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The Truest and Most Ultimate Showdown has beguneth. Goofykins V.S. SpongeByrne!
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Does anyone know where I can figure out how to unfabricate memories? Asking for a friend.
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Check out our new and improved thread. Just an interest check for now, but oh boy is there so much more to come! roleplayerguild.com/topics/…
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A Council of Hunters
The Hunter’s Dream - 2.5 hrs Past Sunset
A Collab by @Dark Jack, @yoshua171, and @Tuujaimaa


With their means of egress in sight, Ophelia lead the charge toward the lantern - ignoring the ominous street she had to traverse to get there - stared into its pale gleam, and was returned to the Hunter's Dream. Farren and Torquil quickly followed, while Gerlinde happily and carelessly danced her way from the gateway and toward their means of leaving.

Ophelia arrived first, to find the Hunter's Dream just as they had left it: under a cover of dark clouds, raining heavily and with strong winds blowing through. The doll and the Shopkeeper huddled in the workshop at the top of the hill, looking out of the doorway to see the Paleblood Hunters arriving at the foot of the stair.
Then Farren arrived, he felt a tremor go through his blood... and abruptly the rain and wind both stopped, the clouds parted, and the Dream seemed to resume the appearance it had had when they first found it. Torquil followed, but the only thing that seemed to happen at his arrival was the manifestation of something in the pouch on his hip.

While the doll and Shopkeeper hesitantly emerged from their now-needless shelter, the birdbath Messengers beckoned the Hunters, signalling that they had something new for sale.

Ophelia remarked the sudden change of weather in the Hunter's Dream with a pleasant nod, and immediately set towards the Doll and Shopkeeper, planning to meet them both en route.

"Hello, loves. You've nothing to apologise for with the Darkbeast--all's well that ends well! And it enabled us to get Blood Echoes, which I think we'll spend now. Doll, could you be a dear and increase my stamina again like you did before? A couple of times, I think, in fact... say four? I've learned that my frail constitution demands I dance around the battlefield, and I'm sorely in need of the extra endurance to be able to do so!"

"As you wish, good Hunter," the doll said with a bow, then took Ophelia's hand and complied.

As Farren entered he shivered slightly when the Tremor passed through him, but otherwise only briefly regarded the weather with a single raised brow after which he considered heading for the Doll, but elected to check what the Messengers had for them first. When he reached them he spoke up. “What do you have for us, then?” As he asked, Farren tilted his head to the side slightly as he regarded the small figures.


Ophelia breathed in deeply as she felt the power and vitality flood her body. Even empowered by the Old Blood and with a little of the strength of echoes she'd been able to feel that fatigue in her bones. Now it had almost entirely abated, it felt like--she felt loose, limber, hale and whole. "Ahh, it is an incredible sensation, to feel frailty leave oneself. An exceptional and thrilling change... Ah! Might I ask you to do it again for me, though this time for my proficiency with the Arcane?"

"Of course," the doll nodded and fulfilled Ophelia's wish, just as Torquil walked up to them.
And just as Ophelia felt the number of blood echoes clinging to her diminish once more, leaving but a fraction of what she had arrived in the Dream with, she suddenly felt herself becoming much more attuned to the arcane forces of the world. The Holy Moonlight Sword pulsed softly, and it glow seemed to become subtly brighter.

"I wonder... if you are but a tool to be used, dear, is being used what grants you the most pleasure? Is fulfilment of your purpose your greatest desire? Or... perhaps not desire, no, but... maybe it lies in agency. You have been made to fulfil a function, but if you could choose to be anything would you have chosen this?" Ophelia mused as she pondered the nature of what it was that made people who they were--about what the lines that divided were, the separators between things such as man and beast. She'd come to believe it was in reason and in choice--to understand, and to have agency... and that was something she wondered if the Doll had, too... about who made her, and why.

The doll cocked her head and stared at Ophelia with her shiny eyes of glass. "You have strange questions, good Hunter. Are you not but a tool to be used as well? Does the hunt bring you pleasure? Just as humans created me to fulfill a function, the gods created you. If you had known what fate awaited you, would you still have chosen this?"
She let out a sigh and glanced at the Shopkeeper. "I know no other way of being than this, good Hunter, and have never left the Dream, but I think it has been worthwhile. I have felt yearning and joy, and have aided many good Hunters reach their dawn. Good Hunter, worry not; I think I am content."

Ophelia looked around briefly at the doll's reply, briefly glancing over all the beings present there, and then back at the doll. "Yes, love, I think I would. I'm not sure anyone feels in control, not really... and we all have that in common, don't we? Even tools made to be used. Who says the gods don't feel the same too? I think we all yearn for connection, so I seek it out."

She smiled and stepped away slightly then, reorienting herself to talk to the Shopkeeper more readily. "Quite the fight, no? I'm glad Torquil summoned you when he did--your intervention gave us a chance to succeed, and still grow from it besides. You've my gratitude, dear. I've... learned a couple of things. I want to ask you what you know about the Interstice, or... the Old Labyrinth, as it might be better known."

The doll followed her, ready to interpret for the silent Shopkeeper. "Though they explored it extensively during the Night of the Blood Moon, we know surprisingly little of value," she said. "It is a place that overlaps both the Nightmare and the Waking World, where many gods yet sleep, and where all of this has begun time and time again. It is in the Old Labyrinth that the Old Blood was found, and each time it has been, it has given rise to powerful and prosperous realms. It is also where each of these empires eventually fall to when they crumble, as their remnants become new domains of the dungeon. There are a lot of treasures to be found there, which has led to countless Tomb Prospectors being sent into it, and it is a place of great and terrible danger, which led to most of those prospectors being lost." She paused. "Is there anything in particular you want to know?"

"It's come to my attention that traversing the labyrinth need not be as perilous for us as it is ordinary folk: that we might avail ourselves of chalice rituals, and find ourselves in specific parts of the Interstice. It is about those chalices and their rituals I'm curious, loves--did you perform them yourself, in your explorations? Do you know how they work, or have any insight into where new chalices might be acquired? Mother Moon whispered to me that the chalice I seek can be found 'at the throne of this land'. That was whispered to me in Yahar'gul, so I find myself uncertain if it is Yahar'gul that I must search or somewhere else!"

