Heretek
Techpriest of Tzeentch
Do they?
Do they?
We've noted this twice IC:
He has sketched out a number of plans for recruiting to bring Stirland's actual strength back up to it's theoretical one, each expensive and time-consuming.
I've explicitly noted we aren't an expert in raising an army, but knowing his background, does it not look like he is up to his old tricks?and if the task is to be completed by this time next year an additional signing bonus will be required to tempt people into joining
And that's exactly what I'm saying we do? Is explicitly vote we say we didn't actually investigate his actions here, and that we may just be finding these things expensive due to not being familiar with them.
But it's also something he should keep in mind. And it's essentially giving him the option to order us to investigate dear old Professor.
After all, "long and expensive" is exactly what kind of project someone like him would want. "Sign up bonus" that would probably never be verified as long as the men showed up is also mighty convenient.
Do you propose we not tell him his marshal has a past for serious embezzlement? When military actions will probably take far and wide most of his budget?
The bolded part is nonsensical. It's our duty to tell our Count that kind of thing.If he does embezzlement then we should report that but he hasn't done it yet to our knowledge I especially don't want to tell Van Hal who he is actually working for since I want to avoid making an enemy with someone in such a high position
But what point is there to tell him that if we report that he was embezzling funds then the all the blame will fall on him but if we expose the Emporer's spymaster involvement then we will get his attention too something I want to avoidThe bolded part is nonsensical. It's our duty to tell our Count that kind of thing.
We can't report what we don't investigate, yet the Count should be made aware there is reason to devote precious time to that.
How, exactly, would that happen?But what point is there to tell him that if we report that he was embezzling funds then the all the blame will fall on him but if we expose the Emporer's spymaster involvement then we will get his attention too something I want to avoid
Do you propose we not tell him his marshal has a past for serious embezzlement? When military actions will probably take far and wide most of his budget?
Yeah this stuff is also us doing our job.So does no one else want to vote for Possible Orders for Next Turn?
Our liege here loves us. This is a very good development.Anton Kiesinger II is quite possibly the least politically savvy person you have ever encountered.
You first assumed that his simplicity was a facade, a way to put people at ease while gaining their trust. But every indication is that Anton is exactly what he appears to be: open, honest, a bit dim, and entirely blind to the deeper meaning behind every word and action in high-level political discourse. And apparently that he is so non-threatening as a diplomat is why he's able to perform the job so well. He's not a threat as a politician, and because his father's lands are relatively small and out of the way, he's not a threat as a future noble.
In a world of wolves, he's a puppy. And like a puppy, now that you've shown him attention, he adores you. After you had found everything you needed to know, he continued to seek you out and ask how you've been eating and making sure that the Greatswords assigned to you are being properly respectful. Whether you like it or not, he's decided that you're his new little sister.
But here we see something odd. A Jade Wizard isn't too odd, but why a false bottom for a guy so...evidently innocous?But as you're about to put the box away, you notice that it's deeper on the outside than on the inside, and it doesn't take you long to lever out the false bottom and find another bundle of letters entirely. These are between him and a person he addresses as 'Auntie Julia'. The letters to her are mostly filling her in on events in the family, though they frequently mention how much he misses her. The letters back are much less prosaic, filled with descriptions of a military campaign against Beastmen in some forested corner of the Empire - and from her descriptions of events, Auntie Julia appears to be a Jade Wizard.
We have a goddamned dungeon.[HEADS, A TOWER. TAILS, A DUNGEON. Result: Tails.]
[DOES THIS PLEASE RANALD?: Roll, 98. Ranald is amused.]
[HOW GOOD A HOME DO YOU FIND?: Roll, Diplomacy+Ranald's Blessing, 87+9+20=116. Well, then.]
Half an hour of pushing what could have been centuries of accumulated junk out of the way (the innkeeper seemed to have forgotten about you, and from the waves of rowdy noise coming from the interior, you couldn't blame her), you finally found what you suspected you would find - a trapdoor made of wood so ancient it was nearly fossilized. It took you another ten minutes to lever it open with the help of a bent metal bar you had found in the refuse. And when you descended down the ladder, what you found took your breath away.
The explanation, you pieced together later, was fairly simple. Every few years, the River Stir would flood, depositing another layer of silt onto the streets of Wurtbad. In a single lifetime, this meant stepping up onto a street that used to be level with your door. But over the centuries that Wurtbad had served as capital of Stirland, ground floors had become basements and attics had become ground floors, and people had put an extra floor on their houses and forgotten about the now sub-basement they had no use for. Over the years, Wurtbad had risen, it's walls protecting it from the erosion that washed back the flood-deposited silt everywhere else.
Underneath Wurtbad, entire buildings lay forgotten.
Entire underground ecosystems fled at your approach, the dim light of the lantern blazing like a supernova to creatures who's ancestors had forgotten the sun a hundred generations prior. Ornate windows showed a view of soil and rock. Rusted scraps of metal protruding from the wall mark where fine tapestries once hung. In places, many places, the walls had given way and soil had poured in, drowning entire wings. And only the vaguest hint of differing colours showed where frescoes once covered entire walls. But like a lingering ghost, the grandeur of this forgotten palace was still visible.
Thank you Ranald!Later, as you make the entrance room of your underground home liveable and barricade the doorway into the rest of the palace (just in case), it occurs to you that there's barely anything you can do to set up more of a shrine to Ranald. It's a shack that's a palace, bought from the unknowing by sanctioning their theft of tax money. In the end, all you can really do is draw some crosses on the wall and put out milk for the cats that were already lounging around the place. And you could swear that the look the black one was giving you was especially smug, even for a cat.
...so, I'm guessing our home is actually part of the undercastle? It sounds like where a ruler might put their mistressProfessor de Verezzo's mapping of the castle went as well as could be expected, as several more hidden chambers were found and cleared. He reports that he wasn't able to penetrate below the first floor of the dungeon - one stairway down was caved in and a second was flooded.
EAGLE CASTLE: Everything from B1 and above mapped, excluding the East Wing; no hidden chambers remain (?)
Not our liege, he's the diplomacy advisor.
Just a guess, the rest of his family wasn't too pleased about the whole magic thing so his Aunt was the black sheep of the family, so he found a way to converse with her in secret.But here we see something odd. A Jade Wizard isn't too odd, but why a false bottom for a guy so...evidently innocous?