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The Anaconda

The Anaconda (The Shedder of Skins, The Rib-Key) is the Twenty-First Hour of the Fansus, created by Anaconda With Sword. It is either a God-From-Flesh or a God-From-Blood, ascending to Hourhood after the Segmenting of the Serpent. Its aspects are Knock and Winter, in decreasing order of importance. There’s argument for the tertiary being Moth- this is an hour that enjoys starting debates, telling riddles, and making groan-inducing puns. The jungle, the arctic, places that are wild and untouched are holy to the Anaconda.

The Anaconda
Judgement.png
Origin Blood or Flesh
Titles The Anaconda
The Rib-Key
The Shedder of Skins
Names The Anaconda-Decieved
The Joined
Thora, Wyrm-Watcher
Aspects Knock Winter
Date of arrival c. 500 B.C.E.
Owner(s) Anaconda With Sword

The Rite of the Lindorm Historian recreates the ascension of the Anaconda in microcosm; it’s an area of debate as to whether this qualifies as the sacrifice or the ascension of the being the Anaconda was. The Anaconda has, occasionally, provided evidence for one side or the other to continue the debate.

Its tarot card is Judgement.

Contents

Appearance

The Anaconda takes the appearance of a vast constrictor, typically carrying a sword or some sort of weapon. It is this form which most adepts will view and potentially even interact with. This is also the traditional depiction of the Anaconda in occult art. The Anaconda has often been conflated with Jörmungandr or other "world serpents," but has thankfully not been known to leave the Mansus since its ascension to Hourhood.

On occasion, the Anaconda has been recorded as appearing as a genderless humanoid figure with seven snakeskin shifts. There are no known records of the Anaconda's motives for taking this form, but they always correspond to deaths. It does not please the Anaconda to be depicted in this form, and those who have often die as well, their works going missing.

Principles

The Anaconda is an Hour of assassinations, of the silent death which takes away all sound and breath. Thieves, smugglers, and those who do not wish to be noticed often call upon the Anaconda to keep them from sight. Explorers, naturalists, and wanderers have also called upon the Anaconda to let them reach paths others have not tread, and to keep their travels from disturbing the places they walk. Interestingly, those fond of bad puns have also been known to invoke the Anaconda's wit, and the Hour itself may purposefully make those puns itself.

Worship

Cults

The Ouroborines, domain of the Undawned: the cult which foolishly revered both the Wrong-Serpent and the Rib-Key. Their motto was To break the cycle.

Mark

  • Mark of Exploration: "Take off your skin, and whip the flesh beneath. Again. And again. Seven times, for seven shifts, and the seven skins beneath it. Once you bathe in the lye for the last time, you will begin anew."

Servants

  • Stollenwurm: The cat-headed Stollenwurm resembles others of its kin; two-limbed and long-bodied. When you pat it, perhaps you will feel scales, or hair like a copper brush, or teeth like pearl knives.
  • Whiteworm: Seeing a Whiteworm is only lucky if you are not the one in its jaws.
  • Thora, Wyrm-Watcher: "I wonder what you look like on the inside."

Locations

The Fansus

The Anaconda has no one location in the Mansus. It curates the Wyrm's Museum, swims within the Aquarium, coils around the spires of the Golden City, and chases the Tail around and around. It holds no court, but neither does it reject the company of wanderers who happen upon it.

The Histories

  • Probably a Colony: No one could be said to have won the War of the Doors, not even the Hours who fought in it. All that remains is a pile of corpses, and what they carried on them when they died.
  • Probably Not a Colony: No one could be said to have won the War of the Doors, not even the Hours which fought in it. The simultaneous crushing and rending of the Ways has left this area scarred, and even a slight injury can send horrors spilling out from the skin.

Items

Tools

  • Broken Scale Whip ( 4,  8): Lye-etched and shattered from a rending force. It could be repaired, but why would you want to?
  • Shed Garrote ( 8,  12): It constricts.

Ingredients

  • Scale Whip ( 2): Useful for some Rites.
  • Pass-Fang ( 4): Keys are attuned to a certain configuration of wards. This tooth is attuned to all of them.

Influences

  • A Charter of Passage ( 4,  8): This boon from the Anaconda grants the bearor the right of passage. Eerily, it does not specify passage through what. Decays into a Pass-Fang.

Books

  • The Blue Book ( 2): A study of dreams from individuals with persistent social deficits, compiled by an analytical psychologist. The psychologist discusses the archetype of the Giant Serpent in conjunction with inborn social isolation. Unfinished.
  • Two Beings ( 2, Contentment): A fable written in the style of a children’s story about a squid and a reptile, and the friendship they share. The illustrations are typical of books written by the People’s Committee for Openings.
  • Juliette Eunectes ( 2,  2): A parody of the libertine novel Juliette, wherein the characters are all different types of serpents. Why are you reading this, again?
  • The Tears of the Conjoined ( 4): An acrostic poem in the style of the tomb of Silo of Oviedo; each page contains numerous ways of reading the same phrase.
  • What Might be the Truth ( 10,  10): A compilation of advice for the aspiring explorer. In Old Norse.
  • Princess Lindworm ( 12, Rite of the Lindorm Historian): An ancient fairy tale, in its original form. In Proto-Germanic.