The doll looked to the Shopkeeper, then turned back to Ophelia. "They used such chalices extensively, yes, though most of them were found in the Old Labyrinth itself. Should you find any, we can help you partake in communion. We still have some chalices here, in the Dream, but the one you speak of..." She glanced at the Shopkeeper again. "The only throne we know of is in Castle Cainhurst, where Queen Annalise rules the Vilebloods."

It was about at this time that Gerlinde finally arrived in the Dream as well, looking quite like herself. She was clean once more, and her clothes and hair were restored to perfect condition.
She raised her left hand to briefly inspect the head of the snake molt there, smirked, then lowered it and looked around to check what everyone else were doing.

Ophelia nodded thoughtfully, taking a few silent seconds to process the new information. "Mmm... I think I saw a marker for there on one of the headstones... Well, thank you--I'll add to my ever-growing list of places to visit. Is this what you felt like in all of your mortal lives, hurried to and fro by the eddies of unfolding events?" Ophelia replied, giving a nod in thanks rather than her usual curtsey and turning to Torquil.

"My, you'll have some strength to spend. Have you considered how to best spend your echoes, love? I tried to focus on improving what I lacked on our last fight--perhaps the same would be good for you? You're already plenty strong--getting stronger is better, of course, but perhaps a bit of dexterity will help you guide your blows better? Maybe more stamina, for more big and heavy strikes?" Ophelia offered, long past the point now where she might be worried she was overstepping when she offered Torquil her thoughts--it was very clear he didn't like to do much thinking, and Ophelia's ever-whirring mind was happy to compensate. As Gerlinde returned and Ophelia caught notice she waved with her free hand, but stayed with Torquil.

"Oh. Uh..." Torquil looked awkwardly from Ophelia to the doll, suddenly deeply uncertain what to do now that he finally had some of these echoes the others had talked about. He had meant to just ask the doll to make him stronger, and grew confused and conflicted now that Ophelia suggested that might not be the best choice.

As the doll turned to him, seemingly sensing that he was about to speak, Torquil hesitantly asked: "Could you not just... make be better? Like, at everything?"

The doll's eyes widened and she cocked her head, staring at him intently for a moment before telling him: "There are a great multitude of echoes coursing through your blood, good Hunter. If that is your wish, I shall do so."

She held out her hand, and Torquil hesitantly gave it to her.

"Well," Ophelia began, hoping to interrupt Torquil before he committed to this. "You needn't spend your precious echoes quite like that, dear. What use have you for proficiency in the Arcane? I think you should focus more on the physical attributes, love--if you just want to be better at everything there, why not split your echoes between those? Strength, dexterity, constitution, and stamina--those are the things you actually use, mm? Perhaps do them each one at a time, see which ones you like, and then do more? There's no rush." Ophelia offered, suddenly worried that she might have inadvertently pressured Torquil into something. If he'd made up his mind they were his echoes to spend and she respected that--but she did want to make sure the power was spent in a way that would benefit him the most.

"Oh," Torquil mumbled, stopping just before he would have taken the doll's hand. "Uh... sure. Can we do what she said and split them between those things?"

"Of course, good Hunter. Let the echoes become your strength."

He finally took her hand, and his blood echoes were spent.

"It feels magnificent, doesn't it, the infusion of power? How are you feeling now? Why don't you try things out, see if you can feel the difference?" Ophelia asked, smiling softly. She put her free hand on Torquil's shoulder and gave it a gentle rub.

"I assume you're simply going to increase your knowledge of the Arcane like you said earlier, Gerlinde?"

"I said that?" Gerlinde asked without looking at Ophelia, heading to examine what was available from the birdbath Messengers instead of to the doll. "I suppose I did, didn't I? I will, but I can also feel that the echoes of that beast were more powerful than any I've ever had before. Attuning me to the arcane with all of that power might be going too far."

"Well, you've demonstrated little need for constitution... Nor for strength. I suppose that leaves dexterity, endurance, and... bloodtinge, was it? You didn't seem to have much trouble simply attacking restlessly, nor need for extra movement. Oh, is there a new memory?" Ophelia replied in turn, now turning to face that direction so she could look at Gerlinde and Farren both--and the question appeared addressed to both of them.

Farren considered the offerings that the Messengers had brought for them and found himself wondering if they could have–or perhaps could still–harvest the Darkbeast’s still-undying corpse for more of its strange blood. Regardless, Farren decided he’d grab more than just standard supplies–unlike last time, and indicated the Hourglass and Darkbeast’s Blood. After a moment, the Messengers offered up the small hourglass and the vial of strangely warm blood from the dark beast. Farren stowed the vial in his pouch of them, certain he would be able to differentiate it simply due to its ever-warm contents. The Snakescale Hourglass, however, Farren looked over for a moment before putting it in his vial pouch as well, its shape was such that it would be easily identified as something distinct from everything else in the pouch.

By the time Gerlinde had joined them and Ophelia had finished a round of questions with the Shopkeep and the Doll, Farren had of course already extracted his items. With the two women approaching, Farren stepped back from the gathering of pale-fleshed helpers, making room for them. “Indeed, there remains a Memory,” Farren commented, though his gaze looked distant as he considered something.

After a moment he looked to Ophelia, “The Mask Rune, brand me,” he said, and his tone was flat, his gaze steely and serious as he regarded her. Farren would tell the others what he’d acquired from the Messengers before they departed, but for now…he wanted his mind clear and clean of influence before he made any further decisions.

Ophelia simply nodded, and gathered the runebrand to do the deed. She focused upon her newest rune, pondering its solidified meaning in her mind and the circumstances in which she'd acquired it, and it alighted in the projection case as she pressed the instrument to Farren's flesh with an unvarnished curiosity upon her face to witness the difference.

Upon Farren viewing the Mask Rune on the projection case and Ophelia pressing the runebrand to his flesh, Farren would very instantly and overwhelmingly feel its effect. The very second the new Caryll Rune was placed on his mind, Farren would feel a similar relief to what he had felt when he had seen Vicar Harold for the first time, as the irrational paranoia and madness - at least the parts of it that were not natural to him - abruptly fell away.

