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Since you are leading the funeral im especially interested if you will lead it in any specific way. Also are you sure you dont want to check if the bodies are still breathing and if you want to maybe cast something on them?
I cast Deathwatch and heal any who are still alive. Any corpses I arrange to be returned to the townspeople.
 
Nightfall
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I cast Deathwatch and heal any who are still alive. Any corpses I arrange to be returned to the townspeople.
deathwatch is overkill you only cast 1 time a day. (i also gave you two protection from evil instead of one. you were supposed to get two spells. you can change later. i didnt think you would mind because its a good spell to spam at low levels). you can just physically check if they still breath.
 
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deathwatch is overkill you only cast 1 time a day. (i also gave you two protection from evil instead of one. you were supposed to get two spells. you can change later. i didnt think you would mind because its a good spell to spam at low levels). you can just physically check if they still breath.
Sure I'll check for signs of life then.
 
Nightfall
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Aerel steps forward, the grass not even noticing his weight. “If it pleases the bereaved,” he says, “I’ll see to the wounded. For the living, there should always be hope, even in the company of the dead.”

The crowd parts, and I get a better look at the boys—one cradling a broken arm, one leaking blood from a split scalp, the third groaning softly into his own vomit. Two more lie nearby, tangled like fallen marionettes. They smell like cheap rye and cheaper tobacco. Aerel kneels beside the worst-off, and his touch is neither gentle nor cruel, but—strange word—chaste. He closes his hand over the boy’s shoulder, murmurs a phrase soft as the rain, and then: a tingle, ozone-bright, the wound closing up in a neat pink spiral.



Aerel Feillendril

Returning from the tangle of battered boys, I find the mourners breaking apart into two separate orders of sorrow: one clinging tight to the grave, faces set against the wind, the other drifting to the periphery, stealing glances at the blood-stained grass as if it might begin to bloom in the old professor’s absence. With the last vestige of wound mended and the sharp scent of ozone trailing at my heels, I resume my post at the head of the coffin, hands folded—one to still my own tremor, the other to honor the dead.

The casket itself is a plain, honest vessel—oak, lacquered only by weather and the industry of local carpentry. It rests unevenly upon the mound of earth, a mute challenge to the formalities of burial. I lay a bare palm against the wood, anointing it with the chill that is my birthright, and wait for the congregation’s whisper to fall beneath the hush of morning.

It is time.

I close my eyes and exhale, conjuring the familiar cadence of the funereal rite, then begin: “Let no one say that Petros Lorrimor left this world unmarked. Though his bones rest here among the common clay, his legacy seeds the fields of memory and fear alike. Where some men reap only silence or shame, he sowed questions—and in their shadow, hope.”

The words drift out, softer than I intend, but the listeners lean in. I feel the point of it: the man with the staff in the back, arms folded across his chest in a pose meant to mask the shudder beneath; Kendra at my right hand, standing so rigidly her shadow could have been carved in basalt; the pointy eared mutant, whose subtle mimicry of elven stoicism does not quite hide the small, desperate sounds caught at the back of his throat; the maceman, his attention fixed and predatory, as if the delivery of this eulogy were part of a larger hunt.

“We come not to judge the sum of the professor’s days, but to bear witness to a debt—one owed by the living to the dead, and by the dead to those who dare remember them. The Lady of Graves asks nothing but this: that we carry the tale forward, uncorrupted and unafraid.”

The crows on the stones seem to understand, tilting their heads in shared approval or perhaps simple hunger. The wind carries away the last syllable before it can shatter.

I open my eyes and see that the crowd is listening as if to a spell, each mourner suspended for an instant in the gravity of what remains unsaid.

Kendra Lorrimor

I am not the one to speak, not now, not when my voice would betray me, but I stand at the very edge of the words, feeling the chill of Aerel’s hand through the lid of the coffin and the marrow of my own spine. My father would have liked this—no overwrought pieties, no hollowed-out comfort, just the blunt edge of truth, honed to something almost beautiful.

Aerel’s features are unreadable, but I see the faultline of sadness running beneath his even timbre, and for a split second I am brought back to every late night at the window, every lesson in the library, the two of us listening to my father’s lectures and only understanding them years later. I can no longer tell if I am crying from grief or from the relief of being understood, even if only in passing.

