grotsnik
Arcane
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2010
- Messages
- 1,671
Night Empire
Evening. If you're just joining us, you've stumbled into a long and over-elaborate CYOA, set in the modern-day world of Vampire: The Masquerade, in the foggy city of London, in which Codexers vote a path for a young and ambitious Ventrue trying to struggle his way up the ladder (and, relatively briefly, a young Tremere would-be antitribu. It didn't work out) . It died at a critical juncture, and now it's back. If you want to catch up, you can do so here.
***
Filling In The Blanks
The young Tremere by the name of Joan Willoughby would no doubt have been horrified to realise just how deeply she had been fooled by older and more devious Kindred. The audio recording she captured on the night after Roger Kirkbeck’s death, evidence of Samantha Eames’ involvement in the affair, did not end up in the hands of Bishop Dubrik, but was passed over into the clutches of London baron and Camarilla member Rodyon Turcov. Joan, it is to be feared, never had the chance to fully comprehend what had really transpired; she was quickly dispatched at the meeting point upon the heath.
Turcov, calling upon his Camarilla allies, struck quickly, pre-empting the Anarchs’ attempts to discredit the Camarilla, and cutting off the possibility of civil war before it began. Samantha Eames arrived in the Prince’s study, certain of her triumph, to find the barons waiting for her. Faced with the choice between fighting or fleeing, Eames attempted to escape through the window and into the gardens – though, it must be noted, her first offensive attack, a thrown, extremely corrosive substance that was later discovered to have been related to the malevolent Hands Of Destruction path and which ruined the antique desk and much of the study walls, was aimed squarely at one Anthony Sommers. The Sheriff Gordon Wyther, it is said, was the one to catch her (it is not to be doubted that several of the barons did not desire to get too close to the powerful Tremere).
The fate of the creature known as Hob is not known. When the Camarilla forced their way into Greenwich chantry, and entered the Lhiannon ruins beneath, they found no trace of the assassin. It is possible it escaped into the endless sewers beneath London, but if it encountered the Centurion, then perhaps it met with a fitting end, for the city’s ancient and inexplicable guardian still stalks the underground, as mad and as merciless as ever.
Kirkbeck had never been popular – but London, over most of its long and storied history, had only known a single, reputedly omnipotent Prince, and the city was overcome by the sudden panic that a once stable Camarilla might be falling into chaos. The Anarchs’ revelations were overshadowed by mourning – or, at best, misinterpreted. Eames and the Tremere, the word went around, had murdered the Prince and practiced diabolical, forbidden forms of blood magic, and if the Anarchs’ evidence said that there was a traitor in the council, then surely Eames was responsible. More than one group of over-excited fledglings gathered outside the Greenwich chantry with the aim of burning it to the ground – perhaps luckily for them, they were quietly dispersed by Edgar Fellowes.
While Griddle and his followers, with desperate, shrill insistence, repeated their claims and spread their pamphlets, the Kindred held an emergency meeting and – no doubt to the delight of the city elders, it was the ordinary vampires who were now insisting upon a stronger prince with more powers to investigate and purge the horrors in their midst. But even as they enjoyed the support of the proles, the news began to creep down that someone in Venice had been asking exactly what the hell was going on in London…
As the fear spread amongst the lower orders that the Tremere were infested with Baalites, the barons began to concern themselves with giving the right impression to whoever might be watching. Turcov took the barony of Mayfair, and handed Westminster, for want of a more suitable candidate, to Sommers until such time as a Prince could appoint a permanent baron. The young Ventrue, too exhausted to even savour his (presumably temporary) triumph, edged back from the spotlight, and returned to consolidating his power.
***
Chapters
Prologue/ 1 - Her Majesty's Grey Eminence
2 - Torches In The Night
3 - The Ragged Prince
4- Election Fever
5 - Reflections
6: In Which The Queen Presents Herself
7: Poor Silly Half-Brained Things
8: All The Faithful Departed
9: Something About Serpents Licking Ears
10: Gotterdammerung
***
Contacts:
Wilhelm Vogler
Vogler, an up-and-coming, curiously diplomatically-minded Gangrel, has an eye on the position of Prince of London and has asked for Sommers' help in the affair; his resources, up to a point, should be considered at Sommers' disposal.
