Georgiana Wentworth
Characteristics
| Characteristic | Regular | Half | Fifth |
|---|---|---|---|
| STR | 40 | 20 | 8 |
| CON | 60 | 30 | 12 |
| DEX | 50 | 25 | 10 |
| INT | 70 | 35 | 14 |
| SIZ | 50 | 25 | 10 |
| POW | 80 | 40 | 16 |
| APP | 50 | 25 | 10 |
| EDU | 60 | 30 | 12 |
Derived
| Attribute | Max | Current |
|---|---|---|
| HP | 11 | 11 |
| MP | 16 | |
| Luck | — | |
| Sanity | 80 | 79 |
Combat
| Attribute | Value |
|---|---|
| Move | 8 |
| Build | 0 |
| Damage Bonus | 0 |
| Dodge (Regular) | 25 |
| Dodge (Half) | 12 |
| Dodge (Fifth) | 5 |
Status
- [ ] Temporary Insanity
- [ ] Indefinite Insanity
- [ ] Major Wound
- [ ] Unconscious
- [ ] Dying
Personal Description: A young English gentlewoman of twenty, slight of frame but steady of hand. Her manner is composed, her gaze direct, and her posture carries the particular stillness of someone who listens before she speaks. She dresses simply by the standards of her station and wears no ornament save the Aelfric_Brooch.
Traits: Sharp-minded and analytical. Approaches the supernatural with a scholar’s instinct to categorise before an investigator’s instinct to destroy. Willing to take social risks and absorb failure without retreat. Tactically sound in combat despite no formal military training. Carries a quiet warmth toward those she trusts that is expressed through action rather than words.
Ideology & Beliefs: Educated in the Church of England but increasingly defined by a rationalist’s faith in observation and evidence. The horrors she has witnessed have not destroyed her belief in an ordered world so much as expanded her understanding of how large and how indifferent that order truly is.
Significant People: Emma Wentworth (sister, constant companion since Tarryford); Nikolai_Volkonsky (bond forged through shared intelligence and shared survival at the masquerade); Lord_Percival_Harcourt (Order commander, recruited her after Northlake_Hall).
Meaningful Locations: Tarryford, Wiltshire (home); Northlake_Hall (where the investigations began); Hartwell_House, London (Order training and residence); Palais_Lobkowitz (the masquerade, the Wachter combat, the fork).
Treasured Possessions: The Aelfric_Brooch, symbol of Order initiation. The Command_Tuning_Fork, taken from Adler’s grip at Palais_Lobkowitz and carried since. A pair of swords she drew in her nightgown against a Nightgaunt.
| Skill | Base | Regular | Half | Fifth |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Archaeology | 01 | 40 | 20 | 8 |
| Art/Craft (Piano) | 05 | 25 | 12 | 5 |
| History | 05 | 45 | 22 | 9 |
| Library Use | 20 | 50 | 25 | 10 |
| Spot Hidden | 25 | 45 | 22 | 9 |
[!info] Keeper Only Only skills with trained values above base are listed. The full character sheet may contain additional skills at base or with minor training increments not captured in vault records.
- Cleaver wound to the shoulder (Chapter 2 — Lyon, Orphans’ Hospital raid). A surgeon’s apprentice struck her during the basement assault. The wound healed but the scar remains.
- Theatre (acquired Chapter 0.5 — Drury Lane, December 1813). Fear of the enclosed architecture of theatres, born from the time loop and the mirror beneath the stage.
- Fish (acquired Chapter 0.6 — The Viscount Who Loved Me, May 1814). Instinctive revulsion toward anything piscine, rooted in whatever she encountered in the river and the siren’s cave beneath Bath.
- Revelations of Gla’aki — read; used to identify the Nightgaunt during the Session 6 attack at Palais_Kinsky. The tome was confiscated by the Polizeidirektion in Session 4 and recovered during the Session 10 heist.
- Horrors (Chapter 0.1, Northlake_Hall). Squat, headless, fur-covered creatures with fanged mouths on their torsos. First encounter with the supernatural. Performed the blood ritual to close the portal.
- Nightgaunt (Session 6, Palais_Kinsky). Faceless, oily, bat-winged creature from the dreamlands. Georgiana fought it with swords in her nightgown and identified it from the Revelations of Gla’aki.
- Harmonische Wachter (Sessions 8-9, Palais_Lobkowitz). Bronze-scaled creatures, the failed by-products of the Brotherhood’s integration process. Georgiana raked one with her sword, hamstrung Adler who controlled them, and briefly established a psychic link with a surviving Wachter through the command fork — seeing through its alien senses at the cost of 1 SAN.
