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PROFESSOR DEMIR
Initial Knowledge: Demir is trained as an anthropologist both in
Turkey but also in Greece and London. He also has an interest in
magical belief and has written extensively on the subject of cults and
outré religions and is well respected in his field. He is a Muslim and is
married with two sons and a daughter. He is in his mid fifties.
Further Information: Professor Demir is held in good standing at the
Oriental Club and any number of testimonials can be offered there.
These establish him as an upright and learned man committed to good
causes. He is also an ally of the Ottoman court and has little time for
those who would oppose it politically.
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Preparing for the Trip
The investigators should prepare for their trip to Constantinople. The
Baron has wired money to Smith so that they can secure tickets on the
Orient Express. Smith can also contact the Turkish embassy on their
behalf to secure travel visas for Constantinople. If investigators lack
passports or visas or other impediments, the Baron pulls strings from
Vienna to have everything smoothly provided before the departure.
See also the Gaslight on the Orient Express source material on page 83
for more information on preparation for travelling on the Orient
Express.
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London to Chalons-sur-Marne
The investigators depart London’s Victoria Station at 10:00 A.M. on the
morning of their Orient Express connection. They make a pleasant
journey out of the city and through the countryside of Kent to Dover,
where a steamer awaits to take them across the Channel to Calais.
They arrive in Calais at 1:40 P.M. and after a short afternoon stay take
a connecting service from Calais to Châlons-sur-Marne where they will
join the Orient Express that evening at 10:26 P.M., three hours after the
Orient Express departs Paris.
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BURNHAM ON BOARD
The trip from London is uneventful save for one critical thing: the
presence of Bentley Burnham. He is shadowing the investigators and
intends to board the Orient Express with them, report to Menkaph on
the train overnight, and disembark at Stuttgart in the morning. He
keeps a discreet distance from the investigators as much as he can
when they are sharing trains and steamers. If they confront him, either
for following them or because they have encountered him earlier, he
puts on a bland façade and proffers his journalist credentials. He claims
to be on the way to Stuttgart to cover a story about the German
Empire conducting espionage against Great Britain. His story is
plausible, if unlikely.
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CHÂLONS-SUR-MARNE
Investigators dine on the Calais-Châlons coach, so by the time they
board the Orient Express that night the staff will get them onto the
train as quickly as possible and settle them into their sleeping
compartments. The Wagon-Lits staff assists the porters of Châlons-sur-
Marne in quickly sorting investigator luggage. The investigators are the
only ones joining the Constantinople car at this stop, so they alone join
Sleeping Car One. Bentley Burnham is staying in Sleeping Car Two,
since he is getting off sooner than Constantinople. (At the keeper’s
discretion they could elect to have one or more of the British NPC
passengers journey with the investigators from London—this does not
include the Myers, who are already in Paris).
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A major incident may delay the train, but if the Chef de Train can
present an obvious solution to local officials and have them remove
bodies and blatant evildoers promptly and without fuss, he will.
(Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express is the classic example
of this).
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(4) Double Compartment: Miss Macgregor and Miss Minkoff
AILEEN MACGREGOR, AGE 27, SCOTTISH REPORTER FOR THE
WOMAN’S HERALD
Macgregor is a Christian suffragette and reporter for the Woman’s
Herald. She is interested in international issues and is independently
wealthy, and thus funding a fact finding mission to the Ottoman
Empire. The British (and later the Americans) are especially intrigued
with the ‘Armenian Question’ in the Ottoman Empire, especially the
fate of Armenians as Christians within a Muslim Empire. Aileen is also
interested in the lot of women there. Armenian nationalists are
agitating to break away from the Empire and political, religious, and
ethnic tensions are high. There have been armed clashes between
Armenians and their Muslim neighbors. This will soon erupt in
bloodshed and massacre, but for the time being things are merely
simmering with the odd outbreak of violence and rumors of rebellion.
Aileen intends to go to the Ottoman court to find answers to their
approach, then to travel in Armenia. Macgregor is an intense but
pleasant woman and comes from a well-off Lowlands family, hence her
capacity to travel on the Orient Express. She is keen to get to her story
fast. She has travelled for pleasure before in the east and knows
Constantinople well and might serve as a useful ally.
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KARLA MINKOFF, AGE 34, RUSSIAN COMPANION
Karla Minkoff is the companion of Countess Irina Razumosky (p. 66).
