by C S » Sun Mar 05, 2017 10:59 pm
It was a new day to crack down on a mystic mystery at the precinct.
Proceedings took place outside of the usual office where Johnathon was holed up. All hands on the case were gathered on the floor above, in a room with a sizable table at the center and an oil lamp over it for work that went on deep into the night. A low flame burned within the glass frame, and would continue to burn until the sun was high enough to brighten the land and sky. The windows that lined the sidelong wall were opened in anticipation.
The officers took up a quadrant of the table to address the compiled reports that had come back from all the ministries that had been contacted for their expertise. The magical research department had delivered unto the detective team work that may as well have been an unbound tome. Johnathon sifted through the pages, more than thankful that the language used was plain enough for him to read. There was sparing use of jargon, and what could not be avoided was defined in smaller paragraphs after the initial appearance of the terms. That said, the contents of the confiscated pamphlets were of a dire sort from what Johnathon had gotten through so far. The hefty return of information was the research division's way of contextualizing the gravity of the situation at hand.
The Green-Coat was hunched over the table, hands braced on its surface and his eyes scanning back and forth across the tanned pages that symmetrically encompassed blocks of meticulous script. Johnathon was under the impression that the reports were the result of enchanted quills, though as his mind inevitably began to wander from the journey through the reading, he began to entertain thoughts of some miserable monk-scholar being dictated to by people in stuffy coats and experimentation garb.
Out on the street, the hydromancer pulled her coat tightly together and stuffed her hands into its pockets to keep herself bound in leather and fur. She looked up from underneath the rim of her pointed at to the two guards who walked on either side of her, stoic in full plate. Their slitted visors were pulled down over their faces, the teeth of the wyrm-god outlined by red paint on the top and bottom of the armor. Their metal boots provided a steady rhythm to their pace at the side of the road.
Moira swayed ever so slightly to that beat, humming a song in her head following the intervals. She didn't think she was going to get much conversation out of her guards on her way to the precinct, which she found pretty unfortunate. If there was anything that would have made dealing with being escorted around more tolerable, it was good conversations with the bodyguards. A good chunk of Brodudika's elven population would have appreciated the measure of security afforded for her, which also made things just a tad bit more uncomfortable. As aloof and carefree as she came off to be, Moira was not blind to the looks her passing garnered. They were not the bemusement she was used to of others. They were harsher, and more critical.
Nothing much she could have done about that, she knew. It was a more achievable goal to defend one woman against a vague threat focused on her specifically than to protect every individual at risk at any moment in the day or night from an even more ambiguous enemy. Nevertheless, Moira's song was brought to an end by the thought, "The queen without a kingdom didn't have a pair of knights following her everywhere." A moment of clarity.
"You guardsmen and guardswomen -- it's hard to tell which one you may be when you have your faces covered -- impress me to no end," Moira stated without caring for a response. "The hottest days, or the coldest, it matters not. Your steel is your wear for all weather. If only I could be so grossly disciplined."
That earned her tinny chuckles from her metal bound guardians, but little else. Cutting her losses as they were, Moira went back to the song in her head. She and her guards passed the steps of the church at the moment that Natalie stepped through its dragon motif doors. On the other side of them, she took her coat off and hung it up on the rack nearby, then she smoothed out her black and green gown that signified her new role as a verger.
"Hey, Johnathon," said the teslamantic aid.
Jesse ran a finger across the uncannily smooth surface of a wood-cover book. The corners were padded by triangular cuts of leather, and the spine had overlapping leather squares sewn together by sturdy looking black string. What was truly eye-catching was the silvery circle inlaid on the front cover. It was made out of three concentric rings around a central plate. The plate had etchings of identical overlapping triangles, each consecutive triangle rotated a few degrees from the starting position so that their bases formed a densely angular shape that was not quite a circle, and their points lined up with the two outer rings, which were covered in arcane symbols.
"Any idea why the bigheads sent this book?"
Johnathon glanced up to the book in question, then to the pile of papers he had yet to get to. "Give me a moment." Johnathon went down the page he was on for mention of the book. When he did not see one, he scooped up the top of the pile and began to leaf through the pages, repeating the process and, in doing so, divvying up the tall pile into several smaller ones, until he got what he was after.
"It's called a 'multi-inquiry codex'. It's several books in one."