- Formless_Spawn (Chapter 2, Maison_du_Corbeau, Lyon). Witnessed during a child sacrifice at the masked soiree. The investigators observed but did not intervene.
| Weapon | Skill % | Damage | Attacks | Range | Ammo | Malf |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unarmed | 1D3+DB | 1 | — | — | — | |
| Sword (paired) | 1D8+DB | 1 | — | — | — |
- Emma_Wentworth — Sister. Inseparable since Tarryford. The other longest-running PC in the campaign.
- Adrien_de_Montferrand — French Vicomte, fellow investigator since the road to Vienna.
- Varrio_Harrowmont — Italian operative. Mutual warmth since his dissociative episode and the Italian poem (Session 3).
- Katherine_Ward — Order operative, arrived Session 7. Carried the fork before handing it to Georgiana.
- Freddy_Cavendish — English gentleman, joined the party Session 6 after Colonel Moreau’s death.
!georgiana-mask.png
At Thaliastraße 12 as of late afternoon, 9 August 1814 (end of Session 10). Physically uninjured. SAN reduced by 1 to 79 from the Wachter-sight trespass through the fork (Session 9). The fork came to her hand while she slept (Session 10), and the colours of the room shifted through an alien spectrum before settling. The psychic conduit between Georgiana and the Engine is deepening — the fork is using her, or she is gaining control. The distinction may not matter.
Georgiana is the closest of the party to Nikolai as a grieving comrade. She holds Thurner’s full operational packet (safe house, weapons cache, guard rotations, secret passage). She deployed Metternich’s writ at the Polizeidirektion to recover the stolen tomes. Five days remain until the ritual. Caroline_Hartley is inside the University. The woman who performed a blood ritual at Northlake_Hall to close a portal now carries a device that opens one.
{Player-facing notes. Protected — skills never modify.}
Relationships
- Sister of Emma Wentworth — Sister; they travel together and have been inseparable since Tarryford
- Knows Adrien de Montferrand — Fellow investigator since Vienna
- Knows Katherine Ward — Order operative, fellow party member since Session 7
- Knows Varrio Harrowmont — Fellow investigator; mutual warmth since the Italian poem (Session 3)
- Allied with Nikolai Volkonsky — Bond deepened from waltz partner to comrades who survived the masquerade together
- Knows Freddy Cavendish — Fellow investigator since Session 6
- Located at Thaliastrasse 12 Safehouse — Current base of operations as of 9 August 1814
Equipment
Gear & Possessions:
- Paired swords (carried since at least Session 6)
- Aelfric_Brooch — symbol of Order_of_St_Aelfric initiation
- Command_Tuning_Fork — brass, A=432 Hz, etched with the Brotherhood crest. In Georgiana’s possession since the withdrawing room at Palais_Lobkowitz, dawn 9 August 1814. The fork establishes a psychic link with nearby Wachter when handled. It came to her hand while she slept (Session 10). The conduit between Georgiana and the Engine is deepening.
- Liber_Ivonis and De_Vermis_Mysteriis — recovered from the Polizeidirektion in Session 10 (party possession, not personal)
Wealth:
| Attribute | Value |
|---|---|
| Spending Level | |
| Cash | ~4,000 gulden (Session 1 letter of credit) |
| Assets |
Chapter 0.1 — The Long Corridor
In the autumn of 1813, Georgiana Wentworth attended the Northlake Ball at Northlake_Hall with her younger sister Emma, as she had attended every significant gathering in Tarryford for as long as she could remember. She was twenty years old, sharp-minded, scholarly by temperament, and utterly unprepared for what the evening would reveal. The Long Corridor was a portal into a dark realm, and the creatures that dwelt within it — squat, headless, fur-covered things with fanged mouths on their torsos — were the first impossibility she had ever been required to accept as fact. On the second expedition into the corridor, Georgiana performed a blood ritual at the altar to close the portal, an act of analytical courage that would define her approach to the horrors ahead: study the problem, then act on what you have learned. The Horrors descended as the portal closed. James_Bennet was overtaken, dismembered, and consumed — the first death she witnessed in this work. The surviving women walked out together, and Georgiana left Tarryford knowing that the world she had understood was a surface stretched over something vast and indifferent.
Lady_Honoria_Lyndhurst brought the survivors to London. At Hartwell_House, Georgiana and Emma were given instruction by six tutors — combat, languages, etiquette, occult scholarship — and the sisters settled into a life that bore no resemblance to the one they had left in Wiltshire. Georgiana’s intellect found purchase in the Order’s library, in the texts and case files that gave names to the things she had seen. The scholarly temperament that had once been a social curiosity became the foundation of her usefulness.
