Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Mirror, Yard, Penhew, Foulness

Upstairs in the Soho spice shop, the investigators decide to experiment with the mirror and vials of stuff that they've acquired. They pour the contents of both a red liquid vial onto the mirror and the black powder. Nothing seems to happen. Sullie starts concentrating on the idea of Oscar, and suddenly the mirror glows where the red liquid was poured, and Oscar is visible in the mirror, hiding in the jungle. Sullie stops before anything weird happens. The black powder seems to have done nothing, so they return it to its vial. (There are 14 vials of red liquid, 8 black powder).

Back at the hotel, the gang meets someone new: Adrian Linpool, a former Scotland Yard man who now works as a private investigator, and he seems to know a lot about what is going on. He has been tracking Gavigan and says that: 1) Gavigan is indeed evil; 2) the cult of the Black Pharaoh actually worships a horrifying, powerful outer-god known as Nyarlathotep. He offers to come with the group and help.

Pyle visits Barrington at Scotland Yard and updates him, asking about this Adrian Linpool. Barrington confirms that Adrian was a great detective, but saw some very disturbing things that made him decide to take a leave from the Yard and go do some mental rehab and also some investigating. 

Mickey and Sullie visit Oxford U to discover that there are no birth records for Edward Gavigan, and that his name appears for centuries back in the record books. On their way out they are attacked by three men with weird clubs--each having a large nail sticking out of it. They kill the men and decide that these clubs must be causing dead bodies to be found with a hole in the heart.

Babe and a few others visit the Penhew Foundation once more and find nothing much in the front rooms. They discover a back room with a sarcophagus in it.

The group finally decides to make their way to Gavigan's country estate, which is located on an island in Essex, in the east of England--Foulness Island.

Some the group (Suzie, Mickey, Babe, Pancho, & Bruce) are going to try to enter through the front gate. The rest (Adrian, Raju, Sullie, and Pyle) rent a boat and approach the island on the water, from the north.

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

Spicing Things Up: Friday, Feb. 6, 1925




After some deliberation, the gang decides to investigate the "Egyptian Murders" of London, which all seem to center around Soho. They begin at the Blue Pyramid, a club not far from the Carlyle Foundation. Pyle, Raju, Bruce, and Pancho visit to see what they can find.

This club is the center of all culture and life for Egyptians who live in London--Egyptian food, belly dancers, and exotic music. [For full effect, leave that tab open while you read.] Raju takes the lead, since he is the closest thing to an Egyptian in the group, and after shelling out a sizable tip to the bartender ("Stanley"), he and the others are seated at the table of the owner--a fat, fairly quiet Egyptian man named Abdul.

A psychological assessment from Dr. Bruce seems to indicate that Abdul is an innocent (and lazy) businessman who wants the Egyptian murders to stop as quickly as anyone else. He really likes the four guys, and when Raju says that they are interested in traveling to Egypt, not only to see the sights, but to spend a lot of money on antiquities, Abdul says that his brother-in-law owns a hotel in Cairo. Abdul eventually seats the four at a table right in front of the belly dancers for their amusement.




At a pause in the program, one of the lead dancers, Yalesha, sits with the four guys. Once she learns that they are investigating the Egyptian murders, she gets looks around her suspiciously and then starts telling them what she knows. Her boyfriend was one of the victims, and she wants revenge. She does not know who is ultimately responsible, but she knows two things:
1) once a month, a truck comes by the club at about one o'clock in the morning, loads up with people from the club, and drives out of town, off east somewhere she thinks;
2) this endeavor is always led by a certain Tewfik al-Sayed, a local spice shop owner.

The four return to the hotel room at the Ritz, only to find a scene of chaos. Four men lie dead in the hotel room: three cultists, and, sadly, Dr. I. The cultists had suprised Dr. I at the door before anyone knew what was going on. Aside from a nasty bruise on Sullie's arm, the group suffered little additional damage. Each of the cultists was carrying his ritualistic club with a spike in it, and wearing the upside-down ankhs of the Brotherhood of the Black Pharoah.

The investigators remove the ankhs and call Inspector Barrington to clean up the mess. Before the bodies are taken away, Pyle gets pictures of the cultists and sends them off to The Scoop, where he hopes Mickey Mahoney will process them.

