Toodleroodle von Skroodledoodler (
doneisdone) wrote in
faderift2024-10-02 11:40 am
Entry tags:
player plot: chateau d'onterre
WHO: Teren, Abby, Clarisse, Julius, Mobius, Redvers, Viktor
WHAT: The Gang Gets Stuck in a Haunted House
WHEN: ~Harvestmere
WHERE: the Emerald Graves
NOTES: Please track the post and keep to one thread, which I will re-up with a new starter periodically!
WHAT: The Gang Gets Stuck in a Haunted House
WHEN: ~Harvestmere
WHERE: the Emerald Graves
NOTES: Please track the post and keep to one thread, which I will re-up with a new starter periodically!

It's a dark and stormy night.
The party was on their way from the eluvian to a rift at Argon's Lodge, but, having been caught up in an especially nasty squall, has been forced to seek shelter somewhere nearer than either. Lightning flashes, too close for comfort; it illuminates a flash of metal through the overgrown trees, perhaps a sign of civilization. They draw nearer, and are able to identify a large and elaborate gate, hanging slightly ajar. Inviting.
Thunder cracks furiously, and with little choice but to duck within or to remain out in the downpour, the party chooses the former. A short stone walkway leads up to an enormous building, impossibly concealed by the forest and even now partially obscured by mist and rain. Redvers tries the door, a construct tall and grand: it groans open.
The entryway is pitch black as they pile in, the occasional flashes of lightning enough to suggest the accoutrements of a personal dwelling, albeit a large and wealthy one. Julius, the last one inside, has barely drawn his dripping overclothes through the doorway when it slams shut of its own volition, and cannot be opened again.
Down the hall, about ten paces away, a sconce flickers to life.

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On closer inspection, the burglars have probably only been lying here a few weeks, untouched by anything apart from whatever killed them.
The sharp-eared will notice, around this time, that sounds of the storm have completely dissipated. The room they stand in is a massive gilded gallery bisected by a grand staircase, with portraits lining the walls on either side of the first floor and what appear to be bookshelves atop the landing of the second.
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"Look." She crouches and points a finger at the nearest body to her, at those slashes that go through the clothes and the skin. "A trap?"
Something shoots out of the wall, maybe? Or someone, watching.
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But the fireplace roaring to life seems to restart him and he moves farther in, away from the door to let anyone through who hasn't already come into the room. He doesn't go far, but he's aware he won't add much to the examination of the corpses. Instead, at Clarisse's suggestion, he mentally traces a line from the corpse to the nearest wall and examines the area for holes or other signs of a potentially lethal deterrent.
Seems like it would be asking for trouble to bobby trap one's entrance gallery in a house that is clearly meant to host guest, in his opinion. Then again, the nobility can be odd, and sometimes paranoid.
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"Someone's playing games with us," he muses. This could all somehow be set up, playing into some kind of trap the would-be burglars wandered into, but he ganders at the slashes and feels like there's a more obvious conclusion. "Someone or something might've mauled them. Slashed right through."
Might mean a vicious animal (or demon) loose around. Might still be around, might not. Given the strangeness of the lighting situation, something demonic feels more appropriate. And given it's a dark and spooky...
...huh. He lifts his head, looking around ceiling-ward, straining with focus. "Did the storm die off so soon?"
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Her first thought was an animal too, actually. It's why she says, "Whatever — whoever — killed them didn't come back afterwards." They're intact despite the slashes. Their bodies haven't been looted, as evidenced by the burlap sack resting almost innocently on the ground beside one of the bodies. She turns toward it, setting down the sconce so she can open it up and root through.
One of the good parts about being here rather than at home is that the corspes don't have jeans pockets you feel obligated to go through, in case one of them had a lighter or something.
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He has no answer to the question of the weather. Storms come and go, wind calms as suddenly as it gusts. Doors open and close. Fires are set. People die, often gruesomely. Each of these events is perfectly plausible on its own, and together... still plausible, but admittedly very weird. (His pulse seems to agree.)
With a smooth pull, the copper antenna extends to the length of his arm. He turns a dial, points it at the closest body in search of any sign of arcane activity. Points it at Abby, too, necessarily—but there shouldn't be any interference, as, for the moment, this particular thaumoscope can't pick up the signature of an anchor shard at all. (If it could, it would have been pipping away all day for the incessant prickling in his palm.)