Chapter 0.5 — The Scandal Beneath the Stage
The investigation at Drury Lane in December 1813 brought Georgiana and Emma into the orbit of Giles_Mercer’s mirror and the time loop that had consumed the theatre. Its lasting mark on Georgiana was precise and permanent: a phobia of theatres, acquired in the bowels of a building that had become something other than a place of entertainment. The fear is specific — not of performance but of the architecture itself, the enclosed space where an audience sits passive while something on the stage reaches back through the fourth wall. It is a scholar’s phobia: born not from ignorance but from having understood too clearly what a theatre can become when the wrong forces take the stage.
Chapter 0.6 — The Viscount Who Loved Me
The wedding of Harriet_Palmer and Viscount Huntley at Bath Abbey in May 1814 drew Georgiana and Emma into the investigation of the Siren beneath the river and the curse that killed the Viscount on his wedding night. It was here, in the river cave where the Siren’s bones waited, that Georgiana acquired her second lasting phobia: fish. The phobia persists — an instinctive revulsion toward anything piscine, rooted in whatever she encountered in that subterranean water. The chapter carried a lighter note as well: the dashing Lieutenant Oliver Hawksley — red-haired, wounded, melancholic, and pointedly Scottish — was among the wedding guests, and Georgiana found herself drawn into conversation with a warmth she had not expected.
Chapter 1 — London: The Orphean Society
In early June 1814, Lord_Percival_Harcourt dispatched the investigators to find two missing Order agents connected to the Orphean Society at 43 Grosvenor Street. Georgiana took the lead at the Royal_Academy_of_Music, confronting the registrar Phineas_Lang directly with the names of three dead students. The Charm roll failed. Lang’s warmth drained to bureaucratic ice, but his discomfort betrayed that he suspected something rotten in his own institution. Georgiana pressed on regardless — a willingness to take social risks and absorb failure that would become one of her defining qualities.
The investigation carried her through London’s social geography in disguise — coarse wool and muddied hems to pass as a charwoman in Limehouse — and into the sub-basement of the Orphean Society, where Augustus_Bolt mercy-killed the Choir Below in the Catacoustic Chamber. At Stonehenge, on the night of June 12th, the cult erected tuning crucifixes along the solstice axis and a servant of Yog_Sothoth began to form above the stone circle. Georgiana survived the assault, was formally inducted into the Order_of_St_Aelfric, and carried the knowledge of what she had seen southward toward Lyon.
Chapter 2 — Lyon
Lyon declared itself before they even reached the Puyrault estate. On the road up from the city, ciimba — zombie children with their mouths sewn shut — attacked the party. At the masked soiree at the Maison_du_Corbeau, Georgiana witnessed the Formless_Spawn and a child sacrifice in the hidden chamber. The investigators watched and did not intervene. The knowledge was carried away like a splinter under the skin.
The Orphans’ Hospital raid cost the party dearly. Augustus_Bolt fell to mortal wounds and a botched first-aid attempt. Jacob was shot dead by Marina_Garrick in a bout of temporary insanity. Georgiana herself took a cleaver to the shoulder from a surgeon’s apprentice — a wound that would scar and that she carries still. The final assault on the Silkweavers_Guild ended with Marina’s death — the campaign’s original protagonist detonating herself with lantern oil and gunpowder to destroy the Chakota — and Mathilde_Savarin cut down by a veterans’ volley. The Lyon cell was destroyed, but four lives were the price.
In the aftermath, Georgiana fended off the persistent romantic attentions of Comte Emeric de Puyrault, who had attached himself to her since the Paris ball where she returned his family ring. He proposed before the party’s departure. She shut it down with the directness that characterized her: she had to move on. The road to Vienna waited, and whatever Georgiana had been before Lyon — a scholar, a researcher, a woman who studied problems before acting — had been tempered by violence into something harder and more certain.
Session 1 — Arrival in Vienna
The party arrived at the Linienwall customs gate on the morning of August 3rd. Georgiana secured four thousand gulden through her letter of credit and noted with scholarly interest Dr Falkner’s letters identifying them as visiting scholars at the University. She declined Lady_Ashworth’s invitation to the Burgtheater for Don Giovanni, remaining at Palais_Kinsky with Charlotte — a decision that placed her outside the opera’s social theatre where Baron von Kaunitz first made contact with Emma. The evening was quiet, but the University access letters were already turning in Georgiana’s mind.
Session 2 — The Opera and the Dead Man
While Emma attended the opera and inadvertently told Kaunitz their address, Georgiana led the Leopoldstadt expedition with Charlotte and Varrio. Disguised as a man — more convincingly than Charlotte, as it happened — she navigated the back streets to Widow Katz’s boarding house, where she revealed her gender to the sharp-eyed Jewish landlady to gain entry. Upstairs, in a wretched attic of empty bottles and a single candle, Brenner told them everything: the Engine, the living tissue, the voices cut from throats and integrated into the machine. The horror of it settled over Georgiana with the particular weight it reserves for those who understand precisely what they are hearing. She left the room before Varrio made his cold calculation about the loose end Brenner represented, and returned to Palais_Kinsky carrying knowledge that would not let her sleep.