And as it did, so did the compulsions that remained on him from encountering the vicar. Gone was the forced impression that Harold was just a nice old man; gone was any reservations he might have had about feelings of hostility toward him. And as those compulsions vanished, he also became acutely aware that they had existed in the first place, and that they had been something unnatural forced upon him. For the first time not only since meeting the vicar, but since touching the Golden Halberd months ago, Farren's mind was only his own.

As Ophelia poised to brand him, Farren closed his eyes, brows knitted. This time…the only sign of pain was a slightly sharp exhalation of breath as the brand pressed to his offered arm. As the Rune formed in his mind’s eye the surge of almost euphoric relief as his mind was freed of foreign intrusions, of extant madness not borne of his own life, experiences and trauma fading away into mist…well, it was overwhelming. Farren staggered back one step and he drew in a gasped breath to replace the one he’d expelled.

His eyes shot open, wide and clear-eyed. There was a flash of fear that went over his face, but as nothing else impressed itself onto his mind beyond the Rune Farren’s entire body relaxed. Farren let himself sink down to the ground and sit on the now dry cobbles of the Hunter’s Dream. For a moment he almost wanted to cry, but then as the revelations of exactly how his mind had been tampered with washed through him, that overwhelming relief ignited and almost entirely burned up like so many dry leaves.

Farren let out a rumbled almost-growl that built in his chest, but he took another set of breaths, wiped away moisture from his eyes and met Ophelia’s gaze. “Thank you,” he said, his voice more strained even than he’d expected as he gave her a nod. The corner of one of his eyes twitched faintly from time-to-time. Still as he sat there, knees partially drawn up, arms rested atop them, Farren called to mind the Vicar’s face. It immediately brought a scowl to his features…he could hardly believe he’d thought it was the Garden of all things. “I’m going to find every reaching ray of his and his patron’s influence and rip them out, root, stem, and branch. Then…” Farren met Ophelia’s gaze and his expression darkened further, “Then I’m going to pull out his God’s innards and choke him with them.”

The conviction and channeled rage she’d find in his gaze made those eyes of his look more like coils of hateful crystal, sharp and burning all at once. For his part, Farren focused on that emotion and let it burrow deep in his core. Though it was unlikely to do him any good, Farren gestured for the brand, one hand outstretched, palm open, as he caught Ophelia’s gaze once more.

While everyone's attention was on Farren and what was happening to him, Gerlinde picked something out of the birdbath and stuffed it in her pouch, then went to the doll to empower herself with blood echoes.

Ophelia's expression went from wide-eyed relief to match Farren's own, shrinking slowly into wariness and not-quite-suspicion as he let the truly most base and retributive of urges consume him, greedily clawing them into himself. His eyes met Ophelia's in that near-feral state only to find her customary openness to suddenly be in question.

"... What for?" she asked, leaning down with the runebrand and coaxing forth the Messengers as she did so. She intended to ask them about the Mask rune, wondering if there was something about it that she should know, or if this sudden... beastliness, she supposed, in Farren was in there all along... or if it was all that was left, stripped of everything but the Old Blood.

Mask Rune
Caryll Rune that invokes the mask of a plague doctor, allowing its bearer to walk even amidst filth and affliction without doubt or fear.
Those who bear this mark on their mind are rendered immune to all eldritch deceit and corruption, shattering attempts at influencing their psyche and allowing their senses to pierce even the most powerful illusions.
Poor Saint Adelaide was feared and coveted by all not only for the remarkable potency of her blood, but for her strange connection to the Nightmare that allowed her to see and hear what no one else could. Yet even she was powerless before the darkness unleashed in Yahar'gul on the Night of the Blood Moon.
Messengers about the Mask Rune

Farren noticed the shift in his companion’s demeanor. It struck him as different in a dangerous, if subtle, sort of way, so he took a breath and closed his eyes, freeing her from his baleful glare. As he wrestled with the fury in his veins as it coursed alongside the weight of Echoes in his blood, Farren really dug into the why of things. Why was he so furious? Why had it disturbed him so. Surely it ought to disturb anyone to have their mind tampered with, violated, in such a way. Yet…it didn’t seem to bother Ophelia much. Gerlinde seemed…well, gauging her response was difficult, it wasn’t as if she even seemed to see herself as even remotely important, so much like the suffering she’d already endured, what was a little more added onto that?

Farren let out a sigh, “The mind ought to be the one place that nothing can truly touch,” he offered Ophelia. After a few carefully controlled rounds of breathing, Farren opened his eyes and some of that hatred, resentment, and fierce anger had died down, leaving only a simmering heat to his gaze. It was almost concealed by his usual intensity as he met Ophelia’s eyes for a handful of moments before pushing to his feet. “Think what you like, but it’s the one thing I consider sacred,” he didn’t voice any qualifiers even as the briefly passed through his mind.

“That aside…perhaps it’s not something you’re used to, but mundane men and women can be plenty beastly without even a touch of madness or the scourge.” He may not have remembered the specifics, but from both his own actions in the past…and from the impressions he felt from what must have been those around him, it was something he knew to be true. “I’ll not succumb so easily,” he said to finish, glancing over his shoulder back towards her as he passed.

As Farren went to explain, the tension immediately gave way--even the beginnings of him articulating reason were enough to assuage her and her entire body visibly relaxed. "Beasthood cannot claim we Palebloods, love. Forgive me, it... We've just been through a lot. I just... I suppose I wasn't expecting such immense hatred. I understand your violation, and don't begrudge you your retribution... but I feel like I must understand Ego before I may strike a blow at him. Look what chaos killing gods has caused already--are we to doom so many more, like poor Adelaide who even now shelters you? I will not be party to it until we know the why of it, love. But... I am glad you have yourself back. I agree that the mind is deeply sacred, and... I want to support you, and be here for you, but... the severity with which we feel things, what they might compel us to do... Moira's words resonate with me a bit more, now, and she's right. We are really very scary indeed."

Farren’s gaze became distant, his eyes shifting as he seemed to consider her words for a long moment. “You’re right. First…the why of things. Then Ego and its puppet die,” there was no vitriol in those words this time and for some reason he chose to leave her wondering if he might change his mind given good enough reason. Farren admittedly wasn’t sure if he might either. That said, he found himself moving towards the Doll perhaps a minute or so after Gerlinde had done so. He would wait, patiently while she took care of things before he approached beyond a meter or so away.

