Urgency took over Ophelia's desire to check in with Gerlinde and Torquil, and getting the false Paleblood out was the most important thing--so she and Gerlinde left and awoke in the same opulent surrounds as before. Ophelia fished the case out of the sack that she'd taken with her and left the cloth by the lantern, quickly surging forward and assuming the reverent and kneeling position that she had on her last visit while presenting the box up towards Annalise.
"Old Blood, as requested, Your Majesty... and something else. I... fear this will require some explanation, if I may?"
The queen started raising her hand and arranging her fingers to snap them, but seemed to pause as Ophelia's report continued. "Thou may, Lady Ophelia. Speak freely."
"The Gilded Trickster's false Paleblood is also within this box. I do not know how much you know of Paleblood and the Hunter's Dream that it is tied to--and I would not wish to disrespect you by explaining to you what you may already know."
"Very little," the queen admitted. "I know it is ancient and of the Nightmare, but little else. Explain, and I shall excuse any repetition of what I already know."
Ophelia nodded. "True Paleblood, like that Gerlinde and I bear, is an innate gift from the Great One Flora. The Hunter's Dream belongs to her, as do the little ones that serve us. This false Paleblood is an imitation crafted by the gilded one, and a means by which he is trying to usurp our Dream and claim it as his own... for immortality like ours. We erred gravely in bringing it to our Dream, where it temporarily disturbed that realm enough for him to influence it somewhat, and we cannot keep it there. You seem to be well acquainted with the lore of blood, Your Majesty, and in a position of safety and security besides; I had hoped that you might perhaps be able to learn something of it, of our mutual enemy, and safeguard it... or destroy it, if there is naught to be learned from it and you deem it wise."
Nodding her head, Queen Annalise finally snapped her fingers, and a black-robed figure once again emerged, only to this time - unprompted - to approach Ophelia, reaching out its hands to receive what she had for them. As it got closer and faced her directly, Ophelia might notice that within its hood, deep in the unnatural darkness in there, there were the faintest hints of Guidance sprites dancing in its depths.
"It shall be safe in Castle Cainhurst," the queen declared. "We will learn what we can."
"Thank you, Your Majesty." Ophelia began, offering the box to the servant as she gazed up into their hood and took notes of the little sprites. "I also bring grave tidings concerning the White Healing Church: Vicar Harold--an inhuman puppet of the Gilded Trickster--has denounced us, as we have freed the First Hunter from his influence, and has declared war upon us and all of Yharnam. Your forces were already embroiled in a war with them, but now others will join the fray too. I mean to contact as many groups as is possible and recruit them in pursuit of our mutual enemy. I also feel obliged to let you know that they seem to have some method of controlling others against their will--a Hunter who aided us when we first awoke has been cocooned in golden armour, with a queer device atop his head, that seemed to render him insensate and obedient... I know not how many of these resources the enemy bears, but that they can do it at all is a tremendous worry. Fortunately, as I understand it, the Mask rune that I may brand into people should protect against it... so I once again offer those services to your forces. For all of your Hunters to be protected from the insidious influence of Gold will surely be a boon in the conflict to come."
The servant received the case and stepped to the side of the room, but then just remained standing there in silence.
"A Hunter," the queen mused, thoughtfully tapping a claw-like fingernail on the armrest of her throne. "Who was this Hunter?"
"His name is Victor," Ophelia began and offered a simple description of his features.
The queen shook her head and interrupted Ophelia: "I do not know this name, and I cannot see with this mask to recognize your description. What was his affiliation? Was he an especially powerful ally?"
"My apologies--he was not a particularly powerful ally, in the grand scheme of things... but he helped us and came to be something of a friend. I did not get the sense he bore the White Church any particular loyalty. He came to Yharnam shortly after the Blood Moon was over, and has survived as a Hunter since then--a sure sign of tenacity, if nothing else, though it was told to me that he had a potential problem with an overindulgence in blood. It hurts me, deeply, to see anyone taken from themselves--especially in service of one so foul. It... it is personal, Your Majesty."
The queen nodded her head slowly. "I understand thy grief, Lady Ophelia. We Vilebloods seek to destroy the Healing Church, as we have ever since their betrayal; if the time comes for us to do battle against them, we may avail ourselves of thy offer of this rune, in spite of its ill-omened name."
Ophelia let a small smile come over her at the queen's words, just for a second, before she exhaled purposefully. "Then I suppose I am a Vileblood after all, for destroying the White Healing Church and its master is now my heart's most fervent wish as well. If it pleases you, I would like to partake of the blood that you offered before--to cement us as allies true, to wield every weapon against the Healing Church. To take every advantage."
Nodding once again, the queen grimly dragged the nail of her right index finger across her left wrist, causing a small amount of blood to immediately flow from the wound. She offered the wrist to Ophelia. "Very well. Drink deep of Our blood. Feel the spreading corruption burn."
