#Marcus Aquila Summanus
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🧜🏽♀️ MERMAYPALOOZA! 🧜🏼
Requested by: @vesuvian-disaster
Marcus Aquila (or is that Mercus Aquila? ;P) Ey looks so happy as a lionfish mer...
Link to full-sized render under the cut! Detail snippet below:
Full Sized Render (2k)
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👫Evander and Marcus Aquila - vesuvian-disaster
Evander doesn't personally see enough of Marcus (though they do interact for various work and occasionally personally related reasons) to correctly remember what age he is and his mental picture and/or descriptions of him range from 'youngish adult' to 'isn't he in his forties by now?' This is despite having literally seen him grow up to a degree. I think it has to do with Marcus' ongoing levels of exhaustion.
Both Marcus and Evander do agree on the need for proper filing, paper trails, and the usual documentation in relation to business and law. Evander runs a clean ship - However, when Evander's more cutthroat business actions go down (there's no escaping it in Vesuvia), he does get some leeway because it's generally all reasonable as per files and information (not falsified - simply occasionally excluding a certain detail or telling the story in a certain way).
While Evander definitely knows better than to trust the Queastor for... literally anything, he still appreciates Marcus' warnings to keep away. Evander does not have the mental time or space to concern himself with whatever house Summanus is up to (he has far too much work to attend to himself), although if he did he wouldn't care for it (obvious, perhaps, but yanno... it's Vesuvia.)
Hortensia and Evander surprisingly haven't jumped each other's bones, but Evander doesn't tend to play as much with other nobility. They do get along though, on rare occasion that they interact.
#Evander#Marcus#Thank you for asking#I hope I characterize Marcus alright#he's a little slippery for me to get hold of in my mind#but I want these two to interact more
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Marcus Aquila Summanus : Assistant to the Quaestor
Name: Marcus Aquila Summanus
Age: 25
Height: 5’11”
Hair: Black
Eyes: Brown
Gender: Agender (AMAB)
Pronouns: ey/em/eir - pronounced “ay/em/heir”
Orientation: Tired (Demi-romantic Ace)
Favorite Food: Apricot Crostata
Favorite Drink: Fortified Red Wine
Favorite Flower: Narcissus
Brief Background:
Marcus is the fourth child of the current head of the Summanus noble family of Vesuvia. When ey turned 18 eir father used his connections to get em a position assisting Quaestor Valdemar with their work dealing with the treasury.
When The Red Plague became entrenched in the city, Marcus continued the work distributing funds to various different branches of the government, paying the guards, paying the palace staff, making sure taxes are collected, and other such responsibilities. Quaestor Valdemar, being generally uninterested in such things, happily went about their real interest of studying The Plague and leaving the treasury in eir hands.
#the arcana oc#non-apprentice oc#Marcus Aquila Summanus#neopronouns because i like being able to tell people apart when i write
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Marcus Aquila Summanus and Miloš Borka (@sharpfawngz) dancing on the eve of their wedding under the watchful eye of The Empress! 💖💘💖 This is amazing work and I love it (and them) so much! I commissioned this from@sharpfawngz. I cannot recommend them enough!
Here it is, folks, a month in the making - Miloš and Marcus Aquila’s wedding dance!
Big thank you to @vesuvian-disaster for commissioning me to do this, I owe u my life <3
#sharpfawngz#marcus aquila#miloš#i literally gasped when i saw this 💖#seriously go check out their other art too!
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Apprenticember, Day 5
Do they have any other friends outside of canon? What about the minor characters?
🌺 Phan Đạt Linh Heron has been Jinana's friend since childhood, when they apprenticed together under Master Efisio Borgia. Of course, s/he no longer remembers this, but the bond remains; Heron returned from Prakra one year after the ritual took place to find Asra caring for a severely impaired Jinana, and immediately began assisting in hir rehabilitation.
🌺Jinana is introduced to Praefectus Marcus Aquila Summanus by Portia, and quickly takes a liking to em. Despite having a rather flighty nervous energy, eir pointed observations and acerbic wit defuse a lot of hir apprehensions around working for the Countess, and eir knowledge of the history, inner workings and dirty laundry of the Palace are invaluable to hir investigation.
🌺 Of course a friendship forms between Mazelinka and Jinana; they are in league together to make sure Julian doesn't run himself into the ground with his own lack of self-care. Jinana is also fascinated by her magical recipes, which are very different from what s/he knows, yet just as effective, and loves learning about them.
🌺 Navra takes a bit of a shine to Jinana and very much wishes to help hir regain hir love for and knowledge of Prakran classical dance. They also bond over their shared ability to perceive auras.
🌺 Nazali becomes Jinana's friend through the medium of Julian, and drops by the clinic whenever they can to talk shop and pick up supplies. Heron eventually offers to transform their beloved hideous waist-bag into a magical Bag of Holding, much to the chagrin of their sisters.
🌺 Natiqa and Jinana (both of whom have The Wheel of Fortune as their patron Arcana) almost immediately form a chaos4chaos friendship - Natiqa supplies the prank ideas, and Jinana supplies the magic to make them happen. Together, they are something of a terror around the Palace grounds. Beware of giant chooks, horse-sized hedgehogs, and spots where gravity suddenly does not play by the rules.
#apprenticember#jinana aditya#heron phan#marcus aquila summanus#arcana fan apprentice#arcana ocs#the bromance
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👫 Jinana and Marcus Aquila. -vesuvian-disaster
[ 4 headcanons about our muses ]
After trauma-bonding during the whole Devil fiasco, Jinana and Julian regularly visit with Marcus and Miloš at the Summanus estate.
Jinana and Marcus like to share a nice hookah smoke once in a while, generally whenever Julian is not around to make faces about it ;P (Jinana's enchanted hookah makes it an Experience for sure!)
Jinana happily lends Julian to Marcus as Stunt Sub when ey expresses an interest in learning the ropes (both literally and figuratively) of the domination game. (Julian is only too happy to oblige, mind you...)
After Marcus becomes the new Quaestor, they tend to find an excuse to hang out together at Palace functions, entertaining themselves by being amusingly catty about the nobles over their drinks.
#ask memes answered#marcus aquila summanus#thanks for sending in!#they do amuse me greatly#smoking cw#kink talk cw#ToC spoilers#like it matters lmao
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Midsummer Masquerade, Day 1: Bath + Food
Marcus Aquila takes a break from deterring revelers from seeking treatment at Valdemar’s carefully-stocked infirmary (just go to one of the helpful medic tents instead, please...) to clean up and snack after having a little fun with Jinana and Julian. Julian is a floating, if still rather excited, dessert tray.
🔞🍋Warnings and links to full-sized uncensored renders under the cut, minors DNI!
(Marcus Aquila Summanus (ey/em/eir) belongs to @vesuvian-disaster!)
Warnings: full frontal nudity, one (1) erection, marks (hickeys, bites, scratches), implied alcohol.
Full Render
Closeup: Julian is Living Deliciously.
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Jinana’s Birthday Renderpalooza!
Requested By: @vesuvian-disaster
Marcus Aquila and Jinana get a nice dance in, in coordinating black-and-silver.
