here in this labyrinth.
Maybe I'm seeing things where there's nothing...but that and the Bull blood?
>>
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>>539468
>>
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Well it's not something you'd volunteer to do again, you begin, but it was... it was interesting. Strange, very strange, but you can't deny that it was interesting. The old stories about reality breaking down that far north are accurate – perhaps more so than you'd been expecting.

Not, you'll admit, that you really knew what to expect.

“Huh,” Vas doesn't quite seem to have an answer for that. He drinks slowly and scrutinises you carefully, as though something else might have returned from the north wearing your skin. It's not a hostile look, as such – there's none of the black paranoia you sometimes hear associated with Ministry veterans – but one of mild curiosity.

With the awkward silence drawing out for a moment longer, you feel compelled to expand on your explanation. Looking back, you tell him, it all feels like a bad dream. Without recourse to logic or reason, things would change or rise up out of the night. You saw ribs the size of trees, and tenement blocks cast adrift in an ocean of blood. All very strange, you finish with a deliberately nonchalant shrug, but just business as usual for you. Nothing that'll keep you awake at night, certainly.

“That's what I like to hear,” Vas smiles faintly, “Keep your eyes forwards – there's always a new challenge on the horizon!”

Exactly so – now enough about that, you pause here to take a deep drink of beer, what about things here? Anything interesting happened while you were away?

“There was certainly something interesting,” Vas leans forwards a little, lowering his voice, “You won't hear this in any official report, though. I got this from a few drunken guards. You know, the locals here like to talk when they've had a few, and I'm a friendly face. A good listener, you could say.”

Since when did drunks care about that, you ask back, instead of just rambling at anyone nearby?

“Either way,” waving away your comment, Vas chuckles softly to himself, “Do you want to hear this or not? If this is accurate, and I have no reason to think it isn't, they caught themselves a barbarian. Stupid bastard strolled right up to the gates and let himself get arrested.”

Really, you ask incredulously, he just walked out of the forest and tried to enter the city?

“The way I hear it, he wanted to get caught. You see, this wasn't just some raider or wandering hunter,” Vas pauses here, milking the drama of his story for all it's worth, “He claimed to be a messenger, carrying a letter from the White Tyrant himself!”

[1/2]
>>
>>539491

The last time you heard about the White Tyrant trying to make contact, it was one of Bach's tales – and the “message” had been tied around the neck of a mutilated man. Now this, a messenger bearing tidings. Somehow, you can't bring yourself to believe it was as clean as Vas says.

“No, believe it or not, there wasn't a single drop of blood shed,” your old friend insists, “He didn't even draw a weapon!”

Very civilised, you say slowly, and it was a real letter?

“Oh yes, ink on good quality paper and everything – no blood and deerskin here,” Vas, enjoying the act of telling his tall tale, leans back and drinks, “The White Tyrant, or so I'm told, has quite the elegant script. A little antiquated, and his language had a touch of formality about it, but it was all perfectly understandable. Not what you were expecting, was it?”

Not at all what you'd been expecting. What about this letter, then, what was it saying?

“Well, this is where things get a shade unreliable. Drunk guards, dubious literacy, fallible memories... you understand, right?” Vas shrugs, “But from what I gathered, it was a warning. Not exactly a threat, but a warning. It said that there was going to be a great battle soon, and any who wished to avoid it should flee south. After that, it strayed back into familiar territory – the north is not yours, and so on. Nothing we've not heard countless times before.”

All very familiar, you agree, and what about the messenger himself? What happened to him?

“That,” Vas' expression darkens, “Is less easy to learn about. From what I hear, he didn't leave the city again. Make of that what you will.”

Dead, you ask, or held captive?

“I couldn't tell you,” another shrug, and a bitter scowl from Vas, “But I'll tell you this, it's bad fortune to kill a messenger, even if he is a barbarian. If you start mistreating them, people stop wanting to talk to one another. People stop talking to one another, they keep trying to kill each other, you see?”