The next morning, Pyle, Raju, Bruce, and Pancho head out to the spice shop. It's a very nice, two-story building, the bottom floor of which is wall-to-wall exotic cooking spices from around the world. Tewfik sits at the cash register while a few British people mill around the store. The four guys walk up to him wearing the ankhs and confront him directly. Tewfik appears very angry, but he smiles cruelly and says that they do not know what they are getting into.

Tewfik shouts that he wants everyone to leave, and the other customers do, but the four investigators refuse. Suddenly he begins chanting. Bruce shoots at his neck and hits, causing serious damage, but not before Tewfik starts transforming into a wormy bat-thing with a human head. Bruce gets scratched by the thing before the rest of the four unload their guns and bring it dead to the ground.

Searches of the ground floor reveal nothing, so the group goes to look around Tewfik's apartment upstairs. A bizarre, asymmetrical mirror on the wall gives everyone the heebie-jeebies, and Dr. Bruce has an insight: he knows he's heard of this mirror, and he knows it's powerful, but he does not know how it works. He covers it and takes it. Inside a roll-top desk, Pyle finds a secret compartment: robes, an ankh, a skull-cap, a very ancient scroll with hieroglyphics, a pair of scepters (one ending in a crook, the other in an inverted ankh), and about twenty-five vials. Two-thirds or so contain a red, syrupy liquid (not blood), while the rest contain a black powder with odd rubbery crystals in it.

Monday, July 10, 2017

Castle Plum & London: Thurs, Feb 5, 1925

[Quick summary of our last meeting, which was way back on June 19.]

The werewolf in the dungeon of Castle Plum is actually the daughter, Eloise Vane. Their family has a curse on it ("The Gavigan Curse"), going back hundreds of years, which turns female Vanes into werewolves. Since the family seems to have the situation under control, the general opinion (not without dissent) is to let her live, so long as the family promises to do everything it can to keep her from escaping again.

The gang then returns to London to discuss the current leads in their investigations:
1) Edward Gavigan's name continues to pop up in strange circumstances.
2) Tex Rickard suggested that you all speak to Inspector James Barrington at Scotland Yard.

Mickey and Pyle go to speak to Inspector Barrington, then will head off to the King's College Library to do some research.



Pyle gets a number of things from Barrington:

a) He investigated Edward Gavigan, at the prompting of good old Jackson Elias, and found nothing.

b) In the last three years, there have been 24 victims of the "Egyptian Murders." Seventeen of those people were from Egypt, and all were somehow associated with Egyptian culture in London. Almost all were found beaten and stabbed in the heart with something narrow. Barrington's predecessor was one of the victims.

c) The Blue Pyramid is a local hangout (in Soho) for Egyptians. Barrington's efforts to investigate the place have all found nothing.

Mickey and Pyle then head over to the King's College Library.


They find very little there, but Mickey discovers that there is a major estate in Essex owned by Edward Gavigan. It is located on Foulness Island, where the Rivers Roach and Crouch meet.

On their way out of the library, in broad daylight, the boys are attacked by three Middle Eastern-looking men. After some work the three are defeated. All three were carrying clubs with 4 to 5 inch nails sticking out of them. Ritualistic weapons?

Thursday, June 15, 2017


werewolf...werewolf? Therewolf...There castle.. HAHAHA



Lesser-Edale: Wed. Feb 4, 1925

With a full moon about to show itself tonight, the gang decides to get to the bottom of the recent nighttime attacks in Lesser-Edale, and try to discover if it has anything at all to do with their other cult investigations. They hear a rumor in the Laughing Horse pub that the vicar of this little hamlet is secretly a druid, so they will throw that into their investigations as well.

Since Raju has a connection with Sir Arthur Vane (led his cousin on a safari), he drives a cart up the cliff road to Castle Plum on Wednesday morning to see if he can get an audience with Sir Arthur. The servant who opens the door, however, suggests that Raju send a letter and sends him away.

Meanwhile, almost everyone else checks out the caves at the base of the cliff. All five of the former mining caves entrances are sealed tight with piles of rock. Smaller fissures above the entrances would allow birds in and out, but nothing else.



Mickey returns from his research at the University of Nottingham with some new information, and with a new person: Dr. Edwin Bruce. Dr. Bruce is a psychiatrist who, by complete coincidence, recently gave treatment to Harold Short, the one surviving victim of the Lesser-Edale attacks, and happened to run into Mickey, who was looking for answers to some of the same questions that he was at the University library.