(Fun fact: Marcus Aquila is 5′11 and Jinana is wearing some serious heels lmao)
#my art#Jinana's Birthday Shenanigans#Renderpalooza!#Marcus Aquila Summanus#Jinana Aditya#arcana ocs
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I recently hit 300 followers, so here’s my very first 3-person render! :D :D :D
Dom Lessons with Jinana, Marcus Aquila, and Stunt Sub Julian
(not at all sfw, links to full-size and outtake version under the cut...)
Warnings: bondage, gag, riding crop, paddle, well-spanked cheeks, people holding fancy glass toys in a vaguely threatening manner, Concerned Julian
Full Size (it’s biiiig)
Outtake Version with rubber duck, various produce, and Even More Concerned Julian (entirely for the lulz)
#bigger clown shoes just means you hear me squeakin from further away lmao#my art#lemon#Marcus Aquila Summanus#jinana aditya#Doctor Disaster
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D1 with Miloš and Marcus Aquila? I'll leave the clothing to your whims lol - vesuvian-dsaster
[ Renderpalooza! ]
In the Modern AU... Marcus works for a prestigious accounting firm, and Miloš is a successful doctor. Here they are having a relaxing moment after a busy workday... (full size render under the cut!)
[ Full Size ]
#my art#renderpalooza!#marcus aquila summanus#Miloš Borka#Dungeon Buddies#arcana oc#vesuvian disaster#xx sharpfawngz xx#thanks for sending in! <3
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hewwo jenjamin can I get c3 for Marcus and Miloš pwetty pwease 😳 <3333
B E H O L D
It is them
[ Full Size ]
* Miloš and Marcus models made in conjunction with @vesuvian-disaster!
#ask memes answered#dungeon buddies#marcus aquila summanus#Miloš Borka#aw man I shoulda put earrings on them#next time!#my art#Jenjamin's V-Day Extravaganza
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When the Consul is on his bullshit, and you’re just waiting for it to come bite him on the ass...
(Test render: The Praefectus was looking a little too healthy and well-rested, so I updated eir textures for a more appropriate look during the madness leading up to the Masquerade.)
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Praefectus Marcus Aquilas Summanus (ey-em-eir)
(Testing out some new textures... ey looks a little healthier now that ey is happily married and no longer spends all of eir time in a horrible murder dungeon living off cigarettes, coffee and wine. However, ey could still really use some sleep. ;P)
Sculpt by: @vesuvian-disaster
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BOOK VI: THE LOVERS
Chapter 4: The Aqueduct (~5000 words)
Warnings: Blood, injury, bad language from a bird, mild masochism :P
Notes: Marcus Aquila Summanus belongs to @vesuvian-disaster and appears with permission!
(back to table of contents)
The clatter and screeching of the lift sounds from beyond as I strip off the safety gear and hand it back to Valdemar, not giving them a chance to assist. A familiar voice bounces down the rough hallway as I push open the big metal door.
“Jinana! There you are.”
The sight of Marcus Aquila fills me with a relief so intense that I nearly stumble. Valdemar’s voice floats over my shoulder, asking if the shipment has been taken care of.
“Yes, Quaestor. And Portia was just asking after the Inquisitor.” Ey looks at me pointedly.
“Ah, yes. Well, we are done here… for now.”
The Praefectus takes my elbow, ushering me back to the lift with some haste. Ey sends me up first, following directly after.
“What was it you said... eccentric?” ey says drily as we walk toward the passage to the library, and I snort. “I guess you didn’t even have to ask for the Dungeon of Death tour. Did they make you dress up in an apron and mask, too?”
“They insisted. Very nostalgic for them, it seems.” It’s honestly a lot funnier here and now, away from that dreadful presence.
“It would be.” We step out into the library, and the shelf slides closed behind us once more. “Portia really was asking after you. She said she would be in her garden for a while - it isn’t far from here.”
Before I can inquire about this, a voice comes faintly through the window. “Look, you little bastard, I need to get in there!”
Marcus Aquila glances at me with barely-smothered amusement. “Mister Shitbird strikes again, it seems.”
“You are really trying my patience!” It’s definitely Portia, arguing (presumably) with the yet-unseen Camio.
“I think I can find the way,” I tell the Praefectus, struggling not to laugh myself - being away from that awful place below the Palace has left me mildly giddy.
“Go from the veranda, and around the hedge maze. It’s a tad quicker.”
“I’ll keep that in mind. And… the more I find out, the more I think you are right about this. For what it’s worth.”
Marcus Aquila smiles a little. “I would bet my family name that Devorak did not set the Count on fire… but that he probably did try to put him out.”
I laugh before I can stop myself. “Well. I just hope that everyone will be able to rest a little easier once this is settled.”
“As do I. Good luck, Jinana.”
I know my way around well enough to quickly arrive at the veranda (empty), and continue out past the hedge maze. There seems to be some sort of impasse going on, with Portia alternately beseeching to be allowed into her shed and promising to roast her opponent for supper.
“HOW DARE YOU! DON’T YOU KNOW WHO I AM?”
The sound is shrill, piercing the ears, clearly that of a bird mimicking a human.
“You’re about to be a meal for Pepi, is what you are!”
Nestled among the trees that line the outer edges of the gardens, I see a humble little cottage, ringed by a flourishing garden that threatens to swallow it whole. There is a work shed perched nearby, upon which perches in turn a brilliant white cockatoo, strutting, screeching, and snapping at Portia whenever she tries to wave it away.
“Oooh, that’s it, Mister Shitbird! I warned you! Get ‘im, Pepi!”
A pudgy little cat with brown markings at face, legs, and tail scrambles up to Portia’s shoulder, launching itself toward the menacing bird. This, finally, seems to be too much for the creature, who suddenly wings away, almost clipping Portia in the process.
“They’ll never forget me! They’ll never survive without me!”
“Get lost, you horrible thing!” Portia calls after it, stamping her foot. Spotting me, her face goes pink. “Oh! Sorry about that... that bird has lost his tiny mind, and he likes to make it my problem.” She sighs and adjusts her apron. “Anyway, welcome to my little abode! Mind the grasp-gourds, they’re full of it today, and the lavender mint can be overly friendly.” Even as she speaks, a stray vine seems to be slowly circling her ankle, and she kicks it away.
“Marcus Aquila said you were looking for me?”
“Oh, yes! Pardon me while I do a little work here, I like to use my midday break to tend the garden.” She opens the now uncontested shed and pulls out a hoe, attacking the weeds with a will. I’ll never know where she gets so much energy.
Meanwhile, the cat is circling my legs, bumping me and making curious peeping noises until I bend down to scratch its furry little head.
“Pepi can be very demanding,” Portia says, laughing. “Don’t let her bully you!” She attacks a stubborn clump of sedge with the hoe. “I just wanted to know your plans for the afternoon, in case you needed me for something.”
She smiles, and once again I feel a small twinge of guilt for adding to her workload. I wonder if Nadia has found something else to take off of her plate - assuming that Portia herself will allow it.
“Just investigating,” I assure her. “The Praefectus has given me a lot to put together. Ey knew your brother, you know.”
Portia’s eyes widen in shock. “I - well, I guess that makes sense, but… of course, Marcus Aquila doesn’t know about me.”
I would not bet upon that, myself - ey is too good at piecing things together. “For what it’s worth… ey seems very convinced of his innocence.”
She pauses, leaning on the hoe for a moment, and presses briefly at the bridge of her nose as if to forestall tears. When she looks at me again, her eyes are glimmering with them, but she blinks them back. “That… actually makes me feel a lot better, Jinana. Thanks for telling me.”
