Using the time-honored Kezmaroki tradition of presenting cityscapes as a series of squares, Balazas draws the Nine...
Using the time-honored Kezmaroki tradition of presenting cityscapes as a series of squares, Balazas draws the Nine this map of the Rusevin from his memory.
Last time we talked with him, he flipped the fuck out as to where he was, but wouldn't tell us why. Have we been able to get anything more from him on that score?
ReplyDeleteI am really starting to dig this way of mapping large out door ruins. I may have to start drawing a map soon.
ReplyDeleteHumza Kazmi he visibly becomes highly agitated when there is any talk of the ruins at all in his presence. It is only through a couple of weeks of concentration that he can bring himself to map this much. He claims that he has no conscious memory outside of what he glimpsed when outside the ruin other than a sense that something great and horrible lies with in (and that he has been inside the walls).
ReplyDeleteHmmph. Sounds like a cake walk. :)
ReplyDeleteOK, so not a good idea to bring him to the ruins, he's liable to go bughouse on us. Cool beans, he can hang out back at King's Ten and help prep its defenses.
ReplyDeleteHe describes it Mike Davison with gritted teeth and terrified eyes as "easy breezy."
ReplyDeleteFather Jack looks at the map. "Uh.. I don't get it."
ReplyDeletewhen talking to the agitated Balazas, Taurus makes a point of phrasing things with many unsubtle references to the diary's "long, racy and embarrassingly clumsy digression"
ReplyDeleteTo which he shifts about uncomfortably with a bit of an embarrassed grin.
ReplyDeletethat just gets the patented dead-eye stare
ReplyDeleteThat at least has the advantage of distracting him from his sense of overwhelming supernatural dread.
ReplyDeleteEverybody loves a clown. They help us to let go of our worries.
ReplyDeleteTaurus is the best.
ReplyDeleteTaurus, Worry Exorcist: A Biography
ReplyDeleteHe's just a simple wandering entertainer.
ReplyDelete