Having already taken care of her business while Ophelia and Farren talked, Gerlinde readily did a little sideways bounce and hop to move aside and give Farren space, wearing her usual excessively cheerful smile.

"I confess... it's foremost in my mind to go and offer Dietrich the same relief as you've benefited from--though now I wonder if his reaction will be anything like yours... Still, if I were under the influence of something like that, I'd want to be freed--so I will at least offer him freedom. Do you think it's a good idea to try and visit the White Workshop now? I don't want to press too far into Yahar'gul to complete Harold's agenda, but also... do want to get back to it."

Farren gave her a small nod, his expression softening slightly as he glanced her way, before he turned to regard the doll, approaching only to stop within easy arm’s reach. Yet he didn’t speak or offer her his hand as of yet, instead, Farren closed his eyes and took stock of himself. His body, his mind, and the events that had transpired in the last while…how he’d chosen to fight, what he had lacked, where his strengths and weaknesses lay. He even considered those of his allies, and then he addressed the pair before him.

“I’ve echoes to spend,” he said, slowly opening his eyes, his gaze finding the doll’s. “...would delving into the Arcane allow me to call upon weapons as the Moonbound Hunter does? Or perhaps…allow me to retrieve them from the little helpers more swiftly?”

The doll shook her head no. "I am sorry, good Hunter, but I cannot help you achieve such things. The little ones try their best and move as fast as they can, and the Shopkeeper's power..." She glanced at the subject of their conversation. "None of us know how to replicate it. Attunement to the arcane on its own, at least, would not achieve what you want."

Farren frowned, but ultimately it was neither of their faults if they could not ascertain the nature of the Moonbound Hunter's power. “How unfortunate. What might greater capacity for the Arcane endow?” Farren asked, head slightly cocked as he regarded her. The azure-eyed hunter figured that he may as well fully understand the nature of his options before making a decision this time.

"The arcane is power drawn from the Nightmare," the doll hesitantly explained. "On your own you are unlikely to benefit from attunement to it aside from the ability to sense arcane powers around you, but the most practical purpose of it is to convey that power into the tools you wield. It is difficult to explain..." She glanced at Ophelia. "For instance, good Ophelia wields the Holy Moonlight Sword, which is an arcane weapon that is itself of the Nightmare, so it should be no surprise that attunement to the arcane makes her better at drawing more power from it. But the arcane also empowers more natural phenomena, bolstering them. A torch, for instance, will burn more intensely in the hands of someone like that. An explosive will also be more powerful."

At first Farren's frown remained, but as she explained in more detail and gave an example or two, Farren began to nod. He had a sense that his natural ability for such things was likely...not considerable. Nonetheless, he couldn't help but be somewhat intrigued by the prospect of enhancing the so-called Arcane aspects of the world simply through an unseen potency of Will, or whatever else it might derive from. That said...for the moment the fight with the stormbeast had made clear that he was far less strong than he'd perhaps thought. It had been humbling, really. He was grateful for that. “Thank you,” he said gratefully, nodding his head to the doll. However, something occurred to him in that moment and he frowned again, “Do you not have a name to call your own?” He asked, once more regarding the doll, though now with an increased intensity. “Something more than a mere title, perhaps....”

"I do not," the doll told him with an apologetic bow. "I am but a doll; if you wish to call me by a name, you are free to do so."

Farren shook his head, “You've a will of your own, a purpose, a mind. Even if it was granted to you by someone or something else, it is no less your own. You deserve a name,” he replied. His words almost sounded...wise or perhaps considerate. Someone who didn't know him well--which really was everyone present, himself included--might think that he'd become sentimental, but the simple reality was that Farren was being equal parts practical and gracious. His recent experiences, particularly with the Mask Rune, had truly elucidated him as to the importance of one's agency. Even if the Doll was trapped in the Dream--though it seemed more that she was bound to it and equally was content with remaining therein--even if she were just an automaton, to Farren she seemed a person. If one made entirely of porcelain and other typically inanimate material. She could speak and she appeared to reason and for him that was enough. “If you do not wish to choose one for yourself...” Farren said, his features growing thoughtful as he considered what might suit her. His eyes looked over her features, her strange pale eyes and skin...and he regarded the moon far above. “...I think Amaris would suit you well,” Farren finished after a brief time considering the matter, at which point he found himself smiling faintly. The name was familiar somehow...but he didn't know why. No matter.

The doll nodded her head in acceptance and bowed again. "Then I am Amaris, good Hunter."

Ophelia nodded along at the doll's explanation of affinity with the arcane, though she was right--it was difficult to explain. Ophelia found Farren's little name-giving moment quite touching, if perhaps a little presumptuous. Indeed, she knew it might be presumptuous of any of them to apply their particular perspective to one such as the doll, or the Shopkeeper. Reality was governed by unseen rules and desires far greater than anything any of them truly knew--even those who grasped more of it than most would only ever see so much.

"Seems to me you're a man of bold action, dear. You seem to like taking the initiative. I like to work out the why of it and identify key components... We're both strategists, I think, though you've a more physical grasp than I. Perhaps it makes sense for you to increase your stamina, strength, and dexterity fairly equally? That should ensure whatever weapons we come across you can use--and you seem to like having just the right tool for every situation, mm?"

Ophelia turned then to the Shopkeeper, a new spark of curiosity in her eyes.

"Is there somewhere here in the Dream that we could perhaps spar with you?We aren't able to draw you into the Waking World all of the time, for many reasons, but Farren seems enamoured with this ability of yours to shift between your arms and armours rapidly. It might prove an engaging hobby for the both of you, and be helpful besides?" Ophelia asked, before turning her focus back to the doll.

The Shopkeeper turned to Ophelia and just seemed to look at her for a moment - as much as one can seem to be looking at anything when you cannot see their face - and then pointed to the field of flowers under the tree, where the statues of past Paleblood Hunters stood.

