I hope everyone had a happy new year. I spent the first day of January 2019 in a hung over haze, but the second day was quite pleasant. While cleaning out the attic in observance of purification rituals of old, I came across a strange, dusty tome, filled with all manner of strange practices and mystical pacts with the natural world. I thought it prudent to share some of the most interesting of these pagan charms here, in the spirit of giving and celebration of the slow death of a long December.
The first few pages concern themselves with what appear to be the glorious powers of supernatural monarchs. Whoever these beings were, they must have led quite fantastical lives if these are the legends by which they're known.
Witch-King’s Nocturne (Royal Autumn)
The changeling invokes his authority over the secret worlds, chanting in a mystical tongue his commands to a Hedge ghost he can perceive in the scene. If his words prove true, the ghost must oblige.
Cost: 2 Glamour (+1 Willpower, optional)
Dice Pool: Presence + Occult + Mantle vs Resistance + Wyrd
Action: Contested Instant
Success: The changeling gives the Hedge ghost one order, which it must carry out to the best of its abilities. This can consist of a single action (“Tell me where the nearest Goblin Market is”) or an ongoing command (“Guard my Hollow”), though not multiple, unrelated actions (“Open this door, then attack whatever is on the other side”). This Contract lasts for a single scene, unless the changeling spends a point of Willpower when activating it, in which case the compulsion lasts until the sun next crosses the horizon. At the Storyteller’s discretion, particularly abusive or destructive commands may prompt a Clarity attack using the changeling’s Mantle as the dice pool.
Exceptional Success: When the Hedge ghost completes its assigned task, the changeling receives a short vision of its actions, plus any immediate consequences thereof.
Failure: The Hedge ghost refuses to comply, and is probably now angry at the offending changeling.
Dramatic Failure: The changeling’s magic leaves him vulnerable to rebuke. The next Numen the targeted Hedge ghost uses on the changeling forgoes any Contested roll or Resistance penalty.
Loophole: The changeling created the targeted Hedge ghost (whether that means cobbling it together from scraps, or murdering the ghost’s living form).
--
Solemn Hibernation (Royal Winter)
Dreams can be a source of comfort and strength, but the wise and cautious recognize that they are also a place of vulnerability. A Huntsman could hide its heart in your dreams, or one of the Gentry could poison them into neverending madness, or an unscrupulous changeling could manipulate your thoughts and deeds unseen. And so the Icelords of the Winter Court long ago devised this Contract as a means to keep both themselves and their loved ones safe. The price it exacts is cruel, but some would argue that such cold cruelty is entirely the point. It is also by no coincidence that in freeholds where this Contract is widely known, Bridge Burners abound. When is Winter not a double-edged stiletto?
Cost: 2 Glamour + 1 Willpower
Dice Pool: Intelligence + Subterfuge + Mantle vs Resolve + Wyrd
Action: Contested Instant
Success: The changeling draws a veil of the thinnest ice across the target’s eyes, blanketing her psyche in the cold and dark. The target immediately gains the Soul Shocked Condition. So long as the Condition persists, the target does not dream when she sleeps, and forms no Bastion in the Hedge. The target’s slumber is still restful enough to regain Willpower, but from the moment she closes her eyes until she opens them again, she experiences nothing but a deep sleep. If this Contract is used on a sleeping target, the subject awakens immediately.
Exceptional Success: Even after resolving the Soul Shocked Condition, the target still has no dreams for a number of nights equal to the changeling’s Mantle.
Failure: The Contract fails.
Dramatic Failure: The changeling’s own dreams become frozen. The next time she sleeps, she regains no Willpower.
Loophole: The target tells the changeling in detail about the last nightmare she had.
--
March Hare Apparent (Royal Spring)
The changeling touches a mundane animal symbolic of spring (a rabbit, a bee, a dove, etc) and infuses it with the essence of the season, transforming the creature into an avatar of growth and life, a loyal servant of the Antler Crown.
Cost: 2 Glamour
Dice Pool: Manipulation + Animal Ken + Mantle - Stamina
Action: Resisted Instant
Duration: 10 minutes per success
Success: The animal, suffused with the essence of spring, begins to grow until it reaches Size 4. Its feelings become well disposed toward the changeling, and it can understand one language that the changeling herself speaks. The animal acts as a Retainer with a dot rating equal to the Contract’s activation successes. The creature retains all its natural abilities, and its natural behaviors count as its area of specialty for the purposes of the Retainer merit.
