Winthrope took the bottle in his hands and gave it a good shake, his displeasure evident. "These aren't the spider sacs, Harrison." He blinked, seeming to see her for the first time. "Oh, hello!" With a conspiratory sideways stare, the old nuit whispered behind his hand. "My idiot lab assistant got millipedes mixed up with venom sacs!" He let out a happy chortle as he set the container onto the table. "You know, a millipede only really deals in making muscles stop muscling, slows them down!" He rolled his eyes, hitting the side of his head with the heel of his palm as he muttered to himself, "Oh of course he knew that, he's Rayage after all."
Blinking a few times, he turned back to her, the gaps in his teeth showing through a loose pucker as Winthrope seemed to think. "You... don't happen to have any venom sacs? I swear they were on that shelf..." As he spoke, he literally followed his thoughts, stopping at the pages of Nader with the crude sketch of a scorpion. "Oh! Weakness when injected, nausea when ingested!" His voice rang as a sing-song, waggling his finger in rhythm before he let his hand fall to his side, a look of sadness on his face as he surveyed the dead rabbit. "Harrison." He stuck a finger into the cage, prodding the animal. "How long?" He whirled to face Rayage, eyes wide and voice excited. "How long!?"
Before she could reply, Winthrope nodded, removing his hand from the rabbit's fur to pluck several containers from the rack before snatching up a mortar and pestle from the middle table as he rounded it to get back to work. "You can't just throw whatever you want in - won't mix and that won't be any good." He muttered to himself, the second part a bit nasally as if he were impersonating someone. "Grind it up, toss it in, works best fresh." He did as he spoke, sprinkling in the addition before picking up the rod to stir it. "Painless but slow, sneaky. Drowsy." He turned a happy grin to Rayage, offering her the concoction as if it were some fancy cocktail. "Death's Sleep!"
He withdrew the offer, for a moment, a hand raised to keep her still through gesture alone. "Venom of a snake, augmented with magic. You can do that, you know? Make a poison more... poisony? It's a process, I tell you." He shook his head. "Can't make my own, but I can certainly use it." He chuckled, pouring some of the liquid into a small flask. "Some snakes melt your face, some snakes melt your brain!" He chuckled. "Some snakes only wrap you up tight. Don't want those. No good." Handing the vial to Rayage once more, Winthrope set about scribbling in his journal. This time, what he wrote was clearly visible, though it was entirely illegible. If he wrote it code, it was a complex code indeed, but there was no telling whether that was the case or if his hand writing was simply terrible. He busied himself, muttering about this and that, leaving Rayage up to her own devices. There were several more pages about the middle desk, most of the detailed sketches of a snake's anatomy, though they were incomplete and some were smudged. Whatever they had been used for before, they seemed napkins now.
There was a soft hiss from the vat behind her, a sound that had been playing in the background of his madness for some time, but indistinguishable from the sound of his voice up until that point. There were still a few living things in cages, one of which seemed to be a very dour looking, malnourished cat, the other something that could easily have been mistaken for a nuit in the body of a rat. Winthrope was in his own world, oblivious to questions save a short, expectant glance at the tube in Rayage's hand before going back to his notes, muttering about "lotus root".
Blinking a few times, he turned back to her, the gaps in his teeth showing through a loose pucker as Winthrope seemed to think. "You... don't happen to have any venom sacs? I swear they were on that shelf..." As he spoke, he literally followed his thoughts, stopping at the pages of Nader with the crude sketch of a scorpion. "Oh! Weakness when injected, nausea when ingested!" His voice rang as a sing-song, waggling his finger in rhythm before he let his hand fall to his side, a look of sadness on his face as he surveyed the dead rabbit. "Harrison." He stuck a finger into the cage, prodding the animal. "How long?" He whirled to face Rayage, eyes wide and voice excited. "How long!?"
Before she could reply, Winthrope nodded, removing his hand from the rabbit's fur to pluck several containers from the rack before snatching up a mortar and pestle from the middle table as he rounded it to get back to work. "You can't just throw whatever you want in - won't mix and that won't be any good." He muttered to himself, the second part a bit nasally as if he were impersonating someone. "Grind it up, toss it in, works best fresh." He did as he spoke, sprinkling in the addition before picking up the rod to stir it. "Painless but slow, sneaky. Drowsy." He turned a happy grin to Rayage, offering her the concoction as if it were some fancy cocktail. "Death's Sleep!"
He withdrew the offer, for a moment, a hand raised to keep her still through gesture alone. "Venom of a snake, augmented with magic. You can do that, you know? Make a poison more... poisony? It's a process, I tell you." He shook his head. "Can't make my own, but I can certainly use it." He chuckled, pouring some of the liquid into a small flask. "Some snakes melt your face, some snakes melt your brain!" He chuckled. "Some snakes only wrap you up tight. Don't want those. No good." Handing the vial to Rayage once more, Winthrope set about scribbling in his journal. This time, what he wrote was clearly visible, though it was entirely illegible. If he wrote it code, it was a complex code indeed, but there was no telling whether that was the case or if his hand writing was simply terrible. He busied himself, muttering about this and that, leaving Rayage up to her own devices. There were several more pages about the middle desk, most of the detailed sketches of a snake's anatomy, though they were incomplete and some were smudged. Whatever they had been used for before, they seemed napkins now.
There was a soft hiss from the vat behind her, a sound that had been playing in the background of his madness for some time, but indistinguishable from the sound of his voice up until that point. There were still a few living things in cages, one of which seemed to be a very dour looking, malnourished cat, the other something that could easily have been mistaken for a nuit in the body of a rat. Winthrope was in his own world, oblivious to questions save a short, expectant glance at the tube in Rayage's hand before going back to his notes, muttering about "lotus root".