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Domain of the Month

Mordent

Adventure Hooks

Darklord: Wilfred Godfrey
Lamordia info in 3e: RL3E / RLPH, Gaz 2, LotB
Second edition: Black Box (Realm of Terror), Red Box (RL Campaign Setting), Domains of Dread
Adventures:
Novel: Tales of Ravenloft

Other selected interesting sources: Darklords and Book of Secrets (Merilee Markuza)

ScS of the Fraternity

Perhaps a case of misdirection?

A wealthy nobleman gathers togther an army of mystics, mediums and monster hunters. Who ever can drive the ghosts from his newly inherrited estate gets a massive payoff.

What is not known is the former owner of the manor was a diabolist. Just before his death, the owner summoned a demonic entity into the house and trapped it in a pentagram, hidden in a secret chamber beneath the manor's dilapidated chapel.

Little did the socerer know, but the demon possessed powers that could extend beyond the summoning circle. The creature used its vile sorcerery to slay the summoner while he slept. But, his attempts to free himself caused the servants to flee the manor.

Now trapped in the secret chamber, the demon must somehow lure the witless band of ghost hunters to his prison and free him.

Yet the sorcerer still has the last laugh - the network of traps and keys required to unlock the chamber will confound and kill all but the most resourceful dupes.

Don Fernando: Excellent. But what if, the Fiend escaped the pentagram and possessed someone in the Diabolist Family, perhaps the young daughter, an Innocent. However things are not so easy for the fiend, and since the soul of the young woman is pure, it is really difficult to corrupt her. So it can only take control of her at a certain time in the day. With this control it managed to kill the Diabolist and his family. And now it lured another victim, less pure (the nobleman) and more influential along with his family to the manor.

But in order to be free, the pentagram that still holds the Fiend bound to the manor must be erased. In which case the soul of the young woman will be lost, the family killed and a major Fiend set loose. This is where our heroes enter the scene....

Corrupted_Loremaster

A local family seems to be tormented by a strangely elusive ghost, plagued by strange noises and flying objects. This ghost seems to follow them no matter where they go, or what they do. In truth, there is no ghost. The families youngest child is a budding sorcerer/psionic wild-talent. How will the heroes deal with this once they learn the truth. Furthermore, what shall they do should word of this childs abilities get out, and angry men with torches and pitchforks appear.

David of the Frat

  • A local family estate, long rumoured to be haunted, suddenly becomes a hotbed of ghostly activity. The poor family in residence flees for their lives and begs anyone for help.
    What is not realized is that the home is sitting on some choice real estate and a local swinder has decided to use the ghostly rumours to scare away the current inhabitants so he can buy the land cheaply.
     A possibly twist (to avoid a possible Scooby Doo story) is that there really is something that haunts the manor, something that responds to fear and has awoken by the scoundrel. Maybe a night-forgotten phasmagoria that is regaining its strength. As the hours go by it gains strength slowly manifesting itself.
  • A prototype of the much rumoured Apparatus is unearthed in the basement of a workshop. It is dusty and long forgotten, but could it still function? But the question remains, why was it abandoned?
    One possibility is the receptacles were faulty so one did not have to stand in a dome to be affected, bystanders and even those innocents nearby might be effected by the blast. If some energy was stored within once it is disturbed the minds of everyone in a hundred foot radius may be randomly swapped. Things get complicated when some of the people do not wished to be swapped back, especially the sick old man or the half-vistani sick of prejudice.
    Or the Apparatus does not spit a person's soul in twain but instead splits the mind causing schizophrenia and multiple personalities, or even subverting the morals of the user.
  • Talk begins that the shop of herbalist Rudolph van Richten is cursed after a number of deaths on the premise and nearby. With the monster hunting twins away on business the panic is running rampant with talk that something the good doctor brought back with him has placed a spell over the building. Could it be a cursed item recovered and locked in a basement vault? The ghost of a monster slain by Rudolph Van? Or perhaps it is someone seeking to ruin his reputation post mortem.
  • The heroes are hired to rescue the kidnapped daughter of a wealthy landowner who was abducted and is being held hostage in the kidnapper's manor home. The twist? The kidnapped daughter died of influenza the previous winter and is being held on in Gryphon Hill. A rescue must be made on a haunted house to free a ghost. Even if Godefroy is distracted with events elsewhere in the land can a single ghost and someone's immortal soul be saved?

DeepShadow: That last one was intriguing, but how could you get the ghost out without Godefroy's permission? Only he can release a ghost from the Vortex. On a similar note, the Vortex only affects ethereal beings, not all incorporeals. An unusually intelligent and clever shadow (perhaps a Necropolitan version) could prove a powerful fly in Godefroy's ointment, a rogue agent running favors for the undead under the DL's thumb.