“We’ll get to the bottom of this, Portia. I promise.”
We speak of smaller things until it’s time for Portia to return to her Palace duties. The untamed garden yields a bounty of sweet sun-warmed fruits for us to share as a snack. We walk back together, until our paths must diverge - I need to investigate that strange run-off, and quickly. I would much prefer to bring a full report to Nadia, rather than interrupting her preparations for the Masquerade just to tell her I saw something odd.
I think I know how to get back to that rear corner of the Palace from here... it’s just a bit of a walk through less-orderly portions of the gardens. Fortunately, today’s outfit is more practical than a sari - though I tuck the various jewels I am wearing into my bag, just in case. It wouldn’t do to lose any of them amid the tall grasses.
Approaching from the other side, I see the evidence before the odor of rot can reach me - a river of browned grass, even a couple of sickly-looking trees. As I get closer, I see the stream that Marcus Aquila spoke of… but it is crimson, dyed through by the foulness.
Misgiving growing in the pit of my stomach, I follow the course of the stream with my eyes. Quite naturally, it flows toward the city - but to where? I have to find out.
The back of my neck tingles with the sudden, intense sensation of being watched, and I whip about - but see nothing. No ghostly goat-form, no red eyes.
Be on your guard… but do not give him your fear. He doesn’t deserve it.
I inhale, exhale. It’s just a specter anyway, a sad remnant of a dead man. There is very little that such a presence can do, especially with one’s wits about one. And under normal circumstances, such remnants cannot go terribly far from their home territory - in this case, most likely the Palace grounds.
Keeping the stream within sight, but staying clear of its aura of decay, I begin following it down.
The Palace is perched upon a sort of rocky cliff overlooking the city. The many streams that supply Vesuvia’s water converge and flow downward through the massive stone aqueducts. This one is no different.
I pause at the point where the rugged stream transitions to smoothly carved stone. It’s quite a vantage point - all of Vesuvia is laid out before me, as if in miniature. I can see countless rooftops and canopies, gondolas in the canals, people about their business in the streets.
And I can see the scarlet water wending its way down to them, like a wound, like an ill omen.
The aqueduct is more than wide enough for me to travel along it, as those who maintain these structures do. I am not particularly afraid of heights... but the prospect is still somewhat daunting.
We need to know where this goes, what harm it is causing. Grasping my resolve, I step out onto the aqueduct bridge.
A shadow passes over, dark wings against the afternoon sky. It’s a large raven, extremely common here in Vesuvia, perhaps attracted by the shiny embroidery of my tunic. It circles back, swooping lower, mildly concerning me.
And then it lands directly on my shoulder, talons lightly gripping the fabric of tunic and dupatta. It peers at my face with one night-black eye, then the wicked beak opens - but only to preen at my collar. (I am glad that I put the shiny jewelry away.) The raven seems agitated, its feathers puffed up, but it is making no aggressive move toward me. I’m not sure what to do.
“Uhm...?”
Once again, the beak opens. “That FUCKIN’ guy!”
This is so unexpected that I break into laughter, and the raven takes off, flapping away and down amongst the buildings.
I wonder if it is the same one I have seen before - but then, Vesuvia is full of ravens, grown large on the easy pickings of a city. It’s not hard to believe that someone might have taught one hilarious obscenities.
I continue to follow the aqueduct as it curves around the outer city, encompassing the land that is not part of any district, but is where Vesuvia inters her dead. (Or was... until the Red Plague overwhelmed both capacity and gravediggers.) I dare not rush, lest I lose my footing, so my journey takes some time. The sun is setting as I come to a sharp turn in the aqueduct’s path, even as another, lower one comes alongside from the west. Taking a moment to survey my surroundings, I can see where this goes.
South End. I recall the sluggish, clogged canals, the murky reddish-brown water.
Dread grows within my guts as I follow the turn, the inexorable flow of the poisoned water into one of the most vulnerable parts of the city. I think of the rough channel through which the runoff reaches the stream, and I can only wonder if that is intentional.
But who would do such a thing? The Quaestor? Someone else? Someone, perhaps, looking to foment unrest and undermine Nadia’s rule by poisoning the citizens?
If so, they’re not being especially sly about it.
Darkness gathers in the streets as the sun sinks, and soon I will have to use my magical lights to navigate - unfortunately also acting like a beacon for my location. But it is better than falling off of the aqueduct, which is still a good 15 feet in the air. As I approach South End, its squatly stacked buildings rising up before me, the aqueduct crosses over a reservoir of sorts, into which the majority of the water empties some distance down.
“Jinana?”
This startles me so much that I nearly do lose my footing. A tall, broad, very familiar form in black seems to coalesce before me - how does he do that? I didn’t notice him at all.
“Julian!”
He’s standing right at the edge of the aqueduct, and as he turns I spot something very white in his gloved hands - the beaked mask of a Plague doctor. Recovering from his shock, he eyes me in the dimness.
“Fancy seeing you here, of all places. Not exactly suitable for a little evening stroll, is it?” He looks aside from me, down into the water. The color can no longer readily be seen; it is only murky.
“You’re here, aren’t you?”
“I - er, well, you’ve got me there. I suppose I was just… thinking. Life’s a strange, fickle thing, isn’t it?”
“I don’t think I’d be standing so close to the water if I were you.”
“Oh, no, it can’t hurt me. You probably shouldn’t go for a nice swim in it, though. Or drink it. Fortunately, everyone here with any sense boils their water. The Plague itself might be over, but some contaminated places still remain. It can still make people sick, or even kill, but it ends itself with them. Isn’t it amazing? They figured out how to beat it… or maybe we just outlasted it in the end.”
He looks down at the mask in his hands. “And I couldn’t do a damned thing, then or now.”
“There’s always a need for doctors,” I point out.
“Certainly… but not a failed doctor with a price on his head.” He gives a short, bitter little laugh, then spreads his arms wide with a dramatic flourish. The action causes his hair to skid into his eye, forcing him to shake it aside with a toss of his head. “So this is what’s left. Me, throwing away everything I used to be, my last link to a past I don’t remember, and can’t reclaim. Ah, well.” He tosses the mask into the water, the pink tinge becoming visible as it swallows the white mask. Around it, the water comes briefly alive as long, pallid forms writhe around the fallen object, then fall away when they find it inedible.
Vampire eels. The horrible things really do seem to have established themselves in any sizable body of fresh water here in Vesuvia.
“Julian…” I begin, unsure what I should say. I am cut off by a sudden screech, one I’ve heard before -
A big raven dives between us, nearly colliding with me in its haste. It must be the same bird, the one from the tavern, and perhaps from earlier today.
“Best be going, there’s guards afoot. Come on!” He turns and dashes down the access bridge that connects to the street levels, taking the shallow stairs three at a time with his long legs.
Even as I start to follow, something gives me a sudden, sharp shove. As close to the edge as I am, I cannot recover. The last thing I see as I fall is two glowing red eyes at the height of a man, alight with wicked glee.
The water is so cold, so dark, and so deep, the impact taking my breath from me. I struggle weakly to find the surface, the lip of the reservoir - I was not far from it. But my movement is not the only one here, and something smooth and strong slips by me… before latching on to my side, with a dreadful pain.
