Menu
News
All News
Dungeons & Dragons
Level Up: Advanced 5th Edition
Pathfinder
Starfinder
Warhammer
2d20 System
Year Zero Engine
Industry News
Reviews
Dragon Reflections
White Dwarf Reflections
Columns
Weekly Digests
Weekly News Digest
Freebies, Sales & Bundles
RPG Print News
RPG Crowdfunding News
Game Content
ENterplanetary DimENsions
Mythological Figures
Opinion
Worlds of Design
Peregrine's Nest
RPG Evolution
Other Columns
From the Freelancing Frontline
Monster ENcyclopedia
WotC/TSR Alumni Look Back
4 Hours w/RSD (Ryan Dancey)
The Road to 3E (Jonathan Tweet)
Greenwood's Realms (Ed Greenwood)
Drawmij's TSR (Jim Ward)
Community
Forums & Topics
Forum List
Latest Posts
Forum list
*Dungeons & Dragons
Level Up: Advanced 5th Edition
D&D Older Editions
*TTRPGs General
*Pathfinder & Starfinder
EN Publishing
*Geek Talk & Media
Search forums
Chat/Discord
Resources
Wiki
Pages
Latest activity
Media
New media
New comments
Search media
Downloads
Latest reviews
Search resources
EN Publishing
Store
EN5ider
Adventures in ZEITGEIST
Awfully Cheerful Engine
What's OLD is NEW
Judge Dredd & The Worlds Of 2000AD
War of the Burning Sky
Level Up: Advanced 5E
Events & Releases
Upcoming Events
Private Events
Featured Events
Socials!
EN Publishing
Twitter
BlueSky
Facebook
Instagram
EN World
BlueSky
YouTube
Facebook
Twitter
Twitch
Podcast
Features
Top 5 RPGs Compiled Charts 2004-Present
Adventure Game Industry Market Research Summary (RPGs) V1.0
Ryan Dancey: Acquiring TSR
Q&A With Gary Gygax
D&D Rules FAQs
TSR, WotC, & Paizo: A Comparative History
D&D Pronunciation Guide
Million Dollar TTRPG Kickstarters
Tabletop RPG Podcast Hall of Fame
Eric Noah's Unofficial D&D 3rd Edition News
D&D in the Mainstream
D&D & RPG History
About Morrus
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
Forums & Topics
Forum List
Latest Posts
Forum list
*Dungeons & Dragons
Level Up: Advanced 5th Edition
D&D Older Editions
*TTRPGs General
*Pathfinder & Starfinder
EN Publishing
*Geek Talk & Media
Search forums
Chat/Discord
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Community
Playing the Game
Story Hour
Aeon (updated 10/9/14)
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="Sepulchrave II" data-source="post: 5762110" data-attributes="member: 4303"><p><strong>Obsession – Part 3</strong></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>“Your friends have arrived,” Soneillon raised an eyebrow. “In the village. They are warded against perception – poorly. Are we entertaining, tonight? Should I send Carasch to greet them?”</p><p></p><p>“You sense of humor is singular,” Eadric smiled, but his face was etched with pain, as one who has experienced great anguish. “Who is here?”</p><p></p><p>“The Uediian and the sidhe – and also Hlioth. I have killed her once already; perhaps she liked it and is returning for more. Mostin is not with them; I suspect he is avoiding me: he still owes me Graz’zt.”</p><p></p><p>“Why did they not simply issue a <em>sending</em>?”</p><p></p><p>Soneillon gesticulated vaguely. “I confess that a number of signals have been deflected.”</p><p></p><p>“How many?” Eadric squinted.</p><p></p><p>“I did not count. Besides, it’s better that you have company on your return to Galda. Your horse is ready; Mazikreen has taken care of him. She has become rather attached.”</p><p></p><p>“He seems to have that effect. You are a curious creature, Soneillon.”</p><p></p><p>“Yes?” She fastened a garland of black lotuses around his wrist.</p><p></p><p>“What will you do now?” </p><p></p><p>“I will brood and pine desperately, Eadric. Or perhaps I should instead fortify my position against the coming storm – which may blow from any number of directions, or from all at once. Shomei musters her devils; the Fourth Effluxion is moving – I do not relish that meeting. Dhatri’s host is marching. Desire – the Cherry – is active. And your first girlfriend has a new persona; we’ll see how that plays out. Let’s hope that you don’t like her more than me.”</p><p></p><p>“Of what do you speak?” He asked suspiciously.</p><p></p><p>“I would hate to spoil the surprise,” she replied drily.</p><p></p><p>“Shomei may still be open to dialogue,” Eadric suggested. “I have not given up on her.”</p><p></p><p>“Maybe. Or she may simply <em>dominate</em> you at your next encounter; she is the assertive type. Although, perhaps you’d like that too.”</p><p></p><p>“You are impossible.”</p><p></p><p>“Thank-you,” she gave a small nod. “I try not to take things too seriously.”</p><p></p><p>“You need not remain here.”