treave
Arcane
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2008
- Messages
- 11,370
Edit: wait, 70s. That can't be right. Does it mean Madoka was Juuzo's wife?
Why not both? :kinzo:
Edit: wait, 70s. That can't be right. Does it mean Madoka was Juuzo's wife?
So how likely it is that Maeda received his qualifications in 'child psychology' and accumulated enough money to become the founder of the Kaimei group during or in the aftermath of the World War 2?
What are you referring to?(apparrently even before we got here)
Now it turns out it wasn't completely random. Makes perfect sense.“I’m… uh…”
Shinohara Seiji.
The name flashes through your mind. You almost blurt it out.
“Shino…se…ki…” Gulping, you force out the words carefully, almost giving up under their questioning stares. “Shinoseki. Yes… that’s my name.”
It turns out to be a proper set of lockpicks. You feel a strange familiarity with the object – it seems to resonate with your soul – and as you peer at it, voices begin to float into your mind.
I think we’ve found it. This should be the right place. Kaimei Hospital, right?
I don’t know why we’re out at this spooky based on some random rumour, man.
It’s not a random rumour. Adachi-san assured me that it was real.
Really? You believe his bullshit about German gold hidden here after the war? Get real.
Even if there wasn’t, there’s always that other thing. That would fetch a pretty penny too.
No use having money if we don’t live to spend it.
Alright, I’ve got the door open…
A powerful headache drives the voices out of your head, blowing them off like leaves dancing in a strong gust of wind. As they dissipate, you somehow understand that what you heard was connected to the lockpick that you just obtained. Perhaps the voices belonged to its former owners. Still, you know that you will get nowhere standing out here in the cold. The door needs to be unlocked first. Unfolding the picks, you kneel in front of the door and begin your work.
Although Hermeticism did not truly arrive to the forefront of the Japanese Mind until 1905, a few noted personalities have been rumoured to engage in its practices well before they were popularized.
One of these personalities was Dr. Sakaguchi Kuroki, a baron in the Meiji peerage. An aficionado for all things Western, he constructed an English-styled mansion upon his return from Europe in 1888, where he dabbled in the occult through the then newly founded Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. A year later, he married Tendou Shizune, a daughter of the well-regarded Tendou family. They had long been custodians of the shrine in his home village and were said to be the top mediums of the era.
Subsequently, his interests in the paranormal expanded, and Dr. Sakaguchi was reportedly one of the first practitioners in the country to attempt a merging of European and Japanese occult practices. Though not as influential as some of the ones that came after him, Dr. Sakaguchi remains a popular figure amongst certain circles, as it is rumoured that while in Europe he discovered that rare tome sought after by all occultists, the Book of Eibon, Liber Ivonis.
Although Hermeticism did not truly arrive to the forefront of the Japanese Mind until 1905, a few noted personalities have been rumoured to engage in its practices well before they were popularized.
One of these personalities was Dr. Sakaguchi Kuroki, a baron in the Meiji peerage. An aficionado for all things Western, he constructed an English-styled mansion upon his return from Europe in 1888, where he dabbled in the occult through the then newly founded Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. A year later, he married Tendou Shizune, a daughter of the well-regarded Tendou family. They had long been custodians of the shrine in his home village and were said to be the top mediums of the era.
Subsequently, his interests in the paranormal expanded, and Dr. Sakaguchi was reportedly one of the first practitioners in the country to attempt a merging of European and Japanese occult practices. Though not as influential as some of the ones that came after him, Dr. Sakaguchi remains a popular figure amongst certain circles, as it is rumoured that while in Europe he discovered that rare tome sought after by all occultists, the Book of Eibon, Liber Ivonis.
***
The other side of the page depicts Baron Sakaguchi's family and his mansion. There appear to be five people in the photograph - the baron, his wife, their twins, and an unknown woman. The faces of the baron and the unknown woman have been ruined in the process of opening up the page.