Author Archives: 祟り

Rebirth

Rebirth
A sinister slide resounds
From the fountainhead found
When fortune aligned

The roots that ripped had run too deep
Left to dig in the weeds
And climb up the vine

Your mind is only echoing
What your heart wouldn’t say:
“I’ll be me, in time”

🌲🌲🌲

What happens?
The Oracles again advise Hunter to his missteps. They note that Hunter can’t escape his past by assuming the guise of the Son, nor does he truly want to, but again, Hunter doesn’t listen.

What’s in a name?
In assuming the identity of the Son, Hunter has killed himself so as to be ‘reborn’ as the Son. The album will follow his attempts to distance himself from his old identity and establish himself on a new course with this new identity.

I think there’s also a somewhat meta shade to this, as there was a 6-year gap between Act III and Act IV and stylistically it shows. Both musically and lyrically, songs here are much more intricate than in the first three acts, and though probably unintentional, it works astoundingly well to convey how Hunter himself has matured between Act III and Act IV aside from Casey maturing as a musician.

Whose viewpoint?
Oracles.

🌲🌲🌲

>0:00 – 0:10 AaaaAAAAaaaAAaaaaa
AaAAAAAAAaaAAAAaaaAAA yes hello Oracles. Once again, they are here to establish the themes of this chapter and tell Hunter where he’s going wrong.

>A sinister slide resounds / From the fountainhead found / When fortune aligned
woah woah woah these LYRICS! Yeah, in that six year gap, Casey got a lot stronger when it comes to conveying ideas through lyrical imagery — which makes understanding them significantly harder unless you really sit down to think about them. Even then I don’t think anyone would have figured out what certain songs meant had Casey not explained what they were. They’re beautiful but man does this make reading them, especially the ones in Act IV, hard.

‘A sinister slide resounds’ -> taking ‘slide’ to mean a change of note on a violin, this is pointing to how Hunter has discarded his old identity for that of the Son’s. Metaphorically, the ‘note’ he is has changed, this being a sinister change both because it will bring Hunter to ruin and because he committed murder to achieve it, compromising his own morals and doing away with his principles of love.

‘From the fountainhead found when fortune aligned’ -> ‘fountainhead’ being the Son, who Hunter encountered and recognised to be his brother (from the General’s story) by total chance in the War. Hunter will be reliant on things downstream of the Son to guide him in this new life (ie, who the Son was close with, where he lived, what kind of person he was).

>The roots that ripped had run too deep / Left to dig in the weeds / And climb up the vine
‘The roots that ripped’ -> Hunter’s past, which he has tried to disassociate himself from.

‘Had run too deep’ -> Hunter is not able to actually disassociate himself from his past, however, as it runs too deep. The roots have survived and the plant will regrow. Also saying that the pain Hunter has suffered is too much for him to totally ignore it — rather, he’s only taking the actions he is because the pain was so much, which is an extremely Hunter thing to do.

‘Left to dig in the weeds / and climb up the vine’ -> Though Hunter has turned away from his past, it’s still there and will continue to have implications and effects on his life while he occupies himself with ignoring it. The past is tenacious as a weed and its implications span as high as a vine.

>Your mind is only echoing / What your heart wouldn’t say: / “I’ll be me, in time”
The real whammy, contesting Hunter’s core motives for having stolen the Son’s identity. Hunter has devised this plan because he thinks he can be a better person as the Son than as Hunter, and Hunter likes to consider the ‘real’ him as a basically good person. Consider, ever since he was a child sheltered by Ms Terri, Hunter has felt constrained about who he can be. Now that he has the opportunity to Not Be Hunter, he paradoxically thinks he’ll be more free to become a person who embodies the things he wants to be.

But his heart, which he’s ignoring, wants to go back to the principles that make Hunter be Hunter. Chief among those is love. He wants to learn to love again, but after the ferocious pain of the war and Ms Leading and This Beautiful Life especially, he is too terrified to trust in love and cynical about its worth in regards to him. Maybe it’s also like he’s still too mortified about having ‘betrayed’ Ms Terri’s love by leaving the Lake in the first place, and no longer feels able to associate himself with love? Or rather, he’s unable to trust himself as being strong enough to deal with the world while also being himself, and his heart, if he listened to it, would assure him that he would be able to learn and stabilise without totally disavowing what matters to him? But in essence the Oracles are telling Hunter that he’ll get what he wants simply by being true to himself, which he won’t do.

>1:16 – 1:25 Instrumental
Echoes of the end of Oracles on Delphi/end of The Church and The Dime/end of BSB? ‘Wandering around town’ music though I don’t think Hunter is at the City just yet.

>1:26 – 2:00 Instrumental
Wowww! No idea what this is, but it’s cool!

>2:00 – 2:49 Instrumental
Unsure again, but still cool.

>2:49 – 2:51 The Procession ‘Drums’
Hunter prepares to leave Europe.

Life and Death | Act III
Act IV | The Old Haunt

Life and Death

Life and Death
When we dance, it looks just like fire
When we sing, it sounds the same tone
We all have hearts, we all have homes
But when we die, we die alone

Oh, what a mess, as everything descends
Oh, what a mess, but everything amends

Such it was so long ago
We always tried but failed
And now with new found consciousness
We stand here waiting, waiting to die

Oh, what a mess, as everything descends
Oh, what a mess, but everything amends

One of these days, you will learn to love again
One of these days, he will learn to love again
One of these days, he will learn to love again
One of these days, he will learn to love again
One of these days, he will learn to love again
One of these days, he will learn to love again
One of these days, you will learn to love again
One of these days, he will learn to love….

When we dance, it looks just like fire
When we sing, it sounds the same tone
We all have hearts, we all have homes
But when we die, we die alone
When we die, we die…

🌲🌲🌲

What happens?
The war ends. Commentary is given on the nature of war and its effect on Hunter.

What’s in a name?
‘Life and Death’ — the name of the album. This song exemplifies all the ideas the album wants to get across, principally on the nature of war. As for what these words actually mean, that’s a little more nuanced and hard to decode.

Well, first of all, war is a place of just that — life and death. It’s an environment where people have to face their ever-present mortality. Soldiers go into battle knowing they could die, and frequently with the resolve to, with survival in many cases leaving you with the question ‘Why did I live? Why did they die?’. But these ideas also tie into the overall theme of rebirth in the acts, especially Hunter’s present killing of his own identity and adoption of the life of the Son. In that way it has the kind of tenor of, ‘war changes people’, but mostly I think it’s about the mortality.

Whose viewpoint?
Omniscient.

🌲🌲🌲

>When we dance, it looks just like fire
BEAUTIFUL. This is where we first see the power of the lexicon Casey has established truly flexing its muscles. Using such simple words, it’s able to convey an extremely precise and and detailed idea with an elegance I can’t overstate.

So, we know that a ‘dance’ is something you put a lot of passion and genuine investment into, but that fundamentally conflicts with its stated goal. Ms Terri’s attempt to shelter Hunter was a dance (inherently doomed because she was still prostituting), Hunter’s attempt to pursue an untroubled relationship with Ms Leading was a dance (inherently doomed because Ms Leading was a prostitute), etc etc.

And we know that ‘fire’ represents a powerful force, born from love, that can and wishes to destroy evil. Flame is gone / Fire remains and all that.

So when you put this together, the ultimate sentiment is like, ‘we put a lot of investment into fighting in war, though we know that doing so is fundamentally a ruinous thing, with the attempted belief of doing something good and defeating evil’. Both sides of the war carry this sentiment — they fight to defend their country or uphold some kind of principle, but all war really does is bring ruin, traumatise those caught in it, disrupt societies, etc. But at least it’s ostensibly just.

>When we sing, it sounds the same tone / We all have hearts, we all have homes
Both parties involved in a war have the same sentiments behind why they fight. The soldiers involved are individuals who love their families, values, or cultures and wish to protect them.

>But when we die, we die alone
Underlining how soldiers die miserably on the battlefield, miles away from those things that they treasure, often without feeling that they did die for a cause that was worth it or felt loved by the institution they had trusted themselves to. Death is impersonal and does not care about what you treasure or what makes you you.

>Oh, what a mess, as everything descends / Oh, what a mess, but everything amends
Here’s the life and death — though war brings great destruction, it doesn’t last forever. Periods of great downturn will be followed by stabilisation, security, and dare I say prosperity, though what that stability looks like might not be what the country was before. Rebirth on the scale of nations.

As it goes for Hunter, pointing to his prospects of a happier life as the Son.

>Such it was so long ago / We always tried but failed / And now with new found consciousness
This must be Hunter speaking — really the earlier verses were probably Hunter’s takeaway from the whole war experience too. Hunter accepts that his previous attempts at happiness were failures, with his ‘new found consciousness’ being the maturation he’s been forced to have over the war as well as his new consciousness as the Son.

>We stand here waiting, waiting to die
Hunter is in an inbetween state right now, waiting to return to the City so that he can properly assume the Son’s life and kill Hunter once and for all.

Shades of ‘scream at the sky and beg, beg for a reason’ in this?

>One of these days, you will learn to love again / One of these days, he will learn to love again
Hunter’s experiences in war have destroyed his… not quite his capacity, but his faith in love. He is currently cynical and withdrawn from the principles that make Hunter who he is, but we are given assurance that Hunter will one day come to experience love as he had with Ms Terri or Ms Leading again. Rather, despite how Hunter’s turning away from it right now, love is still fundamentally what Hunter wants, hopes to find, and what powers him.

Poor Hunter. This whole experience has severely damaged him, so much that he can’t trust in the single thing he values most.