Dr. Bruce says that he has recently seen an increase in patients with very strange stories from the eastern counties of England, Short included. Harold Short believes that Sir Arthur Vane's family is subject to a curse of some kind, and Mickey's research just led him to discover this morning that a certain evil priest named Edward Gavigan in 1714 put a curse on the Vane family which involves full moons and beastly transformations. Dr. Bruce would like to help the team get to the bottom of these weird happenings.



Sullie tries his hand at spying on the vicar, the Right Reverend Jeremy Stratton, whose church and vicarage are on the edge of town. As he wanders the adjacent graveyard, the vicar's elderly housekeeper comes out and chats with him. She reports the vicar to have been more nervous in the last month, praying more and locking himself in his study more.

Late that night, Dr. Bruce, Pancho, & Sullie knock on the vicar's door, force their way in, and hold a gun to his head, demanding to know who he really is and what he is doing. He is horribly shaken, and eventually admits that he is translating a very old diary (18th century) of a past vicar who was trying to deal with the "Gavigan curse" that is on the Vane family. What parts the vicar has translated out of ancient Greek (not his forte) confirm that the curse indeed changes some members of the Vane family into werewolves during a full moon.




Pancho discovers a photo on the wall of the vicarage: "Derwent Valley Order of the Golden Druid." It appears to be a group of mostly women and children who might have just come from Sunday School, sitting at a picnic. His "druid" group is just a historical society with an interest in pre-Roman Britain.

The clock in the vicarage strikes midnight and suddenly the horrible howling noises begin echoing throughout the town. The investigators, armed with all manner of silver bullets, trace the sounds to the fissures in the cliff wall. The origin must be a lower chamber of Castle Plum.

Gun to his head, they drag the vicar with them up the cliff road to Castle Plum. They make use of the big knockers, and the surly servant opens the door. The vicar, with Dr. Bruce, persuades the servant to rouse Sir Arthur, while the rest of the group hides in the shadows. As soon as the servant is gone, all others rush the house and search for stairs going down.




The kitchen leads down to a wine cellar and storage. Eventually (when Suzie finds a key), they discover more steps that lead down to an ancient dungeon, complete with torture chamber and holding cells.


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Pyle is relieved to see that the torture equipment looks very old and out of usage. The howling now is horribly intense and coming from behind an iron door. Suzie, Raju, Babe, and Pyle all slam into the door to force it open, and--sure enough--there in an iron-cage cell at the end of the hallway is a nasty looking thing, half human, half beast.


Wednesday, June 14, 2017

Green Vials, Green Valleys

Monday, Feb. 2, and Tuesday, Feb. 3, 1925

Once they are in full force, the gang decides to return to the Shipley home and check for boogadees in the basement. It is a relatively calm trip, though. A careful search of the house, top to bottom, reveals only a few new things: a lacquered box in Miles's closet that contains a syringe and a vial of weird-looking green stuff. A secret room in the basement contains some strange symbols on the wall, large jars full of various substances that are beyond anyone's reckoning, and a stone tub. Sullie does not hesitate. He opens the tub. A severed (and chewed on) head looks back at him. The gang decides to leave the place, but take along all paintings, along with the green stuff in vials.

Back at the hotel, they finally decide to let Miles Shipley go, paying him a sizable amount of money for his paintings. He'll probably be fine...

At the bar that evening, feeling very sad and confused about the Oscar's fate, the gang happens to meet a certain Raju Thomas, a former Sikh soldier who now hosts safaris in the Punjab jungles for spoiled Brits. He hears some of what the investigators are up to and is fascinated, having some experience with murder, Thuggee, and the unnatural things happening in jungles. He asks if he can tag along...


Displaying Raju.JPG


After leaving Oscar's special mask in the hotel safe, everyone hops into the car and heads north out of Lodon towards Lesser-Edale. About 130 miles north of the city, near Derby, is the valley of Derwent, one of the most picturesque parts of England. Its valleys are covered in a new snow today as the gang finds the tiny town of Lesser-Edale: thirty homes with thatched roofs, the Laughing Horse Pub, limestone cliffs with waterfalls. Atop one of the cliffs is the Castle Plum, home to Sir Arthur Vane and his family.