She was hired by the Count but her first loyalty is to her mistress,
including keeping secret the Countess’ affairs.
Among her skills are first aid and accomplished hand-to-hand abilities.
Karla has no sympathies for anarchists or other political revolutionaries
and is indifferent to politics. She is thoroughly practical. Investigators
could do worse than seek her out if they are injured. She will help in a
crisis provided it does not endanger her mistress.
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The Countess has been given an ornate knife by the Count for self
defense against Turks, but she has little skill in using it and would
greatly hesitate to actually stab someone.
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NEW SPELL
Reading The Whispering Fez gains the reader Fez Controller Powers, as long as they
succeed in an INT roll when they finish reading the book. Powers that require a Fez
controller and another Fez wearer are marked with an asterisk. These must be within
a half a mile radius of one another to work.
DRAIN THE FEZ*
Cost: 1D4 Sanity point if successful; 5 POW if attempt fails.
Casting time: One round
The Controller may attempt to drain other Fez wearers of magic points or POW. If the
target is unwilling, an opposed POW roll is required. Only 5 POW per day can be
drained this way per Fez wearer. The POW is taken permanently from the victim and
added to the Controller, or it can be used to spawn a new Fez (see below). One magic
point per hour can also be drained, but these come back to the wearer at the end of
day.
SPAWN FEZ
Cost: 5 POW; 1D4 Sanity points
Casting time: One round
A new Fez can be grown from an existing Fez. This requires 24 hours, at the end of
which it is slowly extruded with a hideous shucking noise.
FAVORITE OF YOG-SOTHOTH
Cost: See Call Yog-Sothoth in Rulebook for details.
Casting time: As above.
This spell acts very much as Call/Dismiss Yog-Sothoth except that no stone tower is
needed. Instead, a sacrifice is required and both caster and sacrifice must be wearing
a Blood Red Fez. On a successful roll by the caster, Yog-Sothoth is inclined to view its
summoner favorably and grant spells and POW bonus at the keeper’s discretion. If
another person wearing a Fez contests primacy then the spell will be aborted on an
opposed POW roll. On a Fumble roll Yog-Sothoth appears anyway and is not inclined
to view anyone favorably.
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NEW MYTHOS TOME: THE WHISPERING FEZ
In Persian and hieroglyph, author unknown This is a bound book,
dating from the Ottoman Empire around 1800. It is a quarto volume
that appears to be bound in the same dark blood color as the Fez,
though without its disturbing symbols or strange smell. The book is in
two distinct parts.
Part One: The bulk of the book is in Persian, and recounts the specific
use of the Blood Red Fez and its properties and its use as a device to
call on Yog-Sothoth to grant the user power.
After reading the book the reader will have an innate knowledge of how
to control the Fez, and learns all of the Controller Powers. This section
may be read in 24 hours. Gaslight Handout #8 summarizes what can
be gleaned from this section.
Part Two: The end of the book is in hieroglyphs similar in symbol and
pattern to those found on the Fez. Only very rare individuals can
translate and interpret this correctly. They must have over 25%
Cthulhu Mythos and over 75% Persian to do so. It takes around 12
hours to read this section and comprehend it. This matter occupies
only a few pages at the end of the book. The results are described
under Professor Demir in the Constantinople section below.
• Sanity loss: 1D10
• Cthulhu Mythos: +7 percentiles
• Mythos Rating: 21
• Study: 24 hours for the Persian, 12 hours for the hieroglyph section
• Spells: Arrest Fez Decline, Control Servant of the Blood Red Fez*,
Control the Fez*, Favored of Yog-Sothoth*, Drain the Fez*, Spawn Fez*.
*Require both controller and fez wearer.
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Day One (Wednesday): Paris to Strasbourg
TIMETABLE
Paris 7:30 P.M.
Arrives: Châlons-sur-Marne 10.26 P.M.
Arrives: Strasbourg 3:43 A.M.
MIDNIGHT SHADOWS
At 11:00 P.M. the Countess creeps from her own compartment to
Pytor’s. At midnight Scott Myers passes into the second day of the Fez.
His Shadow creatures stalk the entire length of the train. If
investigators are alert and/or they manage to injure the creatures, they
see them return to Myers’ compartment either after they are hurt or at
dawn (just after Strasbourg).