David of the Frat: Well, they might be supplied with an item that could render the Vortex weakened. Or they may have to petition the local Guardians for use of the item they're guarding that is rumoured to make ghosts solid if not flesh, or they may simply 'borrow' it. Or they may perform a mercy killing in the manor freeing her soul.

DeepShadow

Emily Morgault, a powerful Mordentish seer, was one of the first to witness the inexorable pull of the House on Gryphon Hill. Morgault consulted those who visited her on how to help the departed avoid this compulsion, and her suggestions started many of the Mordentish funeral traditions. Morgault's visions were accurate, but her remedies to free the spirits of the departed from the house's influence were invented solely for profit. Later in life she entered into the service of Wilfred Godefroy, and upon her death she remained in his employ, as a diabolical spectre who led other spirits into the House's grasp.

Rotipher

The PCs are hired by an elderly cleric of Ezra to sabotage the researches of a mysterious foreigner who has set up a private laboratory in one of Mordent's many abandoned estates. In particular, they are to destroy a cursed figurine which this individual is alleged to possess: an evil icon of a terrifying death-god.

In reality, the item they are sent to destroy is an unique wondrous item similar to a Figurine of Wondrous Power, which the researcher (a budding necromancer specializing in incorporeal undead) is using to capture souls of the dying in Mordent. Once per week, the "icon" can be used to send a grim reaper (DoD) to collect the soul of a person on their deathbed, which is trapped within the reaper's scythe and delivered to the researcher, who stores the souls in an enchanted crystal.

The twist? The person who hires the PCs -- who is too frail to accompany them, but is utterly convinced by prophetic dreams(despite her Order's skepticism) that the foreigner intends to found a dark cult in the heart of Mordent -- is actually being manipulated by a dream-warping ghost in the service of Lord Godefroy. The ghost darklord has become concerned that spirits he'd long been looking forward to terrorizing have not turned up at his manor when their bodies die. The researcher, though spooky and strange, is actually working for a Mordentshire-based spiritualists' club, which knows a little about the Vortex, and whose members needed a way to shield their dying loved ones' souls from captivity on Gryphon Hill. The researcher's figurine isn't useable all that often -- certainly not enough to save every soul in Mordent -- so the spiritualists keep their knowledge of the Vortex and their dealings with the foreign necromancer confidential, reserving the crystal's shelter solely for their own ailing loved ones.

The researcher, himself, is a Mist-napped outlander who can't speak the local languages, and his homeworld's culture is very different from that of the Core (e.g. necromancy isn't considered scary there). This, combined with oaths of secrecy he's sworn regarding the figurine's true purpose, means it'll be quite a challenge for PCs to negotiate with him enough to learn what's really going on... or to make amends, if they go through with their assignment and destroy the figurine before its work of collecting the designated loved ones' souls can be completed. To make matters worse, the figurine -- an item the foreigner brought with him from his own world, where it was used routinely as a first step in preparing the dying for the afterlife -- may be developing some nasty side effects its owner isn't yet aware of, due to Ravenloft's subtle corrupting influence over necromantic magics: if he brings the soul-filled crystal to another domain, outside the Vortex's range, as he'd been hired to do, and releases the souls there, it may well be that they'll emerge as corrupted, hostile undead, rather than passing over peacefully!

Stygian Inquirer

A female spellcaster, in search of a being that might end the suffering of her family, attempts to summon a being from another plane. This being, distinguished by his coat and large, floppy-brimmed, hat or foreign styles quickly turns on her and reverses her wishes. He makes her immortal by binding her spirit in a mirror and using the mirror to show her how he tortures and torments her family. The man loses the mirror though, in a mansion and since then the woman has been struggling to use her magic to let her escape. All that she has been able to do is use her spells in a small range from the mirror or possess mortals that maintain possession of the mirror in which she is trapped. She desperately seeks to avenge herself and her family and her opportunity comes when the mirror finds its way into the hands of an unwitting adventuring party...

vipera aspis

I could bet that a bard from Mordent would be able to scare the witts out of people with his/her ghost stories. Like the scary stories to tell in the dark childrens books. not sure if anyone remembers those.

DeepShadow

These elements were used IMC after the DP's left RL, but there's little here that can't be put into any campaign.

During one of his visits to Daniel Foxgrove, Godfrey became convinced that the aging Jules Weathermay could see him and knew of his relationship with Daniel. Knowing Daniel would never harm his father-in-law, Wilfred decided to handle the matter himself. Catching Jules alone late one night, Wilfred vicously assaulted the helpless old man, taking great pleasure in beating him with his ghostly cane. His sadism got the better of him, however, for he let Jules live, but rammed the cane down the old man's throat to scar his tongue and vocal cords. In the morning the servants found Jules on the floor of his bedroom and concluded a stroke had robbed him of speech.