>They're barbarians. They're always trying to kill us
>I wouldn't put too much faith in any of this. You heard it from a drunk, remember?
>I don't know if there can be a truce, but it's worth fighting for
>Other
>>
>>539523
>>Other
Just nod
>>
>>539523
>Other
"Yeah they shouldn't kill the messenger. No point and he came in without a struggle. It makes me wonder how barbaric the northern people can still be if they have leadership like the White Tyrant. I think the Ministry underestimates them."

>>Other
"Well regardless, if there is any truth to that message it means Port Steyr is going to be in trouble soon. We've both seen witches on the outskirts of the town before and I've heard the witch be both want a piece of, Hebona, is working with the White Tyrant. I just hope the Ministry takes this seriously."
>>
>>539523
>>I don't know if there can be a truce, but it's worth fighting for
Or at the very least don't actively try to make the situation worse.
>>
>>539529
Supporting this, also who wants to guess The White Tyrant is one of the human form beasts.
>>
>>539534
I'd give it good odds.
>>
Nodding slowly, you mull over the rest of your drink and consider the issue. He's right, you reply eventually, shooting the messenger won't do anyone any good. He came without a struggle, and answering that with violence is just wasteful. You've got to wonder, though, just how barbaric the northern people are if they have organised leadership like the White Tyrant. From what you've heard, he's been working to unite the scattered tribes – he's building an army. The Ministry needs to keep that in mind, and take care not to underestimate him.

“A barbarian army sitting on our bloody doorstep,” Vas curses, “And still, the “enlightened minds” down in the capital won't see it as anything more than a few natives getting angry. Darks times ahead, my friend.”

Dark times, you agree, and Port Steyr might be getting it worse than most. You've both seen what it's like out in the forests, with witches and beasts crawling about freely, and that's before the White Tyrant starts to make good on his warnings. You've heard that he's made an alliance of some kind with that witch, Hebona – that spells nothing good, either.

“Hebona. Bitch,” Vas empties his glass, his face creased up like a man who just drank poison, “I'd love a chance to get even with her.”

Maybe so, you nod, but she's not someone to underestimate either. If it comes to fighting, to a state of open war, there's no way that it'll be quick and painless. No, you're not sure if there's any chance for peace – even just a truce of some kind – but it's worth aiming for. At the very least, the Ministry here could avoid making the situation any worse.

“Peace,” regarding his glass with a bitter eye, Vas rises to his feet, “We can think about peace once the Tyrant is dead, and so is his pet witch. Then, maybe we can find a way of settling things.”

Harsh, you murmur – more to yourself than to Vas.

“Harsh,” he agrees, before changing the subject, “Next ship south won't be until tomorrow morning, you know.” The transition is so blunt, so tactless, that you take a moment to catch up with what he's saying.

A ship south – home. The idea of sinking back into your own bed, eating meals in your own apartment, and drinking beer in a more familiar bar than this... heavenly, after everything that you've been through. Of course, you've still got a week at sea separating you from those humble pleasures.

That's fine – you've waited long enough. One more week won't kill you.

>I think I'm going to close things here. I'll have a new thread up on Friday, and I'll stick around for a while in case anyone has any comments or questions
>Thanks to everyone who stopped by today!
>>
>>539609
Thanks for running Moloch
>>
>>539609
thanks man!

>need a new thread soon eh
>>
>>539609
Thanks for running!

Not long until a global government conspiracy now?
>>
>>539789

Oh, well, I wouldn't call it a GLOBAL conspiracy, so there's nothing to worry about!
>>
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>>539805
>>
>>539534
That'd be pretty cool. Even better if him and Hebona are the twin knights we're looking for next. I really don't want to hunt down anyone that Lize might know.

>>539609
Thanks for running Moloch. Can't wait to get back home, check on Lize and see how everything is doing.
>>
i was starting to think that the twins would be the head of the Minstry and the colgle since they alwas keep fighting with each other but always haveing to help each other



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