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The Great Ghost: Difference between revisions

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|parents=  
|parents=  
|first_seen_in= [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Ghosts and the Machine (short story)|The Ghosts and the Machine]]''
|first_seen_in= [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Ghosts and the Machine (short story)|The Ghosts and the Machine]]''
|also_seen_in=  
|also_seen_in= [[PROSE]]: ''[[The Book of Evil (short story)|The Book of Evil]]''
|copyright= [[Lupan Evezan]]<br><small>(concept)</small><br>[[Aristide Twain]]<br><small>(design)</small>
|copyright= [[Lupan Evezan]]<br><small>(concept)</small><br>[[Aristide Twain]]<br><small>(design)</small>
|index=
|index=
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The possessed Queen managed to distract Tarsa long enough to activate Frankenstein's new Reverse Spirit Realm Gateway, but it turned out to transform all the spirits into clockwork toys even as they pour out (because it was a wholly reversed version of Frankenstein's original Gateway, including with the functionality that turned Clockwork Cherubs into spirits; Frankenstein noted that he had not consciously realised this fortunate fact until now). While the possessed Queen watched, aghast, Igor managed to shove her into the Gateway, turning her into a toy as well. A delighted Tarsa scooped up the toys to use them as part of her Halloween line, and used a magic hat and wand she'd been working on to separate the Queen from the Great Ghost, sending the latter to parts unknown. She departed, leaving the Cupids to ponder what the Great Ghost meant when he implied that his ghosts were themselves fleeing something terrible in the Spirit Realm, and to return to their party. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Ghosts and the Machine (short story)|The Ghosts and the Machine]]'')
The possessed Queen managed to distract Tarsa long enough to activate Frankenstein's new Reverse Spirit Realm Gateway, but it turned out to transform all the spirits into clockwork toys even as they pour out (because it was a wholly reversed version of Frankenstein's original Gateway, including with the functionality that turned Clockwork Cherubs into spirits; Frankenstein noted that he had not consciously realised this fortunate fact until now). While the possessed Queen watched, aghast, Igor managed to shove her into the Gateway, turning her into a toy as well. A delighted Tarsa scooped up the toys to use them as part of her Halloween line, and used a magic hat and wand she'd been working on to separate the Queen from the Great Ghost, sending the latter to parts unknown. She departed, leaving the Cupids to ponder what the Great Ghost meant when he implied that his ghosts were themselves fleeing something terrible in the Spirit Realm, and to return to their party. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Ghosts and the Machine (short story)|The Ghosts and the Machine]]'')
These facts were recorded in an entry for the Great Ghost in the [[Book of Evil]], which was later one of the ones chosen to be digitised for the abridged electronic version. The entry noted [[Pythagoras-858]]'s predictable certainty that the Cupids would meet the Great Ghost again sooner or later. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Book of Evil (short story)|The Book of Evil]]'')


[[Category:Individuals]]
[[Category:Individuals]]
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