Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Exit, stage left (Mindscape)

Michael
When he wakes up, he cannot tell if it is the same cot. The mattress beneath him is dry, and also when he pulls away from it and sits up, his cheek and hair tack and crisp with the dried blood that must have blown out of his face earlier.

It isn't his blood. He knows that. Any Hermetic worth their salt, with apprentice knowledge of the Ars Vitae, would know that it is not their own blood. The mattress has a patina of rust on it. The floor beneath the cot, and his feet when they connect, is concrete. The air is dank and cold.

A basement?

Nothing of note in the room, aside from the rancid mattress and the rickety cot frame. A small set of steps, also concrete, lead up to the only door in the place. Bits of old garlic husks and dried onion skins litter the corners, along with mouse droppings and scuff marks. But nothing else to tell him where he is or what is going to happen next.

He is not alone. In the room, sure, he's alone in the room. But not in the house.

William
He sits up and his cheek and hair feel… off. William does a quick check to feel the back of his head, half expecting there to be a hole the size of a finger where he remembered metal being pressed to the back of his head. William remembered the feeling, but not the aftermath. He should be dead; he isn’t dead. He should have been dead five times over but, again, William Holmes is not dead.

He places his hand to the wall and does a quick walk of the perimeter- how many steps to each wall? Twenty two and a half inches per step. He is making a map (he is wasting time.) William isn’t alone here; it is an immutable fact. Were he to stay in this room, there would be no exit plausible. Many of his problems could have been solved by the mere ability to not be where he is- either by magick or otherwise. He’s not a mind reader, though- nor does he possess any kind of miraculous fortune telling ability beyond that of people who experience misfortune. Captain Hindsight, this one. It’s what trauma does- makes you scrutinize every detail and wail about how you didn’t see the signs regardless of what should have rationally been expected as an outcome.

All that was just background noise, and had seasoned what his next action would be. There were no exits save for the obvious one, so carefully, quietly, the young man made his way up the stairs to the door. He would exit if the door would give. If not? Well, now, won’t that be fun.

Michael
The door is not locked.

When Will opens it, the hinges whine just a little bit. No more than the hinges in a typical American home tend to whine. Basement usage varies from person to person, as does upkeep and maintenance. This house appears to fall in the category of Average. An Average American Home.

Will opens the door. He comes to stand in a mudroom. At least, it looks like a mudroom. On either side of him are four closets, two on each side. Ahead are two utility sinks, back-to-back, with storage to the left and what appears to be a water closet and another walk-in closet beside that. Two walk-in closets and a doorway on the far wall.

The house looks normal. Looks. Something is hanging in the air, an atmosphere he can almost reach out and touch but he maybe doesn't want to.

Someone is upstairs, or else the wind is blowing with a fury tonight.

William
He familiarized himself with the area quickly. Two closets. Two sinks, and a bathroom. He headed to the utility sinks first, reaching to turn on the water before thinking better of it. After taking a quick check of his hands and deciding they were clean enough (after wiping them off on his pants), he headed to the bathroom to get a look at himself and to, hopefully, get the blood out of his hair.

William acknowledged his own desire to leave, it was made present the minute he woke up in an unfamiliar basement- understandable. He did, however, have the presence of mind to realize that he can’t wander out of a house with blood on his face and without anything that would help him to get from point A to point B. Will didn’t have a point B because he didn’t know where the Hell point A even was.

If he could, he washed up as quickly as he could. No need to turn the water on longer than necessary- just long enough to get shit off his face and abandon ship. The contents of the closets were not ignored, and instead he went to look for something that might either protect him from what’s upstairs or help him when he goes outside.

And a flashlight. You can never go wrong with a flashlight- if it’s heavy enough it kills two birds with one stone. Or, you know, knocks said bird unconscious so you can run away screaming.

Michael
The closets are either just there for decoration, or some sinister force is preventing him from opening them.

Much like the empty room full of sunlight and windows he could not open earlier, nothing he does has any effect on the closet doors. He can rattle them until his arms begin to ache, he can kick them hard enough to shoot pain up into his knee and hip, he can scream obscenities at them. But nothing will open the things.

Which leaves the open doorway leading into the hallway, glowing with soft 60-watt light. Across from it is the darkened master bedroom.

As he turns to leave the room, the toilet in the unseen water closet gives a gurgle almost as a way-belated afterthought, churning down the last of something that ought to have been flushed away long before Will came upstairs.


William
Unlike the panic-inducing doors and windows from his last adventure, William seems content to leave these be. They won’t open, so they get to stay decorative. Something is in the house, and he can’t shake that feeling. He drew a long, slow breath before forcing it out again. There wasn’t enough evidence to indicate that there was danger there (though some parts of his brain want to scream that there is always danger so you need to be ready and prepared for it.)

He know that he had to stay quiet, and his intention was very much to be quiet when he steps into the gently lit hallway. Typical American household. He pays attention to whatever may be on the walls, looking for any indication that would give a hint as to his location, and he counts steps. One, two, three- trying to measure how long the hallway was. The sound of the water closet snapped his attention (and his body) back in that direction.

“…”

He hadn’t flushed the toilet, or done anything of the sort. The toilet gave no indication that anything had happened while he was in there. Will barely washed his hands while he was there. His back was to the master suite for a good ten seconds before he turned back around.

William pressed his back against the wall and crept towards the dark room. I should close that door.

William
But then he gets there and realizes that there was no door. "...shit."

and is now standing in front of a giant dark room.

Michael
Physical spaces do not engage in physiological responses. Hardwood and plaster and copper wiring have no need for the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide. That is a human need.

Everyone in the audience will have to forgive Will if he gets the impression that the dark room, full of vague furniture shapes and light-consuming curtains and possibly a potted plant possibly a lurking emaciated humanoid creature, is drawing a deep breath.

And then letting it out as it waits to see what he is going to do.

William
William, still pressed to the wall, moved along the wall and patted around for some indication that there was a lightswitch nearby. He only moved away from the wall long enough to press himself to the next one. Something is here, he thinks, can’t pin the exact shape down but knows sure as the sun (the one that refuses to shine) that there is something in there with him.

His breathing stays shallow, slow, and he hopes that maybe whatever is in the room with him didn’t notice him cursing outside.

Michael
The wall is cold beneath his searching palm, cold from disuse and darkness rather than the cranking of air conditioning. In point of fact, no air moves through the place at all.

Other than the darkened room before him as it takes another deep, patient breath.

Something is just outside his periphery, taking advantage of the fact that he is pressed against the wall and seeking out a source of light. It nestles up nice and close so that when it speaks, deep and velvety and sharp, it is right in his ear:

"Don't go in there."

William
He doesn’t make a sound. Instead of gasping he just forgets to breathe entirely, body goes stiff and his hand still rests on the wall and that cold, cold room- unused and silent- breathes and waits for him as though it is expectant. Perhaps it is waiting for guests, wonders if it should put on tea or a record or light a fire. No, no fire- the room seems to like it cold.

“Where should I go instead?” he whispers, forces his voice to stay solid. His fear is real, but it isn’t crippling. Just… insistent.

William moves his arm in the direction of the sound, but doesn’t turn. Doesn’t give the room in front of him any indication that he is taking his eyes off of it (Don’t try anything funny.)

Michael
This place is not interested in either his well-being or his continued survival.

He's already survived something that would have killed him in any other instance. He can reason it away however he wants, but the fact remains that he's not in a place that has to follow any particular laws.

The room keeps breathing. He can almost hear the thing in his ear grinning.

Then a voice that ought to be familiar to him  by now rings out in the corridor upstairs.

"Will?" A pause. "William, are you in here?"

William
There is a familiar voice upstairs in a corridor, and he doesn’t call back to that voice. Against his better judgment, the young man tries to make his way across the room along the wall in hopes of finding some other entrance that he could use- something that would lead him to some place that had a path to the front door or a window or-

He takes his eyes off what he thinks might be a human-ish figure in time to try and find an exit. The thing in his ear was grinning, and the desire to leave and not give away his trail was important. Run until despair creps in.

Run into you realize running killed you once. Might not come back a third time.

Michael
In moving down the hallway, he has to slide past another darkened entryway. That space must belong to the guest suite, or full bathrooms. Both, if he were to allow himself the time and the lost sanity to go into the darkness and investigate.

Michael, tenuously present due to the combined powers of Correspondence and Mind, steps out of the shadows and peers down over the balcony on one side, then the other, and then finally over the side where Will is creeping along.

"Will," he calls down. The Chakravat has no idea what transpired in the previous episode of the Hermetic's Mindscape. That's between Will and his Avatar. "Stay there, this place isn't--"

If Will lets him get that far, they're in good shape. This ST doesn't think he will.

William
The ST was, in fact, correct. William does not let Mike get that far and tempts the programming in this particular realm. He looks up towards the sound of the voice and concludes he maybe has a little while before he either gets shot or dragged down to the basement (Whose blood is this?)

He foregoes the comfort of being able to have one side of his body covered in favor of gaining speed when he made a break for the guest room. (Please let there be light, please let there be light-) He if makes it, he shuts the door behind him.

“Fuck, fuck, fuck why is he here?”

Michael
It isn't often that Michael raises his voice. According to apocrypha, the man never panics either. He doesn't experience emotion the way other Adepts do because he's a honed blade, a clean and oiled sniper rifle.

When Michael raises his voice this time, it's with the hope of catching Will before he runs off.

"Will, wait!"

Which, of course, he doesn't. Michael doesn't swear, but he does move quickly down the spiral staircase. The Hermetic can hear the man's rapid footsteps descending right before he slams the door.

He's in a pitch black, abattoir cool room. The predominant scent in the room is ozone. That unsettling sense of nothing.

Why is he here.

Something behind him slithers, then slides, then shivers with pleasure.

There is no light.

William
There is somenothing in here with him.

The man outside doesn’t panic and doesn’t experience emotions in the way others do. He is very good at what he does, and the information William has is what he had once observed and the stories he’d heard from Grace. Grace, who thinks the world of the man, but does not do much to portray her beloved as anything other than inhuman efficiency in a humane suit. William knows him to be devoted and likable; it’s a hard mixture and he can’t reconcile the two.

What he has in front of him is lifetimes of knowing. There is Nothing there, but there is something and it slithered behind him and even if it didn’t touch him William could feel it on his skin breathe the ozone into his lungs and ruminate in pitch black. What he says next is for the ears of the universe alone, insists and repeats some poem that only makes sense in Enochian-

Nothing.

William moves back to try and find the door again. He didn’t lock it, he should be able to walk out, right? He hasn’t encountered many doors that lock from the outside. (He’s encountered enough doors that lock from the outside that it isn’t outside the realm of possibility.)

Michael
Given that he did not travel far between slamming the door and huddling down into the darkness, Will should not, it stands to reason, have to travel far to return.

He does. With his hands wherever they are, he has to take twice as many steps back as he took in with that thing following him. Nipping at his heels. Sniffing and insinuating itself around his ankles. Trying to trip him up.

Somehow Will manages to make it back to the door. He does not find it obstructed. He is able to burst through the door--

And he finds himself back in the doorway where he started.

William
Once he is outside of the door he shuts it behind him, hard. Doesn’t bother to look back and see if whatever was in that room, whatever was there closeby, whatever was underfoot and intent and slithering had stayed behind him.

William pushed himself back against the door. Closed his eyes tight and took the opportunity to force his breathing into something of a more calm state. It was a good solid minute before he could look around again.

This time, he went to the water closet and flipped the toilet seat completely up, unsure of what to expect there but checking just in case.

Michael
The house is not content to give him an entire minute to stand in silence and contemplate his place in the universe. Or its halls. Or in his own head.

Five seconds go by before a rumble begins to issue from deep within the house's foundation.  It is an unhappy rumble that grows in intensity with each passing second. Will is a smart young man, in spite of what others tell him and what he may well have internalized on his own. He knows that if this keeps up, he's going to have a quake on his hands.

It gets him moving again. Gets him to look around and open up a door. The toilet is still standing there, although it, like the sinks and the floor and the air, it seems, is dirtier than before. Covered in a fine layer of dust and skin flakes and small bits of hair that get everywhere when a room has been used and used and used and then abandoned.

Another gurgle, as if the toilet is trying to choke down an unpleasant meal. Then the lid flips open.

A red mass of tissue, like a heart or a liver, something smooth and full of blood, is jammed in the bottom of the bowl. It will not go down. As Will absorbs this, in the time between his observation and his reaction, the bowl seems to burp, and a ripple of air moves through the mass, threatening to dislodge it.

William
He was going to stand still, he was happy standing still until the house made it abundantly clear that he was not allowed to stand still and, instead, he launches himself back into the fray. So, there he is, standing in a dirty bathroom with skin flakes and dust, feeling just grimy for his own presence there.

“… the Hell?” he peered closer at the red, formerly living mass in the toilet before he seemed to realize what it was. Will has seen enough horror movies and documentaries to know what human organs look like and the gurgling toilet and the mass-

Slam!

Will was not going to wait for the little human parts to come out of the toilet and, instead made his way out into the hallway again, lingering in front of the master bedroom to give it a quick check.