Session 3 — The Salon and the Night
Georgiana spent the morning of August 5th researching Vienna’s history and discovered that the anatomical theatre beneath the University had been sealed in 1794, connected by service corridors from the old mortuary — an independent confirmation of Brenner’s account that gave the Engine a physical location in documented fact. At the Countess von Thun’s salon that evening, she accepted a waltz with Count Volkonsky and stumbled catastrophically — tripped hem, stepped on his foot, bumped other couples. Volkonsky laughed it off and steered her through with grace, and over vodka afterward he revealed that three Russian musicians had disappeared in Vienna over the past year and his ambassador would not investigate. It was intelligence freely given and gratefully received: a second independent source confirming the pattern of vanishing musicians. Later, when Varrio suffered a dissociative episode triggered by a servant dropping a tray, Georgiana tried to snap him out of it. He recovered by reciting an Italian love poem — crimson flowers, summer breezes, kisses — and something warm passed between them. After the salon, the party attempted a night scouting of the University that ended in a failed bribe at the porter’s gate.
Session 4 — Organs and Tomes
On the morning of August 6th, Georgiana helped secure British delegation invitations and visited Countess von Thun, winning the older woman over through intellectual conversation where Thomas’s awkward charm had merely amused her. At the Conservatory, she and Emma befriended Anna Lindqvist near the refreshments — helped fix her hair, settled her nerves — and saw Adler enter through a side door to watch with unsettling intensity, his long fingers twitching in time with the music. When Georgiana and Emma tried to approach Anna afterward, Adler pulled the soprano through a side door, and when the sisters followed to his office, Adler half-drew a knife: “I’m afraid I must insist.” They left, but the image of Anna’s warm smile from Adler’s doorway — waving while the man behind her held a blade — would not leave Georgiana’s mind.
At the Imperial Reception that evening, Georgiana met Volkonsky on a balcony, where he slipped her a notebook containing the names of missing Russian musicians: Sokolov, Petrov, Markov, Orlov. She copied the contents and returned the notebook — an asset acquired through trust rather than deception. When Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony filled the Redoutensaal, Georgiana heard the shape of the Engine beneath the music. The beautiful became horrible. She returned to Palais_Kinsky to find their rooms professionally searched, their Mythos tomes and Marina’s notebook stolen, and a single white rose on Emma’s dressing table. The cult had been in their bedrooms. The investigation was over. The hunt had begun.
Session 5 — Blood on the Graben
The morning of August 7th opened with the reconnaissance of the University, where Georgiana noted the hidden mortuary entrance on the south side behind wooden hoarding. While Adrien and Charlotte extracted Count von Trautmannsdorff and his torrent of confession, Georgiana accompanied Emma and Thomas to the Conservatory, where they met Anna again. But the afternoon’s intelligence-gathering was cut short by catastrophe: Colonel Moreau was assassinated in broad daylight on the Graben, Varrio was wounded and detained by compromised police, and the party reassembled at Palais_Kinsky with two empty seats at supper. The silence where Moreau and Varrio should have been was heavier than any horror Georgiana had yet encountered in a tunnel or a basement.
Session 6 — A Bite in the Dark
The Nightgaunt came in the small hours of August 8th. It crawled down the side of Palais_Kinsky, frost crystallising on stone, and shattered Charlotte’s window with its barbed tail. Charlotte was slashed before she could react. Emma’s pistol bounced off the creature’s oily hide, and it grappled her and began dragging her toward the window. Georgiana drew swords — in her nightgown — and struck the creature’s legs and back, scoring lines that drew a whistle-like shriek and dark fluid. When the men burst through the locked door, Georgiana was already manoeuvring to block the window, cutting off the Nightgaunt’s escape route. It was Emma who bit through its neck and Adrien who drove the killing blow, but Georgiana’s contribution was the one that mattered most in the aftermath: she identified the creature as a Nightgaunt from the Revelations of Gla’aki. The horror had a name, a taxonomy, a place in the literature. The scholarly mind that had performed the blood ritual at Northlake_Hall a year earlier was still the sharpest weapon in the room.
