Although most of the letters appeared to be dead ends, a reply from Alexander of Brennenburg invited Daniel to a castle in Prussia to offer him protection. As Daniel became more and more relentless in his pursuit of information, he stole one of Herbert's address books, firing off letters to everyone on the list. While leaving, Daniel heard that the geologist, Sir William Smith, had been found dead. Professor Taylor told him that the Orbs were the inspiration for much Roman symbology and that they had originally been wielded by priests. Two nights later, after an intense dream, Daniel managed to assemble the Orb and visited Herbert's university in order to obtain more information on it. There were no traces of Herbert and his men, except for the man who gave the alarm, who was badly injured and rambled that the camp had been attacked by something terrible. Ī few days later, Daniel discovered that his expedition ended in disaster. Disturbed, Daniel went to Sir William Smith, a geologist, to seek an explanation. In England, Daniel began to look into the origins of the Orb, noticing that its pieces changed color and shape. His duties were transferred to Khaled, who analyzed the symbols on the pillars in The Chamber of Pillars. Īfter being freed from the tomb an hour later, Daniel was sent back to England against his wishes to recover by the expedition's leader, Herbert. Having nowhere else to go, he proceeded forward and came upon a mysterious Orb. The team continued to search/excavate the tomb, and upon entering, Daniel was trapped inside by the collapse of the doorway. However, for some reason, he was never able to finish it. Meanwhile, Daniel presumably started writing a letter his sister, Hazel, on the 16th of May, 1839. Before he went to the tomb, Prof Herbert's team had taken a shelter in Al-Mamaru Fort. Algerian expedition and aftermath ĭaniel was part of an archaeological expedition to Algeria, which expedition uncovered an ancient tomb. Īs a young adult, Daniel began working at the British Museum as an archaeology research assistant to Professor Thurston Herbert, at the time when it was expanding it's collection of human history and culture. Weary of being constantly tormented everywhere he went, Daniel finally gave in to peer pressure and confronted Henry, striking him with a rock. ĭaniel's childhood was also made miserable by a school bully by the name of Henry Bedloe, who carried the bitterness of his own abusive mother. This was not because Daniel was literally afraid of the absence of light, but because he feared the possibility that he may be trapped forever in the darkness, with no hope of escape. Young Daniel developed nyctophobia, an intense fear of the dark. His father was physically abusive and would often take out his anger on his children, at one point being known to have kicked Daniel in the stomach in the family kitchen. She was stricken with sickness at a young age and Daniel would often read to her during the summers. He grew up in Canterbury, Kent alongside his sister Hazel, for whom he cared deeply. Daniel was born in the early 1800s to an artisan father and an unidentified mother.
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