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Liem Talbott
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Liem's mindscape is dark; quiet; contemplative. Any feelings or sensations that Liem doesn't intentionally project himself seem distant, as though echoing from a far-off room. Following any given sense to its source is bafflingly difficult.
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Someone else went missing? Who?
[This is the first he’s hearing of anyone other than Manon disappearing — but then, he hasn’t had a wealth of time to investigate since getting back from the Tree of Life.]
Also, you spoke to the others who encountered Manon’s shard, didn’t you? What did they have to say about their encounters?
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—Oh, right, theirs was... uh, it's just better if you see it since they seem to have found him before either of us.
[ Childe offers the memories that were transposed to him, only speaking up afterwards. ] I knew they were involved pretty easily because their voices were chorusing with Manon when Vander and I stumbled on him.
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[Liem doesn’t remember having too many conversations with Kaeya back in Horos, but he seemed like a decent enough man. He would have felt concerned to learn that something had happened to him.
He is not, however, at all sure that a “dodgy character” like him would be especially forthcoming about where he disappeared to, if he took the time to ask.]
That voice… When I heard it during my own encounter, I thought it was a memory. But after witnessing this encounter, and yours… it seems more as though the creature was being controlled somehow.
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—controlled.
I didn't think of that... slow gaining of information isn't anyone's favorite, but... maybe it's for the best here if that's true. Who knows if we're being expected to go digging.
What do you think, by the way, about this whole situation with it being seen as the Tribune holding Manon hostage for not turning him over right away?
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It’s politics, [Liem says without hesitation, with the air of long familiarity.] Regardless of why Lady Yima wants the shard back, her best chance of getting the Tribune to hand it over is to make him look like a villain for refusing. His image is important to him, after all — just as I imagine the Matron’s image is important to her.
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[There are reasons that she might take issue with it, of course, but that isn’t the point of his line of inquiry.]
So I wonder what she fears would happen to a hostage in the Tribune’s care.