Farren bowed his head to Amaris in turn and even offered her a small smile when they both had risen. A moment later, Ophelia chimed in from nearby and he glanced at her out the corner of his eye, head tilted away from her as his gaze shifted thoughtfully towards the sky. He couldn't help but chuckle, her assessment was rather accurate after all. Calling to mind how many echoes it had required previously and weighing what he may have possessed in that moment, Farren finally made his decision, “Empower equally my dexterity of body and mind, along with endurance. Perhaps the faintest bit to my vitality as well,” Farren requested, raising his hand for her to take as he closed his eyes.

"Very well, let the echoes become your strength," the doll told him, then channeled his echoes as requested.

Ophelia nodded approvingly at the interaction before beckoning everyone closer (which mostly meant trying to get and keep Gerlinde's attention) to discuss.

"What do we want to do now, then? I'd say our purpose in getting echoes from Yahar'gul has been a roaring success. Like I said, I'm eager to get the key players out from under the influence of Harold... and there's a conversation I'd like to have with Dietrich. In fact, perhaps filling him in on the Crowmother personally would be wise, no? We could pursue that, or Old Yharnam, or perhaps the thread left behind by the Pallid one? Should we check up on the Hunters at the clinic? I've a mind to go to Castle Cainhurst--Mother Moon whispers to me that the chalice is there, and I'm eager to retrieve it. Think what magnificent arcane treasures and echoes might await us in the Interstice, Gerlinde! We... have a lot of options. I'm inclined to visit Dietrich and then head to Castle Cainhurst myself. What do we think?" Ophelia asked, listing out the considerable barrage of options and offering her own thoughts.

Gerlinde smiled and stared at Ophelia. "Exploring the Old Labyrinth sounds like it could be fun! Let's get the chalice and go there!"

Farren felt the echoes suffuse him in a way entirely different from how their subtle weight had ridden the channels of his blood. For as Amaris focused them, transmuting them directly into the essence of his body, Farren experienced the invigorating sensation of those echoes enhancing every fiber of his muscles, every aspect of his flesh and bones and nerves. Impulses traveled faster between neurons, an experience that while he did not understand, lent him a greater and more rapid sense for the world around him. Before it had felt totally normal, but now his prior perceptions felt...slow somehow. Like there had been some delay between input and his awareness of a given phenomena. That had been reduced now and along with it he felt...full of vim and vigor as if every cell in his body was bursting with new energy. Any sense of exhaustion or fatigue from their prior battle was utterly washed away by the sensation and after a moment he felt renewed. Taking a deep breath, Farren savored the sensation and then--eyes opening--he gave the dol...no, Amaris a smile and a nod. “Much appreciated, Amaris,” Farren said, then he turned to Ophelia, listening once she'd gathered the others upon the steps embedded in the hill.

As she listed their various options, it occurred to Farren that he needed to get Fulmen checked by a proper craftsman. As much as he wished he could fix it--for he'd sensed that his gambit had failed--he knew that for now it was beyond him. Perhaps with time he might gain the skills necessary...but for the moment he would need the assistance of the specialists of a Workshop. Once she had finished, he spoke up, “I also need to visit the Black Workshop to repair Fulmen...and see if perhaps Seven might find a proper use for the forearm of the Stormbeast,” Farren said, half-thinking aloud. Then something occurred to him and he knelt, calling upon the Messengers, murmuring his wishes. He wanted to know what they would say about the creature’s arm, in the same way that they had been able to describe other objects…as well as the Caryll Runes.

The Messengers quickly provided Farren with a scroll:
Arm of a darkbeast
The still-living arm of an undead darkbeast.
"Oh sweet Paarl, where did you go? Your old mother misses you so..."
The Messengers about the darkbeast's arm

"No more splitting up, so we're all going. I think the White workshop takes priority--who knows if Dietrich is still there? I... just want to get it over with. Freeing him from Harold's influence seems to be the least I can do... though I'm certain it would cause some disruption. Is that something we want to bring into being? I... I just think he deserves to be free of it, no matter the consequences. I'm possibly just projecting, but... Ah, I don't know, it's all so much to keep track of." Ophelia replied, looking slightly more stressed and strained than usual by the end of it. She took a quick moment to breathe idly and gaze at the brightness of the Holy Moonlight Sword softly, appreciating the new nuances of brightness she could discover.

Farren frowned slightly at the parchment, but nonetheless gave the Messengers a thankful nod, before he pushed back to his feet. He'd been hoping that they could offer him something more substantial than that, but it seemed things could not be so simple as that.

Farren turned his attention back to Ophelia, “Indeed, Fulmen can wait for now, though I'd at least have it dropped off with the Black Church Hunters, if not repaired, before we head for the Castle,” Farren said, apparently agreeing with her course of action. As much as the mystery and problem of Yahar'gul tugged at his mind--and such things did have a pull--he had no true desire to return to that miserable place. Not for now, at least.

"'Disruption' sounds fun," Gerlinde chimed in with a grin.

"Ah, but let me use the Mask rune myself before we go... Would you like it as well, Gerlinde, seeing as you'll need to change? Say... you don't think that the golden areas are in the Interstice somehow, do you? Could that be why the Dream rune needs to be removed, as you'd already be existing there? Have you tried being in the Old Labyrinth with the Dream rune already?" Ophelia asked, suddenly seeming invigorated from her little moment with her blade. She moved to obtain the runebrand and change her rune while she began to extrapolate towards the end.

Once she'd finished branding herself, she did the same for Gerlinde.

“Seems it’s decided then. However…let’s not use the Lumenflower lantern,” Farren said, unable to entirely suppress a faint shudder, his brow wrinkling for a moment before he schooled his expression.

"Yes, best not. To the Workshop, then, and hoping Dietrich is in. Ah, but let me make some purchases first!" Ophelia added, heading over to the birdbath to inspect the inventory. She purchased 10 quicksilver bullets, leaving herself 50 echoes for the memory later, and refilled her tube while depositing the rest for the little ones to look after. She then went and joined them at the marker to arrive at their new destination, runebrand safely upon her person.

"Ah, one thing before we head back out into the fray," Gerlinde interjected as Ophelia got ready for them to leave. Again she raised her left hand and pointed to the head of the snake molt wrapped around her arm. "Earlier, after I stumbled over to the white-furred beast and attacked it, I managed to get Snakey here to eat some of its light. So if it becomes necessary, it has some healing mojo in it at the moment."