Father | Act III
Act IV | Rebirth

Father

Father
And what of the father? Will he analyze?
And what about the mother? Will she discover
The truth behind this lie we’re living?

(I knew that I kept this for a reason)
(I knew that I kept this for a reason)
Now everything we’ve ever had is here for us
Now everything we’ve ever had is here for us

Don’t worry ’bout the father, you’ll take care of him
And as for the mother, she always loved her son
And you look like him

🌲🌲🌲

What happens?
Having assumed the Son’s identity, Hunter considers the obstacles that could ruin his plan. Though he dismisses the Son’s Mother as an issue, figuring that himself and the Son look enough alike that she won’t notice the swap, he decides the General is a problem. Using the bottle the Poison Woman gave him, Hunter kills the General.

What’s in a name?
‘Father’ — mirroring ‘Son’, to point to the Father/General as the subject who dies in this song and underline his relation to both Hunter and the Son, as it’s kind of like second half or immediate continuation of the train of thought left off in ‘Son’.

Whose viewpoint?
Hunter, being devious.

🌲🌲🌲

>0:00 – 0:28 Black Sandy Beaches Reprise
Here’s that BSB smile through the pain again. This is the most peaceful and subdued that we’ve ever heard it, though, more in the vein of how it was in VVV than in BSB, so this time it strikes me less as trying to distract oneself from pure agony (though that’s still the fundamental thing that’s going on here), but Hunter finding a kind of small, warm hope and happiness in this plan of being the Son. For once he’s feeling something that isn’t just total misery. He’s happy that he feels the potential of being happy.

>And what of the father? Will he analyze? / And what about the mother? Will she discover / The truth behind this lie we’re living?
Hunter considers the immediate obstacles that could ruin his plan. The Son’s father, that being the General, has interacted with both Hunter and the Son. Though Hunter and the Son look so alike that anyone could confuse them, the General has a frame of reference to know each one’s specific attitudes and mannerisms. It’s highly possible, if not within the first period of seeing Hunter as the Son, then at some point when they’re all back home in the City, that he’ll figure out Hunter has stolen the place of his Son.

Meanwhile, there’s the issue of the Son’s mother. Hunter knows from rifling through the Son’s postcards the rough family dynamic the Son has going on — the Son and the mother are close. However, she has no knowledge as to the existence of Hunter. It would be a far leap of logic for her to think her Son had coincidentally bumped into someone who looked so exactly like him, and stole his identity coming home, than for her to figure the Son just got rattled by the war as a way to explain away inconsistencies. Still, the fear she could figure it out is there.

‘The truth behind this lie we’re living?’ -> Hunter has already extended his sense of himself to be both himself and the Son. He’s asking himself this question both as Hunter and the Son.

>(I knew that I kept this for a reason)
Referring to the Poison Woman’s bottle of poison that she gave Hunter. The Poison Woman is a character whose ‘thing’ is killing people without their realising and without facing accountability for it. Using her bottle means Hunter, too, will be able to commit a killing that nobody will trace to him and that he won’t have to face responsibility for. A consequenceless killing.

Hunter sounds so gooey and happy as he realises this plan will totally work. A lot of things have built up to this moment — Hunter’s hatred of the General, his need to escape his own life, his lesson from the Thief of compromising morals for personal gain, his challenge from the Poison Woman to find someone who is justifiable to kill, his abandonment by the world in WIMTBA, his disbelief in a just God after Mustard Gas, the lack of power of ethics and morals before the Tank — really everything that’s happened up to now. It’s the horrors of war sequence that gives him the (lack of) moral impetus to be able to do this, but thinking about it I think the biggest element (like aside from He Said He Had A Story + the cost/benefit hurt/comfort reflex) is actually WIMTBA, because WIMTBA had Hunter realise he had to be the one actively trying to get his life back on a happier course rather than trusting the world to do it for him, and he’s certainly taking proactive action here to make sure his little plan is flawless.

>Now everything we’ve ever had is here for us
Hunter regards the plan of killing the General as perfect. He’s the only barrier between Hunter and a perfect life, and he shortly won’t be an issue.

I get the image of him smiling as he prepares a poisoned drink for the General, then goes on to find the General, sit with him and offer the drink. Again hearkening to WIMTBA; ‘everything you thought you had you lost’.

>Don’t worry ’bout the father, you’ll take care of him
Man, are you hearing this? We didn’t hear much of it to have a great reference, but this is the Son’s intonation. Hunter stop trying to justify doing abominable stuff by imagining that the Son would want you to/encourage you to do it.

But yeah, the General’s not an issue, Hunter will just kill him.

>And as for the mother, she always loved her son
And the Son’s mother? Also not an issue. Hunter has read through postcard correspondence how much she seems to miss and adore the Son, and without knowing that Hunter exists, will likely accept and dote on him as if he were her son. Hunter’s found another potential Ms Terri surrogate and is probably pretty pleased about that.

>And you look like him
The big whammy and the big reveal of the album — Hunter and the Son look so alike, the Son’s own mother could mistake them.

Which is strange. Let’s talk about that.

So the general sentiment across the fandom is that the Son is Hunter’s half-brother through the General, though we have these two points from Casey nudging towards the idea that he’s not, and the relation is actually closer:

  • The “half-brother” is Hunter’s half brother, actually more than his half brother, but to explain that would be very hard right now. But it will be 100% clear in the graphic novel. But he is related to him, very close in age. They both have the same father.
  • Hunter and the half-brother look eerily similar for reasons that will be revealed in the graphic novel.

So for them to be closer than half-brothers under these circumstances, you can take two routes. Either they have the same mother, and they are full brothers, or their mothers are related. Whatever the case, the circumstances going on behind Hunter and the Son’s relation sounds to be very complicated. Let’s go through these scenarios.

Scenario 1: Hunter and the Son are twins born to Ms Terri. This would explain why they look alike; they are literally genetically identical. This also gives us an incredibly interesting scenario for Act I — Ms Terri impulsively deciding to escape with Hunter after being forced to surrender the firstborn. (Also puts a literal read into ‘you were born with the sun’).

There are some big questions with this, though. For one, it implies that TP&P had some arrangement with the General to hand off the newborns to him. While it’s fair to figure that TP&P wouldn’t want kids killing the mood around his brothel, how would he know that the children belonged to the General? Do they normally have contraceptive measures in the Dime, and the General specifically forsook those? And why would the General accept such a proposition? Blackmail? How was the General able to explain away the kid to his wife? Why would she accept mothering someone else’s child?

I guess on the topic of the General’s wife, the impression I get of her from At The End Of The Earth, the song she narrates, is that she loves the General more than the Son and sees the General in the Son. ‘And the Echoes of you / Rhyme like a distant verse on forgotten words’, echoes of you being echoes of the General being the Son. So she would love the Son largely because he reminds her of the General, that is, she accepts the Son because she loves the General and he is the General’s son. Maybe the Mother was struggling to conceive, or maybe the Son was already born before he met the Mother, and the General explained him away as being from a previous marriage?

I’ll also note that if the Son was listening back in He Said He Had A Story, unless the described encounter is chronologically set before he hooked up with the Mother, he just got to hear his dad bragging about cheating on his mom with a hooker.

Scenario 2: Ms Terri and the General’s wife are sisters. This makes the boys cousins and three-quarter brothers, which is a pretty convoluted state of affairs. Since the kids are close in age, the General would’ve been screwing his wife and Ms Terri around the same time, but it either comes down to coincidence that he selected Ms Terri, or he had some discontents with his wife and chose to vent them on a hooker that resembled her. This leaves massive questions about the relationship between Ms Terri and the Mother, though, which are hard to fill. Why is one of them suffering as a hooker while the other is living comfortably in the City? Are they not on good terms? You could maybe scrape evidence for this from Remembered, reading ‘met your life before us’ as referencing the Mother rather than the Dime… ehhhh possible?

Scenario 3: Ms Terri and the General’s wife are twin sisters. This makes Hunter and the General’s son for all purposes full brothers again, and is the same as scenario 2 except that the General would have absolutely made the connection between his wife and the hooker he bedded. Also explains why having visual depictions of the characters would make it clear.

In the end I can’t decide which of these I ascribe to, but one of these three scenarios is true. Place your bets?

>3:13 – 3:25 Black Sandy Beaches Reprise
And a return to BSB to close us out. A little bit harsher, perhaps the General dies here?

Son | Act III | Life and Death

Son

Son
We lay aligned, and move to disguise
With a soul below, only the eyes above
Slowly and silently slip away

Sleep now in the soil, the dust in the debris
A stolen smoke ascends, leaving the shell to atrophy
Meet with the earth, as the sober spirit sings

Leave, leave it behind, this truth is harming you
Leave, leave it behind, set out and start anew
Your life hereafter will cure all your troubles and recast a history
Turn and walk away…

🌲🌲🌲

What happens?
Hunter buries the General’s Son, who died in the Battle of the Somme. Simultaneously, he steals the identity of the General’s Son, conspiring to escape the pain of his own life by instead living as the Son.

What’s in a name?
‘Son’ — tells us who this song is in reference to (the son died) and the dynamic this character has with the General (he’s the general’s son; first time you learn this). You know I’ve seen Casey comment that certain information is presented in clear or upfront ways but then it turns out he means things like how you’re meant to infer Hunter’s name from Act I and as I stare at this song I’m realising I have no idea how people figured out the dynamics of the Son and the General without getting it wrong fifty times first.

Whose viewpoint?
(Switches out the dogtags) Sorry guys, Hunter can’t narrate this, he’s down there with the worms.

