This is a very long post, and I hope it makes sense. I have actually cut out some stuff. At some future point - hopefully sooner rather than later - I will post the mechanics of the singular item which is the focus of this installment. Suffice to say, for the time being, that to derive information from it requires various Knowledge (Arcana) checks with absurdly high DCs, and that a mage can 'take 20' on these checks.
[Edit - make that 2 posts. I can't fit it all in one.

]
Soo...
****
The Web of Motes
After Mostin and Eadric had quizzed Nufrut, the Paladin related the news conveyed to him by Tramst in full. A bitter argument ensued.
"There is no
need for us to return," Nwm sighed. "It would serve no purpose. We have – in a roundabout way – succeeded in what we set out to do. Irknaan is dead. The Demon’s precarious hold on the demiplane is compromised.
We have vexed him. When we initially spoke of this, the plan was to assail him on as many fronts as we could. We should change tack accordingly now."
"My gear remains in Afqithan," Ortwin snapped.
"Forget your gear," Nwm replied unsympathetically. "Live with it – you
are alive, if you would notice. Goddess, you’re a selfish bastard, Ortwin."
"But we have already formulated a plan," the Satyr continued, ignoring the insult. "
We can do this. It will work."
"It would be an unnecessary waste of time and effort," Nwm retorted. "What would we gain? Eadric?"
"I don’t know," Eadric admitted.
"Pah!" Nwm snorted. "This is absurd. Why Afqithan?
What’s the point?"
"It is some kind of key," Eadric replied.
Nwm looked exasperated. "Why? Have you had some kind of revelation?"
"No."
The Druid closed his eyes, and clenched his fists. "I have humoured you thus far, Eadric, but you need to seriously reappraise. Genuine visions I can accept, but some vague feeling is
not sufficient."
"I trust vague feelings more than divinely inspired visions," Mostin said unhelpfully.
"I’m not suggesting that is
the key," Eadric said. "But perhaps it is
a key. Or perhaps we can turn it into one. There is the
gate to Azzagrat…"
"Which opens both ways, I might remind you. And it is periodic – who knows what else has walked through it since we were last there."
"Soneillon." Eadric said again. "She is pivotal – or could be, if we allowed her to be. She lusts after the fall of the Lord of Azzagrat more than anything else."
"Do not presume to understand the motives of demons," Shomei warned. "Especially one such as her. If you use her as a tool – if you use
each other I should say – then she will exact a price which may surprise you at a later time."
"Do you then intend to strike a bargain with Soneillon?" Ortwin asked.
"I don’t know. Titivilus offered to act as an arbiter – maybe for this purpose. Perhaps opening some kind of dialogue…"
"For me to regard something as questionable means that it must be
very questionable," Ortwin said sardonically. "But I suspect that this is one barrel of maggots that you do
not want to open."
Overcome by a sudden wave of irony, Nwm guffawed. "Eadric of Deorham purposes to compact with a Demon Queen? Ah, the world has changed. And maybe not for the better."
"There is opportunity, here," Eadric replied patiently. "And I am in the unfortunate position of having to decide the least evil."
"Do you have that authority?" Nwm countered. "Or sufficient information?"
"Yes, and no," the Paladin answered with a wry smile. "That is my lot. I am resigned to it. Things will unfold according to Oronthon’s will, irrespective of my actions."
"That is a depressing fatalism," Nwm groaned.
"Not so," Shomei unexpectedly came to Eadric’s defense. "To exert individual will and to submit to destiny need not be mutually exclusive perspectives. This is well established."
"Shomei, your philosophical sophistry is irrelevant to me," Nwm replied. "Your world-view is under assault. You are confused, and your intellect is trying to grasp at dialectical straws."
The Infernalist looked mildly offended, opened her mouth to say something, thought better of it, and clamped it shut again.
"Through sustained application of Will, we can force a confluence of events to occur in Afqithan," Mostin nodded. "We cannot control it, however. It may backfire. There are too many variables. We lack Jovol’s prescience."
Shomei raised her eyebrows. "Your euphemism is transparent, Mostin. You are too anxious to unleash the Pseudonatural Horror."