Jesse raised a brow and then attempted to flip the book open. It came as a great surprise that the front cover did not budge at all. "What the hell? It's like they sent us a brick."
"It essentially is a brick, if it's locked," Johnathon clarified. "One needs to specify the nature of their query before it can be opened. That's what the runes are for."
"Handy. Our own dedicated magical resource, and we can't use it because I'm fairly certain that none of us here know any combinations that could get it to open, much less give us something we could use here," Jesse observed, finding the whole thing very underwhelming. What a fancy paperweight, full of paper!
"There might be some instructions tucked away inside... all of this." Johnathon gestured to his collection of clinical arcane literature. Then there was Moira of course, and her involvement in the case, but her attendance was not exactly reliable in any formality she was a part of. And that was on a good, normal day. Now that she was to be escorted by guards to keep her from being ambushed again, there was no telling when she'd appear at places she was due.
"I could take a crack at it. Remember how I jigged the jig and got that one shed open?" Kenneth broached from across the table.
Johnathon craned his neck and inspected the book. It was as he suspected. "No keyholes, no lock. It'll take more than some directed finagling to get into this one, I'm sorry to say."
Back in the resource room, Jesse ducked down under the table to see what Kenneth had been busy with. "What's with the crates?" The other detective was on a knee looking through six boxes that were on the ground beside the table.
"Evidence boxes. Our 'civilian helpers' made the find the other night. I can deduce already that our culprits have bad fashion sense." Kenneth looked up to Jesse and smirked. "Furs aren't local. These coats were bought some ways out from here, so no tracking down clothing stalls to ask about suspicious groupies. And as you can probably guess--"
"Names in the city's visitor logs are all fake?" Jesse asked.
"So no point in sending you out to get copies."
"Small blessings, to not have to go through that again."
Kenneth nodded and went back to inspecting the coats. After a short while he hummed introspectively. "Five coats, and one coat that's been partly mauled. A little bit of belated trouble with the local wildlife, it looks like. I don't think our jungle girl's rough play will interfere too much in the alchemical testing though, since Moira said that at least one of them knows a bit of sorcery."
"With any luck, our research teams may be able to work their magic on a couple of rocks and come up with a way to track down our wand-waver down," Jesse said. That couldn't be too hard for the people who restored function to a limb, and then some.
"Maybe," Johnathon responded. "Right now, it seems to me that they are the extreme outliers in all of this. If we can catch them before anything else escalates, that would be amazing, of course. The real focus though should be finding out the ones in the city these people were trying to contact that day. Who was supposed to get those books? We put a stop to the internal operation and everything else grinds to a halt. We might just learn who our mercenary warlocks are along the way."
The door opened behind him at that precise moment, and all in the room turned to look at the newcomer. "Sounds like a reasonable strategy to begin with. Avenging Blitz was a good first strike, but there is still much work to be done, it seems." she said as she stepped inside. Moira met all the eyes turned her way, bowing her head in greeting to all the officers. "I hope I haven't missed much."
The officers all said their greetings, which blended into a murmur before the din died down and they returned to piecing together their current findings into a patchy whole that was nearing some semblance of coherence.
"We were talking about how we might nab the one who put a wand into your back not long ago," Jesse stated.
Moira chuckled, a flush of elation visible in her features underneath her wide brimmed hat. "Wonderful. I may be free to walk the streets alone sooner than I expected!"
"We can hope," said Kenneth. "It may be a bit sudden here, but do you know how to work this book?" He rapped his knuckles against the directory's solid cover.
Moira flitted over to the table and hefted the weighty book into her arms, as though she were holding a baby. "Do I know how to work this codex, he says," she cooed, tracing a finger around the rings in an oddly motherly way. She lined up runes with the vertical point of the plate: the initial triangle, and opened the codex.
Jesse slumped somewhat. No glowing, no flashy visuals. "So it's like a regular book with a fancy way of keeping people who don't know what they're doing from reading things they shouldn't?"
"In a way," said Moira with a small, wry smile. "It also rearranges its pages and writing to suit what you're looking for, if you know what to look for. These books are updated regularly back at the research division, so each one of them is the latest volume of any number of series of tomes."
"So it's a fancy book that likes to play that it's just a normal old book, then," Jesse amended.