(this is your opportunity to speak on your memories, if you want to speak on your experiences with the professor roll D20 Memento Mori @Memento Mori Schwarzwald @Schwarzwald Apollo Tenzen @Apollo Tenzen ) (you can remember anything you want i will edit anything out of order)
 
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Aerel steps forward, the grass not even noticing his weight. “If it pleases the bereaved,” he says, “I’ll see to the wounded. For the living, there should always be hope, even in the company of the dead.”

The crowd parts, and I get a better look at the boys—one cradling a broken arm, one leaking blood from a split scalp, the third groaning softly into his own vomit. Two more lie nearby, tangled like fallen marionettes. They smell like cheap rye and cheaper tobacco. Aerel kneels beside the worst-off, and his touch is neither gentle nor cruel, but—strange word—chaste. He closes his hand over the boy’s shoulder, murmurs a phrase soft as the rain, and then: a tingle, ozone-bright, the wound closing up in a neat pink spiral.



Aerel Feillendril

Returning from the tangle of battered boys, I find the mourners breaking apart into two separate orders of sorrow: one clinging tight to the grave, faces set against the wind, the other drifting to the periphery, stealing glances at the blood-stained grass as if it might begin to bloom in the old professor’s absence. With the last vestige of wound mended and the sharp scent of ozone trailing at my heels, I resume my post at the head of the coffin, hands folded—one to still my own tremor, the other to honor the dead.

The casket itself is a plain, honest vessel—oak, lacquered only by weather and the industry of local carpentry. It rests unevenly upon the mound of earth, a mute challenge to the formalities of burial. I lay a bare palm against the wood, anointing it with the chill that is my birthright, and wait for the congregation’s whisper to fall beneath the hush of morning.

It is time.

I close my eyes and exhale, conjuring the familiar cadence of the funereal rite, then begin: “Let no one say that Petros Lorrimor left this world unmarked. Though his bones rest here among the common clay, his legacy seeds the fields of memory and fear alike. Where some men reap only silence or shame, he sowed questions—and in their shadow, hope.”

The words drift out, softer than I intend, but the listeners lean in. I feel the point of it: the man with the staff in the back, arms folded across his chest in a pose meant to mask the shudder beneath; Kendra at my right hand, standing so rigidly her shadow could have been carved in basalt; the pointy eared mutant, whose subtle mimicry of elven stoicism does not quite hide the small, desperate sounds caught at the back of his throat; the maceman, his attention fixed and predatory, as if the delivery of this eulogy were part of a larger hunt.

“We come not to judge the sum of the professor’s days, but to bear witness to a debt—one owed by the living to the dead, and by the dead to those who dare remember them. The Lady of Graves asks nothing but this: that we carry the tale forward, uncorrupted and unafraid.”

The crows on the stones seem to understand, tilting their heads in shared approval or perhaps simple hunger. The wind carries away the last syllable before it can shatter.

I open my eyes and see that the crowd is listening as if to a spell, each mourner suspended for an instant in the gravity of what remains unsaid.

Kendra Lorrimor

I am not the one to speak, not now, not when my voice would betray me, but I stand at the very edge of the words, feeling the chill of Aerel’s hand through the lid of the coffin and the marrow of my own spine. My father would have liked this—no overwrought pieties, no hollowed-out comfort, just the blunt edge of truth, honed to something almost beautiful.

Aerel’s features are unreadable, but I see the faultline of sadness running beneath his even timbre, and for a split second I am brought back to every late night at the window, every lesson in the library, the two of us listening to my father’s lectures and only understanding them years later. I can no longer tell if I am crying from grief or from the relief of being understood, even if only in passing.

(this is your opportunity to speak on your memories, if you want to speak on your experiences with the professor roll D20 Memento Mori @Memento Mori Schwarzwald @Schwarzwald Apollo Tenzen @Apollo Tenzen ) (you can remember anything you want i will edit anything out of order)
Lorrimor was a man with a fierce intellect and a curiosity for all things. He may have had a meek exterior but inside was a heart of gold. I am greatly indebted to him for saving my life.
 