🌲🌲🌲

>We lay aligned, and move to disguise
THERE we go that’s more like it.

‘We lay aligned’ -> ‘With hands aligned,’ the corpses of the soldiers who died in Go Get Your Gun have been collected and arranged in lines for burial. Hunter is presently in whatever field or building they have arranged for the treatment of these corpses, likely having retrieved some from the battlefield himself.

‘And move to disguise’ -> This could be the living soldiers putting tarps over the corpses of their comrades, while likely also pointing to Hunter’s intentions. Hunter sees the opportunity here to swap his identity with that of the dead Son, since they look extremely alike. He rifles through the Son’s pockets for his postcards, dogtags, ID, etc.

>With a soul below, only the eyes above / Slowly and silently slip away
‘With a soul below’ -> The Son is dead, and it’s his corpse that Hunter is presently standing over.

‘Only the eyes above / slowly and silently slip away’ -> Hunter averts his gaze as if hesitant or guilty, but also as if checking to see nobody else is watching him. Indeed, the processing of the bodies is done and no other soldiers are around now.

I also hear this as Hunter feeling that his own ‘soul’ or ‘self’ is already dead or buried as he locks in to his plan; that is, he regards the person who has died as Hunter, and the body standing over the corpse belongs to an as-yet undefined entity that doesn’t have any compunctions about identity theft.

>Sleep now in the soil, the dust in the debris
Hunter is burying the son’s corpse, simultaneously feeling to be burying himself.

>A stolen smoke ascends, leaving the shell to atrophy
The ‘stolen smoke’ is the Son’s identity or ‘essence’; it ascends in the literal sense of Hunter straightening himself after being hunched over to bury the body, now being resolved to live as the Son or ‘having’ the Son’s essence in him. In the metaphorical sense it’s like, Hunter feels his own soul is solidly ‘below’, right, but the Son’s essence wisps out of the grave and feels to permeate the air before going on to Heaven. Hunter thinks the Son is a better person than him, is kind of in awe of or mystified by him, and thinks it better that the Son survives than Hunter, so on that level too he doesn’t mind trading places.

Leaving the shell to atrophy is the Son’s body being empty of its essence, now, and left to decompose in the grave.

>Meet with the earth, as the sober spirit sings
The burial is completed.

‘Sober spirit’ is of course Hunter’s mood being generally low and grave after This Beautiful Life, but might also be pointing that he’s not putting on a mask of passive joviality as he was in Go Get Your Gun (a drinking song vs. being sober) anymore; these are Hunter’s proper, honest thoughts.

>Leave, leave it behind, this truth is harming you / Leave, leave it behind, set out and start anew
Hunter tells himself to leave behind his old life and assume a new life under the identity of the Son. The way this is framed is like there’s an actual entity he’s talking to (the sober spirit) that is encouraging him to go ahead with this plan. Obviously, it’s just Hunter, but I wonder if he’s justifying it by imagining that the Son would have wanted him to proceed down this path, also.

‘One life for another’, ‘Take another life’ — once again we have Hunter destroying/abandoning his current life to achieve a rebirth. And ONCE AGAIN we have Hunter doing this as his go-to answer to pain. This one is the most severe, though, because it’s not just trying to send his self down an alternate course that might be happier, it’s that he’s given up on himself as being worth anything and thinks the only way to get away from the pain is to literally be a different person.

>Your life hereafter will cure all your troubles and recast a history
Hunter you idiot you’ve done this twice before and both times it didn’t work out. But yeah, he thinks the Son’s life is a significantly more worthwhile, smooth, and happy one to be living than Hunter’s, so he’ll be able to get that stability and comfort he still fundamentally wants as long as he stops being Hunter. He doesn’t want any tie to his (miserable, sad, ‘I’m left with my…’) history anymore.

Note also that Hunter thinks he’s a bad person (’you, with this cruel and bitter heart’, ‘this suffering sends hope to the ground / but I never really had enough’, ‘I can promise you, my ego’s running me’) and seems to recognise a lot of the trouble he gets himself into is a side effect of his own thinking/personality, hence part of why he’d want to replace his usual script with someone else’s.

>Turn and walk away…
Hunter turns and walks away both from the Son’s grave and from his own life.

Go Get Your Gun | Act III | Father

Go Get Your Gun

Go Get Your Gun
Go get your gun, get your gun, and let’s find out what it does
Shoot, shoot, shoot, shoot, shoot
We haven’t won, and if we win, and if the morning light sets in
We’ve cheated fate again

And to those who die, please try to understand
That for those who die, we try the best we can
With our one foot in the grave
While the other one’s kickin’ its way right down to hell

Go get your gun, get your gun, imposing penance one by one
You’ve got a virtue in a vice, it forces fate, you’re taking lives
With all the history to guide, you’ve got a passion in those eyes
So aim it straight and true

And to those who die, please try to understand
That for those who die, we try the best we can
With our one foot in the grave
While the other one’s kickin’ its way right down to hell

Now, when this is over
Then, we’ll raise a glass
Straight up to the sun
With our one foot in the grave
While the other one’s kickin’ its way right down to hell

Go get your gun, get your gun, and let’s find out what it does
Shoot, shoot, shoot, shoot, shoot
We haven’t won and if we win, and if the morning light sets in
We’ve cheated fate again

And to those who die, please try to understand
That for those who die, we try the best we can
And to those who die, please try to understand
That for those who die, we try the best we can
With our one foot in the grave
While the other one’s kickin’ its way right down to hell

🌲🌲🌲

What happens?
The General’s regiment, including Hunter, fights in the Battle of the Somme. The Son dies in the battle.

What’s in a name?

  • “Go Get Your Gun” is meant as a cheesy drinking song that’s been around in this world. It’s a novelty of the time, as if it has existed in this world for a long time.

Whose viewpoint?
Hunter.

🌲🌲🌲

Go get your gun, get your gun, and let’s find out what it does / Shoot, shoot, shoot, shoot, shoot / We haven’t won, and if we win, and if the morning light sets in / We’ve cheated fate again
Okay oh wow this song. This is one of those ones where I’m not sure how much I need to comment on it, because it basically is what it says on the tin and my takes on it aren’t anything special.

I suppose the most interesting thing is how I’m reading it as a framing device. Basically, I think what this song represents narratively is the Battle of the Somme. We know that the Son dies during, or shortly after this song with the aftermath of his death coming up in the next song, and know he died in the Somme (’hints of a higher hand / lost on the Somme’), so 1 + 1 = ?.

With the Somme being a long battle, Hunter and the rest of the General’s regiment are going to be involved in multiple engagements during it, so basically I see it as… not quite a montage, but you get lots of scenes of them being mid-engagement, engagement ends, they stare over the battlefield, move through the trenches, joke around together, have time to kick back and sing songs and drink, engagement ensues again, etc etc etc ad infinitum. The morale of the regiment sounds to be overall good, and Hunter too seems to be letting himself get sucked into that energy. Of course, we know from This Beautiful Life that he’s already decided to go along with whatever the General’s regiment is doing and pretend to be jovial with them (’so let us force a smile and pretend we’re alive’), so I think his willingness to shut off his brain and go back into soldier mode here is mostly an extension of that. Like, he’s still not in a state to be thinking much about what he personally wants to do right now, so he’s just joining in whatever with his fellow soldiers.

Long and short lyrically it’s just the kind of thing soldiers would sing to themselves to hype themselves up and get morale flowing for the next battle. ‘You’re part of a legacy, you’re the good prevailing over evil, many will die but they’ll die as heroes,’ blah blah blah.

I mean I like it but by virtue of it being annoyingly effective as the kind of thing a barful of drunks could sing it’s not exactly the chewiest of high concepts for me here, you know?

Anyway, so that’s my deep insightful enthusiastic read of Go Get Your Gun.

>2:47 – 3:16 Doomy Ambiance
The fighting ends and the soldiers, including Hunter, count up and collect the dead from the battlefield. Hunter finds that the General’s Son is among the dead.

This Beautiful Life | Act III | Son

This Beautiful Life

This Beautiful Life
One foot, then the other
Such embarrassment, it wasn’t meant that
I, I should discover such offensive things
This suffering sends hope to the ground
But I really never had enough
They’ve got pride in him
This tide turns lives over

A black tongue prophecy, adorned in stony skin
We never ever (never ever) ever had to lie to move ahead
But here in oblivion, we cling to what we can
So in the end (in the end) we can say that with these hands
We took it all back, it all back

So let us force a smile and pretend that we’re alive
Oh, but somewhere, none of this happened
The bullets removed themselves; life is beautiful
I have a home above the lake where I could

Forget the words to the songs that we’ve heard
The passages read, all the names in a world
That have brought us this pain, from the wounds we’ve sustained
A cold calloused heart, sitting still in this cave of a chest
So abandon a life from before
A boy and his innocence

🌲🌲🌲

What happens?
Struggling with the revelation of Ms Terri’s profession and the circumstances of his own birth, Hunter comes to hate himself. While marching to the Somme, he resolves the only solution is to discard his past and restart life under another identity. The regiment then arrives at the Somme.

What’s in a name?
‘Hunter Hates His Life’.

Whose viewpoint?
Hunter, hating his life.

🌲🌲🌲

>One foot, then the other / Such embarrassment, it wasn’t meant that / I,
Hunter is plodding along at the end of the line of soldiers, marching en route to the battleground. The mindless rhythm of the march has helped him cool down from He Said He Had A Story, but his mind is still fixated on all the implications of the horrible truth he’s learned.