Godfrey now takes great pleasure in teasing the old man, often insisting on meeting with Daniel right in front of Jules, and bringing Alice to meet her sobbing father before sending her to reward Daniel for betraying his countrymen. For his part, Daniel has confessed everything he knows to Jules, treating the mute old man as a confessional of sorts to whitewash his conscience. Jules now knows more of Godfrey's nature and plans than he ever wished to, but is unable to tell anyone at all.

Nine days ago, well after the assault on Jules, George Weathermay returned home to Mordentshire, accompanied by his nieces. His return was ill brought, however, for it wasn't Heather House that the twins wanted him to visit: George Weathermay was mad, and has been institutionalized in Saulbridge Sanitarium since his return. The Weathermays have managed to keep the situation hushed up, but as George's madness has escalated into violence, there is no telling how long they will have to keep the situation under wraps. Dr. McClintock had reached a dead end in George's treatment until the arrival of a Lamordian scholar and student of Dr. Illhousen. Karl Bauer's assistance was simple yet invaluable: he entered George's dreams to discover what had brought him to where he was.

Through the dreams and the twins, Bauer has managed to piece together the source of George's mental instability. After his decade-long hunt for Natalia, George had finally seen her dead. Natalia had discovered Gennifer's infection, and had reunited the nieces and their uncle in the hopes of infecting George through his niece. Just as Natalia realized that "Gennifer" wasn't changing, her progeny pulled out a Falkovnian revolver with silver bullets. The last thing the werewolf heard was Laurie saying, "You forgot: we're twins."

Seeing his nemesis destroyed in such a wickedly clever scheme by the very people he was protecting was too much for poor George. With Natalia dead and the twins not needing his protection, he now questions the point of his hunt for Natalia. His dreams are haunted by Hypnos, who recreates his humiliation at Natalia's hands ten years ago and mirrors it with Natalia's death at Laurie's hands. In both cases, George stood horrified, unable to move, stunned by the real or apparent transformation of a loved one. Karl Bauer has called in another dreamwalker (a PC) to assist in driving off Hypnos before the glass coffin slams tight around George's heart and he turns on the twins to soothe his injured pride.

DeepShadow

Saulbridge Sanitarium--Mara, a ten-year old girl, arrived only two days ago, admitted to the Sanitarium for horrible nightmares. While the child is fluent in Mordentish, her mother speaks only Lamordian, and has become increasingly upset upon being separated from her child. Katrina von Brandthofen accidently broke one orderly's arm after he tried to retrain her from entering a treatment room, and in conversation with Dr. Maclintock she explained that her daughter was not supposed to stay here longer than one night, though she won't say why. Doctors are beginning to suspect that the mother's derangement may be connected to her daughter's nightmares, which reportedly are full of blood, death, cannibalism and a strange phobia of bright light.

A number of people all over Mordent have been overhearing parts of the Mournsworth slogan whispered in their ears, and the Mournsworth graveyard has been the scene of eerie lights and thunderous rumblings of late. Having fled Mordent for other parts just before the Mists arrived, the Mournsworths may be trying to return now that the Mists are gone, but what could be preventing them?

In truth, this is a hoax of incredible proportions perpetrated by a spellcasting doppelganger, leader of a clan that fled Paridon after a wicked blood feud. Sir Marcius Galta is a most resourceful and cunning doppleganger who sports considerable skills as a wizard in addition to his race's natural abilities. His "whispering wind" spells to public places all over Mordentshire have been laying the foundation for his next identity: Sir Felix Mournesworth, who was sent forward in time to complete the spells that will bring his family back. After he has finished contacting enough of his doppleganger kin, Marcius will appear formally at Heather House to announce the return of his family, followed by a masterful performance at the Mournesworth estates.

DeepShadow

The Hon. James Martigan (BoSecrets, Lights in the Fog)--died of heart failure after a Vistani seer revealed that his daughter might still be alive. Already in failing health, the shock was just too great for James when a seer showed turned over the "artifact" card from her deck and said that it represented the object his daughter had become, lying forgotten in the hoard of her "collector." Martigan expired even as the old woman turned over the Horseman card, but his last moments were so traumatic that his spirit lingered. It attached to his old friend Sir William Canifax (BoShadows), who broke down under Martigan's deathless dogged persistence and promised to recover the girl from the Phantom Lover. Canifax (and Martigan) are now seeking heroes to accompany them to Leederick...and the trophy room of the Black Dragon himself!

Desdichado

Shorter and perhaps a bit more familiar to us fellow mist-dwellers than the verses of Lord Byron, this week's poem was written by Edgar Allan Poe in 1839 and, IIRC, included in The Fall of the House of Usher. Creepy and atmospherical, this poem reads like a preliminary to the current Domain of the Month: Mordent thread.

 

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