Michael
That slithering hiss he heard just before he broke into a run and existed the guest room greets him when he peers into the darkness, but this time he has the dingy light from the overhead fixtures to help his eyes adjust to the lack therein.

Somewhat. The darkness of the master bedroom is so completely that it swallows the light beyond a certain point. But it persists for long and far enough.

The walls are moving. Like a nest of snakes, bits of wallpaper and baseboard and hung paintings writhe and slide and twine around and over each other.

In a matter of seconds, the entire tableau comes to a rattling halt. The room knows it's being watched.

William
He was looking for something, for that vaguely humanoid, emaciated form he had seen before. Amidst the things that might be plants or might be a bed. What he had heard in the guest room hissed and made its presence known, made it abundantly clear that the voice he had heard earlier was right: Don’t Go In There. He swallows, running his hands through his hair like he does when flustered or thinking or wound up- and he most assuredly was wound up. His heart was beating loud in his ears even though his breathing was forced and measured. One-two-three-four out-two-three-four-

Other grounding exercises weren’t going to work right now. Will didn’t want to hold onto the fact that the walls were moving and the dark was creeping in and there was Something in all of that nothing and-and-and-

William backed himself against the wall and continued along the hallway, not taking his eyes from the master bedroom. The walls were moving. Why are they moving? He turned his gaze briefly to the hallway for some kind of reprieve- only to snap his attention back to the master bedroom as he crept away from it.

Michael
And the attention of the master bedroom is straight on him as he leaves its orbit.

For all he knows, the skulking shadow creature he had seen before is still there in the no man's land that is far too dark. Waiting in the void for Will to turn his back so it can creep closer.

Down the hallway, the same scene as before: the space outside the guest room, with the second water closet and a second room for the shower. The door to the guest suite in the center of the corridor, closed unlike last time.

The spiral staircase, empty for now. Nothing and no one on the landing overhead, at least not that Will can see.

Somewhere deeper in the house, a doorknob is rattling.

William
As he backs out into the area by the staircase, he visibly relaxes noting that there was no Chakravat waiting for him, telling him to wait, here to beckon the sun to rise (there has to be another way) with the most readily understandable end there. That particular fate was avoided for now, and for that he could be grateful.

He does not open the door to the guest suite. He does not linger in the hall. He heads deeper in the house and tries his level best to ignore the rattling doorknob and knowledge that he is not alone in this place(Why isn’t Mike here? This… this shouldn’t be happening, should it?) William plays it off as the strange that comes with being awakened and continues off to find his quarry.

He was looking for a kitchen. Kitchens had things like knives and pantries and places you could hide if things got bad. Kitchens have things like refrigerators, possibly full of human parts because there was a heart or a liver or some goddamned thing in the toilet and it wouldn’t go down and whose blood is-

One. Two. Three. Four. Out. Two. Three. Four.

Michael
A shadow falls across the hallway.

Whatever the solid body impeding the light is, it's standing in the open door of the room off to the right, and its shadow is so long that it hits the baseboard of the opposite wall and cants upward. The shadow it cuts is darker than a shadow has any right to be.

There's that ozone smell again.

The shadow's head turns towards Will. Where it ought to have a nose, it has nothing. Where it ought to have a chin, it has nothing. Where it ought to have teeth, it has long shards.

Footsteps sound out on the opposite end of the house. Sensible shoes on kitchen tile. They move quickly, as if pursued moreso than in pursuit.

Then the shadow steps back, and the hall is clear again.

William
That is not his shadow.

William knows his shadow, knows the scents and sensations of his avatar, knows its voice and threats and pleas and the cracks in between where its former nature wants to shine through. This is not his shadow, not the shadow that stands stark and solid when the young man was in the umbra with Leah and Henry and Kiara when they all wore their natures openly and loudly.

Putain de merde…” he hisses when he catches a look at the shadow’s would-be teeth. He wanted to take his eyes off the shadow, but didn’t trust it enough to stay where it was, to stay attached. William’s lungs burned.

Hearing his former path impeded, the Hermetic made a run for the stairs. Upstairs. Yes, upstairs was good. No shadow creature, no assassins. But… he couldn’t shake what he’d seen. What belonged to that shadow?

What does its voice sound like? Are you familiar to me?

Michael
Another shadow strikes the stairwell halfway up but this one is easier to identify.

A burlap sack containing an object around 60 inches long with a broad section about a foot from the top, a tapered section not far from that, another broad section, and then skinny stick-like shapes that continue until the sack ends. Ropes are cinched around the ankles, the knees, and the elbows. The rope hanging the entire thing in place runs from the landing rail to the shape's neck. Its head, such as it is, slumps forward at an unnatural angle.

He can see what look like human toes cinched just outside the sack. Their nails are painted sparkling black. One of the feet has a silver toering on its longest toe. The rope creaks as the body swings with a gentle slight rhythm back and forth.

A folded piece of paper is secured to the sack with a safety pin. He has to climb the stairwell halfway in order to reach it.

William
The body makes him stop dead (ha) in his tracks. William’s stomach hurts when he sees it, his chest hurts, and something in the back of his mind aches because it has suspicions. He goes through the list of things and people that might be in that burlap bag, hanging with its head at the unnatural angle heads do when the neck snaps under its own weight.

He moves up the stairs and reaches out for the safety pinned paper. The note is unpinned and unfolded. William waits by the body as he reads…

Michael
The paper smells like incense. Depraved incense, but incense nonetheless. That thick cloying sort of smoke that is meant to provoke an emotional response depending upon the plant and the oils.

This plant is tobacco. This oil is cedar. Old cedar, cedar that resisted its burning as much as it could. Oil has a high smoke point after all and wood is used for burning but if trees had any say in it that is not what their deaths would provide. They need light to live. They have no reason for providing light. It is not as if they have a say in it.

The note's contents have the shimmering halo of a black hole. The swirling mass of nothingness that aims to suck in anything that passes the event horizon. He can feel that nothingness pulling at him. Can hear a whispering at the edges of the paper. Cannot make out what exactly the voice(s?) means to convey but the tone, that he can feel.

Time is up. The Sun is dead. The Void has come to claim him.

Behind him, the hallway bulb explodes and in exploding consumes part of the illumination downstairs.

William
Together, they do provoke a response in him- together, they are the ending of both the self in a slow, intent way and the consumption of something tall and impressive. The consumption of things that live for lifetimes beyond what humans can fathom- things that lived longer than countries and yet burned and consumed all the same. (The Void consumes. It is its nature.) He looks at the paper and he can’t stop his hands from shaking.

It is coming. His borrowed time has been reclaimed. This is what you’ve been warning me about? All those dreams? You knew this would come (I’m so sorry) and we couldn’t stop it.

“Je suis tellement désolé-” as though his apologizing through ragged breath and pounding, breaking heart would make any difference.

(No, no you couldn’t stop it, could you? You couldn’t stop it because you caused this. You brought this about, you brought down the sun with careless act after careless act you liability, you embarrassment, you-)

The bulb in the hallway explodes, claiming more light and driving the young man deeper into the house, following whatever chain of lighted paths he had. Some part of his mind realizes he’s being herded somewhere. The Void has come to claim him.

He would not go quietly.

Michael
It is around this point that Michael, less concerned about accumulating Paradox and more concerned with Will having a seizure and becoming trapped in a hellish Quiet for however long it takes him to wander through it alone, decides the least of either of their worries is his casting in another Willworker's head.

Also, he has had about enough of Will running through the house and shadows either getting in his way or swallowing up the path he had already taken. They could do this all night, hypothetically, but he isn't exactly thrilled with the idea of seeing how far this nightmare scenario will go.

So: he teleports from wherever he previously was to the top of the spiral staircase. He looks beleaguered. Whatever is in this place is affecting him, too.

His only options are to hear what the Chakravat has to say, fight him, or turn around and run down into the darkness.

William
Mike McCarrick is standing in front of him, which makes William stop in his tracks. He looks back at the ever-encroaching darkness, to Mike, and then to the body. He looks at her details hidden away, at the way the body is hung inside of a sack, and he can imagine death throes and struggle. He can imagine how hard it must have been, how hard-

“Please don’t leave her.”

As though some part of him is dead, as though he is pleading because he was pleading. Is pleading; William knows who is in there but is too afraid to look. Too afraid to confirm. Too ashamed to look at her. This is my fault (it always is.) 

Michael
Standing inside another person's head is a dangerous activity for anyone. It requires an ironclad will and near-complete mastery over one's own thoughts. Careless words or actions can have irreparable consequences, especially in a Mindscape. Mages are more vulnerable in these states. They cannot distinguish reality from their own dreams and nightmares, and many of them are not even aware that they are, in fact, dreaming.

It is like a Seeking in a way. Particularly difficult Seekings can leave the Mage scarred, too frightened to attempt further Enlightenment for a long time afterwards. If advancement is so difficult, then Ascension is an impossible task. That anyone ever becomes an Archmage is testament to the power of perseverance and belief.

This is neither here nor there. What is here is Michael's complete attention. His mutable eyes move to find the hung body in the shape of a child, or a small young woman. He does not have to ask what - or who - the body is to Will.

"Will," he says, gentle, crouching down so the two of them are more at eye level. He does not want to tower over him. Fear is threatening to consume the Hermetic and he does not want to further contribute to the darkness. "Kiara asked that I help you. You're in a Mindscape." A pause. "That's not her. She's back home, and she's okay."

You, on the other hand...

William
“Grace asked you to come,” he tells Mike, his own manufactured reality butting against Mike’s actual knowledge of what is there. William swallows, “you came, and- and I panicked- and I’m not fighting this time-”

It takes a second before it really settles in that Mike is saying something, and the man has no reason to lie to him (he has plenty of reason, you shouldn’t trust him, don’t you remember? Run-run-run you know the Void, stop fighting-) and that voice in his mind is not his own and not his avatar but he doesn’t exactly force it away. He hasn’t moved from his position, but he does hold on to the hand railing. William isn’t fleeing, but he is looking incredulously at the older man.

His attention goes back to the body, his breathing is shallow.

“I don’t want it to be her,” William says, “I don’t want any of this but I brought it anyway...”

Michael
Grace asked you to come...

Though a flicker of confusion touches on Michael's brow, he does not interrupt to ask what he's talking about. Will continues all on his own. He stays in his crouch, patient to an extent, wary of the fact that the house is beginning to breathe around them again.

He hears it, too.

"You," he says with a tense smile, "are the reason your friends Margot and Ned are still alive right now, if my understanding of the situation on the outside is correct."

A bulb behind Michael blows. That shadow Will had encountered downstairs in the library doorway begins to peek out from the darkness, defying physics to crawl along the floor towards Michael, its facial features obscured for now.

"I think I know a way out of here, but you have to trust me. I would like to avoid sticking around to see what happens when all the lights go out."

William
It’s breathing, and if they stay still for much longer the house was going to make it clear that they should not be doing so. They’re being herded somewhere and he knows that much. If this is what Mike says it is, there is a way out and the world around him very much hinges on the fact that William must stay.

And here was this interloper offering to show him a way out. William nods, eyes still distant while he parsed through the information- conflicting information but decidedly more pleasant stuff. The ritual worked. Nothing went wrong, he didn’t lead it incorrectly, he’d done what he’d sworn he done and they were alive and-

His attention turns to the shadow creeping out of the darkness, the one with its shards and its too-solid features headed towards the man who said he had a way out. If this was William’s mindscape, whatever lived here didn’t stand to gain much by killing him (though there are far, far worse things you can do to a person). Mr. McCarrick, on the other hand…

“Move!” He wasn’t as fast as Mike, or as strong, but he does move forward and tries his damnedest to pull the man out of the way, tries to do whatever he can to actually protect the person sent to help him. It isn’t that he thinks he can, or that it will do any good, but rather William thinks he must. And there is no room for error or hesitation or doubt or fear. Mike could protect his damned self, but William would try anyway.

So, there he was, attempting to move a Chakravat and put some kind of space (or if need be, barrier) between the shadow and his would-be guide.

Michael
Somehow Will's grab for Mike's arm doesn't send Mike toppling over and down the stairs. He is not the world's most graceful creature, but he is not a klutz by any stretch. He manages to compensate for the weight and the Hermetic's desire to get him out of the way of something.

Which Michael spares a quick glance over his shoulder for the purposes of orientating himself.

"Down," Michael says as he stands again, "down the stairs."

Will has to go first in order for this to work, but as soon as he's turned his back, a burst of ethereal light gives them a pale globe of protection against the darkness.

The Chakravat behind him has conjured a bulb of pure Prime and fastened it to the space over Will's head.

A delighted snarl leaves the darkness, and he can feel the shadow pursuing them at a monster's steady pace.

William
He. Hauls. Ass. He knows damned good and well that Mike can keep up with him, and he has had presumably more time to familiarize himself with the layout of the house, even if the house’s layout would change- he could only expect it to change, and his instruction was made simple enough. Down the stairs.

William is very good at moving, notes the pale glow and the fairest bit of protection for what seemed to be an all-encompassing darkness. Whatever was behind them is pleased, gets the opportunity to give chase. Again: William Holmes would not go quietly.

“Right or left?”

