Author's Note:
So, it finally happened! A quest has bugged out completely on me and I cannot complete it, no matter how hard I try. I've edited my save files, changed my stats around. I've even tried to change poor Ray into a human, to see if him being a half-orc was fucking with the game code. Nothing workred. So, uh...just assume that the negotiations with Caladon went off just fine and we'll move on. Sorry about this, ladies, gentlefolk and genderqueer individuals.
On to the story!
December 12
th
, 1885
Rain pattered against the windows of the Misk household's expanse library. Virginia had, helpfully, set every light in the room to as bright as it could go. Warmly burning oil lamps and electrical bulbs shrouded in comforting draperies both worked with the stoked fireplace to give the room a warm, cheery glow -- but it did little to offset the grim mood that had cast its pall over the Misk house. With both Victor and now Wesley the butler both dead within the same week, both murdered by the ominous curse of T'Sen-Ang, it felt as if we were all at an impasse, with no clue as where to investigate next.
Save...
Virginia sat next to me on the small reading couch that was situated across from the fire. Light danced along her freckled cheeks as she held up the small, wrapped package that she had retrieved on her mysterious errand. I took it and winkled my nose. "This smells like you fetched it from a grave," I said.
"Heh, uh, well, open it," Virginia said, coughing demurely behind her hand.
"You didn't," I said, my eyes darting from Virginia to Leslie Misk, who was sitting near the fireplace and looking into it, her black gloved hands rubbing together in slow circles.
Virginia coughed. "Well, the exigencies of the service and...well...I put...I buried him again once I was done!" She whispered, her voice growing increasingly furtive. "If we can't find T'Sen-Ang, who knows how many more innocent folk these blighters will arrange 'accidents' for." She tapped the wrapped sack. I sighed and put aside the faint distaste that rose in me. It wasn't as if I hadn't searched a dead body before, nor used the equipment taken from still cooling hands. But there was a step of remove between taking a dead bandit's revolver and reading a book buried with a dead gentleman.
The book, once I unwrapped it, proved to be a poorly bound copy of
Horror Among the Dark Elves
by Renford A. Terwilliger. My heart picked up a pace as I held the book, looking down at the age worn leather. Or...was it age worn? I held the book up closer to my eyes, looking at the seaming. It looked more like wear from a poor job on the binding itself, not actual age. And the papers in the book itself were less yellowed than I'd have imagined for a fifty year old book. I opened it and scowled fiercely.
"What does it say? Does it have a map?" Virginia asked.
I turned the book to show her the printing within:
HOW THE VALIANT
NASRUDIN DEFEATED THE
NEFARIOUS
ARRONAX
and other stories to elucidate young minds!
"Purchased at the Roseborough Gift Shop," I said, my voice holding no small amount of anger.
"B-But..." Virginia's face twisted in confusion. "Why the bloody hell would Mr. Misk bury himself with that!?"
"I beg your pardon?" Leslie Misk asked, her head snapping up.
"I was just wondering," I said, closing the book up tight and tucking it into my jacket pocket before she could pounce with more questions. "Did you and Victor ever vacation at Roseborough? It has a rather nice inn, does it not? And the Ring of Brodgar and other such sights?"
Leslie's lips quirked into a faint smile, her eyes filling with sad recollections. "Aye. In fact, Victor's father was buried there. He lived out the last years of his life there, hiding in seclusion from his own nightmares and demons." She paused. "Not that those demons and nightmares seem to be so phantasmal now, eh?" She asked, her voice growing bitter. She shook her head slowly.
"That must be it!" Virginia said, brightening.
"Good find indeed, old girl!" I said, springing to my feet. "We must away to Roseborough." I grinned. "It seems my travels are nearly circular..." I shook my head, while Leslie came to her feet.
"Wait!" She held up her hand. "Must you go so soon, Rayburn?" She took my hand with one her gloved hands. "It is yet still raining, and Wesley has not yet been buried nor given a service." She nodded. "At least allow me to put you up for, say, a few days?" She smiled at me, her eyes soft and gentle, like that of a doe. I took her hand in my hands.
"I would dearly love to do so, Mrs. Misk," I said.
"Bugger me sideways!" 'Magnus' exclaimed, her voice squeaking audibly on the 'me' before plunging down the register as she attempted to once more fake the gender she was perforce required to masquerade as while in public, where dwarves might react poorly to seeing a woman of their species wandering about unveiled and unchaperoned. Everyone in the library turned to look at her -- save for Sally Mead Mug, who had quietly begun to snore in the corner.
"Yes, Mr. Shale Fist?" Mrs. Misk asked, her voice dripping with irritation. 'Magnus', her face beat red beneath the false beard she wore, turned to face us, holding a tome she had fished from the shelves. She held it up.
"Is this truly the book of...Durin's Truth?" she asked.
A memory, as thick and sudden as a living dream, struck me. Standing in a silent cave, looking up an ancient dwarven machine. Hearing a croaking, hissing, popping voice emerging from a speaking tube, like a primeval phonograph. We had all heard what the ancient dwarves of the Iron Clan had left for their descendants to find: "
Listen to the words passed down from the Iron's Clan, find the book of Durin's truth, for within those pages lie the key that you seek.
"
"Oh, yes," Leslie said, unaware of the consternation that this discovery had thrust us into. "That was one of Victor's prizes. He had found it in some old pawn shop or another."
"May we read it?" I asked.
"Well, it is a book," Leslie said, a flash of humor appearing on her face, which was then immediately clouded in a moment of sorrow. "Oh, that was one of Victor's favorite sayings."
We gathered about the book of Durin, but I gave 'Magnus' the chance to turn the pages. The first page was embossed with an excellent dwarven map, showing the exact coordinates on the Stonewall Mountain of the 'entrance to the Iron Clan', with a decorative symbol I personally did not recognize -- but which caused 'Magnus' to gasp in shock, her voice warbling around her higher register despite her best attempts. Her hand went to her mouth, and before I could ask whatever it was about that symbol that made her so impressed, she was turning the page, reading the dwarven script within. Her voice, husky and low, read out the text as she turned the pages.
Search you for the Truths of Durin?
Do you seek the Stone and Shape?