Session 7 — Whispers, Widows, and Wounded Warriors
The morning of August 8th brought the arrival of Katherine_Ward — a new Order operative from Krakow — and the coordinated relocation from Palais_Kinsky to the White Ox Inn on Wipplingerstrasse. That afternoon, Georgiana attended a musical gathering at the Countess von Thun’s townhouse and witnessed Anna sing. The windows vibrated. A wine glass cracked. The bone-deep pressure of the Engine’s frequency pressed against every chest in the room, and those who had felt that resonance before recognised it instantly: Anna’s voice was the missing piece, inverted and complementary, as though the soprano and the machine had always been reaching for each other across the membrane of the world. After the performance, Georgiana approached Anna and made the medical observation that would give the party its moral imperative: dilated pupils unresponsive to light, deep purple-grey bruising along the throat and jaw concealed beneath a fashionable collar, persistent hand tremors. This was not training. This was systematic abuse. Adler appeared, took Anna’s arm, whispered something low and vehement, and steered her toward the door with one sharp glance back at the Wentworth sisters.
Session 8 — The Duel, the Diva, and the Demon
The Grand Masquerade at Palais_Lobkowitz was the convergence of every thread in the Vienna chapter, and Georgiana operated at its centre as the evening’s chief intelligence gatherer. She waltzed with Nikolai, who revealed that he had watched her reading Anna’s body at the afternoon salon and recognised the bruises before anyone else in the room had understood. A second officer swept her into another dance and revealed himself as Major Wilhelm Thurner of the Order: a safe house at Thaliastraße 12, a weapons cache, University guard rotations, a hidden passage behind the bookshelves in Herzfeld’s office leading to the basement, and a coded contact system. Georgiana received the operational packet mid-waltz with the composure of someone who had been trained for precisely this.
When the extraction plan was formed, it was Georgiana who weaponised the intelligence. She told Nikolai that Adler was the Kapellmeister responsible for the disappearance of his friend Dmitri Volkov. The charm and poetry dropped from Nikolai’s face like a mask, and what was left was cold fury. He gathered his officers without a word of doubt. The plan was set in motion the moment Anna’s performance ended — and the performance itself was a horror beyond the social, Anna’s final note climbing to something that should not have been possible while every person in the room stopped breathing. Then the great stained-glass window exploded inward, and two Harmonische Wachter were loose inside the ballroom.
Session 9 — The Burning Ball and the Broken Baron
Georgiana entered the combat at Palais_Lobkowitz as both tactician and combatant. She spotted Baron von Kaunitz slipping away via the balcony with the calm of a man who had simply grown bored of the evening. She identified Captain Vogel beneath his domino mask — the Geheimpolizei mole, frozen with a half-drawn pistol, a witness caught in a scene he had not been warned about. She raked her sword across a Wachter’s flank in a single fluid cut that spilled dark ichor across the dance floor. And when Adler scrambled to his feet and sprinted for the withdrawing-room window, Georgiana was already in position. She swept her sword low and sliced through both of his Achilles tendons in one decisive stroke, ending his escape permanently.
In the withdrawing room, as the party gathered to plan their flight, Katherine held the command tuning fork recovered from Adler’s grip. Georgiana touched the fork in Katherine’s hand and was struck by something that defied every category her scholarly mind possessed: she saw through the surviving Wachter’s eyes, an alien colour spectrum replacing her own vision, the creature’s claws felt as her own limbs. For a moment she forced the thing to sit submissively on the cobblestones outside. The link fractured and she lost it, paying a point of sanity for the trespass. She asked for the fork, and Katherine handed it to her without a word. It has not left her person since.
Session 10 — The Fork in the Road
Georgiana’s nightmare was the strangest. The Drury Lane Theatre with its burgundy carpets and its audience of children whose mouths were sewn shut, the stage holding a brass engine behind a mirror that showed her not her own face but her hands: bronze, scaled, clawed. She opened her mouth to scream and what came out was a sustained inhuman harmonic tone, and the theatre collapsed around her like a closing fist. She woke with the fork warm in her hand — certain she had not been holding it when she closed her eyes — and for several long seconds the colours of the room were wrong, shifting through a spectrum that belongs to no earthly light before settling back to normal. The psychic conduit between Georgiana and the Engine is deepening. The fork came to her hand while she slept.
That morning, Georgiana deployed Metternich’s writ at the Polizeidirektion with decisive calm, overriding the desk sergeant’s resistance when Fischbein’s legal pressure alone proved insufficient. The Liber_Ivonis, the De_Vermis_Mysteriis, and Marina’s notebook were recovered from the ground-floor strong room and carried out before Captain Vogel could learn what had walked out of his evidence locker. The books are back in hand. The fork is warm against Georgiana’s skin. Five days remain until the ritual beneath the University, and the woman who performed a blood ritual at Northlake_Hall a year ago to close a portal is now carrying a device that opens one.
