Coin's Journal

Revision as of 15:34, 17 October 2019 by Avinasharora (talk | contribs) (Coin's Journal, Entries Seven and Eight. What miracle is this? A tree?)
Coin's journal appears to include unfinished scraps of spells and many pages torn out, and writings smudged over and removed

Entry One, dated Talus Trisaturna (1/21/347)

File:Coin, Journal Entry 1.mp3

Some time ago in the aftermath of the Collapse of Solace and our encounter with Gods once forgotten. The numbers dead, injured and missing innumerable. The destruction unfathomable. The Magistery and the Eternal Order itself suffered great losses. Rescued, in a way, was the thousands of years of knowledge and history stored within the Magistery Library. Much of what occurred when Azathoth was ripped from his slumber is a blur. Due to the size, strength and number of fires immolating Solace, the sky was a bright orange hue. I could not possibly tell you if it was night or day.

I remember sinking into a darkness in a sunken temple beneath the ocean. I remember surfacing in the waters off of Solace and seeing a stranger standing in place of the city I knew. I was pulled from the ocean into the sky and could see it all with the perspective of a bird. I will never forget those images of Solace bathed in red. And yet behind us was an infinite blackness, a swirling abyss barely cloaked in shape and form. Nothingness. Oblivion. We stared into the abyss and fought against it. Strangely, I feel no happiness, no relief. I do not feel like a hero. I feel nothing but sadness. I fear Solace is not all that collapsed that day.

I have spent the last several weeks with what books I could scrounge that could help advance my plans, but what I can access is lacking. Everything will have to be accelerated. Tomorrow is no longer guaranteed. It is difficult to have faith in the basic tenets of reality. I often forget that I am not in the Magistery. Shanjiu Castle has become our shelter. This architecture and design is foreign -- alien, even -- to me. As unrecognizable as the profane geometry we called Azathoth. I have largely remained inside, perusing and organizing what knowledge can be discovered with shreds of the library. Shanjiu Castle is not my home, though it is difficult to say as I have never really had one. I can’t stand to go outside. I am afraid that the next time I look at the sky the horizon will burn as bright as it did that day. .

Inugs is loyal and fierce. He has agreed to accompany me as far as possible. I am so proud to see how far Jyx has come, however, his story leads down a different path. I am not proud of it, but I have stolen Pearl’s Cloak of the Manta Ray. I learned in my time at the orphanage that it was often better to ask forgiveness than to ask permission. Hopefully, I will be able to return it before they know it is gone. If I do not return, take my books, sell them, keep the profit. I would hate to know they are collecting dust in a tower somewhere.

To those of The Eternal Order, should you discover these pages, it has been an honor to know you all. I apologize for leaving without saying goodbye, but I know that there are several members of The Order that would not approve of my goals. I have learned something from every single one of you and this knowledge means more to me than anything that can be gleaned from a tome. For most of my life I thought that I could not exist as a part of a greater unit. It turns out I was correct, but thank you for making me believe, just for a moment, that I was not. Together we stared into the abyss and fought against it. But if you stare too long into the abyss, sometimes, the abyss stares back.

Entry two, dated Carneira Premercuri (2/4/347)

File:Coin, Journal Entry 2.mp3 I have returned to the land feeling both triumphant and melancholy.

Yesterday, Inugs and myself entered one of the small fishing villages that dot the coastline on either side of Solace. Few of the older, salt-worn sailors wanted to make a journey with an unknown destination, let alone one with a goblin. Few have felt the urge to venture too far away from shore knowing that the few, scattered remains of Azathoth and its armies were returned to the blackest parts of the sea. One of the younger fishermen was swayed by the prospect of making more gold in a day than he would in a year and we set off the next day at noon. We sailed outward, the young man making slight adjustments in direction at my command as I kept my eyes locked on the Solace coastline and what remained of its towers and spires that once pierced the clouds. Hours later, I saw that sight again - the same image of Solace I saw when I was ripped from the ocean, save the rising fires and polluted skies. Somewhere beneath us was the sunken temple where I first glimpsed the eternal.

Shrouded in the Cloak of the Manta Ray, I found myself lost in the shifting features of the water beneath us. It was in that moment, I hoped that this would be the last time I set foot in the Godless depths. I cannot think of the deep sea without shuddering at the nameless things crawling and floundering on its slimy bed, worshiping ancient stone idols and carving their deities’ detestable likenesses on submarine obelisks of water-soaked granite. I often dream of the day when they rise above the billows to drag down in their reeking talons the remnants of puny, war-exhausted mankind. Of a day when the land shall sink and the dark ocean floor shall ascend amidst pandemonium.

