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i am currently attempting to use my willpower to manifest an outcome where we have the morbs done before the elves show up

On the one hand, they're elves, they don't generally do things quick, so we might have another 6 months before anyone shows up.

On the other hand, elves take the Waystone network very seriously, so if anything is gonna spur them to act quick, this might be it.
 
i am currently attempting to use my willpower to manifest an outcome where we have the morbs done before the elves show up

On the one hand, they're elves, they don't generally do things quick, so we might have another 6 months before anyone shows up.

On the other hand, elves take the Waystone network very seriously, so if anything is gonna spur them to act quick, this might be it.
Here's the thing, even if we do finish the Orbs before they arrive, would it even change anything? Like, are we going to present them to whoever Ulthuan sends that isn't Teclis? If they're showing up because of Waystones, then I doubt we're going to talk to their representative about much else the Colleges have accomplished.
 
Teclis returning is kind of hopium at the moment, but, like, it's logical hopium? I mean, if someone in the Empire is expanding the network, it's not unreasonable to assume the Colleges are in on it. If they are, then whether the verdict is to aid them or stop them, Teclis would be a logical choice to send since his status in the Colleges would allow him to do either with ease.

Also, on another note, I imagine Teclis will be exchanging info with the embassy to the Empire, to try and see how the Colleges have done this, since the embassy seems to keep an eye and ear out for new magical developments. They may point to Middenland and the Eonir, possibly the fog bridge if that gets done, but the topic of Waaagh and Peace might also raise Teclis' interest.
 
Atop a gleaming tower, an unnaturally slender Elf suppresses a grimace with the ease of long practice as he sips from a potion of monstrous potency, not letting it distract him from making his way through the many reports, missives, and attempts at correspondence that constantly bombard him and have been accumulating for far too long. Vitality that could lend any other Elf enough strength to lift a boulder floods through him and wars with a curse as old as Ulthuan, giving him just enough strength to sit upright and lift his writing implements. He's just returned from a rather fraught expedition to the Turtle Isles, and it would be some time before it would be safe to once more sup dosages that would allow him to heft a sword in one hand and a staff in another.
The one man who can handle the potion seller's strongest potions.
 
Oh.
Well that makes me glad we did not sign off on the Druchii.
And also…Oh boy. We need to haul tail on those Morbs or freaking bury the plan.
 
he is an elf, I expect his next decade to consist primarily of boasting about how smart he is for convining some humans to make more waystones
I mean, he is an elf, sure. But he's also pretty young (he's less than 350) and gets along with humans super well because he also knows what it's like to be condescended to by everyone due to your birth. He was born a cripple and people in Ulthuan looked down on him for it, which he's never forgotten. Also, he's a mega-nerd, so I'd more expect him to jump the next possible ship he can to the Empire and talk to the Colleges, so he can discover the methodology if nothing else.

If Teclis knows, how long until the Slann weigh in?
Doubt they will. They've got the smarts, but I don't think they have a way to monitor the flow of magic from the Old World to Ulthuan.

Teclis returning is kind of hopium at the moment, but, like, it's logical hopium? I mean, if someone in the Empire is expanding the network, it's not unreasonable to assume the Colleges are in on it. If they are, then whether the verdict is to aid them or stop them, Teclis would be a logical choice to send since his status in the Colleges would allow him to do either with ease.
Teclis also just seems excited about it and might turn up because he wants to as well.
 
i am currently attempting to use my willpower to manifest an outcome where we have the morbs done before the elves show up

On the one hand, they're elves, they don't generally do things quick, so we might have another 6 months before anyone shows up.

On the other hand, elves take the Waystone network very seriously, so if anything is gonna spur them to act quick, this might be it.

Not... entirely impossible. There's an ocean imposing not-insignificant travel time, and there's some significant ambiguity in how many months it took for them to find out in the first place vs which month of six the Journeyman got into the swing of things last turn.

Plus, we don't know how much time they're going to spend investigating, so they know who to point fingers at, and prepare opening offers in negotiations to Stop That, Please.
 
Here's the thing, even if we do finish the Orbs before they arrive, would it even change anything? Like, are we going to present them to whoever Ulthuan sends that isn't Teclis? If they're showing up because of Waystones, then I doubt we're going to talk to their representative about much else the Colleges have accomplished.
It would be an extra cool flex :V

Teclis returning is kind of hopium at the moment, but, like, it's logical hopium? I mean, if someone in the Empire is expanding the network, it's not unreasonable to assume the Colleges are in on it. If they are, then whether the verdict is to aid them or stop them, Teclis would be a logical choice to send since his status in the Colleges would allow him to do either with ease.