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The investigators waste no time entering the pub, chumming up to the locals, and finding plenty of people who will cheerfully talk about the strange night-time attacks of the area that have left two dead and one out of his mind.

Farmer George Osgood was "torn to shreds" on the first night of attacks, several months ago. Miss Lydia Parkins, twenty-year old daughter of horse-dealer John Parkins, was killed the next night. His neighbor Tom Corty witnessed it, and the investigators got from Tom Cortny that he saw Lawrence Vane, son of Sir Arthur, fleeing the scene. Wheelwright Harold Short survived the attack on the third night. He lives alone in Lesser-Edale, but is now recovering at his brother's house in Norfolk County, half a day east of Lesser-Edale. One villager reports that after the attack, the only word he keeps repeating is "Gavigan."

Mickey discovers that the University of Nottingham is only an hour away, and decides to try his hand at doing some research on the area. Maybe he can dig up something useful. Suzie drives him out there for the day.

Wednesday, May 10, 2017

Wait, is that Oscar?
Monday, Feb. 2, 1925

The intrepid investigators decide to spend their first full day in London by splitting up and checking out two of their leads--some to the Penhew Foundation and the home of Miles Shipley.

Miles Shipley lives in a two-story brick house where he paints pictures that have attracted attention because of their horrifying and mesmerizing nature. Oscar, Sullie, Pancho, & Pyle all approach the house, posing as art collectors.

The door is answered by a sweet old lady carrying her knitting. It's the mother of Miles Shipley, and once she hears how much money the investigators are ready to pay for a painting, she allows them up to see Miles' paintings up in the garret.

The paintings are all horrifying, and each tests the sanity of whomever is looking at it. One depicts a weird little bleeding statue of a boy. Another shows a group of bull-headed men ravaging a group of women. Another seems to be just full of shapes, but the shapes are impossible, and cause great mental discomfort. The one painting that attracts the attention of the investigators the most shows a group of cultists in front of a mountain wearing intestine headbands and worshiping a giant monstrosity: it's vaguely humanoid, standing on three legs, and has a tremendous red tentacle instead of a face.


The investigators want to check out the rest of the house, but the feisty Mrs. Shipley won't let them, and eventually, with some prodding, the feisty Mrs. Shipley moves to a corner of the room and shape-shifts into her real form--a lizard creature, who had eaten Mrs. Shipley. It attacks. It manages to bite Oscar before being shot to death.

Miles is insane and keeps babbling about the stuff in the basement that he's addicted to. The group, maybe not so comfortable with basements these days, decides to leave the basement alone for now. But as Miles keeps babbling, he says emphatically that they should not bother the painting in the closet upstairs. Oscar goes immediately to the painting.

After shooting the lock off the closet door, he unveils a painting of a swamp with a stone altar. But the painting is sucking him in, and despite his amazing level of magical mojo, he loses the psychic battle. Oscar finds himself in a swamp. He hears strange, loud animal noises in the distance. The stone altar is in front of him. A lizard creature comes out of a patch of trees and rushes him, but he blows its head off in short order. He climbs onto the altar. In the distance he sees a flash of light, but really nothing else besides endless swamp. At least for now, Oscar Marin lives in a swamp.

Back in the garret, Pyle sees that Oscar has been sucked into the painting, but can't determine any way to get him back. Pyle takes the painting. Sullie knocks out Miles Shipley. The group returns to the hotel with Miles and the painting.
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                                                              *        *       *
At the Penhew Foundation, Mickey, Babe, and Dr. I present themselves as the posse of Babe Ruth, rich American celebrity who wants to start learning about and investing money into Egyptian exploration. The front-desk secretary, and then eventually the current director, Mr. Edward Gavigan, welcome Babe and his friends.
Mr. Gavigan discusses a number of things with the group: Egypt, the Foundation's collection of artifacts, and then even the Carlyle expedition. And yes, Jackson Elias was here, asking about the Carlyle expedition, just last month. Mr. Gavigan is happy to share with you all that he shared with Elias.