Ophelia did as bidden, though she could not disguise the displeasure at the act from her face or voice. Indeed, she did feel it burn deep within her, joining the nestled ember of vengeance in her heart and beginning to pump with its rhythm throughout her form.
As Ophelia drank, Annalise declared: "Now, thou’rt too a Vileblood. Welcome, Lady Ophelia. For the honor of Cainhurst."
Ophelia has obtained the Corruption Rune. When when branded on a Hunter's mind, this rune will allow them to retain a degree of superhuman regeneration even when their regenerative potential has been fully depleted. The rate of this healing is approximately one fifth of a Hunter's normal rate."For the honour of Cainhurst." Ophelia repeated, satisfied once more with the feeling of having acquired another rune. She wondered about her familial legacy, about the choices that had been made and that had eventually led her here, and wondered if it had always been her fate--if one ascribed to such a concept.
"Papa... his name was Laertes, I think. Do you perhaps recognise it, Your Majesty? I... know very little of my childhood. My parents went to the woods when I was young and never returned--I don't even remember their faces, though... I need not explain that pain to you, I know." Ophelia continued, perhaps one of the rare instances of uncertainty creeping into her voice that she'd felt that night.
"I know of one who was once called Laertes," the queen confirmed solemnly. "Once upon a time he numbered among my knights, before the Healing Church wiped them all out. He disappeared, and we never knew what happened. I suppose now I do."
"Mother Moon was gracious, to give us both some element of closure. And to bring us together. Now... I do not wish to sound ungrateful, Your Majesty, but may I have the chalice as promised? Something of great value was taken from us in the Dream, and restoring my Holy Moonlight Sword is my only recourse to getting it back. For that, I will need the chalice." Ophelia replied, not hiding the wistful notes from her voice. It wasn't much, but it was something--she'd have to go to the woods to find out more... and she would, she resolved.
The queen turned her sightless head toward the black-clad servant holding the case. "Have we confirmed that this is Hunter Old Blood?"
The servant silently grasped the lid of the case and pulled on it to no avail.
"It would appear that whatever thou brought is not accessible," the queen said, a note of disapproval in her voice. "The case is locked."
"Ah, yes--I... in wake of what happened, I... I had hoped it would be easy to simply dismantle the case, and we had to vacate the Dream urgently once we realised the effects of having brought it there. Still, that is no excuse for my negligence, Your Majesty, and I humbly beseech your forgiveness. Pray return the case to me, and I shall see if there is anything that I can do while here; if not, I shall leave it in your safekeeping and return when I have the key." Ophelia stammered haltingly, as if only just realising what had happened in her haste. She had been so overcome by everything that it simply hadn't occurred to her at all.
The servant obediently returned the case to Ophelia, allowing her to examine it. The metal case, though ornate, was also clearly quite sturdy and equipped with a heft built-in lock that prevented the lid from being opened. There did not seem to be any openings or weaknesses in its construction that could facilitate forcing it open, and the lock - from what familiarity she had with such things - seemed rather complex and durable. She would surmise that while it might be possible to break the case open, the force required to do so could be very likely to damage its contents.
Ophelia examined the box thoroughly, coming to the conclusion that only a very precise and controlled means of extraordinary force could open it without risking its contents--something that she could not risk. She beckoned the messengers from her already-kneeling position and wrote a quick message to Farren:
'Need to unlock case, can't see a way to do so without damaging contents. Have you any talent for lockpicking or know someone who does?'
Shortly thereafter, while waiting for a response, she whispered to the Holy Moonlight Sword:
Could I loose your power just enough to breach the lock, without risking the contents inside?The whispers simply replied: "
It is not a precision instrument."
Ophelia permitted herself a slight dry chuckle at the response.
"I've written to my companions in the Dream, Your Majesty, inquiring whether they might have the skills to open this case without risking its contents. If not, I shall return with such a person or the key as soon as possible. I am again deeply sorry for my haste, and shall make amends."
As Farren stood, near Torquil, fidgeting by running his fingers over the grooves and faint textures and patterns 'pon the hilt of his blades, Messengers rose from the grass at his feet. He stiffened a moment, but when they held up a scroll, as if beckoning him, Farren smiled faintly and took a knee. In his usual, slow way, he read the message. As expected, it was from Ophelia.
He made a small sound, like a hum as he considered, closing his eyes a moment. Faint recollections came to him, sensations and textures...cold metal, deft motions. His fingers twitched, his eyes opened. Farren did not send a message in return. He frowned a moment, sighed lightly and glanced to Torquil,
“The case was locked, it seems. I'll be back,” he provided, then he went to the headstone and pressed two fingers to the same name that Ophelia had.
His mind shifted towards sleep, Farren felt time skip a step, and then he was waking within the throne room of the Queen's court.
