Bathrooms are very important to humans and human-adjacents, the forest spirits have come to realize. The bathrooms make this hotel luxurious. A vacation destination!
The concierge spirit bows as Rosinante finishes signing in, and then turns to pluck three keys for room 403 off of the wall. Enjoy your stay, gentlemen!
Taking the stairs, Rosinante and Kuai will find that all of the hallways look about the same! There's nothing much to report there; they're just run-of-the-mill hotel hallways like one might expect to find in this style of building. It's all very ornate.
Arriving at their room, they'll realize that while the keys look vintage, there's no keyholes on the doors. Instead, there's a magnetic sensor like in a modern hotel that uses keycards. Pressing the key against the sensor will open the room marked on the key's tag, and only that room. No breaking and entering allowed!!!
The room itself is as promised. It is indeed an apartment pieced together by renovated hotel rooms, and it includes three separate bedrooms, two full bathrooms, and a large common space. The common space is open concept with a large living room area and an attached kitchen/dining area. It's furnished, too.
Beyond that, the rooms in this hotel adhere to the same "vague floorplan so you can make it up on your own" deal as the other housing areas already available in town. Does this room have an uncanny number of bunkbeds? Does the kitchen have technicolor shag carpeting? Is there a to-scale portrait of a man resembling Colonel Sanders? Maybe! Dealer's choice.
Maes may flip through the guestbook to his heart's content! It's very long, though—like, hundreds of pages long, would take hours if not days to sift through entirely, it's one hefty chonk of a book. But, hey, skimming a few pages is definitely possible. It's tough to read quickly as everything except what Rosinante just wrote in the book is scratched out, leaving some of the text illegible.
But! He'll notice two things of note: The names in the first couple dozen pages sound similar enough to suggest they're from the same culture (such as how looking through a western book of baby names might suggest North American or European origins), and later in the book, once the list of names show more variance, he'll spot the names Astoria, Diode Zipsell, Richie Tozier, Rastus, and Takashi Shirogane.
no subject
The concierge spirit bows as Rosinante finishes signing in, and then turns to pluck three keys for room 403 off of the wall. Enjoy your stay, gentlemen!
Taking the stairs, Rosinante and Kuai will find that all of the hallways look about the same! There's nothing much to report there; they're just run-of-the-mill hotel hallways like one might expect to find in this style of building. It's all very ornate.
Arriving at their room, they'll realize that while the keys look vintage, there's no keyholes on the doors. Instead, there's a magnetic sensor like in a modern hotel that uses keycards. Pressing the key against the sensor will open the room marked on the key's tag, and only that room. No breaking and entering allowed!!!
The room itself is as promised. It is indeed an apartment pieced together by renovated hotel rooms, and it includes three separate bedrooms, two full bathrooms, and a large common space. The common space is open concept with a large living room area and an attached kitchen/dining area. It's furnished, too.
Beyond that, the rooms in this hotel adhere to the same "vague floorplan so you can make it up on your own" deal as the other housing areas already available in town. Does this room have an uncanny number of bunkbeds? Does the kitchen have technicolor shag carpeting? Is there a to-scale portrait of a man resembling Colonel Sanders? Maybe! Dealer's choice.
Maes may flip through the guestbook to his heart's content! It's very long, though—like, hundreds of pages long, would take hours if not days to sift through entirely, it's one hefty chonk of a book. But, hey, skimming a few pages is definitely possible. It's tough to read quickly as everything except what Rosinante just wrote in the book is scratched out, leaving some of the text illegible.
But! He'll notice two things of note: The names in the first couple dozen pages sound similar enough to suggest they're from the same culture (such as how looking through a western book of baby names might suggest North American or European origins), and later in the book, once the list of names show more variance, he'll spot the names Astoria, Diode Zipsell, Richie Tozier, Rastus, and Takashi Shirogane.