He says that Sir Aubrey Penhew was indeed looking for more artifacts for his collection, but more than that he was researching the idea that a powerful sorcerer once ruled in the ancient days of Egypt. According to Gavigan, they discovered that the idea was false--there really was no ruling sorcerer. And then the mysterious African woman of the Carlyle expedition made off with 3,500 pounds, never to be seen again. The expedition then decided to take a vacation from their Egyptian work in the cooler climate of Kenya, where they finally met their horrible fate.

Gavigan happily shows the group all of the artifacts that they have up in their second-floor showroom. He lectures about pyramids and dynasties. Nothing among the artifacts seems to be connected with the dark cultist events that have pervaded the investigators' recent lives. They decide to leave for now, agreeing on a later day for Babe to come back and start the process for sponsoring an Egyptian expedition of their own.


Monday, May 8, 2017

Boat to London
Sunday, Feb. 1, 1925

Ready to leave New York City behind, the investigators decide what to bring with them to London, shop, pack, and catch the S.S. Resolute across the Atlantic on Tex's dime.
Speaking of Tex's dime...the gang is also now joined by James Monroe Pyle, an honest law man, whose work in solving murders in Osage County caught the attention of the government, and he's now been sent (by both Tex and J. Edgar Hoover) along with the investigators to help in any way he can. He has a huge wad of British pounds that Tex entrusted to him.

Almost the whole gang spends the duration of this boat ride to Southampton absorbed in evil books. Each comes away with horrible, arcane knowledge, and a strange, new awareness of the universe which makes their guts tighten a little more.
In London, Tex's secretary has set the investigator's up at the Ritz, on the west side of town, just north of Buckingham Palace, across Green Park. Tex also sent along a car and driver--a very capable woman from Boston named Suzie.


Once settled in, the investigators go first to see a certain Mickey Mahoney, the Irish cigar-chomping editor of a cheap London paper called The Scoop. Mickey knew Elias Jackson, and is very saddened to hear about his death. Mickey does not entirely know why Elias left London in such a hurry, but he says that Elias was interested in three specific stories that The Scoop published.
Mickey digs up the three stories and hands them over. He thinks he might have written all these, but also might have just borrowed some from other London rags, and maybe even embellished a few. He does so many stories like this that he honestly can't remember. Mickey says that he will help the gang however he can.

Meanwhile, Suzie drove several of the investigators past the Penhew Foundation for a first look. The Penhew Foundation for Egyptian research occupies a Victorian building just north of Soho, so it only has two floors (fewer than the others around it), but each floor is tall and covered in ornate detail, even on the outside. There's a tall black gate that closes off the sides and back of the building from the public. A delivery truck is parked outside the front, and Sullie tries persuading the delivery man that he works there, but the delivery guy doesn't buy it. The investigators drive away, deciding to form some plans before making another move.

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

A Sea of...What did you say?

Sunday, Jan. 27th, 1925, 2am

The gang stands in the middle of the dark road on this moonless night, wondering why one of the drivers ran off screaming. Huh. Something must have bothered him. In any case, the giant, dead flying worm lies across the top of the front taxi, and it reeks likes nobody's business. Eight cultists lay dead. The building from which they came looms on the side of the road, no light or sound. The gang decides to investigate.

Just before opening one of the large doors, a car starts up around the side of the building and zooms off towards Manhattan. Half the gang decides to stay and search, while the other half hops in a car and gives chase. Pancho, everyone learns, has terrific driving skills, so he takes the wheel while Sullie, Ambrosch, and Dr. I pull out what guns they have and start shooting at the vehicle ahead.

They are definitely cultists in the car ahead, and the cultists start shooting back. Pancho takes a nasty bullet in the shoulder but keeps his cool and drives like a pro. Ambrosch takes a serious hit to the head, and though he remains conscious, he deeply wonders what on earth he thinks he is doing with these people. Ambrosch shoots out a tire on the cultists's car. It loses speed but the thing keeps going. It eventually pulls up to the very Waldorf Astoria where the gang has rooms. The four in the taxi trade shots with the cultists before the cultists run inside.


Sullie decides to take the two wounded investigators to the hospital rather than chase the cultists. Sullie realizes then too that the giant winged worm has not fallen off the car. He thinks it best to drive out of the city, camouflage the car, and walk back. During all this, Dr. Iaokai and Sullie spend a couple of hours getting acquainted. Dr. I does not catch everything Sullie is saying, but he understands the comment about his mother perfectly well.