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The best time to get to see Scott Myers is during meals, when
Menkaph makes it a point to dine with Mrs. Myers. Myers can only be
saved by selfless action on the part of the investigators using the
Arrest Fez Decline ritual.
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VIENNA, 5:50 PM
The train arrives in Vienna late that afternoon at 5:50 P.M. The
investigators are to meet Baron von Hofler, Smith’s friend and their
patron. Passengers boarding in Vienna are placed in Sleeping Car Two.
Baron Von Hofler is seen off by his concerned daughter, Ilsa.
Investigators watching out the window see her beg him not to make
the trip. She claims he is exhausted and needs the rest. When he
refuses she storms off. In fact she gets back on the train minutes later
in disguise (see The Baron’s Daughter, below).
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The Baron has long wanted to get his hands on the Blood Red Fez,
having heard of it from associates in Anatolia. He has assembled an
equivalent copy of Apocrypha of the Fez from his own researches. He
will allow the investigators to read this or summarize for them. He has
not read The Whispering Fez and so has no exact method of learning
more.
She will observe her father, and when she is certain he is a danger to
himself and others, she will act. In some ways Ilsa is cold-bloodedly
using the investigators as guinea pigs. She suspects that they are just
more degenerate hangers- on of her father.
Ilsa plans to drug the Baron and get him off the train somewhere
between Vienna and Belgrade. To this end she carries a hypodermic
needle and a bottle of laudanum, as well as a bottle of chloroform and
a large rag. She has her family doctor waiting at Belgrade and hirelings
at Budapest whom she coordinates with via telegram messages if need
be. With the doctor’s connivance she plans to get the Baron back to
home in Vienna and confine him there until he is well. She believes
Doctor Freud will have some success treating him in Vienna.
Keepers should roll on her Stealth and Disguise skills to catch the
Baron off-guard. If she is successful she leaves the train with the
unconscious Baron at Budapest or Belgrade or even Sofia.
If Ilsa detects the investigators are possible allies she will ask them for
help. While she does not believe her father is evil, she is not a fool and
will acknowledge if he becomes dangerous. Under no circumstances
will she condone serious harm coming to the Baron.
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11:00 P.M. BUDAPEST
At 11:00 P.M. the train arrives at Budapest and the Berlin-to-
Constantinople carriage is attached, necessitating a wait of 20
minutes. If the investigators have given Baron von Hofler the Fez and
the book The Whispering Fez, and if his daughter has not acted, he will
slip off the train here and try to get back to Vienna. Investigators can
pursue him and get the items back, but then must make a mad dash
by coach, horseback, and local train across the Hungarian frontier and
into Serbia to try and rejoin the Orient Express at Belgrade at 5:40 A.M.
the next morning.
This level of triumph would be unusual but not impossible and is certainly not
discouraged. Keepers should assume that before the last cultist falls he has a chance
to telegraph Constantinople and warn Nisra the Daughter of Fate. She will then have
even more incentive to kidnap Professor Demir’s son in Constantinople (see below for
more details).
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Day Four (Saturday): Constantinople Arrival
TIMETABLE
Arrives: Constantinople 10:43 A.M.
FINAL MORNING
The investigators enjoy a last breakfast on the Orient Express before
preparing to disembark at Constantinople at 10:43 A.M. The state they
are in depends entirely on their actions during the train
journey.======================================
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Arriving In Constantinople
The investigators arrive at Sirkeci Station at 10:43 A.M. on Saturday
morning. The station is new and very grand, having been completed in
1890. It resembles a cross between a mosque and a huge Victorian
railway terminus; as the creation of a Prussian architect it is considered
a classic example of European Orientialism. Investigator luggage goes
straight from the train to the Railway Custom House where it is
inspected and then passed on to Wagon-Lits staff who make sure there
is minimum delay.
CURRENCY
The Ottoman currency is the Lira which is equal to 18 English shillings in the 1890s.
On the streets the coinage is in gold, silver and copper coins, the latter once having a
silver coating which has now been prised off most coins. Turks tend to price things by
the gurush, known as piastre to the Europeans. The piastre is worth about 2 pence.
European currency can be used directly without need of exchange. The English
sovereign is known as the English lira and is worth 120 piastres. Other popular
currencies are the French, Italian and Greek silver francs worth 4.5 piastres.