Session 11 — The Duelling Ground
Georgiana woke on the morning of the tenth holding the tuning fork. She had hidden it under the floorboards before sleeping. She had wedged it deep, out of reach, wrapped in cloth. And yet it lay in her open palm, warm, as though it had crawled through the dark and found its way home. The second consecutive morning. Her nightmares had been kaleidoscopic, tinted with the alien colour spectrum she now recognised as the vision of something that was not her, seeing through eyes that had no lids in a world that was all sound and pressure. She set the fork on the table and did not touch it again for an hour, and the hour was difficult.
She spotted Thomas and Varrio sneaking out of the safehouse in the pre-dawn dark and woke Emma. The party followed in a second carriage to the Linienwall gates, where grey light lay heavy on the grass and a surgeon was already laying out instruments on the running board. Thomas and Sternberg fired and both missed. Varrio talked both seconds into switching to sabres. Thomas drove his blade into Sternberg’s armpit and chest, and the Austrian went to his knees with a collapsed lung. Thomas kissed Emma on the duelling ground. Four sessions of romantic tension, resolved in steel and silence, and Georgiana watched her younger sister find something real and fierce in the worst possible circumstances.
That afternoon, Georgiana rode with Nikolai to the Palais_Razumovsky, where the Russian delegation occupied a wing that smelled of boot polish and tobacco. Major Andrei Volkonsky received her in a small, functional office with nothing on the desk but a map of Vienna weighted down with pistol balls. He was a compact, weathered man with close-cropped grey hair and pale eyes that did not move when he was listening, essentially the man Nikolai would become if he survived another twenty years and stopped drinking. Georgiana presented the writ from Metternich as evidence of their standing, showed Harcourt’s brooch, and described the Brotherhood’s methods and the creature attacks with unflinching directness. The Major asked precise questions and listened to everything she did not say as much as what she did. He poured vodka. He laughed, and Nikolai told her afterward it was the first time in recent memory. The deal was struck: five Russian soldiers including the Major himself, conditional on the party providing detailed intelligence on the university’s layout and guard routines. It was the largest single alliance Georgiana had brokered since Metternich, and she had done it with nothing but evidence, a brooch, and the willingness to describe impossible things to a man who respected the truth. Afterward, she shared Charlotte’s intelligence with the party: the cult kept its captives alive while their voices were useful. Caroline could sing. Caroline was alive. The fork waited in her pocket, warm against her thigh, patient as geometry.
Session 12 — The War Council
Georgiana cast the spell on the third-floor desk compartment because Varrio had asked, and because she had learned in London that the things people hide behind false panels are rarely safe to touch without precaution. What emerged from her hands was not what she expected. The glowing mass expanded into a geometric constellation that covered every surface in the room, a map of interconnected stars that burned with the clarity of mathematical proof before fading into nothing. She felt it pass through her without resistance, the way the tuning fork’s resonance passed through stone. Varrio’s reaction was worse. He stood frozen, then something changed behind his eyes, and she watched the consulting surgeon develop an obsession with magic that he would carry out of that room like a wound.
The harmonic compass confirmed what she had suspected. The needle led her through the safehouse with trembling, audible oscillations, tracking the resonant frequency to its source: the tuning fork, hidden and wrapped in fabric exactly where Emma had insisted she put it, and vibrating regardless. The fork was active. The Engine beneath the university was running, and the two were speaking to each other across the city in a frequency that made her chest ache.
The Liber_Ivonis gave her the framework. She worked through the Latin with the focused patience of a woman who had been reading dead languages since Hartwell_House, and the text opened onto harmonic gate theory: specific sound frequencies could thin the barrier between dimensions, and 432 Hertz was the resonant key tied to Yog-Sothoth’s domain. The knowledge hit her like a physical blow. She lost herself for several minutes, laughing and crying simultaneously in a fugue of half-glimpsed visions, while the rest of the party watched in alarm. Nikolai’s gifted flask of vodka brought her back to the surface. Across the parlor, Adrien had it worse: the De Vermis Mysteriis dropped him unconscious, and his worst memory, the Pyrenees abbey massacre, played across the window like a moving picture for everyone to see. When he woke, he had the other half of what she needed. Counter-frequencies. Tonal inversions that collapsed harmonic fields rather than sustained them. Between the two books, between the fork’s 432 Hz and the inversions in the De Vermis Mysteriis, she could see the shape of something that might work. A counter-ritual. The party’s only option that did not require overpowering Herzfeld’s machine by force alone.
At the Heuriger Zum Rebstock, she told the assembled coalition what she believed she could do, and the Russians accepted it without hesitation while the Sardinians regarded her with the polite skepticism of men who trusted steel and powder over Latin and vibration. She accepted the skepticism. She would have felt the same, once. Then the Wächter crashed through the pergola and the burning oil spread across the flagstones, and the fork in her chest hummed in recognition.