Michael
Two sets of footsteps thunder down the spiral staircase. Something collides with the body hanging in the center of the staircase, slides a distance, and connects with the tile floor a second after Michael's reached the ground floor.

Left or right?

"Straight. Go straight, you're almost--"

Thump!

William
Two sets of footsteps, and he can feel them in his chest when he’s running but all his brain is wanting to process is run. And it doesn’t matter what any other voice is telling him, if his Avatar is screaming for him to fight and stand and not be cowed by this or everything else is insisting that this is real, this is true, he knows it to be true, he knows this has been coming for him since when he awakened and he should just accept it-

Straight. Go straight, you’re almost-
And then nothing. A loud thump and the Hermetic skids to a stop- he could have continued forward but the voice following him wasn’t there. William spins around to see what may lie behind him or what may be impeding his companion- “Mike?!”


Michael
By the time Will stops and turns around, something has dragged something else a far enough distance that he cannot make out what is happening using the glow of the Prime flame alone.

But the flame does persist. That is a sign that Michael is, if in peril, at least still in control of his faculties.

He came here to get Will out. If that means he has to get eaten by a shadow monster so that Will will keep running, it's not the end of the world. Will escaping this Hell his mind has created for him will boot him back into his own body.

There is not enough time to convey that to Will. Michael is in Will's mind, not the other way around. And Michael is currently wrestling with a creature that doesn't have to obey the rules of man or nature.

"Go!" Mike says, bass in his tone and an edge to his voice. Like so help him God if he has to tell him twice.

William
You don’t argue with that voice. It was something he has only heard from either his father and (now) Michael McCarrick. It’s a tone his being associates with you might not like it but I’m doing this for your own good. It’s the voice that has talked numerous things out of his hands and insisted on finishing homework or not killing yourself in the bathroom floor because this was coming and it was too much. You don’t see the aftermath of that tone, and perhaps it’s for the best lest you see those indestructible figures as the humans they are.

He turns back and keeps running. Goes forward even though it rings out on his face and in his shoulders and in his labored, uneasy breathing that he doesn’t want to. It hurts in a different way; some part of him knows this isn’t right. It tries to argue that William is ignoring suffering, ignoring the plight of the world around him but…

This wasn’t real, was it? None of this was real, so could Mike really get hurt? (Of course he could, Will knew that. He was painfully aware of that) He ran anyway.

If I get out fast enough, he thinks, he’ll be okay. Keep running.

Michael
In spite of the wet crunching sound that indicates vicious teeth tearing a mammal's windpipe, Michael keeps silent. He can turn off his pain reception, but he already has so many rotes juggled and if he spares himself a gory, not-real death, it may plunge Will into darkness again.

At least this is distracting the thing that wants Will and his sanity.

Roughly thirteen feet separate Will from the front door. No light glows outside, not even from a fixture. He already knows the stars have all gone out. Neith confirmed as much for him. The spectre posing as Michael was prepared to kill him to bring back the Sun.

All Will has to do is decide he wants to defy the darkness. His Avatar is not with him in this place. Nothing will be, once that Prime flame dies out.

William
He was almost to the door but there was no light there. No light and no sun and no real path save for a continued one of running. His exit would not be out there, the road would only continue to fall apart should he continue to be pursued. There was the reminder that this was not real, but more importantly the addition of another reminded him of something vital: William Holmes had never truly been powerless here. Not unless he allowed himself to be.

The Hermetic turns, does not pursue his exit anymore because it isn’t a place.

“My name is William Charles Elijah Renee Poirot Faolán Holmes, bani Jerbiton. I am Lethe’s Emissary, and I have walked to the edges of your bank. I have taunted your gods and refused your offerings,” his words are in only the truest of languages- the language of creation. He speaks Enochian like he was born for this.

“I have driven your supplicants from their burrows, I have seen the things you mock. You are not Fear. Fear is a being of Respect and you-“ he all but spits, does not finish his thought there.

“I am Abditus Ashmi Tuvene Rheath Zhentka. You will return what you have taken. You will place the stars, you will light the Sun, and you will Wait Until Your Time.”

There is no room for negotiation in his voice. There is only insistence. There is only the impression and the reality that he is the one holding the cards here, he is the one whose Will is Law, because the universe does the Hermetic’s bidding for the sheer reason that William is who he is. And that name, that one true and solid and Real definition said it all: do not fuck with me.

Michael
One of two things was going to happen: either Will was going to keep running, burst through that door, and emerge in a shallower level of Quiet knowing that the darkness devoured Michael with no recourse, or Will was going to remember that he is the master of his own fate.

Or at least a disciple of his own fate. He is not powerless. Drained as he was, confused and afraid and bereft as he was, he was not powerless.

Yet he accepted the help another wiser Willworker offered him, in the end. That is the point of joining a cabal. Of having friends, and keeping them. Of admitting that the journey upwards is not one walked alone.

And he commanded the darkness in the only tongue to which it would respond.

It hisses. It recoils. It keeps drawing back, a curtain allowing in the daylight, and though the daylight reveals Mike's ravaged body on the tile floor, the Sun has returned.

The little Prime flame flickers, sputters, and then dies.

Sunlight streams in through the beveled glass windows flanking the front door. It floods the  foyer and the corridor, streams in through the upstairs windows, reveals the body in a burlap sack still hanging from the rail.

Within seconds, the light begins to become unbearable. He has traveled so long in darkness that the light overpowers him. But it is not painful. It is warm, and it is strong, and as he reasserts himself in the face of defeat, it wraps itself around him like a blanket borne by a long lost friend.

Eventually, he has to blink. And when he opens his eyes again, he is back in the living room of the cabal. His head on Kiara's lap, his body lain out on the sofa, his cabalmates in front of him.

He's still in Quiet, but compared to the Mindscape he just left, this is an improvement. He survived the death of the Sun.

Friday, November 17, 2017

Mike, November 1st.

William
He had left Blythe two gas stations back.

Nobody had been able to tell him where he was, of course, just giving him the same kind of dead eyed and knowing stare that came when the universe around you knew that you were a marked man. Keeping public wasn't quite working for him and, instead, William had moved on to trying to keep a low profile. It was starting to get cold, what with Samhain being the final harvest before the sun goes dormant and dies underground. Usually, after the solstice, the assumption is that the sun is reborn and welcomed into the world again. THe sun, here, would not be welcomed again. The sun, here, was like every other star in the sky. Consumed.

The trees here grew straight up instead of widning out and up and out like those spindly things not accustomed to getting the water they need, not accustomed to the abuses of wind and weather. They grew like trees in Virginia grew. (He didn't know much about Virginia, really, except that he had gone with Jenn for vacation and died there. They had been walking to her cousin's house, southern kids don't know how to tell when the ice on a river was thick enough to tread. )

We weren't here to discuss memory, but rather to set a location. William was walking beside the a creek bed listening to the slow draw of its flow. The ground was peppered with either thawing or fresh snow- William couldn't tell the difference, but only knew that it was snow and there. When you're from the south all you know about rivers is the Mississippi and everythign else had to be considered a creek. Even if the body of water was thirty feet across, it was probably a creek.

There was a bridge several hundred yards down the way, well-lit in theory but barely in practice. The bridge itself was lovely, though. Old architecture and rusting metal beams. William continued along his way towards it.

Michael
The difference between a Good Death and a murder is a monumental one and yet it is the most difficult concept for outsiders to grasp. A murder leaves the individual open to reincarnation and repetition of the same disbalancing acts as they committed to land themselves in the crosshairs of the Chakravat in the first place. A Good Death aims to right the wrong. Wipe the slate clean.

Certain creatures are a lost cause. There is no rehabilitating one who has gone through the Caul, no matter what the rumors say; a Marauder can not be brought back to sanity; Infernalists, once pacted, cannot unsign the pact. To say nothing of the Night Folk.

By now, William must be fully aware of the only way to ensure the sun will rise in the morning.

That way is standing before him, at the mouth of the bridge, looking down at the water but aware of his surroundings all the same. He is wearing black trousers and a black button-down shirt, tucked in and belted. His thick black hair is combed in such a manner that it will stay out of his face during physical encounters. His eyes appear black from such a distance, in such lighting.

The figure knows Will is some distance away, and waits to see what he will do. If he will come forward like an individual accepting of his own fate, or if he will make it harder for himself.

William
The water looks deeper than it has any right to be. We all know the subtle change to darkness when you realize how far down the bottom of  a riverbed is, but this is different. This has no bottom. The water flows but looking out at it? Could go on forever. Could fall into those spaces that simply are- without end because they truly had no beginning; it was a little like the sky in that way save for one fact.

There wasn't something in the sky. Despite all indications to the contrary, William was set with the awful knowing that there was something in the water. It kept him out; he couldn't find respite in the sky. No answers there. Perhaps that knowing extended to Mike, perhaps not.

When faced with having his being subject to the whims of another in the name of safety versus this? William chose to face the man in the suit instead of riding to Hell in a 2014 Hyndai Handbasket.

He was not so well put together. There's blood on his shirt at the collar, dirt stains. He's missing a couple buttons and he lost his vest back at Sera's party. No pocket watch. No identification. No phone. Just a set of keys he'd grabbed out of the glove box and a pack of cigarettes he'd taken from a guy at a gas station.

william decided he would make this harder for himself, and ran.

Michael
When dealing with a subject who is either unaware of their impending end or has otherwise chosen not to accept it, the best course of action is to set aside all expectations of how human beings, lost causes or not, would ordinarily behave. Even if the being is one's closest friend, a lifelong lover, their child.

This particular individual, he granted a reprieve. William Holmes is an intelligent individual. He belongs to an independent house in a tradition that has stringent standards for even its least prestigious members. He has a heart, and a full one, and he has more often than not sought to be a force of good in the world rather than a force of destruction.

He runs. The Chakravat checks his watch. Then he adjusts one of the watch face features so that--

Well. Will is running. He can't see what exactly he's doing.

But at some point, when he stops running, he's going to have to look back. And then he's going to see that Michael isn't behind him anymore.

William
If he immersed himself in what he was doing, whole-heartedly, he wouldn't potentially find himself being herded in one particular direction or the other. He would move because it was worth doing. Going away fromt her water was subconscious, but understandable. Run towards something instead of nothing (Nothing?). Things like that.

If he focused on running, he wouldn't have to face the idea that he was woefully unprepared for this. (When were you ever prepared?)  He went onto auto pilot, ran for what he was certain would take him towards civilization, only to really find that they were in the middle of nowhere. Two gas stations away from Blythe still meant he was a minimum of two gas stations away from people who would remember his face if something seemed amiss.

He wasn't in Denver. Will Wasn't even sure if he was in Colorado anymore, truth be told. He ran until his lungs hurt and his legs ached and the air burned his face. When William looked back, he saw that Mike wasn't behind him. Staying still wasn't an option.

The Hermetic talked to himself, forcing breath into his lungs and pushing out commands to the universe. I need to hide.

[Forces 2: I'M INVISIBLE, CAN YOU SEE ME? Base 3 + 2 + 1 (shit's vulgar) = 6]

Dice: 3 d10 TN6 (8, 8, 10) ( success x 3 )

Michael
[anti-magick: it's like countermagick but MEANER.]

Dice: 4 d10 TN8 (2, 2, 3, 10) ( success x 1 )

Michael
Unfortunately for Will, Michael appeared from wherever he had gone the moment Will turned around and realized he couldn't see the Chakravat anymore. He decided he needed to hide, which was smart, but the problem with that plan is that the person from whom he was trying to hide already had eyes on him, and chooses to take the same time that Will takes to set up his next move.

As Will warps light waves around himself to convince the rest of the world that he is invisible, a sharp sting hits him in the neck. It becomes an all-over warmth. That warmth sublimates into a grogginess that he could not fight even if he wanted to: it isn't a chemical entering his body. It's magick. And by the time he has that realization, well, he's unconscious.

Michael steps out of the shadow that had served as his momentary cover, returns the modified pistol he had used to shoot the dart to his holster, and lifts Will up onto a shoulder. Off they go.

---

Before Will even regains consciousness, he hears the Chakravat's warm yet emotionless voice:

"If you try to run again, I'll have to restrain you. Please don't make me regret not securing your arms and legs."

He's lying on a cot. It's not a particularly comfortable cot, but it's better than being strapped to a torture chair.

William
In a best case scenario, William Holmes is a little over one hundred and fifty pounds.
This is not a best case scenario.

He was, for the most part, manageable once he was unconscious.

---

The voice outlined what the rules of this particular engagement would be, what was a courtesy and what wasn't. He was laying down this time instead of sitting in a chair. He could still feel his extremities, so that was a plus.

William tried to push himself up into a sitting position and observe the area around him. Should his body prove to be cooperative, he wouldn't remain sitting for long and would isntead move to explore his surroundings.

"What day is it?"


Michael
They appear to be in a room in a house that, if not actually in Baton Rouge, was built in the French colonial style. Big windows to let in breezes, doors that open (hypothetically) onto balconies that lead around the entire outside wall, allowing inhabitants to roam freely outside without ever really setting foot on the soil.

