Nina Zenik (
ravkanwitch) wrote2024-06-05 08:01 pm
[[open post and announcement: no mourners, no funerals]]
[cw: discussion of death!]
Nina knows that word of Shen Yuan's death has been slowly spreading. She tried to put out a general warning of danger right after it happened... but she's not sure how many people were warned by it. She wasn't in the right mind at the time, after all. This time, she's more careful and collected. With SecUnit's help, she's alerted and gathered everyone who's interested for an important announcement in the lobby of the mansion. Despite all appearances of bossiness and stubbornness - all quite true - Nina has never been in charge of anything so serious. Kaz, Zoya, and the King himself; she followed their lead. As people slowly begin to gather and she attempts to compose herself, she wonders why she decided to put herself up to this.
Deep breath, Zenik. Pretend that - well, that this is pretend. She's back in the orphanage as the official greeter, making an important announcement to all the other children. She's the governor of a small town, making sure that all the citizens are aware and prepared. It does have to be her, after all. She's playing a crucial role in everything. She also doesn't want anyone else to carry the emotional load.
"Hi," she tells everyone gathered, trying to paste on a somber but not-too-morose expression. "Thanks for coming. I'm sure some of you have heard part of this announcement already and I'm sorry that it took so long to pass this information onto everyone else... but there was an incident not too long ago. We're not sure what caused it, whether it was the house or whether it was an individual, but... Shen Yuan is dead." There's most likely a reaction at this point and Nina forges onwards as confidently as she can, pitching her voice above the hubbub.
"But there is a way that he can return. We're sure of it. We're just trying to figure out the details, which might take a while. If you want to know more about that, you can ask Magnus, but I'm not sure how much he can tell you. Also, if you encounter any signs of Shen Yuan's spirit, you can talk to--" Here she meets Aleksander's eyes almost instinctively; this line of conversation is something she's purposefully kept from him. "You can talk to myself. Or... to Lan Wangji. ...That's all. Thank you."
A confident start but slightly deflated by her last few sentences, Nina steps back and allows for conversation to happen. If anyone would like to speak to her, she's looking much less strained and grim than she has in a while.
[[Feel free to post a single comment reaction and/or start a thread with Nina in the comments!]]
Nina knows that word of Shen Yuan's death has been slowly spreading. She tried to put out a general warning of danger right after it happened... but she's not sure how many people were warned by it. She wasn't in the right mind at the time, after all. This time, she's more careful and collected. With SecUnit's help, she's alerted and gathered everyone who's interested for an important announcement in the lobby of the mansion. Despite all appearances of bossiness and stubbornness - all quite true - Nina has never been in charge of anything so serious. Kaz, Zoya, and the King himself; she followed their lead. As people slowly begin to gather and she attempts to compose herself, she wonders why she decided to put herself up to this.
Deep breath, Zenik. Pretend that - well, that this is pretend. She's back in the orphanage as the official greeter, making an important announcement to all the other children. She's the governor of a small town, making sure that all the citizens are aware and prepared. It does have to be her, after all. She's playing a crucial role in everything. She also doesn't want anyone else to carry the emotional load.
"Hi," she tells everyone gathered, trying to paste on a somber but not-too-morose expression. "Thanks for coming. I'm sure some of you have heard part of this announcement already and I'm sorry that it took so long to pass this information onto everyone else... but there was an incident not too long ago. We're not sure what caused it, whether it was the house or whether it was an individual, but... Shen Yuan is dead." There's most likely a reaction at this point and Nina forges onwards as confidently as she can, pitching her voice above the hubbub.
"But there is a way that he can return. We're sure of it. We're just trying to figure out the details, which might take a while. If you want to know more about that, you can ask Magnus, but I'm not sure how much he can tell you. Also, if you encounter any signs of Shen Yuan's spirit, you can talk to--" Here she meets Aleksander's eyes almost instinctively; this line of conversation is something she's purposefully kept from him. "You can talk to myself. Or... to Lan Wangji. ...That's all. Thank you."
A confident start but slightly deflated by her last few sentences, Nina steps back and allows for conversation to happen. If anyone would like to speak to her, she's looking much less strained and grim than she has in a while.
[[Feel free to post a single comment reaction and/or start a thread with Nina in the comments!]]

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A murder, and a missing person. One who knows when her name is spoken and who can excise memories with precision. This memory loss is not like Wei Ying, who drops important details and remembers others without any apparent pattern, whose fear and grief at the end of his life wiped the last several weeks of it from his mind entirely. It is targeted and specific.
"They are connected," he says, after another short silence. He's quiet but confident. "When I play Inquiry, I always begin with the same two questions. The first is who are you? The second is who killed you? The spirit has no choice but to answer me."
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So the moment someone else contacts Shen Yuan, Claudius may lose this entire conversation, this moment of shared realization. Despite everything, that's good news. Shen Yuan's spirit is here. He tears a page out of the back of the dossier, and writes it down in his spidery hand.
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He looks back up at Claudius. "I will play Inquiry again. You accompany me and keep a record of what we learn."
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He steps back, waiting for Claudius to be ready to follow him.
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The worst didn't come to pass -- he didn't forget his friend entirely. Claudius re-folds and re-places the letter where he found it, locks up the drawer with his dossier, and follows.
