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> I am Lena Wolf, Lena's life as it happens
Lena Wolf
post Dec 9 2023, 11:05 AM
Post #587


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Joined: 18-May 21
From: Bravil



21 Second Seed, 4E195 - Crazy few weeks

When Geralt finally dropped to his knees to meditate, he realised that he had not slept for three days. "I am getting too old for this," he thought, shaking his head.

...

Past couple of weeks were beyond crazy. Once the curse over the ravine was lifted, Kaedweni army marched into Aedirn, and heavy battles renewed. Kaedweni king, now free of his personal curse, decided that he no longer needed to tolerate Vernon Roche's Special Forces camping near his own army, and ordered them hanged. They were lured to a "feast" and taken without resistance. Ves was spared, having received the king's special favours as he was eager to double-check his virility. He claimed she enjoyed it, but Geralt and Vernon were sceptical. Vernon wanted to slay the king where he stood when he got the opportunity, but Geralt reminded him that regicide was a double-edged sword and that they were hunting a kingslayer already. As history had shown later, it ultimately made no difference to anything besides Vernon's conscience. But they could not have known it then, of course.

Time was short however and the king could not advance very far into Aedirn - he was due at the peace summit to end all wars. No one believed in it of course, yet everyone attended.

The summit was held in an ancient elven city of Loc Muinne which had been reduced to ruin already many centuries ago. Although most walls still stood, buildings no longer had roofs and rubble blocked most streets. This had its advantages however as it allowed to keep various delegations truly separate from one another with just a few working doors linking different sections of the walled city.

When Vernon and Geralt arrived in Loc Muinne, the nobility was already assembled.

"What are you planning to do?" Geralt suddenly realised that he didn't understand why Vernon was there. "Since Letho killed your king, the country had been in turmoil with the barons tearing it into pieces. The king didn't leave an heir, not a legitimate one anyway... so what now for Temeria?"

Vernon looked very somber.

"Things are bad, indeed," he nodded. "I don't think we can hold Temeria together. But we can try! The king had two children with a local baroness, and he wanted to legitimise them - you know, you were there. We have to act as if it had taken place."

"I don't think it will work..." Geralt shook his head, but Vernon interrupted him.

"This is the only path for me. I have to try to keep the country independent. And those two kids need taking care of anyhow - there bound to be numerous attempts on their lives. I am here to find them and to make sure they stay alive." Vernon paused, not taking his eyes off Geralt. "I could use your help."

"I'm with you," Geralt nodded.

"But what about Triss?" Vernon couldn't believe how easily Geralt agreed to help him.

"Triss should be here somewhere," Geralt squinted. "If that figurine was indeed she, then she's been kidnapped by a powerful mage, or by a powerful group who had a mage among them, such as a Royal Court. She'll manage, she's good with royal courts." He scowled, and now it was Vernon who squinted.

"Something's on your mind," he said slowly. "Another memory? Why such change in attitude towards Triss?"

"Yes, another memory, but no new information," Geralt nodded. "A change in attitude? I don't feel it like that. My attitude towards Triss in the past six months had no background. She is a beautiful woman, she's interested in me, what's there not to like? But her behaviour in the last month or two had been odd, and what I learned and remembered contradicts some of the things she said, so I would say I am simply gaining experience and can see a little past her charms. And yes, I am disappointed."

"Have you recalled anything about Yennefer?" Vernon asked cautiously.

"She is important, very important somehow, I can feel it, but can't remember the details," Geralt sighed. "Was I involved with her? No one is telling me anything..."

"You were trying to free her from the Wild Hunt after she was kidnapped," Vernon reminded him, but Geralt remembered that part. What he rather wanted to know, was whether he was doing it simply because any person kidnapped by the Wild Hunt deserved to be fought over, or whether there was something more about Yennefer in particular. He felt there was more, but he didn't trust himself. "You need to recall it for yourself," Vernon said firmly. "You don't want other people to tell you what to feel."

...

Helping Vernon meant getting thrust into court intrigue, and although Geralt really disliked it, he realised it was necessary under the circumstances. Of the two children in question, one was already dead and the other one was kidnapped and held hostage by the Kaedweni king, the very person whose troubles Geralt had been solving the past month. This was a small world indeed.

"What about the kingslayer?" Vernon asked at some point. "You are still a wanted criminal in the whole of Northern Realms, there's still bounty on your head, and that still needs to be cleared up officially and once and for all. Shouldn't you be chasing the kingslayer instead of helping me?"

"Yes, and I am doing it while helping you," Geralt smiled. "From what I remembered about Letho, he will not be found until he wants to be found, and he is here somewhere too. I don't need to search for him, he will find me. My name will be cleared, I have no longer any doubt. Now, let's focus on finding the girl and getting her out of captivity."

Walking from court to court and talking to various officials was very boring indeed, although occasional attacks on Geralt by various heavily armed gangs did spice things up a bit. Yes, there was still a bounty on his head! Whether the gang leaders believed in Geralt's guilt or not, they didn't care as long as they got the reward. Geralt had no choice but to kill them. "They just never learn," he shook his head, turning over another pile of bodies. How could they learn when they were already dead?

...

"Roche!!" A very angry young woman pulled on Vernon's sleeve as he and Geralt were crossing the central square, absorbed in their conversation. "Don't you turn away from me!!" She had a very shapely and attractive countenance, and Geralt had to raise an eyebrow - why would Vernon want to turn away from someone like that? But Vernon suddenly exploded with anger.

"You!!" His face contorted with rage. "Boussy is dead and Anaise kidnapped!" He hissed, trying to keep his voice down, rather unsuccessfully. Those were the two children of the late king of Temeria. "You were charged with their safety! You failed!!"

"Only because it was an impossible mission!" She retorted, matching Vernon's rage. "What can a nanny do when the kids are travelling in separate carrages without any armed protection and the convoy is getting overwhelmed by bandits?!"

"What..?" Vernon's rage evaporated as suddenly as it rose. "An ambush? That means... there's a traitor in the court," he concluded grimly. "And why no armed escort? That's just madness!"

"You mean... that wasn't the plan?" The young woman softened her tone too, and Geralt reflected that her shapely curves originated in sword training rather than lazy pampering. She was one of Vernon's agents. "All right, I'll tell you what happened," she said amicably, "after Geralt escorts me out of this city and sees me off to safety," she added with a smile. "I have arranged for transport, but I expect several ambushes along the road to the rendez-vous point."

Since Geralt had already agreed to help Vernon, he had no choice but to escort the young lady to her rendez-vous.

...

"That's a fine mess you got yourself into," Geralt shook his head after they defeated yet another group of heavily armed men. "How much further? How many more ambushes, I wonder? And why did you not tell Vernon what happened? I would have helped you anyway."

"Vernon needs to learn to take care of his agents," the woman retorted. "He needs to think it through better. Two kids should mean two nannies! Not just one. Ves could have helped, but no, Ves gets to go play with soldiers, while I am stuck minding young royal brats!" She fumed. "And now the one that was in the other carriage is dead, the poor boy stood no chance. And I wasn't even able to save the girl - too many bandits, they completely overwhelmed us, we had no armed escort, and I was told not to carry a sword to maintain my disguise!" She shook her head in desperation. "Vernon should not have trusted the others to make arrangements for that convoy!"

"I'll tell Vernon to be more careful," Geralt said soothingly. "Come on. There's bound to be more ambushes ahead."

...

"Well, that was your transport," Geralt knelt over a dead fisherman at the rendez-vous point. "At least the boat is still in one piece. Will you manage?"

"I'll have to," the young woman shrugged. "Here, take these letters to Vernon. Tell him what I told you about that convoy, this should be enough to... well... I don't know. There is a traitor, possibly traitors, and these papers clearly show it, but who it is, is another matter." She handed Geralt the documents. "Thank you, witcher."

She got into the boat and rowed away. Geralt stashed the papers and turned to go back to the city.

...

"Hey, look, a cave," Geralt was walking back through the woods, enjoying the nature around him, free of ambushes this time. He felt the need to do something different than talking to court officials. Perhaps he should clear this cave of monsters for a change? Forest caves usually had monsters in them. And so he went in hoping for some entertainment.

The cave didn't disappoint - a group of nekkers made a home there, not a threat for a witcher, as long as he didn't let them surround him. He didn't. Then, as he went deeper in, his medallion began to buzz. "There's something other than nekkers in the depth," he thought. "Something far more dangerous." Geralt proceeded with caution.

The cave passage twisted and turned, then Geralt noticed reflections of a campfire and felt a breeze of fresh air. The tunnel opened to a cavern with an open sky. The moon was rising. A man was sitting by the fire, watching Geralt come in.

"Hello, friend," he said amicably. "You look tired. Please, rest here. I am Dorian."

"Geralt," Geralt introduced himself, eyeing the man. His medallion kept buzzing, but there was no one and nothing else there. Yet, he was tired, and so he dropped to his knees by the fire. "Are you living in this cave? All by yourself?"

"Aye, a man's got to live somewhere," Dorian smiled. "Oh, you mean nekkers in the passages? They don't bother me."

The moon was now clearly visible through the opening. The night was quiet, with just a few animal noises coming from the forest. Geralt's medallion stopped buzzing. Did the danger pass? What was it in the first place? "I'll have to have it checked over," Geralt thought. "Can't have it give out false alarms like that. Perhaps the enchantment got corrupted."