It would be pleasant on an ordinary morning, the morning after Samhain, were the sun where it ought to have been and the windows and balcony doors open to allow in the air. As it is, Will is allowed off the cot because the room has no other furniture in it, aside from the uncomfortable-looking metal folding chair Mike has placed in front of the only door leading to an exterior hallway.

The windows do not open. The balcony doors do not open. He cannot break the glass. He cannot break through the walls or the floor. If he tries to use Forces, he cannot cause the lightbulb to break. Where they are at now does not have to follow the rules because Will has no control over them. He was not consulted when they were written.

And Mike is sitting in the folding chair, his posture erect and his stance alert, idle in the way Elijah could remember staff at the state hospital being idle. Muscles primed to react to the slightest hint of a patient acting up. He has his fingers knit together, his elbows resting on his thighs, and he's watching Will to see if he's started to come to terms with the finality of the situation.

"Wednesday," says Michael. "The first of November, 2017." He consults his watch without breaking his stance, only moving his eyes. "Sunrise willoccur at seven twenty-nine a.m. At present, the time is five fifty-nine a.m."

William
[Forces 2: break, damn it!]

Dice: 3 d10 TN10 (1, 1, 5) ( botch x 2 )

William
(Oh god, spend a willpower, do NOT get torn to bits in front of Mike because ouch)

William
He tries, though. Mike is sitting bored in his chair If he were in any other state he would have been awed by the kind of optential this place had. Hell, it would have made him homesick, even. He knows this kind of architecture because he'd ripped walls out of places like this and redone roofing on some sort of enforced sobriety march.

Renovations were always fun projects, keeping the bones and the soul of a place while you tore away the parts that were falling apart and needed the help. Restoring what you could salvage and replacing the rest. Maybe it was appropriate to be here. William put his hands on the edges of the window, tried to pull up and found nothing. Tried the doors, even though they wouldn't budge.

It feels like it's been a lot longer than a day. Mike tells him that the sun will be up soon but he's too busy trying to get the door to the balony open. When it becomes clear that it won't give he elbowed the glass pane. Once. Twice. It made all of the sounds that glass was supposed to make except it didn't make the one sound it is supposed to make when you throw your whole goddamned body against it.

He looked back at Mike, body tense and waiting to see when he was going to move. Not if, when. It was going to happen, and since it was going to happen it only meant that he had to try harder because he didn't want to be here. He didn't need to stay here. They had something to do, they had to fix what was happening because-

"Do you see any stars right now?"

He sounded desperate, muttered something and made some intent demand to the light bulbs and blanched. There was sweat on his brows and the air felt wrong. He pushed and the world didn't so much push back as it did slam into him. Black eye for a bad dinner kind of push. Ran-into-a-door-I'm-so-clumsy pushed back. Through negotiation alone did it not strike him immediately. (Maybe it would wait at least until company checked their watch again.)

Stillness didn't suit him, and though he pushed against the windows and tried his exits, he couldn't find them. There was one way in that was viable, and seeing it blocked made him pace. Made him push against the windows again.

"Do you? Or-or the moon? Or- what do you think I did?" as though that would make things make sense, "-because I don't- it wasn't-"

William tried to recenter himself. Okay, if the glass wouldn't break, maybe a wall would. Maybe the floor would-

"How did you know to come here?" like he knew this place.

Michael
Whatever he may look, Michael does not sound bored. Boredom would imply a lack of subjectively sufficient mental stimulation. Like this was supposed to be entertaining. Michael is unemotional. This is a man operating on nothing but logic right now.

He watches the Hermetic protest his current situation. Though it costs him another physical injury, he tries to escape the room. He cannot. A part of him knew that he would not be able to, recognized that Michael was here not simply to end his life but to ensure the damned sun will shine at its appropriate time. Lord knows what that means for the rest of the world. If the sun is only cool in Denver or if the entire planet has stopped turning or maybe Neith was right.

Question after question goes unanswered. Eyes darkened by purpose and an absence of external light remain twined around Will, and when he finally stammers to a halt, Michael draws a patient breath.

"Tell me," he says, "why I'm here."

William
[Matter 2: Let's... uh,... be water. Base 3 + 2 + 1 (because vulgar) + 3 (Because Hahahahahafuckyou), -2 quint = diff 7]

Dice: 3 d10 TN7 (1, 1, 5) ( success x 1 ) [WP]

William
This is not a person operating under logic. This is a person operating under the presumption that he Wants Out Now. One of them is calm, and it certainly isn't William because he didn't want to be here. He didn't want to do anything but Be Here.

The dark-haired man is patient; the blonde man feels like a patient.

"You can't keep me here," he tells Michael. At once defiant (you're not capable) and plaintive (don't do this to me), he encompasses all meanings of the word before finally just laying straight into defiance. When pressed against the wall beings are stripped to their cores.

He is alive today because years ago he insisted to the universe that He Would Not Die.

He backed against the balcony door, pressed his hands against the glass and tested the strength before placing each hand on the wooden portions of the door. His breathing was unsteady, but damned if he wasn't trying to keep it together. The effect didn't fall apart immediately, if only because of William's insistence on the matter.

Michael
"William."

He doesn't even stand up. He doesn't try to use intimidation tactics as he would if he were dealing with a Sleeper. A Sleeper might have fought to the death to escape, but Michael is not above invoking Mind on a Sleeper who will not calm down enough to face their actions.

Dealing with a prone-to-Quiet Hermetic who will not calm down when called to task for putting out the sun, well, that's a whole other can of worms.

"I am not keeping you here. This is a temporary arrangement. If you don't step away from the wall and work with me on a solution to our dilemma, then I'm afraid I am going to have to kill you."

William
"-I'm going to die either way-" he was quick to reply, "-you're not going to believe me."

Michael
"Try me."

William
"I didn't put out the sun! I didn't make the stars go away it's just- the sun isn't going to come up. The stars aren't going to come back, They've noticedus. Whatever is out there has finally started paying attention and it's all going back-

"Giant crunch from big-fucking-bang- I don't know-"

He pressed his back against the doors and slid away from Mike and into what he was holding onto may well be an exit if he could keep his focus on the effect. That focus, however, was dwindling.

"You don't negotiate with the Void."

He closed his eyes.

"Please tell me that's not real this time... that it's never been real... and... and you're just here about Ned and Margot."

Michael
"This is the last time I'm going to tell you this."

He means it this time. Mike stands up from his seated position and picks up the chair, not to use it as a weapon but to fold is so that he can get it out of the way. He sets it into a corner and begins to cross the room to William.

"I believe you. You didn't put out the sun. The sun is not the issue. The sun will rise when it's supposed to, whether you cooperate with me right now or not."

A tipping point. Will isn't strong enough to fight him off or fast enough to evade him. He's two steps away from being within arm's reach and that amiable, karmically-bound gentleman who sat in his living room two years ago and relieved him of responsibility insofar as the Artist went is now looking at him with the same singular purpose he had once reserved for a Nephandus.

"Step away from the wall, William."

William
I believe you-"You do?"

You didn't put out the sun. (William looked almost relieved) The sun is not the issue (which gave way to confusion)-"Then what is the-"

The sun will rise when it's supposed to, whether you-"-I'm not running, I'm not fighting-"

-cooperate with me right now or not- "what do you want?!"



Step away from the wall.

It's called malicious compliance. Mike told him to step away from the wall, so he did. William made a run for the door.

[Time 3: Haul. Ass. Bro.. Diff 3 + time 3 + vulgar 1 + 3 = 10, -1 quint]

Dice: 3 d10 TN9 (4, 8, 9) ( success x 2 ) [WP]

Michael
And Michael was expecting something like this to happen.

Ignore everything he might have said or done otherwise to have given off the impression that expectations have no place in a Good Death. At the rate Will is protesting and carrying on, he's beyond help. This isn't a Good Death anymore. It's just a euthanization.

As soon as he sees an opportunity other than the one that has literally been sitting in front of him the entire time, the Hermetic makes a break for the door. Without pausing to do so much as blink, the Chakravat bolts to flank him, then catches the younger, weaker man around the throat and effectively headlocks him.

This maneuver is one William may well have become familiar with if he were ever an actual prisoner rather than a patient. One of his arms ends up behind his back with the wrist wrenched so far up, towards his neck, that his knees decide they don't want to work anymore.

Michael gives a long-suffering sigh as he restrains the Hermetic, taking advantage of his greater size and ability to use all of his limbs to forcibly walk William over to the cot, where he slams him face-down before putting a knee in his back to make sure he doesn't thrash too hard. The Hermetic's arm is still halfway up his own spine.

In a Mindscape, things happen that don't make sense.

In this Mindscape, Michael removes a pistol from his holster, but it was not the pistol he used to fire a dart earlier. This time, it has a 9mm clip in its stock.

The laws of physics just sort of shrug, here. William feels the punch of the bullet, but does not hear the actual shot. It doesn't matter. When he opens his eyes again...

Michael
[AHAHAHA COMMERCIAL BREAK FUCKERS]

Saturday, November 11, 2017

Of Tribunals, October 31st

William
There weren't any stars outside; William grimaced at the window. "...Fuck."

Neith
Her back is to him, one palm on the cold window. She sighs.

William
He rolled out of bed, shoving the sheets back where they were, "hey."

Neith
No clouds, no moon. Nothing. This troubles her. He has always troubled her.

William
"... you see it, too?" his breathing wasn't steady. They didn't touch.

Neith
Thanks to the window's reflection, her gaze meets his. Yes, William. She does.

William
What his reflection does and his body does are different. He turns; it doesn't.

Neith
"The tribunal is going to be the least of your problems," she says.

William
"Nobody is saying anything about this-" he gestures to the sky "- this is-"

Neith
"This is un-fucking-natural. I can't believe you--" She swallows. "You should've called sooner."

William
"I've seen this for years- I thought- it's never been real- it's never-"

Neith
"How has it not been REAL? William? It's your fucking Avatar. YOU never--"

William
"-at some point it fucking stops, okay?!" He pushed away from the window.

Neith
She whirls around, eyes flashing like knives drawn.

"YOU'RE SO--"

Oh look. Remote.

William
"I'M WHAT?!" It;s a good time to wear pants. Get on that, kiddo.

Neith
Alicia would cry. Neith flicks her wrist, sends the controller flying. At Will.

William
Pants were more important, but damn the remote hurt- "-Jeezus! What's your-"

Neith
"My name is Neith Adelaide al-Khalid bani Bonisagus, Breaker of the Inverse Pentacle--"

William
"-fucking Hell, are we going to use our titles now? If we are-"

Neith
"--and my problem is YOU'RE MY FRIEND. YOU BURNED OUT THE FUCKING SUN."

William
"FUCKING THINGS UP IS WHAT I'M GOOD AT! MY INTENT DOESN'T MATTER!"

Neith
Her nostrils flare. Her jaw sets.

Try ducking a flying ice bucket, WILLIAM.

William
He doesn't dodge; Will didn't make much noise on impact but did wince.

Neith
"WHO THE FUCK TOLD YOU THAT? KALEN? You're gonna listen to the--"

Breathe.

William
"-It's fucking true- Grace is calling to see if I'm salvagable-"

William
(William Charles Elijah Renee Faolan Holmes, Lethe's Emissary,)

Neith
She uses his Shadow Name. That's how he knows she's mad as hell.

William
It's enough to make him stop because she said his Whole Damn Name.

Neith
She turns around again. Crosses her arms.

"Do I mean nothing to you?"

William
"No!" he stopped, "I mean-"

Dumbass.

"You mean everything-"

Sigh.

"That sounds- ugh-"

Neith
"Sounds truer than anything else you've said in the last five minutes."

Dumbass.

William
"I don't want to leave you, and I don't want to die."

Neith
"Yeah, well," she sighs, "you're the one who decided to stay in Denver."

William
"Arguably, the sun could have gone out in Boston, too."

Neith
This is how you get hit with a lamp, Will.

William
[Ack! Dodge? +2 diff because your brain wants to hit you with a damn lamp]

Dice: 5 d10 TN8 (1, 1, 3, 3, 8) ( success x 1 )

William
The lamp makes a solid crack and now Will is on his ass.

Neith
"I really… I respect your autonomy, and I love you, but I wish..."

William
"You love me?"

Why does that hurt?

Neith
"Yeah." She fixes her gaze out at the starless sky. "Sucks, doesn't it."

William
"... I love you, too."  He looked at her; his reflection looked outside.

Neith
No more throwing. She does, however, knock over the padded desk chair. Telekinetically.

Friday, November 10, 2017

Not Grace, October 31st.

William
Kalen took William to the one place that William knew would be safe, despite the fact that he knew that it wasn't safe. It was just such a force of habit that his mind built the world there. If Kalen was going somewhere, Kalen would see GRace. If Kalen and Grace were together, they would be at the warehouse.

It was as William had remembered, with his room largely intact though a ghost town because he barely maintained any sort of residence wherever he went. The library was still a work in progress, and Chloe- Grace's poor houseplant- was still in very real danger of being executed by the Virtual Adept.

William had recused himself to the shower immediately coming home (Home? Was this home? it had been, once, given Jenn enough cause to be concerned because he shacked up with some stranger he'd just met and was immediately withdrawn shortly thereafter.)And did not remove himself for at least an hour. He was still nursing a concussion, and a fairly bad one at that. Though Kalen had assisted him out of the house he hadn't given any indication that he was going to be assisting the younger Hermetic in fixing his damages. No, William would have to do that on his own.

