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Frau Leppling woke up at 6 AM that day. As was her custom, she washed her face, dressed herself in modest yet comfortable clothing, and woke her seventeen year old daughter up for her to do the same before moving to the kitchen of the house to start working on breakfast. Before she pulled the door behind her, she reminded her daughter to wake up the lodgers at the requested times, and afterwards, she started to brew coffee. In fifteen minutes, Johann from the pastry would leave off her daily order of a dozen croissants, and she would proceed to have a quick breakfast alongside her daughter, Theresa, before beginning to prepare for the day.

Her daughter looked at one of the ledgers on the reception table to check up on the notes of the day, before looking at the mirror to make some minor adjustments to her blonde hair. She gave the mirror a toothy smile (although the way her mouth was, it was hard for her to smile and not bare all of her teeth anyway) before going upstairs to wake up the lodgers who had requested to be waken up at half past 6 the day earlier. Herr Krauss, Herr Feldwald, and a Herr 'Nafizbei'. She let a quiet chuckle as she thought about the name for a moment. She guessed that he was the Turk that her mother had mentioned the day earlier.

Nafiz woke up at 6 AM that day. As was his custom, he washed his face, took off his nightcap, and rolled up the sleeves of his striped pajamas before sitting down on the table to start cleaning his revolver with a makeshift cleaning rod made out of a pencil and a string dipped in grease. In fifteen minutes, Theresa, the meaty, toothy daughter of the landlady would knock on the door, and afterwards he would proceed to dress up, prepare his suitcase, arm himself, and then get downstairs for breakfast alongside the other lodgers before leaving the lodging house.

As usual, the knocking at Nafiz' door came right after he had finished loading five cartridges into his Gasser revolver, leaving a chamber empty, as was his custom. He got up from his seat, cocked the hammer of his revolver, gripped it in his left hand and opened the door with the right, barrel pointing at the doorframe behind the door. As usual, it was not a foreign spy that had come to visit him, but instead the large blonde. He pointed the barrel of his revolver down.

''Herr Nafizbei, it is half past six. You had noted to be woken up at this hour. Breakfast should be ready in thirty minutes,'' Theresa said, leaning on the frame of the door, hanging her torso down in a way that revealed her cleavage. ''Nafiz,'' the large man replied, eyes squinting at her face, and Theresa corrected herself after a moment of being caught off-guard. ''Do you want anything else, sir?'' She asked suggestively, and was replied by a curt no, with a moment of courtesy given for her to leave before the door shut.

Breakfast was quiet and simple. The lodgers were too mentally exhausted to be able to partake in small talk, and most of them either retreated to the grim news that awaited them in the newspapers or went to work afterwards. Nafiz had two breadrolls which he converted to beef on weck sandwiches with the resources available - those being some pickled cucumbers and a small slice of roast beef, a gift from Theresa, if the girl's chuckling upon Nafiz' inspection of the meat with the fork was supposed to be any implication. The Austrians weren't happy about the rationing, it seemed, but for a man who had subsisted on nothing more than small amounts of shoe jerky and grape juice for a week in Gallipoli, the breakfast was more than one could ask for.

The walk to the rendevzous was rather uneventful. Nafiz took the opportunity to sightsee on his way, for Vienna was quite a city. It was not as beautiful as Istanbul (then again, no city was as beautiful as Istanbul, so it was not a fair comparison), but the architecture was still pleasant to the eyes. The people of Vienna also seemed to have fairer looks, which intrigued but also alienated Nafiz, who was by all accounts used to the malnourished, sunken, rickety and sunstruck figures that populated his weary Empire.

At the designated building, Nafiz almost felt a tinge of excitement and nervousness, but instead of feeling things, he instead moved to action by asking for a 'Herr Schwarz'. After the first receptionist he asked mentioned that there were at least three people called 'Herr Schwarz' employed in the building, Nafiz first felt like slapping the man, but remembered that this was Europe, and instead simply leaned over the desk and mentioned that he was called here for a meeting.