At the end of the Contract’s duration, the changeling, if able, may spend Experiences equal to the Retainer merit’s rating to make the magic permanent. The changeling may only have one permanent avatar at a time (though may use the Sanctity of Merits rule to transfer dots from the old Retainer to the new), and doing so causes a Clarity attack using the changeling’s Mantle rating as the dice pool.
Exceptional Success: Spring bestows an additional blessing upon its living avatar. The animal gains one feature of the changeling’s choice from the Fae Mount merit (since the animal isn’t native to the Hedge, Actormask can’t be chosen).
Failure: The Contract fails. A touched wild animal might flee or strike back at the changeling, depending on the circumstances.
Dramatic Failure: Spring takes the target as an offering rather than an avatar. The animal lies down and dies peacefully. In a crossover game with Geist, there is a good chance it leaves behind a Barghest to haunt the changeling.
Loophole: The changeling makes a crown of ivy and flowers and places it on the animal’s head, bestowing a fitting noble title, such as Prince of Spring or Baroness of the Lushest Meadow.
--
Nemean Spite (Royal Summer)
It is a mistake to assume that summer’s knights know nothing of cunning or ruse. With the proper magic, a warrior of the Iron Spear can transform his very blood into a weapon to punish the impudent and savage.
Cost: 1 Glamour + 1 Willpower
Dice Pool: None
Action: Instant
Fixing his gaze into a caustic glare, the changeling’s blood changes from red (or whatever color it is now) to the hue of molten gold. For the rest of the scene, if any attack deals Lethal damage and pierces his skin, the changeling releases a scorching spray from the wound. Roll an attack using the changeling’s Mantle + damage suffered (minus the opponent’s Defense); the retributive spray inflicts one point of lethal damage per success rolled.
The blood attack can only hit targets close enough to touch the changeling, and is thus most effective against opponents with daggers, claws, or other intimate weapons. That said, if the changeling is struck with a weapon at a distance, he can use this Contract’s effects against a different character who is close enough to be hit.
Loophole: The changeling is attacked by surprise.
The first few pages concern themselves with what appear to be the glorious powers of supernatural monarchs. Whoever these beings were, they must have led quite fantastical lives if these are the legends by which they're known.
Witch-King’s Nocturne (Royal Autumn)
The changeling invokes his authority over the secret worlds, chanting in a mystical tongue his commands to a Hedge ghost he can perceive in the scene. If his words prove true, the ghost must oblige.
Cost: 2 Glamour (+1 Willpower, optional)
Dice Pool: Presence + Occult + Mantle vs Resistance + Wyrd
Action: Contested Instant
Success: The changeling gives the Hedge ghost one order, which it must carry out to the best of its abilities. This can consist of a single action (“Tell me where the nearest Goblin Market is”) or an ongoing command (“Guard my Hollow”), though not multiple, unrelated actions (“Open this door, then attack whatever is on the other side”). This Contract lasts for a single scene, unless the changeling spends a point of Willpower when activating it, in which case the compulsion lasts until the sun next crosses the horizon. At the Storyteller’s discretion, particularly abusive or destructive commands may prompt a Clarity attack using the changeling’s Mantle as the dice pool.
Exceptional Success: When the Hedge ghost completes its assigned task, the changeling receives a short vision of its actions, plus any immediate consequences thereof.
Failure: The Hedge ghost refuses to comply, and is probably now angry at the offending changeling.
Dramatic Failure: The changeling’s magic leaves him vulnerable to rebuke. The next Numen the targeted Hedge ghost uses on the changeling forgoes any Contested roll or Resistance penalty.
Loophole: The changeling created the targeted Hedge ghost (whether that means cobbling it together from scraps, or murdering the ghost’s living form).