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A table, a few seats. He needs nothing more. He leads Claudius inside and notices only as he is taking Wangji from his back that he is still clutching his own note from Claudius. Before it can have any chance of slipping from his grasp like a stolen memory, he tucks it into the folded collar of his robe. It will be impossible to miss later.
He sits, then, the qin hovering across his lap, and glances at Claudius to tell him to do the same and to make himself ready.
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This is not the first time he has done this, but it is the first time he has done it with Claudius, his sharp-eyed and quick-witted brother, by his side. It will be different this time.
He takes the spirit attraction flag from the pouch at his waist, unfolding it in a flutter of black fabric, and props it up in one of the admittedly convenient empty jars on the table before him. "This will draw any spirits within the mansion directly to me," he says, for Claudius' benefit.
Almost no sooner than the flag has been unfurled, Lan Wangji feels it, an insistent tug at his spiritual senses. Wangji's strings nearly hum, as if something other than him is trying to play them.
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Time and again, Claudius has witnessed Lan Wangji work small wonders, conjuring flame, floating his qin upon the air, soothing small pains and great ones with swells of spiritual energy. Despite that, Claudius can still find it himself to be amazed. His mind turns back to time spent in meditation, trying to feel the breath of the world, trying to believe in its power. The power flowing through him also flowed through Shen Yuan and even in death, it hasn't gone from this place. Even in death, it's enough to stir the strings of an instrument, to make it sing.
His heart catches, and he waits.
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Rarely has he encountered a spirit quite this eager to answer. Shen Yuan will have no choice in any case; Lan Wangji's qin language is the work of decades, an irresistible compulsion for the dead. In this case, that skill goes wasted. When he lifts his hand, the qin appears immediately to play itself in answer.
"Shen Yuan," Lan Wangji says to Claudius, merely to confirm what they already know.
The second question: Who killed you? Shen Yuan must be weary of answering this, knowing the dangerous potential of the name. It hums out from the strings anyway, because he must respond, and because he must tell the truth. Aornis.
Here, he looks up from the qin, over to Claudius. This, too, is something they all but knew already. Now it is certain. "The name we cannot speak. She killed him."
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And listens. This is by far the longest answer he has ever received to an Inquiry question.
At length, the qin goes still again. Lan Wangji looks back to Claudius. "Maintenance is minimal. Do not change the balance of sunlight and moonlight. Keep the soil moist, especially in the morning. Keep the lattice clear and open and allow nothing to block it. Additional qi may speed growth, but too much haste will warp the final product."
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He gets the chance to indulge that faintly skeptical look after all as Shen Yuan's answer, again unreasonably verbose, plays itself. The qin is a beautiful instrument, the instrument of the sages. It was not meant to channel such nonsense.
"The seeds are, indeed, a plot contrivance, but Shen Yuan harvested these from Bai Lu Forest with someone named... Airplane." Resigned, he continues: "The plants that produced them had been inoculated with neither qi nor blood. Plants that are already growing into bodies may not produce seeds, but there is one beneath the pavilion that has also not been inoculated. He invites you to experiment with it." Here, Lan Wangji pauses, gathering the wherewithal to conclude. "He would like to look at something other than his own 'weird mushroom face.'"
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Here is a plan. And unlike every other plan (— a thought —) this one will work.
“Magnus,” he says, speaks aloud the thought. “We never found who targeted Magnus, did we? Dost thou think … ?” Someone who can perfectly cover their tracks, erase any memory of their involvement … it still feels like there’s a piece missing. Another move available in their game with Aornis. But there are connections in the gaps now, in the mysteries unsolved. “Ask Shen Yuan what happened, how she killed him. She may have used similar methods.”
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The longest pause yet follows. Lan Wangji might almost believe Shen Yuan's spirit had fled if he did not know better. When the answer comes, the notes are softer, the strings plucked with less sure, brash intent.
Claudius will certainly see the hard set to Lan Wangji's expression as the music dies out, the cold glint to his eyes. He translates, carefully. "Shen Yuan was shot with the gun whose bullet Magnus gave me. It should not have killed him. His killer can manipulate coincidence. Everything turned to her favor. Luo Binghe's sword suffered a backlash of demonic qi. The poison that once blocked Shen Yuan's qi returned and he could not heal. A song from his childhood happened to play."
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He has questions of his own. He sets his fingers to the qin strings and plays. His response comes without hesitation, one low note, a yes. Lan Wangji has gone colder still when he makes eye contact with Claudius. "That person is also the one who attacked Magnus."
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There is also a question he promised Magnus he would ask. For Claudius' benefit, again, he speaks aloud before he plays it on the qin. "I will ask Shen Yuan whether he knew he would be targeted." He had those seeds planted, ready. If there is a way to anticipate Aornis' malevolence, Lan Wangji wants to know.
This is another quick answer, identical to the last: yes. Lan Wangji pauses, the ghost of a frown tugging at his mouth. "He knew. How?" He plays the question as he asks it.
The subsequent jumble takes him a moment; to listen, to interpret, to reshape into words for Claudius. "He anticipated some attack, but not by the woman who killed him. She toyed with him and mocked Luo Binghe, but took the memory each time. It happened several times. Shen Yuan wanted a failsafe in case of a threat, because he believed the narrative of this place would demand one. It came sooner than he expected it to."
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