</p><p></p><p>“I am not tied to this place, Eadric; I come and go as I please. But prudence demands that I strengthen a bulwark, and this one is better than most. And it would appear that Nehael – your <em>Eleos</em> – has been of some <em>use</em> after all; she has struck a delicate balance, which compromises neither my solidity here, nor your attachment to this particular plot of earth. I should ask you to thank her for me when you next pray to her, but I won’t; it would be an inauthentic request.”</p><p></p><p>“Do you care to explain?” He asked.</p><p></p><p>“You will discover when you leave. Don’t you ever like surprises, Eadric?”</p><p></p><p>“Generally, no,” he said grimly. “It would appear that the lacuna has passed. If another should arise, I will return.”</p><p></p><p>“Of course you will, <em>Ahma</em>.” She smiled darkly. Her eyes were fathomless voids. “And things need not always be so <em>harrowing</em>; your courtesy and forbearance have earned my gratitude. But I have known you in death: you are now <em>mine</em>. And I don’t share well.”</p><p></p><p>She pressed a scarf of black samite into his hand, and curled his fingers tightly around it.</p><p></p><p>*</p><p></p><p>Fresh snow had fallen, blanketing the courtyard; the winter sun was wan. Eadric looked upon the Blackthorn cautiously, as if his gaze alone might invoke malignancy from it, but it seemed subdued, as though its song had changed in some way. He closed the door to the keep behind him, and turned to pull a handful of dead ivy away from the wall, but green leaves had begun to shoot. He paused, confused, and lowered his hand.</p><p></p><p><em>Eleos</em>, he knew, and understood Soneillon’s words. </p><p></p><p>The <em>Ahma</em> made his way to the gatehouse, and slowed to regard the Steeple where Carasch roosted; the demon seemed not to have moved a hair’s breadth. A shadow of darkness passed across his mind; again, the same feeling of dread and foreboding oppressed him, as he felt the chthonic’s eyes follow him. He shook it off with effort, and trudged forward.</p><p></p><p>“Nice horse,” Mazikreen handed him the reins to <em>Narh</em>. “Come again.”</p><p></p><p>Eadric climbed into the saddle, rode through the gate, across the bridge, and straight for Deorham. He did not look back to the Burh. </p><p></p><p>Within, Soneillon brooded.</p><p></p><p></p><p>**</p><p></p><p></p><p>“You knew,” Ortwine glared at Nwm. “And so did you.” She glared at Hlioth.</p><p></p><p>“Yes,” Nwm laughed. Beer-foam clung to his beard; the <em>Twelve Elms</em> was thronging with activity.</p><p></p><p>“I did not. This irks me,” Ortwine continued.</p><p></p><p>“You are attuned to darker currents, Ortwine,” Hlioth sighed. “And none of us can see everything.”</p><p></p><p>“These benches are still filthy. And why is there a hole in the ceiling?”</p><p></p><p>“Should we go to the <em>Burh</em>, I wonder?” Nwm mused.</p><p></p><p>“We wait,” Hlioth replied. “He will come here, or will not. She can see us.”</p><p></p><p>A short time passed, and Eadric entered.</p><p></p><p>Hlioth quickly spoke a spell, masking the <em>Ahma</em> from the inevitable attention – and subsequent religious hysteria – which his presence was likely to provoke.</p><p></p><p>He nodded in gratitude, and sat.</p><p></p><p>“Gods, you look terrible,” Ortwine observed. “I’d offer a quip, but even that seems inappropriate. Nice bracelet, by the way.”</p><p></p><p>Eadric shook his head.</p><p></p><p>“Did you encounter the <em>rot</em>? How was it?”</p><p></p><p>“Ugly.” Eadric scowled.</p><p></p><p>Ortwine sniffed her wine disapprovingly, and placed it on the table. “Nehael seems to have reversed it. But the cordon set by the <em>ludja</em> is still in place. We are inscrutable; although apparently not to Soneillon. Did Nehael communicate with you regarding her intervention here?”</p><p></p><p>He shook his head. “At Galda, I invoked the <em>Eleos</em>; I prayed for the safeguarding of Deorham – of all within the Blackthorn’s range. I must assume that she listened; or she chose to act thus anyway.”</p><p></p><p>“A goddess who listens sets a worrying precedent,” Ortwine remarked. “And if Shomei comes here now?”</p><p></p><p>“I may have to forbid it outright,” Eadric replied.</p><p></p><p>“<em>Forbid?</em>” Nwm asked sceptically. “One does not <em>forbid</em> Shomei the Infernal anything. If you set yourself up as Law; she will be forced to confront you.”</p><p></p><p>“She will not attack me. I am the <em>Ahma</em>.”</p><p></p><p>“Are you sure?” Nwm inquired.</p><p></p><p>“No,” Eadric admitted.</p><p></p><p>“Is there an alternative?”</p><p></p><p>“I would prefer to avoid conflict here. Attempting another dialogue with Shomei is the first step. But I will not have Soneillon assailed for no reason…”</p><p></p><p>Ortwine groaned. “You are blind, Eadric. This girl has you mixed up.”