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Rules

Winter Magnitude 80

Performing the Ritual

Performing this ritual takes at least 2 minutes of roleplaying. This ritual targets a campaign army whose general must be present throughout.

This ritual is an enchantment. A target may only be under one enchantment effect at a time.

Effects

At the completion of the ritual, the general used as the focus for the ritual becomes subject to VENOM. This condition can be removed in the normal way. At the same time, the ritual hardens the soldiers resistance to venoms and infections. The effectiveness of the Fire in the Blood order used by an opposing army in the same campaign is halved against this army.

While the army is enchanted, the general experiences a roleplaying effect: You regularly experience rheumatic aches and pains, stiffness, stomach upsets, and headaches. You regularly catch colds and sniffles. You suffer short-lived pangs of hunger, thirst, fever, or chills that come on you randomly through the day. Furthermore, when you sleep you are prone to nightmare-like dreams of being poisoned, of being in places where you experience crippling hunger or thirst, of being hunted by venomous monsters, or of being forced to endure sickness or bodily infirmity.

These effects are particularly pronounced and disturbing for a character with the draughir lineage.

The effect lasts until the start of the next Profound Decisions Empire event.

Description

The original research that lead to the creation of this ritual was undertaken by Palaphon during Spring 381YE. His original research was eventually codified at the Lyceum under the guidance of the Dean, the Empty One, occupying the attentions of the entire Lyceum through much of 382YE. Work was completed, in spite of threats from the Grendel, shortly before the Autumn Equinox of that year. The name of the ritual changed several times during the process of codification, but in the end the Dean settled on Why Sulemain Walked Away From The Baker, apparently in reference to some story about the controversial founder of the sword scholar movement in Urizen.

In addition to the work performed by the usual arcane scholars and magical theoreticians, the staff of the Lyceum were granted additional assistance by a number of “friends” of the eternal Sadogua, dispatched by the Brother of Wizards at the behest of the Dean. Most of these “friends” were Imperial magicians normally disinterested in academic pursuits, primarily from the Brass Coast, Wintermark, and Navarr, but included a handful of actual heralds of the Father of Bats. With their assistance, the ritual was codified significantly more swiftly than would be expected for such a powerful enchantment.

The ritual has a profound effect on the soldiers of the army on which it is cast. While their general is wracked with minor aches and pains, unseasonal colds, and bad dreams the soldiers feel hale and hearty. They do not become sick, and prove especially resistant to poisons and venoms of all kinds. They can still be crippled by an envenomed weapon, but they recover quickly from anything except a fatal blow. Furthermore, the soldiers find that they can eat almost any food without becoming ill. In a manner similar to a draughir, they can consume stale bread, brackish water, or spoiled meat without ill effect.

While it is not traditionally seen as a resonance of the Winter realm, the concept of suffering is closely tie to the Eternal Sorin. Yet to cause suffering in another without a purpose is merely cruelty. While the Winter realm can be cruel this does not mean that all suffering is cruel in its nature. For Sorin, and for some scholars of the Winter realm, suffering is a means to an end. By enduring privation – hunger, thirst, exhaustion – an individual can be come inured to the effects. By exposing the general to venom, they symbolically pass the ability to endure that venom to their soldiers.

The ritual draws on two key resonances of the Winter realm. The first is survival - the urge to live is a powerful instinct, enhanced by Winter magic. The realm is effective at weaving enchantments such as Unyielding Constitution or Fight Tooth and Nail that help the beneficiary endure pain. The enchantment of Why Sulemain Walked Away from the Baker draws on this resonance specifically to allow the soldiers effected by the magic to survive the effects of venom, poison, and disease.

The other key resonance utilised in this ritual is that of preservation. For all the darker powers commonly associated with the realm, Winter has a predilection for keeping things as they are – for opposing change even if it leads to stagnation. In the case of this ritual, in keeping with the resonance of Survival, the Winter magic works to preserve a state of “good health” in the target. It should not be taken to mean that Winter is adept at healing, or would be as effective at creating an enchantment to allow one to endure wounds. Rather, the idea of Preservation is tied somewhat to a third resonance: weakness. Normally, the Winter Realm is preoccupied with ageing and especially with the weakness and infirmity that comes from old age. Yet the magic of weakness need not be solely aimed at a mortal body. Winter magic will also weaken objects and structures. In this case, the weakness is aimed specifically towards the poisons, diseases, and venoms that attempt to overcom th soldiers of the army.

Common Elements

The ritual resonates with the theme of the endurance that is mastered and tested through suffering. As such, the general who is he focus for the enchantment may be threatened with privation, torment, or injury by the coven; they are expected to remain stoic throughout enduring the descriptions of suffering without flinching.

The Dean originally suggested that the ritual should require an invocation of Grandmother Winter, Clever Spider. Other totems might also be appropriate, especially those known for their great strength or endurance – the stag, the bear, or the boar.

A suggested element is the use of a strengthening or heartening draught infused with poisonous herbs, consumed by the general at the mid-point of the ritual. Another suggested element is the painting – or for a blood magician cutting – of a symbol representing the poisonous thorns of a winter plant on to the target.

Some experimentation with astronomancy suggests that the Oak and the Stallion are both good constellations to use with this ritual.