It is only then that Geralt realised that with all the running around, he hadn't slept in three days. "I am getting too old for this," he thought, shaking his head. He could not be sure that Dorian was as peaceful as he appeared, but there was no reason to confront him either. Geralt needed to rest, and Dorian's cavern was as good a place as any. He would not be any safer in another part of that cave or in the open forest, he reckoned, or, certainly, in Loc Muinne.

"You can sleep here, it is quite safe," Dorian must have noticed Geralt's hesitation. "I am no threat to you."

Why did Geralt believe him? He did not know, but he closed his eyes and sank into meditation.

This post has been edited by Lena Wolf: Dec 9 2023, 02:11 PM


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"What is life's greatest illusion?"
"Innocence, my brother."

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Lena Wolf
post Dec 10 2023, 01:40 AM
Post #588


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Joined: 18-May 21
From: Bravil



21 Second Seed, 4E195 - The silver light of the moon

Geralt's meditation resembled sleep, and he even had dreams. Yet he remained sitting upright, propped on his heels, his legs folded. Keeping his head high allowed him to hear every minute sound and feel any change in air flow, all without waking up. If any of it was alarming, he would awaken - such was his training. Perhaps for this reason he did not hesitate too much to start meditation in a cave with its owner sitting next to him - a man that Geralt had only just met.

It was a quiet night and the moon was visible through the opening in the ceiling of the cavern. All was still, and the man next to Geralt seemed to be meditating too. He sat cross-legged, watching the moon. An old diary lay nearby, not used in many years by the look of it, covered in dust and mold.

"Yes, tonight," Dorian was watching a ray of moonlight slowly creeping further into the cavern. "Together we'll get it done." When the ray of moonlight reached his position, he transformed. A black werewolf stood in the cavern, his red eyes glowing.

Geralt twitched his nose - the smell woke him up. Yet his medallion remained quiet, not indicating any danger. The ray of moonlight shifted further, now touching Geralt too. He opened his eyes, watching the werewolf, but the werewolf just stood there, not attacking.

Geralt got up. Not all werewolves became as wild and uncontrolled as their appearance would have you believe. Some preserved presence of mind, although that was rare. The witcher would not slay a werewolf that didn't attack.

The ray of moonlight was now touching Geralt's face.

Surely, it wasn't the first time he was out at night... yet that night something was different. He pulled off his glove and saw long claws replace his nails. He braced for a transformation - but that didn't happen. The black werewolf was watching Geralt, then pushed the old diary towards him. Geralt picked it up and read.

The bite is really burning, but does not fester. What kind of a wolf bite is that?

Werewolf. So this is how it happens. Am I still a man or am I a beast? Do beasts write in their diaries? Do men bite other men?

I cannot go back to the village, not even when the moon is not out. It's too dangerous. I cannot control the transformations, and I have trouble controlling my temper too. Although I know quite a few men who are no werewolves, yet act as beasts.

A witch told me there is no cure. I am to remain a werewolf for the rest of my days - and I am immortal. Nearly. A werewolf can be slain only with a silver weapon, and even then it's not enough - the curse has to be lifted, and then I shall die as a man. I need to find a witcher.


Geralt looked up at the werewolf who was still not attacking.

"You are no beast, I won't slay you," he said.

"You must," the werewolf managed to speak. His voice was hoarse but Geralt could easily understand him. The werewolf howled and a wolf pack assembled outside the cavern, looking in. A large wolf stepped forward, sniffing the air, looking at Geralt. Their eyes met.

Geralt dropped his swords to the ground.

"I will not slay you or your wolves," he repeated, now looking at the werewolf. "But I can lift your curse."

That wasn't what the werewolf wanted to hear. He growled, and the wolves behind him growled too, but didn't step forward. The werewolf tensed, ready to attack.

"All right then, come on!" Geralt bared his teeth and the wolves backed off. He threw off his jerkin that was only restraining his movements. Fire was playing in his hand.

The large wolf howled, and the others joined in. The moon was shining bright when a black werewolf faced a white one.

...

"The witch was right from the start," Dorian lay on the ground, transformed back into a man. "Someone had to take my curse from me. And you did." Geralt was sitting next to Dorian, watching his claws shrink back to human nails. "You are a werewolf now, and I am a man again. Thank you, witcher." He smiled with sadness. "I am sorry."

A raven flew into the cavern, landing on Geralt's shoulder. Its sharp claws punctured the skin, but Geralt didn't flinch.

"I didn't become a werewolf tonight," Geralt smirked. "I am a witcher. We are immune to such things. Your witch had it wrong."

"But your claws? Your fangs? You transformed!" Dorian didn't give up. "I wasn't fighting a man just now!"

"Oh, I get that a lot," Geralt laughed. "A mutant. A freak. A non-human. And those are the nice terms. I am a witcher, I am immune to disease, I cannot catch lycanthropy." The raven squeezed its claws, drawing a few drops of blood from Geralt's shoulder. "What?" He squinted at it. "Yeah, I know, he's right. Claws, fangs... Did I really have fangs?" The raven was watching him with one eye, as birds do. "Claws and fangs are not enough to make a werewolf," he concluded firmly, now talking to Dorian again. "I don't know what happened there. I fought you with magic, that's all. I dropped my swords so as not to kill you."

"The witch was right all along," Dorian repeated. "You are a Prime."

Geralt didn't understand what that meant, but Dorian was already asleep, exhausted after the fight and subsequent transformation. The wolves howled one more time and left. Geralt dropped to his knees and resumed his meditation.


--------------------
"What is life's greatest illusion?"
"Innocence, my brother."

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Lena Wolf
post Dec 11 2023, 02:33 PM
Post #589


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27 Second Seed, 4E195 - Returning memories

Returning to Loc Muinne city, Geralt got caught up in various aspects of royal intrigue again. However, his choices were easy: he helped Vernon track down and free the little girl who was the sole surviving heir of late king of Temeria. Surprisingly, the other kings accepted her as the legitimate heir. Of course, she was too young to rule, but the youngest of the kings offered Vernon to protect the girl and make her his wife when she was old enough... thus securing himself a reign over Temeria from that point forward. Vernon sighed, but he was out of options - the country needed a king.

All that running around took quite a bit of time, and the peace summit started before Geralt was able to as much as inquire about Triss, let alone go searching for her. Vernon was watching him with a slight worry and a good deal of surprise, but didn't comment. Geralt noticed, but was grateful to his friend for his discretion. Truth be told, he could not explain to himself why he decided to abandon the search for Triss. He simply did what felt right.

At the summit it became obvious that the kings were not the only powerful figures present. A group of sorceresses known as The Lodge was seeking to control "the balance of power", or to put simply, they sought the power to appoint kings, having been behind the recent wave of regicide. The names of the sorceresses were read out: Triss and Sile were among them. Suddenly Triss' behaviour in spying on Sile started to make sense.

The kings were not thrilled to hear the news, however. They banned sorcerers and sorceresses of all kinds, condemning the members of The Lodge to burn at the stake. They had to catch them first, of course, as most of them were not present at the summit. A ban on all magic was thus brought on, and every mage present was executed, along with any herbalists and healers, for good measure. Dark times descended upon the Northern Realms.

But Geralt wasn't done yet. The one person he wanted to find in the burning ruined city, was Letho. That proved easier than he had thought: Letho was waiting for him in the central square, and Triss was with him. Geralt and Vernon approached.

"You took your time getting here," Letho smirked. "You had me take care of your woman again."

"Again?" Geralt squinted. "Oh."

Triss was covered in smudges of blood, but it wasn't her own. She looked tired but otherwise unharmed. But more than anything, she looked crestfallen.

"Geralt..." she started, but Geralt shook his head.

"Not now, Triss." He looked at her without resentment, but also without affection - her charm had worn off. "Letho and I have things to talk about."

"We'll wait for you by the city gates," Vernon pulled on Triss' sleeve. She sighed but followed.

When they were finally alone, Letho looked Geralt in the eye.

"What do you want to do, Geralt? Are you of a mind to kill me? I won't go soft on you this time."

"Got any vodka left in that bottle?" Geralt smiled, and Letho knew that there would be no fight. Geralt wanted to talk. "My memory is not fully recovered yet," he started slowly. "I remember how we met, but not how we parted. Did we ever catch up with the Wild Hunt? Did we rescue Yennefer? Was I involved with her? Tell me."

"Well..." Letho started cautiously. "We did catch up with the Wild Hunt... because I knew where to catch them. I think the witcher School of the Viper had been set up specifically to fight the Wild Hunt. The documents in our archives... you would not believe. Of course, our school had long perished, like most other witcher schools, but as long as at least one of us still lives... You know. We keep going."

Letho was talking, slowly building a picture of the long and arduous chase after the Wild Hunt. Geralt wondered whether Letho was trying to jog his memory... then suddenly he remembered.

They did catch up with the Wild Hunt on several occasions. A cavalcade of wraiths across the sky, freezing everything on the ground. But some of those wraiths could be slain with a sword, they bled and fell - they were of flesh and blood. Elves, but not like the elves in Geralt's world. Tall, powerful, superior. These were very different elves indeed. "They came from another realm," Geralt realised. "They kidnapped people to use as slaves, no doubt."

"They had a particular interest in Yennefer," Letho continued. "One of them said as much."

"Why?"

"No idea. But then they saw you."

"And?"

"You don't remember?"

Another wave of memories washed over Geralt. The elf from the Wild Hunt said with disdain that he would drop that female any moment in exchange for the White Wolf. And Geralt did not hesitate, taking Yennefer's place.