The hour he took in the shower gave Kalen time to talk to Grace. What Grace did after that shower was completely up to her. William shut himself in the library, piled up books, and tried to find solace there.

Not Grace
She has to announce herself with a "Hey." for him to notice her appearance. Grace always did seem to just appear from nowhere, whether or not teleportation were involved.

The library feels like her -- as though the books themselves might take wing. It is her place. Her home. She does not look happy -- but who would?

"I've talked with Kalen. Hopefully some sense into his skull," she says, walking into the room, leaning her head back against the bookshelves. She prefers to stare at the ceiling rather than at him.

William
She wouldn't look at him, or rather she did what Grace does and looked at the ceiling instead of the person because Grace was never particularly good at people. William found himself staring at the book in front of him, and though there were words and diagrams and everything there, not a word of it made sense. His brows knit, his eyes narrowed and when he turned his attention back to Grace his distress was obvious.

At least he wasn't covered in blood anymore.

"What did he tell you?" he asked warily, "I... I don't know how well the house is warded since Sepulveda left, but... you might be able to see- I don't know. It's- it can't be that bad."

He doesn't believe it himself. William obviously doesn't believe it, and he wears his fear openly.

Not Grace
"Well, not gonna lie -- he told me you fucked up," she says, to the ceiling. "Ned and Margot are dead, there was some invocation of demons or whatever..."

She rolls her eyes at that one, because technomancer.

"It's pretty bad, Eli... Will. But. Not so bad that I recommend throwing you at The Order. They might think they have some claim over you just because you signed on the dotted line, but fuck that, honestly."

William
"It wasn't like that-" quick, clipped "-he wasn't there, he didn't see it- something was breaking through we had to stop it. I-I don't know what happened after that..."

He looked from Grace back to the book. The words that didn't seem like anything more than scribbles and the useless words. Brought his mind back to the useless sigils- how did he know it wasn't like that.

"But... we have to tell them. I can't- it... I wouldn't do that."

Why would I do that? it sounded like. William was baffled, confused and offsettled by the idea that he would do such a thing, that he would knowingly lead a ritual that would end the way it did, but... he had to have known. He had to have figured something. William Holmes wasn't stupid, and there was always some question as to whether or not he understood the implications of his actions.

What if he did know what he was doing this whole time?

Not Grace
Grace sighs, crosses her legs in gangly form. "Well, regardless of how it happened? What happened is an embarrassment to them."

You, Will, are an embarrassment. You know that, right? Every group that takes you under its wing is taking on a liability.

"They won't exactly be in a forgiving mood. Even if it wasn't entirely your fault, a Verbena is dead, and it looks like a Hermetic conjured demons to do it. Politics are going to get... shitty."

For the first time, she peels her gaze off of the calming ceiling, to give him a look that feels like she's trying to pin him to the chair.

"They might decide that you are expendable. And I don't agree. We need a neutral, trusted party."

William
There are things she says and things that he hears. And someone didn't have to say it to make it true- he was a liability. They knew it in Baton Rouge, they knew it here, and now the entire Order would know it.

"I guess it was only a matter of time, I guess? Before... y'know.. something like this happened or got this bad," he said again, nodded along because he trusted Grace. he trusted Grace's judgment even though they'd had ups and downs. "Can't I-"

He looked back at her, and he didn't move from his spot. She was talking about a neutral party.

"What if I just left? No more people, no more other mages, no nothing. Just... somewhere else. Somewhere not here.

"What is that neutral third party here to decide?"

Not Grace
"If you just left? Talk about making everything worse, man. That would not look good. Remember, you are dealing with a bunch of people who can find you wherever you decided to go.

"No. That would not help."

That gaze of hers meanders down to the floor, apparently unable to even look at him again.

"That 'third party' would... decide if you can be salvaged. I know a guy. I trust this guy, Will. Enough people trust him that if he looks into this and figures out that you don't need your soul ripped apart, they'll back off.

"Just don't make this worse, Will. Please."

You know you're going to make it worse.

William
"Salvaged?!" his voice broke at that, eyes finally as far away from the useless book as they could be and he shrunk back into his chair. Heart was racing as it started to dawn on him what exactly it was that Grace was talking about and all he could think about was Eleanor and how she'd said these things to him before.

"I'm not a burned out processor, I'm a person," he said.

There was the awkward, long silence. She wouldn't look at him, but he looked at her. Looked for some sign of weakness or some sign to say that she knew what was happening and that she would sympathize or-

"... what do you think?"

Not Grace
"Ugh, of course you're a person," she says, arms going into the air and a hand landing over her eyes. This whole thing is giving her a headache.

"I think that... as a person who legit cares about you? I think that my plan is the best chance you've got of making it out of this alive. I don't know what happened, okay? Maybe some malevolent entity framed you or whatever. My point is that there are powerful people out there who will come to some conclusion about what happened, and it's much better if they don't have some ulterior motive in mind when they do."

She bites a lip, looks up at him again with a worn-out look to her. "For the record? I think whatever happened, your heart was in the right place. It always is. But sometimes, man? Sometimes... that's not enough."

William
"This... this can't be- something has to be up, though. I heard Ned, I heard Ned and Doc and I swore I heard Kiara and two of those people weren't even at the ritual so why would I hear them? Something isn't right here... it..." his thoughts were moving faster than his brain, and his brain was already fuzzy on account of the fact that he had a rather impressive concussion.

He stood up, the stillness hadn't suited him and the young man took to doing what he usually did- he paced. He moved, he couldn't sit still because he had to think and none of this made sense, but-

"What if your third party doesn't believe me?"

There was the undercurrent there, the feeling of something he knew and gnawed at him; people weren't going to believe him. What was worse? An executioner who didn't believe your innocence or a jury that knew you were innocent and sentenced you anyway?

He stopped and looked at her, "I swear I tried, Grace. I did everything right it... it just... none of it makes sense now. The books, the signs, the ritual- none of it."

He swallowed, and found himself faced with the idea that, perhaps, he had done this. Lies work best when you believe them yourself.

Not Grace
Will paces, and Grace stays staring at the floor, tired perhaps? Or just done trying to follow him.

"Mike's good at this, Will. It's his... obligation? Duty? To get this right. He'll do right by you, I promise. Isn't that the better option? I don't hand out promises like candy, you know. I trust him that much. I'd trust him with anyone's life."

With anyone's death.

She doesn't promise that Mike will believe him, after all.

William
"Will it hurt?"

Not Grace
This time, it's Grace's voice that cracks. Another person might run up and hug him, but this this Grace, and as long as Will has known her, she just doesn't do that. "It doesn't have to."

"I'm sorry, Will. I wish I had some better choices to offer."

William
[Manip+Subterfuge: I'm totally not running away from my impending death]

Dice: 7 d10 TN6 (2, 3, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8) ( success x 2 ) [Doubling Tens]

Not Grace
[Perception + Empathy: You totally are.]

Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (1, 1, 1, 2, 10) ( success x 1 )

William
"I... I know, I know it's hard, this can't be easy for you. And, for what it's worth, I'm... I'm really sorry," he told her. Somehow, he felt the need to apologize. Somehow, he felt it was necessary to calm her down and make things okay even though he was the one who was probably going to die in the next few days. "I never wanted to hurt anybody."

"I... uh... figure I should swing by the house and see if Sera is around so I can let her know what's up. Go out with a party or a shit ton of booze or whatever," he laughed, a huff of air and sound, "I mean, it's not like there's any problem with it. Best case scenario I'm celebrating and worst... Well, it's better to go out without regreting anything."

Damned hedonist to the end, shot Grace a grin before sobering up some.

"How's Kalen handling this?"

Not Grace
"Kalen is... being Kalen. Drinking a lot of tea and whiskey probably, and being very restrained. He always wants to seem so strong."

He's not strong though. No, he's blaming himself, isn't he? Couldn't stop you from fucking everything up.

"Will. Don't... overdo it? There's still a chance you can get out of this, okay?"

If you even want to get out of this.

William
"C'mon, when do I overdo it?" he said with a grin. The young man started to head out to grab his things from his room. He didn't have his phone with him, but that was probably for the best. Didn't need someone tracking him any easier than he already was.

"Just... wait a few days for me, okay? Please, at least a day, I need to put in for a substitute for my classroom."

Not Grace
"I can't promise that, man. Don't go to your class. This is a little bigger of a deal than that, okay?"

She doesn't grin back at him. Just shakes her head.

"Always. You always overdo it. I'm asking you, please, just stay low, don't tell The Order just yet, let me try to help you. Be good."

For once, do the smart thing? Eh, Will?

William
"Fine, fine. I'll be good and low key," he acquiesced, although it hardly seemed like he was having to bend hard to do what she'd asked.

"I'll be good... just... worst case scenario, make sure my parents find out I'm dead, okay?"

A little more grim than his intention seemed. Resolute, almost like he was going to go quietly.

Elijah never did anything quietly.

Not Grace
"I'll let them know. I've got to let Doc know, and... everyone else besides," she says, and crosses over to a window, slumps against it as she stares outside.

William
He nodded, and with that he started to head back to his room. He might have wanted to go out, but at that juncture his head hurt too much to be able to really function. He had no idea that the sun wouldn't come up when he woke up, that there would be no sun. That people wouldn't acknowledge it. Just another thing that was wrong that nobody seemed to see.

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Halloween, a cross section

Ned Plus
The weeks have been trundling on, with the house growing quieter and quieter.

Bodies have entered and made themselves at home. Bodies have left and the space they once occupied is an open wound, driving those that remain to cringe and maybe isolate to protect themselves. Perhaps that's why things haven't escalated to 'concerned' until now.

It is the eve of Halloween. Decorations were minimal from the house's resident Orphan, who has been studying Corr in the spare study in the west wing of the house for a couple of weeks now. Time had him doing the same, constantly lost in the manic disruption of when. Corr is proving to provide the same level of incomprehensible where. He emerges only occasionally for bathroom and eating breaks or to poke his head in on the other two to see that they aren't dead. Then it's back to studying.

Halloween, though is different:

The door to the second study is open. The hallways are quiet in a brittle sort of way, with each floorboard creak promised to a loudness that is more noticeable then forgettable. The air reeks with acrid static, as if fresh before or after a lightning strike. it permeates the hallways and gathers under the nostrils, clearing sinuses and dipping nervous energy out of limbs and veins.

One might easily attribute this to the House being the House or the resident Mad Scientist doing what he does but there has been an absence. Enough that the play of electric chemical is difficult to explain.

Until one visits the main study.

The Tower of Books has been growing steadily. At first not noticeable, lost in the plethora collection that has been pulled from the shelves and left on the table, it isn't difficult to miss a book stack that numbers five or six high. It's when that stack begins to reach nine or ten that perhaps one of the kids has noticed the oddity and details around it. Even then, this could be dismissed as some odd little game. Someone's been building the stack in their spare time and leaving it behind for others to watch grow.

But inside of a couple of weeks, that singular stack has become over a dozen tall. Haphazard, impossibly balanced, the more than a dozen cinder touched, titleless books have been flying off random shelves one by one to form the Tower it has become now.

And Tonight, on Hallow's Eve, they sit that many deep as they had the previous night. The study is a mess of random books cleared from the table and scattered to the various couches and furnishings. The table is clean of all other paraphenalia, chairs pushed to the outer walls, random wrappers, dishes and foodstuffs tucked into the kitchen and even larger sofas and nightstands dragged noisily toward the study's far eastern side.

Because tonight, the Tower of books has begun to smolder. Not impressively, but enough that wisps of smoke burp from between the occasional page, feathering in the air around the tower before vanishing into nothing. Small sparks of light accompany these exhales, azure blue and as momentary as a sweating campfire. The pungent stench of lightning is all too noticeable in here. The origin point that has seeded the entire house by now and is making it noticeably uncomfortable to breathe in.

Enough that the call goes out if no one has bothered yet to arrive from their isolation, or if one of them has come and the other(s) are yet to arrive.

"Meeting!"

Bellowed from the Study, where Ned is sitting on a chair far from the table and the Tower. His head is in one hand, that palm decorated with a bloody dish towel, the hair on one side spiky and mashed with blood from a gash riding one side of his hairline. He meets the eyes of anyone who enters, bags of tiredness under each, offset by the vibrant sort of worry that comes with 'Fucking Up and Paying for it'.

"...Something's happening."

Is all he says. Closing his eyes and wincing, while adjusting the makeshift bandage at his brow.

William
Halloween is loud. It's always been loud with the sounds of children shrieking with terror and then delight and the neverending parties that seem to come about regardless of whether or not the holiday was taking place on a weekdayor a weekend. Students were restless, and even if they were in high school they were very demanding of candy. William had imposed a "Can you keep your mouth shut" grade for the class at the beginning of the year. Every time anyone said something outside of class discussions the class lost a point. Generally, this was supposed to be an easy grade. Shut your mouthes and get an easy A for the day that would inevitably bolster test scores and what-have-you.

Today, the first period class got a 42. Second period wasn't much better.

