Sunday, February 16, 2020

Season 14, Episode 4


Episode 4: The House That Was Not
1974. A team of parapsychological investigators enter Belmont Hall, aka “the most haunted house in England”, to unearth its secrets and solve its mysteries. They are soon joined by two strange interlopers, the enigmatic “George Saint-Germain” and his “assistant” Lady Penelope Ashworth), who seem to have an agenda of their own…  And then all Hell breaks loose!


As can be gathered from the above blurb, episode 4 was created as a homage to Richard Matheson’s awesome Hell House novel – but I borrowed the central idea (a monstrous, extra-dimensional entity disguised as a haunted house to lure and devour psychically-gifted individuals…) from The Haunting of Hex House, the second story of 2000 AD’s excellent The Alienist comic book horror/SF series, set in the Edwardian era (and not to be confused with the book and TV series of the same name).

Actual play was just fantastic. The pacing, the dialogue, Sylvie’s decisions… everything just flowed perfectly, with an ideal mix of quick-thinking, tough choices and improvised embellishments. A very memorable episode – which also had a very memorable epilogue. King Fenn’s psyche is now fully restored – but the special, unique link which tied his destiny to Penelope’s own fate is now unraveled. A page has been turned – and new adventures await – with the Count of Saint-Germain as Penelope’s travelling companion !  

Next stop: Atlantis!

Sunday, February 9, 2020

Season 14, Episodes 1-3


Episode 1: The Shadow King
As Lady Penelope prepares to leave the court of her lover, King Fenn of the Tanu, Little Nuada, Princess Dana Ashworth’s 3-year old son and Fenn’s adopted heir, is suddenly robbed of his psyche and lifeforce by an invisible enemy. Penelope must race against time to prevent the Dying of the Light and save the child from the clutches of the mysterious Shadow King…

Episode 2: The Companions of Demnos
While enjoying a short trip to 1956 Paris, Penelope once again crosses the path of the Comte de Saint-Germain!  Soo, the Time Lady and the dear old (more or less) immortal rogue join forces to thwart the nefarious plans of the mysterious Companions of Demnos, prevent an atomic disaster and defeat the terrible Helix Mandragora before it changes history! Mais oui!

Episode 3: The Emperor’s Talisman
On her quest to find the scattered remnants of King Fenn’s psyche, Lady Penelope arrives to Charlemagne’s palace in the spring of 803 AD, with the Comte de Saint-Germain at her side… just a few days before a terrible earthquake ravages Aachen! Are the time travellers ready to face the Judgment of God? A tale of court intrigue, historical destinies and human ordeals.


Episode 1 focused on Lady Penelope’s long-time relationships with the Tanu people, a race loosely based on the species of the same name from the Many-Coloured Land book series by Julian May – and more specifically on her very peculiar rapport with King Fenn, who first started out as a full-blown enemy of the Time Lady (that was back in season 1!), before becoming her ally (that was in season 8)… and then her lover. The romantic evolution of their relationship was completely unexpected and developed in actual play, at Sylvie’s initiative, providing us with one of those fascinating story twists that make some episodes unforgettable. Since then, Penelope and Fenn’s story had acted as a recurring plot device within the larger context of her alliance with the Tanu… and it needed a new twist, which The Shadow King delivered. At the end of this season opener, King Fenn ended up in suspended animation inside the TARDIS’ clinic, with his psyche scattered all around the vortex. Thus, Penelope started a new quest to recover, collect and reconfigure these psychic fragments in the hope of bringing back the Sleeping King alive, adding an extra dimension to her usual travels through space and time… And for those wondering, here is what King Fenn looks like...