Meanwhile Mickey, Oscar, Babe Ruth, and the cab driver who did not run off in terror all look for the best entrance to this dark building. They turn on taxi headlights to discover a few things: there are three sets of doors in front, there are tons of animal tracks leading into the huge center door, and there's a sign on the building reading "Balley Bros. Meat Packing." The sound of metal scraping is heard from inside.

They enter the left-most front door--Mickey leading with The Punisher (his slug shotgun), Babe wielding a tire-iron, and Oscar thinking that everything's going to be fine. Mickey finds a light switch. It's a slaughterhouse--tables, giant saws and knives, lots of meat hooks, one of which seems to hold the rest of poor Hank. Four cultists are standing on an upper balcony, and Mickey takes three of them out immediately. The fourth, out of sight now, yells, "GIVE BACK THE MASK!" He then starts to chant something. Before anyone can do much else, what appears to be a sea of slaughtered pig heads starts rolling into the building from out back, each head chomping fiercely at the air as it rolls. The cab driver loses it and runs straight into the oncoming wave of animated pig heads, where he is soon overcome. The other three investigators do not stay to hear the last of his screams.

Back at the hotel, the gang discovers that the cultists had apparently tried to break into Oscar & Pancho's room, were surprised by local police, and they all ended up killing each other. Though the room is filled with the corpses of cultists and police, nothing seems to be missing. Oscar requests a new room.

They decide to have the mask locked in the hotel safe for now. A note has been left at the desk for them: YOU HAVE WON THE BATTLE YOU WILL LOSE THE WAR. Collecting their thoughts, they decide that they have all the information they can get in New York, and it's time to start investigating their lead in London. They call Tex. ("No, Nishy, not Texas.")

Tex assures them that he and the government are both on their side, and urge the gang to get to the bottom of all this un-American nonsense. Tex has in fact been in contact with J. Edgar Hoover, and the government has an interest in helping the investigations, so they are sending along an agent to assist. Tex will arrange passage to London, and will even send along a medical team to help ensure the healing of any wounded investigators. Two of the three nurses will even be real nurses. Ambrosch, though, decides that his place is here in America. He cannot imagine depriving the world of 95% violin skills.

Thursday, April 13, 2017

Party's Just Getting Started

Saturday night (January 27)

The group spends several more hours socializing at the Carlyle mansion. Ambrosch wows the crowd with his playing. Pancho attracts a group of ladies. Hank ends up playing fruit-ball with Babe Ruth in the backyard. Sullie talks to the guard outside patrolling with the dogs. Apparently he foiled a break-in at the Carlyle mansion a month ago by cultists, presumably looking for the books which you now have in your keeping.


The group also makes the acquaintance of a Dr. Nashingu Iaokai, a Japanese parapsychologist who is interested in helping you with your work. His English is a little rusty, so he's not sure what to think about Texas, but he's ready to go anywhere else with you. Plus he needs a ride back to the city.

The gang learns a few more details about the Carlyle Expedition members (perhaps Hypatia's joining the group had something to do with an abortion; Robert Huston treated both Erica and Roger Carlyle before going off on this expedition) and finally the gang decides to leave.

On the way home, on the street in the dark stand three cultists, one chanting with his hands up. Before Mickey has a chance to take him out with his shotgun, a giant flying worm with a bearded face swoops down out of the sky and lands on the front car. This is all finally too much for Hank, who flees into the dark screaming. Cultists are now attacking from several sides.

A relatively short fire-fight leaves the worm thing dead on top of the front car, all the cultists on the road dead (total of about eight?), but not before one of them tosses the macheted-off head of Hank at you. Hank will not be returning. Probably.

Once things quiet down, anyone who can draw his attention from the scene of carnage long enough notices a large, dark building here in the middle of nowhere. These cultists came out of there, didn't they?

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

Of Worms and Men

Friday & Saturday (Jan. 26-27, 1925)


With poor old Silas tethered to the wall above the pit, the gang (at Oscar's insistence) decides to move the eight-foot stone cover that seems to be keeping something down in that pit. Whatever it is, it's making a strange wailing noise, and the noise only grows louder and more strange when the cover is lifted. It takes two men on the pulley to get the stone cover out of the way. Mickey and Pancho choose not to be present and opt to guard the top of the stairs.