I hear my name, in the strange way one hears things underwater, then feel my wrists manacled by something… two gloved hands, pulling me and the creature which has attached itself to me up out of the water. The eel wriggles, its translucent-pale body suffusing with red as it drains me.
“On three, then. One, two…” On three, Julian expertly grasps the vampire eel behind its horrible head, releasing its jaws from my flesh with a fresh shock of pain. He tosses the animal back into the water, then assists me to rise.
“Easy, now. I’ve got you. We have to go.”
Gasping, stumbling, freezing, I can barely hold myself up as he half-drags me, leaving bloody puddles in my wake. They sparkle briefly with rainbow lights that quickly vanish - the wild magic escaping from me with my lifeblood. I have very little control over it right now.
Shivering helplessly, I can barely even hold on to Julian’s arm. Noticing this, he simply picks me up and dashes into the deeper shadows of an alleyway, where he lays me down and inspects the injury.
“I’m sorry, but I need to see the bite.” I am barely conscious enough to even notice as he lifts my sopping wet tunic. His hands probe gently at the wound, making me suck in my breath at the pain.
“That’s, um... well, no time to worry about why you seem to be bleeding out little stars.”
I wonder if this is how I will die… in a dark alley, with a (falsely?) convicted killer frantically attempting to stanch an eel bite on my belly while wild magic escapes my body with my blood. I wish I had the energy to laugh.
“Damn it all. They have an anticoagulant in their saliva. The bleeding isn’t going to stop.” He sits up, stripping off his gloves, scowling. Upon the back of his left hand, the black brand of a murderer is stark against his pale skin. His right hand presses directly to the wound - cold, at first, then burning like ice.
He admonishes me to hold still; I have little choice. “Take slow, deep breaths.” His left hand slides up to gently support my head, so it is not pressed to the hard stones.
Suddenly, I realize that the pain has melted away; my body, no longer needing to be clenched around it, relaxes.
“We have got to stop meeting like this,” I manage to say, surprising a short, sharp bark of laughter from him.
“If you can talk back, you can get up. Slowly.” The back of his cool hand presses to my brow, then he helps me to sit up. The blood loss makes my head swim, but I grit my teeth and manage not to black out.
“At least you didn’t catch me breaking and entering,” he says, with a wry smile. “This time. You did surprise me, though. I’d say you’ve got some kind of luck… but you are a magician.”
My eye is drawn to a soft, white light emanating from where his collar stands open - I can just make out a mark of some kind, shining under the skin. Its form is familiar; I saw it only hours ago.
Julian frowns, seeing the direction of my gaze. “Recognize your master’s handiwork?” he asks.
What?
It’s then that I notice that the side of his own jacket is wet - not with water, but with blood, which comes away on his hand as he touches it gingerly.
“A parting gift, I suppose. A curse. I can take the wounds from others… as I just did for you. But in return, I get to suffer them myself.” He swallows thickly, swaying slightly. I reach out to steady him, unthinking - he is almost twice my size. “Don’t worry, it won’t last. Nothing does.” A pained grimace. “A suitable curse from a witch who fears commitment, no?”
This is like no work of Asra’s I have ever seen… and he is hardly someone who fears commitment, I think. Not when he took care of me for so long.
“But then, I’ve never been bitten by a vampire eel before, so this will be… interesting.”
“Interesting?” My head is clearing now; it seems that whatever magic afflicts him, it takes all effects of the wound away, including those of blood loss. How bizarre. He allows me to open his jacket, peeling his shirt from the seeping wound. Gathering my magic, I clean the blood away, allowing me to get a better look at it. It isn’t pretty, and more blood quickly obscures it. But it isn’t flowing the way it did when I was wounded; it’s sluggish, slowing even as I watch.
“Fate just keeps finding new ways to test the limits of this body of mine,” he says, looking down at the wound. “Not nearly as much fun as the ways I’ve come up with on my own, mind.”
“Oh, really?” I arch a single brow at him, and he gives me that incorrigible grin.
“Absolutely.”
“Then I suppose that is interesting,” I answer, and his grin broadens.
“It certainly can be, if -”
He does not get to finish this statement; footfalls echo, all too near. The city guard are making their rounds.
Julian gives a low curse in a language I do not recognize, snatching up his gloves in one hand and my own wrist in the other, pulling me bodily into a dark, narrow alley. He crowds up against me, boxing me in, and I realize that he is attempting to hide me from view behind the blackness of his greatcoat and the shadow of his own body.
Pressed together like lovers, we wait in silence. I can feel him shivering slightly, his breathing quick and harsh with exertion and pain.
The guards arrive in a jangling of armor and the thud of boot-heels, and I feel Julian’s body tense against mine. But they pass us by.
We wait a bit longer to be certain they have gone. Surreptitiously, I summon enough of my magic to dry our unpleasantly wet clothing. In the darkness, I feel the fringe of Julian’s hair brushing the top of my head as he bends down.
“If they catch us,” he says quietly, “say I’ve taken you hostage.”
There’s a sound near the alley entrance, and in a flash, Julian drags me out the other side at a dead run, only slightly slowed by the weaving evasions we take through alleys and behind precariously stacked houses. But his stride is so much longer than mine, I’m hard-pressed to keep up, and I nearly stumble several times.
Then I see it - a rusty wrought-iron gate, with an equally-rusty padlock and chain holding it closed. Behind, an overgrown garden runs riot between two leaning buildings.
I tug Julian’s hand sharply, and he glances back. Spotting the garden, he seems to have the same thought. He lifts me up by the waist without preamble, and I scramble over the gate, dropping to the ground with an ungainly thud. Julian lands next to me, light as a cat, and pulls me into the cover of a thicket of vines, once again using his greatcoat to obscure me. Booted feet go past at a run, and he presses a cool finger to my lips, despite my saying nothing.
When the street outside has been still long enough to suit him, he rises, assisting me in turn, checking me over for further injuries as I look around. It feels otherworldly here, a place lost to time, folding us into a deep, dense silence. Most likely, it is a place abandoned during the Plague Times, and never reclaimed. Choking ivy obscures the statuary, making beasts of men and monsters of beasts, spilling from the fountain as water does not. Rampant tree roots have heaved up the flagstones, making for a treacherous surface.
Julian pulls his gloves back on and picks his way around these obstacles, admiring the sights. He is definitely not moving like a man who has sustained a serious injury. “Look at all of this!” His voice is pitched low, not to carry outside the garden walls. “What a perfect little sanctuary. I wonder how many more of these there are in the city… neglected, forgotten.” He pauses to admire the statue of what appears to be a minotaur, one horn broken, its powerful body clothed over in ivy. “Why hello there, handsome. Come here often?” He puts an arm around the statue’s massive shoulders with a cheeky grin.
“A little dangerous, don’t you think? It’s not in good repair.”
He leaves the statue and comes back toward me, circling me slightly and striking a pose. “Oh, but you see, I live for danger. I find it positively enchanting.” He grins. “What about you? I don’t think you’d be out here with a wanted fugitive if you didn’t like at least a little danger.”
“I suppose that’s true.”
“You suppose?” A teasing grin, which fades into something more serious. “But do you know what you’re getting into, I wonder? You’re smart and you’re brave, sure… but will those qualities see you through?”
Through what? I sense a different dimension to his question, thinly veiled.
“Do I have to know? Isn’t it the mystery that makes things exciting?”
“Oh, I wouldn’t say that’s the most exciting thing… but I suppose it doesn’t hurt. Though I don’t mind a bit of that, either.”