Rodyon Turcov
Turcov is, somewhat understandably, sick of the sight of the younger Ventrue. While he will certainly continue to support Sommers to help keep the peace for the present, he is unlikely to make much of an effort to help him in the near future.
Sir Humphrey Trentbridge
Sir Humphrey is no longer in government – however, like so many of his kind, his ‘retirement’ exists in name only; he still has a great deal of influence on his peers, and currently sits as a non-executive on the board of one of the country’s major banks, and hopes to entice Sommers to also become involved.
Edgar Fellowes
Sommers sees little of Fellowes these days, though they communicate over the phone most nights. The Toreador is still watching over the ghouls of Operation Wistman, although his talents are more and more in demand with other members of the Camarilla. Sommers is all-too aware that his staunchest ally may be offered a position with another, more powerful elder in the near future.
Costello
This elegant harpy takes her place, in the centre of a group of highly-fashionable, utterly devoted Kine admirers, in the Fleshmarket in Hoxton, a garish den of earthly pleasures. Costello’s popularity makes her difficult to reach, at times.
William Horn
Politicians, as Sommers has come to learn, are replaced too soon; there’s no mileage in them. Civil servants of Her Majesty’s Government do not have to concern themselves with re-election, and all policy – foreign and domestic – requires the say-so of the Treasury. William Horn, wheezing, greedy and saturnine, is a truly useful ghoul.
Mr Cripps
This foul-looking, hulking Nosferatu, his putrid face wrapped in bandages and an ancient bowler hat perched atop his asymmetrical head is in charge of Sommers’ personal safety while Fellowes is busy. He certainly seems competent enough, though you couldn’t say the enormous, constantly-scowling Cripps is particularly pleasant company…
Antonia
Now permanently stationed in a comfortable flat in Westminster itself, Antonia will be able to keep Sommers abreast of anything he might need to know.
Robert Griddle
It's unlikely - after the embarrassment Sommers has caused him - that Griddle will want to be contacted by him.
Evening. If you're just joining us, you've stumbled into a long and over-elaborate CYOA, set in the modern-day world of Vampire: The Masquerade, in the foggy city of London, in which Codexers vote a path for a young and ambitious Ventrue trying to struggle his way up the ladder (and, relatively briefly, a young Tremere would-be antitribu. It didn't work out) . It died at a critical juncture, and now it's back. If you want to catch up, you can do so here.
***
Filling In The Blanks
The young Tremere by the name of Joan Willoughby would no doubt have been horrified to realise just how deeply she had been fooled by older and more devious Kindred. The audio recording she captured on the night after Roger Kirkbeck’s death, evidence of Samantha Eames’ involvement in the affair, did not end up in the hands of Bishop Dubrik, but was passed over into the clutches of London baron and Camarilla member Rodyon Turcov. Joan, it is to be feared, never had the chance to fully comprehend what had really transpired; she was quickly dispatched at the meeting point upon the heath.
Turcov, calling upon his Camarilla allies, struck quickly, pre-empting the Anarchs’ attempts to discredit the Camarilla, and cutting off the possibility of civil war before it began. Samantha Eames arrived in the Prince’s study, certain of her triumph, to find the barons waiting for her. Faced with the choice between fighting or fleeing, Eames attempted to escape through the window and into the gardens – though, it must be noted, her first offensive attack, a thrown, extremely corrosive substance that was later discovered to have been related to the malevolent Hands Of Destruction path and which ruined the antique desk and much of the study walls, was aimed squarely at one Anthony Sommers. The Sheriff Gordon Wyther, it is said, was the one to catch her (it is not to be doubted that several of the barons did not desire to get too close to the powerful Tremere).
The fate of the creature known as Hob is not known. When the Camarilla forced their way into Greenwich chantry, and entered the Lhiannon ruins beneath, they found no trace of the assassin. It is possible it escaped into the endless sewers beneath London, but if it encountered the Centurion, then perhaps it met with a fitting end, for the city’s ancient and inexplicable guardian still stalks the underground, as mad and as merciless as ever.