Episode 2 was great fun. It started with Sylvie expressing an interest in travelling to 1950s Paris… a setting which I knew quite well but which, somehow, gave me absolutely Zero Inspiration as far as the character of Penelope and our chronicle was concerned. I just couldn’t figure out what kind of strange adventures I could develop in this context… until I got hit by The Idea: to bring back the Comte de Saint-Germain, a character first introduced in season 8 (how time flies…) and who later played a major role in season 10 and, to a lesser extent, in season 11, just before Penelope’s latest regeneration. Not only did the Count gave me the perfect catalyst for a typically Parisian adventure – but he also proved to be the perfect kind of temporary travelling companion Penelope was needing at this very moment of her odyssey. Their reunion was actually quite moving… For the story itself, I used the Mandragora Helix and the cult of Demnos from The Masque of the Mandragora, transplanted into the Parisian catacombs, with an extra “1950s atomic research” twist and a few meta-references to Les Compagnons de Baal, a French TV series from 1968 which featured an occult cabal of masked conspirators whose look was oddly similar to the Brethren of Demnos’ (just see HERE).

A quick note about our version of the Comte de Saint-Germain: when Penelope first met him, he was a flamboyant charlatan, claiming to have lived for centuries and doing the classic “immortal ascended master” act – a complete confidence trickster, with a fair amount of flair and panache… and it was Penelope herself who actually made him (more or less) immortal (or, at least, very long-lived) by giving him some Elixir from Karn to save his life, after he was critically wounded by an alien entity… thereby causing the Saint-Germain legend to come full circle!  Later, in season 10, she took him to the fabled Library of Alexandria because he wished to trace the true origins of the mysterious manuscripts of Hermes Trismegistus (what else?) - which he ended up writing himself, making once again things come full circle and reinforcing his status as a truly unique, time-defying character!  Here he is - in his 18th century attire, back when Penelope first met him.

Episode 3 was originally intended as a purely historical story, in the style of, say, The Aztecs – but with an obviously very different historical period! No alien threat to defeat, no otherworldly menace to tackle, just a tale about the challenges and problems of temporal travel… In the end, it did include a small (but decisive) fantasy/SF element about Charlemagne’s famous talisman, which allowed me to make a nifty connection with the ongoing theme of King Fenn’s scattered psyche fragments AND the “psychic stones” encountered by Penelope back in episode 8.05, when she first crossed the path of the Comte at the court of Catherine the Great.


See you in a few weeks for a couple of new episodes!

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

2019 XMas Special


In a few weeks, Lady Penelope’s Odyssey will be back for a new season - the fourteenth! 

In the meantime, let's start 2020 with a Christmas (well, technically, New Year’s Eve) Special!

Holiday Special: Christmas in Red
Advent 1869. Penelope has decided to spend a traditional Bavarian Christmas in the charming town of Rothenburg ob der Tauber, with its bustling Christmas market, medieval cobbled streets and quaint local legends… But the Time Lady finds herself on the trail of TWO mysterious creatures: the ancient Red Rider and the all-new Red Devil of Rothenburg!

This episode actually borrowed one of its core elements from the Sarah Jane Adventures story “The madwoman in the attic” – i.e. the red-skinned, psychic alien child, though I ignored her time-altering abilities and boosted her psionic ones, giving her the ability to create “psychokinetic holograms” drawing on the surrounding persons’ inner fears. And of course, the quaint, 19th century Bavaria setting gave it a completely different atmosphere.

So to cut a long story short, my “Red Devil” was actually the poor, Earth-stranded alien girl, whose barely-controlled powers were the origins of the terrifying apparitions of a Red Rider, lifted wholly from Terry Gilliam’s Fisher King movie (BTW Rothenburg does have a corresponding local tradition – see here for more details).

Actual play was really great, with a lot of quick-witted dialogue, fast-paced detective work and insightful empathy from our favorite Time Lady – the perfect mix for a Xmas Special!

See you soon - for SEASON 14!

Monday, August 19, 2019

Season 13 Finale


Episode 15: The Music of Time
On the heels of their uneasy reunion, Penelope and her former travelling companion Dorian go back to the Paris of the belle époque - only to discover that the eccentric musical genius Erik Satie, who once graced her TARDIS with a private piano recital, has disappeared from Montmartre… and from History itself! Did he even exist at all? In order to save the unique composer from oblivion, the Time Lady will have to create a temporal Dissonance of her own.