>It wasn’t meant that / I, I should discover such offensive things
Hunter regrets learning about Ms Terri’s profession, especially in such a bawdy and denigrating manner. Hunter has always held his mother in extremely high esteem and from his perspective she’s never been anything but gentle, loving, and spotless. Knowing now that these were the secrets she was trying to hide from him, and that this is what she was doing every time she went away, Hunter feels like an idiot for ever trying to uncover the truth, and like he has utterly disrespected her memory by soiling it with images of her flirting with and getting pounded by clients. Moreover, now when he tries to think back on his past to periods where Ms Terri was absent, that absence automatically fills with unpleasant images of her getting railed.

Ms Terri obviously didn’t want this to affect him or to affect his perception of her — but now that he knows it, inevitably, it has.

>This suffering sends hope to the ground / But I really never had enough
Trying to uncover Ms Terri’s secrets, and from that find some stability, was the impetus for him leaving the Lake in the first place. Now that he knows those secrets weren’t worth uncovering, or rather that they were actively deleterious things to know, he feels not just beyond stupid, but like he’s accidentally upended any possibility of finding happiness in his life. Like, who is Hunter? Oh, he’s the selfish greedy spoilt bastard son of a raped prostitute.

Turns out Ms Terri was protecting him after all. He should have trusted her more.

>They’ve got pride in him
Hunter glances over the other soldiers and sees how they are looking to the General with admiration. They loved his story, and are impressed by the General’s authority and handling of that hesitant hooker — what a ridiculous thing! — by firmly putting her in her place. Hunter of course hates this and does not even know how to respond to the fact that consensus says the General is cool for raping his mother.

I imagine that the other soldiers expect Hunter to hold the same sentiment, and part of getting along with them means having to pretend he’s not furious. He’s gobsmacked by the whole thing.

>This tide turns lives over
Everything Hunter knows about his life has been upended. Prior to this moment, if you looked at Hunter’s life as a gestalt, you could say that it was basically good and happy. Of course, bad things happened, but those were interruptions bouncing off an essentially positive foundation.

Now it feels like it’s the other way around — Hunter’s life is basically horrible and miserable, and any strongholds of happiness in it were strenuously engineered to be so. Everything he thought to be a good decision in retrospect was wrong, and by defying the bounds that Ms Terri set for him, all he’s done is immerse himself in the utterly unremitting, merciless blackness that surrounds every facet of his life. Hunter is now understanding that actually, no, he doesn’t have the power to face this, and to think he could was incredibly naive.

>0:44 – 0:57
Those ‘buh buh buh’s again. Really need to figure out what’s up with those.

Stewing on his hurt, indignation, and changed perspective on his life, Hunter’s thoughts grow more incisive and spiteful.

>A black tongue prophecy, adorned in stony skin / We never ever (never ever) ever had to lie to move ahead
Wow this is a hard line! Okay.

‘A black tongue prophecy, adorned in stony skin’ -> Mostly this part. What’s this referring to? The idea of black-tongue prophecy, generally, points to the idea of Hunter’s life and fate being negative, but why is it adorned in stony skin? Whose tongue? What prophecy? Clueless on this one. Oracles maybe?

‘We never ever had to lie to move ahead’ -> Hunter mocks himself and the naive mentality of dumb honesty that got him to this point. Hunter’s general worldview before this was that there was no good reason to tell lies, that good people will be generally sincere and honest, and that you can resolve most misfortunes by fair means. That is, whatever difficulty is placed before you, you can generally solve it without resorting to scummy tactics. So on, so on, the innocent way of the Lake. Broadly speaking, he does still believe that good people will lean towards such things, but is recognising that he was conceited to apply these concepts to himself, because he’d just never been in a situation where he’d had to make such hard decisions before.

Obviously dumb honesty couldn’t work for Ms Terri, and won’t work for Hunter now. If he wants to be happy again, he has to find some way to dissociate from this awful past — when it’s as close to him as the questions “So where are you from?” or “What were your parents like?”, it’s always going to butt back into his life.

>But here in oblivion, we cling to what we can / So in the end (in the end) we can say that with these hands / We took it all back, it all back
Hunter resolves that, when you’re desperate, sometimes none of the options available to you are good. He is willing to use untoward methods to secure a good life for himself again.

>So let us force a smile and pretend that we’re alive
Hunter feels dead inside, but decides he’ll play along making friends with the General and his regiment.

>Oh, but somewhere, none of this happened / The bullets removed themselves; life is beautiful
Thinking about how sheerly agonising pretending to get along with these people will be, Hunter wistfully fantasises of a happier place where he didn’t experience any of this pain, nothing went wrong, none of his loved ones got hurt, and he still has a broadly positive and hopeful outlook towards life. He wishes, truly wishes, to go back to being dumb, naive, sheltered, and innocent.

>I have a home above the lake where I could
Wonderful buildup here. While on the train of thought of going back to safety, it occurs to Hunter that the comfort zone of the Lake is still, like, there.

Another thing to note — the home is ‘above the lake’, so I think my map was right. The cabin’s at the junction of the lake and the river.

>Forget the words to the songs that we’ve heard / The passages read, all the names in a world / That have brought us this pain, from the wounds we’ve sustained
He considers the possibility of running back to the Lake and pretending that none of the events that followed his leaving ever happened. Love the absolute despair cheery stuff going on in this verse, a bit Mustard Gassy. We have the BSB ‘smiling through the pain’ sting show up again here, too.

>A cold calloused heart, sitting still in this cave of a chest
But even if he went back to the Lake, he’d still be this horrible, selfish, greedy person and by all metrics would likely still be miserable. Going back to the Lake doesn’t give him anything new he can replace his current life with; it just forces him to pretend he’s happy.

>So abandon a life from before / A boy and his innocence
Hunter decides that what he has to do is erase any association he has with the life he’s lived up to now. The innocent boy that Ms Terri tried to shelter and nurture has been undone, and Hunter needs to assume a new identity if he’s to move forward anywhere.

For all purposes, this song marks the point where Hunter just snaps. His life is causing him so much pain he can’t handle it anymore.

>2:54 – 3:15 Instrumental
Buh buh buh buh buh. Hunter’s thoughts begin to take a devious direction.

>3:15 – 3:44 Instrumental
Unsure, but I think this big burst of energy before the fadeout might be Hunter already considering the possibility of stealing the Son’s identity.

>3:45 – 4:05 Ambiance
So we have wind… frogs… rain… Hunter’s regiment has reached the battleground (in terrible conditions, too), and will now participate in the Battle of the Somme.

He Said He Had A Story | Act III | Go Get Your Gun

He Said He Had A Story

He Said He Had A Story
There was a silver circle sign
And she was standing at the door
We pressed our way right through the crowd
Our pace was quickened to her floor
There was a single feigning light
And there was silk all on the walls
She had a lot of love to give
I was prepared to take it all
(But what did she do next?)

She had disrobed and she was
Waiting on the floor
She asked me what it was I want
I thought that I wanted it all
(What did you say?)
I said, “Stand up
And move your body to the bed”
She quickly stood and slowly turned
And here’s exactly what she said

“Please be soft and sweet to me
This life has not been good, you see
It’s hard with such a history
Buried in misery.”
(And what did you do next?)

I broke a smile
Reminding that I paid her well
Her lips returned, and then I felt her hands
Unbuckling my belt
(So was it good?)
It felt like Heaven
But I’m sure she was in Hell
I made it clear I’d get my money’s worth
Out of the goods she sells

Break and bind yourself to me
Deliver what you sold, you see that
I will only take from you
And use it up, I’ll use you up
What was your name?

Break and bind yourself to me
Deliver what you sold you see that
I will only take from you
And use it up, I’ll use you up
What was your name?

🌲🌲🌲

What happens?
During a moment of respite at camp, the soldiers tell stories of their romantic conquests. The leader of the regiment, The General, joins in by proudly recounting how he raped a prostitute at a brothel called the Dime. Hunter realises in horror that Ms Terri was the prostitute, and this man is his father.

What’s in a name?
He has a story! Let’s hear it.

Whose viewpoint?
Hunter, listening to the General tell his story.

🌲🌲🌲

>0:00 – 0:04 Instrumental
The General swaggers over to a group of soldiers telling stories about their romantic conquests (the tongue-in-cheek joke about the First Lady at the end of Saved is our ‘conceptual’ transition into this; the soldiers are the type to have these conversations and make those kinds of locker room jokes). Off the bat, we can hear that he’s a very arrogant person, and sounds to be gearing up to blow the privates’ minds with something really juicy. The soldiers, including Hunter (who is likely still confined to camp for now), gather around to listen.

This is another song where the lyrics are extremely aggressive, blunt, and straightforward — even moreso than usual since it is literally a character narrating a story. Still, there’s stuff to note. A lot of stuff.

>There was a silver circle sign / And she was standing at the door / We pressed our way right through the crowd / Our pace was quickened to her floor
‘There was a silver circle sign’ -> The symbol of the Dime is a silver circle. As the General recounts his story, he’ll be noting the things that stood out to him — this one is the most important off the bat, since it establishes the setting of the Dime. Having been there himself, as Hunter listens along, he will begin to recognise the sights that the General is recounting.

‘She was standing at the door’ -> Ms Terri was soliciting punters to enter the Dime. Otherwise, the General targeted the first woman he saw upon entering.

‘We pressed our way right through the crowd / our pace was quickened to her floor’ -> Familiar scenes, huh? We got to see the Dime crowded full of patrons on the main floor in Bitter Suite II, with Ms Leading guiding Hunter upstairs in the same fashion. Note the use of ‘quickened’ — echoing ‘quickened cat’s feet’, the manner the General jumped on Ms Terri and raced to get to the sex was as aggressive and practised as TP&P is when he jumps on marks to exploit.

