Book Five, Chapter 22: Horrific Events Through the Ages
The Carousel Atlas’ section on rescues was written, or at least rewritten, by Curtis W., who was the same guy whose journal entries in the Atlas told us about Project Rewind.
He proposed a system for rating rescue tropes based on three criteria: Potency, Availability, and Risk (PAR).
I read through the entry in the Atlas aloud so that everyone else could hear.
"Availability is exactly like it sounds," I said. "It's how likely, on a scale of one to five, a rescue trope is to work in any given storyline. Potency is about how straightforward and beatable the 'game' becomes, with emphasis on the win condition that the rescue trope creates. Risk is a question of the conditions for the rescue trope and whether they favor rescuers or not."
I continued reading to myself for a little bit, but Antoine interrupted me.
"What kind of conditions are we talking about?" he asked. "Is that talking about the live-to-tell-the-tale part?"
"Yes," I said. “Rescue tropes with high risk create storylines that are just as dangerous to the rescuers as they are to the people they were rescuing. The ones with low risk: You can fail the rescue, but as long as you don't die, you’ll be fine."
Antoine nodded. "Mine must be low risk then."
In fact, there was a way to check.
Popular rescue tropes had their own small sections. Antoine’s rescue trope was called a Race Against Time. It had a risk of two, a potency of four, and an availability of three.
Kimberly's rescue trope was A Woman in Mourning. It had an availability of one, a potency of five, and a risk of four.
My rescue trope was not listed. Overall, the Atlas didn’t have much information about Film Buffs.
"I kind of like Dina's," I said. "It was a pretty popular one from what I can tell."
I looked up from the book. She wasn’t there.
"Where’s Dina?" I asked.
"She went downstairs," Kimberly answered.
For the first time in a while, I put the Atlas down and took a moment to see what the others were doing. Surprise, surprise, they had not been just listening to me with rapt attention. Cassie was trying to use her psychic trope to learn more about the enemy we faced. She was not having a good time.
"I’m sorry," she said, tears flowing down her cheeks. “I’m trying my best, but it just isn’t working."
Kimberly comforted her. "There’s clearly something about this storyline that makes scouting it hard," Kimberly said soothingly. "We’ll figure it out. Don’t you worry."
But Cassie was worried because her brother's life was literally on the line.
At that moment, Dina came back upstairs holding a beer with its label torn off, which is how they sometimes appear in movies to obstruct the brand name.
"The creepy guy's back," she said.
There was a man who was clearly up to something, but it wasn't clear what. He would just stare at us anytime we went down to the restaurant. He wasn’t an omen, and he wasn’t an enemy as far as we could tell, but he was unnerving because he wasn't hiding his staring at all. He was an NPC with a generic title, “Drifter.”
No name other than that.
We had seen him a few times.
"I got something," Cassie said. "It's weird, but I’m definitely hearing something."
Dina stopped and stared as we waited for Cassie to extract as much information as possible from her I’m Blocked trope.
"It’s talking too fast," she added.
We waited as Cassie listened to something we couldn’t hear.
"Well, I’m going upstairs to get some ice," Dina said. She went toward the stairs that led up to the roof, and after she was out of the room, Cassie exclaimed, "I lost it!"
Cassie started to cry; her eyeliner was hopelessly smeared.
I didn’t know what was going on with this storyline that we were having such difficulty doing scouting. It was true that whatever tropes the storyline had would apply to the scout’s abilities as if they were in a storyline.
That was likely the reason that the Atlas contained very little scouting information for the story.
If we could just figure out what was going on, we might be able to learn something more. Of course, it would be easier one day when we had lots of players who could contribute.
Back at Camp Dyer, anytime someone needed to scout out a new storyline, they could make the rounds, talking to all the different archetypes they could find with dozens of different scouting tropes that could tell you all kinds of information.
They never let us do that because they wanted us to learn to play the game the old-fashioned way.
After a moment, Dina came back down the stairs and asked, "Why can we not keep the ice scoop in the ice machine?"
"Just use the cup," Isaac said. "It's there for a reason."
In the middle of a town filled with horror stories, the biggest debate going on at the loft was whether the metal scoop we owned should be used in the rice bin or the ice machine. Everyone took sides, and it got messy.
"It’s back," Cassie said. "I hear it again. It's just talking so fast."
"Whatever," Dina said as she went back upstairs again.
"What are you trying to drink beer with ice?" Isaac asked.
"I want a glass of ice water," Dina said as she continued walking back upstairs.
Isaac shrugged.
"I lost it," Cassie said again. This time there were no tears, just resignation.
I started to notice a pattern.
"Dina, come back down here," I said. "Just for a second, come back down."
Cassie picked up the book and tried using her newly acquired trope, Curios and Trinkets, to feel if it was an occult item. It allowed her to intuitively compare one magical item to others that she had collected.
She said, "This is nothing like the flask."