Kirkbeck had never been popular – but London, over most of its long and storied history, had only known a single, reputedly omnipotent Prince, and the city was overcome by the sudden panic that a once stable Camarilla might be falling into chaos. The Anarchs’ revelations were overshadowed by mourning – or, at best, misinterpreted. Eames and the Tremere, the word went around, had murdered the Prince and practiced diabolical, forbidden forms of blood magic, and if the Anarchs’ evidence said that there was a traitor in the council, then surely Eames was responsible. More than one group of over-excited fledglings gathered outside the Greenwich chantry with the aim of burning it to the ground – perhaps luckily for them, they were quietly dispersed by Edgar Fellowes.
While Griddle and his followers, with desperate, shrill insistence, repeated their claims and spread their pamphlets, the Kindred held an emergency meeting and – no doubt to the delight of the city elders, it was the ordinary vampires who were now insisting upon a stronger prince with more powers to investigate and purge the horrors in their midst. But even as they enjoyed the support of the proles, the news began to creep down that someone in Venice had been asking exactly what the hell was going on in London…
As the fear spread amongst the lower orders that the Tremere were infested with Baalites, the barons began to concern themselves with giving the right impression to whoever might be watching. Turcov took the barony of Mayfair, and handed Westminster, for want of a more suitable candidate, to Sommers until such time as a Prince could appoint a permanent baron. The young Ventrue, too exhausted to even savour his (presumably temporary) triumph, edged back from the spotlight, and returned to consolidating his power.
***
Chapters
Prologue/ 1 - Her Majesty's Grey Eminence
2 - Torches In The Night
3 - The Ragged Prince
4- Election Fever
5 - Reflections
6: In Which The Queen Presents Herself
7: Poor Silly Half-Brained Things
8: All The Faithful Departed
9: Something About Serpents Licking Ears
10: Gotterdammerung
***
Contacts:
Wilhelm Vogler
Vogler, an up-and-coming, curiously diplomatically-minded Gangrel, has an eye on the position of Prince of London and has asked for Sommers' help in the affair; his resources, up to a point, should be considered at Sommers' disposal.
Rodyon Turcov
Turcov is, somewhat understandably, sick of the sight of the younger Ventrue. While he will certainly continue to support Sommers to help keep the peace for the present, he is unlikely to make much of an effort to help him in the near future.
Sir Humphrey Trentbridge
Sir Humphrey is no longer in government – however, like so many of his kind, his ‘retirement’ exists in name only; he still has a great deal of influence on his peers, and currently sits as a non-executive on the board of one of the country’s major banks, and hopes to entice Sommers to also become involved.
Edgar Fellowes
Sommers sees little of Fellowes these days, though they communicate over the phone most nights. The Toreador is still watching over the ghouls of Operation Wistman, although his talents are more and more in demand with other members of the Camarilla. Sommers is all-too aware that his staunchest ally may be offered a position with another, more powerful elder in the near future.
Costello
This elegant harpy takes her place, in the centre of a group of highly-fashionable, utterly devoted Kine admirers, in the Fleshmarket in Hoxton, a garish den of earthly pleasures. Costello’s popularity makes her difficult to reach, at times.
William Horn
Politicians, as Sommers has come to learn, are replaced too soon; there’s no mileage in them. Civil servants of Her Majesty’s Government do not have to concern themselves with re-election, and all policy – foreign and domestic – requires the say-so of the Treasury. William Horn, wheezing, greedy and saturnine, is a truly useful ghoul.
Mr Cripps
This foul-looking, hulking Nosferatu, his putrid face wrapped in bandages and an ancient bowler hat perched atop his asymmetrical head is in charge of Sommers’ personal safety while Fellowes is busy. He certainly seems competent enough, though you couldn’t say the enormous, constantly-scowling Cripps is particularly pleasant company…
Antonia
Now permanently stationed in a comfortable flat in Westminster itself, Antonia will be able to keep Sommers abreast of anything he might need to know.
Robert Griddle
It's unlikely - after the embarrassment Sommers has caused him - that Griddle will want to be contacted by him.