De Vries succumbs to ritual terror
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
De Vries becomes frantic, realizing the raven is gone, and Martha expresses concern.
De Vries' panic escalates as a glowing standing stone appears outside, and he orders Martha to flee.
Martha refuses to leave De Vries, showing her loyalty and concern.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Panic masked by ritualistic phrasing, rapidly devolving into terror as symbols of his power vanish
De Vries’ composed facade dissolves into manic desperation as ritual omens betray him, his voice rising from command to plea. His body language betrays a cornered man, twitching toward the window as the standing stone glides past, his authority evaporating in real time alongside his crumbling faith in the Cailleach.
- • To regain control over the chaotic ritual by reasserting divine authority through the Cailleach
- • To extricate himself from the situation by forcing Martha to flee, ensuring his own survival despite the ritual’s mounting failure
- • That the Cailleach’s presence is imminent and manipulable through ritual invocation
- • That human sacrifice is a necessary and sanctioned means to restore cosmic order
Conflicted devotion—rooted in devotion to De Vries but shaken by the ritual’s collapse
Martha responds to De Vries’ breakdown with quiet resolve, her loyalty to him conflicting with the growing horror of the unfolding ritual disaster. She braces against the encroaching chaos, physically reacting to the crashing glass but steadfast in refusing his orders to leave.
- • To prevent De Vries from facing the ritual’s consequences alone
- • To understand the true nature of the forces he claims to command
- • That ritual adherence must be tempered by human compassion
- • That De Vries’ interpretations of the Cailleach’s will are corrupted by his desperation
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The raven, symbolic of ritual omens and De Vries’ claimed divine favor, disappears without warning, stripping him of his veneer of control. Its absence exposes the hollow foundation of his rites, leaving a void that the glowing standing stone’s apparition immediately overpowers as a new, uncontrollable omen.
The glowing standing stone materializes outside the study window as a physical manifestation of the ritual’s failure. Its pulsating blue light pierces the decaying grandeur of the room, visually embodying the unstoppable arcane force De Vries can no longer control or interpret.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The study transforms from a space of scholarly ritual into a crumbling theater of crisis, its brooding atmosphere condensed under the weight of supernatural disruption. The shattered French windows and scattered debris from earlier violence frame De Vries’ collapse, with the standing stone’s eerie glow exposing the room’s fragility as a bastion of false control.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The brutal murder of De Vries and Martha (beat_ae1cc638ae9627d6) escalates the threat level, foreshadowing the Cailleach’s blood ritual and the glowing stone at the circle (beat_9ddd1dc05d95b74a), demonstrating the violence of ancient forces in the modern world."
Doctor finds silicon residue from the killer"De Vries’ panic over the missing raven and the appearance of the glowing standing stone (beat_9ddd1dc05d95b74a) directly precedes the Cailleach’s formal blood ritual commanding the Ogri (beat_49c77d04c97b2502), linking ritualistic signs to performative acts of power."
Cailleach commands Ogri through blood rite