''Oh, you're-oh. Herr Schwarz should be awaiting you at the second floor, the Public Information department.''

Nafiz left for the second floor without thanking the receptionist, and upon reaching the second floor after some annoying flights of stairs, he was greeted by a young woman with a funny hat. Nafiz still wasn't very used to the dressing customs of the women here in Europe, admittedly, but such fashions had already begun to spread even in Istanbul. Maybe he was just old fashioned. ''Herr Nafiz? We've been expecting you,'' she mentioned casually, as she offered her hand for a shake. ''Adina Tividar, secretary to Herr Schwarz.''

Nafiz squeezed the woman's hand tight as he shook her hand, although his muscles instinctively relaxed upon seeing her startle from the pressure. ''Yes,'' he replied, solely for affirmation, before asking for directions. To his delight, the woman escorted him to the meeting room, before quietly opening the door and leading him inside, to a cozy room. Immediately striking his attention, aside from the two gnomes, was the American revolver on display. He remembered that the Americans were fighting against them. He made a mental note about the possibility of this Herr Schwarz being an enemy spy as the older gnome in the room offered his hand to Nafiz.

''Hahn Schwarz,'' the man said, and Nafiz felt a tinge of disappointment in having such an unassuming looking man as his superior. He shook the man's hand silently before sitting to the left of the younger gnome. He eyed the man with an evaluating glance, and after a moment's worth of thinking, decided that the man was likely to be worthless. He eyed the copper-haired woman that entered afterwards with a much more inquisitive glance, before questioning the possibility of her also being an enemy spy. Such a woman at such a job was obviously not to be trusted.

Nafiz sat quietly and listened to Herr Schwarz and reevaluated his colleagues as the man skimmed through their folders out loud, only breaking his silence to reply ''Hoşbulduk'' to Schwarz' greeting in his native tongue, as a gesture of goodwill. He simply nodded in affirmation to the man's question about whether he said it correctly or not, and after hearing of the woman's file as well, he felt content in the fact that he was, as usual, right - his field of expertise in mathematics and finance proved that this Stephan fellow was worthless, and he knew better than to trust anyone even tangentially related to the British Isles. Adding the good looks and gender only made his opinion on 'Miss Grey' more concrete.

He did pay any more attention than was necessary to the briefing. Admittedly, he was not used to chemical warfare, neither was he happy about having to pose as a member of the Anglophile Society (he wasn't too happy about the way the man had worded it either - it seemed to him that the man wanted to insult his intelligence and/or knowledge on matters concerning his own very country), so all in all, he wasn't exactly enthusiastic about the job. But a job was a job, even if it were a ploy to get him away from purging the state of enemies, and as the man said, he was handpicked for it. He mentally repeated to himself the instructions on gas mask usage as Schwarz asked whether they had any questions or not. ''No,'' Nafiz replied, before taking a sip of water. This was going to be interesting.
Nafiz' fake identity is Necmeddin Sahir Bey, member of the Turkish Anglophile Society (practically a group that lobbied for the Ottoman Empire to get underneath British Mandate).
<Snipped quote by gcold>

Sounds perfectly fine to me.

@Peik You still onboard if it's just us three?


Yup. Union and Progress, to the bitter end.




Raelyn was completely fine, I mean, she loved being stabbed. There were worse things that could happen. She could have been stabbed twice. She wasn't feeling better, but the pain had reached a peaceful sort of agony that you often see in sick wards. The pain wasn't dulled, but her mind had entered the doorway of delirium. She lay against a wall, nearby Solveig, groaning and occasionally stiffening painfully. She'd mutter some prayer, more often than not to Stendarr, but occasionally to Dibella, who was also the patron of the arts as well as beauty.