"And this is how you lost your memory," Letho resumed his story. "You remember it now? I thought as much."

"What happened to Yennefer?"

"They dropped her, literally. Exactly as he said. She was very weak, she had complete amnesia, like you six months ago. We picked her up from the ground and nursed her back to health." He paused, watching Geralt take it all in. "She is trouble, that woman. Don't know what you see in her, but there is no accounting for taste. She's got a temper, oh boy! It must have been worse because she was so confused... She'd lost herself... Well, you know how it feels. She did calm down a bit after a while."

"Then what? Where is she now?"

"Then we got caught by the Nilfgaardian Secret Police, taken to Nilfgaard, interrogated - politely, mind - and released. The Emperor made me an offer: slay a few kings in the North, and he would rebuild the School of the Viper... The one thing I could never turn down."

"Aha..." Geralt was sceptical about trusting kings and emperors, but something in Letho's tone made him keep his remarks to himself. "Where is Yennefer now?"

"She was in Nilfgaard when we were caught. I haven't seen her since."

They sat in silence for a while, drinking vodka.

"You didn't answer my question," Geralt resumed. "Was I involved with Yennefer?"

"You still don't know?" Letho smirked. "When you died at Blaviken, she gave her life for yours. Somehow she didn't die and the two of you were whisked away... where to? I forget."

"The Isle of Avalon."

"By what force?"

"I do not remember."

"All right," Letho did not insist. "And then Yennefer gets kidnapped by the Wild Hunt, only because you fought too fiercely, they did not manage to get you. You start your pursuit."

"Months and months later I came across the three of you, three witchers fighting a manticore," Geralt nodded.

"Dying to a manticore," Letho corrected him. "Without you, we would have been dead. We were chasing the Wild Hunt as well, for months and months and months..."

"Together we caught it, because you knew where they'd be," Geralt was remembering more and more details. "One of the fights was exceptionally fierce... yes... one of the wraiths... well, he wasn't a wraith, it was armour. He took off his helm - I remember his face! An elf." Geralt paused. "I went with them, so they would release Yennefer. That I remember. From that point on, everything is blank."

"That's because they wiped your memory," Letho nodded. "Drink."

They drank in silence.

"How long?"

"Five years."

"What?!"

"Five years you spent with them," Letho looked somber. "Then... someone dropped you off at Kaer Morhen."

"What?!" Geralt was shocked. "Who?"

"Think."

Letho wasn't going to make it easy, that much was clear. There seemed to be another important person in Geralt's life, someone whom he so far could not remember... And then it came to him.

"Ciri."

"Who?"

"My ward." Geralt paused. "The daughter of the Emperor of Nilfgaard. She... she's got powers. She is of Elder Blood, she is not quite of this world... a bloodline on her mother's side... In a way, she is like the elves in the Wild Hunt."

"Aha..." It was now Letho's turn to sit and listen.

"So, Blaviken... That was... what..? six years ago?" Geralt looked up and Letho nodded. "She was but a child then. I remember. She must be all grown up now."

"Do you think or do you remember that it was Ciri who dropped you off at Kaer Morhen?" Letho squinted.

"I... both." Geralt said firmly. "Not sure. But it is the only explanation."

"Aha..."

"All right, but what then?" Geralt still had gaps in his memory. "Where did Triss come from?"

"Beats me, I wasn't there," Letho shrugged. "But she claims she nursed you back to health at Kaer Morhen... and never let go of you since."

"Hmm... Is that why you said you saved my woman again?" Geralt squinted.

"Isn't it so?"

"No," Geralt shook his head. "My woman is in Nilfgaard. And that's where I'm going."

"I had a feeling Triss was dreading the moment your memory came back."

The bottle of vodka was nearly empty.

"Time to go, Letho," Geralt got up. "No hard feelings. Perhaps we'll meet again."

"Who knows what the future holds." Letho got up too. "But if I may... as an old friend. Don't rush to Nilfgaard. Your memory still has gaps. Go to Kaer Morhen. You are lucky to have your home still mostly intact... not like mine. Go there, spend time with your brothers... if anyone is still minding that place."

"Vesemir should be there at least," Geralt nodded. "He's like a father to us, youngsters... He's pushing three hundred by now. Retired from the Path, but he'll still whip your ass better than anyone, if need be."

"See? You're lucky," Letho said whistfully. "I have no home to return to... I doubt the Emperor will keep his word..."

...

Geralt and Letho parted ways. Geralt took a slow walk through the ruined city of Loc Muinne, now filled with fresh corpses, already arranged on pyres. Even though the place was a ruin, no one needed an epidemic. "They will practically set the city on fire," Geralt reflected, seeing just how many pyres had been prepared. "Wouldn't be the first time."

His mind was on fire too. He was remembering more and more details now. His feelings were confused... he recalled that it had never been plain sailing with Yennefer. They'd known each other for twenty years, they'd argued about everything, they'd split up more times than he could remember, but never for long. They'd always find each other again. And then - Blaviken. "She's got a temper, oh yes," Geralt smirked. "She's got a sharp tongue and she is trouble... She's a sorceress, they are often like that. And she's all I've ever wanted." He climbed to the top of a tower overlooking Loc Muinne. The view was majestic. Burned and ruined and littered with corpses, the ancient elven city still inspired awe. "There's something to say for elves..." Below, by the city gate, he spotted Vernon and Triss waiting for him. "There's Triss... Not just a young sorceress but a member of The Lodge that sought to control the kings... yet she never mentioned that little detail," he thought with resentment. "'There must have been a reason why you didn't get help' - that's what Sila had said about my memory," Geralt recalled. "Oh yes, I can see the reason now. Sweet, tender Triss... half a year of amnesia that could have been avoided."

Geralt didn't hurry, he even considered meditating to calm his inner turmoil, but then he thought of Vernon and didn't want to keep him waiting. "Letho was right - I should return to Kaer Morhen," he thought. "I am not going to sort it all out here and now."

He descended from the tower and walked towards the city gates, then the three of them walked out. They would follow the mountain path together, then go their separate ways. They walked in silence as everything had already been said before.


--------------------
"What is life's greatest illusion?"
"Innocence, my brother."

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Renee
post Dec 18 2023, 06:44 PM
Post #590


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Joined: 19-March 13
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15-18 Last Seed, 4E202 - Mages Guild - The Old Crow Inn - Corthio---- Arch Mage Traven, exposed as a living lich! 👻

QUOTE
And we'll need to decide what we are going to do about Necromancy."


This is true. With mods (or just pure imagination) deciding to make a change about the whole Ban on Necromancy is certainly up for grabs, pertaining to the decision of the new Arch Mage. redwizardsmile.gif

QUOTE
"Necromancy as well as the other schools that Hannibal Traven had cut" - Lena reminded him. "Such as Conjuration, Illusion and Mysticism."

"Mysticism?" - Raminus raised an eyebrow.


At first I thought this was due to the year 202, and no Mysticsm in Skyrim. But as seen, this school is connected to necromancy, somehow. I did not know that. Well, with Soul Trap the connection is obvious...

Interesting she turns down the upgrade toward Arch Mage. I agree. Seems silly we can become the top of the Mages Guild (or College in Skyrim) even with hardly any magic involvement during quests. At least in Skyrim we have to cast a spell just to get into the College in the first place, of course.

This Corthio quest sounds awesome. So Lena tracks the guy down to a shop in the I.C., enters the shop via spell, and now she's confronted by the guy who rented her Corthio's former cellar in the Old Crow Inn!

Is there something which adds this stuff into your world? I'm assuming not any of the Better Cities cluster[CENSORED] of plug-ins, which I'm pretty sure you do not use.

http://chorrol.com/forums/index.php?s=&...st&p=338947






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Lena Wolf
post Dec 18 2023, 06:49 PM
Post #591


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QUOTE(Renee @ Dec 18 2023, 05:44 PM) *

This Corthio quest sounds awesome. So Lena tracks the guy down to a shop in the I.C., enters the shop via spell, and now she's confronted by the guy who rented her Corthio's former cellar in the Old Crow Inn!

Is there something which adds this stuff into your world? I'm assuming not any of the Better Cities cluster[CENSORED] of plug-ins, which I'm pretty sure you do not use.

No Better Cities for me, thanks. I don't find that an improvement at all. nono.gif Cortio's story comes from The Old Crow Inn which adds an inn and a few other things, a lovely mod and a permanent addition to my game! biggrin.gif


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"Innocence, my brother."

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Renee
post Dec 18 2023, 08:41 PM
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Yikes! Easy there! Wasn't suggesting you should find BC an improvement, just curious what you've got there, is all.


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Lena Wolf
post Dec 18 2023, 09:02 PM
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QUOTE(Renee @ Dec 18 2023, 07:41 PM) *

Yikes! Easy there! Wasn't suggesting you should find BC an improvement, just curious what you've got there, is all.

Sorry if it came over rather strong, didn't mean it that way. I generally find it rather... umm... presumptious... when people call their mod "Better Whatever" because whether it's better or not is a matter of opinion... as is the case with Better Cities.


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Renee
post Dec 19 2023, 12:00 AM
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Yeah I apoligize too. Miscommunication, I guess. The internet sucks sometimes for communication.


This post has been edited by Renee: Dec 22 2023, 09:36 PM


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Lena Wolf
post Dec 26 2023, 12:56 AM
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13 Sun's Height, 4E195 - White Orchard

The Castle of Kaer Morhen was the seat of the Witcher School of the Wolf, Geralt's home of a lifetime. Even amnesia induced by the Wild Hunt could not erase its memory. It was therefore only logical that Geralt should return there once his amnesia was mostly cleared and the events of the past six months or so presented themselves in a very different light. Events and people, too. Geralt had to get his head in order first and foremost.