She shrugged her shoulders and handed the book to me.
The flask was the now cement-filled item that had been used to summon the Spirit of Vengeance in the Die Cast storyline. If the book was nothing like it, that meant that there was no spirit inside the book that could be invoked, or at least that’s what I understood the trope to mean.
Did that make it safe?
I had to hope so.
It would be unfair if my scouting trope had told me about this book in the trailers for The Strings Attached storyline, and it turned out to be a trap. However, we couldn't be too careful.
As we walked back to the loft, I couldn’t even open the book and take a peek simply because I needed to keep my eyes out for omens. But when we finally reentered our safe space, the first thing I did was take the book up to the roof and find a chair in the shade.
It didn't take me long to completely regret finding the book.
Reading through it was like reading one of those Guinness World Record books that everybody wanted in the 5th grade. The cool pictures and the fun text entries convinced our young minds that everyone in the world was trying to win records through various odd feats of human skill.
This book had the same tone.
Whoever wrote about these massacres and horrific deaths did so as if they were reporting feats of human athleticism or mental prowess.
“Six dead from a rat poison accident at Sundown Bakery,” one entry read.
The entry lamented the fact that the accident happened at a relatively unpopular bakery—not that they wanted more deaths, but that they wanted a better record.
The entire book was ghoulish and unsettling, especially because, as I came to realize, many of the photographs were too close to the accidents. They were taken too soon as if the photographer knew what was about to happen and was sitting around waiting for it.
I was reading through a sickening entry about crowd crush at some sort of festival in Carousel when I saw something that made me jump up from my chair and run to the others.
"It’s them," I said. "Look!"
I pointed to the black-and-white photo. It was a horrifying image, and I wish I had warned Kimberly and Antoine before they looked. Bodies were mangled together as if twisted and fused, the people dying from the weight of those on top of them—a terrible image.
Next to the alleyway where that occurred, I saw a brunette in a denim jacket with her hair tied in a ponytail next to a man with jet black hair and a missing arm, cut off at the elbow.
"Oh my God," Kimberly said as she looked at the photo.
Antoine stared at the image and then looked up at me. "So we can track where they were in the storyline, right?" he asked.
All we knew, aside from what I had seen with my scouting trope, was that their storyline involved time travel. Anna was not willing to spoil anything more than that in the letter she wrote us and attached to the back of Silas the Mechanical Showman.
"It might be useful," I said. "I don’t know. I can check to see if they’re in any of the other photos. Maybe we can trace their path, assuming they went to other dates in the book."
That was something I could do. It felt like progress.
I didn’t like looking at the horrific pictures.
Funny enough, if these exact same pictures had appeared in a movie, they might not have bothered me aside from maybe a jump scare here and there.
But the book, with its strange tone and the knowledge that in some way these deaths were real, whether it was a fictional event portrayed by NPCs or real events brought here from a universe unknown...
I went back to my seat and flipped open the book, double-checking to see if there was any indication of who the author was or when it was published, but I got nothing. For all I knew, the book was self-published within its storyline.
There was no way to tell.
But the more I read it, the more I got to know its voyeuristic author.
The entries were written in the tone of someone who really enjoyed the sport of rubbernecking history's greatest tragedies.
He didn't emphasize the gore or the sadness, but he did commentate on how there could have been more deaths or why a particular tragedy didn't rank highly for him in one way or another.
One quote I picked up on was, "There was very little screaming because the victims did not realize their fate until it was upon them. Oh well, the looks on their faces at the end were well worth the trip."
At that moment, it dawned on me that this wasn't just some book written by coincidence that was used in a time travel storyline.
From the way he talked, it almost sounded like he was collecting mini-vacations to tragic events.
Still, he did lament the deaths of children and women on occasion but was never overly sympathetic to them.
After enough time, I finally found another picture with Camden and Anna in it.
It was something that happened in 2010—a group of teenagers died in the woods from apparent suicides.
One picture was of the police investigating.
In the background, I saw Anna and Camden walking down the road. I recognized the road. It was one of the roads that led to Camp Dyer.
And suddenly, I had all the pieces, and I could put together what had happened. They had gone to that specific tragedy to collect the Atlas in 2010, back before it was so heavily censored.
But that mere clarification was not what I was after. That was just details of information I already knew.
What I needed to know was how to save them.
That answer didn’t come.
As I flipped through the pages and looked intently at each picture to try and find my friends, I started to notice that there was one obscured figure in many of the pictures. It was the same man I had seen in the shadowy alleyway in the trailer for Post Traumatic—the man wearing an overcoat with the strange amulet.
I was done reading. I started to bring the book back down inside, but something within me did not allow it. The book had genuinely creeped me out, and I had no desire to take it inside our sanctuary. I went to the bar that was on the ceiling not far from where I was sitting and found a cabinet to stash the book in. The ceiling was off-limits to enemies and omens the same as the loft, but it was also outside, and that’s where I left it.