And then, without realizing it, I was descending.

Pushing through a patch of sea plants was not only the temple, but this approach revealed the remnants of a sunken city with its buildings, arches, statues, bridges and colossal temple with its beauty and mystery. Neither age nor submersion corroded the pristine grandeur of the temple, and today after hundreds (if not thousands) of years it rests untarnished in the endless night and silence of an ocean chasm. Upon discovering the opening we entered upon our initial exploration, I retraced my steps to the great underwater cathedral where the tendrils of Azathoth greeted us.

It was within these walls that I first heard the cacophonous rending of instruments both known and unknown to Terra. At the time, as the tendrils pulled us into a vast void, I thought it a ringing in my ears or a steady, alien vibration pulsing through the living walls. But Azathoth is gone, and the dirge reverberates impossibly clearly through the now silent halls. I followed those crooked notes to a second floor, emerging in a dry corridor. I reflexively gasped for air but was instantly choked by the odor of antiquity, and both marine life and death. It was not unlike the smell that pervaded the fishing village at low tide, but it brought with it the stale, corrupted air of a crypt. While normally this assault upon my senses might have overwhelmed me, I could now clearly hear the music and was immediately haunted by the weirdness of it. Knowing little of the art myself, I was yet certain that none of the harmonies had any relation to music I had heard before and could not conclude whether the composer was a highly original genius or a madman. The longer I listened, the more I was fascinated.

The damp hallway opened up, or perhaps opened down, and I found myself peering through crystal clear water at what can only be described as a sunken amphitheater. On the stage, performing now to an audience of one, was an orchestra of aquatic humanoids. In perfect synchronicity, the fish people all raised their heads simultaneously, not a single note missed, and gazed upon my intrusion. Suddenly and wordlessly, my head was filled with dozens of voices speaking as one. Just as they played in perfect harmony, so too did they communicate - an orchestra so in time from eternities of practice - that they have become a sort of hive mind, the type that may be seen in communities of insects. Through magic I could understand their projections and though we conversed they continued playing the spiraling melody, never missing a note.

The exact wording I can not recall but we spoke at length. I learned that these Merfolk were not only undead but cursed and condemned to a lifetime of solitude playing an endless melody. In a time before man as we know it today, these Merfolk raised arms against the ones who lived above the surface in the name of their God. Upon defeat, they were banished to these dark depths, trapped in an unliving and yet undying orchestra, performing a forgotten rite in the form of a lullaby meant to keep the Old One called Azathoth in slumber.

I informed them of everything that had occurred; the theft of Azathoth’s Eye, its awakening, attack and defeat. I described what I could of the Blind God’s amorphous appendages and the oozing darkness deep within its shell. The Merfolk had suspected such a thing had occurred, but this knowledge only intensified their play. For now, they explained, their magical prayers would be even more integral as Gods of both Terra and the infinite cosmos would seek to fill the void which remains in Azathoth’s wake. And indeed, Azathoth, the blind idiot God had not, and perhaps could not, die. It could only return to what it had always been, time and space, waiting for when all of space and time folds upon itself and is compressed into Azathoth at the center of all things, the nucleus of chaos, when the infinite cycle begins again as it always has and always will, and only Azathoth remains.

I inquired further about these existential magics which I had learned from my own research on the boundless daemon. The lingering traces of the knowledge I seek, in remnants of memories from forgotten cities, lay before me. And from within the space and silence between words of the tale told by the Last of R’lyeh, I fear I may have found madness. For what is madness but collapsing under the weight of being the only living creature with knowledge lost to time? Never before have I felt quite so alone as I did when my mind wrestled with the truths I learned. And almost in anticipation of my next set of queries, the conductor of the grand symphony stepped aside and motioned towards his lectern and the grimoire upon it. The exact text which I both hoped and feared would be here, hidden away from the eyes of those who would seek to use this knowledge for personal gain.

“Take it,” they spoke. “Others from above have borrowed it before. Somehow, it always finds its way back here, though its borrowers never do.”

What do we know of the world and universe about us? Our means of receiving impressions are absurdly few, and our notions of surrounding objects infinitely narrow. We see things only as we are constructed to see them, and can gain no idea of their absolute nature. With five feeble senses we pretend to comprehend while other beings with wider, stronger, or a different range of senses might not only comprehend the things we see, but might see and study whole worlds of matter, energy and life which lie just outside of our understanding. Even those at the top of the Magistery, those who have spent their lives dedicated to the mastery of magic do not (dare not?) know of the strange, inaccessible worlds, ideas and laws which have always existed but been misplaced by the ravages of passing time. And now, I believe I have found a way to break down the barriers. Within this text I believe I will see these things, and other things which no breathing creature has yet seen. I will see that at which dogs howl in the dark and which cats prick up their ears after midnight. I will leap over those other creations of Azathoth - time, space and dimensions - to peer to the bottom of creation.