>There was a single feigning light / And there was silk all on the walls
Describing Ms Terri’s room. The attention brought to the silk answers the question of what happened to the flame in City Escape, as noted.

‘Feigning light’ sticks with me. I’m not sure what it’s pointing at apart from describing the atmospheric lighting of the brothel’s room, but since the phrasing gets brought up again later, I think there could be something to it.

>She had a lot of love to give / I was prepared to take it all
The General is here to fuck her raw and keep going ‘till she screams.

>(But what did she do next?)
The soldiers listening are invested in this story, urging the General to continue.

>She had disrobed and she was / Waiting on the floor
Interesting place to wait — is Ms Terri hoping to get away with, or at least begin with, just a blowjob? Either way it emphasises Ms Terri as reluctant and powerless before the General.

>She asked me what it was I want / I thought that I wanted it all
The General is greedy for sex and completely uncaring of Ms Terri’s limits or desires.

>I said, “Stand up / And move your body to the bed”
‘Move your body’ is a phrase we’ll see reused as a shorthand for taking actions that you are unwilling but forcing yourself to do, or more precisely that you are coerced into doing. For now, the General does not regard Ms Terri as a person and is cutting out any foreplay that could ease her into what’s about to happen — he’s going straight into the rough sex.

>She quickly stood and slowly turned / And here’s exactly what she said
Just wanted to note the really nice, subtle juxtaposition on ‘quickly stood’ to ‘slowly turned’. Ms Terri obeys this aggressive punter promptly and without question, likely aware that things will get even worse if she falters, then hesitates when she goes to request that he be gentle. She seems to know punters like him can be volatile, but is also so adverse to rough sex that she’ll risk making such a request anyway. Rather, she can probably figure from his demeanour that he’s going to rape her, and is simply hoping for him to see her as human enough to go easier than he first intended.

>”Please be soft and sweet to me / This life has not been good, you see / It’s hard with such a history / Buried in misery.”
Even in these circumstances, it’s nice to hear Ms Terri again. Apart from this being sung in her gentle, sad intonation, every word here is a landmark meant to twig us back to the conclusion of ‘oh my god, it’s Ms Terri’. ‘Please be soft and sweet to me’ = ‘The cavalier, she hopes of him / in dissonance with experience’; ‘This life has not been good’ = all of City Escape basically; ‘it’s hard with such a history’ = ‘with a fondness for cooking history, revealing thoughts of Ms Terri’; ‘Buried in misery’ = ‘The expiry of misery’ & ‘Fatal fascination breeds a bloom of misery’. The whole verse of course rhymes with Ms Terri, too.

Ms Terri divulges to the General the broad circumstances that led her to the Dime. Apart from her struggles in the Dime itself, I sense the ‘history’ she’s alluding to goes back to things even before that, suggesting her life in general has never been great, hence how she wound up here in the first place. She is hoping that knowing more about who she is as a person will make him pause and be more sympathetic.

>(And what did you do next?)
Love the energy of how the listening soldiers come back in after such a gentle verse. Yeah, don’t expect any sympathy — they’re all keyed up now to know how the General dealt with this conflict of the reluctant hooker.

>I broke a smile / Reminding that I paid her well
The General feels that energy too, growing only more aggressive and eager to dominate her, and more proud to inform his audience that he successfully did so. Beyond his amusement, he seems vaguely irritated that she even tried wheedle out of this, since she is a hooker, this is a transaction, and she should be prepared to take this kind of treatment. Whatever kind of sympathy or gentleness she’s looking to get here, she sold away the second she made this her profession. If anything, her plea has only aggravated his desire to punish her.

>Her lips returned, and then I felt her hands / Unbuckling my belt
Knowing this could get precarious, Ms Terri abruptly concedes the point and gets to business.

We’re getting the song version of this whole encounter, but remember that Hunter is actually listening to all of this as the General describes it. Do you think the General is going to neglect to brag about the way she screamed, or the faces she made, or whatever other bawdy indignities? Liquor in the front, poker in the rear… not nice things to be hearing about your mother.

>It felt like Heaven / But I’m sure she was in Hell
‘A failed life exposed the man / Who led her off into the flame / To cast her back to Hell again’ -> Entertaining clients in the Dime is Hell. The General is aware that Ms Terri hates this and is in pain, but he doesn’t care, since she is a hooker so he should have free rein to do what he wants. With money being involved, I’m not sure the General can even conceive of this being rape, or rather that if he was accused of raping Ms Terri he’d just laugh and note that she accepted the money.

Ms Terri is also an extremely proficient prostitute, I figure to mention, if she’s able to make him second-guess whether she was enjoying it or not even while she was in total agony.

>I made it clear I’d get my money’s worth / Out of the goods she sells
Ms Terri may have tried to slow down the pace or ease the General’s rhythm down into something more resembling a romantic encounter, but he wasn’t having it and just molested and pistoned the fuck out of her. This aspect of control and domination was highly arousing to him and likely not something he could inflict on his !wife!, but prostitutes are sluts, so it’s fair game.

>Break and bind yourself to me / Deliver what you sold, you see that / I will only take from you
The General describes how he was looking to utterly destroy this woman, and violate her beyond her limits from the outset, while in an EXTRAORDINARILY ironic fashion describing the event of Hunter’s conception.

‘Bind yourself to me’ -> While ostensibly it’s the General wanting to make a permanent mark on Ms Terri by utterly traumatising her, it’s actually priming us to make the connection that this encounter leads Ms Terri to get pregnant with this man’s child, binding her to him in that fashion.
‘I will only take from you’ -> Exquisitely done how THIS is the line that tells us he got Ms Terri pregnant. Because he’s totally, totally wrong — in his single-minded determination to violate her, he didn’t take anything more than what others have taken, while instead giving her Hunter.

>What was your name?
Gee! It’s a mystery. Har har har.

Only after he has ‘used her up’ does the General think to ask Ms Terri for her name, in a total afterthought, as if to have a way to categorise this conquest. This is contrasting Hunter in Bitter Suite I, who asked for Ms Leading’s name right off the bat because he liked her and wanted to know more about her. Given how uncomfortable Ms Leading was with the question, we can figure that the General’s manner of name-asking is more typical.

In terms of the General recounting his story, I figure this is where he namedrops the prostitute as Ms Terri.

>2:13 – 2:24 Instrumental
Hunter is alarmed to hear this name, beginning to realise by the details of the General’s story that the ‘Ms Terri’ described might be his Ms Terri.

>2:24 – 2:36 Instrumental
Stress and realisation building. Oh my God — it is his Ms Terri. The connections form themselves as scenes from his childhood align with scenes he has himself seen at the Dime, and that the General has described — his mom’s silver circle necklace, her visits up north, her quiet exhaustion, the revulsion of the Lake people, her refusal to talk about it… his mom was a prostitute at the Dime.

>2:37 – 2:45 Instrumental
Furious anger towards the General. THIS is what she was hiding all this time… and maybe, for good reason! Hunter abhors this man for the pain he’s inflicted on Ms Terri, and for how casually he talks about it as if this isn’t the reason she killed herself. Hell, if he knew that, would he even care! Probably not, he’d probably brag about it and make it the punchline to his horrible little story. I think Hunter is already considering killing the General here, or at least is rumbling with a quietly murdery sentiment — the passage is extremely dark.

And the cherry to all this, really topping this tale off, is that this rapist is his father. How does Hunter know?

The dude’s son, the soldier who rescued Hunter, looks exactly like him.

(This is a stretch thing but it crossed my mind, I wonder if Hunter recognised his freakout towards Ms Leading in Red Hands is rather reminiscent of the way the General just talked about Ms Terri, at least in the sense of how willing he was at that moment to punish her by treating her like a tool and whore. Would make the whole thing even worse).

>Chorus Repetition
Hunter has recognised and processed exactly what the General has done, focusing back on the dialogue going on as the General continues to showboat and bask in the admiration of the privates. Hunter is furious and perhaps asks him more questions to confirm the General as utterly irredeemable.

>3:19 – 3:30 Instrumental
Hunter turns away from the circle, stewing in fury, as the story wraps up and camp breaks.

>3:31 – 3:33 Silence.
Small timeskip.

>3:33 – 3:39 Drumroll
Hunter is now well enough to join the regiment on the field. He is deployed back into duty with the General and the Son, marching out en route to the battlefield.

Saved | Act III | This Beautiful Life

Saved

Saved
Amongst the stone and smoke
We never laid before
Images floating all about
Life in the afterglow

My decaying mind pretends
None of this ever happened
We either learn to live a lie
Or we’re waiting here to die

And after all this suffering
I could lie here for good
But with a mind on fire
I try and stand my ground

Illuminate and I will follow

Amongst the stone and smoke
Rising above it all
Broken but not beyond repair
Let’s see how this soul fares

And after all this suffering
I could lie here for good
But with a mind on fire
I try and stand my ground

Illuminate, and I will follow you
(I will follow you, you, I will follow you)
(Everything you thought you’ve lost you have now)
(Who’s laughing now? Who’s laughing now? Now, now, who’s laughing now?)
Let’s see how this soul fares

“The Private does what The General says
The General does what The President says
The President does what The First Lady says
So-so they say…”

🌲🌲🌲

What happens?
Hunter, still collapsed in the field and barely alive after the Mustard Gas attack, contemplates his imminent death. Though tempted to let go and let it all be over, he ultimately determines not to surrender if there’s still a chance he could live. Rewarding this determination, an allied soldier comes upon him and brings him safely back to camp to recover.

