Harcourt Reunion
Date August 6, 1814 (evening)
Location Hofburg_Palace — Imperial Redoutensaal
discovery
Outcome: Campaign shifts from reactive to coordinated global counter-operation. Harcourt learns the full Choir network scope and the 5-of-8 ritual requirement. Order agents subsequently dispatched to Warsaw, Luxor, Ouro Preto.
Participants
Overview
The structural pivot of the campaign. On the evening of August 6, 1814, at the Imperial Reception in the Hofburg Redoutensaal, Lord_Percival_Harcourt — Earl of Wrexham, commander of the Order_of_St_Aelfric, and official British diplomatic observer to the Congress of Vienna — reunited with the investigators he had recruited in London in Chapter 1. Neither Harcourt nor the party had known, until that evening, that the other was in the city.
Context
Before this meeting:
- The party operated reactively: one city at a time, following clues from cell to cell
- Harcourt had been building intelligence on the Aeternum_Choir’s structure from London, via diplomatic back-channels, without knowing the party was across the continent closing in on Vienna
During the meeting:
- The party briefed Harcourt on London, Lyon, and Venice (via Varrio)
- Harcourt revealed the 5-of-8 requirement — the Grand Canticle’s threshold condition
- Harcourt identified Der_Kantor as the Munich coordinator — the central coordinator of the eight cells
- Plans for coordinated counter-operations were set in motion
After the meeting:
- Harcourt dispatched Order agents to Warsaw, Luxor, and Ouro Preto
- The party’s Vienna mission became part of a strategic global effort, not a lone investigation
- The campaign’s tone shifted: the investigators moved from survivors chasing rumours to operators on a coordinated counter-operation
Why This Matters
- Strategic: every Chapter 3+ session operates against the 5-of-8 math. The party now has a clear objective gradient.
- Narrative: Harcourt on the ground in Vienna changes the political dynamic. He is a peer of Metternich’s — a diplomatic lever the party did not previously have access to.
- Character: the original party from Chapter 1 is reunited with their mentor. Emotional beats for Emma, Georgiana, Charlotte.
Music and Atmosphere (historical anchoring)
The Imperial Reception featured period-accurate music:
- Mozart’s German Dances (K.600–605) — actually written for Hofburg Redoutensaal balls
- Works by Hummel — Vienna’s reigning keyboard virtuoso in 1814
- Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony was recently in the air (premiered Dec 1813 at a Vienna charity concert; the Allegretto an immediate sensation)