"It's a wonderful innovation out of the labs. Now all that's left is finding a way to rapidly print books without magic, so that everyone across Aster can get access to this knowledge, albeit without the convenience of their books rewriting themselves to include new developments as they arise," Moira mused.
She then laid the book down and tapped Johnathon on the shoulder to get his attention. Amazingly, or perhaps, exactly as should be expected, the representative had opened up to the codex's entry on the recovered pamphlets.
"There weren't any hexes placed on those booklets, thankfully for all who had to handle them, myself included," she explained, " but they are bewitching for what they describe. A group of mystics approached by a hermit. A messiah figure? He instructed them to study dragons so that they could create a being that exhibited all the best traits of dragonkind. Their work was extensive, and took many years to yield results. Surprisingly, they did not take live subjects to test on. On the contrary, the mystics actively freed captive dragons."
"They sound like a nice lot," Kenneth commented. "Is the part where it all goes bad next or do we have to wait a little more for that?"
"A smidgen of a wait," Moira replied, holding the tips of her index finger and her thumb only so far apart.
"Can you clarify what you mean by 'messiah'?" Jesse inquired.
Johnathon concurred. "I would like to know how deep this Frondfoot nest goes. Is there someone out there pushing for the creation of... creatures... still?"
Moira looked at the tome vacantly. "We can't honestly say. The booklets only refer to this individual as the 'Enlightener' and they don't go into much detail about him past the fact that he was male. Or they thought he was male at the very least. They don't specify why he wanted a dragon in the first place, but in pursuit of that goal, the mystics studied wild drakes, wyverns and ventured to remote places to find even the most exotic dragons. They collected discarded shells and membranes, and tokens from the Blood Dragon wars, all so that they could one day make a shrine for their 'Enlightener' and their future progeny. And then they drew up their plans to give their own souls to flesh born from magic..."
The sailor-turned-mage looked to Kenneth and said, "This is the part where it turns bad."
"Sounds like it," Kenneth agreed flatly. "Far cry from speculating about inspiration for dragon gods."
"And more in line with trying to make one," said Moira.
Jesse shook her head. "Always a genius move."
"At this point in time, the mystics became warlocks. They dabbled in forbidden magic, magic that influences the very nature of a soul. They were planning to stitch their very beings into that of their creation, to ascend into another state of life as its guardians as well as its life force. They called their work 'Chromatus'. Things must not have gone as according to plan... their superior hybrid turned out to be a hydra, each part a blend of all the dragons the warlocks had studied before. This is why all descriptions of Chromatus don't match any of the known dragon species. The warlocks must have thought it perfect, but in reality, Chromatus was just an imitation; what they thought dragons should be. Their minds were all twisted beyond comprehension to birth a creature like that."
"A bit of an understatement," Jesse chimed in.
"Chromatus did not run rampant, however. It was... benign, in a way. A wandering giant, alone in the world. Many people encountered it; it wasn't hard to collect a few records of the incidents. Even Desrium and Septimus came across it in their journeys. But then, at some point, Chromatus just disappeared."
"Along with the 'Enlightener', I assume," Johnathon said, to which Moira nodded.
"These 'gospels' didn't come into our criminals' possession by chance. They had to have been searching for a long time to find what became of those warlocks, and to retrieve their journals." Moira sighed. "It seems to be the only logical conclusion that this plot predates even the wyvern conspiracy. Perhaps it was the lack of results which prompted our conspirators to seek the service of poachers in the first place, as a backup plan."
"Well damn," Kenneth replied plainly. "You weren't kidding about Avenging Blitz. It knocked a big dent into our terrorists' effectiveness, but we missed some key patches if none of the confiscated documents tipped us off that this thing was coming. If it weren't for you, our especially talented sneaks would have gone ahead with their scheme without anyone being wise to it."
Moira waved a hand. "I am inclined to plead humility here. It's difficult to let the praise go to my head after laying my life on the line."
"On the bright side, there's something I think we can all appreciate: if our baddies were just a little more patient, we would have all been blindsided. Now look what they have to show for their eagerness," Jesse proposed with a vindictive edge.
"Limited support from their now-arrested peers and no element of surprise. They're going to have to be on the defensive, and we're one step ahead of them already." Johnathon chuckled.
That was a pretty good bright side.