</p><p></p><p>“…other than the fact that she possesses something which Shomei <em>wants</em>. Yes, Ortwine? You are about to present some solid, ethical case? A sound reason why I should allow half of Trempa to perish in smoking ruins, whilst demons and devils run amok and Carasch slugs it out with a half-dozen fallen seraphim? I am sorry, but <em>because Shomei wants</em> is not a compelling argument to me.”</p><p></p><p>“<em>Carasch?</em>” Ortwine asked.</p><p></p><p>“I was coming to that. He is at the Burh. Climb up the ridge above the North Road; you will see him perched on the Steeple.”</p><p></p><p>“And he will see you,” Hlioth said. “I advise against it.”</p><p></p><p>“And Soneillon is the <em>innocent</em> party, here?” Ortwine spoke contemptuously. “There <em>is</em> no greater demon than this one, <em>Ahma</em>.” The religious appellative was pronounced with some derision.</p><p></p><p>“I know it well!” Eadric snapped. “He has haunted my imaginings for longer than you know; since first I heard his name. And now he is at the Burh? Do not worry, Ortwine; the irony is not lost on me. And trust me: in person he is worse than in your darkest nightmares. I do not doubt that he could extinguish all life within a hundred miles – but, as of yet, no rampage has ensued.”</p><p></p><p>“And you are confident that your psychotic inamorata is trustworthy?” Ortwine exuded pure acid. “Or even capable of containing this monster? <em>This</em> is where I question your judgment, Eadric.”</p><p></p><p>“Soneillon asked me one question – and one only – to which I have attached value throughout this: <em>If not by my action, then how will you judge me?</em>. For one who advocates repeatedly and in varied guises for Shomei’s case – and I suggest you question your own motivation in <em>that</em> regard – the notion of <em>agency</em> and its implications should strike a particular resonance.”</p><p></p><p>The sidhe smiled coldly. “Let us hope that your suspense of judgment – and your action – is vindicated.”</p><p></p><p>Nwm coughed. “You said yourself that Cheshne was awakening, Ortwine. That Soneillon is not who she was.”</p><p></p><p>“And at no point did I suggest that I <em>trusted</em> her,” Ortwine groaned.</p><p></p><p>“There is something else,” Hlioth spoke through gritted teeth. “Shomei seeks to woo the ritual pool offered by the Academy, and bribe leading members of the Collegium. Mostin has committed himself to protect the Articles – and curiously enough, I believed him, because he believed himself – but until the Articles are actually <em>threatened</em>, he will not act. Gihaahia will prompt him; she is <em>leaning</em> on him – and Daunton. In the meantime, he may try to reason with Shomei – he may be the only one who can slow the meteor. Or she may attempt to sway <em>him</em>; and she is the superior rhetorician.”</p><p></p><p>Nwm nodded. “She is smarter than Mostin. Shomei presses hard against every barrier. She tests her exemption to the limit. For what it’s worth, I don’t think she’ll strike here until Dhatri reaches the envelope of the scions at Galda. I suspect that she will force you to choose, Eadric, or split your force. And perhaps I should keep my mouth closed in future, and learn from the <em>Ahma</em>’s mistakes: if the wizards <em>do</em> find a goddess in Gihaahia, then a reign of dark magic is imminent.”</p><p></p><p>“Her parentage is mixed,” Hlioth said archly. “She is the daughter of Astaroth and the Void; it might behoove us to remember this fact – it is apt enough. Forces other than the Claviger may be seeking to manifest through her.”</p><p></p><p>“We are a muddled and incestuous pantheon,” Ortwine sighed.</p><p></p><p></p><p>**</p><p></p><p></p><p>:: Mostin ::</p><p></p><p>Begone, Vhorzhe. I have nothing to say to you.</p><p></p><p>:: Soneillon has abandoned us, Mostin ::</p><p></p><p>I don’t blame her. Now, <em>begone!</em>.</p><p></p><p>*</p><p></p><p>“<em>Roses of life?</em>” Daunton grinned broadly, brandishing a scroll. The two wizards were closeted in an obscure nook of Hell’s library. Mostin wondered if they might need a spell to find their way out again.</p><p></p><p>“I am beginning to understand Shomei’s strategy,” Mostin sighed. “We will spend the next thousand years searching for and transcribing exotic dweomers, whilst she suborns the Academy and uses it for whatever she wants. And we shall be perfectly happy. How long have we been here, anyway?</p><p></p><p>“I have no idea,” Daunton mumbled. He brushed dust off a green tome entitled <em>The Fortification of the Skin</em>. “It’s a shame Rimilin is gone. He’d like this one.”