The August Travel-Writer: Difference between revisions
Robert F. Harris Tag: visualeditor |
No edit summary Tag: visualeditor |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
|allegiance = [[The Admiralty]] | |allegiance = [[The Admiralty]] | ||
|relationships=The Severe Bluejacket (father) | |relationships=The Severe Bluejacket (father) | ||
The Abiding Wife (mother)}}<blockquote>''" | The Abiding Wife (mother)}}<blockquote>''"My life could have been very different. There's no sense dwelling on what might have been; but there are moments to consider it, perhaps."''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/The_Season_of_Wrecks|The Season of Wrecks|Fallen London|}}</ref></blockquote>'''The August Travel-Writer''', Robert F. Harris, lives in a flat in Elderwick. He's often out for work and is rarely at home. He lives alone so neighbours refer to him as the bachelor.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Where_You_and_I_Must_Go Where You and I Must Go , ''Fallen London''] ''"There is a row of modest homes on the outskirts of Elderwick. [...] Lichen climbs the bricks of Robert Harris' home like ivy. The quiet man who lives here is known to the gossiping wives merely as 'the bachelor'. He works all hours on any kind of odd job. He's out right now."''</ref> He used to live as a tenant of the [[The Soft-Hearted Widow|Soft-Hearted Widow]],<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/A_Confession_of_the_Soft-Hearted_Widow|A Confession of the Soft-Hearted Widow|Fallen London|}} ''"The Widow has written of an August Travel-Writer she took in; better heeled than her usual lodgers, but insistent – his plight must have been desperate indeed. He kept odd hours and was often away, but on chilly evenings they shared tea and spoke of the prior Sunday's sermon. Until one November morning, when she found his room empty, and her lodger gone."''</ref> but left her care to avoid his father, who was a friend of the Widow.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/A_Confession_of_the_Soft-Hearted_Widow|A Confession of the Soft-Hearted Widow|Fallen London|}} ''"Should she have invited him to dine with her guest – an old friend from the Admiralty – when he visited that week?"''</ref> | ||
The [[The Admiralty|Admiralty]], seeking to establish diplomatic relations with the Flukes, undertook a project to reshape their officers into a form better suited for interaction.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/The_Season_of_Wrecks|The Season of Wrecks|Fallen London|}}''"Your nation called. You serve. You are the last of twelve volunteers. Five survived the amber infusion. Two survived to maturity. None have survived the embassy. None yet. A distant bell. The zubmarine dives. The Flukes await."''</ref> Their final attempt was led by Severe Bluejacket, Harris's father. However, a grave mistake on his part provoked the Flukes into attacking,<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/The_Season_of_Wrecks|The Season of Wrecks|Fallen London|}}''"[...] The zubmarine shudders as a torpedo launches. Moments later, a shockwave rocks the vessel. [...] The Fluke-song changes. It is no longer curious; it is incensed. Their embassy has been profaned, and today they have learned that their domain is worth killing for. [...]'' Trespassers'', they sing as they slay.'' Trespassers!''"''</ref> resulting in devastating losses for the Admiralty. In the aftermath, the [[The Agreement About Nothing of Consequence|Agreement About Nothing of Consequence]] was signed and Harris took the fall for his father’s failure.<ref name=":0">[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Where_You_and_I_Must_Go Where You and I Must Go, ''Fallen London''] ''"'Lt R. F. Harris. During Lorn Embassy fired on a rival Khanate zubmarine. Ensuing conflict roused wrath of Flukes; resulted in all-hands loss of fourteen zubsurface vessels.'"''</ref> | The [[The Admiralty|Admiralty]], seeking to establish diplomatic relations with the Flukes, undertook a project to reshape their officers into a form better suited for interaction.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/The_Season_of_Wrecks|The Season of Wrecks|Fallen London|}}''"Your nation called. You serve. You are the last of twelve volunteers. Five survived the amber infusion. Two survived to maturity. None have survived the embassy. None yet. A distant bell. The zubmarine dives. The Flukes await."''</ref> Their final attempt was led by Severe Bluejacket, Harris's father. However, a grave mistake on his part provoked the Flukes into attacking,<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/The_Season_of_Wrecks|The Season of Wrecks|Fallen London|}}''"[...] The zubmarine shudders as a torpedo launches. Moments later, a shockwave rocks the vessel. [...] The Fluke-song changes. It is no longer curious; it is incensed. Their embassy has been profaned, and today they have learned that their domain is worth killing for. [...]'' Trespassers'', they sing as they slay.'' Trespassers!''"''</ref> resulting in devastating losses for the Admiralty. In the aftermath, the [[The Agreement About Nothing of Consequence|Agreement About Nothing of Consequence]] was signed and Harris took the fall for his father’s failure.<ref name=":0">[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Where_You_and_I_Must_Go Where You and I Must Go, ''Fallen London''] ''"'Lt R. F. Harris. During Lorn Embassy fired on a rival Khanate zubmarine. Ensuing conflict roused wrath of Flukes; resulted in all-hands loss of fourteen zubsurface vessels.'"''</ref> |
Revision as of 17:33, 20 March 2025
![]() |
Beyond this point lie major spoilers for Fallen London, Sunless Sea, Sunless Skies, or Mask of the Rose. This may include endgame or major Fate-locked spoilers. Proceed at your own risk. You can find out more about our spoiler policy here. |
"My life could have been very different. There's no sense dwelling on what might have been; but there are moments to consider it, perhaps."[1]
The August Travel-Writer, Robert F. Harris, lives in a flat in Elderwick. He's often out for work and is rarely at home. He lives alone so neighbours refer to him as the bachelor.[2] He used to live as a tenant of the Soft-Hearted Widow,[3] but left her care to avoid his father, who was a friend of the Widow.[4]
The Admiralty, seeking to establish diplomatic relations with the Flukes, undertook a project to reshape their officers into a form better suited for interaction.[5] Their final attempt was led by Severe Bluejacket, Harris's father. However, a grave mistake on his part provoked the Flukes into attacking,[6] resulting in devastating losses for the Admiralty. In the aftermath, the Agreement About Nothing of Consequence was signed and Harris took the fall for his father’s failure.[7]
In disgrace, the Bluejacket sent his son to serve aboard a lifeberg-hunting vessel. Fate was not kind—the ship wrecked on the very lifeberg they pursued.[8] Few survived, but Harris was among them. Escaping the wreckage, he journeyed to the Avid Horizon,[9] where he signed his name to plead for absolution.[7] In response, the Admiralty assigned him to enforce the Agreement.[10]
Harris receives information on his targets from the Admiralty.[11] He employs a vast array of disguises[12] and tools for his work.[13] For targets which require him to move across the Unterzee, he masquerades as a travel writer, using interviews as cover for his assignments.[14] His killings are often messy, gruesome, and highly public,[15] serving as brutal warnings against breaking the Agreement.[16]
He regrets his involvement in the project that preceded the Agreement and sees his job as a way to atone.[17] He no longer harbors any love for his father, having altered his face with the aid of the Face-Tailor to ensure his father would think he's dead.[18]
References
|