In the time since returning from the blackened deep, the song which lingered for so long within my subconscious has been forgotten. Replaced by the chorus of Merfolk voices as they conferred their knowledge unto me:

That is not dead which can eternal lie. And with strange aeons even death may die.

Entry three, dated Carneira Diveneris (2/13/347)

File:Coin, Journal Entry 3.mp3

We have traveled some time. Inugs may know how long. In much the same way that we scoff at ancient tribes who revered the sun as a supernatural deity, I no longer wish to bore myself with the acknowledgement of passing time.

The book is many things. A spellbook, a book of prayer, a history lesson, philosophy and science. It is black and forbidden, the type of text only spoken of in furtive paragraphs of mixed abhorrence and fascination, penned by those strange, ancient delvers into the universe's guarded secrets whose decaying texts I loved to absorb. It is a key, a guide, to certain gateways and transitions of which mystics have dreamed and whispered since Terra was young. It leads to freedoms and discoveries beyond the three dimensions and realms of life that we know. Not for centuries had any man recalled its vital substance or known where to find it. I do believe this must be the Libris Mortis.

I transfer key portions of this knowledge to my journal not for passing along, but for my own edification. Often I find myself unsure whether or not I am within a dream. Most of the time upon awakening I frantically check this book to see what I have actually written within its margins. Despite the confirmation, there are still times I fear I am existing in a dream within a dream. I do not know how deep my subconscious can go as a defense mechanism, pushing my conscious self farther and farther away from the things I have learned, buried beneath a mountain larger on the inside than on the outside.

If this truly is the Libris Mortis its information on what we know as natural law is fact. It is history and not myth. It also confirms that which the Merfolk told me of the nature of their curse and the origins of death itself. However, the author is unknown and therefore there can never be a truly authoritative canon.

According to the text, when the universe was unfolded from within the center of chaos, what life escaped from the madness became the Gods we have forgotten. And from the exponential unfolding of time and chaos, eventually man came to exist. Forever, it turns out, is quite a long time and the weight of aeons was most heavy on the newer, smaller, weaker creatures. Both overwhelming and isolating, the acknowledgment of ever-growing units of time would drive them to madness. On a long enough scale, this affliction would expand to infect greater, older beings and to demigods and other entities we would not comprehend. Azathoth could not alter time, change that which is his being, much in the same way we can not alter our own heights or eye color (without relying on temporary magics).

And so the universe received the Eldest God’s last gift: release from the inexorable stagnancy of life. Today, we perceive death as a failure of body and spirit, but it is life that is the error in the grand design. And this new creation needed avatars of its domain. The knowledge of this curse was passed down to them and while the Elder Gods have been forgotten, this knowledge has been retained. This is even more cause to believe my hypothesis is correct, but I must dig further into Nerull, and Pluton.

Entry four, dated Carneira Kiluna (2/23/347)

File:Coin, Entry 4.mp3 What happens when a God dies? Few if any can claim to have been present for the death of a deity, but there are tales and stories of those that have. Several religions reference the “Divine Spark” though it is unknown if it is literal or symbolic. Texts on both Nerull and The Raven Queen state that she usurped not only all within his plane of Pluton but his Divine Spark as well, becoming the new god of death. One story suggests that Nerull was buried at the feet of Yggdrasil. I know I have heard this name before but where? Who is Yggdrasil? It is also suggested that a God can not truly die as long as its name is remembered. One can only finally destroy a God’s memories via the complete purge of all remnants of its existence. Theologians suggest that these powerful memories are easier to bury or hide by the Gods than be destroyed. In their prisons they will slowly rot over innumerable generations until the last creature who remembers its name comes into the service of the Raven Queen.

What a horrific torture it must be to feel your entire being falling away like water through a hand. And what physical form do forgotten memories take so that they can be hidden in the first place. With no form or function to contain and control them, as the last remnants of proof it once existed, would the memories be aware they were once part of a God? Such irony; the God of death being buried alive. Living under the land, under the sea or in a plane of fire. A vague shape bleeding all that once defined it, floating in infinite nothingness. Alone. I have no mouth, yet I must scream.