So here goes another season of Lady Penelope’s Odyssey! 

This season finale was really emotional, starting with a bittersweet, awkward, not-as-I-had-planned reunion with Penelope’s former travelling companion Dorian / Miranda… and ending with their heart-rending farewell, which was somewhat reminiscent of the Tenth Doctor’s adieu to Rose in “Doomsday”.

One of the most interesting aspects of this very moving denouement was its unexpectedness.

When I built the plotline of this episode, I had (somewhat naively) thought that Lady Penelope would be delighted to be reunited with Dorian / Miranda, considering they had got on like a house on fire while they were travelling together across time and space – and indeed, I was more or less expecting this NPC to be welcomed back aboard the TARDIS, embarking for at least another season…

But things didn’t take this direction. At all. Penelope was completely caught off-guard by Dorian’s sudden reappearance. Following the harrowing events of the whole Avalon/Gallifrey crisis (including her encounter with a new incarnation of the Master), all she wanted was to “turn the page”, as we say in France. Dorian’s departure (back in episode 7 – only eight episodes ago but it felt more than a lifetime away to her…) had deeply saddened her – but it was now in her past, a finished story, with Dorian / Miranda living the high life of a galactic singing superstar of the 40th century. He was safe. He was no longer in danger. Penelope felt ready to move on to other things.

And then Dorian was back, without a warning, her responsibility once again. He was no longer safe, once again vulnerable to the perils of travelling along the Time Lady – and it was too much for her.

Needless to say, this added a very intense, almost brooding emotional mood to the whole episode – and the difficulty and consequences of this (from Penelope’s perspective) unwanted reunion quickly became at least as important as the “mystery at hand” (a timey-wimey conundrum about musician Erik Satie).

In the end, I did what I always try to do as a GM – follow the players’ decisions and their logical consequences, even if it takes things in a completely unexpected or unplanned direction. The final scene of the episode was, as I said, almost heart-rending - but also solved the problem in a very neat way, with Dorian now living in an alternate 1978, as one of the companions of an alternate, earthbound Doctor (first met in the final episode of season 12)… an unexpected but perfect conclusion for a season where alternate timelines and parallel continuums featured prominently.  

The Parting of the Ways…

See you in a few months for a new season!

Sunday, August 11, 2019

Season 13, Episodes 13-14


Episode 13: The Darkest Hour
The fall of Avalon is at hand. The home of the free Time Lords is under attack! The Master has breached the quantic gates, opening the way for hundreds of Cybermen, who are now wreaking havoc on the once safe haven created by Penelope and the Doctor. As Jack Harkness, a newly-regenerated Doctor and the other valiant defenders prepare for the last stand, the Time Lady must evacuate the entire civilian population before it is too late...

Episode 14: The Hand of Harmony
Avalon has endured. Lives have been lost – but the Darkest Hour is now over. The Cyber-Master and his legions of steel have been defeated. But what about Gallifrey, still shut off from the vortex and the rest of the universe? With the Dissonance under control, it is now time for Avalon to extend the Hand of Harmony to the Time Lords of the Capitol, with Lady Penelope as the peacemaker. A tale of power plays, diplomatic intrigue and hidden agendas.



The Cyber-Master mentioned above is actually The Master (or, more properly, one of his incarnations from an alternate continuum - but this doesn't really change anything, really, since He Is The Master And You Will Obey Him) after a partial cyber-conversion - yes, that is a weird idea but one that made perfect sense in the context of our storyline. Having forged an alliance with the Cybermen of the Cyberiad, he was supposed to offer them full time-travel technology and capabilities, in exchange for their services as a tireless workforce and as an armed force to carry out his grandiose plans of conquest of the universe...  But after Penelope's daring deeds in episode 12, he was put in a very difficult position with his Cybermen allies, who demanded a solid proof of his loyalty and commitment - and (you guessed it) decided to partially cyber-convert him against his will. 

