I'm happy with three, providing they're not things that will spawn more complications right on the tail of us finally resolving our biggest complication.
Speaking of complications, I think we're talking past each other,
again. There are two parallel topics of discussion in play here.
- Are the windigo jars an immediate and serious problem?
- Should we tell the Bureau about the Windigos?
These are separate thoughts that need to be discussed
separately, not all at once layered together like disappointing lasagna.
Are the jars a problem? Yes, yes they are, and they need to be dealt with immediately and with prejudice, similarly to how we dealt with Copper. I've no argument at all with
this thought.
Should we tell the Bureau? Well take it one step at a time. Imagine the "ideal" situation, Beyond Reproach finds the planted warning, and while leafing through it opens a storeroom door and finds one or more jars right there. Well he knows not to poke them, that's good, but he's not going to be able to do anything to make them
safer and the ponies on the ground will have to make a snap decision on what to do with what they believe to be a volatile magical bomb of construct. In this particular hypothetical the Bureau would have full and total control of the jars, but would
not have the knowledge or expertise needed to renew the bindings, nor would anyone else be able to easily access them in order to renew said bindings without raising questions.
Not in one month before the bindings expire. This logic chain leads to the jars detonating either in the Bureau's custody or in that of Eclipse if they're seized as "materials of interest" and subsequently classified.
In a less ideal situation the jars are not available to be found in Manehatten, but the Bureau still takes the warning seriously and begins or
wishes to begin a focused effort to find and retrieve the wayward weapons or constructs of mass destruction. In this hypothetical we would be pressured to focus on finding them (via the Bureau) and the information would presumably spread to Celestia and/or Eclipse given that we're all theoretically on the same side. This either leads us to a very uncomfortable institutional failure as the very dangerous things go unfound, or we end up with them in custody where we can't defuse them unnoticed. In either case Eclipse and Celestia are right on top of our efforts to bring the Lores into the Bureau and we've got to operate either with oversight or possibly just have the information seized outright since it's so dangerous.
A third option would be nopony taking the warning seriously for whatever reason and no jars being found in Manehatten, which leaves us either pushing the matter (but why, the Bureau isn't equipped to defuse windigo jars) or letting it go in which case we've wasted a "Lore Laundering choice".
Fourth option is of course nobody taking the warning seriously
and one or more jars being found in Manehatten, in which case we'd be utterly at the mercy of the dice.
The only thing I really see the warning option doing is giving us a better chance at averting a premature detonation in Manehatten
if the windigoes are there to be found by the investigation, and otherwise just making our literal job harder.