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Elusive BT​-​7 (Part I)

by Zeffon

/
1.
i. He Was... (Part I of II) Fair was a twinless twin with a birth defect distorting his right ear. Other than that, that's all Igen tells us about Fair's appearence. According to Lauren, Beatrice, another one of the librarians says that Igen named Fair because she believed that he would grow into a "doer of good".
2.
ii. Understanding Fair went to a misty lake at one point and found an armless corpse floating in it. According to Fair's diary, the cuts were very smooth, just below the elbow. Lydia Isga appearently interprets the corpse to be that of the father of Meddin's master craftsman, since in the Kingdom of Meddin, which has disappeared, he was the only disappearance under "strange circumstances". Also, the new Inejeheim from our current dimension kept two public logs from Meddin: a death book for the names of those who passed, and an "undeath book", apparently a conformation log for those who have been "resurrected".
3.
iii. His Heart Was Out For Her Lydia believes the corpse in Fair's Inejeheim is in fact the elder master craftsman from Meddin, because of the "Undeath Book". Although illegible to everyone except Lydia Isga, there is a page dedicated to what is known as "exp". In Block 8 (there are 8 blocks of text total), there is mention of a man who was taken from his home, despite protests from his son.
4.
iv. Ritualistic Suicide (12'' Chopped Mix) While Blocks 1-5 and 7 make mention of this experiment's potential, Block 8 talks about how the man died before the "experiment" could proceed further. It even discusses the increase of brain impulses when the man's arms were amputated. Clearly it was torture. But why?
5.
v. Grandeur (Part I of II) Lydia suggests that the man was a handroteim and an important individual who was amputated to prevent the rot from spreading from his hands (at least in theory). Adelais suggests it was more in self defense.
6.
vi. A White Glassy Liquid (Shellshock Tribute, Part II of II) However, a handroteim is never truly dead. According to The Tales of Inejeheim and Igen, the week after the elder master craftsman's death, dead bodies of the Pathiers involved began to turn up in odd places.
7.
vii. Displaced Electricity Igen mentions her father, the Lord of East Inejeheim, had become a handroteim and killed most of the Pathiers in the town. This is considered debatable. The interesting thing I've considered as well is that Inejeheim has existed twice - as a small kingdom of the Pathiers on the continent of Mödgod, a dreary rainy continent south of Värta, and a town on the Mountain of Shadow.

about

i. He Was... (Part I of II)

Fair was a twinless twin with a birth defect distorting his right ear. Other than that, that's all Igen tells us about Fair's appearence. According to Lauren, Beatrice, another one of the librarians says that Igen named Fair because she believed that he would grow into a "doer of good".

ii. Understanding

Fair went to a misty lake at one point and found an armless corpse floating in it. According to Fair's diary, the cuts were very smooth, just below the elbow. Lydia Isga appearently interprets the corpse to be that of the father of Meddin's master craftsman, since in the Kingdom of Meddin, which has disappeared, he was the only disappearance under "strange circumstances". Also, the new Inejeheim from our current dimension kept two public logs from Meddin: a death book for the names of those who passed, and an "undeath book", apparently a conformation log for those who have been "resurrected".

iii. His Heart Was Out For Her

Lydia believes the corpse in Fair's Inejeheim is in fact the elder master craftsman from Meddin, because of the "Undeath Book". Although illegible to everyone except Lydia Isga, there is a page dedicated to what is known as "exp". In Block 8 (there are 8 blocks of text total), there is mention of a man who was taken from his home, despite protests from his son.

iv. Ritualistic Suicide (12'' Chopped Mix)

While Blocks 1-5 and 7 make mention of this experiment's potential, Block 8 talks about how the man died before the "experiment" could proceed further. It even discusses the increase of brain impulses when the man's arms were amputated. Clearly it was torture. But why?

v. Grandeur (Part I of II)

Lydia suggests that the man was a handroteim and an important individual who was amputated to prevent the rot from spreading from his hands (at least in theory). Adelais suggests it was more in self defense.

vi. A White Glassy Liquid (Shellshock Tribute, Part II of II)

However, a handroteim is never truly dead. According to The Tales of Inejeheim and Igen, the week after the elder master craftsman's death, dead bodies of the Pathiers involved began to turn up in odd places.

vii. Displaced Electricity

Igen mentions her father, the Lord of East Inejeheim, had become a handroteim and killed most of the Pathiers in the town. This is considered debatable. The interesting thing I've considered as well is that Inejeheim has existed twice - as a small kingdom of the Pathiers on the continent of Mödgod, a dreary rainy continent south of Värta, and a town on the Mountain of Shadow.

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released November 4, 2016

Everything -- Creighton Jenkins

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Zeffon Renton, Washington

:9:9:9...

Don't you dare even tend to catalog what lurks ominously in the dark...

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