“Your majesty,” Farren said respectfully, giving her a sloppy bow--he'd never learned proper etiquette after all--before he rose once more, his still faintly luminescent eyes scanning the room until he saw the robed figure and the case.
“Don't have tools of my own...” he said clearly as his azure-eyes fixed upon the case.
“But I may have sufficient skill to wield them, if your highness' court might provide.”"I fear that the position of locksmith is one that is currently unfilled in Castle Cainhurst," the queen sighed impatiently. "Thou'rt permitted to visit our workshop, but I know not whether our tools can do much against this container."
Ophelia only heard Farren enter, and did not look up in her speech for fear of displeasing the queen further. "Thank you, Your Majesty. We will try. Where is the workshop?"
When the directions were given, she would lead Farren and proceed.
Farren waited, letting his teeth grind a bit, not out of further irritation, but to occupy his thoughts. Once they had a course to take, he'd follow easily.
At a gesture from the Vileblood Queen, the black figure wordlessly gestured for them to follow and walked toward the opposite end of the chamber. As they walked they passed by even more of the awesome yet somewhat archaic art and architecture of Cainhurst Castle. Just outside the throne room itself they passed through a long stairway flanked on both sides by sizeable statues of armored lancers atop equally armored horses, intermingled with more elaborate columns with golden trimmings. Shafts of pale light fell through equidistant windows in the ceiling, giving the entire hallway - which indeed seemed to serve no other purpose than a grand passage leading up to the queen's chamber - an ethereal feel.
The rest of the castle, as they passed through it, was somewhat less ostentatious but no less impressive than what they had been through initially. Following the servant they passed through an immense library with many, many shelves, some of which were many floors high, tightly packed with countless tomes and scrolls. And everywhere, Ophelia would occasionally notice stray little Guidance sprites fluttering about, signifying the presence of the Nightmare... but that was not all. Ophelia and Farren both would find that while the parts of the castle they passed through seemed mostly deserted, they would occasionally catch glimpses of movement or hear a hushed voice or the rustle of cloth, only to look and find nothing there. Once or twice they might notice a faint pale, translucent face with sunken eyes peering at them from a shaded corner, only for it to disperse back into the shadow.
Here, further away from the throne room, Ophelia would get a similar sense from Castle Cainhurst as she had on her visit to Yahar'gul: a sense of tragedy, fear, agony and death... but also hatred, rage and thirst for vengeance. This was Castle Cahinhurst... or at least what the Executioners of the Healing Church had made it.
Eventually they reached a place that was recognizably equipped as a Hunter's workshop, staffed by another two black-robed figures like the one guiding them. Here, Farren would find the tools he needed.
Taking a selection of appropriately useful tools from the workshop, Farren went to work on the lock with Ophelia and Gerlinde supervising, and three identical, anonymous black-robed figures simply lingering silently in their vicinity. Though the tools were not meant for picking locks, they were of high quality and meant for delicate creation and maintenance of complex Hunter armaments, so they worked as well or better for the task.
Even so it was still by far the single most difficult lock Farren, let alone Ophelia and Gerlinde, had ever encountered. After five minutes of fiddling he felt several moving parts inside slip out of his grasp, and he might very well realize that a bad mistake could end up irrevocably damaging the mechanism to the point of rendering the lock permanently closed. After ten minutes his progress got reset again as he felt tumblers slipping. But finally, after fifteen long, tense minutes of extreme focus, Farren was finally rewarded with the feel of the lock relenting to his pressure, allowing itself to move as if the correct key had been inserted, to finally be unlocked with a click.
Finally, Farren relaxed and slowly eased the tools from the lock now that the mechanism had released. When everything was clear–his ear near the case of blood–and he hadn’t heard anything click back into their former positions, Farren pulled away and nodded to Ophelia and the gathered figures,
“There...unlocked. Careful that you do not lock it again, it’s a fragile, fraught thing. The wrong turn and it’ll break and be sealed forever,” he said, only slightly exaggerating. They could break it, after all, but that would almost certainly pollute the blood within.
When no one else took the immediate action to open it, Farren wiped the sweat from his brow with his sleeve, set aside his tools, and then moved to reveal the case's contents. Hopefully their efforts had been worth it.
What actually happened:
With the lock disengaged the metal case yielded easily to Farren's fingers, revealing its contents. The interior of the case, it turned out, was covered in a heavy layer of soft, shock-absorbent blue padding on both bottom and lid, designed to trap the items inside between them and prevent them from shifting and potentially breaking.
The first two thirds of the case from the right to well past the middle were filled with tiny corked bottles, each less than half the size of one of the blood vials they were familiar with. There were a total of fifty of these, though all but five of them were already empty; those last five still contained what appeared to be blood.
