Alexander:
Your frantic attempts to escape, for the most part, only result in tracking sap and blood around. The floor transitions from tile to carpet. You also discover that there are more corpses in this room and that they are of all of the sentient species, with a relatively larger concentration of Nyelrrithics. A Demonblood's horn, daggerlike in design, clacks under your feet right before you bump into something hard, the top at the height of your hip. You think it's made of metal and it seems to have paper on it. You stumble onto it face-first, scattering whatever was on it to the ground.
Ralu:
For one, Alexander is nowhere near you. Ith must think you're talking to yourself. Ehh... Lotuses aren't especially known for their sanity, so it makes a bit of sense for you to be insane already.
Anyways, the text says,
"Jutït, xor naijarït, aqrî, Ïloîal, Dëxöz, Junên, qö Nâsjez! Ad kjem do Shudovaij wibêthloqt lôn! Ad Gamâz Doktor wipêcloqt sejar!"
You look at it for a few seconds before involuntarily mumbling it to yourself phonetically. It seems familiar, but you can't quite figure out what it says.
"Yoo-tit, sor ny-yar-it, ogg-ree, I-loi-ull, Duh-soohzh, Yu-nen, kooh Nayz-yayzh... Odd kyaym doh Shu-do-vy-yeh wee-beth-loct loohn... Odd Gah-mayzh Doke-tor wee-petch-loct say-yar..."
Saying the words gets your memories returning. This is in Cêmïral, an offshoot of Warspeak that takes elements of German and Kestvoshorik. The alphabet was heavily inspired by Cyrillic, Greek, and Latin. It's most commonly spoken in the Exile colonies, where the Iloial who don't fit in, are insane, or are religious/political criminals are sent. The writing, while crude, is grammatically correct. It says, roughly,
"Run, or die, all, Iloial, Demonblood, Human, and Nyelrrithic! A/the age of Shudovaij will come on! A/the Plague Doctor will oversee it!"
You don't recognize the word "Shudovaij", but it has "ij" at the end, making it likely a plural.
(You just remembered Cêmïral, so now you can speak it. When doing so, you need to put <Cem> between the first quotation mark and the first word of the quote.)