--
Solemn Hibernation (Royal Winter)
Dreams can be a source of comfort and strength, but the wise and cautious recognize that they are also a place of vulnerability. A Huntsman could hide its heart in your dreams, or one of the Gentry could poison them into neverending madness, or an unscrupulous changeling could manipulate your thoughts and deeds unseen. And so the Icelords of the Winter Court long ago devised this Contract as a means to keep both themselves and their loved ones safe. The price it exacts is cruel, but some would argue that such cold cruelty is entirely the point. It is also by no coincidence that in freeholds where this Contract is widely known, Bridge Burners abound. When is Winter not a double-edged stiletto?
Cost: 2 Glamour + 1 Willpower
Dice Pool: Intelligence + Subterfuge + Mantle vs Resolve + Wyrd
Action: Contested Instant
Success: The changeling draws a veil of the thinnest ice across the target’s eyes, blanketing her psyche in the cold and dark. The target immediately gains the Soul Shocked Condition. So long as the Condition persists, the target does not dream when she sleeps, and forms no Bastion in the Hedge. The target’s slumber is still restful enough to regain Willpower, but from the moment she closes her eyes until she opens them again, she experiences nothing but a deep sleep. If this Contract is used on a sleeping target, the subject awakens immediately.
Exceptional Success: Even after resolving the Soul Shocked Condition, the target still has no dreams for a number of nights equal to the changeling’s Mantle.
Failure: The Contract fails.
Dramatic Failure: The changeling’s own dreams become frozen. The next time she sleeps, she regains no Willpower.
Loophole: The target tells the changeling in detail about the last nightmare she had.
--
March Hare Apparent (Royal Spring)
The changeling touches a mundane animal symbolic of spring (a rabbit, a bee, a dove, etc) and infuses it with the essence of the season, transforming the creature into an avatar of growth and life, a loyal servant of the Antler Crown.
Cost: 2 Glamour
Dice Pool: Manipulation + Animal Ken + Mantle - Stamina
Action: Resisted Instant
Duration: 10 minutes per success
Success: The animal, suffused with the essence of spring, begins to grow until it reaches Size 4. Its feelings become well disposed toward the changeling, and it can understand one language that the changeling herself speaks. The animal acts as a Retainer with a dot rating equal to the Contract’s activation successes. The creature retains all its natural abilities, and its natural behaviors count as its area of specialty for the purposes of the Retainer merit.
At the end of the Contract’s duration, the changeling, if able, may spend Experiences equal to the Retainer merit’s rating to make the magic permanent. The changeling may only have one permanent avatar at a time (though may use the Sanctity of Merits rule to transfer dots from the old Retainer to the new), and doing so causes a Clarity attack using the changeling’s Mantle rating as the dice pool.
Exceptional Success: Spring bestows an additional blessing upon its living avatar. The animal gains one feature of the changeling’s choice from the Fae Mount merit (since the animal isn’t native to the Hedge, Actormask can’t be chosen).
Failure: The Contract fails. A touched wild animal might flee or strike back at the changeling, depending on the circumstances.
Dramatic Failure: Spring takes the target as an offering rather than an avatar. The animal lies down and dies peacefully. In a crossover game with Geist, there is a good chance it leaves behind a Barghest to haunt the changeling.
Loophole: The changeling makes a crown of ivy and flowers and places it on the animal’s head, bestowing a fitting noble title, such as Prince of Spring or Baroness of the Lushest Meadow.
--
Nemean Spite (Royal Summer)
It is a mistake to assume that summer’s knights know nothing of cunning or ruse. With the proper magic, a warrior of the Iron Spear can transform his very blood into a weapon to punish the impudent and savage.
Cost: 1 Glamour + 1 Willpower
Dice Pool: None
Action: Instant
Fixing his gaze into a caustic glare, the changeling’s blood changes from red (or whatever color it is now) to the hue of molten gold. For the rest of the scene, if any attack deals Lethal damage and pierces his skin, the changeling releases a scorching spray from the wound. Roll an attack using the changeling’s Mantle + damage suffered (minus the opponent’s Defense); the retributive spray inflicts one point of lethal damage per success rolled.
The blood attack can only hit targets close enough to touch the changeling, and is thus most effective against opponents with daggers, claws, or other intimate weapons. That said, if the changeling is struck with a weapon at a distance, he can use this Contract’s effects against a different character who is close enough to be hit.
Loophole: The changeling is attacked by surprise.
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