Kaer Morhen was almost deserted. Like all other witcher schools, the School of the Wolf had been decimated during the past couple of centuries, with no young witchers being trained since Geralt was a boy. Indeed, he was one of the last children to be trained by the school. The castle felt somewhat hollow without the young voices, but witchers still returned home for the winter, but their numbers dwindled with each passing year. Although long lived, witchers were by no means immortal. In the year of our story, only a handful of them remained, and most were scattered too far to return. Besides, it was summer, and most witchers were on the Path anyway, with only Vesemir remaining at Kaer Morhen. He was already nearly three hundred years of age and was starting to feel old. He preferred to retire from monster slaying and to take up masonry instead - the castle was getting old too, and someone had to mind it.

It had been just a few weeks since Geralt's arrival, but the mountain air had already restored his memory fully. He was thinking of setting out for Nilfgaard in search of Yennefer, when a letter from her arrived. It was a short and terse note asking Geralt to travel to Vizima, now the seat of the Emperor of Nilfgaard. Yennefer was there and had something important to discuss. She made no allusions to the past, and Geralt knew that something very serious was indeed going on. He was leaving immediately, and Vesemir insisted on accompanying him.

"If this is the Wild Hunt, you don't want to be alone," he reasoned, and Geralt agreed.

They rode to the village that Yennefer named in her letter, but she was no longer there. Instead, the place had been frozen - an unmistakable sign of a visit of the Wild Hunt. On top of that, the land was torn by the war, as the Nilfgaardian troops marched through, then stalled. It was hard to say which brought more devastation - the war or the Wild Hunt.

"But Yennefer escaped, look here," Geralt picked up a crystal skull of a raven - a remnant of one of Yennefer's spells. "These horse tracks... She rode at full gallop in that direction," he pointed out a path. They followed, they couldn't be too far behind.

...

White Orchard was a small village at a crossroads, and Geralt and Vesemir decided to stop there and ask around. Especially since they ran into a griffin along the way and Vesemir got a nasty cut on the shoulder, although he dismissed it as "barely grazed". Still, it needed cleaning, and so they headed to the inn. Vesemir settled down with some rye whiskey, but Geralt went to look and ask around.

He'd been gone for a day or more, but Vesemir wasn't worried. "Probably found himself a wraith to fight or something, let's hope he's getting paid," he shook his head, calling for more rye.

A young woman in a traveling cloak walked into the inn. She looked around, then asked for food and drink - it was a common thing to do and no one spared her more than a passing glance. Picking up her teapot and mug, she walked over to the back corner where Vesemir was nursing his wound.

"May I squeeze my teapot in between your bottles?" She smiled at him. "Do you mind if I join you?"

"By all means, please do!" Vesemir looked surprised, at least at first sight. "Let me make some room here..." He tossed empty bottles under the table. "Passing through? Or just sightseeing? White Orchard is beautiful this time of year, especially with the modern gallows-themed decorations. The things young people get up to these days..." He joked, watching her sit down and pour a cup of tea.

"I... I'm not sure," she mused. "It depends on what I'll find." She took off her traveling cloak revealing a peculiar sand-coloured robe underneath with a wide leather belt around her waist with pouches and bottles on it. "I am a healer," she offered. "I have a practice in Flotsam. I am... err... here to restock some herbs," she concluded brightly. "White Orchard is beautiful this time of year, just as you say."

"I see," Vesemir nodded, stretched for another bottle and winced with pain.

"That wound needs cleaning," the young healer pointed at Vesemir's shoulder. "Or it will fester. Unless it started to fester already. Take off your armour," she added firmly, fumbling with the bottles on her belt.

"Whoa! Settle down, settle down!" Vesemir laughed. "I've lived long enough, young lady, to handle grazes like that without a healer! I'd rather spend my coin on the rye!" He added, signalling the innkeeper who was just setting a filled plate in front of the young woman. Then, when the innkeeper had walked away, he said quietly: "He's around, don't worry."

"You figured out who I am then?" The young woman looked up from her food. "I didn't lie."

"I know," Vesemir nodded. "But healers don't usually carry swords and throwing knives under their robes," he smirked. "Besides, Wolf told me about you."

"Ah," Lena nodded too. "I thought he might have done. So, where is he?"

"Around here somewhere," Vesemir shrugged. "Making enquiries. Fighting monsters, no doubt. Nothing unusual. Why do you worry?"

"My medallion," Lena pulled a wolf medallion from under her robe. "It's been buzzing like mad for a few days already, which is why I came. There was talk of two witchers searching the battlefields for something, traveling in this direction. Two witchers traveling together - that's highly unusual. You got yourselves noticed. Flotsam is only a few miles away."

"Yennefer had sent a letter asking to meet her quite urgently in one of the villages that had since been ravaged by the war," Vesemir said grimly. "It is not just because she wants to see him... which I am not sure if she does... but that's his affair. Something big is up."

"The Wild Hunt," Lena said softly.

"Most likely," Vesemir agreed. "We tracked her down to around here, but she hadn't been to this village. So Geralt's been asking around to see if we can pick up her trail again." He took a sip of his whiskey. "While I get patched up here. I'm getting old, you know." He looked her over, searching. "Whose medallion is it?"

"Fredrik's," Lena tucked it under her robe again. "He... I was not able to save him," she looked away. "His wounds were too great."

"So... this is how you know so much about witchers and their wounds," Vesemir squeezed his shoulder again. "Perhaps I should have it cleaned, after all. Is that Swallow?" He picked up one of the potion bottles that Lena was diligently setting out before him. "That'll do."

"No, that won't do," the young healer stood up. "That is just a temporary relief. Take off your armour."

"Like brother, like sister," Vesemir smirked, obeying. "Stubborn."

...

With Vesemir's wound cleaned and bandaged, Lena tucked the remaining potion bottles back into her belt and turned to leave.

"You're better off waiting for him here," Vesemir tried to reason with her. "He'll be back, eventually."

But she had made up her mind and would not be talked out of it.

The night had already fallen when Lena left the inn, trying to sense somehow which way Geralt might have gone. His horse wasn't at the stables, so he must have been further afield which made the search all the more difficult. "Perhaps there's a notice board in the village," she remembered Geralt's habit of following up on requests from notice boards. "It's worth a look."

There was a request for a new plough, an order from the local garrison to enlist into the army, a plea for some rat poison, a call on all able-bodied men to go out into the battlefields to bury the dead, another plea to deal with a ghost by the well, and a polite request to help find a missing brother among the many fallen soldiers of the most recent battle. "The last two," Lena decided. "First the well, then the battlefield."

She found the well surrounded by burned down houses; the hovel had been evidently abandoned for many years. Fresh footprints were all around the well, some fresh scorch marks too. "He was here, fought the ghost or wraith by the looks of things," Lena decided. "He prepared this skeleton for burial, but hasn't done it yet. Perhaps he's missing something. He must have gone on to the battlefields next."

She mounted her horse and rode to the field of the most recent battle. It took place just a few days ago, the corpses were still fresh, with crows picking at them. It was already dawning. Low fog hung over the field, hiding blood and corpses from view. All was quiet.

Then Lena heard noises in the distance, at the far edge of the field. She saw fire lighting up through the fog, flashes of it, not a steady light - someone was casting spells. She unsheathed her sword and moved cautiously in that direction, expecting ghouls to surprise her as she advanced. She found ghouls, but they were dead - sliced in two with a powerful swing of a longsword, a witcher's sword. She knew who was the witcher.

The fire stopped flashing and the noises subsided, the fight seemed to be over. Lena was still moving in the same direction but without the flashes she wasn't sure it was right - she couldn't see more than an arm's length in the fog. Then a sizeable explosion shook the ground to her left and various ghoul body parts rained all around her. "You filth," she heard swearing nearby. "That nest is done now." She found her witcher.

The sun was already above the horizon but the air was still grey, although the fog was slowly lifting. A campfire sprung up a little further on, there was less fog there. "A clearing," Lena thought. "Slightly higher than the field. He's there." She sheathed her sword and ran towards the fire.

Geralt didn't like to meditate among dead bodies, in particular dead monsters - the stench was offending his senses. He always preferred to build a campfire a stretch away and on a higher ground, if possible. When Lena finally got to him, he had already dropped to his knees and closed his eyes, settling in to rest and recover. His wounds would close on their own, he had no energy left to tend to them just then.

Lena picked a potion from her belt and poured the contents into his mouth.

"Hello, sis," he smiled but didn't open his eyes.

Lena sat down too, suddenly realising just how tired she was, having been on her feet all night. She could sleep now, the place was quiet, with no people or monsters in sight. Her medallion stopped buzzing.

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Lena Wolf
post Jan 1 2024, 11:22 PM
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16 Sun's Height, 4E195 - The sorceress from Vengerberg

"Mistress Vengerberg rode to Vizima," the commander of the occupying forces in White Orchard finally told Geralt, but only after Geralt took care of a griffin and a number of stray drowners around the village. "And yes, I could have told you this when you first asked. But would you have dealt with the griffin if I did?" He looked at Geralt shrewdly. One could not argue with that.