I eye his side, where the bloodstained patch is only visible by its wetter sheen. “Is that what makes your ability a curse? The pain?”
“Oh, no. One becomes well-acquainted with pain in my line of work. Intimately so.” He places a certain stress on the word, with a smile that borders on the lascivious.
Again, that thing stirs within me, the unknown part of me that seems to always rise to his bait. But is it really so unknown?
Julian’s brows go up suddenly. “Ah… hold still.”
I obey this unexpected order, worried that the guards have returned. But he simply reaches out for something that has fallen upon my shoulder - a strange flower, luminous in the dark. Looking up, I realize that there are many of them, like stars in the canopy above, shedding a gentle bluish light. He offers the bloom to me with a theatrical little bow, the smirk once more curling his lips.
But as I stretch out my hand, he twitches the flower back toward himself, curls bouncing as he shakes his head.
“Lovely, isn’t it? But it has a dark heart. Like almost everything here; this is a poison garden. They were all the rage before the Plague.”
He’s right; almost every plant I lay eyes on is baneful - belladonna, foxglove, castor, hemlock.
He twirls the flower in his long fingers. “This one is called deadly starstrand for a reason. The toxin distilled from these flowers is so powerful that a single drop can kill. It doesn’t discriminate - from tyrants to martyrs, from innocent babes to infamous criminals, it has taken them all. In the wrong hands, it could topple an empire.”
I am unfamiliar with it, but I feel that I am entirely familiar with the game he is attempting to play as he once more offers the flower to me, its glow reflected in his eye as he watches me avidly.
“Do you still want it?” he asks, and once again I feel that deeper undercurrent. I watch him steadily as I pluck the bloom from his fingers, lifting it to my nose. It has a strange, acrid scent, at odds with its ethereal beauty.
“The poison has to be distilled, you said.” I smile. “It cannot hurt me.”
He blinks. “I suppose not… though I wouldn’t eat it, if I were you.”
I laugh and let the bloom fall from my fingers, but Julian snatches it back up with deft hands, stepping close to tuck it into my hair. “Beautiful,” he says, his touch following the shell of my ear, along my jawline, his leather-clad thumb daring to trace over the edge of my lower lip.
That inner thing is clamoring within me now, demanding that I act, take control… dominate. I don’t know how much longer I can push it down, not when Julian insists on provoking me like this.
Does he even know? (He must.) His eye looks down on me, flicking between my own eyes and the vicinity of my mouth. Even in the dim light of the fingernail moon, the stars and the glowing flowers above, I can see the flush on his cheeks. The very tip of his tongue flicks out to nervously wet his lips, an unspoken question.
For an answer, I reach up and take hold of his collar, pulling him down to me, and touch my lips to his. It is a fragile, hesitant thing, despite the authority of my grip - this is not something I have done, not in my memory. But his eye flutters closed, his hand sliding up the back of my neck, and my heart begins to race despite myself. His lips caress mine in turn, with a sureness that can only draw me with it. My hands unconsciously clutch at his jacket, forgetful of the wound he took from me.
Julian moans against my mouth - not exactly a sound of pain - and I can feel him shudder under my hands.
He breaks from me, looking down on me with something like desperation. “Jinana…” He takes a step back - but stumbles on the uneven flagstones, fetching up against the crumbling fountain with a grunt.
I advance on him, coming right up to stand between his bent knees, his head only a little higher than mine like this.
“Let me help you with that.” I pass my hand over his side, using my magic to leave his shirt and jacket clean and innocent of blood once more. Experimentally, I press my palm against the area of the wound, to see if any more blood soaks through. It does not… but Julian makes a strange little sound.
“You like that,” I say, and it is not a question. In response, his hand comes up over mine, pressing it harder yet, and he sucks in his breath, catching his lower lip between his teeth. I tangle the fingers of my free hand into the curls at the nape of his neck, and he goes utterly pliant, not resisting at all as I bring him back to me. He parts his lips slightly in anticipation, whispering my name, his other hand coming around my waist to pull me closer -
The sound of hobnailed boots on the cobblestones outside shatters this moment. With a muffled curse, Julian clamps his hand around my wrist, and we vault over the dilapidated rear wall, once again on the run through the night-dark streets.
#the arcana rewrite#arcana rewrite: tides of chaos#jinana aditya#Marcus Aquila Summanus#Quaestor Valdemar#portia devorak#julian devorak
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BOOK VI: THE LOVERS
Chapter 3: The Quaestor (~5100 words)
Warnings: Descriptions of lethal disasters and highly unethical medical procedures. Smoking CW.
Note: Marcus Aquila Summanus belongs to @vesuvian-disaster and appears with permission. :)
(back to table of contents)
I lift my head from yet another record, yawning mightily. I’ve been in the library all morning, and it’s just been more of the same. When Lucio wasn’t killing and extorting his way across Venterre and beyond, he was draining the coffers with lavish parties, statues to his vanity, and various follies built across Vesuvia.
I have read over many, many requests for civic funding, most of which went ignored. Several of these can be connected to later accidents or even disasters, as critical infrastructure gave way to the relentless actions of water and time. In fact, here and there I find slips of paper tucked between the pages, upon which neat lettering cross-references some of these ledgers and notes. It looks like someone else has been connecting these dots, as well - no doubt Marcus Aquila emself.
It’s easy to see exactly how the entire Flooded District situation came to pass. Once the port’s Market District, it now stands as a crumbling, mold-infested testament to Lucio’s neglect. Several other areas of Vesuvia face similar peril, or worse… and worse has already happened in at least one place.
Some ten years ago, a sinkhole opened up beneath a multistory building in Goldgrave - entirely due to failure to maintain the drainage system beneath the city. 19 were killed, 23 injured. But even this was not enough to budge Lucio’s intransigence.
Reading the account, it seems to come vividly to life despite the impersonal tone - I can smell the rank, moist air belching up from below, the stink of fear from those trapped, and those trying to help… A sudden, sharp pain jabs into my skull, another arcing over my ribs, and I find myself struggling to breathe. My hands are numb yet burning, my arms aching, my eyes gritty -
“Inquisitor... forgive me, Jinana. I thought you might be here.”
I open my eyes - when did I close them? Marcus Aquila stands before me, eir manner rather different from that of yesterday. There’s a tension in eir frame beneath the elegant drapings of embroidered voile that make up eir dress.
“Are you all right?” ey asks. “Some of that makes for very unpleasant reading, I’m afraid.”
I take a deep, somewhat shaky breath; the constriction starts to ease, the beating wings of impending panic to lift. “I… yes. I’ll be fine.” I close the book firmly and set it aside.
“Some air and a change of scenery may help. Will you walk in the gardens with me?”
I am coming to understand that this phrase has a certain meaning about the Palace, namely that one wishes to speak privately on matters of importance. “Of course,” I answer.
“Wonderful. If you’ll follow me?”
I rise, shouldering my bag, and follow the Praefectus as ey leads the way deeper into the library. We pass among the tall shelves, until Marcus Aquila pauses, reaching up to slip a particular book from its place… but it does not slide out. It merely tilts, standing out at an angle. Ey does this to a second, then, grumbling, hitches the skirt of eir dress slightly and ascends a stepladder to pull forth a third.