"I am not
that anxious," Mostin said. "Or I would have done so already."
"I still do not understand what this
thing is, of which you speak," Eadric sighed.
"It is the creature which slew Vhorzhe – in all likelihood." Shomei answered. "And probably other adepts who thought they could control it."
"The Horror," Mostin nodded eagerly. "The
gate. Titivilus. Soneillon. The Prince. The Spell – which I am close to capable of casting."
"Although not alone," Shomei pointed out. "And enlisting a cabal will be far harder than speaking the incantation."
Mostin shrugged. "We are going in circles. I have some possible solutions, if any of you have the stomach to hear them: bear with me before you shoot me down. First, Soneillon: I can
bind her, although I doubt I can hold her for long. Second, the
gate: we can use it, or seal it with a
disjunction. Third, Mulissu: it may be that she has made progress in interpreting Jovol’s
web of motes – it may give us an idea on how to proceed which we have not previously considered. Fourth, the Pseudonatural: I can likewise
bind it, and probably not hold it. Fifth, and I am loath to even suggest it: Shomei – or even I, for that matter – could enlist celestial support."
"There will be no cascade in Afqithan," Shomei said simply. "Tramst made that clear to me before I left him – this is no concern of the Host. And I have worries on that count which I haven’t yet voiced: there is no doubt that – irrespective of Nhura’s current inclinations – news of a celestial presence in the demiplane has already been reported to Graz’zt. Information such as that has a habit of spreading quickly."
"But would he have suspected who caused it?" Eadric asked.
"Perhaps not," Shomei conceded, "but the Prince is supremely paranoid, as I have said before. News of Irknaan’s death has probably reached him already. Who can guess the loyalty of the other Loquai?"
"We need information," Nwm sighed. "And we need it badly. Things are finely balanced. Factions are forming faster than we can apprehend them. They change before we have a chance to begin to understand them. There is too much flux."
"We are dealing with
demons and their allies," Mostin said. "What do you expect? Our own presence has skewed events rapidly."
"Everything in Afqithan seemed relatively stable before we arrived," Nwm said laconically.
"Chaos and inertia have a great deal in common," Shomei smiled.
"Then we should take one more day," Eadric said grimly. "One more day, before we decide to act – and then ten hours or so will have passed in Afqithan since our flight. As Nwm says, we need information – to garner as much as we can. And when we do act, it needs to be
decisive. No more vacillation. Mostin, you are the Diviner – the onus lies on you. Can you contact Mulissu?"
The Alienist nodded. "I have yet to prepare my spells. But I had determined to make a
metagnostic inquiry before anything else. This will involve a translation."
"How long will it take?" The Paladin asked.
"Exactly no time at all," Mostin replied. "I will go to the Far Realm."
**
Beyond the glooms created by an uncounted number of fears – the terrors which lurked in the recesses of human souls, the darkest imaginings of demonic lust, and the nightmares of creatures which bore no shape or name – Soneillon dreamed a dream.
Annihilation, the threat of unbeing, the primeval void in which all meaning ceased, held no mystery for her. She was it, and it was she. From the blank tablet of unmanifest reality, the succubus drew forth a tendril of possibility. Fashioned by her dark spirit – which had, by the dubious virtue of sheer force of will, survived or transcended the insurmountable necessity of ontological cohesion – a shadowy phantasy began to coalesce.
She strove to give it form and meaning, to imbue it with qualities which marked it as real. Madness and meaninglessness flowed away. The numinous slowly subsided, and became the phenomenal. A vision of trees, of sky, of streams, animals, birds and men assumed tangibility. A small castle, with whitewashed walls, ivy-clad and perched upon a rocky knoll.
Paradox rapidly spiralled into infinity, and potentiality shrank to a single point in space and time. The interstices snapped, and unbeing retreated.
Soneillon stood in dappled sunlight, clad in flesh and blood. Nearby, an ancient oak-tree stood. The demoness glanced at Kyrtill’s Burh, erected a ward around herself, and assumed a pleasing form.