The last of the witnesses
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Aerel steps forward, the grass not even noticing his weight. “If it pleases the bereaved,” he says, “I’ll see to the wounded. For the living, there should always be hope, even in the company of the dead.”

The crowd parts, and I get a better look at the boys—one cradling a broken arm, one leaking blood from a split scalp, the third groaning softly into his own vomit. Two more lie nearby, tangled like fallen marionettes. They smell like cheap rye and cheaper tobacco. Aerel kneels beside the worst-off, and his touch is neither gentle nor cruel, but—strange word—chaste. He closes his hand over the boy’s shoulder, murmurs a phrase soft as the rain, and then: a tingle, ozone-bright, the wound closing up in a neat pink spiral.



Aerel Feillendril

Returning from the tangle of battered boys, I find the mourners breaking apart into two separate orders of sorrow: one clinging tight to the grave, faces set against the wind, the other drifting to the periphery, stealing glances at the blood-stained grass as if it might begin to bloom in the old professor’s absence. With the last vestige of wound mended and the sharp scent of ozone trailing at my heels, I resume my post at the head of the coffin, hands folded—one to still my own tremor, the other to honor the dead.

The casket itself is a plain, honest vessel—oak, lacquered only by weather and the industry of local carpentry. It rests unevenly upon the mound of earth, a mute challenge to the formalities of burial. I lay a bare palm against the wood, anointing it with the chill that is my birthright, and wait for the congregation’s whisper to fall beneath the hush of morning.

It is time.

I close my eyes and exhale, conjuring the familiar cadence of the funereal rite, then begin: “Let no one say that Petros Lorrimor left this world unmarked. Though his bones rest here among the common clay, his legacy seeds the fields of memory and fear alike. Where some men reap only silence or shame, he sowed questions—and in their shadow, hope.”

The words drift out, softer than I intend, but the listeners lean in. I feel the point of it: the man with the staff in the back, arms folded across his chest in a pose meant to mask the shudder beneath; Kendra at my right hand, standing so rigidly her shadow could have been carved in basalt; the pointy eared mutant, whose subtle mimicry of elven stoicism does not quite hide the small, desperate sounds caught at the back of his throat; the maceman, his attention fixed and predatory, as if the delivery of this eulogy were part of a larger hunt.

“We come not to judge the sum of the professor’s days, but to bear witness to a debt—one owed by the living to the dead, and by the dead to those who dare remember them. The Lady of Graves asks nothing but this: that we carry the tale forward, uncorrupted and unafraid.”

The crows on the stones seem to understand, tilting their heads in shared approval or perhaps simple hunger. The wind carries away the last syllable before it can shatter.

I open my eyes and see that the crowd is listening as if to a spell, each mourner suspended for an instant in the gravity of what remains unsaid.

Kendra Lorrimor

I am not the one to speak, not now, not when my voice would betray me, but I stand at the very edge of the words, feeling the chill of Aerel’s hand through the lid of the coffin and the marrow of my own spine. My father would have liked this—no overwrought pieties, no hollowed-out comfort, just the blunt edge of truth, honed to something almost beautiful.

Aerel’s features are unreadable, but I see the faultline of sadness running beneath his even timbre, and for a split second I am brought back to every late night at the window, every lesson in the library, the two of us listening to my father’s lectures and only understanding them years later. I can no longer tell if I am crying from grief or from the relief of being understood, even if only in passing.

(this is your opportunity to speak on your memories, if you want to speak on your experiences with the professor roll D20 Memento Mori @Memento Mori Schwarzwald @Schwarzwald Apollo Tenzen @Apollo Tenzen ) (you can remember anything you want i will edit anything out of order)

I steps forward, smaller than everyone, but his posture is what he was raised with back straight, chin level, elven trained. His voice is quieter than usual.

"Professor Lorrimor never treated me like I was strange."

I pauses, frowning slightly.... as if I'm working through something I doesn't fully understand. My face scrunchies up as if a sharp headache washed over me. And I spoke...

"Everyone else does. Even when they're kind, I can feel it... the way they look at me. Like I'm a puzzle they're trying to solve. But the Professor just... talked to me. About history. About translation. About whether the Elven death poets were actually mournful or just dramatic."

A small, genuine smile rises and fades from my face.