</p><p></p><p>“Why are we even here?” Mostin asked. “We don’t <em>need</em> any of this.”</p><p></p><p>“No, you don’t.” Shomei had appeared from nowhere behind them. Daunton started. She seemed inordinately calm and focused. “And you have been here for nine hours. But there are transvalents; some were struck by the Adversary. Would you care to see them?”</p><p></p><p>Mostin twitched. His heart pounded. “And you have not committed them to your armamentarium?”</p><p></p><p>“There are more than a few. Most are beyond my ability – or yours – to cast,” she smiled. She did not need to add the word <em>yet</em>.</p><p></p><p>“Proceed,” Daunton said enthusiastically.</p><p></p><p>“Your library persona is an agreeable one,” Mostin observed.</p><p></p><p>“This is my passion, Mostin. You know this. I am most <em>me</em> here; I would not have you think that a quest for raw power has blinded me to what is important for my <em>I</em> – which is, and remains, the pursuit of knowledge. Now, follow me.”</p><p></p><p>She led them through winding corridors, past dens and studies, between stacks of books and down flights of steep stairs. They skirted repositories and scriptoria; passed through secret panels and hidden doors. All was silent, and musty. Finally, she produced a small key and opened an iron postern at the rear of a room crammed with scrolls. They descended yet more stairs, until they reached an open space. Ahead was an area of dead magic. Shomei gestured for them to proceed; the Alienist paused uncertainly. </p><p></p><p>“I would not cut the claws from the cat and then leave him at home with the fox,” Mostin said through narrowed eyes.</p><p></p><p>“Mostin…” </p><p></p><p>He assumed his pseudonatural shape.</p><p></p><p>“Then you will have me at a disadvantage,” she sighed. “Because the cat just became a wolf.”</p><p></p><p>The hall beyond was cavernous, a hundred fathoms tall, and stretched as far as Mostin’s many eyes could see ahead of him. Their footsteps – and his slitherings – echoed within. In the vaulted ceilings, great ruddy lights glowed at intervals, illuminating the contents: countless slabs - of adamant, marble, alabaster, steel, jade and obsidian - attached by clamps to soaring cables. A vast infernal apparatus controlled the assembly above; pulleys, derricks and sheaves arranged with impossible intricacy.</p><p></p><p>They followed as Shomei made her way to a booth which contained an array of levers and switches. She initiated a complex operation; wheels span, gears ground, and a single slab – a hundred yards distant – slowly swung out into the chamber and towards them. </p><p></p><p>When it reached them, she lowered it into a waiting channel: it was a plaque of diabolic steel, three feet wide and six high. As she released its clamp, another, like a vice, contracted to grip it. It stood upright before them. Daunton gaped. Mostin reached out, and ran a pseudopod over the embossed glyphs and sigils. It was a thing of beauty.</p><p></p><p><em>The Irrefutable Argument</em>, it read. It was a spell which had been in effect when the Nameless Fiend had precipitated the Fall; when unnumbered billion celestials had been seduced to his cause.</p><p></p><p>“This is Knowledge, Mostin. This is my legacy; I am the librarian of Hell.”</p><p></p><p>“Yes,” he quivered. Shomei read it as a nod.</p><p></p><p>“I am making an appeal to you.”</p><p></p><p>“I understand,” he hissed. Shomei heard it as a sigh.</p><p></p><p>*</p><p></p><p>Daunton sat within her study; Shomei poured <em>kschiff</em>. Mostin stood, looking at the Accord which hung above the mantlepiece.</p><p></p><p>“Temenun has offered an alliance.” She nodded toward the cherries which still rested on their plate. “He suggests that I marry the remaining Hazel scion to a Cherry which grows in Nivorn. I am reluctant to conflate Will and Desire for obvious reasons. But with his <em>Anantam</em> and the succubi in Throile – who bear no great love for their former mistress – I am looking at the twelve-hundredth order. I can do a lot with that.”</p><p></p><p>“But you would prefer to use the Wyrish Academy,” Mostin finished for her. “Because they are known, safer, more passive – but they also represent the body which Gihaahia is mandated to <em>uphold</em>.”</p><p> </p><p>“Touché,” Shomei raised her glass. “I find it hard to believe that the Enforcer will censure a majority, if it comes to infraction.”</p><p></p><p>“I don’t,” Daunton grumbled. “She is a tyrant, not an elected representative.”