Soneillon smiled. She smiled at the hopeless lot of mortals, like pigs who were destined for slaughter. She smiled at the pathos which she perceived in Graz’zt: his interminable wheedling and plotting and conniving for the slightest of transient gains. She smiled at Wyre, and its magical Law, embodied in the Claviger and its servant Gihaahia – in the full knowledge that she herself needed no agent to bring here there and, thus, no infraction had occurred. And she smiled at Oronthon, and the Celestial Host, and their Interdict against the millions that had rebelled before time began.
Once, she had been one of them. But no longer. Her paradigm had shifted. Unreality was hers, and she made her own laws now.
**
The creature interrogated by Mostin was a writhing mass of matter which would have defied all attempts at classification, had the Alienist been inclined to attempt to categorize it. Two things only concerned him: it was of the lower order, and thus unlikely to resist his compulsion, and it was of reasonable intelligence – the latter inferred by Mostin who,
invisible and
mind blanked, had watched it interact with numerous other creatures of less stature than itself.
Transfixed, it swayed eerily beneath the Wizard’s gaze, its pseudopodia stretching and rippling simultaneously through several overlapping dimensions.
Mostin’s question was generic. He sought guidance, not definitive answers.
Can you enlighten me with regard to the events and possibilities which currently preoccupy me?
The creature’s consciousness was catapulted into the deepest reaches of madness and euphoria, and a barrage of scenes and feelings flooded into Mostin’s mind as it filtered them to him.
[Image] Graz’zt + [Image] a black tower + [Image] a satyr (or was it Titivilus?) + [Fear] Nothingness + [Image] peasant girl + [Image] a huge bird + [Incomprehensible] void + [Image] Steeple + [Image] dragon + [Image] a dreamscape: the Claviger; Jovol; Soneillon. [Image] the forest perishing + [Smell] acid + [Image] Lukarn + [Image] a million tiny stars + [Image] the Horror + [Fear] the Horror + [Terror] the Horror + [Image] a hundred souls, confined, deranged, screaming and gibbering + [Image] Vhorzhe + [Voice]
saizha, Mostin?
Mostin quailed, and fled back to the bounded cosmos.
*
"I think that a slightly more structured question may have been in order," Mulissu said sarcastically, as she poured a smoking liquid into a tall, blue flute, and handed it to Mostin. "You might as well have asked ‘Can you please reveal all of my deepest fears to me?’"
The pair sat beneath the pomegranate tree in Mulissu’s courtyard, as several mephits capered nearby. The dome of the sky was, as usual, a perfect, unbroken cyan.
"It is within my nature to risk frequent assault upon my psyche," Mostin replied shakily. "You may have a point, however."
"Did you uncover anything worthwhile?"
"That remains to be seen," Mostin downed his drink rapidly and held out his glass for another draught, "but I think so. Interpretation is always the hardest part. This is a fine beverage. What is it?"
Mulissu shrugged, and poured again. "I don’t think it has a name. I acquired it from a passing Djinn. The pseudonatural entity seems foremost in your mind. Have you made an effort to contact it?"
"Not yet. I have not judged the time to be ripe. It soon will be, however."
"And you plan to
gate it into this ‘Afqithan?’"
"Perhaps. Or I may loose it against the Prince, if we ever have the misfortune to meet. Mulissu, I need guidance."
The Witch groaned. "I prefer not to dispense advice, where possible."
"Jovol’s
web of motes," Mostin persisted. "Have you made headway in understanding it?"
Mulissu sighed. "I have thought of little else. It continually distracts me from my work."
"But do you
understand it?"
"No," she replied. "Or, I should say, I understand its principles and its function, but not how to read it – as you said, interpretation is always the hardest part. Would you like a demonstration?"
Mostin nodded. "Of course."
"Then we should go inside – it is best if we see it in relative darkness."
"I will bring the bottle," Mostin said. His mood was improving rapidly.
Mulissu had dedicated the space within the largest of the five minarets of her mansion-cum-castle to Jovol’s device. When she activated it – a flat metal plate some twelve inches square – by merely passing her hand over it, Mostin’s jaw dropped.