Entry five, dated Secundus Prilovis (3/5/347)

File:Coin, Entry 5.mp3 Why did the gods create a dual universe? So they might say, "Be not like me, I am alone." And it might be heard.

What we perceive as hallmarks of death: decay, rot, etc are actually the consequences of disobeying the gods, a rot born of the Elders themselves. Death can not be halted or delayed, but simply claimed from others.

The skeletons of haunted graveyards and the ghouls of family tombs are closer to the Gods than the noble paladins and clerics who pledge their lives. Such knowledge could drive one mad.

The necromancers of the North are only scratching the surface of their power and its inherent connections.

Lately, a feeling has come over me the likes of which I can not explain. It not despair for I wish to press on. It is not loneliness for I am with my research and Inugs and will soon be in the home of my friend Gumtoe. It is as though my entire body is drifting, pulled by an invisible thread from one moment to the next. It is the feeling of trying to draw a face that you saw in a dream.

Entry six, dated Secundus Triluna (3/16/347)

File:Coin, Entry 6.mp3 Gumtoe has barely changed since we last met, aside from the face he lives - I had thought for some period of time that he was feared dead. His stores had grown since that time and he was now able to afford a shop supplying him the space to catalog his collection. He has become a sort of star of the rare book trade in recent years, and though his collection is not near the size of that within the Magistery, its troves of knowledge contained undoubtedly rival it. After catching up over tea, I revealed the Libris Mortis

While scanning a relevant text he found a passing reference to Yggdrasil! It led us to a Northern myth, not about a person as I initially suspected, but a tree. In some cultures a version of the myth refers to it as “The Tree of Life.” The immense ash tree that is the center of the universe, its branches extending to the heavens and the roots winding and extending through all of Terra. Where Terra’s gods hold their courts. It is unknown which language Yggdrasil originates but some writers have translated it to "The Bridge of Aether." Others have suggested "Gallows of the Gods." Others still have interpreted it simply as "The Tree of Terror." The stories of The Raven Queen and Nerull suggest he either perished or was laid to rest here.

What if it isn't a myth?

Entry seven, dated Secundus Kimartis (3/24/347)

File:Coin's Journal, Entry 7.mp3 Though I glossed over it the first time, I felt the urge to scribe this exchange from a tale in the Libris Mortis.

I whisper in the dark. Imagine my surprise when the darkness answered back.

"How will I find you?" The man asked the Crawling Chaos.

A voice within the void spoke, "Stare the Gods in the eyes and walk backwards into Hell."

—Libris Mortis 194.5:13-15

Entry eight, dated Tresuna Trisolace (4/15/347)

File:Coin's Journal, Entry 8.mp3 What miracle is this? This giant tree. It stands ten thousand feet high but doesn’t reach the ground. Still it stands. Its roots must hold the sky.

Yggdrasil

Ygg̡dra̴si̶l.

Y̗̩̤̫͚͔g̱̟̜̤̙̕gd̻̜̰̬͜ra͏̱̞͈̝s̥̫̺i̸l̡̞̟̞̲͇͚ͅ.


Y̱͕̖̗͚̜͇ͨ̉g̢̥̼͕̥̭̓͑ͨͧ͛ͭg̡̗͍̩̗͍ͅd̖̦̂̋ͪŕ̯̦̤̳̣͔ͪ̓ͯͫ̓ͪ͡a̡͆̾͋̈ͪ͐ͦs̩̞̤̹̑̔̄į̬͓̍͂ͩ͆͛̆l̄̒ͫ͗͒̄͏͕̻̰̹̻̝̦.̵̲