His adrenaline and fear fueled blind marathon through the underground steam cavern filled with mouthbreathing Dunmer dumbasses and forgotten, ancient mechanized giants had Sadri soaked in sweat and blood by the end of his moments-long journey. Having accidentally stumbled upon Sagax and a wounded Tsleeixth, Sadri had somewhat begrudgingly applied his amateur Restoration magic upon the lizard's wounds, anxious over the fact he was busy saving someone else other than the one he wanted to. But even though he wished to do so, he couldn't just run off and leave the lizardman to die, and plus, he had to make up for that bottle thrown back at Windhelm somehow. Upon closing the Argonian's wounds, or at least, having diminished their severity, Sadri dashed off once more into the steam, looking for the spearwoman, and came to a panting stop after finding a bloodied, impaled Raelyn settled against a wall, and a somewhat anxious looking Solveig next to her. He was relieved that she was okay, but showing his relief in front of a seemingly dying woman was not exactly sporting behavior.

''Oh. You're fine. No, I mean, of course not,'' the Dunmer muttered as he walked over to the bard, although his eyes couldn't help but dart at Solveig to see if she were wounded. He clapped his hands together and kneeled next to the bloody bard (he couldn't help but think that would be a good nickname if she were to survive this endeavor), looking at her wounds. ''Stabbed, are we?'' He asked, internally chastizing himself for his dumb behavior, and then pulled out a potion of restoration from one of the satchels on his belt. ''Alright,'' he muttered to himself as he settled the bottle next to Raelyn. He got around to analyzing the wound. Stab in the gut, that much the spear poking out of the woman told him. Looked quite deep - hopefully her intestines weren't damaged. He figured he could push her guts back in if need be, but to meld her guts back together, that was likely harder.

''So, we'll have to pull this out. Can't push it out the other side unless you want to shit from your belly for the rest of your days,'' Sadri informed the bard. ''If you could, give me a hand, eh?'' Sadri said, looking at Solveig, as his iron hand wrapped itself around the spear's handle, ready to pull it out.

Solveig readied herself to leap at the body coming through the doorway to where she rested with Raelyn. One more Dunmer to kill, maybe, but when she saw the scarred face before her, she couldn't help but let go an exhausted smile. She grunted, moving her weight somewhat of a task now, getting to one knee. She didn't want to block Sadri from his work and when he beckoned her over for assistance, she hesitated. Throwing her doubt to the wind, she undid the knot keeping her cloak around her shoulders and readied herself to keep the wound from bleeding after the spear left it. She nodded to Sadri.

Upon seeing Solveig ready herself, Sadri raised his head to look at Raelyn. ''This is going to hurt,'' he informed, as kindly as he could.

With a stutter, Raelyn said, "Be gentle, it's my first time doing this," just a moment before an amused Sadri slowly tugged the spear back to see if its path back was obstructed by anything. It did not seem to be lodged in anything important (aside from Raelyn's flesh, at least), and thus, Sadri pulled back once more, and immediately threw the spear to the ground upon hearing the equally disgusting and relieving 'plop' from the flaps of flesh falling back around the gap where the spear once was.

Raelyn, at this point, wasn't sure if she were alive or dead but if she were dead it was the sort of painful oblivion that Molag Bal would likely inhabit. She made a sobbing sound after it was over, possibly relieved that she would soon be well enough to punch Sadri in the mouth for pulling the spear out.

''Right, her guts aren't out, are they?'' Sadri asked Solveig as he kneeled back, inspecting the wound once more, with Solveig trying to stabilize the bleeding. ''We may have to lay her down,'' Sadri told Solveig, as he grabbed the potion he had put on the ground, popping open the cork. ''Would help staunch the flow.''

Solveig moved quickly to staunch the immediate bleeding, taking a peek behind the cloak at Sadri's question. She looked back to him, shaking her head, "No."

She nodded to Raelyn as she snaked a hand behind her neck, though she doubted the bard could tell she was trying to reassure her. She looked like she was in some other place, as far as she was concerned. She did not protest past giving pained huffs and grimaces when she led her to the ground, "There."