Currencies other than those listed bring less favorable exchange rates. Thomas Cook
& Son has an office in Pera, where travelers can get notes exchanged and other
currency issues attended to with a minimum of fuss.
DOGS OF CONSTANTINOPLE
Without fail the accounts of nineteenth century travelers to Constantinople mention
the packs of stray dogs which infest the streets and can be found day and night
throughout the city. Some look on them as friendly and engaging while others
consider them ill-tempered curs and a blight on the city.
GETTING AROUND
It is customary to hire a Dragoman, a guide and interpreter when in Constantinople.
The going price is around 7 shillings a day. Note that in Constantinople the term
‘guide’ is a euphemism for pimp, and may lead to some confusion.
Carriages and Horses: Carriages are very common and are drawn by two horses
because of the steep hills. Short rides are 10 pence while longer ones are 2 to 3
shillings. Travelers pay a few pence more for rides after 6:00 P.M. Riding horses can
also be hired, although there is no fixed fare and prices must be settled by
bargaining.
Trams: Trams run in Pera and Galata for 2 pence and across Stamboul for 3 pence.
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THE PROFESSOR’S CHILDREN
Toprak and Rana meet the investigators—they are the son and
daughter of Professor Demir. They speak excellent if accented English
and are courteous but in a state of some agitation. Last night the
Professor was attacked in his home and their younger brother, Barlas,
kidnapped when he went to their father’s aid. The Professor was
stabbed in the stomach and is now convalescing. They insist the
investigators come and see him before going to their hotel.
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The Professor is retired at the moment, but not entirely by choice. The
Ottomans have closed two of the main universities he worked for
previously: Istanbul University and the University of Marmara (though
the latter is closed for rebuilding). Both will re open by 1900. He is
currently on a stipend to do research for theDepartment of Education.
THE KIDNAP
Uppermost in Demir’s mind is the safe return of Barlas. He shows the
investigators a note that has been delivered by hand which agrees to
return the Professor’s son in exchange for what the cult wants. The
cult’s demands depend on the investigators’ success on the train, but
can include the book (if the investigators have it), a Fez (if the cult
have none), or for the Professor’s “new friends” to get back on the
Orient Express or a steamer and leave Constantinople before 24 hours
has passed. The note specifies that the meeting is to take place
Sunday midnight at Kasim Pasha docks.
SELIM MAKRYAT
The investigators may recall Smith’s warning about Selim Makryat.
Demir tells them that Makryat worships a terrible entity called the
Skinless One and that Selim has been conducting strange researches
and experiments for years. He explains how Selim and Menkaph were
once allies. Selim’s cult is known as the Brothers of the Skin, and they
inhabit an ancient fortress in Scutari, on the Asian side of the
Bosporus. Selim is extremely dangerous, and Demir is not convinced
he has anything to do with this business.
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Research
Investigators may wish to spend some time researching any gaps in
their knowledge. Ideal places for research are as follows.
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POSSIBLE INFORMATION
Successful Library Use may glean the following. However note almost
all the information is in Arabic, Persian (the preferred language of the
Ottoman court literature), or Turkish.
=>Assembling a new Apocrypha of the Fez.
=>Assembling The Whispering Fez. If the investigators have a Blood
Red Fez or a rubbing of its symbols it is possible with judicious research
to find reference to enough material to assemble the hidden section of
the book: the ritual and destruction of the Fez. This is a feat of
scholarship that has been beyond Nisra and Menkaph and their cronies
and takes two full time researchers two weeks of study. (See below for
Demir’s interpretation of the reading).
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The hieroglyph section makes plain that it is not a true Prince that is
needed, but that whoever wears the Fez and conducts the ritual will be
as a prince. This will be disastrous, allowing the entrance into our
reality of a foul being beyond any mundane conception of evil, known
as the ‘Father of Sorcerers’. The price that the city and indeed the
world could pay is incalculable. Cthulhu Mythos identifies the deity
as Yog-Sothoth.
Keepers should keep his true identity secret but play him consistently
with how he appears in the 1920s. If the players suspect they are the
same man, they will be immediately suspicious when the 1923
investigators meet him in Lausanne. See the Lausanne chapter
“Nocturne” for more information.