“Dramatic bastard.” I am uncertain to whom this is addressed, exactly, but before I can ask, an entire section of the bookcase slides aside, revealing darkness. It’s a short passageway, rough-hewn despite the clever mechanism that obscures it.
Marcus Aquila steps down into the darkness without hesitation - I can just make out the first stone steps. “Be careful,” ey warns. “The steps are uneven.”
I summon my globes of magical light, illuminating my way. Marcus Aquila clearly has no need of this; ey must use this passageway constantly. I pick my way down, finding a T-junction at the foot of it. The Praefectus turns left, and I follow.
The glow of heatless torches greets us here, though the passageway remains rather rustic.
“What is all of this?” I ask.
“Oh, just a little relic of the Plague Times. It was all very hush-hush back then… but it hardly matters now. You could probably ask Valdemar for a guided tour and they’d give you one.” A mirthless little laugh.
We pass another tunnel that seems to lead to a more finished section of the complex, with a series of doors visible, but Marcus Aquila leads on. The floor begins to slope upward again, and a final section of tunnel leads to a dungeon-like door of iron-bound timbers.
We emerge, blinking, into sunlight. We seem to be behind the Palace, in a less-used (and less-maintained) portion of the vast gardens that nestle between the Palace proper and the high defensive wall that rings it. Here, stands of trees almost obscure the white limestone cladding of the wall beyond.
Marcus Aquila fishes in a pocket in eir dress, removing a single embroidered glove. Ey puts it on, rather baffling me, then slips a small chased-silver case from the same pocket. It opens to reveal a number of pre-rolled cigarettes, and a tiny device of some sort. Marcus Aquila places one of the former between eir lips, and uses the latter to ignite it, holding the cigarette in eir gloved hand and blowing the plume of tobacco smoke considerately away from us.
Ey gives a little sigh of seeming relief, then starts slightly. “Oh, how rude of me. Would you like one?” Ey proffers the silver case in my direction.
I decline with a smile, and ey tucks the case away once more before leaning against the cool shadowed facade of the Palace and taking another drag. “Earlier today, I went to check on… some old things. I thought it might jog my memory, so that I could give you more information.” The sunlight seems only to enhance their pallor, almost as if one could see the bones underneath shining through. “I found something that perhaps you should see.”
“It has to do with the investigation?”
“Maybe not in so many words. But it could very much cause trouble with the Countess’s plans.”
The Praefectus pushes off of the wall and begins leading me along the rear perimeter of the Palace. I can see the stacked-stone foundations emerge as the ground slopes gently away. The breeze brings an odor wafting toward us, not quite putrid, but unwholesome, like spoiling meat.
“Lovely, isn’t it?” Marcus Aquila says with a grimace. Ey gestures to the rear corner that stands perhaps thirty feet away. “Don’t get too close… it can’t be good for you.”
Ey pulls a folded white square out of another pocket, shaking it out and handing it to me. It is a scented handkerchief, lavender and citrus mercifully overpowering the whiff of rot. Ey then stands back fastidiously, alternately puffing from eir cigarette and holding an identical hanky to eir own nose.
Here, the foundation stands almost my own height above the ground. I can see now that a reddish substance appears to be oozing from between the stacked stones at ground level, looking for all the world like the Palace is bleeding. The odor is stronger the closer I get - and I do not want to get very close at all. I can see that the liquid gathers in a sort of narrow, irregular trench, leaving visibly blackened grass to either side.
“There’s a stream, further down,” the Praefectus explains. “I’m concerned that this… run-off is getting into it, maybe even into the city’s water supply. Since you seem to have the ear of the Countess these days, at the least you can bring it to her attention.” Ey gives me a sidelong look. “It really would not do to have revelers stumble upon such a thing.”
“No indeed.”
Ey nods, taking another deep drag from eir cigarette. There’s still a tight-wound feeling to em, an anxiousness that seems great even given what we have just seen.
“May I ask a personal question?” I venture, and Marcus Aquila gives a brittle little laugh.
“Why not? You are the Inquisitor, after all.”
“Forgive me if it’s intrusive, you don’t have to answer. It’s just that you seem very, um, invested in exonerating Devorak. Were you close?”
Marcus Aquila raises eir eyebrows. “Close? No, I wouldn’t say that… but we worked together under tremendous pressures, and I suppose that does form a kind of bond. Moreover, I saw what they did to him. I still have nightmares about it - all of it. We all do. I’m sure that Devorak does, too.”
I remember the way the color drained from Julian’s face when I showed him the drawing, the one that he said was a human brain... one of many. There is a part of me that is sorely glad that I have no memory of the Plague-time and its horrors. “I’m so sorry,” I offer. “It sounds like it was a terrible time.”
“It was a desperate time,” ey says, shaking eir head. “None of our hands are truly clean… but Devorak doesn’t deserve the gallows. Not after everything he went through - everything we all went through - just because of fucking Lucio finally catching the damned plague.” Ey says the dead Count’s name as if it is the most vile curse ey can muster.
“You must understand… I was there when they did it. I watched them force a fucking plague-beetle down the man’s throat. And I could do nothing to stop it.” Ey drops the remains of the spent cigarette, crushing it out under eir heel, and immediately pulls out the silver case again, fumbling to open it. “Lucio wanted to make an example of him in the cruelest, most horrific way possible… probably because Devorak wouldn’t fuck him.” The shaking of eir hands makes it more difficult to light the fresh cigarette, but ey manages. The action seems to calm em slightly.
“I’m not about to stand by and let him be executed on top of that... and for something I don’t think he even did.” This is punctuated with another cloud of smoke. “I can try and do that much, at least.”
“I understand,” I say, though I am still trying to digest what ey has said. It sounds too awful to be true… but it seems that no cruelty was beyond Lucio. “Was the Count in the habit of, um, forcing his attention on people?”
Marcus Aquila snorts. “Actually, that was the one thing he wouldn’t do… but he would also never stop trying his luck. Even right in front of his own wife… though there was no love lost there, either. That was certainly no secret.”
Ey takes another, more thoughtful puff. “That’s what’s so strange about all of this, though… why does the Countess want Devorak dead so badly? Those three spent the better part of a year being almost inseparable.”
“Nadia, Devorak, and Lucio?” I ask, puzzled.
“Oh, no. The Countess, the doctor… and your master, Asra.”
I blink. Asra did mention once being close to Nadia… but she has forgotten it all. He also spoke of his former relationship to Julian… but not of Nadia and Julian being close. Clearly this knowledge has also been lost to Nadia - and perhaps to Julian himself. I am unsure of the extent of his own memory loss.
I can only hope that it extends to the terrible thing that was once done to him.
The Praefectus lifts eir head, as if ey has heard something that I cannot. “We should return, before I am missed,” ey says, and begins leading me in the direction of the door we came from. “With the Masquerade so close, there is much to do.”
We walk back in silence, each in our own thoughts. As we approach the door, Marcus Aquila extinguishes eir cigarette and slips the glove back into eir pocket. Ey pulls open the door -
And Quaestor Valdemar is standing there, unblinking as their pupils close tightly against the sunlight. (Are they… slitted? They can’t be. Can they? Why, exactly, is their presence so upsetting to me?)
“Ah, there you are, Marcus.” The Quaestor seems to be smiling, though it’s hard to tell behind that cloth mask. “It seems our shipment has arrived ahead of schedule. I want you to oversee it personally.”
