I'm trudging through the forest toward the Void with the rest of the expedition. I'm incredibly tired of the buzzing in my head. I spent a month and a half with this; I'm not enjoying reliving it.
[ or do they only add to the noise, in other words?
she's tempted to ask about the morale of the expedition, but she doesn't; that question drifts across anyway, more of an impression of concern than anything posed outright. ]
Yeah. They show me to direct my thoughts to where I want to direct them, as opposed to where the Void wants them. The buzzing is so there, the urges are, but I can almost ignore them.
The Void posseses some form if sentience, by the way.
Is it even possible to discern the Void through our own consciousness, or is it too powerful to really be interpreted?
Regardless, getting close enough to sustain some kind of consequence, physical OR mental, feels unwise. [ it's why she had firmly informed the duchess's messenger that she wouldn't be going on the trip, not willing to risk herself for someone she swears no loyalties to. ]
[ it takes a moment for yennefer to remember where she's heard the name. ] His lack of reticence wouldn't have anything to do with the Duchess's ability to resurrect people here, would it?
[ it's more of a rhetorical question since she thinks she already knows the answer. ]
He is the churchwarden for a reason. Of course, her Ressurection ability was a huge factor. Though it's possible he may have still volunteered without the guarantee that he'd be resurrected.
Cult fanatics tend to be willing to sacrifice for their god.
Not at all. Some people are just living their lives here, but religion when people have a living God they can interact with, especially one that can bring the dead back to life will permeate everything they know.
I am intimately familiar with how what's going on here can grow in a myriad if given the opportunity and the propaganda to back it up. Every religion starts out as a cult, Yennefer.
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I'm trudging through the forest toward the Void with the rest of the expedition. I'm incredibly tired of the buzzing in my head. I spent a month and a half with this; I'm not enjoying reliving it.
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[ or do they only add to the noise, in other words?
she's tempted to ask about the morale of the expedition, but she doesn't; that question drifts across anyway, more of an impression of concern than anything posed outright. ]
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The Void posseses some form if sentience, by the way.
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Regardless, getting close enough to sustain some kind of consequence, physical OR mental, feels unwise. [ it's why she had firmly informed the duchess's messenger that she wouldn't be going on the trip, not willing to risk herself for someone she swears no loyalties to. ]
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And unwise as it may be, we push ahead. At least we know what to expect. I'm sure some people will peel off and return, but I suspect most won't.
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Already starting to show some cracks in their heroic facade, are they?
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No, wait. It's still funny.
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I'm not expecting us to be successful; if we do it'll be through dumb luck. Which is why I'm not going as myself into the fucking Void itself.
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My body will be staying outside of the Void behind layered protections while I send my consciousness into a corpse and puppet it.
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Whose corpse?
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Mateus. He volunteered to be my vessel when I approached him about using a potentially already available corpse. Saw it as an honor.
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[ it takes a moment for yennefer to remember where she's heard the name. ] His lack of reticence wouldn't have anything to do with the Duchess's ability to resurrect people here, would it?
[ it's more of a rhetorical question since she thinks she already knows the answer. ]
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Cult fanatics tend to be willing to sacrifice for their god.
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I am intimately familiar with how what's going on here can grow in a myriad if given the opportunity and the propaganda to back it up. Every religion starts out as a cult, Yennefer.
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I always thought it was the other way around. Religion into fervor and blind devotion.
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You're not wrong, but neither am I. Two ends of the same thing. Fanaticism on both ends.
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[ in fact, she'd argue they're more inclined to follow it, in many instances. ]
That hardly makes me feel better about it.
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You know, I'm not sure there's a need to change their belief system. It serves them, for the most part.
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Though I never did ask about the gods of your sphere.
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