How THIS will affect his next regeneration remains to be seen - for yes, the Cyber-Master did suffer some heavy physical damage before escaping from the Avalon debacle in his special stealth-model TARDIS... Needless to say, I plan to answer this particular question in a forthcoming episode, probably in the next season of Lady Penelope's Odyssey.


NEXT POST: Episode 15, the Season Finale!


Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Season 13, Episodes 11-12... and the Greflings!


Episode 11: The Eye of Madness
The Master is back!  Coming from yet another alternate timeline, trapped in our continuum by the Dissonance, the Doctor’s nemesis is now intent on becoming the sole Master of Time… which, of course, implies the destruction of all other Time Lords!  Following the shutdown of Gallifrey’s and Avalon’s Eyes of Harmony, Lady Penelope and the Corsair must track the power-mad arch-villain through the vortex… The chase is on – but Time is running out!

Episode 12: Scar(ed)y Cats
Following her brush with the Master and his Cybermen allies, still awaiting news from Avalon, Lady Penelope lands her TARDIS in Ulthar, the out-of-time city of her friends the Greflings. She soon learns that something dark and very nasty is threatening the very existence of the adorable Quantum Cats… a menace known as the Kitlings!  A tale of secret origins and feline paradoxes, featuring yet another ancient, half-mad Time Lord renegade!

Episode 12 gave me the opportunity to indulge into some retcon fun about the Catkind (e.g. Brannigan, the Sisters of Plenitude etc.) and one of my earliest creations for the campaign, the Greflings, also known as the Quantum Cats.


The Greflings

The Greflings are friendly (if insatiably curious) creatures who look exactly like Sphynx cats (you know, the hairless ones) – fully intelligent cats with the power to wander at will through space and time, slipping and sneaking through dimensional interstices; they also have the power to track virtually anyone or anything through the vortex and are irresistibly attracted by paradoxes and other temporal anomalies (as well as by TARDISes, who see them as pesky pests and simply DON’T want them aboard).


The Greflings have been around in Lady Penelope’s Odyssey from the first season (they initially appeared in Episode 4, The City of Chimeras, set in 1920s Paris). I introduced their home of Ulthar during Season Eight (how time flies) and finally had the opportunity to reveal their origin story in Season Thirteenth. Here are their quick & dirty stats:

Attributes: Awareness 4, Coordination 4, Ingenuity 4, Presence 2, Resolve 2, Strength 1

Skills: Athletics 2, Convince 2, Knowledge 2, Subterfuge 4

Good Traits: Keen Senses, Vortex (“the Whisk”), Lucky (side-effect of the Whisk), Run for Your Life, Sense of Direction (on a cosmic level), Feel the Turn of the Universe, Networked (Minor), Face in the Crowd (actually a form of mild psychic/sensory cloaking, making them “unnoticeable” as long as they keep quiet - except by people with Feel the Turn of the Universe, Alien Senses and other perception-enhancing abilities)

Bad Traits: Tiny (Major), Insatiable Curiosity, Cowardly (but adorable)

Their leader, the Grand Grefling, has a Presence and a Resolve of 4, as well as the Psychic and Telepathy traits.


A Convoluted Origin

For quite some time now, I’ve had the idea that these adorable creatures were somehow descended from the ferocious, wicked Kitlings – the teleporting, scavenging black cats from Survival. In “Scar(ed)y Cats”, I was finally able to do this idea justice (in case you were wondering, the Greflings are the scaredy cats, while the Kitlings are, of course, the scary ones). So what happened to the Cheetah People and the Kitlings after the end of Survival?

As hinted in the last images of the episodes, the Cheetah People “found a new home” – but nothing is said about the fate of the Kitlings, with which the horse-riding, hunting felines clearly had a deep symbiotic bond… I decided that the two species were somehow separated from each other – because every existing Kitling had been captured by some mysterious force (more on this below).