This does not seem to be welcome news to the Praefectus, but ey nods. “Of course, Quaestor. I can escort Jinana back with -”
“Oh, no, that won’t be necessary at all.” Valdemar leans forward, uncomfortably close, but I stand my ground. “I’ve been looking forward to a chance to speak with the new Inquisitor.”
This seems to please Marcus Aquila even less, but ey bows eir head. “As you wish, Quaestor.” Ey glances at me. “I simply hope that the Countess is not inconvenienced.”
“Our dear Inquisitor will be back in time for supper… I promise.”
This seems to carry a strange weight with the Praefectus, who closes the door and then nods briskly to me. “Thank you for your time, Inquisitor.”
“And you, Praefectus, for yours.”
With one last glance at Valdemar, ey sweeps past in a rustling of voile and the scent of lavender.
I must go on the offense, here; I must take control of the situation. It is my job to be the one asking questions, after all.
“Where would you like to talk, Quaestor? It’s quite lovely out at the moment, and I do have some questions of my own for you.”
Valdemar turns their back on the door that leads outside, and begins walking. (So much for taking control of the situation.) “You are here investigating Doctor 069, yes?” they ask, as I hurry to catch up.
“I’m sorry?”
“We went through so many doctors,” they say with a wave of one gloved hand. “We began giving them numbers; it was simpler to keep track of them that way. Doctor 069 was the one who appeared at Lucio’s rooms that night.”
“I see.”
They lead the way back toward the passage that Marcus Aquila and I took down here… and pass it, heading into the gloom, barely a white smudge in my vision. I summon my magical lights once more.
“Oh… you do need light, don’t you?” Their cold, dry little voice sounds almost amused.
“Where are we going?” I ask.
“Why, to the dungeon, of course. I’ve not taken anyone down there in so long. You simply must allow me to show you around.”
Without waiting for an answer, they continue down the tunnel. At its end there looms some strange cagelike contraption, with an inscribed plaque that reads:
Bloody hands may turn the key. Know the weight of your sins, and enter.
This does not strike me as a motto of doctors.
Valdemar touches the plate with their gloved fingers, giving a little sigh. “Ah, truly an inspired bit of decor, don’t you think? It frightened them so much, the gullible little creatures.” They reach into a pocket of their apron and remove a strange key. Its surface is an oily-looking black; it is set with a stone of a sullen red color. I am reminded of the fluid seeping from the Palace foundations.
The lock gives an ugly screech as Valdemar turns the key; the door of the cage slides open with a grudging groan of disused metal.
“Go on, now.”
“Into a cage?” I ask, incredulous.
“An elevator,” they say, unperturbed. “Oh, are you claustrophobic?”
“No, but -”
“I don’t actually care,” they continue, in the same exact tone. They advance, and I don’t have much choice but to back into the elevator as they crowd in with me. The space is small - hardly big enough for one adult - and the only reason we both fit in here is my own lack of size and Valdemar’s thinness. I press my back to the bars behind me, everything in my being warning me away from the Quaestor, who simply watches me from over their mask. In this light, their eyes seem as blood-red as the key, or the ruby brooch at their throat... and I finally realize what it is that disturbs me about them.
Everything that lives has an aura, an energy that emanates from and surrounds them. It isn’t that Valdemar doesn't have an aura... it’s that it is so utterly void as to be like a hole in existence, a negative cutout, an inverse aureole. To my sight it is intensely wrong... unnatural.
They pull a lever, and the whole thing begins to descend in a shrieking, rattling cacophony of rusted gears. As it does so, the darkness grows and grows around us, until my lights are barely a feeble flicker reflected in Valdemar’s unblinking, reptilian gaze.
And then even that goes out, the darkness pressing in almost dense enough to touch.
I force down my threatening panic as the lift comes to a bone-jarring halt, and once again I hear the horrid scraping of the door as it opens. There is a rustling, and then the suffocating blackness gives way to flickering shadows as an ordinary torch is lit. It’s almost worse for the ghastly way it illuminates the Quaestor’s sharp features.
“Hurry along now, there is much to see.” Valdemar strides forth with the torch, lighting more torches set in holders as they go, revealing a rather narrow stone hallway. I hurry to catch up - light or no light, I don’t want to be alone in this place... or lost.
“You have questions about Doctor 069, yes?” they offer as we walk.
I do, and I should not let this chance escape me, as bizarre and unsettling as it is. “What, precisely, did he do here?”
“Oh, a little of this, a little of that. I didn’t pay much mind to any of them, you see.”
I wish this answer surprised me, but Marcus Aquila did say that the Quaestor cared primarily for their research, and little else.
“He was always on about leeches, I seem to recall… saying that blood was the key to the Plague. But if you want the specifics of his research, I’m afraid you’ll have to ask him yourself.”
My heart stumbles for a moment - do they know that I have been in contact with him? But Valdemar continues on to a huge door set into the end of the hallway, pushing it open with another creak of protesting metal. Inside is some sort of mudroom or dressing-room where oiled-leather aprons hang by the dozens, with various tools of obscure purpose set into racks. At the far end there sits a legion of familiar bone-white beaked masks upon a rack. The torchlight gleams off the red lenses, making it look as if there are eyes behind them.
Valdemar sets the torch they are carrying into a holder by the door, and claps their thin hands together sharply. “Now, then! Please hold any further questions until the tour is concluded. First of all…” They turn abruptly, causing me to stop short as they once again inspect me from an uncomfortably close distance. It takes all of my courage not to flinch away when their gloved hands reach out - but they seem to be taking my measure, like some bizarre tailor.
“You are very small, aren’t you? I’m not sure we’ll have anything that fits.” Valdemar turns away just as suddenly, striding toward the gear hanging on the other side of the room. Their fingers walk over the aprons like purposeful spiders, finally snatching one that seems to meet with their approval, along with one of the masks.
“Safety first… or so they tell me.” The Quaestor returns to hold the apron up to me, checking its fit. The leather bears very old stains - black from ink, brown from… well. Best not to think on it.
“Arms up.” I comply, once again forcing myself to keep still while they fit the apron over my clothing and the mask over my face. Their touch is as cold as death, even through their gloves, seeming to suck the living warmth from my body. “Ah, perfect.” Mercifully, they then retreat, opening the next door.
The elderly herbs packed in the beak of the mask cannot hope to entirely cover the indescribable fetor that rushes in. Valdemar pauses just beyond the threshold, almost causing me to collide with them, and turns to face me once more. They reach up and pull down the mask covering the lower half of their face, closing their eyes and taking in a deep breath, like one might in a summer meadow. “Ah, memories.” Their thin lips curl into a cruel smile, and they walk backward into the chamber, their eyes never leaving mine.
Even empty, this is a place of horrors. At its center there is a sort of elevated stage, bearing a metal table with well-used restraints. There is a dark stain on the stone platform beneath that no amount of scrubbing could ever remove, I am sure.
With some relish, Valdemar explains how it was used, shows me the additional ranks of vivisection tables… which eventually became dissection tables as their unfortunate occupants perished. With a flourish, they point out the cages where they kept their ‘patients’ - and the many doctors who became patients.
I don’t know if Valdemar is trying to unnerve me with their blithe commentary, but it’s working.
“All lovely, of course, but this is my favorite part. The poor little dears just don’t get to eat like they used to... but they are very hardy.” Valdemar pulls a rusty old lever, grinning widely, revealing rows of inhumanly sharp teeth. (Vulgora, too, had such a smile… I am beginning to wonder if any of the courtiers are truly human.)