The darkness around them was suddenly illuminated by a hundred thousand points of light which coruscated in every colour imaginable. Some pulsed, and hummed, and seemed to move on unpredictable trajectories. Some quivered, some darted here and there, others stayed fixed, or orbited fathomless loci which could not be identified. Almost imperceptibly, slender threads wove them together, joining them for brief periods before they separated, or binding them tightly into pairs, triplets or larger clusters.
"Every mote represents a packet of consciousness – an individual entity, or a single perspective. They are shown in relation to one another."
Mulissu looked around briefly, before locating a bluish mote which blazed more brightly than those around it. She touched it with an outstretched finger, and it grew noticeably. Thousands of other motes winked out, but new ones came into being in their place. A puzzled look crossed her face.
"You seem perplexed," Mostin observed.
"The mote which I selected represents myself," Mulissu said. "That much, at least, I have determined. Notice the bright mote which winks nearby. Its pattern seems random and insubstantial: I suspect that this is you, although I cannot read the significance of its behaviour."
"I am
mind blanked. This may be reflected in the web’s powers of scrutiny. How did you isolate the mote which represents you?"
"I just
knew," the Witch answered. "Do not ask me to explain – I cannot."
"Eadric said that Jovol could
infer certain things," Mostin speculated, "even when he could not accurately determine them. It may be possible to locate anyone or anything at any time, past, present or future – given a user with sufficient ability. Beyond even Jovol’s powers, I suspect.
"Indeed," Mulissu raised an eyebrow. "Or mine. It may also be possible to advance or regress the whole web – currently, I believe it shows things
as they are. It should be able to reveal things
as they were or even
as they will be. This is beyond me. Nor can I determine the spatial coordinates of any of the motes – that is to say
where in any reality the individual to whom the mote belongs is located. Observe this."
The witch traced a thin tendril from her own mote with her finger. Around them both, lights flashed rapidly, as the thread twisted and gyred. Slowly, in the centre of the chamber, a deep, purplish radiance grew. It seemed somehow serene. Perfect in its shape and form.
From it, a thousand strings, gossamer-thin, radiated outwards, connecting it to a myriad of other motes – including, somewhat detached, the bright blue light which was Mulissu herself. Around the central radiance, slowly orbiting on its periphery, was a single spark of deepest red, filled with malevolence and conveying a sense of foreboding.
"Behold the Claviger," Mulissu smiled, "and the Enforcer. At the end of every tendril, there is a Wizard, Mostin. We are all bound together, and there is nothing we can do about it."
"But which is whom?" Mostin asked in awe.
Mulissu sighed. "That is the question."
The Alienist paused in thought for a moment, before reaching out to touch Gihaahia’s mote, eliciting a doubtful expression from Mulissu.
"Mostin…" She began.
"Sshh!"
The Enforcer’s mote grew, and that of the Claviger retreated, until the red ellipsoid outshone all others. A feeling of subservience – tinged with an ancient, ineffable anger – emanated from it.
"Remarkable," Mostin said. As the radicles which anchored it to other luminous points came in to view, its connection to the Claviger assumed a different shape – appearing as a long, tense cord, which glowered with coercive power.
Many of the motes were now black, or deep scarlet, or midnight blue in hue. From all, violence, and lust, and pain, and fear flowed forth – stifling and suffocating. Many flickered and seemed to jump unpredictably.
"Are we seeing reality from Gihaahia’s perspective, now?" Mostin asked.
"I think these motes around her represent the contacts which she has made. The significant entities which have shaped – and maybe continue to shape – her reality."
Mostin’s eyes darted about rapidly, following the tendrils which sprang from the Enforcer.
Where is the connection? It must be here. Is it this?
A fuliginous mote, but somehow vague and indistinct came into view. He touched it. It grew, threatening to consume all else. Beyond it, past incomprehensible connections which spanned realities and stretched the bounds of apprehension, was a yet deeper void.
Mulissu touched him gently on the shoulder. "Stop, Mostin. It will not avail you, and madness lies that way. You do not have the understanding. Sometimes you need to accept your limits."
Mostin exhaled, and nodded.