He'd come to enjoy the relative quiet at home, though. Nothing incorporeal asking favors or whining or chattering heedless of the fact that others could hear their conversations. Will could come out to the house in the middle of nowhere and breathe. Be alone without having to be alone. For the most part, the usually talkative man kept his mouth shut. He spent a lot of time reading. Medical texts that went over his head and books on herbalism and antiquated anatomy books and even things on gardening for Chrissake. He'd been studying Life- Animae, Vitae- William was capable of repairing basic, simple things but had not succeeded yet on making the jump to more complex life forms like the ones he was currently living with.

The request had been simple: don't do anything stupid until at least Halloween, and Mister Holmes was accident free. That, of course, seemed content to end that night. Meeting! and it was off to the study. Floors creeked along the way and he showed up dressed in what he'd worn to work that day, which was basically the culmination of what hipsters wear when they get a real job. Once he got to the room his eyes went from the smoldering, precarious tower to the bloody towel to-

"Fuck, Ned, what happened? When did that-" a gesture to the book pile "-happen? Do you need another towel?"

Ned Plus
"It started about a week ago, I think. I thought one of you was just dicking around-"

Ned flips a hand out at the book tower that continues to burp blue sparks and smoke wisps from between random pages. There is a flush of the electric without the caustic burn of smoke to the air in the study and no one's sinuses have been any clearer then they probably are now.

"But if the Book's are measurable by one a day, then this has been going on for at least two weeks."

Ned sighs which turns into a wince, pulling the dish rag away from his face to reveal the jagged burst of a wound that looks as if something tore a thin out out from under his skin.

"I tried digging one of them out with a bit of kinetic Force and promptly got slapped something fierce by 'dox for it." Ned bounces his brows up as if to indicate the wound and immediately regrets the decision as a thin trickle of blood seeps down over his right eyebrow. He pushes the dish rag back into place, covering one eye in the process while still regarding William across the room.

"I cleared the table and the surrounding area just incase but everything I've tried from physical to working has failed so far." A pause. "...Also, it's Halloween and this House used to have Nephandi oriented owners so..." Another wince, though metaphorical this time because that was probably something they should have mentioned to their newest Cabal member prior to this moment.

Margot
As it just so happens, autumn is Margot's very favorite season of the year.  They all have their pros and cons, and given her honest effort to keep a 'Verbena perspective' on the world (an effort to prevent accidentally isolating from the Tradition, what with her lack of a coven), she was probably going to find far more to love through her Nature-Witch-tinted glasses about winter in the upcoming weeks that she hadn't before.  The timing of the seasons, the assignment to lay low, and Doc's depature all lined up nicely, because Margot's way of coping was to begin spending more time in the yard, or the mountains, than in the house itself.

She had laid claim to two specific spaces in the house, and not unlike how Doc had treated his lab she treated her spaces very similarly; though she didn't come out and forbid the boys from entering the large closet space under the stairs to the second floor, any glimpse within would tell that it's a private space, with the motors and pesels and candles and jars and bits of bone and feather and plant that were tacked up on walls and shelves and surfaces.  The walls didn't actually drip, but they were so thick with the Essence of her Work that to lay a hand on the wallpaper would send a creeping discomfort up the spine, and when that hand pulled away there'd be the sense of something awful, like old blood, left behind.  The second space was the back of the yard, a corner where she'd taken overgrown hedges and bushes and Shaped them into a shrine.  There were no 'Keep Out' signs posted anywhere, but the dense thorny branches that twined their way through the shrine were unwelcome and it felt like the kind of place where the Big Bad Wolf might be waiting to snatch you up when you're not watchful.

The garden was where she'd been working when the muffled bellow of meeting! pushed through an open window somewhere at the back of the house and reached her ears.  Margot arrived a little ways behind William, heavy brow flexed in curiosity and the inconvenience of being interrupted.  She was dressed in a pair of jeans and stocking feet (shoes kicked off at the door), and had a towel in her hands as well, though the dark streaks on the fabric and how she was rubbing her hands suggested she'd been working with dirt instead of blood today.  She'd managed to keep the dirt off her black sweatshirt, but there was a touch showing in the dark brown hair that hung around her face and to her shoulders.


The expression of inconvenience quickly wiped away, and was replaced by a conflicting expression of worry, concern, fascination, and 'oh fuck' as she processed the smoldering and sparking tower of books simultaneous with the blood on Ned's face and towel.

"I thought we were laying low until Halloween?  I mean, I know it is Halloween, but..."  She shook her head and finished wiping her hands off, tossed the towel on a nearby surface that wasn't someplace people sit, and entered the room more fully as opposed to hovering indefinitely in the doorway.  "What's going on?"


Assuming it was re-explained in brief, as she wasn't quite in the room for the first time things were relayed, she was soon scowling heavy once more and standing several feet from the stack of books, facing it directly with her arms crossed firmly across her chest.  Analyzing, processing, deciding.

"I doubt the backlash was a coincidence; I wouldn't be surprised if harder forces of Work would just backfire even bigger.  Maybe...."  She wrinkled her nose, deepening the expression of displeasure as she continued.  "Maybe we're just going to need to see what happens next?"



William
I tried digging one of them out with a bit of kinetic Force and promptly got slapped something fierce by 'dox for it.
"Like they're an immutable fact of reality," he said, "normal Work shouldn't yield that kind of result."

William frowned and crossed his arms. The young man peered cautiously at the pile of books again, all electric and sparked.

There was the suggestion, of course, when Margot came in that they wait it out to see what happens next. William went for a pocket and procured a pocket watch, which he started carefully winding. "I could always check and see what's likely to happen next," all the while tending to the watch with the slightly cracked face and the hints of blood in the inlays.

"At the very least we need to be sure the books don't burn the damn house down."


Ned Plus
"You want to wait and see?"

Ned's incredulous expression made the wound above his brow crinkle, like a second mouth of disapproval aimed squarely at the Verbena that's come to join them. Had had indeed reiterated for Margot on entry, though the Orphan had yet to pick himself out of the sofa chair he had plopped himself into.

Ned glanced at William as the Hermetic pulled a watch from his pocket and began to fiddle with it in that way and manner Mages have a tendency to do when working up to something. The concern on his face turned to worry and a wince, the dish rag left to hover between his knees while he regarded the happening.

"As far as I can tell, working at the damn books is going to cost us something fierce...Just...be careful about what you do."

* * * * *

The Tower itself seems to gather the electric sensation in the air around it. One can feel an almost enforced gravity being applied to limbs and stray parts left to dangle too far from the body. It tugs on errant fingers, flaps of clothing and shoe laces. It pulls at eye-lashes, protruding lips or the tongues when the mouth opens to speak. If one pays attention and close enough to the things Ned has moved away from the table, there is the occasional flutter of a book page or cover snapping open in the Tower's direction or a sofa cushion pulling slightly out of it's groove.

Still the books spit wisps of smoke. Sparks gather in the air around it, lingering a little longer now.

The air is fickle with static.

Margot
[Intelligence 4 + Occult 2: Brain Strain!]

Dice: 6 d10 TN7 (1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 7) ( success x 2 )

William
Perception 4 + Esoterica 2 + Library 3 = 9, diff 6

Dice: 9 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 3, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 9) ( success x 5 )

Margot
[Plus library!]

Dice: 1 d10 TN7 (2) ( fail )

Ned Plus
William has seen practical designs around Rituals before. This matches a large amount of various teachings handed down from several past mentors, teachers, lovers and one time discussions.

A central spire or lode point, that acts as a Focus for the ritual's efforts; a Mystical Lightning rod for any energies to latch onto incase of stray or errant backlash. The spire acts as a concentrating force, meant to alleviate the pressures on the ritualist(s) involved, focusing the power of the ritual into the spire itself. This explains why the books remain as immobile as they do, even against working. It would more than likely take a significant level of power to disrupt the spire though what that would do to the Ritual being enacted here would probably be catastrophic at the very least.

Normally, Lode points like this, have neighbouring anchors within a certain proximity as well. Points through which the spire remains grounded, not unlike ropes attached to a ship mast. An umbrella under which the storm of power can remain contained and in check, even monitored. Similarly immobile as the Spire itself, though perhaps more susceptible to working or moving then the Spire.



Margot
The expression Ned offered her was returned back, but with a bit of snideness tossed in as well.  He didn't seem to think waiting and seeing was a good idea, and naturally a girl smart as Margot took a little offense at having her suggestion greeted in such a manner.  But this certainly wasn't anything new, it was an exchange the pair had no doubt duplicated in any number of conversations or situations before now.  Soon enough she was also paying mind to the watch that Will had produced from his pocket.

"I suppose you could try," she added, in reference to peeking forward to see what would come.  "I'm worried about the Work involving it, but if it's just a peek, I suppose we'll see...."

The tug of gravity was noted when Margot came a little nearer, and with how close she stood now it was enough that the ends of her hair were pulling ever-so-slightly forward in response, the static causing it to want to rise away from her head and giving her goosebumps for how it felt like a charged tickle across her skin.  She caught herself leaning backwards some and planting her feet squarely to compensate for the effect this smolder-sparking stack of books was causing.

This time around she didn't try to puzzle out what was going on aloud, but lapsed into quiet while waiting for William and his attempts at manipulating Time to see what was going to happen.  The longer she stared the further her gaze slipped into the middle-distance, but she seemed to have less anxiety about what might happen to the Hermetic when he tried working his Magick, at least.

William
William's gaze narrowed at the pile of books, hands stopped winding and his fingers rested on top of the watch. "This is acting as a central point- a lode point- for a ritual. This is the center of what's going on and there are connections that should build out from here outward.

"If this has been building for two weeks, we're looking at two weeks of concentrated ritual practice building to a point and this? Is more than likely going to be the point at which all of the efforts of said ritual is going to be released. It's effective ritualcraft- it's like this thing's a lightning rod and any of the crap going on out there, which would probably also explain the backlash issues. You'd have to either be really dedicated of really powerful to move this thing.

"Normally Lode points have anchors within a certain radius essentially holding it up. They're a little more maleable than this thing, but we could actually get a little headway on those versus what we have here."

He let out a long breath.

"God, I hope I'm explaining that right."

He looked down at his watch again, and got on to doing what he said he was going to do, stomach tense and ready to take a right and proper beating from reality.

William
Time 2 + Entropy 1: What's the most likely outcome of all of this?

Base 3 + 2 (sphere) + 1 (vulgar) = 6- 1 (taking time) -2 (Quintessence)= diff 3

Dice: 3 d10 TN3 (3, 4, 6) ( success x 4 ) [WP]

Ned Plus
William's senses begin to unravel around the effect he works into existence, replacing them with strange sigils and numbers that peel away each sense of the now and pull into existence, each sense of the 'will be'

When everything settles and he glances into the future, it is into the face of a man standing on the table, wearing the rags of or shroud of something long dead. He stares at William with a thick tangled beard, his skin tone the grey of a crypt creature, his head bald and etched in the faded swirls and whorls of ink.

His eyes are the azure blue of the sparks and his hands, curled into reflexive fists at his sides.

The stench of lightning, cloudbank and storms is nearly overpowering.

The bloom of crackling lightning is visible on several bookshelves, emanating from singular tomes or volumes on different shelves from different cases.

"Hello, little one." The voice is deep, resonant and echoing. As if spoken from far away and yet audible for miles. The man, crystal blue eyes and lividly bright, is looking directly at the time displacing William, as if they were in this particular moment right now and not in the 'what will be'.

Then William is blinking, as if shunted forcefully from the moment, a thrumming headache drumming in his head at the effort. His skin prickles around his fingertips, which spasm around the pocket watch threatening to drop it with their involuntary twitches.

Ned Plus
There is usually a build up before a revelation. Something to let those involved know that what is supposed to happen, is happening.
This isn't the usual.
The three are approaching this issue with a varied sense of analytics when, quite suddenly and unapologetically, one of the books widens along it's seem, like a mouth being pried open from the inside and something comes scuttling out in a burst of liquid blue sparks that splatter, neon gleaming, onto the table.
The thin, birthed in sickly gelatinous lightning, climbs and clambers down the tower, shedding droplets as it goes, before finally climbing onto the table a small ways from the tower for the three to openly see:
It is a hand.
The wrist is severed, ragged and sawn, the skin a ripe crypt gray. Fingernails are split down to the cuticle with the flesh beneath an actinic white. It hovers on all five fingers, not unlike some necromantic familiar, wrist bone jagged and jutting from it's severed stump. It sits there poised as if in regard of the trio, slim veins of liquid neon blue dribbling through the cracks in the skin.


* * * * *


Ned watches this happen, his hand already reflexively reaching for the knife he didn't have on his person because he rarely ever carried it around inside the house. This was their safe space...right?
"Fuckin'..." It trails off, the Orphan's head shaking slowly while he stares unblinkingly at the severed hand on the table.


* * * * *
The Tower's various books have all begun to burp wider and with more frequency, movement visible in the dark gaps where the pages yawn like hungry maws.
On the table, the fingers of the severed hand have begun to tap out an oddly discordant rhythm.