A scraping sound draws my attention to a strange pit, almost like a half-well set into the wall. Its cover lifts itself up, triggered by some mechanism, and a sound like trickling water comes forth.... no, it is a strange, dry scuttling sound. Not water, but beetles, so many that they flow like a liquid over picked-clean bones, the distinctive carrion beetles synonymous with the Red Plague. Their long, thin antennae are more like those of roaches than anything else, their chitinous red bodies once the source of a prized crimson dye that is now shunned as a reminder of the Plague.
Crimson fluid drains from this pit, into a channel that disappears into the wall behind. I know where this goes - or at least, where it is ending up now. The same smell of bad meat is here, but a hundred times stronger in the enclosed, airless space.
Insects do not disturb me… but this does. There’s something so deeply unnatural about it that it sets all the hairs on the back of my neck bristling. And amid it all, Valdemar stands, still grinning that terrible, sharply tessellated grin.
“Such marvelous little creatures,” they muse. “So fascinating… and quite lethal. And so very effective at disposal.” They sniff. “Not that everyone appreciated this. Corpses burn poorly at best, it was so much more efficient to toss them in here. But people are so squeamish about these things.” They give a clucking sound, and restore the cover to its place. “I’ll see you again, my little darlings.”
They turn back to me, cocking their head to one side like a curious bird. “Well, that concludes our little tour. What do you think?”
“Why would anyone do this?” I ask, my voice thick with revulsion.
“Why? Why for science, of course!” Valdemar shakes their head. “069 was the same way, really… always on about consequences and morals, when all the patients were just going to die anyway. Always scribbling, always doodling, never really getting hands-on with the science. Elbow-deep, as it were.”
I can’t help but note that their own gloves rise well above their elbows.
“Ah, but you weren’t here for the Plague, were you? Most patients went from feeling a bit poorly to being quite dead within three days. A very few lasted a week. There were so many bodies that we could never have buried them all… or even burned them. By the end of it, corpses piled up in the streets faster than they could be carted away. Those left alive were nothing but corpses yet to be.” Once again the inhuman grin, their eyes alight with a sinister sort of glee.
“Compared to that, what were a few dying a day or so earlier, in the pursuit of a cure? Necessary sacrifices, and all that. The ends always justify the means.” They sigh wistfully. “Those were the days.”
This avails me nothing.
“Doctor 069 - wasn’t he in his office during the last Masquerade?”
“Oh, yes, locked inside in fact. He’d come down with a touch of the Plague himself, you see. Such a shame he survived; I’d been looking forward to prying open that thick skull of his. But perhaps I’ll still get the chance, if our dear Countess has her way.”
“Show me his office.” I try to keep my voice firm, to reclaim some modicum of control. Valdemar merely indicates a barred wooden door with a tilt of their head.
“There are still personal effects of his in there, for what it is worth. Perhaps they will hold some clue to tracking him down.”
I peer into the tiny barred window set into the door. It is a mean little place, but also oddly homey, cluttered with items. I can somehow feel that it was his, a residual energy embedded in this small hideaway in a place of unending horror.
Cold, spidery fingers grip my shoulder, and Valdemar’s chilly spareness leans over me to look, as well, their icy cheek brushing mine. I flinch away in startled revulsion, unable to help it, but this in no way upsets them. Indeed, they are grinning again, the most horrid expression I have ever seen.
Clinging to my purpose, I demand to be let inside. They are clearly enjoying my discomfort, but they open the door and leave me to investigate. They will be right out here, they tell me, indulging in nostalgia for the Plague days.
Inside the little chamber, the air is stale but not nearly so vile. I remove the mask, the better to see outside of those disorienting red lenses. It must have been very cramped in here for Julian, and there is a distinct damp. A small rumpled cot is in one corner, and it’s hard to believe he could have fit all of his limbs onto it. Over it, rickety shelves hold long-dried bottles of leeches, a few trinkets, mildewed books. A desk takes up the remaining space in here, covered in papers. The inkwell is overturned, the quill discarded, the wooden stool pushed away.
I close my eyes and try to summon the feeling of such a desperate time, when Death itself ruled the city, the greatest of tyrants. My mind paints an image of Julian so detailed, it’s as if he is truly present. I can see him just so, in my mind’s eye. Feverish, dying himself even as he worked to find the cure. A feeling of vertigo, of falling, though I remain standing...
When I open my eyes, I can see him, just as he must have been then, down to the last detail. There is a quill between his long fingers, his hands bare of the gloves... and the sclera of his right eye is scarlet. The other is hidden under the messy, lank fall of his hair. The quill scratches over parchment as he mutters to himself incoherently, occasionally sending a hunted glance to the door of this little cell. He must think, he tells himself, before the faculty is taken from him by the Plague. But none of it makes sense, none of it works.
Sudden frustration overtakes him, inkwell and quill falling victim to it.
It is oddly painful to watch as he runs the gamut from anger to unstable laughter to fear, wrapping his arms around himself and hunching forward on the stool, shivering with fever.
“...is this… is this how you felt?” His voice is low, pained, exhausted, and he slumps to the desk, unmoving. Before I can help myself, I reach out to him… but it is only a memory, and my hand passes straight through.
I startle back when he suddenly leaps to his feet, babbling wildly that he has found the cure… and the vision fades. In frustration, I reach out again with my magic. But the memory is gone.
With a curse, I look around the room for anything else that might afford some small clue.
That’s when I see it… a faded chalk outline of an oddly familiar symbol - though I cannot say exactly where I might know it from. I know only that it is magical. But why would a symbol of magic be in this place of science?
I search more thoroughly, scattering papers and dusting off books, until I find a tome inscribed with the very same symbol. The language inside is unfamiliar to me, but I have seen something like this before. It resembles one of Asra’s books, once seen back at the shop. But why is this here, sitting for three long years in a godsforgotten dungeon cell?
I page through the book, finding Julian’s distinctive scrawl decorating the margins in places. I can make out perhaps one word in five. It’s clear that he was delirious by then, with disjointed writings about a man with the head of a raven, about belief and portents. A torn page has been shoved in between the back cover and the endpaper. The words I want to believe are scribbled over it. I unfold it carefully - and almost drop it in shock.
The drawing is crude, but it is unmistakable: The Hanged Man, 11th of the Major Arcana, the very image that is in the deck I carry with me. I open my bag and fumble the card from the deck, listening desperately for the voice of the card - but it offers me nothing, beyond a sense of waiting.
Once again, I am on my own.
Valdemar’s inquisitive voice almost makes me leap out of my own skin. (They wonder if I am quite done here.) Quickly, I stuff the book into my bag, and replace my safety gear. I say that I’ve seen enough, and Valdemar asks if I am very, very sure. (I am.) Humming some nameless little tune that is at odds with this place, they lead me out and away, replacing their own mask over their face as we go.
#the arcana rewrite#arcana rewrite: tides of chaos#jinana aditya#marcus aquila summanus#Quaestor Valdemar#Me: sequence breaks like a Metroid speedrunner
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Originally, Marcus Aquila was supposed to have a single appearance as a source of information for Jinana early on... but the Gays are Trauma-Bonding they seem to be becoming fond of each other lmao
Also there may be rioting in the streets if we don’t see em again 😂
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