"He said they were dramatic. I disagreed. We argued for three hours. He bought me tea halfway through."

I look at the coffin, and for a moment my composure flickers, a wet dark sadness bubbles up for a moment as if I lost the only friend I had ever made.

"He once called me 'the most interesting halfling' he'd ever met. I didn't know what to do with that being a halfling wasn't something anyone had ever just... named before. Like it was normal. Like it didn't matter. Like I was just a person who happened to be one."

My voice drops.

"I don't know why that mattered so much. I just know that when he said it, the noise in my head went quiet. Just for a second. Just long enough to breathe..."

I touches my collar, then my bell, but doesn't ring it...

"I'll miss the quiet."
 
Askētismós ἀρετή
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Messages
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Aerel steps forward, the grass not even noticing his weight. “If it pleases the bereaved,” he says, “I’ll see to the wounded. For the living, there should always be hope, even in the company of the dead.”

The crowd parts, and I get a better look at the boys—one cradling a broken arm, one leaking blood from a split scalp, the third groaning softly into his own vomit. Two more lie nearby, tangled like fallen marionettes. They smell like cheap rye and cheaper tobacco. Aerel kneels beside the worst-off, and his touch is neither gentle nor cruel, but—strange word—chaste. He closes his hand over the boy’s shoulder, murmurs a phrase soft as the rain, and then: a tingle, ozone-bright, the wound closing up in a neat pink spiral.



Aerel Feillendril

Returning from the tangle of battered boys, I find the mourners breaking apart into two separate orders of sorrow: one clinging tight to the grave, faces set against the wind, the other drifting to the periphery, stealing glances at the blood-stained grass as if it might begin to bloom in the old professor’s absence. With the last vestige of wound mended and the sharp scent of ozone trailing at my heels, I resume my post at the head of the coffin, hands folded—one to still my own tremor, the other to honor the dead.

The casket itself is a plain, honest vessel—oak, lacquered only by weather and the industry of local carpentry. It rests unevenly upon the mound of earth, a mute challenge to the formalities of burial. I lay a bare palm against the wood, anointing it with the chill that is my birthright, and wait for the congregation’s whisper to fall beneath the hush of morning.

It is time.

I close my eyes and exhale, conjuring the familiar cadence of the funereal rite, then begin: “Let no one say that Petros Lorrimor left this world unmarked. Though his bones rest here among the common clay, his legacy seeds the fields of memory and fear alike. Where some men reap only silence or shame, he sowed questions—and in their shadow, hope.”

The words drift out, softer than I intend, but the listeners lean in. I feel the point of it: the man with the staff in the back, arms folded across his chest in a pose meant to mask the shudder beneath; Kendra at my right hand, standing so rigidly her shadow could have been carved in basalt; the pointy eared mutant, whose subtle mimicry of elven stoicism does not quite hide the small, desperate sounds caught at the back of his throat; the maceman, his attention fixed and predatory, as if the delivery of this eulogy were part of a larger hunt.

“We come not to judge the sum of the professor’s days, but to bear witness to a debt—one owed by the living to the dead, and by the dead to those who dare remember them. The Lady of Graves asks nothing but this: that we carry the tale forward, uncorrupted and unafraid.”

The crows on the stones seem to understand, tilting their heads in shared approval or perhaps simple hunger. The wind carries away the last syllable before it can shatter.

I open my eyes and see that the crowd is listening as if to a spell, each mourner suspended for an instant in the gravity of what remains unsaid.

Kendra Lorrimor

I am not the one to speak, not now, not when my voice would betray me, but I stand at the very edge of the words, feeling the chill of Aerel’s hand through the lid of the coffin and the marrow of my own spine. My father would have liked this—no overwrought pieties, no hollowed-out comfort, just the blunt edge of truth, honed to something almost beautiful.

Aerel’s features are unreadable, but I see the faultline of sadness running beneath his even timbre, and for a split second I am brought back to every late night at the window, every lesson in the library, the two of us listening to my father’s lectures and only understanding them years later. I can no longer tell if I am crying from grief or from the relief of being understood, even if only in passing.