Margot
The split in the seam caught Margot off-guard and caused her body to give a small jerk from the start it gave her.  When something sticky and gooey but still electric burst its way from the book and began to scuttle about, Margot gave a small shrill yelp, like a scream turned to a brief exclamation, and took a few quick steps back away from the table.  It was with sheer disbelief that she stared at what was revealed to be a dismembered hand, mouth slightly agape and naturally wide eyes set almost to the point of bulging.

Then it started to tap out a rhythm, and Margot found her voice and use of her body as well.

"Nope, fuck that."It was easy to forget that she was a quick thing-- well, perhaps not for Ned who had worked with her in teaching knife defense many times over-- but all at once she'd gone from standing and staring to lifting a particularly large and heavy looking book off a chair cushion where it'd been stashed after being moved away from the sparking Lode of a book-tower.  Just as promptly as she'd seized the book she was palming its back cover with one small hand and then sending it flying toward the corpsely hand as though she were tossing a shotput.

[This is probably not the best idea, but here we go.  Dex 4 + Athletics 2, diff 7]

Dice: 6 d10 TN7 (1, 4, 4, 6, 6, 7) ( success x 1 )

Ned Plus
(Hand Acrobatics)

Dice: 8 d10 TN6 (1, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 10) ( success x 2 )

William
[Per4+ Esoterica 2+ Library 3= 9, diff 6. SERIOUSLY WTF)

Dice: 9 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8) ( success x 3 ) [Doubling Tens]

William
For someone tinged by hurricanes, for someone born of tumult and landfall and whose formative years were marked by the devastation of a vibrant city, the feeling of storms and clouds and ozone drenched lightning were the unpleasant bits of familiar that made him stand more still than he ususally would. William was, at best, a little chaotic; stillness didn't suit him and yet.

It is a moment, his fingertips twitch, then tremble, and what brings him back to reality (and not reeling in his own head) is the sound of a book flying and someone screeching. The watch drops from his hands, hitting the ground with a delicate bounce.

"..."

C'mon, Mister Adeptus-in-the-Order-no-longer-Initiate-Exemptus say something.

"... that's a hand."

Ned Plus
William's fascination with details lends itself more toward his penchant for distraction. Too busy taking in all the facts, to specify on any one topic at any one point. It is probably why he isn't as abruptly disturbed by the future speaking directly to him, or the tower of immense power standing in his immediate future.

It is definitely the reason he notices the location of three of those lightning activated books on three different shelves behind where the Tower and the Man were standing.

Books that had buzzed with lightning in the future.

Anchors to a Spire of Power.

Ned Plus
The book lands near the hand, which seems to scuttle into place as it threatens to slide across the table under the weight of the gravity of the Tower as well as the momentum Margot put into it. The hand's fingers latch onto the top of the book, riding it like a surf board for a couple of feet but the hand's added weight keeps it from going to far.

And there is sits on the book, poised and turning in place on five adroit fingers to return to "staring" at the trio of kids.

The tower, meanwhile, has begun to spawn another hand along one side, while vomiting other body parts with sickening squelch like sounds from other seams. An entire body is being disgorged out onto the table. A pair of feet and legs here. Two arms there. Several meat chunks that could be shoulders, falling and wriggling in place before the gravity of the spire seems to force them together.

Flesh knits, the tower disgorges some (thanfully) torn and shredded ribbons of cloth that ooze out onto the table as well, folding over the various body parts that are writhing together into some chaotic puzzle.

Cloth swirls. Body parts suction into the folds of the shroud and all at once, under the thrum of booming thunder, a man is crouched on the table top, covered in a tattered mess of a poncho. The skin is gray. His head is bald, save for the swirling ink patterns that stretch from his neck to his brow. His beard is powerfully thick, like steel wool and his hands, once more attached to wrists that vanish under the folds of the shroud, are planted fists on the table top.

There is an exhale and it brings tremor to the air, though no chill or gusting wind is felt. Still, the pages of the thrown book, resting several feet from this new stranger, ruffle and flap gently with his first breath.

His eyes pop open slowly. Crystal azure blue inside well weathered sockets.

"...Again..." There is a resonance to the word. A resignation and a question without the emphasis that needed an answer. The body unfolds, cracking and popping with vicious stiffness in the process. The head tilts to one side and vertebrae protest, while those eyes scan the surroundings. Narrowed. Focused.

"...Different though..."

He reaches out a hand into the air, ignorant almost of his audience, hesitant almost in touching something-

ZZZTT!

-the hand impacts some invisible barrier. He snatches it back sharply, teeth flashing into existence, sharp and shaved down to fine triangular points.

On the shelves behind him, a triplet of books suddenly blaze to life with crackling arcs of electricity. They vibrate and dance in their sockets, smoke roiling from where their neighbouring books are pressed too close to the sizzling.

Ned Plus
Ned WP

Dice: 6 d10 TN6 (2, 3, 7, 7, 8, 9) ( success x 4 )

William
Will: ahjkfsajfah WP

Dice: 6 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 5, 6, 6, 10) ( success x 3 )

Margot
[Willpower]

Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (1, 4, 4, 9, 10) ( success x 2 )

Ned Plus
Each of the young mages has more experience with this life then most their age. Dealing with trauma and the threat of being wiped off the face of the planet more times then any of them could probably count.

This however, is a different sensation. It goes beyond the bones, weathering each in their place. it digs into that space, that alcove where their Avatar's live, rushing across that connection between them to elicit a response that they can feel more than know.

Each guide to these three, different in their reactions, seems to respond to the same stimuli:

Terror

Margot
A small and sharp curse flashes into the air when the book misses its target, but the fact that the hand stopped its tapping was at least good.  It had poised itself as though staring at them, but it only held Margot's attention for a few moments longer before other pieces of flesh and bone started to fall in electric slime from the books and onto the table.  The second hand was enough to cement her suspicion when the first body part had arrived.

She felt herself paralyzed and helpless, watching without any idea of what else she should or could do as a gray-skinned man who looked like what she imagined Rasputin would have manifested in one of the most disgusting ways possible upon her study's table.  Her throat flexed to swallow back the sensation of horror that was naturally budding in her chest and making her stomach twist, but soon after a wave of absolute terror crashed down upon her.  She felt it constrict her heart before making it slam double-time against her ribs, felt her stomach make an effort at joining her bowels by how drastically it seemed to drop all at once.  Sweat prickled her skin and adrenaline made her brain feel like it was buzzing, but that wasn't all.

Deeper within and further beyond, the goddess of blood and war and victory that had called upon Margot to house her magick was responding to the terror as well.  However, contrary to Margot's natural disposition, it responded with rage, pure and unadulterated.  How dare this gray man deign to make an attempt at frightening Her?  How dare he?

Margot made a quiet sound in her throat like she was going to be sick while her body begged to run and her Spirit and Being screamed into the back of her brain for her to not only attack, but to utterly demolish so there was no doubt in the Victory at hand.

Her voice shook, and though she was trying to speak to the manifested man upon their table, she really just wound up whispering with a tremble: "Please leave..."

Ned Plus
Wits + Investigation. Diff 7

Dice: 6 d10 TN6 (1, 2, 3, 4, 4, 8) ( success x 1 )

William
It's those things you notice thatare a little too late. The books on the shelf that sync up to (It's a mast, not a maypole- why did I think?) There were the things that he'd held onto- the details and the ability to piece through things in a way to keep you sane. The way he processes damages by naming the objects around him and asserting again and again what was real. Things that he'd held onto- the texture of his beard, the color of his eyes (the way that Will's own stomach curled and tried to crawl into his stomach, as though some part of him knew that this man existed outside of time, aware enough to know what would happen, aware enough to know where to look and called him Little One as centuries old creatures were want to do Oh god oh god oh god don't think-his eyes are blue his beard is thick his flesh is gray-)

"This is real."
What is, what was, what will be, all the same. He knew.

He went through his mantras and his thoughts. The same repetitive things over and over, but each detail wasn't helping and he could hold onto details. His eyes were blue (like mine, but more) his beard is thick (and grissled and sharp) His skin is gray (like death, like rot, this shouldn't be real, this shouldn't be real, this shouldn't be real.)

"His eyes were blue." (like mine, but more)
"His beard is thick." (and grissled and sharp)
"His skin is gray." (like death, like rot, this shouldn't be real, this shouldn't be real, this shouldn't be real.)
"I'm with people I know."
"We are not safe."

---
The very visceral and real part of him growled, something that had assumed a form only becaause it knew William, once Elijah, once so many others, was not ready to know the truth. The reality. The living shadow shifted, felt the dauntless creature it had tried so hard to cultivate into its potential shrink in terror.

(Felt the dauntless creature it pushed and pushed to the edges of boundaries and dared him to topple so he could be greater than he was)

I will not. it insisted, reverberated in William's ears and heart and chest.

I will not. It repeated, and the walls reverberated and the voice, all gravel and promises and threats and insistence, grizzled as a thing who has seen the world and has been wounded by it.

We will not.

It says something to William. It is for his ears alone.

--

"This is what happens when we falter, we are not safe."

And, with that, he started speaking, quiet and insistent and demanding that that the universe bring forth its rightful protections. He was insisatent, persistent in the language of creation that these people be betowed with protections, hard from blows, that Force would yield to them.

They were not safe, but they would be.







William
Int 3 + Engimas 3 = 6, diff 6, Prone to Quiet

Dice: 6 d10 TN6 (1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 10) ( success x 3 )

Ned Plus
"He can't."

She had said it to the man, who was busy looking around himself, down at the table and then at the spire, gray hands flexing in and out of fists, but Margot gets her response from Ned who is by her side suddenly with a shoulder for her to lean against. He's close enough the sensation of power is muted slightly, as if the more space the trio filled, the less intense it all felt. Clustered together, the sensation of gravity ebbs slightly. Ned is staring though, whispering under his breath.

"Can you?"

The response is a careful grunt that whispers off the tongue and mostly vanishes in the beard. The crystaline eyes regard the three, as if noticing for the first time. Those eyes settle on William, as if the man's outburst were a beckoning, a dawning sensation. He watches with almost casual fascination, like inspecting a sudden lightning fork in an otherwise clear sky.

 It is momentary and then, a sharp tug of recognition arrives. His head snaps off to one side and he stares into the space just beyond the table.

"Hello little one" The voice is like thunder, muted and on the spot. It does not roll over the three, but seems contained around the man.

The books on their shelves vibrate a little harder. The shelves themselves begin to shake and rattle gently.

William
Forces 2: YOU CAIN'T HURT MAH FRAAAAANDS

Base 3+ sphere 2+ 1 (vulgar) = 6 - 1 (specialized focus [Thanks Enochian!])= diff 5

Dice: 3 d10 TN5 (3, 8, 9) ( success x 2 )

Margot
[Spirit 2, What the fuck are you talking to? -- Base 4 + 1 (highest level of effect), +1 (vulgar), -1 (focus: blood)]

Dice: 2 d10 TN5 (5, 6) ( success x 3 ) [WP]

Margot
Displaying another strong piece to their dynamic, Ned appeared at Margot's shoulder as a presence of support.  She didn't physically lean on him, but her weight did shift so that she wasn't standing against the gray man anymore, but standing with her cabalmates, weight gravitating toward them instead of the Lode and the man that burst forth from it.

Ned didn't think that it could leave, and William was speaking to himself reminders of what is.  Then: we are not safe.  Margot blinked and turned her head to look at Will, to gauge his expression.  He repeated the statement, and then set to focusing and chanting, clearly setting to Work once more, given how the room had started to feel a little as though the floor was being tossed too and fro by great waves and tumult from someplace not quite physical but still distinctly there.  She took a breath and looked back to the man ,who had been watching them, but turned to address Something Else that she could not see.

She swallowed hard to see this and felt more dread stir in her chest; what was he talking to?  Why couldn't she see it?  Perhaps a Spirit of some sort, even if not something once-alive but aetherial none the less?  She looked around quickly, a girl attached to her tools, and then her eyes hopped up the half-foot between her and Ned's eyes to spy the flash of red still open above his brow.  She reached up and swiped her thumb across his eyebrow, where the moisture from the blood would most likely still be clinging to the hairs, and then swept the now-wet-now-red pad of her thumb across her own brow in an arc and shut her eyes.  When she re-opened them they were clouded over, as though mists had appeared within them to represent what she was looking through.

Brows furrowed over those clouded eyes, and her head turned as they darted about the room in search of something.  She squinted harder at the space surrounding the bearded man of terror, then made a sound of frustration before scrubbing the heels of her hands into her eyes to clear them once more.  As she did she grumbled: "Nothing.  What is he talking to?"

Margot
[Wits 3 + Investigation 2: C'mon Margot you're supposed to be the smart guy]

Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (1, 5, 8, 10, 10) ( success x 3 )

William
It's all playing out the way he'd seen, the way that he hadn't been able to vocalize because it was just- [His eyes are blue (We will not) His beard is thick (Focus)] - It was what it was. His watch was on the floor and his Words were insistent. His Will would be law at that moment, and there would be no negotiation. His compatriots would stay safe-

Margot asked him a question, or just askexd a question of the air but he was still focused, still speaking, still giving the law of What Will Be. Speaking of truth and definitions, shaping a thought into substance and giving it a Name.