Farren’s brows rose and his head shifted to the side slightly as he glanced at Gerlinde while Ophelia made her purchases. “Well that’s quite the trick,” Farren commented, unable to suppress the beginnings of a lopsided grin.

"She'll look after us again, sweet thing. I hope she's okay. Let's go?" Ophelia added, ready to reach out and touch the appropriate name on the headstone.

Farren for his part gave Gerlinde’s snakeskin garment a final amused glance before he turned to the gravestones, found the newly inscribed location in Yahar’gul and promptly named it.

It simply read ‘Yahar’gul Entrance,’ and while part of him had wanted to name it something slightly more evocative…if only so each time they read it they could prepare themselves for the pervasive misery of the place, ultimately his pragmatism had won out. Besides, it wouldn’t do for them to forget exactly where the lantern would land them, thus the name ought to clearly indicate its locale. Once he was satisfied, Farren turned and reached for the same name that Ophelia was, clearly ready to depart as well.
Farren
felt a not-at-all subtle sense of not-so-distant, but altogether foreign, dread and sorrow settle over him like a gossamer thin sheet made from lead. It weighed on his mind and that weight had him nearly dragging his feet, his shoulders sagging subtly in a way that he didn’t even notice even as he peered about, scanning his surroundings. It seemed that Yahar’gul was an even more harrowing and strange place than he’d heard, its seemingly endless central boulevard straddled on both sides by statues of an eerie, disquieting nature.

Farren’s brow creased in a frown, but he continued forth, moving towards the lantern he’d caught sight of even as he glanced back behind him. It was then that he noticed the uncountable stone figures frozen in a scrabbling, maddened fear as they attempted to scale the great walls that enclosed this fell place. A shudder wracked his figure for a moment and Farren shook himself, his eyes narrowing slightly before he deliberately pulled his gaze back to the lantern, which he’d just reached. Taking a calming breath, Farren snapped his fingers in the unlit lantern’s direction, as he’d been shown once by the Messengers, and waited for it to light even as he kept his senses stretched to their limits.

Yet…he heard nothing except the occasional shift of old masonry and woodwork. The place seemed utterly and profoundly abandoned…yet it had been guarded by that terrifying undead creature and concealed by the lightbeast. The question was…why?

Why had someone taken such drastic precautions…and how had the enclosing wall been created, hell when had it been created for that matter. Of course…while those questions were pressing ones he wanted answers for, the thing that truly had him unsettled were the statues themselves. For, with his enhanced eyesight, he could see details that only the most prolific of sculptors would have been capable of including. Even the most warped of the statues, after all, had an eerie realism to them, like flesh and cloth, sweat and tears, hair and sinew and skin had been wrought from stone by some unknown power. In fact…the statues barely felt like statues, in a esoteric sort of way. Logically, Farren wanted to believe that some utterly mad artist had done this, that the sheer quantity and quality of the statues was just the result of perhaps numerous sculptors working tirelessly for weeks–that the beads of sweat and trails of terror-induced tears on some of the cheeks of the statues were just additions of someone utterly and profoundly dedicated to their craft.

But it didn’t feel that way. It didn’t feel that way at all and while it felt…irrational, Farren was coming to understand that the world in which he lived was one profoundly more strange than he would have liked to believe.

So, instead…Farren admitted to himself–if only in the silence of his inner mind–that it was more as if every resident of Yahar’gul had been suddenly and inextricably turned to stone in the midst of attempting to flee in a terrified mob in every possible direction.

The idea–again–made him shudder, but he steadied himself with another deep breath and glanced back towards the threshold from which he’d entered, hoping the others would hurry. For…while he wanted to call out to them, to not be alone in this place, Farren couldn’t quite bring himself to speak. The dread and misery in the air was too thick and choking–and if he were being entirely honest…while he was handling it well, and barely displaying it in his demeanor, he was profoundly frightened. Something about this place just…it had wormed its way past his defenses.

Whatever dwelled in Yahar’gul…after they had extracted everything they could from it…it needed to die. Then, he would only be satisfied if he never had to visit, see, or speak of the place again and perhaps not even then would he feel relief….
Farren
nodded idly in response, though his eyes blazed slightly as he regarded Ophelia with a somewhat intense expression that only calmed once she’d assured them she’d be sharing the Rune. When she demonstrated it, he’d be paying very close attention, but thereafter he’d pull away, turning towards the path that had been opened for them. Walking, he joined Gerlinde where she was peeking past where the fog gate once had been. Farren didn’t peek, he just looked straight through the open threshold and after briefly taking in what he could see, he stepped past it after drawing the Beastcutter into both hands, braced in front of him, but not in such a way that would cause him problems stepping through the doorway.

Clearly he was quite ready to push onwards.
Farren
watched warily as the beast began to move, but he didn’t strike and unable to see the gathering motes of light as Ophelia could, Farren reacted not in the slightest once it had settled into a state resembling prayer. Frowning, the azure-eyed hunter regarded the beast for a long moment before shaking his head slightly. Then it reached out to Ophelia and his eyes widened fractionally, but before he could act, its claw lightly tapped his ally’s forehead and a series of expressions seemed to wash over the woman’s features. Farren took a single step forward, but again before he might do something drastic, Ophelia spoke and Farren’s eyes darted to her, noting that she seemed entirely unharmed.

He started to relax, though he gave the white-haired beast a suspicious look. However, as Ophelia explained what the beast had done, his brows rose and his eyes widened. Farren wanted that Rune on his mind…but not before they returned to the Dream, for as much as he itched for it…for the influence of that Garden to be well and truly gone, he knew it wasn’t practical to assume there would be no further encounters ahead of them. After all, more echoes riding within his blood was a blessing all its own and it was not one he would so simply give up on for the mere comfort that this new Rune might offer..

“Teach it to us,” Farren said, his voice stiff and measured as he held back how badly he wanted that power. “...but I will keep the Heir Rune for now…until we return at least.” That said, Farren joined her in fully freeing the lightbeast for though he remained vigilant and somewhat wary, much of his suspicion had waned.
Farren
watched as Ophelia began to move away from the Darkbeast and he followed in kind, so that when she eventually turned to seek him, he was only a meter or so behind and to her left. He’d been watching the Lightbeast as she’d interacted with it and he had a faint frown creasing his brow, though it faded after a moment as he gave a slight shrug. “Certainly…and if you lent a hand, Torquil, it’d likely go twice as fast,” the last he added as he glanced in the armored man’s direction. After a moment he glanced back to the Lightbeast and approached it at a measured pace, his discerning gaze vigilantly remaining focused on the beast.