Shaking his head and cursing slightly, Geralt rode back to the village to tell Vesemir that Yennefer had been just a few miles away all this time. The village was filled with people however - a dozen of the Emperor's elite guard were crowding the streets. "What in blazes is going on..?" Geralt didn't like elite guard, besides they seemed to be gathering around the inn, around Vesemir...

"What..?" Geralt started saying, hearing them asking for a witcher. Then a voice he hadn't heard in a long time sent a jolt through his body.

"Hello, Geralt. It's been a while." Yennefer stepped forward and the Emperor's elite guard closed behind her.

...

Yennefer was terse, terser than usual. She asked to delay a proper conversation until they were in Vizima, they had to hurry, she said, and the urgency of her voice made both Geralt and Vesemir fear for the worst.

"Go, go," Vesemir patted Geralt on the back. "I'll return to Kaer Morhen, they are not after me, they are after you. I don't think Yennefer is bluffing."

She wasn't. As soon as they were out of the village, the Wild Hunt decended upon them, and it became painfully clear what the Emperor's elite guard was for. The Emperor wanted both the sorceress and the witcher alive, even at the cost of the guard. They escaped, but all of the guard had perished.

The audience with the Emperor was brief and to the point. He wanted Geralt to find his daughter Cirilla who was also Geralt's ward. How that came to be was an old story, but the fact remained that she wasn't raised at the royal palace but at Kaer Morhen, the only child in a destituted witcher school. Vesemir was the one who actually looked after her most of the time, but Geralt as well as a few other witchers came by regularly as well. However, when Ciri was in her early teens, things changed. Ciri wasn't just an Emperor's daughter, she was also of the Elder Blood through her mother's side - she was not quite of this world. Someone "on the other side" noticed her existance and couldn't permit it, and they tried to reach her through the fabric of space... And that had everything to do with the Wild Hunt.

Although what exactly happened remained a mystery, the danger that Ciri was in, was plain to see. It was then that she decided to leave - to leave this world for another. It wasn't about death, it was about traveling through space into another world. The problem was however, that the Wild Hunt could do it too.

Geralt hadn't seen Ciri since then. Yet she must have been keeping an eye on things because when he died - or nearly died - at Blaviken, it was Ciri who pulled him and Yennefer from there to the Isle of Avalon, and years later it was again Ciri who pulled Geralt from the Wild Hunt, dropping him at Kaer Morhen, alive but without his memory. After that Ciri vanished again. But it seems she didn't go far, because she returned, she was back in their world, and the Emperor wanted her found.

"Why now?" Geralt squinted at the Emperor. "You never cared to show your paternal feelings before."

"It isn't about feelings," the Emperor replied quite dispassionately, not offended by the question. "It is a matter of state. Cirilla has come of age."

Indeed, she was no longer a child. She must have been about twenty already, Geralt figured. All grown up.

"Ciri needs to be found for her own sake, you know," Yennefer was filling in the details for Geralt. She had been looking for Ciri on the orders of the Emperor for months already, she made some progress, but her magic was leaving traces which was what brought the Wild Hunt after her. "I cannot use advanced magic any longer, it will alert the Wild Hunt and all will be lost," she shook her head. "We have to switch to conventional methods, which is much more your area of expertise than mine," she smiled, and Geralt thought that perhaps they could finally have a private conversation.

"You look wonderful," he said. "I missed you."

"They why did you not contact me in all this time?" Yennefer asked sharply.

"I... no, why were you staying away?" Geralt didn't expect that pang of hurt in Yennefer's tone.

"I heard you and Triss made a lovely couple," she definitely sounded hurt. "I didn't want to interfere."

"I lost my memory..." he started saying, but Yennefer cut him off.

"And it made you realise how much you love me, etcetera, etcetera, I do not wish to hear it, Geralt!" She cried out. Then added in a calmer tone: "Perhaps we can talk about it later."

Geralt was watching her thinking that she must be really hurt. Perhaps she just needed some time to heal, now that he separated from Triss. Indeed, perhaps they could talk later.

"We have to part again, my friend," Yennefer regained her composure and assumed a friendly tone. "I shall go to the Skellige Isles to investigate an unusual magic explosion there - I think it may have to do with Ciri, while you start your search in Velen as we discussed. Come and find me when you have some leads. Do you want me to teleport you?" She smiled, although she knew what the answer would be.

"No teleports, thanks!" Geralt shook his head. "I'll go on horseback."

"Very well, then we'll talk later," Yennefer nodded, kissed him, and before he could recover from his surprise, she opened a portal to the Skellige Isles and stepped through it.

"We'll talk later," Geralt repeated after her. There was hope yet.

...

In preparation for his search for Ciri, Geralt collected a number of reports from the Emperor's spies - Ciri had indeed been spotted, and that was where the Velen lead came from. But Velen was quite a large province, and Geralt needed more details. While going through all that paperwork, he came across an old book by Dandelion telling the story of how he and Yennefer had met some twenty years earlier. And here it is.

It all began when Geralt and I were feeling a bit peckish and, unburdened by heavy coin pouches, decided to fish our supper out of a lake. No bites were to be had, but we did not leave empty-handed - my hook snagged quite a lovely little pot. Oblivious to my friend's warnings, I opened it - and in doing so freed a powerful djinn.

Without giving it much thought I set about proclaiming my wishes. Before I could get to three, however, the djinn - irritated, I see now in hindsight, at being issued demands so soon after waking - began to throttle me. Geralt was able to drive him off, but I was left in a sorry state. I acted, the witcher told me later, as though under the influence of some curse. Clearly, the help of an expert in the magic arcana would be needed.

It was our good fortune that Yennefer of Vengerberg happened to be staying in a nearby village. Geralt went to her to ask that she heal his best friend, who happened also to be the brightest star in the North's poetic firmament. Yennefer, however, was more interested in the djinn (which she wanted to trap into magic servitude) than in its victim, and, it should be said, played the witcher like a well-strung mandolin. Yet rather than grow angry at being used in such a calculating manner, he fell white head over muddy boots in love with her.

What happened then... well, I won't go into details, suffice to say that Yennefer's plans hardly delighted the djinn, and without its cooperation she proved unable to tame it. The sorceress would surely have met a tragic end - and taken all of Rinde along with her - had Geralt not rushed to her rescue. For once, he did not need to draw either of his blades: to send the djinn packing, he had but to pronounce the third and final wish. He could have asked for anything: wealth, fame, power... but instead he asked the djinn to bind his fate to that of the arrogant yet intriguing sorceress from Vengerberg.


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"What is life's greatest illusion?"
"Innocence, my brother."

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Renee
post Jan 6 2024, 02:02 PM
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She's headed back to Skyrim. Back to Falkreath. Yeah, this thing with her father must be weighing her mind.

Ha! The new DB sanctuary's got a pool. 💦 It's pretty cool, all that detail about how things changed in the Brotherhood, and Lena's learning about it all now.

Okay, wow. Lucien does not approve of torture, interesting. He's more interested in doing things clean, and without much fuss. Like an assassin. emot-ninja1.gif

Bookmark sad.gif

This post has been edited by Renee: Jan 31 2024, 05:38 PM


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macole
post Jan 7 2024, 07:54 AM
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QUOTE(Lena Wolf @ Jan 1 2024, 04:22 PM) *

... but instead he asked the djinn to bind his fate to that of the arrogant yet intriguing sorceress from Vengerberg.

That sounds like trouble ahead, to me. Imagine the constant "wear a coat it's cold outside", "be careful with that sword, it's sharp", "did you remember your potions", on and on and on, never ending.

This post has been edited by macole: Jan 7 2024, 07:59 AM


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Lena Wolf
post Jan 7 2024, 11:45 AM
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QUOTE(macole @ Jan 7 2024, 06:54 AM) *

QUOTE(Lena Wolf @ Jan 1 2024, 04:22 PM) *

... but instead he asked the djinn to bind his fate to that of the arrogant yet intriguing sorceress from Vengerberg.

That sounds like trouble ahead, to me. Imagine the constant "wear a coat it's cold outside", "be careful with that sword, it's sharp", "did you remember your potions", on and on and on, never ending.

That would be awful, but that's not Yennefer's style. She may be arrogant and willful, but she is no mother hen. It appears that their frequent quarrels and falling out where rather due to Yennefer being at least as stubborn as Geralt and wanting to do things her way, while Geralt, being very similar, disagreed, because obviously his way's the right one... Hmm.


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macole
post Jan 7 2024, 11:09 PM
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QUOTE(Lena Wolf @ Jan 7 2024, 04:45 AM) *

QUOTE(macole @ Jan 7 2024, 06:54 AM) *

QUOTE(Lena Wolf @ Jan 1 2024, 04:22 PM) *

... but instead he asked the djinn to bind his fate to that of the arrogant yet intriguing sorceress from Vengerberg.

That sounds like trouble ahead, to me. Imagine the constant "wear a coat it's cold outside", "be careful with that sword, it's sharp", "did you remember your potions", on and on and on, never ending.

That would be awful, but that's not Yennefer's style. She may be arrogant and willful, but she is no mother hen. It appears that their frequent quarrels and falling out where rather due to Yennefer being at least as stubborn as Geralt and wanting to do things her way, while Geralt, being very similar, disagreed, because obviously his way's the right one... Hmm.

I was thinking of the djinn being the harpy trying to keep the willful and arrogant in-line and safe thus ensuring its safety. Unless of course the djinn likes constant danger then he might constantly encourage constant rash behavior. It's one way the djinn can get out of the bind it's in.


