The Shifty Scribe: Difference between revisions
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{{Memory_Infobox | {{Memory_Infobox | ||
|name = The Shifty Scribe | |name = The Shifty Scribe | ||
|description = ''[[Aristo of Alexandria|Aristo]], a great [[Greece|Greek]] philosopher, has been been jailed by [[Eudoros]] after he presented proof that Eurodoros plagiarized his latest book. His wife, Callista, asks [[Bayek]] to help her husband escape the city. Bayek, moved by her story, agrees to help free the man.'' | |description = ''[[Aristo of Alexandria|Aristo]], a great [[Greece|Greek]] philosopher, has been been jailed by [[Eudoros]] after he presented proof that Eurodoros plagiarized his latest book. His wife, [[Callista]], asks [[Bayek]] to help her husband escape the city. Bayek, moved by her story, agrees to help free the man.'' | ||
|appearance = ''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]'' | |appearance = ''[[Assassin's Creed: Origins]]'' | ||
|type = Side, Level 11 | |type = Side, Level 11 | ||
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==Dialogue== | ==Dialogue== | ||
Bayek overhead a woman cursing the Ptolemies in her residence. | Bayek overhead a [[Callista|woman]] cursing the Ptolemies in her residence. | ||
*'''Woman:''' ''Curse the King! Curse this miserable city! Curse Eudoros! May they all rot! Where's that bottle of wine? No one can get him back for me! he'll die in prison because of that viper, Eudoros! What will I do without him? Without my Aristo? My comforter, my job, my love.'' | *'''Woman:''' ''Curse the King! Curse this miserable city! Curse Eudoros! May they all rot! Where's that bottle of wine? No one can get him back for me! he'll die in prison because of that viper, Eudoros! What will I do without him? Without my Aristo? My comforter, my job, my love.'' | ||
Bayek entered the woman's house. | Bayek entered the woman's house. | ||
Revision as of 17:52, 23 March 2018
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The Shifty Scribe was a virtual representation of one of Bayek's genetic memories, relived by Layla Hassan through the Portable Animus HR-8.
Description
A Greek philosopher is unfairly jailed after Eudoros plagiarizes his book. Bayek agrees to save him from the guards, and get him out of Alexandria.
Dialogue
Bayek overhead a woman cursing the Ptolemies in her residence.
- Woman: Curse the King! Curse this miserable city! Curse Eudoros! May they all rot! Where's that bottle of wine? No one can get him back for me! he'll die in prison because of that viper, Eudoros! What will I do without him? Without my Aristo? My comforter, my job, my love.
Bayek entered the woman's house.
- Woman: Who are you!? One of Eudoros' phylakes?
- Bayek: I am no friend of Eudoros'.
- Woman: He's brought nothing but sorrow to my husband Aristo. The great poet-philosopher... jailed! Jailed for writing beautiful things!
- Bayek: Words are a powerful weapon.
- Woman: My love spent years wrting his masterwork. Years! Then Eudoros plagirized it and passed by husband's genius off as his own!
- Bayek: And Aristo took him to court?
- Woman: Months of arguments! In the end, my husband is beaten, ridiculed and tossed in a cage!
- Bayek: Is this what passes for justice in Alexandria?
- Woman: Oh, my dear man, if you right this wrong, my husband and I can flee this city and be done with this ordeal. If you free him, I know of a boat that will take him on the southern docks, I will wait for you. Please, jsut bring me back my Aristo.
Bayek left the house and began searching for Aristo. With the help of Senu, he discovered Aristo locked in a cage and was being transported by a horse carriage. Bayek pursued the carriage, getting close to the cage.
- Aristo: Who's this? Another of Eudoros' sychophants come to sneer? Leave me alone with my woes.
- Bayek: I am a friend of Phanos! A protector.
Bayek attacked the carriage.
- Aristo: Hit that one again! He deserves it. Get them! Hit that one next! That one smells vile, look out!
Bayek killed the soldier and carried Aristo out of the cage.
- Aristo: You have more courage than Achilles himself! You've released me from daily beatings!
- Bayek: We should go quickly.
- Aristo: The vlakos broke my hip. Be careful, I pray you!
- Bayek: Your wife tells me to get you out of Alexandria.
Bayek placed Aristo at the back of the horse.
- Aristo: Please, we must get out of this city. We must flee. Those damned guards will find me. Egypt is no place for a philosopher.
Bayek brought Aristo the southern docks, where Aristo's wife is waiting on a trireme.
- Woman: Aristo! Over here! The boat is ready. We set sail as soon as you're aboard.
- Aristo: My wife! Thank the beneficent god!
Bayek carried Aristo off the horse and put him on the boat.
- Aristo: We made it!
- Woman: My love! I'm so grateful that you are free!
- Bayek: You shoud leave, the Phylakitai will surely come after you.
- Aristo: I shall flee. My wife has booked us passage to Crete. It was always our plan to go there. Perhaps we will have a better life there.
- Bayek: May the gods look over you on your journey.
- Aristo: my beliefs on duty and honors are ambivalent, but I can see that you have done yours. If all of Egypt was filled with men of your virtue, life would be divine.
Outcome
Bayek helped the woman to free Aristo, allowing the both of them flee from Egypt.