(this is your opportunity to speak on your memories, if you want to speak on your experiences with the professor roll D20 Memento Mori @Memento Mori Schwarzwald @Schwarzwald Apollo Tenzen @Apollo Tenzen ) (you can remember anything you want i will edit anything out of order)
 
Nightfall
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Aerel Feillendril

“Lorrimor was a man with a fierce intellect and a heart of gold. I owe him my life.” I steady my voice, though the words choke me. It’s no empty piety to praise the fallen— it’s necessity when he’s the only reason I still draw breath. “ Petros Lorrimor lifted others from the pit,” I repeat, for his corpse, not the farmers or the crows.

I briefly recall that midnight at the ruined observatory—blood, fire, and me broken on the floor. He risked his name and his safety to haul a ruined elf to safety and nurse me back. They may have expected elven stoicism; I offered gratitude instead: “There are fates far worse than death, and it was Professor Lorrimor who taught me to outpace them.”

I pause. The crowd shifts—farmers wipe tears, avert their eyes; Kendra’s knuckles blanch on the coffin, her composure cracked by reddened lids. Skender nods in silent salute; Rafael stands alert, troubled by conflicting duties; Chestnutthiel cycles through expressions before settling on polite blankness. The crows clack their beaks, impatient. I bow my head and step back.



Chestnutthiel



smaller than everyone, but my posture is what he was raised with back straight, chin level, elven trained. My voice is quieter than usual.

"Professor Lorrimor never treated me like I was strange."

I pauses, frowning slightly.... as if I'm working through something I doesn't fully understand. My face scrunchies up as if a sharp headache washed over me. And I spoke...

"Everyone else does. Even when they're kind, I can feel it... the way they look at me. Like I'm a puzzle they're trying to solve. But the Professor just... talked to me. About history. About translation. About whether the Elven death poets were actually mournful or just dramatic."

A small, genuine smile rises and fades from my face.

"He said they were dramatic. I disagreed. We argued for three hours. He bought me tea halfway through."

I look at the coffin, and for a moment my composure flickers, a wet dark sadness bubbles up for a moment as if I lost the only friend I had ever made.

"He once called me 'the most interesting halfling' he'd ever met. I didn't know what to do with that being a halfling wasn't something anyone had ever just... named before. Like it was normal. Like it didn't matter. Like I was just a person who happened to be one."

My voice drops.

"I don't know why that mattered so much. I just know that when he said it, the noise in my head went quiet. Just for a second. Just long enough to breathe..."

I touches my collar, then my bell, but doesn't ring it...

"I'll miss the quiet."



Skender tells his story but it comes off dry and impersonal



Rafael Volante


I clear my throat when the silence stretches too thin.

"I met him on the road to Lepidstadt," I say, my voice too loud for funerals. "Two cultists had him in a ditch. Cart overturned. Horse dead. He'd cracked one's jaw with a lantern, but he was losing."

The coffin is easier to address than the mourners.

"I killed the first with my mace. Ran down the second. The professor, bleeding into the mud, asked me not to finish the survivor until he'd questioned him."

A sound ripples through the crowd—not laughter, but recognition.

"That was Lorrimor. Half-dead and still curious. Thanked me before I'd even bandaged him. I liked him,” I finish, which is the plainest truth I have.

Then the business of grief gives way to the business of earth. Ropes creak. The coffin descends. Damp soil patters on oak with that small, final sound no prayer has ever managed to soften.
 
Nightfall
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The last clod of earth falls, and Father Donovan closes his book with a sound like a small door shutting on everything that came before.

I am the one who steps forward. It feels right, in the way that duty always feels right when sentiment has run dry—not because I want to speak, but because the silence left by the shovel is too raw to leave unfilled. I look at the mound, then at the people around it, and I think: he would have hated this part. The standing around. The waiting for someone to say it's finished.

"Miss Lorrimor." My voice comes out quieter than I intend. "If there's nothing else the ground requires of us today."

She turns, and I watch the effort it takes—the small internal reckoning, the composure reassembled like a letter folded back into its envelope. Her eyes are red at the rims but dry now, which seems to cost her more than the crying did.

"No," she says. "No, I think—" She stops, presses her lips together, then tries again with that careful, deliberate way she has, as if each word is a stone she's testing for weight before she sets it down. "I think he would want you all to come back to the house. There's something he left. For each of you, specifically." A pause. "And I find I would rather not be alone with it just yet."
 