A flashlight reveals the source of what sounds like people wailing in torment, a horror beyond imagining: ten feet down, taking up almost the entire width of the pit, is a giant, translucent, undulating purple skin--like a huge alien worm, but when it moves, a dozen human faces push against the skin from within and scream, tortured mouths surfacing and then retracting into the bulging mass. Sanity is lost, and the sight is far too much for Hank, who loses control. Oscar grapples Hank into control before he is able to hurl himself into the pit in a mad fit. And the thing starts to emerge.

After a few seconds of heated debate, and bullet from Ambrosch that seems to do no damage whatsoever, the gang flees the Ju-Ju House basement, and with a final glimpse over their shoulders, they see the wormy horror rise up, and a collection of mouths start chewing into Silas.

On the way out of the building, Hank spots a worm on the ground, a phobia is born. Worms are now Hank's special nightmare. The group hails a taxi and ends up punching out the frenzied Hank so as not to attract too much of Harlem's attention.


The gang calls Tex, and speaks directly to him this time. He assures them of his support to continue the investigations. Things like that should not exist in New York City, or anywhere in the world. He will place a call to the authorities about what you saw, and he has offered to pay for the next eventual stage of the journey, to London, where he has contacts. He also promises to have one of the best psychiatrists he can find visit Hank tomorrow morning.

In the morning the psychiatrist comes and gives Mickey some sedative injections, to be given to Hank once a day, which will help keep him manageable. He explains, however, that Hank is incredibly fragile and will only improve with six months in a sanitarium.

Once evening arrives, the group taxis up to the Carlyle mansion north of NYC. They split up at the gala event and each find bits and pieces of helpful information about Roger Carlyle, his sister Erica, and his fateful expedition.


Erica Carlyle was horribly frustrated with her brother, who squandered their family's money and nearly lost them their fortune. His disappearance, which she blames on his infatuation with some African woman, provided her and the estate's secretary with great relief. Erica, a competent business woman, has not only kept the Carlyle textile and lumber business out of trouble, she has improved it since she took over, and the idea of her brother returning irks her greatly. When Dr. Finnegan (Mickey) suggests to her that her brother Roger might still be alive, she wants nothing to do with the news. "As long as he never returns to New York, I don't care what you discover about him. He always used to spend time reading those awful books. They're in the west library. Look for Poe."

A search of the west library, observed by some east-Indian gentlemen, reveals a book about Edgar Allen Poe, a combination for a safe, and then the safe itself. Four old, strange books. Oscar will be busy reading for a long time.



Thursday, March 30, 2017


Jonah, Ju-Ju, and Jackson's Junk:

afternoon of Jan 26th

The gang decided to spend some time with Jonah Kensington, the editor of Prospero House, and Jackson Elias's publisher. This place was the closest thing Jackson had to a home address. In his last two months, Jackson had apparently made some discoveries about the Carlyle expedition, after having traveled to Nairobi (Kenya), Shanghai (China), and London. His notes grew stranger, and the one from London was hardly even decipherable, looking more like the ravings of a madman. Jonah believes that Jackson discovered something about a blood cult, maybe connected to the Carlyle Expedition, which got him killed.

Jonah hands over all of the evidence that he can find which he thinks might help, and invites the gang to the funeral.

After leaving Jonah, and checking ammunition levels, the gang headed up to Harlem where the Ju-Ju House is supposed to be. The address takes them to a dark alley (maybe not so bad while the sun is still up), which ends up in one of Harlem's less attractive spots: a courtyard, surrounded by apartments and the back of a pawn shop. The Ju-Ju House is a small place with a sign on the east end, opposite the bench with the sleeping wino.



The window features African masks and talismans. Upon entering, they are greeted by Silas, an old African man, who reminds them that the store is closing soon. The dusty store looks like it gets very little business, and nothing, even to the experts in the group looks suspiciously different than what one might expect in a place like this. There's even a stuffed giraffe.

The gang wastes no time, however, with the African bric-a-brac, and dive right into an aggressive interrogation. Poor Silas. They even end up beating him up, plying him for information, and dragging his old ass down the basement stairs, where he has intimated that something untoward is being kept.