Rites

  • Rite of the Lindorm Historian: "Shed a shift, Maiden!" "First shed a skin, Lindorm." The assistant will be changed in this rite. Requires an ingredient, an assistant, and lore. Consumes the assistant; if the pertinent Desire and a Scale Whip are used in the rite, this will allow for a Knock ascension.

Relationships

  • The Architeuthian: These two Hours have typically been considered to be friends. The Anaconda has never needed to break into the Aquarium, and the Names known as the Anaconda-Decieved and the Joined have long been under the Architeuthian's watchful gaze. It has been said that they collaborated at least on Platypode-Plague, and perhaps have done other things in other Histories.
  • Snake Tail with Appendages: The Anaconda chases the Tail like the Ouroboros of myth. The two shall continue their battle until the Great Serpent is brought to the Fansus once again.
  • The Engine of Cycles: The Anaconda despises this Hour for what it did to the Tail.
  • The Peacock: Although the Anaconda is responsible for the imprisonment of the Peacock, the Ways always seem to allow his servants to deliver messages to the Crone.
  • Old Tarnished: The Anaconda feels great responsibility for the existence and predicament of this Hour, and can often be found in the Golden City because of this. It has been rumored that the Anaconda has occasionally even deferred to this Hours advice about human affairs, as it has been inhuman for centuries, if it even ever was such a thing.
  • The Spark: There is no record of these two Hours interacting. However, the idea to sacrifice everything and turn one's self into a giant snake surely came from somewhere.
  • The Cuckoo: The Cuckoo's nest fell from a broken branch and sunk into the mire beneath. No one witnessed the cause, no one was there to say that any hour at all might have done such a thing. The fact that it put the Cuckoo in a prison of her own devising surely indicates that it was her own fault, right? The Anaconda may dislike the Cuckoo, and often chide or thwart that Hour, but certainly no one could ever claim that it had struck against the Cuckoo.
  • The Silver Owl: The Anaconda has been remarkably lenient towards the Strigiforme Slag's transgressions. Perhaps it can understand the injustice of her situation. Perhaps it merely does not care enough to stop her from harassing the Engine.
  • The Bright-Delver: The Anaconda has been known to refer to the Bright-Delver as its elder sister, and can often be tempered by this Hour's gentleness. The Delver is rarely cheated or tricked by mortals, as the Anaconda responds swiftly and finally to those who hurt its sibling.
  • The Harvester: Along with the Engine of Cycles, the Harvester has gained the Anaconda's ire after what happened to the Tail.
  • The Snow-Stained: Although this Hour can be highly disruptive, the Anaconda has been notably more lenient to it than it has been to other Hours. Let no adept claim that the Anaconda does not recognize unique talent where it sees it.
  • The Aged Bones: Both Hours are friends of the Architeuthian, and it is no coincidence that the Ways to the Throne-Eternal twist and contort if one who means harm to her walks them. There is, however, no record of the two Hours ever meeting.
  • The Mendicant Without: After the Mendicant disobeyed the Great Serpent's decree, breaking the truce within the Fourth History, the Anaconda was the Hour which exiled the Mendicant from the Fansus. Only the Delver's interference prevented the Anaconda from slaying the Mendicant on the spot; if the Delver was to be harmed by the Mendicant, that safety would surely be nullified.
  • The Anvil: The Anaconda and the Anvil supposedly collaborated on the Gilded Gate, and other projects.
  • The Maker: The Anaconda and the Maker disliked each other immensely when the latter still existed. The Anaconda does not like being bothered or touched, and the Maker was interested in improving it further when it was still merely a Long. It has been said that the Anaconda assisted the Anvil in the construction of the Gilded Gate for the imprisonment of the Maker alone as much as for the preservation of the Fansus.
  • The Deciever: The Anaconda has always had complicated feelings about this complicated Hour. Followers of the Anaconda never trafficked with it if at all possible, and neither did the Hour. Despite the Anaconda's status as judicator of the rules of the Fansus, it was not the one to slay the Deciever.
  • The Great Serpent: The Great Serpent was the Hour which took the Anaconda as its name, before the Segmenting. The Anaconda is deeply loyal to what it perceives as its patron's wishes, and takes on the duties which those wishes entail with great responsibility. A Name of the Deceiver once claimed to have heard the Anaconda refer to the Great Serpent as "Father," although all claims made by adherents of the Deceiver should be taken with a grain of salt.