Greaves and Sons
Location Overview
Greaves & Sons is a modest pawnshop on Poland Street, just west of Soho proper. Run by the former cathedral chorister Tobias Greaves and his niece Edna, it serves as a repository for pawned goods, used instruments, antiquarian music manuscripts, and forgotten treasures. Greaves has developed a reputation for handling unusual sheet music and rare musical manuscripts.
Clara Fen’s burned music notebook is held here in the pawn inventory, discoverable through investigation or Clara’s own testimony.
Exterior Description
Low-windowed shop set back beneath a narrow archway. Dusty panes show faded lettering. Three golden balls hang above the lintel—the traditional pawnbroker’s sign. Two mangy cats patrol the steps like toll-keepers, eyeing passersby.
Interior Description
Main Shop Floor:
- Dim, yellow-lit interior
- Shelves packed tight with tarnished watches, cracked spectacles, opera glasses
- Glass display case holds sheet music, medals, snuff boxes, and various curiosities
- Counter worn smooth by decades of transactions
- Air heavy with mildew, paper glue, and powdered tobacco
Back Wall:
- Stacked with pawn ledgers and unclaimed parcels
- Music manuscripts lumped together in an old bureau
- Storage for items awaiting sale or redemption
Atmosphere:
- Quiet, introspective, slightly melancholic
- Every object tells a story of loss or desperation
- The space feels like a museum of ordinary tragedies
NPCs
- Tobias Greaves (proprietor): 63, former cathedral chorister, dry-spoken, knowledgeable about music
- Edna Greaves (clerk, niece): 27, suspicious, protects family interests fiercely
Key Items
Clara’s Music Notebook (Primary Handout):
- Burned/charred around edges
- Pages contain harmonic exercises and notations
- Includes fragmented testimony of her trauma (“voice mapping” section)
- One musical phrase, if hummed aloud, triggers POW roll and minor SAN loss
- Ledger entry shows it was pawned under Clara’s real name (not “Anna”)—a slip that reveals her true identity
Additional Materials:
- Collection of rare sheet music (Greaves may discuss musical oddities with knowledgeable investigators)
- Various musical instruments in disrepair
- Old hymnals and sacred music texts
Investigation Opportunities
Acquiring the Notebook:
- Charm/Persuade: Greaves can be convinced the notebook is important evidence
- Payment: Investigators can pay the outstanding pawn debt
- Fast Talk: May convince Greaves there’s danger involved
- Bribery: Money usually works with desperate shopkeepers
Information from Greaves:
- Claims the notebook is “unnatural”; says it “rang” when he dropped it
- Recalls Clara as deeply disturbed, fearful, traumatized
- May recognize harmonic notations as occult rather than standard musical training
- Can testify to her deteriorated mental state
Information from Edna:
- Harder to crack; suspicious of investigators’ motives
- May verify Clara’s identity and distressed appearance
- Protective of the shop’s reputation; resists gossip
Music Theory Discussion:
- If an investigator has Art (Music) or Music History knowledge, Greaves becomes more open
- Can discuss the unnatural elements of the notebook’s notations
- May offer insights into harmonic theory and esoteric musical practices
Campaign History
- Chapter 1 (June 1814): The investigators retrieved Clara_Fen’s songbook/notebook from Greaves & Sons. The notebook contained fragments of the Canticle and notes about her vocal conditioning at the Orphean Society — crucial evidence connecting the Society’s student programme to the cult’s ritual activities.
Keeper Notes
- The Notebook as Artifact: This is a crucial handout. Its discovery validates Clara’s testimony and provides direct evidence of the Society’s conditioning practices. The burned/charred state suggests Clara tried to destroy evidence; the fact she couldn’t bring herself to destroy it entirely suggests internal conflict about her loyalty to Danforth.
- Greaves as Witness: While minor, Greaves provides corroboration of Clara’s state and the notebook’s uncanny nature. His testimony links her directly to the Society.
- The Pawnshop as Safe Space: Unlike the Laughing Fox, the pawnshop is quiet, orderly, and protective of private transactions. Investigators may feel more comfortable here conducting sensitive inquiries.
- Class Dynamics: Greaves treats all customers with professional respect regardless of status, but Edna’s suspicion may require social negotiation.
Appearances
Relationships
- Connected to Clara Fen — Clara pawned her music notebook here; Greaves holds it in inventory
- Owned by Tobias Greaves — Proprietor and owner