=> Nisra the Daughter of Fate was his pupil. She was persuaded by the
charlatan Menkaph that the Blood Red Fez was a shortcut to power so
she abandoned her studies under him. She will come to realize there
are no shortcuts to power where the power is worth having.
=> Nisra has cultivated a delusional exiled Prince, Prince Ramazan. He
is a distant cousin to the Sultan and was exiled because he was
degenerate and ambitious, a combination the Sultan disliked intensely.
The Frenchman has heard Ramazan has syphilis, a prospect he finds
intensely funny.
=> Nisra has set herself up on the forgotten island known also as The
Island of Doomed Princes, the 10th and furthest out of the Princes’
Islands, the place where Byzantine and Ottoman royalty have been
exiled for centuries. She has a Black Eunuch as a guard (being black or
white determines how much of the genitalia is removed, so is a
significant distinction in Ottoman times) and a few
other servants who are probably cultists.
=> Menkaph is a pretender who knows very little. Any power he has is
because of the direct intervention of Nisra or that which has been
stolen from books or artifacts.
Around twenty cultists can be found here at any one time. The fort is
situated above a tiny village. The cultists have passed themselves off
to the locals as a monastic order and do what they can to not draw
attention to themselves. There is a 50% chance Selim himself is here
when the investigators come. He spends around half his time using the
fortress as a base for his foul experiments with skinning humans. The
cult is nowhere as ubiquitous as it becomes by the 1920s.
Selim largely uses its membership as muscle to gain and guard his
victims. Only a small coterie of around half dozen gains actual occult
knowledge, one of them eing Selim’s child Mehmet.
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SELIM MAKRYAT
Selim Makyrat is an intense older gentleman who stares at the
investigators as though he is imagining their faces being stripped of
skin (which, in fact, he is). Selim is watchful and wary, and always has
the Brothers on alert when visitors are admitted into the fort. As a
precaution he has cast the spell Skin of the Sedefkar, giving him 10
points of armor. Selim’s statistics can be found in the Constantinople
1923 chapter if required.
During the conversation with Selim, a nine year old boy sits quietly,
watching and listening. This is Mehmet Makryat. Psychology confirms
that he is following and memorizing every aspect of the discussion—
Mehmet turns to look directly at any investigator who scrutinizes him
before turning his attention back to the conversation.
The investigator is left with the uncomfortable feeling that the boy will
remember them. Selim offers the investigators no help unless they say
they are opposing Nisra, whom he dislikes because he does not like the
idea of women holding occult power. He tells them about the Island of
Doomed Princes, the 10th and secret island in the Princes’ Islands
chain, and that her cult is around fifty strong.
The Sultan
It is possible investigators decide to visit the Sultan to find out about
the Prince. Anyone who knows anything of the Ottoman Empire,
including Turkish investigators, will know the Sultan has many relatives
who might be considered to have ‘the blood of a Prince.’
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THE PALACE
The Sultan’s palace is on part of the Great Palace complex in Stamboul
and is three miles across. It has gardens, palatial buildings, a polo field,
everything the modern potentate could want. Gaining an audience with
the Sultan is extremely difficult and will take at least a week to arrange
and require a Credit Rating roll at Extreme difficulty.
He has no idea where the Prince is now (this is true enough). He knows
he fell in with a very strange crowd and has not seen him for months.
The Sultan does not recall the name Nisra, imperiously implying that
servants are beneath his notice, but Hard Psychology notes a
moment of recognition and perhaps longing.
He will try and gain from them the dispensation of their countries
towards his throne and seek possible ambassadors. If he finds them
engaging enough he may invite them to a ball where they will mix with
notable relatives of his, ministers in his government, foreign dignitaries
and the occasional spy. Aileen Macgregor is here if she survived, and
the Frenchman is also likely to attend. This will be a grand occasion
with astounding opulence and something of the feel of the Arabian
Nights of old.
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The cult leader brings forth the young man with a pistol to his head.
The leader asks for whatever the note has stipulated. Once they have
it and are assured that the book or the Fez are genuine they will kill the
captive and fall on the investigators to kill them. Any workers in the
vicinity will make themselves scarce. If a fight lasts for more than a few
minutes, the navy sends a launch and sailors with rifles to investigate.