</p><p></p><p>“I have tried the more <em>wholesome</em> route,” Shomei sighed. “I cannot make headway. The <em>Ahma</em> is stubborn and irrational, and refuses to engage with his own potential. Those who practice <em>saizhan</em> are difficult to inspire – except the Irrenites, who are a small minority and whom I have yet to approach. I do not <em>feel</em> compassion – and I am not one wont to make empty gestures. I went to see the <em>Sela</em> yesterday.”</p><p></p><p>Mostin groaned. “You are certainly exhausting all avenues. What is it with you and Oronthon, anyway?”</p><p></p><p>“I cannot explain. I was confused, angry and depressed. His perspective is beyond all others. There is no judgment in him.”</p><p></p><p>“And he offered a solution? Or absolution?”</p><p></p><p>“Actually, neither. He offered tea. And a mirror to look in.”</p><p></p><p>“And what did you see?” Mostin asked cynically. “Note that I do not afford much credence to his mystical posturing.”</p><p></p><p>“That my <em>I</em> is relational, and does not exist in a vacuum,” she shrugged.</p><p></p><p>“That is all?” Mostin scoffed. “I might have told you that.”</p><p></p><p>“But you didn’t, Mostin. That’s the point. Regardless, I need help – not compactees and servants and indentured mages, but willing partners. To retrieve the <em>Urn</em>. To master Hummaz. To <em>correct</em> the Morphic and end the Claviger-Enforcer’s <em>tyranny</em>. To propagate knowledge. Is this goal not worthy?”</p><p></p><p>“And you would have me play Belial to your Adversary,” Mostin said acidly. “Did the <em>Sela</em> also whisper in the ear of the Nameless Fiend before the Fall?”</p><p></p><p>“Actually, I think you would know my answer to that.”</p><p></p><p>“It is no surprise, then, the spell which you chose to show us,” the Alienist remarked.</p><p></p><p>“There is a certain symmetry; it is hard to deny.”</p><p></p><p>“And you would then elect yourself as the new arcane factum?” Mostin inquired drily.</p><p></p><p>“I am a librarian, Mostin. It is only natural.”</p><p></p><p></p><p>**</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Sepulchrave II, post: 5762110, member: 4303"] [B]Obsession – Part 3[/B] “Your friends have arrived,” Soneillon raised an eyebrow. “In the village. They are warded against perception – poorly. Are we entertaining, tonight? Should I send Carasch to greet them?” “You sense of humor is singular,” Eadric smiled, but his face was etched with pain, as one who has experienced great anguish. “Who is here?” “The Uediian and the sidhe – and also Hlioth. I have killed her once already; perhaps she liked it and is returning for more. Mostin is not with them; I suspect he is avoiding me: he still owes me Graz’zt.” “Why did they not simply issue a [I]sending[/I]?” Soneillon gesticulated vaguely. “I confess that a number of signals have been deflected.” “How many?” Eadric squinted. “I did not count. Besides, it’s better that you have company on your return to Galda. Your horse is ready; Mazikreen has taken care of him. She has become rather attached.” “He seems to have that effect. You are a curious creature, Soneillon.” “Yes?” She fastened a garland of black lotuses around his wrist. “What will you do now?” “I will brood and pine desperately, Eadric. Or perhaps I should instead fortify my position against the coming storm – which may blow from any number of directions, or from all at once. Shomei musters her devils; the Fourth Effluxion is moving – I do not relish that meeting. Dhatri’s host is marching. Desire – the Cherry – is active. And your first girlfriend has a new persona; we’ll see how that plays out. Let’s hope that you don’t like her more than me.” “Of what do you speak?” He asked suspiciously. “I would hate to spoil the surprise,” she replied drily. “Shomei may still be open to dialogue,” Eadric suggested. “I have not given up on her.” “Maybe. Or she may simply [I]dominate[/I] you at your next encounter; she is the assertive type. Although, perhaps you’d like that too.” “You are impossible.” “Thank-you,” she gave a small nod. “I try not to take things too seriously.” “You need not remain here.” “I am not tied to this place, Eadric; I come and go as I please. But prudence demands that I strengthen a bulwark, and this one is better than most. And it would appear that Nehael – your [I]Eleos[/I] – has been of some [I]use[/I] after all; she has struck a delicate balance, which compromises neither my solidity here, nor your attachment to this particular plot of earth. I should ask you to thank her for me when you next pray to her, but I won’t; it would be an inauthentic request.” “Do you care to explain?” He asked. “You will discover when you leave. Don’t you ever like surprises, Eadric?” “Generally, no,” he said grimly. “It would appear that the lacuna has