The last of the witnesses
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The last clod of earth falls, and Father Donovan closes his book with a sound like a small door shutting on everything that came before.

I am the one who steps forward. It feels right, in the way that duty always feels right when sentiment has run dry—not because I want to speak, but because the silence left by the shovel is too raw to leave unfilled. I look at the mound, then at the people around it, and I think: he would have hated this part. The standing around. The waiting for someone to say it's finished.

"Miss Lorrimor." My voice comes out quieter than I intend. "If there's nothing else the ground requires of us today."

She turns, and I watch the effort it takes—the small internal reckoning, the composure reassembled like a letter folded back into its envelope. Her eyes are red at the rims but dry now, which seems to cost her more than the crying did.

"No," she says. "No, I think—" She stops, presses her lips together, then tries again with that careful, deliberate way she has, as if each word is a stone she's testing for weight before she sets it down. "I think he would want you all to come back to the house. There's something he left. For each of you, specifically." A pause. "And I find I would rather not be alone with it just yet."

Follow the group to Kendra's house

Quiet. Hand on the bell. Still processing that moment at the grave.

If someone talks to him, he'll respond—but shorter than usual.

When they arrive, wait. Watch. Then follow inside.

See what Lorrimor left for him.
 
Nightfall
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The gravel speaks with every step, a dry, unhurried sound that seems to belong to a different season — not this grey and dampened evening, with its low sky and its watching crows. We file out of the Restlands like the last of something, Kendra walking ahead of us in her dark dress, her shoulders carrying a composure that looks newly assembled and faintly fragile. She does not look back at the grave. I understand this. There are kinds of looking that cost too much to repeat.



The lane from the cemetery joins the main track through Ravengro proper, and the village receives us with the particular silence of a place that has decided not to speak. Curtains shift in lamplit windows. A dog pauses at a gate, watches us pass, and lies back down. The crows wheel their slow, indifferent circles overhead, their cawing carrying the quality of a sound that has always been here and will continue long after we are gone. The mud on the road is the deep, clay-heavy kind that sucks at boot heels and leaves a residue on everything it touches, and it seems to me — perhaps only to me — that Ravengro has a talent for this, for leaving marks that are difficult to clean away.



Skender walks to my left, his coat still holding the chapel's cold in its wool. Rafael moves with the unhurried deliberateness of a man practicing patience, studying the village the way one studies a text in an unfamiliar language — looking for cognates, for something familiar to ground the reading. Chestnutthiel is quieter than all of us, their steps barely registering on the packed earth beside the ruts, their gaze lifted to the southern skyline where Harrowstone crouches against the last grey-orange smear of dusk. I do not look at Harrowstone. I have looked at it once today and once is sufficient. It is the kind of thing that invites looking and gives nothing back.



Kendra turns down a narrower lane, and there at the end of it, slightly apart from its neighbors as though by mutual agreement, stands her father's house. It is a modest two-story structure of weathered timber and plaster, the paint peeling from the window casements in curls like shed skin, the thatched roof dark with accumulated damp. But the windows glow. That is the first thing — the warm, amber glow of oil lamps behind the glass, pressing out against the advancing dusk, and for a moment the house looks almost welcoming in the way that old familiar things look welcoming: not because they are beautiful but because they endure.



Inside, the house asserts its true character at once. The smell meets us first — paper, old and slightly sweet, and beneath it woodsmoke and dust and something less identifiable, a mineral undertone like the inside of a scholar's cabinet that has not been aired in years. Then the sight of it: bookshelves on every available wall, floor to ceiling, the shelves themselves bowing gently under the accumulated weight of their contents, creating between them narrow pathways that give the house the quality of a library that has been taught, imperfectly, to function as a home. The furniture exists in the spaces the books have permitted it. Chairs stand where the shelves have left room for chairs. A small dining table occupies an alcove between two towering cases of natural philosophy and ecclesiastical law. Dust motes turn slowly in the last shafts of daylight coming through the western window, performing their small, ceaseless revolutions above our heads.



