[He really doubts that anyone or anything can save this place anymore, but what else can he do? He has a feeling that grabbing and shaking Emet-Selch and forcibly trying to make him wake up won't be a productive course of action, so he actually turns and takes off running across the cracked, barren, crumbling ground, trying to find anyone who isn't headlessly running away. If he does spot the other man's commander he'll urge him to head back with him. Whatever that summoning entails, it seems to be the only tiny seed of hope they have left.
If he dies first he can only hope that that'll wake him up. Perhaps he can ask the cognitive mages for another method, because Emet-Selch seems too deeply immersed in this nightmare to easily be snapped out of it.]
no subject
[He really doubts that anyone or anything can save this place anymore, but what else can he do? He has a feeling that grabbing and shaking Emet-Selch and forcibly trying to make him wake up won't be a productive course of action, so he actually turns and takes off running across the cracked, barren, crumbling ground, trying to find anyone who isn't headlessly running away. If he does spot the other man's commander he'll urge him to head back with him. Whatever that summoning entails, it seems to be the only tiny seed of hope they have left.
If he dies first he can only hope that that'll wake him up. Perhaps he can ask the cognitive mages for another method, because Emet-Selch seems too deeply immersed in this nightmare to easily be snapped out of it.]