Palace of the Winding Path

The Palace of the Winding Path is a location in the Savage Divide region of Appalachia in 2102.

Background
The palace was a spiritual retreat center founded by a cultist named Cyrus. Its architecture is based on Indian and Nepalese buildings, as it looks similar to a Buddhist temple. Cyrus, the founder of the temple, created a cult based on self-enlightenment, spirituality and willpower, and offered to everyone a path to enlightenment.

Simon Gladwell, a prior Cyrus disciple, saw an opportunity to make profit at cost of the cultists, and created a big marketing and business scheme while hiding his shady operations from Cyrus.

After the Great War, the cultists took advantage of their isolated location and spiritual bond and survived in the temple. Later, when the Diehards established contact with them, both groups started making deals, as trading or making a copy of the Margie McClintlock key holotape.

Apparently, the entire cult disappeared literally overnight, as the Diehards found the next day after visiting them, when they went back to the temple and it was empty.

Layout
There is a back entrance to the palace that gives access through the basement. There are two chemistry stations, a tinker's workbench, an armor workbench, and a weapons workbench all in the basement and a cooking station in the kitchen.

Notable loot

 * Child's note - Inside of the highest gazebo on the pond.
 * Cyrus's concern - On an office desk in the basement.
 * Incense complaint - On a desk in the western room near the north entrance.
 * About the noise
 * Margie's goodbye note - In Margie's backpack outside the palace.
 * Palace admin password
 * Two fusion cores:
 * In a generator in the basement.
 * On the metal shelves next to the generator in the basement.
 * Random recipe - In the kitchen area, next to the sink.

Appearances
The Palace of the Winding Path appears only in Fallout 76.

Behind the scenes
The Palace of the Winding Path is based on Prabhupada's Palace of Gold, a memorial shrine constructed in 1979 by the International Society for Krishna Consciousness and dedicated to the movement's founder.