Session 13 — The Assault
The counter-ritual synthesis had taken the better part of the night, and it had worked. In the safe house basement, with the Liber_Ivonis open against the De_Vermiis_Mysteriis and Marina’s notebook bridging the gap between them, Georgiana traced the inversion frequencies through the texts with the focused patience she had brought to dead languages since Hartwell_House, and Adrien’s voice reading the counter-frequency passages aloud gave her the second confirmation she needed. The tuning fork lay on the table between them for an hour before she picked it up, and when she did she held it with the deliberateness of someone who has decided to accept a thing rather than merely carry it. She retuned it — a precise, necessary act of will, forcing the harmonic to shift, imposing her understanding on the instrument rather than letting the instrument impose itself on her. The fork gave. Then she had a weapon, conditional and uncertain and her own.
The Conduit Flash came without warning and without invitation: the operating theatre, victims wired into the machine, mouths open, their lungs working as bellows for something that was not a song. A brain suspended in copper and glass at the centre of it all. Herzfeld below, waiting with his own fork, patient and certain in the way of a man who has run out of doubt. Georgiana came back to the safe house basement with her hands around the fork and a understanding she had not had before: she needed to be inside the theatre for any of this to work. The counter-ritual could not be conducted from a safe distance. Distance was the thing that made it fail. The knowledge carried its own Latin inscription, the one Brenner had scratched into the walls before he died, the one that had followed her from the first accounts: Wer den Schlüssel dreht, bezahlt den Preis. She knew what she was agreeing to. She agreed to it anyway.
At the university, the fork’s first operational use was against a stone fountain — a test strike to measure the field effect, to see what the inversion produced in practice rather than in theory. The deadened zone of sound that bloomed from the impact was real and measurable: three seconds in which the ambient hum of the Engine beneath the building fell silent, in which the particular pressure that had settled into all of their bones over the past weeks lifted briefly away and the world was only stone and night air and the smell of Vienna. Then the Engine reasserted itself and the snap-back hit her like a wave. One strike. Insufficient for shutdown, sufficient for proof. She gathered the letters from Herzfeld’s desk without reading them — there was no time to read them and she would read them after, if there was an after — and descended into the passage behind the bookcase with the fork warm against her ribs and the price of the key’s turning somewhere below her in the dark.
Georgiana Wentworth had closed a portal at Northlake_Hall by performing a blood ritual alone in a dark room while creatures moved in the corridor outside. She had identified a Nightgaunt from the Revelations_of_Glaaki while standing in her nightgown at two in the morning. She had read the Liber_Ivonis in a police evidence room and walked out with it under her arm. She had brokered an alliance with Major Andrei Volkonsky of Russian military intelligence using nothing but a Metternich writ, a brooch, and the willingness to describe impossible things to a man who respected the truth. The woman who had attended Northlake in 1813 as a scholar curious about the world’s hidden mechanisms was now descending into a sealed anatomical theatre carrying a retuned harmonic weapon she had modified herself, toward a machine she had partially understood through visions and enemy texts, toward a cost she had already accepted. The theatre below was exactly her phobia: the enclosed space, the audience, the stage, the performance that reached back. She went in anyway. The key required a hand that was willing to turn it.
Session 14 — The Theatre
The theatre reached up to meet her and she stopped. The phobia struck with the full force of Drury Lane — the enclosed space, the tiered seating, the audience arranged to watch, the stage at the centre where the performance waited — and what sat on that stage was the Engine in its full and terrible completion. Brass and glass and human tissue fused into an instrument that breathed and sang and thought, the Chorus_Dead arrayed in the gallery tiers with their flayed throats open, their harmony sustaining a frequency that pressed against the dimensional barrier with patient, mechanical insistence. Georgiana’s body locked. The hysterics came — the theatre, the theatre, the walls closing, the performance that reached back through the fourth wall and touched the audience — and for several seconds she was useless, frozen at the entrance to the room that contained everything she had spent two weeks preparing to confront. Then she came back. Not because the fear departed but because the fork was warm against her ribs and the Latin was in her head and the cost had been accepted in the basement of Thaliastraße 12 when she retuned the instrument and agreed to be its conduit. She drew her sword. She drew the fork. She struck.
The fork’s tines met the flat of the blade and the counter-vibration bloomed outward through the theatre like a stone dropped into still water. The Engine’s voice — the ambient resonance that had been pressing against their skulls since they entered the university — stuttered. The Chorus_Dead faltered in their harmony. The dimensional thinning above the machine, visible as a distortion in the air like heat rising from summer stone, contracted. One strike. Insufficient for shutdown, but proof that the counter-ritual worked in practice as it had worked in theory, and Georgiana felt the feedback travel up her arm and into her chest and settle there with the permanence of something that intended to stay. She struck again. The muted zone expanded. Emma was shouting about baffles — the acoustic reflectors that amplified the Engine’s resonance — and Thomas and Freddy were already moving to topple them, and each panel that crashed to the theatre floor widened the gap in the harmonic envelope that Georgiana was driving the fork’s inversion through.