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The party can still clearly see the fall of rain and flash of lightning through the windows down the hallway, but it's as though the sound on it has been turned down-- as well as that of their voices, which come out close, dampened, like the air itself is heavy.
Viktor's thaumoscope, activated, begins to vocalize wildly, the dial immediately turning to the highest setting and remaining there no matter where he points it.
Making an uneasy noise in the back of her throat, Teren's eyes scan about the room, her feet rooted to the floor. Fuck this.
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Nothing ate them. They were just left there. Ugh.
The books upstairs are, naturally, very tempting, but he can scarcely imagine perusing through tomes at the moment. Viktor's device going absolutely insane, however, snaps his attention.
"Why is it doing that?" He's in Research. He knows what a thaumoscope does and why it does it. That does not change the question or the tense way he asks it. Even for as muted as his voice seems even to his own ears. "Maybe we need to move on." From this room. This floor. This building, maybe! Perfectly defenestratable windows right there--
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"Uh."
The thaumoscope is, indeed, going absolutely insane, its feedback clicks blending to a single grinding, tearing note, sustained. Perhaps it's gone the other way and become too sensitive? Surely a malfunction—it's like they're sitting under a rift—
Now moving slowly away from the others, aiming the device here and there, "Just... give me a moment..."
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"Get rid of it," she says urgently, dropping the sack on the floor. There was nothing in there of significance other than the candlestick; she takes up the sconce again and gets to her feet. "Turn it off!"
They're practically advertising their location!
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Coming back into the room more fully, he pitches his voice loud enough to be heard: "If we think there's someone actively spellcasting, I have some things I can try, but it still doesn't look like anyone's here." And there's no visible rift, which he assumes they can all see well enough that there's no need to state the obvious.
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"This is messed up," she says, stranding up straight again and gesturing with one hand toward... well, everything. Especially the bodies, though. "I know it's raining," is it still raining? She can't even hear the storm anymore, "but we should get the fuck out of here before something finds us."
She doesn't even notice that she's started thinking of it as something instead of someone.
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In his journey around the wall, Julius can make out some of the title plates below the gallery's portraits:
Jeanette d’Onterre, Matriarch of House d’Onterre
Nanette d’Onterre, Beautiful Rose of House d’Onterre
General Mathieu d’Onterre, Feared by Dog Lords
Antia Chayeau, Beloved Grandmére
Lord Abel d’Onterre
Lady Colette d’Onterre
A group portrait depicts the immediate family, Lord Abel and Lady Colette with their daughter Nanette, a young teenager with a haunted stare.
"Aye," Teren agrees with Clarisse, and, taking matters into her own hands, moves toward a window. It unlocks easily, but when she tries to open it, it doesn't budge.
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They really should leave. Teren can't even get the damned windows open? Is everything locked into place? They'll simply have to chuck something through the glass, then. One of those portraits. A heavy tome.
Sure. He can go get one. Up the stairs and toward the flicker of movement. Did nobody else see that? Maybe not with all the fuss. No, it's fine, he decides when he moves. It's fine because everyone's still together and there's at least some light, and he keeps a hand casually on the hilt of his blade as he moves toward the stairs. Up them. Toward the books atop the staircase, yes, and also more importantly to the what feels like unnaturally deep shadows beyond that the fire's light doesn't reach.
Don't worry about it. They can handle a creature. Surely.
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His gaze presently snags on Mobius taking the stairs, follows him as he ascends.
His credibility may have been scuffed just now—even if only self-imposed, he feels it regardless—but he's taken worse hits for more embarrassing reasons, and this is hardly enough to knock him out of his role. So, with his eyes still raised, a slight turn of his head toward Julius, he says, "By all means, try."
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Normally that would be embarrassing, but even Clarisse is getting too freaked out by all of this to care much about being embarrassed. Whatever is keeping the window closed, it's stronger than she is, and she doesn't like that.
"Shit," she mutters under her breath. She turns to watch Mobius head up the stairs, torn between going with him and trying the window again.
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Mobius' adventure continues upstairs.
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Mobius has disappeared up the stairs. Abby's poised halfway between the stairs and the window, still holding the sconce and candlestick aloft — there's something tugging at her, some bad feeling that says they shouldn't be splitting up.
When she opens her mouth all she says is, "I hate this." The magic Julius casts washes over the window and, to be sure, she takes another step back, gaze automatically going to Clarisse.
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This sucks.
"Guess we're going upstairs." She is, at least, following Mobius up, though it seems more due to frustration than curiosity on her part.