Kendra pauses in the narrow hallway and turns to face us, and for a moment something passes behind her red-rimmed hazel eyes — gratitude, grief, the particular awkwardness of a person who has lost the one they organized their life around and must now act as host to strangers in the rearranged debris of that life.



"Please," she says. "Sit wherever you can find room. I'll bring tea — and something stronger, if anyone prefers it." She pauses, and the slight tightening at the corner of her mouth might be the beginning of something rueful. "Father always said books were safer than people. I'm starting to wonder if he was wrong." She disappears toward the kitchen before any of us can respond, leaving us standing among the towers of his legacy.



We move through the house carefully, as visitors move through a place that is both intimate and strange. Introductions have been made — fragmented, tentative things at the chapel and the graveside, more formal now in the warm enclosed space. Skender turns his name over to Rafael with the air of a man who has given it out many times and awaits nothing new in return. I offer my own and receive theirs, and we perform the small necessary commerce of first acquaintance, filing away what seems useful, releasing what doesn't. We have all of us been brought here by the same man, bound by different threads of the same life, and the house itself seems to understand this — seems to hold us at the precise distance from one another that grief and novelty require.



I find myself drawn to a lower shelf near the far wall, where a row of objects interrupts the otherwise unbroken progression of spines: a carved wooden box with a tarnished clasp, a brass instrument of unfamiliar design, a folded piece of oilcloth that does not quite conceal the angular shape beneath it. Rafael crouches beside a stack of journals near the hearth, turning one over in his hands with careful curiosity. Chestnutthiel has stopped before a large folio propped against the wall, studying its cover, which bears no title but an embossed design — serpentine, old, the detail worn to near-abstraction.



I recognize the brass instrument. I do not mean to, exactly — the recognition is not immediate but creeps in sideways, the way certain memories arrive, through texture and association rather than direct recall. Lorrimor showed it to me once, years ago, in his office at the university. He had called it a reader's compass, used for navigating certain kinds of unbound text, and had shown me how the needle did not point north but oscillated between two fixed points that he never named for me. He had smiled at my confusion with the particular satisfaction of a man who considers confusion a form of progress.



He is dead now, and the compass sits on a shelf in a village that does not deserve it, its needle still.



Kendra returns with a tray — tea, as promised, and a small bottle of something amber that asks no questions — and sets it on the table in the gap between the bookshelves, and we gather loosely around it, and the warmth of the lamps does its best, and we wait.
 
The last of the witnesses
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Jan 30, 2026
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1,616
The gravel speaks with every step, a dry, unhurried sound that seems to belong to a different season — not this grey and dampened evening, with its low sky and its watching crows. We file out of the Restlands like the last of something, Kendra walking ahead of us in her dark dress, her shoulders carrying a composure that looks newly assembled and faintly fragile. She does not look back at the grave. I understand this. There are kinds of looking that cost too much to repeat.







The lane from the cemetery joins the main track through Ravengro proper, and the village receives us with the particular silence of a place that has decided not to speak. Curtains shift in lamplit windows. A dog pauses at a gate, watches us pass, and lies back down. The crows wheel their slow, indifferent circles overhead, their cawing carrying the quality of a sound that has always been here and will continue long after we are gone. The mud on the road is the deep, clay-heavy kind that sucks at boot heels and leaves a residue on everything it touches, and it seems to me — perhaps only to me — that Ravengro has a talent for this, for leaving marks that are difficult to clean away.







Skender walks to my left, his coat still holding the chapel's cold in its wool. Rafael moves with the unhurried deliberateness of a man practicing patience, studying the village the way one studies a text in an unfamiliar language — looking for cognates, for something familiar to ground the reading. Chestnutthiel is quieter than all of us, their steps barely registering on the packed earth beside the ruts, their gaze lifted to the southern skyline where Harrowstone crouches against the last grey-orange smear of dusk. I do not look at Harrowstone. I have looked at it once today and once is sufficient. It is the kind of thing that invites looking and gives nothing back.







Kendra turns down a narrower lane, and there at the end of it, slightly apart from its neighbors as though by mutual agreement, stands her father's house. It is a modest two-story structure of weathered timber and plaster, the paint peeling from the window casements in curls like shed skin, the thatched roof dark with accumulated damp. But the windows glow. That is the first thing — the warm, amber glow of oil lamps behind the glass, pressing out against the advancing dusk, and for a moment the house looks almost welcoming in the way that old familiar things look welcoming: not because they are beautiful but because they endure.







