[27.2408D3, 67.8649F1
Pattern confirmed. Specimen classification: Unknown. Threat level: Unknown. Advisory: Exercise caution; the subject is considered dangerous. Agent autonomy request: Denied. S/U request: Pending. Normal restrictions apply.]
Nnh.
The world shifted, it twisted and contorted, and it wrapped about and within; it shattered and splintered only to become whole once more - and that was the easy part. No one agent could accurately describe how that devil's mechanical abomination actually made its occupants feel. To have your very being broken down, compressed, transported by incomprehensible means, and then to find yourself wholly intact and in another world -
the world, to be exact - like nothing had ever happened? It was a hard thing to live through, let alone get used to.
"Wait," the man said and got up from his knees; he was dressed in well-made, though worn by use, clothing: a simple traveler's shirt, a pair of loose brown trousers, a belt around his waist, and what may have once been a cloak but was now a tattered, bunched muffler around his neck.
"Caution?" He asked. "Did you say 'exercise caution'?"
There was no audible answer: The man stood alone in a forested clearing with no living soul nearby enough to answer him.
“Don’t worry,“ he uplifted his hand and, using his index finger, he scratched at a disfiguring scar running down the center of his face, taking a portion of the bridge of his nose with it, and a good, large chunk of his left cheek as it veered off in a curve.
“I’m not so easy to kill now-a-days.”
Actually, he wasn’t entirely sure he
could die a normal death anymore, but, well, he supposed one way or another, if things turned out like how they expected, he would find out for sure in the next few days; of course, that was assuming the devil’s projections were right and the rampaging voleur d’ame was, in fact, heading here next. For what it mattered, this was the largest collection of souls in the region and the most logical destination for a psychopathic, destruction-hungry voleur d’ame. All Bojan had to do was wait for all hell to break loose and then subdue the thing.
The town - Duland, was it? - was pretty much exactly how Bojan had pictured it to be: quiet, surrounded by wooden walls that spoke of rougher times, and full of life, of animal and human souls. He could taste it in the air, in fact; he suspected that the doctor really was onto something when he suggested this place as the most likely destination.
Bojan stopped just outside the entrance of the northernmost wall and turned to face the direction he had come from. Stretching his senses out, he surveyed the distance briefly before reigning them back in and leaning against the wall; he folded his arms and smiled inwardly to himself.
“Nothing strange, m’am,” he said out loud, “but it could already be waiting inside town, I guess, and just isn’t causing any trouble yet. Might be a few days, maybe, but I’ll check in every hour or so.”
A moment after speaking, Bojan nodded, unfolded his arms, and resumed heading into town. There was a list of things he needed to do before he could rest comfortably: First and foremost, he needed to rent a room and order a few drinks, tell a few stories, too, and get this town to like him enough before they started to question just how a man could survive the kind of wound that had made the scar on Bojan's face. Some things were better left a mystery.