![]() Talbot soon awoke, looking frantically for his notes and letting out cries for help that would fall on deaf ears as a dark fog manifested around him. When Talbot nearly reached his breakthrough, the monks had him drugged and dumped into an opium den. Talbot's knowledge expanded and his mind opened during his time there and he dreamt of ushering humankind into a new period of enlightenment, but he still felt guilt over the deaths he caused and kept having nightmares over it. He agreed to help the monks until he fully recovered. In return for saving Talbot, they asked for his help, believing his knowledge could lead them to their goal. There, monks studied forbidden texts, striving to expand the human mind in the search for other dimensions. He was beaten and thrown into the grave with the other bodies and left for dead.īarely clinging to life, Talbot was rescued by the disciples of an ancient mystery school posing as a monastery. ![]() ![]() He couldn't defend himself against the anger and accusations of his abductor. Unbeknownst to Talbot, his productivity-increasing chemicals nearly killed a whole factory's worth of workers. Soon Talbot was abducted and a sickly man showed him a mass grave filled with hundreds of bodies. There were no official reports on the subject, and Talbot refused to blame himself for what could only be exaggerated war stories. However, the chemicals had a side effect that made a group of soldiers who took it went feral and massacred villages. Talbot was rewarded with a secret lab beneath a prison camp on Dyer Island where he used prisoners from the Opium War to test chemicals that allowed soldiers to withstand incredible amounts of pain. In time, he completed one of his greatest achievements: a chemical that could increase a worker's productivity while reducing their need for rest. His willingness to push the limits secured him a position with the British East India Company, and within seven years he was made head chemist. Into his adult years, Talbot attended the London School of Medicine and excelled at his studies and became a chemist. After a near-death experience with a patch of poisonous foxglove when he was a child, Talbot was fascinated by how a single flower was able to affect him. As a boy, he was a popular child bright, charismatic, and unafraid to challenge authority, yet despite his social graces, he was fiercely independent, spending much of his time exploring the fields near his town alone. To understand the human condition, one must rise above it.
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