Also, on another note, I imagine Teclis will be exchanging info with the embassy to the Empire, to try and see how the Colleges have done this, since the embassy seems to keep an eye and ear out for new magical developments. They may point to Middenland and the Eonir, possibly the fog bridge if that gets done, but the topic of Waaagh and Peace might also raise Teclis' interest.
Yeah, he did describe the Tower as a gilded cage, which doesn't exactly inspire confidence, but if anything could make him come back, it's probably this.
 
It would be an extra cool flex :V


Yeah, he did describe the Tower as a gilded cage, which doesn't exactly inspire confidence, but if anything could make him come back, it's probably this.
I imagine he describes it as a gilded cage becasue he was trapped by the fact he was unable to so much as stand due to having either injured or overtaxed himself whiel doing somethign else. That is, he's not being kept there due to politics or force, he's just sick.

That said, it's been something like four months since the beginning of that interlude, so he might well be nearly able to leave again.
 
Atop a gleaming tower, an unnaturally slender Elf suppresses a grimace with the ease of long practice as he sips from a potion of monstrous potency, not letting it distract him from making his way through the many reports, missives, and attempts at correspondence that constantly bombard him and have been accumulating for far too long. Vitality that could lend any other Elf enough strength to lift a boulder floods through him and wars with a curse as old as Ulthuan, giving him just enough strength to sit upright and lift his writing implements. He's just returned from a rather fraught expedition to the Turtle Isles, and it would be some time before it would be safe to once more sup dosages that would allow him to heft a sword in one hand and a staff in another. For now, he must serve Ulthuan and the world from his gilded cage.

He smiles slightly, as he always does, as he gets to the latest missive from Northwatch, then frowns as he reads through the figures that it contains. They still show a small but significant and steady increase in energies flowing through it, as those reports had before he left. That means energies from what is now Lyonesse, which in the modern era meant energy from the larger human realms - Bretonnia's northernmost states and the unsuborned portions of the Empire. A greater increase than there should be, considering the times and the state of the world, and too prolonged to just be the result of a storm of magic. He itches to investigate it himself, as he so often does, but he'll have to settle for sending someone else in his stead, as he also so often does. A request for patrols in the Sea of Claws and the emissary in Erengrad to take readings of their own is penned and dispatched with a gesture and the slightest application of willpower. That will have to do.

Several months later he receives those reports from the east, and they skip the pile and are opened and read immediately. If Chaos is stirring faster than expected and turning an early Thirteenth to the same warpath as the Twelfth, then that would result in an uptick in energy through Northwatch very much like what the previous report showed, and should also be found in the reports from the Sea of Claws and Erengrad... but no. The figures are up slightly from the last time they were gauged, but much less so than those from Northwatch. They only show the same proportionate increase that is coming through Rokhame and Whitefire Tor, enough to start keeping a cautious eye on the north, but nowhere near so much as to start mustering armies. The extra energy arriving from the Empire is proportionately much larger than these, and cannot be solely attributed to the general waxing in the energies of Chaos. His eyes are pulled inexorably towards the window from which the phoenix eyrie can be seen, but no, blast it. Instead he drafts instructions for a team of students to go to Northwatch and personally observe the fluctuations in energies.

Another month passes in a haze of duty and parchment before their report comes back, and a glance tells him that this needs more than a glance. With close examination of the minute-to-minute data the pattern becomes clear: about once a day, the inflow of magic swells an almost imperceptible, but discrete and seemingly permanent, amount. And this pattern, it seems, has been recurring day after day for months now. This is no swelling of magical energies in the area, no happenstance reconnection of a temporarily disconnected branch of the network. The only possible explanation is that bit by bit, stone by stone, the network is expanding. More than that - it is being expanded.

"Oh, my sweet, clever children," he laughs, and lifts his quill with a flourish to start writing a series of letters that will make a lot of Elves very upset.
Teclis 👀
I think this sums up my reaction better than anything
 
so this could go one of two ways, the apprentices go to the collegues and ask directly about the waystones, but now i am thinking that this could very well lead to roswita being swarmed by a mob of elven wizard apprentices to ask her what the hell is going on in slvania and why none of the wizards present know anything about it?, god she would hate it, 200% the smugness of the combat wizards whit none of the utility and the entitlement of your average low noble turned to a hundred.
 
Forgive me for being slow on the uptake, I'm still a bit on the unfamiliar side, but what was the give-away that the elf was Telcis?
Teclis is of the bloodline of Aenarion the Defender, who was cursed by Khaine, along with all his future descendants, when he drew Widowmaker (Khaine's own sword) to take revenge on the Chaos Gods for the death of his first wife. In Teclis, the curse manifested in the form of his body being malformed and frail, to the point he has to constantly imbibe high-grade strength potions just to have the physical ability to walk unassisted, much less fight with a sword and staff.
 
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