Inside, the house asserts its true character at once. The smell meets us first — paper, old and slightly sweet, and beneath it woodsmoke and dust and something less identifiable, a mineral undertone like the inside of a scholar's cabinet that has not been aired in years. Then the sight of it: bookshelves on every available wall, floor to ceiling, the shelves themselves bowing gently under the accumulated weight of their contents, creating between them narrow pathways that give the house the quality of a library that has been taught, imperfectly, to function as a home. The furniture exists in the spaces the books have permitted it. Chairs stand where the shelves have left room for chairs. A small dining table occupies an alcove between two towering cases of natural philosophy and ecclesiastical law. Dust motes turn slowly in the last shafts of daylight coming through the western window, performing their small, ceaseless revolutions above our heads.







Kendra pauses in the narrow hallway and turns to face us, and for a moment something passes behind her red-rimmed hazel eyes — gratitude, grief, the particular awkwardness of a person who has lost the one they organized their life around and must now act as host to strangers in the rearranged debris of that life.







"Please," she says. "Sit wherever you can find room. I'll bring tea — and something stronger, if anyone prefers it." She pauses, and the slight tightening at the corner of her mouth might be the beginning of something rueful. "Father always said books were safer than people. I'm starting to wonder if he was wrong." She disappears toward the kitchen before any of us can respond, leaving us standing among the towers of his legacy.







We move through the house carefully, as visitors move through a place that is both intimate and strange. Introductions have been made — fragmented, tentative things at the chapel and the graveside, more formal now in the warm enclosed space. Skender turns his name over to Rafael with the air of a man who has given it out many times and awaits nothing new in return. I offer my own and receive theirs, and we perform the small necessary commerce of first acquaintance, filing away what seems useful, releasing what doesn't. We have all of us been brought here by the same man, bound by different threads of the same life, and the house itself seems to understand this — seems to hold us at the precise distance from one another that grief and novelty require.







I find myself drawn to a lower shelf near the far wall, where a row of objects interrupts the otherwise unbroken progression of spines: a carved wooden box with a tarnished clasp, a brass instrument of unfamiliar design, a folded piece of oilcloth that does not quite conceal the angular shape beneath it. Rafael crouches beside a stack of journals near the hearth, turning one over in his hands with careful curiosity. Chestnutthiel has stopped before a large folio propped against the wall, studying its cover, which bears no title but an embossed design — serpentine, old, the detail worn to near-abstraction.







I recognize the brass instrument. I do not mean to, exactly — the recognition is not immediate but creeps in sideways, the way certain memories arrive, through texture and association rather than direct recall. Lorrimor showed it to me once, years ago, in his office at the university. He had called it a reader's compass, used for navigating certain kinds of unbound text, and had shown me how the needle did not point north but oscillated between two fixed points that he never named for me. He had smiled at my confusion with the particular satisfaction of a man who considers confusion a form of progress.







He is dead now, and the compass sits on a shelf in a village that does not deserve it, its needle still.







Kendra returns with a tray — tea, as promised, and a small bottle of something amber that asks no questions — and sets it on the table in the gap between the bookshelves, and we gather loosely around it, and the warmth of the lamps does its best, and we wait.
My hand hovers over the folio, not quite touching. The serpentine design is old, older then I can guess. I studies it intently, archivist's curiosity overriding any grief I felt moments before...

Rolls for my inspection of the folio

He doesn't open it yet. Just... looks. Traces the air above it. Waits.

But his hand stays close.

Eyes wide noticing what he can.
 
The last of the witnesses
Joined
Jan 30, 2026
Messages
1,616
My hand hovers over the folio, not quite touching. The serpentine design is old, older then I can guess. I studies it intently, archivist's curiosity overriding any grief I felt moments before...

Rolls for my inspection of the folio

He doesn't open it yet. Just... looks. Traces the air above it. Waits.

But his hand stays close.

Eyes wide noticing what he can.
Wow ..... Just wow

I guess those rolls are just my skitzo charm.
 
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