Ỳ͇͔̙͌̀͢g̵̠͇͍̙̓͊̎͠gͤ̇͋̅̆҉̪̼͖̟̬͔


Dr̶̥̭̘͑ͯͣ̀ͅà̭̝͖̘̟ͯͣͨ.̱̝̺͕͔͉ͧͯ̕͞


Sĭ̶̹̰͉̖͈̣̪̱͆ͥ͛̒͘l̗ͦͧͧ̍͒̍̆ͯͮ͘



Y̛̺͉͍̻͕̭̜ͦͫ̒̇̓̈́͂͠g̷̷͖̘̘͕̭̩̍̉̄̆̀͟ ̌͒̇͂̏͆̚͡͏͚̦̮̳̥̻̩͕͕͔͟ͅ ̴ͣ̉̊̄̽̊͒ͦ͒͐̅̆́͏̱̣̮̗͍͔̘̣̥̫̥͍̻͕̣̹ ̶̵̣̗̣̮̱̯̱͆̅͗ͧ̿͐͑ͦ̽̈̚͟ ͊̐̉͑ͯͧͪ͂̒ͯ̍͋̍͆̓̑ͣ̊͠҉̧͓͇̮̳̯̬̼̘̬͍̱͙͕͘ ̸̡̧̀̊͛͗ͫ͏̴̤͕̼̺͙̫̖̱̪̩̬͚̰͍͚ ̴̡̥͉̞̱͕̣̮ͧ̐́̔̓́ͧ̓̑͊̀͐̆ͦ͒͘ͅ ̡̩͉̤̱̙̘̙̖͋͐͆̊͛ͩ̉ͥ́͘͘͠ ̴̷̛̥͈͚̬̣̯̹̩̃̈͊̅͋͗̌̓̋ͬͪ̇ͨͨ̃ͭ͑͌̕͟ͅ ̢̇̀̀͋̒ͯͧͨ̈͛̚͞҉̡̪̯̪̥̻ ͎̼͉͎͈̙̃̂̌̿̀͠͡ ̡̝͚̟̝̙̜̯̖ͫ͗ͩͭ̿͋͆̇ͣ̚͜͜g̨̢̯̞̞̞̳̱͔͇͚̝̪̱͚͕̐̂̓̒̒̿̇ͨͦ̚̚͢ ̸͕̝͈̠̝͇̥̱̠̯̬͇͖͈̺̻͇̇ͦ̇͒͒̏͒͒͗͢͢͝ ̨̹͕͈͈̰̹ͤ̊̓̐ͫͪͣͪ̾ͧͬ̌ͦ͒ͤ́̚̚͜ ͊͐͛҉̴̝̦̳̞ ̱̬̠̜̰͍̤̳͈͎̼͕ͣͨ̉̌̿̚̕ͅḏ̷̷̵͍̜͖͆͋͑͗ͫ̇ ̷̷̢̛̗̪̫̙ͬͤ̂͂̀̈͠ ̵͔͎̯͎̪̮̗̪͈̹̦͈̬͙̱͆ͮ͛͐̍ͫ͋͆͊͒̐̌̒̐͘ ̸̷̹̻̗͕ͪ̂ͩ͑̈́ͦ̂̎ͭͭ̎͌̈́͟͝ ̷ͤ̓̃̑̀҉͏̰͍̼̗̟̣̰̱̦̬̤̦͘ ̽̃̌̔ͥ͢͏̠̲̹͍̠̯̯̯͖̱͉̮̪̖̻ͅr̷̴̴̛͈̺̘̣̘̖̣͉̮̰͙̒̋̆ͫͤͥ̎͐͐͑a̧̲͉̻̫̱̯̜͔̹̻̠̜͚͒̾̐̍̅ͧ̓̚͟͝s̡̖̠͈̯̖̟̙͓͐ͪͦͤ̋͌̽̌͐ͫͩ̿ͣ͌͞͠ͅ ̸̞̳̣ͬͨ̇̓̄͐̋ͫ̔ͥ̿́ͅ ̸̡̟̭͚̝̺̠̬̱̤̫͖̱̗͍̟̽͛̓ͬ̎̒ͤͥͤͅͅ ͆̓̊ͭ̈́̇͆ͣ̋̐ͫ͋͋ͭ̾ͪͨ͏̬̰̥̯̣̟̭̰̮̗͚͔͜ ̶̧̭̩̘̤̐͒́ͤ̓̂͒̽ͭ͆ͬ̈́͋͞͝ ̴̮̜͓̖͕͚̙ͫͩͪͬ̀̕͡͝ͅ ̷̛͙̝̪̩̙͔̤̫̦͕̫̱͖̫̺̳̣̇̊̎ͬ͒̕͡ͅi̢̟̲͖̳̗̮̭̻͍͖̖̬͍̝̓ͮ̓̐̆̑͑̉ͤ̐̅͟͝͠ͅ ͙̼̠̹̩̋̌͒̍͑̈̒̿ͩ́͟l̪̯͖̬͖͓͇͉͓̺̖̤̳̙ͫͯͫͭͩ̽̀ͭ͟



Entry nine, dated Sexton Prilovis (7/5/347)

Below the dateline the page is simply blank.

Final entry, dated Septon Trimartis (8/17/347)

A brief addendum before my descent: the date of my entry is Septon Trimercuri. I have instructed Inugs to return both this and the Manta Cloak to the Magistery. If you are reading this and I have not returned for an unreasonable period of time, I implore you

I beg of you

DO NOT FOLLOW ME