The full counter-ritual demanded everything she had studied and everything she had become. She channelled it standing in the centre of the theatre with the fork held high, pooling the residual psychic energy of every ally in the room — the rage and grief and courage and fear of people who had followed her into the dark because she had told them she could do this — and the fork accepted it all and transformed it into a sustained inversion pulse that collapsed the Engine’s harmonic field one frequency at a time. The machine fought back. The Chorus_Dead screamed. The dimensional distortion pulsed and contracted and pulsed again. Georgiana held. Eight rounds. The baffles fell. The Engine’s voice cracked, then shattered, then died in a cascade of breaking glass and collapsing brass and the sudden, stunning silence of a machine that had been singing for weeks finally stopping. The shutdown was clean. The dimensional breach sealed. The Engine was slag.
The cost was written on her body. She emerged into the courtyard with the dawn breaking over the University rooftops and a white streak running from her left temple through her dark hair — a permanent mark, visible and unexplainable, the kind of thing that would draw questions in every drawing room from Vienna to Calcutta. Her left hand, the hand that had held the fork, carried an iridescence beneath the skin that caught the light in colours no pigment produced — not paint, not bruise, not illness, but something deposited there by the passage of frequencies that did not belong to the world she had been born into. And beneath it all, so low it was felt rather than heard, a residual hum: the Engine’s base frequency, 432 Hertz, still vibrating in her bones. The fork bond was permanent now. The instrument had chosen its conduit, or she had chosen it, and the distinction no longer mattered. Wer den Schlüssel dreht, bezahlt den Preis. The scholar who had closed a portal at Northlake_Hall by performing a blood ritual alone in a dark room had now stood at the centre of a machine made of human bodies and unmade it with a tuning fork and three dead languages and the willingness to be changed by what she channelled. Georgiana Wentworth was no longer simply an investigator carrying an artifact. She was the artifact’s conduit, marked in hair and skin and bone, and the price of the key’s turning was permanent, and she had paid it with her eyes open.
Chapter 4, Session 1 — The Morning After
The changes were visible in daylight. Georgiana moved through the gilded lobby of Palais_Kinsky with a white streak cutting through her dark hair from the left temple and an iridescent shimmer creeping across the skin of her left hand, and neither could be explained away as exhaustion or candlelight or the particular pallor that followed a night in a sealed theatre full of the dead. The streak was permanent. The shimmer was growing. She pulled Harcourt aside as he walked to his carriage and asked him plainly about what was happening to her, because Georgiana Wentworth had always preferred knowing to hoping, even when knowing was worse. He told her the changes were outward manifestations of the soul, that those who faced monsters long enough risked becoming something else entirely, that he had seen it before. He mentioned a woman named Dorothea Bexley, a member of the Order who had carried a similar affliction for decades. He did not tell her it would stop. He hinted at tentacles. Georgiana carried the information into the afternoon with the particular stillness of a scholar who has just been told that the experiment she volunteered for has no control group and no known endpoint.
The road from Vienna to Trieste took six days through the Semmering, the passes smelling of pine resin and cold water, and nobody talked about the theatre. The fork rode in her pocket, warm against her thigh, patient as geometry. At every jolt of the carriage she felt it, a low hum below the threshold of hearing, as though the instrument were mapping the distance between itself and the shattered remnants of the Engine. The iridescent patch on her hand did not recede. If anything, in the harsh light of the mountain afternoons, it seemed fractionally larger, the colours shifting through a spectrum that did not belong to pigment or bruise or any category she had a name for. The scholar who had retuned the fork in a basement and accepted the cost was discovering that the cost was not a fixed amount but a running debt, paid in increments too small to protest and too steady to ignore.
At the Trieste docks, La_Speranza waited with its blistering paint and tarred rigging, and Petar led the party below to the after-cabin: fifteen feet by fourteen, canvas cots, stained sailcloth curtains, and a ceiling that Thomas struck his head on immediately. The cramped quarters carried their own horror for a woman whose body was changing in ways she could not predict or control. Six weeks in a space with no privacy, her hand visible to anyone who looked, the streak in her hair catching every lantern. The fork hummed in her pocket. The Adriatic stretched ahead. Somewhere beyond the horizon, past the Mediterranean and the Red Sea and the desert and the Indian Ocean, lay Calcutta and another ritual and another machine, and Georgiana Wentworth, who had closed a portal at Northlake_Hall and destroyed an Engine beneath a university, was heading toward it with an artefact bonded to her soul and a transformation she could not stop and the particular resolve of someone who had already paid the price and intended to see what she had purchased.