The undercity was still terrifying to Ferret but to her eyes, Lydia did not show the fear she had expressed as they had stood in the college or at the hatch into this dark place. "Nothing for me to worry about down here. Well... sort of. The incense might placate demons and drive off imps. A demon could be dangerous to both of us. Besides, it's nice." Lydia seemed relaxed. Even when they came into a large dark room and encountered something that looked like a boquet of skulls. "What does it bring eh? What does it bring? Hello girls. Hello. Hello." It had approached them at first, "Bah! What a stench they carry. Hello. Hello. Put it away, It offends us." Lydia had shaken her head, "No, we think not. Bugger off you. Go to some other hole where you'll find the air to your liking." After it had slunk off and they were sure it was gone, Lydia said "Lesser demon. I imagine it would have been more aggressive if we hadn't had the incense. Strange stuff. If I'm honest, it makes me feel nice. Incense was banned in the college, would ruin the books." After that, Ferret had begun to relax. In time, and in truth it seemed like ages, they at last came to a crumbling wall. "Looks like we won't be needing any tools after all. Just beyond this and a few more chambers, we can get out of this disgusting murk and up into the chapel undercroft. Hopefully, Ferret, we will find what you came for there."
The water was deep in the chambers between the broken wall and the spiral stair leading into the chapel undercroft. Lydia had gone on ahead to make sure everything was safe, and upon returning told her so. "I'm actually a bit excited. Very few, if any, collegiates have ever seen the inside of the undercroft. The older lower level is flooded, but it looks like the upper level is fine. Don't worry, I'm sure your eyes are in the upper level." Ferret navigated the flooded chambers carefully, sucking in oxygen from the narrow gap above the water. As it turned out, there were a great many holes in the street above which annoyed Ferret greatly. She could have bypassed all the trouble of the undercity had she known that these would connect more directly to the church. The nearly nonexistant light coming from the holes in the street above showed her that the day was just about done. To her surprise, she could see stars out against the deepening blue of the clear sky above. The clouds and fog had cleared off or at least thinned while she was beneath Gulgatha. It gave her hope. Hope and determination. She would get the eyes back, rest up somewhere safe, and leave the dead city the next day. She wondered what would become of Lydia though. She wasn't bound the the city, perhaps she would follow Ferret back to Bright Point. Then what? It was a question for later. For now Ferret had to focus on making her way from one hole to the next until finally, she reached a spiral staircase and Lydia waiting patiantly. She was worried that Lydia would have moved on without her, but she hadn't. "Come on out of there." She said, "You can dry yourself off on one of these banners. They've been surprisingly well preserved down here." It didn't take much doing to pull one down. Well preserved or not, the fabric tore easily from the hanging rod. It did an admirable job of drying, and after she relit the mechanical candle she took a better look at the banner. It was a vibrant red like Ferret had not seen in fabric. "It used to have a triangle on it." Lydia explained, noticing Ferrets interest. "They used to hang all over the outside of the chapel. They were always either very fresh and vibrant or covered in filth from the factories. Either way though, they really broke up the drab surroundings after the church knocked out and bricked up all the stained glass." They were in a small anti chamber filled with barrels and crates. Like the banner, they were also well preserved. The contents on the other hand were not. Even the smell of the fish that had been stored in the barrels was gone, leaving only the little piles of pin bones. The skulls, she assumed, had been swiped by Gulgatha's imp population. Her suspicion was well founded. The crates were likewise empty except for one which housed a group of imps, each of them indistinguishable from the mass except for the little fish skull which identified each individual as a single entity. They looked up at her warily as she moved the crates lid back into place. A heavy door, the miniature of there huge counterparts at street level, gave access to a long hallway along which were more doors on either side. The walls were rough in places but smooth in others. Lydia explained that the chapel had once belonged to the city itself as a nondenominational place of worship. It had been decorated with engravings and the words of peoples and faiths from all over the continent. When the Ateshites had seized the chapel though, they had begun removing such things from the chapel and the city as a whole. "The stelle in the study we met in was one such item. Found by a farmer in the foundation of his cellar while he was removing stones to expand it." The rooms contained what Lydia had said they would contain. Long ago, the church had disenterred the bodies that had lain in the undercroft and burned them. In their place, they interred the treasures of every culture on the continent and it's vast horde of wealth. Getting the doors open was as simple as using a set of keys that still hung on a hook at the other end of the hall. The first dozen or so rooms were packed with the churches treasures. A horde of valuables piled haphazardly from wall to wall. Ferret debated with Lydia on whether they should take some of it or not, and they agreed that while it was very nice and such wealth could be of great worth, they could not afford to carry it around. So with one last glance, Ferret closed the door on the churches ill gotten gains. The rest of the rooms were filled with another kind of treasure, and Ferret found that she was just as interested in them as her ghostly friend. Row upon row of weapons and armor comprising various makes and materials, some of which had simply been tossed as bundles into barrels. Paintings, relics, items that looked mundane but were likely the heirlooms of other families, and crate upon crate of regular household items. Lydia was a flood of information, spouting on and on "These swords were made by so and so" and "Look at this glass! Dwarven surely." Again and again they would come to some item and Lydia would exclaim that one thing or another had come from the college collection. One room was filled with shelves and shelves of scrolls, papers, and books. Lydia looked upon them much in the way that Ferret had looked at the chapels treasury. "Such knowledge..." she whispered, "They didn't burn everything it seems..." She had managed to take hold of a scroll tube and remove it's cap. Before she could get the papers out though, she seemed to lose focus and it dropped through her fingers and onto the table she had brought it to. With Ferrets help, she managed to withdraw what the tube contained and spread it out before her. "It's a series of letters. No. Funerary reports. Very old ones. I think the church just kept all the old documents in here and never bothered to look at them." Ferret pulled down a book. "This one looks like a ledger. I'm willing to bet you are right, but I also think they must have added to the collection with their own stuff. Look, this one here is some kind of tithing record." Among the more mundane items were more interesting texts. Ferret flipped through one unbound quire wrapped in brown cloth to find that it was a text on medicine. Another she found outlined where to find, and the uses for, various herbs in all manner of situations. Lydia attempted to pick up another scroll case but withdrew her hand from it with a hiss. "Ferret, get this one for me?" Ferret had attempted to take the tube down for her, but the moment her fingers touched the cold metal she was laid flat upon the cold stone floor with the muscles in her arm spasming and screaming in pain. "What the hell was that!?" she shouted, sitting up. "I'm sorry, I thought I was the only one who would feel it. Perhaps it's an injunction against the living?" They tried again with a pair of tongs from a crate in the next room over, but the effect was much the same if a little diminished. "Leave it alone then." Lydia said disappointedly. "Who knows what will happen if we keep messing with it." Ferret agreed and they went to the next room.