Earwa > The Darkness That Comes Before

Inrau and the Cants of Compulsion

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MSJ:
Wolfdrop, I just read the scene and it has to be a compulsion. Or, its what it seems to be. But, it is the same meeting as the Shrial Knights. Maybe it wasn't a Compulsion, which we know is a way to gain info (which Akka said he was against vehemently, and I truly don't think he would use it.). I think it might have been a calling of some kind, you know, to get Inrau where he could talk to him in private and let him know why he was in Summa. To me, I don't think it was a Can't of Compulsion. But, I do believe it was a way the Akka uses to lure someone where he wants them. We know what the Compulsions do, look no further then Xinemus. I don't think for one second it was a Compulsion. But, I do believe sorcery was at work.

Here's what I think, I think it was a Can't of Calling. And what Inrau's inner dialogue is, is of Akka sending to him. And, this makes sense and also adds up. Moe sent dreams to Ishual and no Mark was left, per Kellhus (another argument, but I believe and can offer proof that Kellhus got those dreams, just read the Leweth sections.). Hence no mark. And, Akka planted the info in Inrau dreams to meet him at the bar. Another thing that makes me know its not a compulsion is that their in Summa. Home of the Thousand Temples, a spy sorcerers worse nightmare. No, it was a calling to get Inrau to where he needed him, without risking the Temple, Shrial Knights and the College of Luthemaye.

Still, great find.

Wolfdrop:
Hmm I definitely like idea of a Cant of Calling, but what confuses me if how immediate he goes from the dreamlike state to physically being there.

I had thought the purpose of the Cant was to force Inrau to meet him.

Doesn’t a Cant of Calling depend on the sender knowing the exact location of the sleeping receiver, hence how Moenghus could send the dreams.

Man, this is a mindfuck.

Wilshire:
Cant of Calling - exclusively used to speak with a sleeping person what you know the location of. I doubt Inrau was sleeping and that Akka knew where he was.

Very interesting section :) as do pretty much all of Inrau's sections.
Inrau's sequences have lots of oddities in them and even retcons/mistakes, I struggle to use any of them to draw meaningful conclusions. He does seem to be rather distracted, but he spends much of the time we have with him hearing voices and feeling compelled to do things.

Its also extremely odd that Akka is using sorcery at all. WTF is that about? Sitting in a crowded bar with shrial knights nearby probably bearing chorae, in a city that abhors magic and is on the brink of war.

If Inrau was being compelled or otherwise directed via sorcery to meet with Akka, maybe it was by some other third party? Who's at play here?
Consult: Soulbearing Skin spies, not to mention the proximity of Aurang. Could be they were going to use Inrau to gain information from Akka about the Mandate in some way. They were trying to turn him later before Inrau suicided.
Dunyain: Maithanet/Moenghus might have wanted them to meet. Psuke at play still - Maybe Maithanet himself was a Puskari, or less speculative and more likely he had one of the Water-Bearers on staff hidden somewhere. Plenty of blind beggars around Sumna I'm sure.
Mandate: Maybe one of them, another field operative or something, was helping move things along.

In the event that is wasn't Akka, its possible in Akka's distressed state he missed a faint mark on Inrau? I know that seems unlikely but we know he wasn't much of a spy lol. That, or the mark is erased post-use, as you guys mentioned above. That seem unlikely because battlegrounds and other objects are scared with sorcery after use, but there are several mechanics in TDTCB (more so than in other novels) that were removed/changed in later books, this might be some kind of error?

Akka using cants of compulsion on Inrau makes no sense story-wise, so I find that the least likely explanation.

MSJ:
I agree with you here Wilshire. Its definitely not Compulsion. I can't reckon Akka using sorcery in a bar in Summa, with the way sorcery is seen in that city.

Why I say that Akka used a Cant of Calling is because it wouldn't be hard for a spy to find out where his former apprentice slept. And, Inrau's musings can be that of a dream he had while thinking about it on the way to the bar.


Anyway, its a great find, no doubt about it.

Wilshire:

--- Quote from: MSJ on December 26, 2017, 05:07:48 pm ---Why I say that Akka used a Cant of Calling is because it wouldn't be hard for a spy to find out where his former apprentice slept. And, Inrau's musings can be that of a dream he had while thinking about it on the way to the bar.

--- End quote ---
Of, that's a fair point, and also obvious lol, I should have seen what you meant.
So you're saying Inrau's sequence is him simply reflecting on the dream he was sent, and his initial view of Akka casting in the bar was in the dream.
His "what are you doing here" comment was the first thing we hear/see him do in real-space (as opposed to dream-space)? Makes sense.

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