passed. If another should arise, I will return.” “Of course you will, [I]Ahma[/I].” She smiled darkly. Her eyes were fathomless voids. “And things need not always be so [I]harrowing[/I]; your courtesy and forbearance have earned my gratitude. But I have known you in death: you are now [I]mine[/I]. And I don’t share well.” She pressed a scarf of black samite into his hand, and curled his fingers tightly around it. * Fresh snow had fallen, blanketing the courtyard; the winter sun was wan. Eadric looked upon the Blackthorn cautiously, as if his gaze alone might invoke malignancy from it, but it seemed subdued, as though its song had changed in some way. He closed the door to the keep behind him, and turned to pull a handful of dead ivy away from the wall, but green leaves had begun to shoot. He paused, confused, and lowered his hand. [I]Eleos[/I], he knew, and understood Soneillon’s words. The [I]Ahma[/I] made his way to the gatehouse, and slowed to regard the Steeple where Carasch roosted; the demon seemed not to have moved a hair’s breadth. A shadow of darkness passed across his mind; again, the same feeling of dread and foreboding oppressed him, as he felt the chthonic’s eyes follow him. He shook it off with effort, and trudged forward. “Nice horse,” Mazikreen handed him the reins to [I]Narh[/I]. “Come again.” Eadric climbed into the saddle, rode through the gate, across the bridge, and straight for Deorham. He did not look back to the Burh. Within, Soneillon brooded. ** “You knew,” Ortwine glared at Nwm. “And so did you.” She glared at Hlioth. “Yes,” Nwm laughed. Beer-foam clung to his beard; the [I]Twelve Elms[/I] was thronging with activity. “I did not. This irks me,” Ortwine continued. “You are attuned to darker currents, Ortwine,” Hlioth sighed. “And none of us can see everything.” “These benches are still filthy. And why is there a hole in the ceiling?” “Should we go to the [I]Burh[/I], I wonder?” Nwm mused. “We wait,” Hlioth replied. “He will come here, or will not. She can see us.” A short time passed, and Eadric entered. Hlioth quickly spoke a spell, masking the [I]Ahma[/I] from the inevitable attention – and subsequent religious hysteria – which his presence was likely to provoke. He nodded in gratitude, and sat. “Gods, you look terrible,” Ortwine observed. “I’d offer a quip, but even that seems inappropriate. Nice bracelet, by the way.” Eadric shook his head. “Did you encounter the [I]rot[/I]? How was it?” “Ugly.” Eadric scowled. Ortwine sniffed her wine disapprovingly, and placed it on the table. “Nehael seems to have reversed it. But the cordon set by the [I]ludja[/I] is still in place. We are inscrutable; although apparently not to Soneillon. Did Nehael communicate with you regarding her intervention here?” He shook his head. “At Galda, I invoked the [I]Eleos[/I]; I prayed for the safeguarding of Deorham – of all within the Blackthorn’s range. I must assume that she listened; or she chose to act thus anyway.” “A goddess who listens sets a worrying precedent,” Ortwine remarked. “And if Shomei comes here now?” “I may have to forbid it outright,” Eadric replied. “[I]Forbid?[/I]” Nwm asked sceptically. “One does not [I]forbid[/I] Shomei the Infernal anything. If you set yourself up as Law; she will be forced to confront you.” “She will not attack me. I am the [I]Ahma[/I].” “Are you sure?” Nwm inquired. “No,” Eadric admitted. “Is there an alternative?” “I would prefer to avoid conflict here. Attempting another dialogue with Shomei is the first step. But I will not have Soneillon assailed for no reason…” Ortwine groaned. “You are blind, Eadric. This girl has you mixed up.” “…other than the fact that she possesses something which Shomei [I]wants[/I]. Yes, Ortwine? You are about to present some solid, ethical case? A sound reason why I should allow half of Trempa to perish in smoking ruins, whilst demons and devils run amok and Carasch slugs it out with a half-dozen fallen seraphim? I am sorry, but [I]because Shomei wants[/I] is not a compelling argument to me.” “[I]Carasch?[/I]” Ortwine asked. “I was coming to that. He is at the Burh. Climb up the ridge above the North Road; you will see him perched on the Steeple.” “And he will see you,” Hlioth said. “I advise against it.” “And Soneillon is the [I]innocent[/I] party, here?” Ortwine spoke contemptuously. “There [I]is[/I] no greater demon than this one, [I]Ahma[/I].” The religious appellative was pronounced with some derision. “I know it well!” Eadric snapped. “He has haunted my imaginings for longer than you know; since first I heard his name. And now he is at the Burh? Do not worry, Ortwine; the irony is not lost on me. And trust me: in person he is worse than in your darkest nightmares. I do not doubt that he could extinguish all life within a hundred miles – but, as of yet, no rampage has ensued.” “And you are confident that your psychotic inamorata is trustworthy?” Ortwine exuded pure acid. “Or even capable of containing this monster? [I]This[/I] is where I question your judgment, Eadric.” “Soneillon asked me one question – and one only – to which I have attached value throughout this: [I]If not by my action, then how will you judge me?