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Lena Wolf
post Jan 7 2024, 11:21 PM
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QUOTE(macole @ Jan 7 2024, 10:09 PM) *

QUOTE(Lena Wolf @ Jan 7 2024, 04:45 AM) *

QUOTE(macole @ Jan 7 2024, 06:54 AM) *

QUOTE(Lena Wolf @ Jan 1 2024, 04:22 PM) *

... but instead he asked the djinn to bind his fate to that of the arrogant yet intriguing sorceress from Vengerberg.

That sounds like trouble ahead, to me. Imagine the constant "wear a coat it's cold outside", "be careful with that sword, it's sharp", "did you remember your potions", on and on and on, never ending.

That would be awful, but that's not Yennefer's style. She may be arrogant and willful, but she is no mother hen. It appears that their frequent quarrels and falling out where rather due to Yennefer being at least as stubborn as Geralt and wanting to do things her way, while Geralt, being very similar, disagreed, because obviously his way's the right one... Hmm.

I was thinking of the djinn being the harpy trying to keep the willful and arrogant in-line and safe thus ensuring its safety. Unless of course the djinn likes constant danger then he might constantly encourage constant rash behavior. It's one way the djinn can get out of the bind it's in.

Oh my gosh, I see how that quote could be ambigous! ohmy.gif Good thing I didn't actually write that text, it's a quote... phew! No, Geralt didn't want to bind his fate to that of the djinn, but to that of Yennefer! biggrin.gif For better or for worse...


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Lena Wolf
post Jan 14 2024, 02:45 AM
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14 Last Seed, 4E195 - Velen

Geralt arrived in Velen, a large province consisting predominantly of swamps. Where would he find Ciri's trail? In which swamp? How much mud would he have to swallow before he found anything? He looked around. The only way to proceed was to talk to people.

It took him a good week or more to "settle in" as it were - to show his face in most villages in the Western part of Velen and to let people realise that a witcher was around. He was also hoping for some contracts, because witchers had to eat. But mostly he knew that people would only start telling him things when they felt at ease in his company. Even if some would still spit as he walked past and make unflattering comments about the size of his private parts. He learned to ignore that.

Eventually he got a lead: Ciri had argued with a witch. Which witch, he didn't know, but there couldn't be too many witches around, could there? Indeed, he overheard a conversation about a local witch, a pretty girl, it seemed, quite new to those parts. That was worth investigating.

The witch turned out to be no simple country witch but a sorceress that Geralt knew quite well - Keira Metz, a former adviser to King Foltest, a member of the Lodge of Sorceresses... now residing in a simple cottage lost among the swamps of Velen.

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"Keira!" He thought he knew what she was doing there, but asked anyway. "What are you doing in Velen?"

"Enjoying the country air, what else!" Keira laughed with such sadness, that Geralt momentarily regretted his question. "Mages, sorceresses, even healers and alchemists are all being hunted and burned at the stake! Don't you read the papers? I am hiding!" Tears glistened in her eyes.

"Ugh, I am sorry," Geralt didn't expect quite such a reaction. "Have you quarrelled with Ciri by any chance?" An abrupt change of topic seemed like a good plan to take Keira's mind off her misfortunes. It appeared to work, too.

"Ciri?" Keira spun around, her face brightening. "No, I didn't quarrel with her - why would I? She didn't come here... was she supposed to?"

"I don't know, I am trying to find her," Geralt's brow furrowed. "I was told she quarrelled with a witch. Are there other witches around?"

"Hmm... Not sure about witches, but there was an elven mage here, asking about her," Keira rubbed her chin. "What a coincidence. He left a message... Let me think... Ciri was to meet him in the old elven ruin not far from here, and she was to... err... follow her destiny? It doesn't make much sense, I know..."

"Hmm... No, it doesn't," Geralt was confused too. "Where is that ruin? May be it will make sense there."

"I am coming with you!" Keira got ready to leave. "The mage had promised me something... a lamp... but since things don't seem to go according to plan, he may never bring it here. Perhaps it is still at the ruin."

...

The elven ruin was infested with the usual monsters and vermin, and it transpired that Keira was afraid of rats. Rats! Ordinary non-magical rats. Rats that she could have evaporated with any of her powerful spells, if she could collect herself enough to cast them. But she couldn't. Good thing she had a witcher for company...

They went through the ruin, followed the clues that the elven mage left for Ciri, clues that Geralt could decipher because he knew Ciri so well. They came to the chamber where the mage was staying, but he was no longer there. The place was covered in ice - the Wild Hunt got to him first. It was a dead end.

"Oh look - here is the lamp he promised me!" Keira picked up a curious elven lantern. "Good. We're done here, let's go."

"No, we're not done yet," Geralt shook his head. "The Wild Hunt got to the mage before us, and we lost Ciri's trail. We have to search through this ruin again, perhaps we missed some clue..." He turned to go back the way they came, but Keira stopped him.

"There is nothing else here, Geralt," she said softly. "But I know which witch you need to find."

"What? You met her? Why did you not say anything earlier?" Geralt's frustration was getting the better of him, he was now angry, and Keira realised she might have gone too far.

"I had to have the lamp..." she said in a small voice. "And it was a good lead with the mage, wasn't it? I didn't know how it would turn out... And I never met that witch but I read about them... Here, see for yourself." She pulled a book from one of the shelves around them and handed it to Geralt - an old tome of what looked like folk fairy tales.

"Fairy tales?" Geralt glared at her. "Speak plainly, Keira." This sounded like a threat.

"Fairy tales that have roots in reality, as always," she nodded. "The Witches of the Crookback Bog are the ones that Ciri quarrelled with... must have done, anyway... they are evil. And they actually exist, it's all in there. It fits." She tried to sound convincing.

Geralt knew of course that fairy tales did often have roots in reality, so he cooled off a bit and started leafing through the book. It gave directions on how to find the witches... they seemed familiar somehow. He might have been to those places already. This was worth a closer investigation. He sighed and stuffed the book into his belt.

"Alright, let's go," he said much more calmly. "What's with the lamp, anyway? What does it do?"

"It allows you to speak to ghosts," Keira replied brightly. "Interesting stuff... I need it for... err... research..."

"Aha," Geralt squinted. "In Velen, right. Well, never mind then."

There was nothing left to do there, they walked around a bit longer trying to locate the exit, and eventually stood outside under the incessant rain.

"Thank you, Geralt," Keira looked genuinely grateful. "I hope you've got the right lead now," she smiled. "That's all I know, I swear."

"Good luck with your... err... research then," Geralt smirked. "See you around."

"Wait... eh... I've got another favour to ask of you..." Keira seemed embarrassed.

"Of course you do," Geralt turned around to face her again. "Let's hear it."

"It is a job for a witcher," Keira said carefully. "No, really. There's a curse that needs lifting. And I... well... I don't know how to lift a curse."

Geralt could never refuse a woman, in particular a sorceress, and especially if she was asking him to do something that he as a witcher would do anyway. So of course he listened and agreed to help. This was the story that he and Lena would be remembering many years later in a bath house of the Pale Pass Inn. We've already told this story, but it's been a while - over two years in our time... Incredible. Still, there is no need to reprint it, since we can simply read it as it was written back then:

21 Last Seed, 4E195 - Velen - Fyke Isle - Oreton

2 Hearthfire, 4E202 - Pale Pass Inn

22 Last Seed, 4E195 - Fyke Isle tower

23 Last Seed, 4E195 - Keira's Elven bath house


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"What is life's greatest illusion?"
"Innocence, my brother."

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Lena Wolf
post Jan 20 2024, 10:39 PM
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2 Hearthfire, 4E195 - Family matters

When Geralt approached the cottage previously belonging to Keira Metz, a small crowd was blocking his way. They stood in a half-circle surrounding the front yard, watching something or waiting for something... The tension was thick in the air. Geralt nudged his way through, but there was nothing going on. Then the door was flung open and a woman backed out of it, bent, dragging something behind her. She took a few steps and straightened up, and the corpse she was dragging slumped to the ground. Next to another such corpse, Geralt noticed. The woman turned around to face the crowd.

"Which of you set the witchhunters onto me?" She glared at the villagers. "Well? Speak up!" Waves of cold seemed to emanate from her youthful figure, but she wasn't casting spells.

"Well, you see, miss..." someone started carefully. "They had papers, miss..."

"From King Radovid, miss!"

"To arrest all witches, see, miss..?"

"But she ain't a witch!" A woman in the crowd glared at the men that were taking turns to speak. "I did tell yah, too! This one's a healer! Who'll be making salves for the little ones now?" Then, turning to the woman standing over the corpses, she added: "Menfolk are such fools, miss!"

"That they are," the woman nodded, still glaring at the men. "How much did they pay you?"

"It ain't like that, miss!" One of them quickly objected. "They had papers..."

"Oh, it's exactly like that!" Another man intervened, clenching his fists. "You took all the coin, you did! Shared naught with us!"

"You greedy bastard!" More calls followed, more fists were clenched.

"HOW MUCH?!" The young woman yelled, and all fell quiet. Suddenly someone realised that she was standing over the corpses of those witchhunters. Corpses of two well-armed grown men.

"She's a witch, she is! Killed them with magic!" One of the men now turned on her, fists still clenched. Another man kneeled over the corpses.

"Shut up, you fool!" He cut him off. "This one's had his throat slit, and this one's been stabbed through the heart! It ain't magic!"

"Men are fools, don't leave us, miss!" The woman from the crowd was pleading now. "We need a healer!"

"How can I trust you people now?" The young woman was looking at them in turn. "You'll sell me out again. I'd be safer out in the woods, with the bears!"