The leftmost third of the case, meanwhile, was occupied by a single much larger container: what appeared to be a cylinder of copper or bronze, inscribed with numerous Caryll Runes and bearing a small faucet on one side.
Ophelia peered inside eagerly as Farren opened the case, curious to see precisely what the contents were. She was a little disappointed to find only five remaining vials of Old Blood, sure enough, but it
was enough to fulfil their end of the bargain with Annalise and obtain the chalice. Perhaps it had also been enough time for the Dream to have recovered. She peered at the canister inscribed with runes, and sought to identify as many as possible: she expected it would bear much the same runes as the case. She was also curious as to whether guidance sprites might be found around or within the canister containing false Paleblood... though she felt no desire to loose any of the foul substance from its container.
"Let's get this back to Annalise. The sooner we've a manner to get the Doll back, the better--without her, we've no ability to transfer our echoes into strength." Ophelia said, directing the last bit at Gerlinde specifically. It was easy to make Gerlinde care, she'd found: it simply required a little rephrasing.
Farren nodded, grunting his assent. He did not affix the top of the case back on for fear it might seal automatically. Hefting the case gingerly, he gestured they go back the way they came. He did pause however, glancing to one of the robed figures,
“Might I return when a moment presents itself?” He inquired, wanting to verify he’d have access later on.
Ophelia suddenly had a thought, and went scurrying about the workshop as she gathered up a loose leaf of paper and some errant charcoal, and picked up the container of false Paleblood gingerly. She examined it over, mumbling aloud the names of the runes that she recognised: "Eye... Lake... Deep Sea... This one's Metamorphosis... Heir... and Dream. What are you..?" She spoke as she took the paper and the charcoal and made a rubbing of the runes that she did not recognise so she could examine them more thoroughly later.
"Alright. Let's get this delivered--I want to get back to Torquil. I hope he's doing alright on his own..." Ophelia said, a tinge of regret in her voice at leaving him alone in the Dream like that.
She then returned the false Paleblood to its little recess within the container, picked it up, and headed back with the others the way that they'd come. Something
was haunting about the bits of the castle they traversed, where something truly tragic had happened with sufficient intensity of feeling to poison the very air. Old Blood could capture echoes of feeling and desire, that they knew, but the essence of the Nightmare seemed to be able to do a similar thing too--and the place was forever stained by the sins and trespasses committed by the awful Healing Church of Old. It made Ophelia seethe, truth be told, and the faintest pricking of the burning now home within her blood vindicated that feeling many times over.
Once back in the throne room, Ophelia reverently placed her blessed blade on the ground next to her and held the opened box aloft as she addressed the Queen, ready for her servant to take it.
"Unlocked and opened, Your Majesty. Five vials of Hunter Old Blood. We shall keep our eyes peeled for more and deliver that too if we can."
The black figure that had accompanied them to the workshop also followed them back, and when Ophelia offered up the case anew it also took it from her without encouragement. Even so the queen still snapped her fingers before speaking: "Five doses is plenty for now, Lady Ophelia. Thou'st done thy duty, and I shall do mine."
From the hallway they had just entered from arrived a second black figure, identical to the first, only where the first now held the case of Hunter's Old Blood in front of it, this one came bearing a large, very impressive crystal chalice with ornamentations of silver and gold. It held it out for one of them to take.
"This is the chalice thou seek; take it with my blessing. Today, thy deeds have done much to aid the noble cause of the Vilebloods."
Ophelia took the chalice and held it one hand, and picked up her blade with the other. "I am honoured to further our cause, Your Majesty, and only regret my earlier haste. I've one last thing to humbly ask of you ere I leave: your library is expansive indeed, filled with many tomes containing precious knowledge. Might I avail myself of them, should the need arise? I would be happy to read them to you, as well, if such a thing would please you."
Queen Annalise nodded her head in agreement. "I will allow it. The library of Cainhurst holds more history than all the scholars of Byrgenwerth, the Choir and the School of Mensis knew combined. Finding what thou need may prove a truly arduous task, but thou'st permission to browse at thy convenience."
Ophelia nodded her gratitude, and spoke it for the Queen's benefit: "Thank you, Your Majesty. I am certain that we shall speak soon, and am full glad to leave something so perilous as the false Paleblood somewhere so safe."
With that she rose, nodded to the others, and moved towards the familiar lantern to return to the Dream with their prize. One step closer to restoration.
Sighing internally, but not aloud, Farren begrudgingly lowered himself to one knee once Ophelia and the Queen had finished their own exchange. He spoke up then,
“If it would not be much trouble, your grace…access to the workshop would be greatly appreciated as well,” he said, the request implied.
"Then it shall be so," she agreed with another nod of her head. "The Vileblood Workshop shall be at thy disposal."
“Gratitude,” Farren said, sounding slightly relieved. He bowed his head briefly, then rose to his feet, ready to depart.