When he had said they were not safe, it had been tinged with that fear. Yes, that primal, gut-wrenching feeling that comes when you know you are small and human and mortal, but striving for something else. William was off in a world of details, and the statement that they were not safe was a resolution. An end to the thought and puncuating a new one.

The second had been different, insistent and as though he had seen a challenge and it was something to rise to. A problem to acknowledge, a deed to be done that he would not be torn from.

It was the first that was off-putting, because for someone who does as many dumb things as he is reported to do who would have thought William aware of safety? Or aware of the feeling that comes with legitimate terror.

[Keep going! Forces 2: Be saaafe

Base diff 3 + Sphere 2 + 1 (vulgar) +1 (extension) = diff 7, -1 (Specialty focus (Enochian) -1 (quint) = diff 5. ]

Dice: 3 d10 TN5 (4, 4, 6) ( success x 2 ) [WP]

Ned Plus
"...This time has changed since the others. There were others....are....others...." Confusion leaped across the man's face. His beard bristled, arcs of lightning gathering around it's tines and tips and strands. "...Things are....smaller."

The crystal eyes narrow. William's efforts strain and push, something charging the air in response to the lightning static that had gathered in the house so invasive. A barricade or storm-dam to weather it all. It forms and bubbles up around the pair of Initiates, even as William pushes his own will to the effort. One might think the Disciple suicidal. One might also reason the effort is reactionary. An activator of stress.

"...Things are weaker."

The Man raises a hand again, pushing at the odd invisible barrier he had encountered before. Lightning spasms around his fingers, his grimace strained but controlled. The barrier bends, warps under the pressure but does not give. The hand is removed, forcefully, smoke curling off of his gray fingertips and those crystal blue eyes turn finally to regard the trio again.

"Where are the caretakers? Those who put me here? Their power has waned some since the last...as with their accusations..." The crystal eyes crackle. Fists form at his sides. "Are you their children? Or their replacements?"



* * * * *



"We live here." Ned offers though it sounds somewhat burdened with obviousness. He can feel the resonance William is putting off, collect and attempt to push back against the obvious acidic static this trapped creature has permeated their Study and home with. Ned doesn't move to stop William, but there is a concern hiding under his features and a growing suspicion alongside of it.

"Who are you?"

* * * *

"I am Ulric. Dreadbringer...Caller of Storms...He of the last light-...or he that was...is...." The eyes narrow. Become unfocused again, head swimming in circles as if to take in his surroundings once more. "...They put me here...called me names...turned those names into bindings...or...wrappings...or-" he looks down at his hands, fingers curling into fists and back out again "....Bars...Cages....something..."

A renewed fervor reaches through him and clarity returns with a glare down at the three.

"Where are they?"

Ned Plus
Perception 3 + Awareness 2.

Dice: 5 d10 TN7 (1, 3, 5, 6, 9) ( success x 1 )

William
Perception 4 + awareness 3 =  7, diff 7

Dice: 7 d10 TN7 (1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9) ( success x 3 )

Margot
[Intelligence 4 + Enigmas 2: NO WHAMMIES]

Dice: 6 d10 TN9 (1, 1, 3, 4, 9, 9, 10) ( success x 4 ) Re-rolls: 1 [WP]

Ned Plus
William knows what he is looking at. He understands that Rituals have purpose and presence. That they serve different measures for different things. He has studied these effects and efforts with some of the best minds and imaginations from all sorts of different perspectives.

Yet there is something far more personal here as well that William is infinitely familiar with. He experiences it on a regular basis and knows the ins and outs of it's effects and appearance. Ulric, whoever he is or may be, is knee deep in the distant, disconnected, almost unmistakable presence of Quiet.

Margot
The man was speaking with them now, searching for people who used to live here, complaining that the room, the house, the entire world seemed much smaller.  This gave Margot a moment of tangential, wandering thought.  He had a point, the world was a much smaller place; affordability of worldwide travel and the information superhighway ensured that.  She wondered how that much appear on different scopes of perspective, and found it interesting to think that somehow space could have physically flexed smaller on account of the changes in the past 75 years.

This wasn't an easy environment for contemplation, though, and soon Margot was back and present, returned by the sound of Ned's voice beside her responding to explain who they were.  Current residents, and that was all.  He asked who he was, and received a name and vague recollection in return.  What this gray man, now with the name 'Dreadbringer' to associate with his uncomfortably unsettling visage, had to say got Margot thinking again, this time much deeper, more focused, and faster.  It was a mental flipping through of many pages, searching for the chapter and depth in the story that felt familiar to the subject.  An answer was somewhere in that mental library of hers, and this time around she happened to open the correct book the first time.

Though it seemed it shouldn't be possible, especially tonight, Margot's eyes found a way to widen further and the color drained from her face.  She swallowed what felt a lot like bile in the back of her throat and wanted to slide back a few steps more, but was reluctant to part from the cabal and the defense that Will had brought up around them that sheltered them from the electric storm in the study.  That and a certain Goddess was still bristling and insulted and slashing intangible blades through the air and against each other in protest; she wouldn't let Margot back down just yet either.

"You guys," she said quietly to catch Ned and Will's ears in particular.  "We... we can't let him get out."  She looked around desparately, as though hoping that some sort of inspiration for how to fold closed the trap that had kept Ulric for goddess-knows-how-long.  She didn't come close to the capabilities she figured were required to accomplish this feat in the first place.

William
His mind insists you can't keep doing this. This isn't good, This shouldn't be like it is and he knows why, he's standing near a goddamned paradox lightning rod Working where he really has no business to push. So he didn't. He stopped the pushing, let the effect come to its fruition, regardless of how weak or strong it may be because some part of him still had the desire to walk away from this okay.

William understands ritual, and understands it from multiple perspectives. He had been here for so long, seen great minds filter in and out. Gotten high with some or waxed philosophical with others or gabbed about the ins and outs of metaphysics sweaty and spent after whatever carnal delights a relatively attractive young man in his twenties can experience.

But this wasn't something he talked to people about. Something he'd never even discussed with anyone around him, never given the indication that it was a problem because when he rode the edges of reality people stopped showing up. (I'm the one for a good time call-) There were moments that he realized much later how far gone from the consensus he'd actually been.

"He's in Quiet, what he's seeing is real enough to him that he'll react accordingly. We are out of sync," William announced. Margot said her piece of the puzzle, seemed insistent and hopeful that they would follow her along. There was a slight can't of his head in recognition. Subtle, but obvious enough. Agreement.

"What are you accused of?"

Ned Plus
"Out..." Like the word was attached to an idea. Ulric seized on it, eyes bristling with light. Fists rose to press against the 'prison walls', driving lightning impacts out from where they came to rest.

The books on their shelves upped their vibration tempos to 9. The bookcases themselves began to rattle.

"Out." Ulric punched a fist into the wall.

* * * * *

Ned was staring at Ulric, concern to worry to anxiety flooding his features. Up until now he had been remarkably withdrawn from it all. Margot makes her statement and Ned's own response is a snapping of his head toward her, followed quickly by another glance at William when he asks his question. Ned's lip thin, pressed together hard around some vocal component of his own. He might have kept it to himself except Ulric was hammering on the 'walls' again.

More lightning. More shaking books.

"...For fuck's sake..."

Ned's scanning the shelves, the area around the room and the various pieces of furniture, books and chunks of things he'd moved out of the 'blast zone'. He steps clear of the protective huddle of his cabalmates, wandering past them and toward some of the nearby books.

"...They put him here, right? That's what he said? So why now-"

* * * *

"Renewal."

Ulric interrupts Ned. His eyes track the young Orphan walking free of Margot and William.

Then:

"Despair. This world was mine. Mine! They did not like that. They were greedy. Are greedy. They are greedy! This is mine!" Thunder and storms, contained still. He answers William with force and terror. Another fist into the prison walls, which begin to shock azure cracks that fail to fade away. "Each time Renewed! Each time asleep! No more! Wake...I will wake-"

* * * * *

"...You said it was lodestone. Smaller pieces around it?! Lesser things to stabilize the center?" Ned bellows over his shoulder at William. Eyeballs the hermetic. The orphan is holding several other books. "But he said it's weaker! It's less now then the last time!" Ned is diving across the biggest of the couches, hands grabbing at books to scan titles and scour covers.

"How many, Will?!"

Because the three with gathered lightning buzzing on their shelves wasn't enough and they had been taking books off the shelves for months now.

"William! How many more?!"

* * * *

Another fist in the walls. More cracks.

"Out!"



Margot
The room felt like it was going to try and collapse, between the electricity kicking from the invisible barrier that kept the Dreadbringer contained and the buzzing vibrations of books ons helves surrounding them.  Margot made a stressed noise when he started pounding actively on the barrier and cringed back some, but didn't shuffle her feet away to start retreat toward the door.  Eyes followed after Ned when he started inspecting the shelves, then snapped back to the entrapped resurrected being who spoke of ownership and renewal and greed.

Another crack appeared and Margot's hands lept reflexively up to cup over her ears and hold the sides of her head.  Ned apparently had an idea, something about returning books to the lodstone from whence the Dreadbringer came, but Margot wasn't catching on to what he was hunting for on the covers, what he hoped to accomplish.  How was he going to identify the books that he wanted to return to the table, and how was he going to get them there with this resummoned prisoner and the straining barrier surrounding him both in the way?

Out! the man bellowed again, and Margot snapped and bellowed back.

"NO!"  She threw her hands away from her head to clench as fists at her sides, limbs trembling with the adrenaline and anxiety and stress of the conflict and situation as a whole while the rage of a Goddess of Many Things But Above All Victory and War found its valve and started to leak its release.

"You were kept and with good reason!  We're not the children of the beasts that bound you, but by fucking god we will bind you again!  You.  Will.  Stay!"

And then, to Ned, her tone snapping and hard with the carry-over from shouting down a being that would probably eat her soul the instant he was free.  "What are you looking for?  Tell me, let me help!"

William
"All I see are three," he tells Ned, with tension while he looked desperately for some kind of indication that there were more. He had only seen what he thought were three, but there-

"I can find more," he said, crouching to get his watch and try to center himself. Focus on the texture, the sensation of metal in his hand instead of the sound around him or the crackling on the walls and the waning of what was around them, "I'm going to find more."

Desperate tracing of the steps he had taken, trembling fingertips and the feeling of the world pressing in. Focus Be present. Be here.

So it was back to looking again, back to the past hopefully when the ritual was first cast, so he could see the pieces that held it first.

William
"They were books."

Ned Plus
Ned Forces 2: Shutting out all sound, stilling the air. Diff 6 - 1 for Focus (Blood) -1 for Quint. WP

Dice: 2 d10 TN4 (5, 7) ( success x 3 ) [WP]

Ned Plus
Ned reaches through the last pile of books he can find, a frustrated scream ripping free of his throat. Margot's yelling at the creature in the cage, who responds with a thunderous bellow of his own. The lightning has reached a crackling pitch inside the 'cage' and doesn't seem to be dissipating at all now.

Ned turns, a book still in hand, eyes regarding Margot with a helpless sort of flutter.

"We need more time...or a distraction...or something to keep him from-"

Boom!

The walls spread more cracks of blue light.

"-Keep from doing that! Tell me you've got some voodoo or Prime or spirit friends or something!"

It is the best Ned has. William's already reaching for his pocket watch and Ned can see the flash and flutter of distraction creeping over the Hermetic with each impact of those fists on those invisible walls. Ned reaches for his brow, mimicing Margot's own efforts from before. The work becomes a focus and his Will pushes outward, closing the gap on Will as the Hermetic tries to work.

The world goes silent, suddenly, assuredly for William. Ned's hands fold over the mans ears and there are no more impacts. No more words but the mumbled inner syllables under William's own breath.

William
[Time 2: Looking at the past

Base 3+ sphere 2 + 1 (vulgar) = 6 - 1 (He ACTUALLY practices looking at the past) - 2 quint = 3

Dice: 3 d10 TN3 (9, 9, 10) ( success x 4 ) [WP]

Ned Plus
William's head once more drifts free of the present. There is a warped sense of searching, scanning a pattern of the world and how it used to be, overlayed with how it is and could be. His fingers sift through symbols and phrases, capture the wheres of who he was and the whens of where he could have been.

In this moment, pictures flash:

Ned's hands throwing books across a study table. His hair is shorter, his brow clear of wounds.

Margot reading quietly in a sofa chair. The same one in the study, on the other side of the room.

The Three of them marching through a deeper, darker, uglier house. Before the renovations.

Something lurking in a dark corner. Slathering over some piece of bloody meat.

A yawning black hole at the centre of what could be crumbling linoleum.

The screech of a monstrous bat thing, in a roughly hewn tunnel, surrounded by the skittering of a rodent flood.

The charged lightning of a pair of eyes, surrounded on all sides by 4...5 books. One for the corners of a pentacle formation. Something infernal. A cage of binding.

Books with titles. Books with many pages.

Glimpses are caught in the time wake. Beneath a couch, thrown during an argument. Something about cake. Something about a Dreamspeaker and the melting of wrists.

Glimpses of a thick tome, used for a doorstop. Tucked on the upper floor, next to a crumbling bedroom. Which room in the house was that?