The basement door opens on its own, however, before the players need to find a way to open its hefty lock, and some moving corpses start emerging and attacking, one of which is the self-same cultist that Ambrosch shot in the head yesterday night. In fact, the bullet-hole is still there. (SANITY CHECK!) A random cultist is also down there, and fires up the stairs, doing a bit of damage before seeing the other end of Mickey's shotgun.

Only blunt weapons seem to damage these zombies, and when they are finally all dead, with some collateral damage to the gang, the basement remains opened and quiet. It's a queer underground space: drums, tethers above a covered pit, which seems to be making a wailing sound beneath its stone cover, a mask, a book (Africa's Dark Sects, just the book that Jackson had been looking for), and some kind of ceremonial leopard outfit, complete with claws. What now?

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Room 410  Jan. 15, 1925

Our intrepid adventurers arrive in NYC and get a room at the Waldorf Astoria (on Tex's dime). Ambrosch receives a phone call from an unusually nervous Jackson Elias, who asks to meet at his hotel room, at the Chelsea, 8pm. Upon arrival the group gets no response to their knocks, busts down the door, and is promptly attacked by three men.

Two of the men are black, and one is white, and all three are wearing a bizarre headdress, like a silly attempt at Mardi Gras in January. The front man slashes Oscar with a long African knife, nearly killing him, while Pancho dives in and starts punching. Mickey joins the fight, berating himself for going anywhere without a shotgun. Hank tries his hand with a dropped African knife, and decides that his fists will work better. After several rounds of fight, the two black cultists are dead, and the crazy-eyed white guy is subdued.
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The characters now see what is left of Jackson Elias. His corpse is horribly cut open down the front, and his intestines are strung around his own neck and the bedposts. Strands of the intestines have been sliced out, and now everyone understands what is dangling from the cultists' horrible headdresses. There is a symbol carved into Jackson's forehead:


Mickey and Ambrosch try to get information out of the white cultist, but he has gone from crazed to completely unresponsive. They take him down to the lobby where the police take over, dragging off the cultist and questioning Mickey and Ambrosch.

Back at room 410, the rest of the group find a collection of new evidence, forming a trail that leads to all parts of the globe: London, Cairo, Shanghai, Australia, and Africa.

Next Steps  Jan 16, 1925

While Mickey and Ambrosch speak to the police, Pancho helps Oscar to a hospital, while the rest make their way to NYU to see if they can catch the end of Prof. Cowles' lecture. Turns out that the lecture was a week ago.

The next morning, after acquiring some new weaponry (That's kind of a bulky coat, Mickey...), the group splits up to investigate both Prof. Cowles and Emerson Imports. Prof. Cowles is back at Arkham University, where he is lecturing for the semester, but Mickey is able to speak to him over the phone. Cowles mentions his research into the ancient Sand Bat death cult of Australia, and how it might be connected to other modern death cults.

At Emerson Imports, Arthur Emerson says that J. Elias was interested in any imports from Mombasa (Kenya). He provides one connection to the investigators, just as he did to Elias: the Ju-Ju House in Harlem. Once in a while that place receives oddities from Mombasa--weird little ritualistic stuff that makes Emerson uncomfortable (masks, African fetishes).

The investigators get more money (another grand!) from Tex's secretary, but also 6 invitations to a black-tie party tomorrow night at Erica Carlyle's mansion. "Get yourself some really nice clothes and don't embarrass yourselves. This is a high-class event. Try to squeeze her for info. She's tough."


Thursday, March 16, 2017

Tex's Invitation

It's the evening of December 30, 1924, and Tex Rickard is a millionaire who is having a party at his Boston home tonight to invite people to the January groundbreaking for the newest Madison Square Gardens, and to promote some of New York's best boxers. The famous Jack Dempsy is there, plus an up-and-coming guy named Poncho Villa from the Philippines.

Tex pulls you aside, along with seven or eight others, to discuss something in private. Tex's secretary has been scouting out the Boston area for a team of people with unique skills--everything from physical prowess to psychic sensitivity.

A friend of his named Jackson Elias, an author (and skeptic) who investigates the occult and writes about his findings, has just wired Tex to ask for a team of investigators. He has discovered something new about the Carlyle expedition and would like a team of capable, thoughtful people with varied skills to help him look into it. (To learn about the Carlyle expedition, see Collected Evidence.)

Tex sends you all on a train down to NY to meet with Jackson Elias...