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+ | ====== The Mummy Diaries- Alwin' | ||
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+ | Brad had no issue with handing over Amenken' | ||
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+ | Future people are strange. Strange in a good way. Usually. You are still a tad bit undecided about Brad. The way he was able to shake off the most alarming of physical barriers, like the traps positively filling this Library Incarnation, | ||
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+ | With Brad satisfied with his ' | ||
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+ | You make it to the Great Hall, with its soaring columns studded with pictures of grand figures, part-man, part-beast, and seemingly endless expanses of hieroglyphs. If you had all the time in the world, you would love to record every last bit of this. | ||
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+ | But, alas... you must prioritise. And this confessional journal is positively // | ||
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+ | This Amenken fellow had plenty of secrets, many of them shameful, bloody, and disturbing. Which is maybe unsurprising if he could dedicate an entire journal that is nearly the thickness of a novel manuscript, to confessions of his supposed sins. | ||
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+ | Would you call them sins? Sure you've studied the moral and ethical debates inherent in many forms of philosophical studies, but, when decoding and translating ancient knowledge, you are not really in the business of passing moral judgments. | ||
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+ | Knowledge for knowledge' | ||
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+ | And this knowledge is... how did some of the Chosen from future times say it? Spicy? | ||
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+ | First of all, your earlier suspicions are confirmed. Amenken was far from the scholar that some of the other hieroglyphs and imagery has depicted him as. It was his brother, Iumeri, that was the renowned scribe and academic, to the point that he had a great library and collection of knowledge of his own. Amenken was far too interested in travel, politics, and waging warfare to protect his domain than to stay put amid papyrus scrolls, vellum manuscripts, | ||
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+ | The two brothers loved each other. Or, at least, that is what this journal professes. To the point they were to be buried together in a joint tomb. The tomb you now stand in, you abruptly realise. Huh. You suppose that could be an expression of intense filial devotion. To share your final resting place as well as with your spouse and children. | ||
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+ | But something changed. While Amenken was often away, Iumeri took care of his daughter, Hetepheres, allowing her to wander the scribe' | ||
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+ | **//I was horrified to learn that Hetepheres' | ||
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+ | You read on, entranced, the journal casting a spell on you so strong you cannot tear your gaze away, and you ignore the headache building in your temples from the strain of constantly translating what these hieroglyphs could mean. Fortunately, | ||
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+ | **//Of course, I confronted him. Demanded to know of these false gods. Iumeri, blast him, protested. Said they were not ' | ||
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+ | Gods of learning? You pause for only a moment, not wishing to be torn out of the rage and sorrow wafting from Amenken' | ||
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+ | //It is like the tablet he so obsesses over. Heretical lost languages that would have him killed if the pharaoh heard he hosted it. And he dares to poison Hetepheres' | ||
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+ | **//At night, I receive dreams from the gods. The TRUE gods. Strangely, it was Thoth rather than Horus who featured most prominently. They assured me that my fears were well-founded. Right. Just.//** | ||
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+ | **//It is done. I sent a unit of guards to set my own brother' | ||
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+ | You exhale all of a sudden and take in a desperate suck of air. You had been holding your breath without meaning to. What had Amenken done?! | ||
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+ | The confessions soon reach their climax: //Their screams haunt my every hour, no matter waking nor asleep. I can receive no respite. My one and only daughter, Hetepheres, is dead. And, along with her, Iumeri. Somehow my daughter snuck into the library before the burning. Iumeri must have tried to save her. He failed.// | ||
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+ | **//If he had been successful, if he had saved Hetepheres, would I have forgiven him? Useless thoughts. The kind he would have entertained. It is his fault that Hetepheres is gone even more than it is mine. Cursed be his name. No one shall speak it in this life or the next. If he must be laid to rest, it will be a pittance of a grave and he will rest with his beloved false gods and wicked knowledge.// | ||
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+ | The words grow ever more bitter and twisted. You get the sense that the more you read, the more these confessions are flowing forth at the end of Amenken' | ||
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+ | Again, you are trying not to make any moral judgements. But you are lying to yourself if you don't admit that you are aghast. How could Amenken burn an entire library? You know that repositories of knowledge have been burnt for far less across history. But... reading a first-hand account by someone who authorised it... you shake your head. | ||
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+ | You scarcely have the energy to read the final lines: **//I am sorry. For the poison that had filled by heart and mind, that killed my own flesh and blood. Hetepheres lost. Iumeri cursed. My heart is too heavy to be approved by Maat. If I should make it to Osiris in paradise, perhaps I shall see both of them there. If not... then I accept my punishment. May Iumeri accept his.//** | ||
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+ | This reading... it has been... draining... You slump against the pillar you have been sat against for perhaps an hour, maybe more. | ||
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+ | Slowly, slowly, you allow your eyes to fall shut. To rest. As your mind settles. | ||
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+ | Until you hear a familiar voice call out: " | ||
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+ | Your eyes snap open and you glance up to see none other than Alexander, who had also been present in Amenken' | ||
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+ | It doesn' | ||
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+ | " | ||
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+ | He coughs. "I was looking for you. For... Amenken' | ||
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+ | " | ||
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+ | You pull yourself to your feet with a muted groan, feeling your joints crack and the disks in your back threaten to give out. You are getting too old for this. For such intense adventuring, | ||
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+ | With a final look at the journal grasped in your hand, equal parts longing and revulsion at war in your mind, you hold out the tome to Alexander. | ||
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+ | You hope he doesn' | ||
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+ | "The man was an accursed book-burner." | ||
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+ | As you walk away to find a quiet spot to sit and think, you wonder at the heartbroken expression you glimpsed across Alexander' | ||
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+ | Why? It was not him you were referring to. It was Amenken. Someone neither of you knew personally. Unless... it was personal to Alexander after all...? | ||
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+ | Your head pulses angrily and you grimace. Alright, enough pondering for now. Maybe you can find some water as well as a quiet corner... | ||