Suddenly there was a tussle and a brawl among the men. It was over quickly, and one held out a pouch with coin.

"Here's the coin, miss. Take it. Almost all still there, I reckon... He won't sell you out again... We'll see to that."

The young woman took the pouch, weighing it.

"Almost all there, you say... Alright, I suppose it'll do. You'll need to bury these corpses for me, too. Right here in front of the house. Let their graves remind you lot of what had occurred."

Sighs of relief were heard all around, except from the one fellow who had sold her out - he was curled up in the bushes, moaning with pain, he'd taken quite a beating. The healer shot him a cold glance, nodded to the rest, noticing two men picking up shovels to dig the graves. She turned around and went into the house without another word. Geralt followed.

...

"What happened?" Geralt asked with worry, when he and Lena finally sat in the back room, away from the windows. "And what are you doing here, in Keira's house?"

"Well, Keira left, you know that," Lena shrugged. "She's on her way to Kaer Morhen now, and she left me this house. Which was left to her by the witch who lived here before... I wonder what happened to her... Died of old age, perhaps..?"

"Stay on topic," Geralt prompted her, his brow furrowed. "Keira left, so what? Why are you here and not in Flotsam?"

"Because you are here and not in Flotsam," she smirked. "You've got a sister now, get used to it." She glared at him, but then let out a long sigh and softened her gaze. "I've never had a brother before. And I don't want to lose one now."

"I'm not used to having family either," Geralt said grimly. "Ciri is already more trouble than I need..." He looked at Lena darkly, then noticing her face fall, he hastened to add: "That didn't come out right... I didn't mean..."

Women could be such touchy creatures. Lena jumped up, tears swelling in her eyes, she tried to hide it, but Geralt noticed. No, he didn't want to lose his newly found sister either. Family was trouble, true, but also... Not knowing how to fix the situation, he acted on impulse. What would a brother do?

"Come here," he took her into a hug. "No one is going to lose anyone just yet."

...

"I am staying here for a while," Geralt declared some time later. "I've got several contracts going, there's the matter of a lost goat and a matter of a goose that stopped laying... What?" He looked up, hearing Lena giggle. "A witcher cannot be choosy about the sort of thing that pays his fees."

"Oh, I'm sure it is a monster of a goat, no less," Lena was laughing now. "Thanks, but I don't need a bodyguard." She stopped laughing.

"Don't start," Geralt sighed. "Those witchhunters were not joking. And it is true about all the contracts. They are not all goats, either. I'll stick around until things cool off with the villagers, I'm sure word has already gotten around about who you really are."

"Who?"

"An assassin." He looked at her with significance. "Next time they'll be better prepared."

"Alright," Lena gave in. "But you don't look too well yourself. Were you coming here hoping to find Keira? Then you need help. Healing perhaps. What happened?" Clearly, it was Lena's turn to ask questions.

"Aye, I needed a place to lay low for a while," Geralt nodded. "I knew Keira had left. That last string of jobs... well... I can't go on to Novigrad just yet. Ciri was here, she left a trail, the White Hunt will follow. I need to stay and see what happens. Gather my thoughts... Novigrad will be tough, I have a feeling... And you are not to follow me there - you hear me? They'll burn you at the stake!" He looked straight at Lena and she knew this was true. Although she wasn't a witch or a sorceress as such, she knew enough magic to qualify for King Radovid's war on mages, and going to his seat of power was nothing short of suicide. She promised not to go there.

"Tell me about your recent jobs then," she sat back in her chair. "I have a feeling it's a fascinating tale."

"Alright," Geralt opened another bottle of vodka. "Have you heard of the Crones of the Crookback Bog?"

...

It was a lead that Keira gave to Geralt in a form of a folk tales book. It told of a path through the swamps marked with ribbons and bright flowers, with sweets and treats all along the way. Unwanted children were sent down that path, never to return. The fairy tales spoke of old witches with a fondness for human flesh, particularly that of children. Most people thought those were but fairy tales meant to scare kids into good behaviour, but Geralt had learned to his horror just how literal the stories were.

Keira thought that if Ciri had indeed quarreled with some witch in Velen, it would be with the Crones - the witches from the fairy tale, and naturally Geralt had to find them. It was easier than he had expected, the path in the swamps was exactly as described in the book: unusually bright flowers, ribbons and sweets - it was all there. He followed it and came to a clearing with two or three houses and a mill. Children were playing outside. The place looked peaceful.

"What are you doing here in the swamps?" He struck up a conversation with the kids.

"We live here," they said. "We're orphans. Gran takes care of us."

"That's an unlikely place for an orphanage..." Geralt started saying, but then a grey-haired woman came out of one of the huts and the children scattered.

"What are you doing here?" She went straight to Geralt. "You are a stranger. Strangers are forbidden. You should leave."

He tried telling her that he was there looking for his daughter, or at least looking for a witch with whom she might have quarreled, but it was no use. The woman refused to talk to him. Yet Geralt felt that she knew of Ciri, had seen her. He waited until she went back into the hut and the kids returned to their games, and trying talking to the children again. It wasn't all that hard to convince them to help, all he had to do was play hide and seek with them... which he did with pleasure. It was of course too easy for a witcher.

With the kids' help, and after another errand, the woman finally conceded that she'd seen Ciri there.

"You will need to speak to the ladies," she said with a sigh. "You will come to regret it, you will... but have it your way..."

She led him to the old mill which turned out to have a shrine inside with a tapestry of three lovely ladies. She touched the tapestry and fell into a trance.

The ladies spoke through her, they had lovely longing voices. They would tell Geralt all about Ciri, but he had to do a service for them first. A great evil woke in the woods, an evil that was killing folk and destroying cattle, deal with it and all would be told. He was given a dagger as a symbol and was sent to speak with the alderman of a village just outside the swamps.

"And don't forget to collect his payment when you are done!" The ladies made a point of that.

It didn't sound like anything unusual or untoward, yet Geralt felt uneasy. Something about that request didn't sit right with him, but he needed to find Ciri, and this was the only way. Besides, if there was indeed a great evil in the forest terrorising the populace, it was his job to deal with it.

The alderman stood aghast at the sight of the dagger.

"I did not know you belonged to them, sir," he gasped.

"I belong to no one," Geralt said firmly. "I am here to deal with your problem, that is all. Now, tell me about it."

With a sigh of relief the alderman told him of a great evil... almost literally repeating what Geralt had already heard from the ladies. So it seemed it was true. No one knew what it was, but folk had gone missing, only to be found dead, and so on and so forth. He was shown the hill that seemed to be the centre of it all.

"This isn't in the fairy tales," Geralt was leafing through the book. "So this is either something new or something very, very old."

He found the hill that the alderman spoke of, and saw corpses all around. He was attacked by wolves at first, then werewolves too. A voice sounded in his head telling him to advance no further, to turn around and leave... which only convinced him he was on the right track and he proceeded. There was a cave beneath the hill, and in it a strangely pulsating growth was speaking to him again...

"What?" He shook his head in disbelief. "Who are you?"

"A spirit older than this wood, imprisoned here by the very ladies that sent you to kill me," the voice answered. "Release me instead, so I might roam free once again!"

From everything that Geralt had seen and heard so far, he was certain that the spirit was evil. He was also certain that the ladies were evil as well. Which should he choose? Release the spirit and earn the wrath of the ladies or kill the spirit and thus make the ladies stronger? Which was the lesser evil? The folk of those parts claimed that the ladies protected them from misfortune, yet the land knew misfortunes aplenty. Was it the ladies' doing or were the ladies holding even greater evil at bay?

The spirit claimed that the ladies ate children, the very children living in the middle of the swamp - that's why they were there. But was he to free the spirit, the children would be saved, the spirit would see to that. How? It did not specify...

Geralt did not believe the spirit. He felt there was no right choice in this dilemma. He attacked the pulsating growth causing it to rupture and thus destroying the spirit. He watched it in disbelief. Surely, a spirit should have fled its cage, if this was its cage as it had claimed... What was it that he killed just then? But it was too late to ask such a question.

When he came out of the cave, he found the villagers gathered outside, with more corpses piled high before them. Where did those corpses come from? They were not there before... The alderman approached, thanking Geralt for killing the great evil in the cave. When Geralt reminding him of payment for the ladies, the alderman nodded, took the ladies' dagger, cut off one of his ears and handed it to Geralt.

"Here," he said. "Take this to the ladies. We obey."

...

Back at the orphanage in the middle of the swamps he found the woman that used to look after the children. She was alone. All the children were gone. She took the alderman's ear from Geralt and put it on a rock. The air grew misty and Geralt felt magic all around him. Then three horribly ugly women appeared - the Crones of Crookback Bog. They were pleased with Geralt's choice of action... and he was horrified to have appeased them, while at the same time he wondered what would have happened, had he released the spirit instead.

The Crones kept their word - they told him about Ciri. Yes, she had been there. Fell out of the sky and right into their swamp. They picked her up, let her rest.

"But she is of Elder Blood!" They exclaimed. "She is not destined for us!"

They would have kept here there by force until the Wild Hunt arrived, but Ciri had been wounded, and they figured she could not run away even if she wanted to... Fortunately for Ciri, her wounds healed fast and she sensed the danger. She bolted, running through the swamps until the Wild Hunt lost track of her, at least for a short time.

Was that lead important? Hardly.

