Matthew Morris RPG Superstar 2009 Top 32, 2010 Top 8 |
Kevin Andrew Murphy Contributor |
What does this mean?
"There would be questions for Madame Eglantine’s head. Questions for the heads of her husbands. Questions for myself and Norret."
They are going to question the heads? Is that Speak with Dead or something?
Or am I misunderstanding that?
No, you read it exactly right.
The Gray Gardeners are rather famous for their necromancy, and Speak with Dead works very well with severed heads.
Aaron aka Itchy |
Bravo! This was very good! I directed some friends to read this tale as one of them is playing an oracle. I hope that one of them doesn't think I was trying to get him to see spiders (he's terrified of them)!
I have to say it's a little disappointing to see class names used in the story. I much prefer to figure out for myself what "classes" characters are written to be. I find that mentioning the given name of a certain classes tends to remind me that I'm reading tie-in fiction. Even despite that, I thoroughly enjoyed this story.
I was wondering where that interaction with the preistess of Calistria was headed. I knew that it had to come in somewhere. Kevin Andrew Murphy wouldn't spend an ENTIRE chapter on something like that without it coming back to mean something. So, did Mistress Philomela send them to her in the hope that they would find out who/what she was and eliminate the threat? That's very conniving.
Kevin Andrew Murphy Contributor |
In reverse order:
Aaron--
That's very Calistrian. With the names, I try to go with which of class names would pass into common parlance, and people (term used loosely) like Madame Eglantine who have Knowledge Arcana would need names to classify all these various metaphysical variants. Glad you enjoyed the tale.
Mairkurion--
Glad you enjoyed it as well. I had a lot of fun with the villainess.
GeraintElberion--
Glad to see you again and thanks for the vote of confidence.
Tremor3258--
Glad you enjoyed it and the business of the Galtans just getting by came through.
Set--
Glad you liked the beastie and the verbiage.
Sunbeam--
Glad you liked. I'll admit that you're not supposed to like the Galtans that much, or at least not their society, though some of the individual Galtans can be quite cool. Certainly I like them.
Thomas LeBlanc--
You're welcome and glad to be in your top spot, especially given the company here in the Tales.
Matthew Morris--
Glad you had fun guessing and that you figured some of the bits out and were surprised by others. It's always a juggle with a mystery story to have a balance of both.
Aaron aka Itchy |
When you put it that way, it makes sense. I didn't think about her making her Knowledge (Arcana) check. I still stand by my statement that I have enjoyed every piece of yours that I have read. Checking your website gives me the impression that there is a lot of your stuff out there that I have not read.
Again, thanks for a really fun story!
Kevin Andrew Murphy Contributor |
Kevin Andrew Murphy Contributor |
Occasionally you get these odd bits of serendipity. I swear I did not see this illustration before today--and I love Carlos Villa's illustrations--but check out this 19th century illustration of Orlin in the spider's web....
Kevin Andrew Murphy Contributor |
Itchy |
KAM needs to write an AP tale.
Funny you should mention that...
Pathfinder Journal for Reign of Winter penned by Kevin Andrew Murphy
-Aaron
MakNak |
Kevin, a well written story. I read 'Thieves Vinegar' first and then this one which provided the some back story. I enjoy writers who draw from history and other writer's works with out being blatant. Madame Margaery for Madame Guillotine, a good parallel given Galt's Fraco Revolutionary feel. Why did you chose to use the name Madam Eglantine as in Chaucer's work she was a prioress that he (for his time) was portraying as saintly if worldly. I also find the use of archaic words nice. it adds a certain sound and feel to the story that using the more modern equivalents would be detracting, Dollymop, demimondaine forced me to reach for a dictionary. And not the run of the mill characters either. Thank you.
Kevin Andrew Murphy Contributor |
MakNak,
Glad you enjoyed, both the story and the archaic words--I really do find they help to set a tale in a time period. With Madame Eglantine, I actually drew from a number of different inspirations--Chaucer's prioress as you noted, especially with her fastidiousness, but also Eglantine Price, the witch from "Bedknobs and Broomsticks," but more the visuals of Miss Price from the original "The Magic Bedknob" and "Bonfires and Broomsticks." Though since this Madame Eglantine is the villainess, I also pulled from a few other inspirations: Mrs. Izzard, the undead witch from John Bellair's "The House With a Clock in its Walls" (I borrowed her scary glasses) and Miss Minchin from Burnett's "A Little Princess." And also, of course, the MO of Bluebeard, Mrs. Lovett from "Sweeney Todd," the Brewster Sister's from "Arsenic and Old Lace," and also Dorothea Puentes, who is currently in prison for murdering her boarders in Sacramento. But as you found this Madame Eglantine is really her own person--and not a villain at all, at least in her own monstrous mind.