It did not seem hostile, but even a beast could have animal cunning. “Gerlinde, in case it’s an act, I want you ready to strike it at,” he said, giving her a glance before he took a knee beside one of its staked hands. Farren looked it over for a moment, trying to ascertain whether it was mostly in the ground or mostly exposed to open air. It only took him a brief moment before he went about loosening the chain, though he couldn’t easily maneuver it with the beast’s bulk in the way and its hands still bound to the ground by the stake. Once there was enough slack, Farren repositioned himself, nodded and warped both hands around the handle. Wrenching upwards with slowly increasing strength, Farren only used as much as he needed to in order to pull the blade of the stake out of the creature’s impaled hands.

He’d still stumble back and away a bit when the blade came out, ending up with the stake in one hand, the chain trailing back to the wrists of the Lightbeast, which he regarded with wary, discerning eyes.
Farren
glanced over at the Lightbeast briefly, before turning back to the Darkbeast’s still faintly crackling cadaver. Some part of him wanted to chop it into little pieces and bury them each some meters apart, but he didn’t. It would be a waste of time for if the creature could come back even from this then separating its remains would only prove to delay it.

However, while taking the time to hack the darkbeast into numerous segments may have been too time consuming, taking some piece of it could be helpful. After all…surely someone could put something so durable, conductive, and with seemingly nigh limitless–if not rapid–regenerative potential to use. With that in mind, while he waited for Ophelia to weigh in on the situation with the Lightbeast–something he deliberately chose not to do for the moment–Farren hefted a foot a bit, found it too weighty, then moved to one of its forelegs. He was able to lift it…just barely, and only a few inches from the silt-coated ground. Perhaps half that weight would be manageable, he figured. That in mind, Farren positioned himself at one of the elbows after maneuvering the arm into an extended position that it would hold on account of gravity, and then he brought his Beastflayer down through the joint in a heavy swing.

Severing it cleanly after two passes, Farren slung the weapon on his back and then knelt down by the forearm and its still-attached hand. He nodded to himself slightly and muttered for the Messengers, who showed up briefly after. Hefting the arm he handed it over to them, helping them lower it into the oblivion of the Nightmare realm they used to store things. When that was finished, Farren glanced back at the body. He could probably take more of it apart and store it…but he wasn’t sure if there was limited space in his ‘storage’ realm or if things could affect eachother at all while in it together. So he didn’t. After all, the beast’s still undead body did not seem to be going anywhere so if the initial part was of some use he figured that he could come retrieve more…and with an actual team to transport it.

That done, Farren turned away from the felled beast.
Farren
did not act as quickly as the others, but when he saw them rushing the darkbeast, he followed suit. However, as he arrived it was already over. He gritted his teeth a moment, irritated, and then the wash of overwhelming, but weightless Significance settled into his veins, pulsing through with each of his heartbeats. Though it burdened him not at all, the sensation of it was similar to what he imagined it must have been like to exist beyond the physical self…yet within the same space. The thought came to him without context and he took in a deep breath, finally feeling some of the frustration from the last hour or so fall away from his shoulders and drain from his body.

Realizing he’d closed his eyes for a moment to revel in the sensation, Farren opened them once more and then walked towards the Darkbeast’s ruined corpse and stared down at it with a slight smile. “Good fucking riddance,” he said, sounding satisfied, then spat on the ground beside it. That done, Farren retrieved what he could from the beast, looking it over to ensure there was nothing of any further use that they might extract from it beyond the echoes that had once animated its undead flesh. During that process he also retrieved the Blade of Mercy he’d left embedded in its skull, checking it over, before unifying it with its twin and sheathing it.

Once he’d found all he could, Farren glanced in Ophelia’s direction, wondering perhaps if he contemplated on their recent experiences if there might be another Rune to be gleaned somehow. He doubted it…and after a few moment’s consideration he decided against it. If he was going to do something like that he’d save it for somewhere safer–like one of the workshops…or the Hunter’s Dream. A moment later he was pulled from those thoughts by Ophelia's praise. He almost let out a grunt rather than reply, but instead he glanced back between the members of their group and then down at the beheaded Darkbeast.

“Still could've gone better,” Farren said, and though the words were rather negative, he was smiling, clearly pleased that things had turned out better than he’d expected. For a time there it had seemed like they’d been slated for an exceptionally more unpleasant trip to the Dream. Then he nodded, and glanced in the direction of the fog gate–obscured by the illusory wall. “Mmh, Sounds as good a plan as any. Besides, I’m tired of all this blasted silt,” Farren replied, kicking at a nearby pile with a faint laugh. He seemed in good spirits. There really was something to narrowly escaping death it seemed.
Farren
watched the battle with baited breath, recovering his stamina naturally as he did so. Each exchange of blows was tremendous and he marvelled at the fact that they’d even managed to fight the Darkbeast at all. However…at the same time, Farren found himself unsettled and uncertain. Before when Ophelia had summoned the Moonbound Hunter he had absolutely obliterated their opponent…but now, it was almost even, and Farren had the distinct sense that the Shopkeeper was struggling.

“This isn’t good…” Farren muttered, pushing to his feet after he’d briefly handed Bulwark to the Messengers who had waited for further direction. They’d taken it after that.

As Farren stood up, he glanced at the three others. Torquil was perhaps in the best shape…or at least looked it, but that was on account of his armor. Besides, the man had clearly taken at least one blood vial during their encounter with the Darkbeast. While Farren took in each of them–startled at how well off Gerlinde seemed despite the sheer quantity of damage she’d taken. Ophelia on the other hand, though in decent shape, appeared largely on her last legs—she was clearly exhausted.