Geralt had already found out that Ciri had left for Novigrad. After she escaped from the Crones, she wandered through the swamps, met a lost child along the way and eventually together they got out to higher ground. There they ran into a hunter who took them to the local baron hoping for a reward - the baron's wife and daughter were missing. They were good twenty years older than Ciri and the girl, but the hunter played dumb anyway. There was no reward for him, but the baron took the girls in, gave them food and shelter... Geralt learned all this from the baron who had asked him to find his wife and daughter in return for the information about Ciri - alas, nothing in that world was free.

The woman at the orphanage of the Crookback Bog who served the Crones, turned out to be the baron's wife. When the baron heard of this, he wanted to free her, despite all the bad blood, betrayal and beatings that led her to seek help from the Crones. He told his side of the story... his wife wasn't blameless either. Their daughter grew up with hatred for her father, not knowing what caused his ire. This was another story not meant to have a happy end.

The baron asked Geralt for help and Geralt felt so involved in all of this, that he simply had to see it through. They came to the village near the entrance into the swamps only to find corpses hanging from trees. Not of everyone, but enough. Who did this and why? A group of religious zealots looking for a way into the swamp, they strung up everyone who stood in their way...

Arriving at the site of the orphanage, they found the zealots. The place was deserted, apart from the monsters that had overrun it completely. The fighting was fierce, but the baron's men, the zealots and Geralt prevailed over the monsters. Then it was time to talk. Who where they and what were they doing in that swamp?

"I am here to take mother home!" A young woman stepped forward, and it was only then that the baron recognised his daughter under all that armour.

"Home? Home where?" He looked dejected.

"Away from here!" The young woman was defiant.

"Is that why you killed all those men back at the village?" The baron was still hardly believing his eyes.

"We killed those men because they stood in the way of the Holy Flame," a man in a long coat stepped forward. "They refused to denounce their gods!"

"What?!"

This didn't bode well. Geralt thought that a fight between the baron and the chief zealot was a very bad idea just then, so he rushed to intervene.

"Stop argueing, you can do it later," he said calmly but firmly. "We must find the baron's wife first. So far we only found monsters."

Fortunately, everyone agreed and spread out to search. The door to the old mill had been barred, but once broken down, this was where they found the baron's wife. She was scrubbing the floor, mumbling some nonsense, not quite understanding where she was or what was going on...

"Mother! I am taking you home!" The baron's daughter ran to her mother. "Come!"

"You will do no such thing," her Commander interfered.

"But... you promised!" She turned to him, not understanding what happened. "You promised to help me find my mother!"

"And I have done so," he stood firm. "Here she is, and her husband is here to take her home. I see true remorse in his eyes, he is a changed man. And anyhow... where would you have taken her? You have duties."

"Duties? What duties?" The young woman stood quite aghast.

"Duties that come from your commitment to the Church of the Holy Flame," the man replied calmly. "The commitment that you made willingly not so long ago. Have you forgotten?"

...

"Family is trouble," Geralt looked at Lena darkly. "The baron found his wife, but she had lost her mind. He found his daughter, and lost her at the same time. I killed a spirit that may or may not have been evil in order to appease horrifically evil crones just so I could get a lead to find my own daughter, and that lead was all for naught, for I already knew where she'd gone! And then I came here to find you've been attacked by witchhunters!"

Lena silently opened another bottle.

"I see the need to lie low for a while," she said pouring the drinks. "Let things settle. A lost goat and a goose that stopped laying seems strenuous enough."

This post has been edited by Lena Wolf: Feb 1 2024, 11:50 AM


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"What is life's greatest illusion?"
"Innocence, my brother."

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Lena Wolf
post Jan 27 2024, 02:50 AM
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9 Hearthfire, 4E195 - Triss Merigold

"Time to go, sis," Geralt finished repairing his armour and turned his attention to the swords. "Ciri had gone to Novigrad, and I have to follow." He shook his head, watching Lena crushing roots for an infusion. "As it turns out, this whole outing to Velen was entirely pointless. Yennefer told me straight away that Ciri had been seen in Novigrad, reported by none other but Triss Merigold. I should have gone straight there and not wasted my time in Velen."

"So why did you not go straight to Novigrad then?" Lena squinted at him. "Where you required to investigate Velen? To what end?"

"I was and I don't know," Geralt scoffed. "Well, it's done now, and I lost... what? a month? Ridiculous."

"Alright, be careful now," Lena gave him a hug as he was ready to mount his horse. "I won't come to Novigrad as I promised, but I might find a quiet spot in the suburbs," she winked. "Don't worry, I have no intention of getting burned at the stake."

...

The road to Novigrad was uneventful. Novigrad greeted Geralt with two pyres in the central square - a sorceress and a wizard. Geralt sighed and turned away as there was nothing he could do. The Church of Holy Flame was preaching death to all who wielded magic, witchers included. The atmosphere was stifling. "Why would Triss buy a house here, of all places?" He wondered. "Has she gone mad? Assuming she's still alive, that is." He still resented Triss his half a year of amnesia, but he did not want her hurt or dead.

Triss had a lovely house right by the central square. Or rather, it used it be a lovely house, but was currently decorated with nasty graffitti. Household items were thrown all over the courtyard, too. A couple of thugs were looting them.

"Oi!" They turned on Geralt. "We're looting here, so shove off!"

"No."

"Arrrghhh!!"

One of the thugs tried punching Geralt's armour, but hit himself in the eye, it seemed. A moment later they were telling all they knew about the Putrid Grove - a place where thieves, thugs and sorceresses currently took refuge. Thugs worse than themselves, that is.

"Triss is in trouble," Geralt concluded, setting off in search of the Putrid Grove.

...

It took days upon days and cost him a lot of coin and effort, but eventually Geralt did gain an audience with the King of Thieves who was also giving protection to sorceresses in distress. He even tried to extend his protection to Geralt, but Geralt just laughed.

"What are you doing here?" Geralt asked when he finally located Triss. "Are you mad? They are burning sorceresses at the stake by the dozen, have you not heard?" The look on his face must have been telling volumes because Triss took a step back.

"I am surviving as best I can," she answered in a small voice. "Novigrad is the heart of the witch hunt, true, but it is also a big city. It is easier to hide here than in a village where everyone knows who you are."

She looked downtrodden and Geralt couldn't help but pity her.

"You can't stay here though, you have to leave - go far, go abroad," he said in a much softer tone.

"That's what I've been trying to do," Triss nodded. "Sail away. That's why I came here. All sorts of ships dock in the port of Novigrad, I was hoping to leave on one... but it didn't work out yet."

"Do you have a plan?" Geralt started seeing the point of coming to Novigrad.

"Yes," Triss smiled. "The King of Thieves is organising a ship, we are trying to round up as many mages as we can before they get burned at the stake... We are not always successful... We need funds, too..."

She paused, and Geralt felt a string of requests coming his way, for the old times' sake. Whatever his personal feelings, he would help, of course. But he had a job of his own, too.

"I hear you met Ciri," he changed the subject. "I am tracking her."

"Oh, so you came here looking for her..!" Disappointment in Triss' voice was unmistakable. "Of course," she caught herself. "Yes, Ciri was in Novigrad. She asked Dandelion for help! Dandelion! Of all people!" Triss was outraged and amused all at once. "And of course he messed it up! Royally! As only Dandelion can!!"

"Ugh..." Geralt shook his head - of course it was up to him to sort it out. "But where is she now?"

"I have no idea," Triss smiled, putting her arm around Geralt's shoulders. "She's got powers, you know, she could be literally anywhere, on any world. I have no idea how you could possibly track her down."

"Don't start," Geralt looked at Triss sideways, gently taking her hand off his shoulder. "I'll help you of course. I'm obviously staying in Novigrad for a while. Ciri must have left clues behind, I'll need to examine every scrap. We'll get Dandelion out of his fix and we'll get your mage friends on that ship. None of you can stay here."

"Geralt..." Triss started saying something, then stopped. It was too late.

...

A month later Triss was finally boarding a ship. They gathered as many mages as they could, but many still perished. Geralt and a few others were seeing them off, it was the middle of the night and the ship was docked at a sewer exit - smuggling mages out of Novigrad carried a death sentence.

"Are you just going to let her go?" One of Geralt's new acquaintances was looking at Triss with amasement. "She loves you!"

"Yes," Geralt nodded, also looking at Triss helping others board the ship, keeping her back turned to him. "I know. But I love another."

Triss turned to look at him one last time, no longer hiding her tears, then boarded the ship herself. They sailed without delay.


--------------------
"What is life's greatest illusion?"
"Innocence, my brother."

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macole
post Jan 27 2024, 05:53 AM
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Sad to see the dark light of the Church of Holy Flame cover Novigrad. Thankfully, Triss was able to find a ship out.


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Endure and through enduring grow strong.
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Lena Wolf
post Jan 27 2024, 04:21 PM
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QUOTE(macole @ Jan 27 2024, 04:53 AM) *

Sad to see the dark light of the Church of Holy Flame cover Novigrad. Thankfully, Triss was able to find a ship out.

Yes, Novigrad looked rather grim. I must say that I never enjoyed that part of the game - that's too grim for my taste. Yeah, it's what witch hunts were like in real life... But this is a video game. If I wanted real life, I could just read the news.

Anyway, yes, Triss gets saved, but only just. Others are not so fortunate. I think the actual name of the church in question is the Church of Eternal Fire... hmm... rather suggestive, that. There are several variations of the name, I think, all revolving about the all-consuming fire that is supposedly good for your soul.


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"Innocence, my brother."

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