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PRINCES’ ISLANDS
The Princes’ Islands are called Kizil Adalar by the Turks and lie 12 miles
south of Constantinople in the Sea of Marmara. Officially they number
nine, with the tenth laying to the southeast of the furthest one and
considered forbidden. (Keepers schooled in Turkish geography will note
this 10th Island is fictional). Four of the islands, the largest are
inhabited and host such establishments as naval colleges and colleges
of divinity. Contemporary Turks argue that the notion of exiling Princes
to the further isles was a purely Byzantine one, but modern historians
note it was also something done by the Ottomans. In spring and
summer steamers run morning and afternoon from Galata Bridge to
the largest of the islands which boasts hotels and cafes for the tourist.
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ON THE ISLAND
The island is little more than a hillock with a small crumbling wall of
rock and a goat path complete with a few ragged goats, kept by the
cultists for food and milk. Three small caïques have been dragged up
out of the water. These are what the cult uses usually to come and go.
(The steamer for the kidnap exchange is reserved for special occasions
and Nisra’s use).
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Nisra is here most of the time, looking after the Prince—after a fashion
—and maintaining cult activities while she waits for Menkaph or his
successors to deliver The Whispering Fez When she has it she will learn
its secrets, kill the Prince, and ascend to what she believes is dominion
over the Eastern Mediterranean thanks to the sorcerous knowledge of
Yog-Sothoth.
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If the investigators come to the tower before the kidnap exchange they
will find Demir’s son Barlas in the same chamber as the Prince,
shackled to the wall and drugged into docility with hashish.
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If Nisra has started the ritual, the investigators may have to challenge
for the Fez at the same time, with the additional caveat that if the
attempt goes badly and 98-100 is rolled, there will be a catastrophic
result. Yog- Sothoth will appear to all at the site. See Yog-Sothoth’s
write-up for Sanity loss and other consequences. All Fezzes will be
destroyed and all Fez wearers except the controller will be instantly
killed or go permanently insane (Keeper’s choice). The Controller can
sacrifice his or her POW completely to end the spell and deny Yog-
Sothoth entrance to this world. The gate closes, and the Controller
slumps lifeless to the ground.
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Conclusion
With luck, the investigators will prevail, destroying Nisra and all of the
Fezzes. Reward the investigators for the following outcomes:
=> Saving the Myers: Gain 1D4 Sanity points each
=> Saving Barlas: Gain 1D4 Sanity points
=> Defeating the Cult: Gain 1D6 Sanity points
=> Destroying the Blood Red Fez: Gain 1D10 Sanity points
Keepers should stage whatever appropriate wrapping up is suggested
by the final scenes: a touching funeral or a rousing celebration.
Perhaps the investigators are all mad or dead on an island in the Sea of
Marmara. Survivors may return to London and the warm thanks of
Professor Smith, or remain in Turkey. The region offers a rich backdrop
for further adventures.
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FORWARD TO 1923
Selim Makryat’s power grows, and he and the Brothers boldly move to
Stamboul and occupy the Red Mosque. Mehmet grows up in his
father’s shadow. The Frenchman withdraws to Lausanne.
Henri the conducteur dies a few years after this, but lives on in dream.
Professor Demir and his brave daughter and sons do not appear in the
1923 campaign, but keepers could introduce them if desired.
Otherwise, assume Makryat found them first, alas.
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New Spell:
Cost: 15 POW; 1D10 Sanity points
Casting time: 3 rounds
This ritual can only be learned from the hieroglyph section of The Whispering Fez. It
allows a challenger to destroy all Fezzes under the power of a rival Controller. The
challenger must wear a Blood Red Fez, and inscribe the hieroglyphs written on the
Fez while speaking the ritual. He or she must then sacrifice 15 points of POW, and
make eye contact with the Rival Controller and succeed in an opposed POW roll (if
there is no rival controller, the challenger must succeed in a regular POW roll).
If the opposed roll fails, the challenger can try again each subsequent round, at an
additional cost of 15 POW for each attempt.
If the opposed roll succeeds, the challenger’s Fez becomes the dominant Fez. The
challenger can then elect to destroy the Fezzes. This is instant. The destroyer loses
1D10 Sanity
points. Current wearers of any Fezzes make a Hard POW roll or their head explodes—
if they succeed they are able to throw the Fez away in the split second between when
it loosens and when it detonates. The challenger’s Fez deflates, corrupting into a red
paste which drips down his or her face and leaves a permanent stain, costing 5 APP.