[/I]. For one who advocates repeatedly and in varied guises for Shomei’s case – and I suggest you question your own motivation in [I]that[/I] regard – the notion of [I]agency[/I] and its implications should strike a particular resonance.” The sidhe smiled coldly. “Let us hope that your suspense of judgment – and your action – is vindicated.” Nwm coughed. “You said yourself that Cheshne was awakening, Ortwine. That Soneillon is not who she was.” “And at no point did I suggest that I [I]trusted[/I] her,” Ortwine groaned. “There is something else,” Hlioth spoke through gritted teeth. “Shomei seeks to woo the ritual pool offered by the Academy, and bribe leading members of the Collegium. Mostin has committed himself to protect the Articles – and curiously enough, I believed him, because he believed himself – but until the Articles are actually [I]threatened[/I], he will not act. Gihaahia will prompt him; she is [I]leaning[/I] on him – and Daunton. In the meantime, he may try to reason with Shomei – he may be the only one who can slow the meteor. Or she may attempt to sway [I]him[/I]; and she is the superior rhetorician.” Nwm nodded. “She is smarter than Mostin. Shomei presses hard against every barrier. She tests her exemption to the limit. For what it’s worth, I don’t think she’ll strike here until Dhatri reaches the envelope of the scions at Galda. I suspect that she will force you to choose, Eadric, or split your force. And perhaps I should keep my mouth closed in future, and learn from the [I]Ahma[/I]’s mistakes: if the wizards [I]do[/I] find a goddess in Gihaahia, then a reign of dark magic is imminent.” “Her parentage is mixed,” Hlioth said archly. “She is the daughter of Astaroth and the Void; it might behoove us to remember this fact – it is apt enough. Forces other than the Claviger may be seeking to manifest through her.” “We are a muddled and incestuous pantheon,” Ortwine sighed. ** :: Mostin :: Begone, Vhorzhe. I have nothing to say to you. :: Soneillon has abandoned us, Mostin :: I don’t blame her. Now, [I]begone![/I]. * “[I]Roses of life?[/I]” Daunton grinned broadly, brandishing a scroll. The two wizards were closeted in an obscure nook of Hell’s library. Mostin wondered if they might need a spell to find their way out again. “I am beginning to understand Shomei’s strategy,” Mostin sighed. “We will spend the next thousand years searching for and transcribing exotic dweomers, whilst she suborns the Academy and uses it for whatever she wants. And we shall be perfectly happy. How long have we been here, anyway? “I have no idea,” Daunton mumbled. He brushed dust off a green tome entitled [I]The Fortification of the Skin[/I]. “It’s a shame Rimilin is gone. He’d like this one.” “Why are we even here?” Mostin asked. “We don’t [I]need[/I] any of this.” “No, you don’t.” Shomei had appeared from nowhere behind them. Daunton started. She seemed inordinately calm and focused. “And you have been here for nine hours. But there are transvalents; some were struck by the Adversary. Would you care to see them?” Mostin twitched. His heart pounded. “And you have not committed them to your armamentarium?” “There are more than a few. Most are beyond my ability – or yours – to cast,” she smiled. She did not need to add the word [I]yet[/I]. “Proceed,” Daunton said enthusiastically. “Your library persona is an agreeable one,” Mostin observed. “This is my passion, Mostin. You know this. I am most [I]me[/I] here; I would not have you think that a quest for raw power has blinded me to what is important for my [I]I[/I] – which is, and remains, the pursuit of knowledge. Now, follow me.” She led them through winding corridors, past dens and studies, between stacks of books and down flights of steep stairs. They skirted repositories and scriptoria; passed through secret panels and hidden doors. All was silent, and musty. Finally, she produced a small key and opened an iron postern at the rear of a room crammed with scrolls. They descended yet more stairs, until they reached an open space. Ahead was an area of dead magic. Shomei gestured for them to proceed; the Alienist paused uncertainly. “I would not cut the