What’s in a name?
Hunter is dying but gets saved. Casey has mentioned that most songs have extremely literal working titles that sometimes don’t get changed by the time the album goes out. This is 100% one of them.

Aside from that. The horrors of war are now over, and this is a good time to note that we’re entering the second half, and second story arc of the album. There’s a distinct tonal and story difference between these two halves. The first half describes Hunter’s experiences in war, and describes what war is like, almost purely for character development, greatly shifting his worldview and loosening his moral rigidity, while shedding him of his naivety, forcing him to mature, compromising his belief in God, so on. The second half is a more traditional ‘narrative’ focused on Hunter’s personal character conflicts in the overall story rather than ‘what would Hunter’s response/impression be to this horrible war thing or that horrible war thing’, so it’s things like addressing plotlines from Act I and setting him up for Act IV.

Whose viewpoint?
Hunter.

🌲🌲🌲

>0:00 – 0:12 Instrumental
What the hell is this, Morning Mood? It’s like he’s in some meadow with birds and bunnies and flowers all blooming and bouncing around. Wakey wakey, rise and shine!

Yeah, so Hunter comes to, having survived the Mustard Gas attack. He is still on the battlefield, not in a good enough condition to get up and go anywhere and in fact presently dying.

>Amongst the stone and smoke / We never laid before / Images floating all about / Life in the afterglow
Oh that’s why it’s so cheery sounding, Hunter is presently totally delirious. Nothing happening around him is registering right now, or is only floating in and out as vague images, while his mind occupies itself with a happy little ‘life flashing before your eyes’, ‘light at the end of the tunnel’ imminent-death euphoria.

Which is what this song is, a description of Hunter’s near-death experience. In that way, it’s really, really straightforward.

>My decaying mind pretends / None of this ever happened
The near-death state is casting out the pain and drawing Hunter’s mind away from any of the horrors he has experienced. He can barely think through this anaesthetic haze and these memories of happier times.

>We either learn to live a lie / Or we’re waiting here to die
Hunter can either delude himself into thinking he’ll survive somehow, and sit here hoping for rescue, or he can be realistic about his chances and recognise that he’s going to be laying here in the mud for minutes or hours until he finally passes. In the latter case, he might as well not protract the suffering and just let himself die.

After all his experiences, he isn’t optimistic enough to believe life will provide him with anything nice, but he still has just enough faith to not want to die.

>And after all this suffering / I could lie here for good
The option of surrendering to death and letting this warm current take him is extremely attractive to Hunter right now.

>But with a mind on fire / I try and stand my ground
‘Happiness is a knife / when the world rolls on its side / and your mind’s on fire’. Our first, and extremely indirect, tie back to Ms Terri in this song. While describing how Hunter is frantically trying to grapple onto consciousness and work up enough anger not to get swept away, it’s also priming us to think about her since Hunter is also going to be thinking about her very soon.

In a more wide-reaching sense, Hunter still feels he has urgent business he hasn’t attended to in his life. It likely isn’t so specific or conscious as ‘I HAVE TO FIND OUT THE SECRETS OF MY MOM AND BURN DOWN WHATEVER KILLED HER!!!’, but he is definitely having fuzzy impulses in that vein.

>Illuminate and I will follow
Hunter hazily asks for a sign from God to point him on where to go. If God assures him that there’s purpose to his survival, and there’s worth in him fighting to live, then Hunter will fight to his absolute limit. Hunter felt abandoned by God as of WIMTBA and outright disavowed Him in Mustard Gas, but in this dying moment he is desperate enough to hope and want that guidance.

Simultaneously, he is asking to see Ms Terri. ‘I still see her face; her beauty, her grace / Transfixed like a light in front of me’. If Ms Terri can appear before him, then he will happily give up and let himself die so that he can join her.

>Amongst the stone and smoke / Rising above it all / Broken but not beyond repair / Let’s see how this soul fares
Hunter is so close to death now that he has an out-of-body experience. He watches himself on the field with shockingly lucid impartiality, observing that even though he’s seriously injured, the injuries are not yet so grievous as to be fatal despite treatment. There is still a genuine chance he could survive this. Whether he does or not, though, is ultimately God’s hands — Hunter himself can’t do anything to influence the outcome. That said, he’s content leaving it to chance.

>Chorus Repetition
Hunter resolves to stay alive for as long as he can so as to keep the option to live open.

>Illuminate, and I will follow you / (I will follow you, you, I will follow you) / (Everything you thought you’ve lost you have now) / (Who’s laughing now?)
But Hunter’s will eventually flags as he gets that sign he was looking for — and it’s not God knocking, it’s Ms Terri.

We have this amazing buildup through this whole verse of absolute felicity and bliss as Hunter finds himself reunited in death with this vision of Ms Terri. He is so, so, so, so happy to see her again as his spirit turns to her, runs straight to her, and in the image I get, hugs her up to the ending of the verse…

‘I will follow you’ -> Hunter will follow Ms Terri into death.
‘Everything you thought you’ve lost you have now’ -> Hunter has Ms Terri back, as well as all the light, warmth, fulfilment, happiness, and love that comes with being in her presence.
‘Who’s laughing now?’ -> Hunter is! Screw your lame ‘life’ with its ‘suffering’ and ‘drama’ and ‘pain’, and alright he was dumb to get so dramatic about all that in the first place, because in the end Hunter got everything he wanted after all! Thanks God! It’s all okay!

But, before Hunter’s spirit can be whisked away into the loving embrace of Ms Terri…

>Let’s see how this soul fares
some TOTAL JERKWAD comes on the scene and resuscitates him! Atrocious! The image of Ms Terri disappears as Hunter is yanked back into reality, illustrated by the abruptness of this line after all that buildup.

We can hear from the distinct intonation that this is a new speaker — the Son. He’s a soldier who belongs to an allied regiment. Right now, his platoon is scouring the battlefield left behind after Mustard Gas, retrieving the corpses and looking for survivors like Hunter. Hunter is truly hanging by a thread when the Son finds him, so the Son isn’t certain he’ll survive, but he’s hopeful.

>4:19 – 4:26 Instrumental
Fade to black & timeskip.

>”The Private does what The General says / The General does what The President says / The President does what The First Lady says / So-so they say…”
Hunter awakens in the Son’s camp to the unfamiliar sound of this wartime ditty on the radio. Some time has passed since he was found, and he has received medical treatment, though I figure he still needs some time before he’s at 100% again. He’ll be staying at camp for now while he recovers, and if he’s well enough after that he’ll join on as a member of this group, since his own regiment got destroyed by the Tank.

Another thing about this ditty — we’re at the Western Front and about to go into the Battle of the Somme, but these soldiers are plainly American if they’re talking about the President and the First Lady. I read this as confirmation that Hunter himself is American, rather than British, since we know he had to cross an ocean to get here, and the members of this regiment include his father and brother, who we can figure to be American and who also came from the City. There’s other stuff like the Dime’s closing coinciding with legislation on brothels tightening in America specifically, so I figure it’s another alternate history slip moment from Casey where he’s had America in mind as the setting the whole time, because why else is it showing up here when America wasn’t involved in the Battle of the Somme?

Mustard Gas | Act III | He Said He Had A Story

Mustard Gas

Mustard Gas
Here they are; the wicked
A panic floods the field
Deliverance; unthinkable
They play their part, performing oh so well

With empty cores they carry on
(“A twisted soul”) “An apparition”
Born of a beastly brand, they butcher purposely
(Just have the sense to run away!)

Scream at the sky and beg
Beg for a reason he would allow this
Look to the sky and say
“We would be better off without this”
“Who would allow this?”

We’ve never felt alive
But none of us can die just when we want to
We’re stuck in this disguise
With leather skin; these eyes designed to haunt you
But do we haunt you?

Scream at the sky and beg
Beg for a reason he would allow this
Look to the sky and say
“We would be better off without this”
“Who would allow this?”

You’re on the other side
You’re on the other side
You’re on the other side
You’re on the other side
You’re on the other side
You’re on the other side
You’re on the other side
You’re on the other side

🌲🌲🌲

What happens?
Following the Thief’s directions, Hunter finds himself caught on an active battleground in the middle of a mustard gas attack. Failing to escape it, the agonising gas cripples him so severely, he can do nothing but lay screaming and wait to die.

What’s in a name?
‘Mustard Gas’ — The final horror of war, this one representing Suffering. What’s there to say about suffering? It’s the horrible sensation of just pain and pain and pain and pain with no light at the end of the tunnel. It’s the absolute agony that makes you wish you were dead and didn’t exist so you don’t have to keep feeling it, and makes you loathe the very concepts of ‘justice’, ‘compassion’, ‘goodness’, or ‘mercy’ as bald-faced lies of the universe.

Whose viewpoint?
Hunter.

🌲🌲🌲

>Here they are; the wicked
The figures that approached at the end of The Thief come into view, leading everyone present to think: we’re doomed.

It’s a group of enemy soldiers in gas masks, dispensing Mustard Gas over the field. Rather, they already have been dispensing it as heard at the end of The Thief, but only now upon seeing them are the allied soldiers making the connection of how they’re under attack. More than that, in their delay to respond, the gas has spread and saturated so escaping it is now impossible.

Off the bat, Hunter characterises the gassers as ‘wicked’. We’ll see he regards them as completely inhuman beings, similar to the Tank in that the outer visage of the mask makes it feel like there’s no human soul behind these actions, but if the Tank was evil for being ruthless and mechanical, the gassers are downright Satanic. The thing about them, which makes them so horrible, is that they still have the illusion of a human shape. It suggests that they may have once had, or should have, some reluctance to inflict the vast pains they’re inflicting. But they don’t.