Sadri sighed with relief upon hearing that the girl's guts were intact. ''Well then,'' he muttered to himself, and handed the potion over to Solveig, motioning for her to feed it to the bard. Afterwards, he prepared for the awkward part, and after a moment of hesitation, slipped his fingers into the gap made by the spear on Raelyn's shirt, softly clasping on the piercing wound. ''Magnus help me,'' he muttered, as he closed his eyes and began channeling what he could of the flesh-mending magics that roamed Mundus, feeling scar tissue growing quick underneath his fingertips.

Raelyn coughed and weakly tried to push Solveig's force feeding arm away from her, but she wasn't especially strong even in the best circumstance and this wasn't one of them. She felt like her skin was being wound with cord when it wasn't, so she moved to grabbing weakly at Sadri's wrist, relaxing when the magic stopped pouring into her wound.

She only stopped giving Raelyn sips of the healing potion when she outright refused them, clamping her lips shut and turning away. She wasn't going to pry her mouth open, so she watched as Sadri wove her wound shut, eyes closed in concentration. She breathed easier now, knowing that Raelyn wasn't going to die in her care. Once all things were done, they sat beside Raelyn. She couldn't help but feel at least one bit happy, after all the things she'd done in Windhelm, she could say she did something to make up for it. A calm settled over the room, with the sounds of fighting in the other drifting over. "You'll live." She laughed weakly, rubbing at her bloodied face, only succeeding in smearing it over the side of her face, "I told you everything would be fine."
@Peik

Hey yo, you wouldn't mind if Mort and I put in our collab a brief mention of Sadri healing up Tsleeixth, would you?


Not at all. Not a better way to repair relations with someone than to help save their life.
<Snipped quote by Peik>

ye


<Snipped quote by Leidenschaft>

YEAAAAAAAH!



PM, one of the pads, or Google Docs?
@Chrononaut, @Leidenschaft, would you be willing to do a collab to get Raelyn to safety?


Only it's mustard gas instead of Chimera.
The edge of Marcel's sword was stained with blood, but unfortunately for him, his one strike wasn't enough. For a man of his manners, having the fight go on longer wasn't exactly preferable, but then again, neither was the situation. He lifted his sword against the Bosmer once more, but the fellow had managed to turn his attention back to Marcel, right after adding more to the deadly colors that flew around the cave and glimmered off the walls like a dangerous aurora. Before his sword could cleave open the crazed mage's head, a blast of magical fire from the mer's palm sent him off his feet, falling to the ground. He could feel flame creeping up his clothes, licking at his flesh, and thus, having already stopped and dropped, rolled around on the ground and muffled the flames. He hissed under his breath afterwards, feeling the remnants of pain from the magic now that he had come to a stop.

As he picked himself up from the ground, Marcel saw the mage literally burn away the wound he had inflicted, and blinked in disbelief. That was certainly the first time he had seen anything like that. He tried to lower himself to pick his sword back up, but when the mage began fanning out flames from his body like a furnace, he found himself staggering in the heat, and immediately threw himself away from the man. He wasn't going to be able to get anywhere near the man - even with his dampening abilities, the heat was too much. He lunged to the side of the cave room, grabbing a pickaxe that had been laying on one of the barrels of pitch, and with the momentum of the movement, swung it straight in Gwinnir's direction, releasing the handle when the middle of the head pointed at the blazing Mer.

''Altmer! Shock him!'' Marcel shouted as the pickaxe flew in the mage's direction, and proceeding his cry, he jumped out of place, maneuvering to confuse his opponent's sense of direction. He could only hope that the Mer would agree to his words, instead of shocking him. It would be a rather annoying disturbance.
I wonder if Marcel could try to pull a Reflect on Gwinnir - you know, just channel all his magicka shit back and implode him or something.

Or is it better to be safe (and wet) than sorry?
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