For the first time in their history, the Cheetah People were alone; cut off from the symbiotic influence of the Kitlings, they quickly changed, as the “Cheetah virus” in their blood adapted itself and its effects to their new, more peaceful surroundings; over a few millennia, they gradually lost their more feral instincts (killing for fun, hunting humanoid preys etc.) while still retaining their other feline traits, evolving into (you’ve guessed it) the Catkind from the 10th Doctor era!  I even allowed myself a small improvisational luxury by suggesting that the commitment of the Catkind in the order of the Sisters of Plenitude could be a way of atoning for the savage past of their ancestors, of showing humans and other sentient species that Cat persons were nice, trustworthy and altruistic, the best healers (as opposed to the best hunters) in the universe.

But what happened to the Kitlings, you ask?  Right after the events of Survival, they were captured en masse by a crazy Time Lord (using their own teleportation powers to lure them into a trap) who wanted to experiment on them – to “improve” them, in all senses of the word, i.e. to refine their unique abilities, boost their intelligence and suppress their feral instincts... Why he wanted to do this remains a mystery – perhaps the mad renegade was simply experimenting for the sake of scientific curiosity or perhaps he wanted to create the ultimate feline pet for style-conscious time travelers. Who knows?

Anyway, after many genetic, psychical and quantic manipulations (involving, among other things, a deliberate sequence of partially-controlled Blinovitch Effects), he finally managed to transform the last Kitlings into the first Greflings. And their transition from black cats to hairless ones coincided, of course, with the complete suppression of their feral, nasty side.

But the first Greflings, blessed with their dimension-walking powers (they call it “Whisking”), quickly wandered away from the abode of their Creator, who probably forgot about them (he was absent-minded like that) before eventually annihilating himself after a catastrophically failed experiment into time paradoxes… When the Quantum Cats returned to what they perceived as their home (a strange, somewhat sinister-looking mansion house located Somewhere Out of Time), they found that their maker had left them forever. They named the place “Ulthar” and went on their curiosity-driven expeditions through time and space, meeting Time Lords and other Highly Interesting Things along the way.

Sources

The basis for the concept of the Greflings was simply the phrase "Quantum Cats" - I hadn't seen Survival back then!  When I discovered the Kitlings, well... it was too beautiful a coincidence to ignore!

The name “Ulthar” is of course taken from the City of Cats in Lovecraft’s Dreamlands stories. As for the mad Time Lord who became the Greflings’ mythical Creator, I had first toyed with the idea of using the Seventh Doctor himself but for various reasons I finally settle for my own version and reinterpretation of a more obscure character – Astrolabus, from the Sixth Doctor graphic novel Voyager.

Friday, July 12, 2019

Season 13, Episodes 8-10


Season 13 of Lady Penelope's Odyssey continues, with three new episodes:

Episode 8: The Gilded Age
New York, 1883. Following the departure of her travelling companion, Lady Penelope is taking a vacation in history, enjoying a glorious Indian summer in Manhattan, attending the inauguration of the Metropolitan Opera and mingling with the Whartonesque locals. And then Time Agent Cyrus Ward appeared out of nowhere, before being shot by a mysterious staser-totting assassin… The holidays are over – and the (temporal) game is afoot. 

Episode 9: Passing Ship
On her way back to Avalon, Lady Penelope intercepts a distress call from another TARDIS caught in the eye of a vortex storm created by the elusive, ubiquitous Dissonance. Rushing to the rescue, she manages to save the Corsair from certain annihilation – only to discover that the renegade Time Lord was actually chasing her on behalf of the new masters of Gallifrey. And then the Corsair starts to die, spinning the regeneration roulette once again…

Episode 10: Trial of a Time Lady
As the conflict between the two Eyes of Harmony escalates, Lady Penelope arrives on Gallifrey to face the Tribunal Supreme of the Time Lords on charges of Grand Conspiracy and Generally Being a Temporal Nuisance. Will the Time Lady and the disembodied Professor Chronotis uncover the identity of the mysterious Black Eminence before the final verdict? With the fate of Avalon hanging in the balance, it’s time for some serious courtroom drama…

(To be continued...)