Note that mustard gas itself is rarely fatal in the short term — its purpose is rather to cause such excruciating pain and injury that the enemy soldiers are too crippled to fight, inflicting long-lasting tortures over entire swaths of battlefield at a time.

>A panic floods the field
The allied soldiers know they’re screwed — they don’t have gas masks. A mad rush back to the trenches breaks out.

>Deliverance; unthinkable
But even if they get to the trenches, they can’t escape. All they can do is hide and hope the gassers don’t notice them. Still, the gas will proliferate wherever the wind carries it, so the answer to what they can really do to avoid the gas is ‘pray’. But there is nothing that will ease the pain once the gas reaches them. They are all going to be casualties, they are all going to suffer, and no merciful power is going to intervene to save them.

>They play their part, performing oh so well
‘They play a part and act a scene’? Probably not…

The gassers are methodical and obedient in how they administer the gas. Their willingness to adhere to their orders, and inflict such suffering, sticks out to Hunter — remember that Hunter broke away from the war machine in Cauda because he saw how he was inflicting pain (‘with abrasive eyes / pain in plain sight’). These are ‘people’ who have not and seemingly will not ever have their ‘Cauda moment’, and if they have, they’ve pushed that voice of conscience aside so they can continue serving as their masters demand. Such, their senses of morality and empathy have been so utterly subsumed by their training that they are basically soulless. Hunter bitterly observes how pleased their superiors must be with them, or how pleased they must be with themselves.

>With empty cores they carry on / (“A twisted soul”) “An apparition” / Born of a beastly brand, they butcher purposely
The gassers proceed in spreading gas across the field, firing artillery anywhere they suspect there are soldiers.

Hunter’s impression of them continues to echo Cauda — ‘an apparition awoken with an urge to own and occupy’, ‘twisted beasts with a desire for disorder’. The Mustard Gassers are the final result of perfect indoctrination, the ‘twisted beasts’ that Hunter felt himself pressured into becoming at the start of the war. They don’t think for themselves, they don’t even think of themselves, they are simply pawns of their masters made to destroy the enemy’s pawns. They do this since it is their purpose, and their party line is telling them it’s morally right. Probably, that’s the only way to inflict such suffering and not be inconsolable.

Any human heart underneath the mask is surely dead. Overall language here frames them as being, basically, demons, or some other kind of metaphysical entity that parodies and preys on humans. The uncanny valley of the human silhouette under the vile masks is highly unnerving to Hunter.

>(Just have the sense to run away!)
Hunter pleads inside himself for the soldiers to not try fighting the gassers, as his regiment tried fighting the Tank, and instead just run. Hunter, we can figure, is running as fast as he can to get away from this scene.

I can also weirdly read this as coming from the gassers, like even they want Hunter’s side to give up and save themselves, but it still doesn’t stop them from doing what they’re going to do.

>0:52 – 0:59 Instrumental
The gassers advance, firing off another round of gas. Hunter is still distanced from the front lines of this fight, but close enough that he can hear the screams of the afflicted soldiers and for the gas to begin billowing its way to him.

>Scream at the sky and beg / Beg for a reason he would allow this / Look to the sky and say / “We would be better off without this” / “Who would allow this?”
Echoing WIMTBA and Cauda: ‘With our hands to the sky / We extend our limbs begging “why oh why?”’; ‘we cannot allow this, this is terrible’.

The pain and horror of the mustard gas is abominable. Screams and wails of agony rise from every man caught in the cloud, leaving Hunter with this impression: a just God would not allow something as horrific as mustard gas to exist. We heard him plead for God in WIMTBA, but now he is condemning God as himself negligent or wicked for permitting men to suffer and die in such an excruciating manner.

Basically Hunter facing the question of evil: how can God be good when evil exists? And comes to the conclusion that, if God exists, then he is not good, but sadistic.

>We’ve never felt alive / But none of us can die just when we want to
Now we get to hear what’s going on in the Mustard Gassers’ world. Unsure if this is a literal hard cut to them as narrators, or them just being close enough now for Hunter to see them clearly and append this perspective onto them.

And wow is their perspective something. Contrasted against all the suffering and horror, life for the Mustard Gassers sounds cartoonishly silly as they bumble around the field, firing off more gas. They are extremely divorced from the pain of what’s going on here, rather, they are aware they are inflicting terrible pain, but are so beyond the point of doing anything about it that their attitude has wrapped around and become disturbingly cheery from all the grimness of it.

The gassers acknowledge that yes, they are soulless. Hunter’s read that they have subsumed their hearts to the war machine is correct, so they have all lost their selves by doing things that have shattered their personal ethos to the dirt. For this, they feel dead, and don’t mind if reality catches up with that inner deadness. Unfortunately, since their superiors still have use for them, they still have work to do, so they can’t just let themselves get shot or whatever. In its own way, this inability to defy the command to torture others is also a kind of torture.

>We’re stuck in this disguise / With leather skin; these eyes designed to haunt you
Driving in the point again that the soldiers are unable to behave with humanity or empathy because their superiors have forced them to become monsters. Even the gassers feel trapped and inhuman in this role — these horrible masks have, in a sense, become their faces.

>But do we haunt you?
There’s the literal element of how frightening a gas mask looks, and how the image of it might linger in nightmares, but I think it’s also like, ‘do you think you could’ve wound up like us?’.

>You’re on the other side.
So why are the gassers doing this? What justifies all this suffering? What justifies any of the atrocities that have happened over this war? Well, nothing, really, except that the other guy is the enemy. In the end that’s all it comes down to.

I like envisioning this as the gassers having broken through the previous front line and are now directly upon Hunter. More gas deployments go off and off all around him, fresh clouds bursting in front of him as he tries to flee. However he tries to avoid it or fight it off, he quickly succumbs to the choking effects of the gas and falls to the ground in agony, while the gassers continue along in their warpath, heedless of him or just uncaring.

That said, I could also figure him being gassed earlier, in either of the chorus iterations (so that his condemnation of God doesn’t just coincide with him seeing others in agony, but with him experiencing it for himself… then the gassers’ verse can cut in while Hunter himself is writhing there in front of them before they trundle onwards). But with the big energy of this verse it feels appropriate to imagine things coming to a head here… up to however you want to read it, I think.

>3:43 – 4:13 Instrumental
Hunter faints. Thinking he is dead, the mustard gassers proceed on, leaving behind what is now a quiet scene.

The Thief | Act III | Saved

The Thief

The Thief
Shrouded criminal
An innovative mind
(We watch spirits move)

Shadowed, they’re oblivious
With plans awry
(We watch spirits move)

Who can save us now?

Love seems baron when cash is king
Wealth here for the bleeding, what good will bring
More than I could ask from those who sleep
A crooked mind, an honest heart, ancillary
They collide…

Cheating innocence
I’ve got the time tonight

Tonight…
Tonight…
Tonight
Tonight
Tonight!
Tonight!

I got time, I got time…
I got time, I got time…
I got time, I got time…
I got time, I got time
I got time, I got time
I got time, I got time!
I got mine, I got mine!

Love seems bare of meaning when cash is king
Wealth here for the bleeding, what good will bring
Me more than I could ask from those who sleep
A crooked mind, an honest heart, ancillary
They collide

🌲🌲🌲

What happens?
Hunter comes upon a Thief robbing the bodies of soldiers. Though the desecration of the bodies angers Hunter, the Thief calms him by noting his petty criminality is inconsequential compared to the war. Accepting this logic, Hunter spends the night with the Thief, who then directs him onward…

What’s in a name?
‘The Thief’ — and for once we actually have a name for him! He’s Pierre and he’s our third Horror, Greed. So we have destruction, death, and… well greed is bad of course, but next to those two, is it really so bad as to be called a ‘horror’?

Pierre will show us yes. Absolutely.

Also with his name being Pierre we can pin Hunter to a specific location — he is presently in France, lining up with references to Hunter fighting in the Battle of the Somme later.

Whose viewpoint?
Hunter and Pierre alternating, but mostly Pierre.

🌲🌲🌲

>0:00 – 0:08 Instrumental
Man, this song. I know it’s coming every time as part of the horrors of war sequence, but this is the first time I think I’ve really sat down to listen to it. Everything about how it’s written, sung, and structured is so shadowy and airy that it passes under the radar, which thematically I think is the point.

Just wanted to say that before the lyrics take over, and also say that the lyrics here are wild, in the sense of how odd the phrasing is and how much you have to extrapolate from tiny phrases and only vague ambiguous references to anything. I think I have some ideas though. Also this little guitar at the start here reminds me of something from Silent Hill lol.

>Shrouded criminal
Okay, so here’s my best guess as to how to approach this song’s lyrics. We have two clear intonations that play through this song: an airy one, which is Pierre’s, and a ‘solid’ one, which is Hunter. The effect is more clear in the chorus and the predominant narrator across the song is Pierre, but the abrupt contrast on these two words is also playing with this dynamic.

‘Shrouded’ -> This is Pierre, in disguise as he stealthily picks through the bodies prepared for burial at the end of The Poison Woman. The soldiers who prepared the bodies have left, since nighttime is imminent if it hasn’t fallen already. He believes he hasn’t been seen, but…

‘Criminal’ -> This is Hunter noticing Pierre’s lone silhouette, realising he’s stealing, and accusing him of criminality by approaching and training a gun on him. Pierre has been caught, and now we know what he is.