claws from the cat and then leave him at home with the fox,” Mostin said through narrowed eyes. “Mostin…” He assumed his pseudonatural shape. “Then you will have me at a disadvantage,” she sighed. “Because the cat just became a wolf.” The hall beyond was cavernous, a hundred fathoms tall, and stretched as far as Mostin’s many eyes could see ahead of him. Their footsteps – and his slitherings – echoed within. In the vaulted ceilings, great ruddy lights glowed at intervals, illuminating the contents: countless slabs - of adamant, marble, alabaster, steel, jade and obsidian - attached by clamps to soaring cables. A vast infernal apparatus controlled the assembly above; pulleys, derricks and sheaves arranged with impossible intricacy. They followed as Shomei made her way to a booth which contained an array of levers and switches. She initiated a complex operation; wheels span, gears ground, and a single slab – a hundred yards distant – slowly swung out into the chamber and towards them. When it reached them, she lowered it into a waiting channel: it was a plaque of diabolic steel, three feet wide and six high. As she released its clamp, another, like a vice, contracted to grip it. It stood upright before them. Daunton gaped. Mostin reached out, and ran a pseudopod over the embossed glyphs and sigils. It was a thing of beauty. [I]The Irrefutable Argument[/I], it read. It was a spell which had been in effect when the Nameless Fiend had precipitated the Fall; when unnumbered billion celestials had been seduced to his cause. “This is Knowledge, Mostin. This is my legacy; I am the librarian of Hell.” “Yes,” he quivered. Shomei read it as a nod. “I am making an appeal to you.” “I understand,” he hissed. Shomei heard it as a sigh. * Daunton sat within her study; Shomei poured [I]kschiff[/I]. Mostin stood, looking at the Accord which hung above the mantlepiece. “Temenun has offered an alliance.” She nodded toward the cherries which still rested on their plate. “He suggests that I marry the remaining Hazel scion to a Cherry which grows in Nivorn. I am reluctant to conflate Will and Desire for obvious reasons. But with his [I]Anantam[/I] and the succubi in Throile – who bear no great love for their former mistress – I am looking at the twelve-hundredth order. I can do a lot with that.” “But you would prefer to use the Wyrish Academy,” Mostin finished for her. “Because they are known, safer, more passive – but they also represent the body which Gihaahia is mandated to [I]uphold[/I].” “Touché,” Shomei raised her glass. “I find it hard to believe that the Enforcer will censure a majority, if it comes to infraction.” “I don’t,” Daunton grumbled. “She is a tyrant, not an elected representative.” “I have tried the more [I]wholesome[/I] route,” Shomei sighed. “I cannot make headway. The [I]Ahma[/I] is stubborn and irrational, and refuses to engage with his own potential. Those who practice [I]saizhan[/I] are difficult to inspire – except the Irrenites, who are a small minority and whom I have yet to approach. I do not [I]feel[/I] compassion – and I am not one wont to make empty gestures. I went to see the [I]Sela[/I] yesterday.” Mostin groaned. “You are certainly exhausting all avenues. What is it with you and Oronthon, anyway?” “I cannot explain. I was confused, angry and depressed. His perspective is beyond all others. There is no judgment in him.” “And he offered a solution? Or absolution?” “Actually, neither. He offered tea. And a mirror to look in.” “And what did you see?” Mostin asked cynically. “Note that I do not afford much credence to his mystical posturing.” “That my [I]I[/I] is relational, and does not exist in a vacuum,” she shrugged. “That is all?” Mostin scoffed. “I might have told you that.” “But you didn’t, Mostin. That’s the point. Regardless, I need help – not compactees and servants and indentured mages, but willing partners. To retrieve the [I]Urn[/I]. To master Hummaz. To [I]correct[/I] the Morphic and end the Claviger-Enforcer’s [I]tyranny[/I]. To propagate knowledge. Is this goal not worthy?” “And you would have me play Belial to your Adversary,” Mostin said acidly. “Did the [I]Sela[/I] also whisper in the ear of the Nameless Fiend before the Fall?” “Actually, I think you would know my answer to that.” “It is no surprise, then, the spell which you chose to show us,” the Alienist remarked. “There is a certain symmetry; it is hard to deny.” “And you would then elect yourself as the new arcane factum?” Mostin inquired drily. “I am a librarian, Mostin. It is only natural.” ** [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
Community
Playing the Game
Story Hour
Aeon (updated 10/9/14)
Top