Yet, before he could even begin to organize some plan of attack, his eyes were drawn back to the conflict as the Darkbeast wrested dominion of the battle by latching onto the Shopkeeper. Then it started to glow with a ferocity far exceeding anything it had done during their fight with it. “Shit…”

Farren cast his gaze down and away, shielding his eyes with an arm in the instant right before the explosion went off. It was so loud and powerful that it rattled his bones, sending a chilling vibration throughout his entire body that set his every nerve on edge. Some small part of him that retained a prey instinct told him desperately to run. Farren stifled that voice, squared his jaw and tried to steel himself, but when the dust cleared, his lips parted slightly in stunned horror.

“That…that’s a problem,” Farren said simply, his tone gruff and though there was a note of fear there, by and large he sounded no less determined than before. Brandishing the Beastflayer, Farren’s eyes snapped over to Gerlinde. “Any chance that horn of yours can work on more than one weapon at a time?” As he spoke, he kept the beast in his peripheral vision. He’d know precisely when it decided to shift its attention.
Farren
healed much faster from that point, as Bulwark levered the chainlink open even further, though it hadn’t done quite the degree of damage he’d hoped it could. Nonetheless, as his senses came fully back into focus, he caught the trailing crimson bolts as the Darkbeast leapt into motion. Farren’s gaze shifted in the direction he’d seen the blur, his brow already furrowing before he watched in dumbfounded silence as the Darkbeast began its clash with the Moonborn Hunter.

Though he’d not know it, Farren had thought similarly to Ophelia…that they could have prevailed given a bit more time and space to maneuver, but seeing that single clash changed his mind.

“Bloody hell…” Farren muttered, but he didn’t gape for more than an instant. The silt blocked his view anyways, so instead he turned his azure eyes upon the chainlink, withdrew Bulwark’s expanded shield form from the space with a grating metal-against-metal racket, and then he tossed the weapon to his left rather carelessly. Far moreso than he normally would have. His hands swiftly caught on the chain link, and he used his strength and dexterity both to unhook it from its fellows, severing the link between Light and Darkbeasts.

That done, Farren glanced at Bulwark, noted the chipped outer edge with a frown, then mumbled to the Messengers, who took the weapon away the next moment. He’d have to get it repaired now…that’d been reckless, but necessary–he hoped.

Rising to his feet, Farren kicked the now separated portions of chain away from one another and pulled the Beastflayer from his back, watching for further movement.

Surely the beast couldn’t overpower even the Shopkeeper….
Lhirinthyl


Lhirin had much to think on as they walked following his involvement in conversations with Freagon and the fall–Caleb–he corrected himself mentally. Though he’d had a fair deal more experience than most with the divine on account of Deo’Irah, fallen angels were a different matter entirely. Personally, he found them fascinating and his experience thus far with Caleb only reinforced that notion. Oddly–though he understood the divine’s reticence to share it–Lhirin found himself truly wishing he had the being’s name. Not to summon it necessarily, but simply to converse with it.

It just seemed a terrible shame that one with so many experiences and the knowledge that came with divinity would be locked away in the Neverrealm once they were done. Had he the option, the deigan might have bound himself to his word with the divine, such that he could not bind Caleb even if he so desired, but alas Lhirin knew of no such magic nor other power that might allow such a thing.

Sighing lightly to himself–the sound small and quiet as the necessity for some measure of stealth had presented itself some time ago–Lhirin went about assisting Irah with her gathering. When they came to a stop to briefly confer, Lhirin made an effort to put some finishing touches on the makeshift facsimile of a body.

It was roughshod at best and though it would surely crumble at some point later when the Angel had once again departed, Lhirin found that it offended his sensibilities as a craftsman.

However, before he could ask for her flask, Lhirin felt Irah’s hand gently lay upon his shoulder. Lhirin frowned slightly, his silver eyes shifting to regard her. While others he could not read, Irah he had come to know very well over their time together and something in his manner hardened–his stance becoming more solid as he spaced his feet more evenly and stood just a bit taller, all as if to offer her something solid to rely on. Yet, even as that occurred, his gaze grew soft, filled with unspoken understanding. Lightly, he raised his own hand and laid it over hers, holding her gaze for a long few seconds, before he finally blinked once and spoke.

“May I have your flask?”

She acquiesced, handing it over and he gave her a small nod of thanks and a brief smile, before squeezing her hand lightly and then letting go. He moved to their makeshift construction and scanned the nearby earth, poking at it with the toe of his boot as he did so. Eventually he seemed to find what he was looking for, at which point he shifted over to it and crouched down, uncapping her flask.

Someone else might think the next thing he did was rude and thoughtless, for Lhirinthyl promptly poured the water onto the ground in an expanding circle until the flask was nearly emptied. Capping it he handed it up to Irah and then began to scrounge in the dirt like some small burrowing animal. He dug without the slightest hint of shame and with a single minded focus that few could match. After a minute or so he’d loosened a fairly decent portion of sodden dirt–mud really–and his hands were thoroughly sullied by the act. Yet, for some reason, the deigan mage seemed pleased at his work. He took in hand some of the mud, testing its consistency–and even compacting it to squeeze some of the moisture out into mostly dry earth–after which he pushed to his feet and turned to their creation. Carefully he began to pat clots of mud onto various areas of the construct in mostly fairly thin layers. He’d come back for more mud, gathering it in hand before repeating the process. When he had gotten most of the mud in place he put some more around where joints might be and molded gentle curves and angles into the piece. It took at least a solid 5 minutes while the others conferred and organized, but when he was done their roughshod thing appeared somewhat more recognizable as a facsimile of a person. He’d been careful not to put too much mud in a given place so that it could hold together with the loose plant matter, sticks, and other materials they’d used. It also, oddly, looked a bit more like something. Lhirin hadn’t been aiming for anything in particular, but it had about if one caught its silhouette they might be startled–even before they summoned a divine to inhabit it.

Brushing off his hands of dried mud, Lhirin then turned back to the others. He only grimaced when he realized that he might have to hold his Runeblade with his soil-covered hands. Sighing a bit he used his own flask to slightly rinse off a bit more dirt, then he absently wiped them off using his sleeves. They could clean his clothes later, it was more important that he could easily move his fingers and wield his blade.

Likely by the time he’d finished, Caleb would be ready for the first summoning and the others would be fully organized, at which point he’d join the group that they’d planned he would accompany.
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