Time seems to freeze on this situation as the first couple verses continue — the intonation on criminal isn’t actually Hunter’s (it’s like a combination of Pierre’s and Hunter’s), with the first couple verses going ahead to describe more of what the situation is.

>An innovative mind
Is stealing from corpses really that innovative? I suppose it could be from Hunter’s perspective, if he’s never encountered the concept of graverobbing before (kind of like how he never encountered the concept of prostitutes even after bedding one), and for Pierre it might indicate that the war has given him opportunities to thieve prolifically where he couldn’t before. There’s only so many graves with so many valuables in them you can rob, right? Unless the guy literally died an hour ago and still has his uniform on and pockets full. His usual fare is probably living people but he’s seen easy money to be made on the war front, so here he is.

>(We watch spirits move)
Clueless on every aspect of this — who ‘we’ is indicating (Pierre and Hunter?), what the spirits are indicating, and why or how they are moving. I’d figure spirits would point to the ghosts of the dead soldiers, but how would Hunter and Pierre be watching them? Just some kind of empathy/thought to how the dead soldiers would react, driving Hunter and Pierre’s responses to this situation? Or some kind of physical action with the bodies being moved?

>Shadowed, they’re oblivious
Pierre confesses that no, the soldiers who prepared these corpses don’t know he’s here and that yeah he’s not meant to be here. He has probably been following platoons around and picking up their scraps for a while now. Could also be pointing to the corpses as oblivious — which of course they are, they’re dead. Hunter might be thinking about what the soldiers would think, but Pierre has an answer to what they actually think about this: nothing.

>With plans awry
Probably just pointing again to Pierre graverobbing? Plans of cleanly burying the soldiers going awry because Pierre is robbing them? Pierre’s plans going awry because Hunter caught him, so he needs to think fast?

>Who can save us now?
This is the dead soldiers speaking, or Hunter’s thoughts of what the dead soldiers would say. They’re being robbed and can’t defend themselves, so who can save them? Hunter. We return to him aiming his gun at Pierre and demanding that Pierre stop, drop everything, and explain himself.

>Love seems baron when cash is king / Wealth here for the bleeding, what good will bring
So this is Pierre’s response, and his argument. What is the point of acting on sentimentality, and leaving the dead soldiers’ possessions for the dead soldiers to have, when Pierre can take those valuables and put them to proper use? Living people certainly need dollars more than dead ones. Especially Pierre, who insists he is too poor to worry about sentiment (love is baron); the money has to come first (cash is king).

‘Love seems baron’ -> Play on words here with baron/barren; Pierre’s greedy focus on money has made him unempathetic towards others, so he’s happy to exploit and use people’s pain to make a buck. Though he was able to see though the Poison Woman, the implications of what Pierre is saying here have not clicked for Hunter.

>More than I could ask from those who sleep
Hunter’s voice interjects, receptive to Pierre’s rhetoric and so finishing his lines. Pierre is arguing that he needs the money; if he is not actually poor, then he is making himself out to be so well enough that Hunter is sympathetic towards him. What he’s getting from graverobbing is a bounty incomparable to his everyday wealth and he seems to appreciate this. So compared to actually killing people, or robbing living people, is what Pierre’s doing really so horrible? Hunter’s a soldier, who is he to throw stones?

>A crooked mind, an honest heart, ancillary
Hunter accepts that Pierre’s methods are scummy, but fundamentally he isn’t that terrible. He puts away his gun and stops threatening Pierre.

>They collide…
Hunter and Pierre decide to camp together for the night. There is obvious discord between Pierre’s worldview and Hunter’s, though Hunter has decided it’s not a big enough deal to reject Pierre.

>Cheating innocence / I’ve got the time tonight
Meanwhile, while Hunter’s thinking to be a good camp buddy and not get on Pierre’s case over heartfelt grievances, Pierre is thinking about how to exploit Hunter. He thinks Hunter is gullible enough to rob and agreed to camp with him to facilitate that.

>1:35 – 1:45 Instrumental
We hear this strong buildup as Pierre’s actual thoughts start to make themselves known.

>Tonight
Pierre is anticipating the massive haul he’ll be able to steal tonight and becoming excited as he prepares camp, talks with Hunter, and graverobs.

>Got time, got time
Echoing two things here.

First: ‘Left right, left right’ from The Lake and the River. That was Hunter mindlessly pushing himself to march out of the bounds of the Lake; here it works to illustrate Pierre going left and right to and fro from body to body to body, robbing them.

Second: ‘We’ve got the time if you’ve got the scratch’ from The Pimp and the Priest. What’s the point of this song? Why is an encounter with a thief included among such horrors as destruction and death in the context of war? How come this one’s so tame, such that even Hunter doesn’t seem to regard it as horrible once he thinks about it, but still relevant enough to include here?

BECAUSE THIS IS THE HORROR THAT ALSO DRIVES THE ANTAGONIST OF THE WHOLE STORY. DUHHH! Our little Pierre may be a smalltime crook in comparison, but his mindset is exactly as mercenary, heartless, and cruel as TP&P. He does not care what kind of hurt he inflicts as long as he gets his money and he will happily backstab others for his own gain. He says as much to Hunter’s face and still Hunter underestimates the utter parasite he is. The only reason he’s targeting dead people, and hence was able to rationalise himself in a way Hunter accepted, was because it was an easier profit. Why struggle with robbing living soldiers if they’ll die within the week anyway?

Probably the worst thing about him is that he isn’t so obvious. If the Tank showed Hunter that morals weren’t the most powerful force on earth, and the Poison Woman was challenging Hunter to find the boundary between justifiable and unjustifiable immorality, the Thief is the force that says it’s okay to compromise your morals for personal gain, and purely by being so lukewarm after those other horrors, Hunter actually accepts it. Hunter has done awful things before — like how he treated Ms Leading in Red Hands, or what he has done in his course as a soldier — but those were consequences of him being immature and indoctrinated respectively. It’s this moment, where he sits back and lets Pierre graverob, on the rationale that Pierre ‘has a point’ and ‘isn’t that awful’, that Hunter first allows wickedness to flourish simply with the sentiment of ‘eh’.

I wonder if Hunter actually joins in with some of the graverobbing too. I’m going to figure no, he doesn’t go that far yet (and Pierre would probably be irascible about losing profits to Hunter), but it feels worth it to at least float the possibility.

On top of that, I figure this ‘tonight’ and ‘got time’ section describes Hunter and Pierre having a conversation while camping — and we’re hearing it from Pierre’s side, where he’s conspiring how to manipulate Hunter into giving up his valuables. Meanwhile, the last two regiments Hunter attached himself to have all died over The Tank and The Poison Woman, so he needs directions to meet up again with friendly forces. It’s unclear whether Pierre could know an attack would be coming soon, but the directions Pierre gives are bad directions that almost get Hunter killed.

Which personally, I think was purposeful. Because then Hunter will be a corpse and Pierre can leisurely rob him. Got mine!

>Got mine, got mine!
Hammering in the point; Pierre isn’t bothered an but about anyone or anything as long as he gets money. People can be left bleeding, screaming, dying — he doesn’t care, he won’t be there to help them. Escalate the scale of this sentiment from one petty graverobber to entire nations plundering the scraps of other war-ravaged nations, or encouraging the continuation of wars to benefit homeland industries — certainly, that’s horrifying.

Narratively, Pierre and Hunter have solidified their plan for Hunter to depart at daylight, across what Pierre seems to know is an active battleground. Aware that Hunter will likely die, and in fact hoping for it, they go to sleep. Dawn breaks with the next verse.

>Love seems bare of meaning when cash is king
Pierre’s thoughts are revealed: he doesn’t see the point of love, or in broader terms, of being selfless, principled, or doing good for others when he stands to make a buck by being exploitative instead. So it’s not that he’s too poor to get by without resorting to questionable means, it’s that he’s an opportunistic vulture who would’ve been doing this either way. You know how Ms Leading singled out TP&P as being ‘alone’ in The Church and The Dime? Yeah, same deal for Pierre, try to imagine him with a woman, or doing anything heartfelt, and he’s sterile. Too busy thinking about how to get money from the situation.

Narratively, I see this verse as Pierre seeing Hunter off in the morning before Hunter departs. For now we’re sticking with Pierre’s viewpoint, contemplating on what he’s done by manipulating Hunter into danger, and not caring. Hunter has been friendly with Pierre and Pierre is also brushing that off as pointless.

>Wealth here for the bleeding, what good will bring / Me more than I could ask from those who sleep
Subtle variation on the line changes its meaning, ‘what good will bring me more than <what I can get from graverobbing>?’ So basically, what virtue is so amazing that it should incentivise Pierre to prioritise it over money?

>A crooked mind, an honest heart, ancillary
Pierre is the ‘crooked mind’, Hunter is the ‘honest heart’, ancillary points out to how they have ostensibly worked together by forming this plan for Hunter to get back to an allied unit, but said plan is really all to Pierre’s benefit.

>They collide
Hunter leaves, unaware of how he’s been tricked. Could also be noting how Hunter has taken in Pierre’s lesson of ‘it’s ok to put aside scruples if you can tangibly benefit’.

>4:15 – 4:25 Instrumental
Hunter sets off across the quiet battleground that Pierre indicated would get him back to an allied camp. Things for now seem peaceful, but there’s still an air of precariousness…

>4:25 – 4:48 Instrumental
As Hunter proceeds, something begins to feel wrong… an odd yellow mist is forming across the field…

>4:48 – 5:01 Instrumental
Someone dangerous is approaching — and with their approach, the yellow mist is growing thicker and thicker…

The Poison Woman | Act III | Mustard Gas