MISR house – chapter 1

Følgende dokumenter finder I i Misr house.

(Billede 1) Brev fra Omar Al-Shakti fra Egypten til Gavigan. Omas Al-Shakti er også en del af Brotherhood of Black Pharao.

(Billede 2) Brev fra Gavigan til Pale Viper (Sir Aubrey Penhew), hvor mordet på Jackson beskrives. Dette er et klart bevis på to ting: Jack Brady (og Penhew) er i live og er i Shanghai og der er en klar sammenhæng mellem New York og London grupperne mht Jacksons mord.

(Billede 3) Bogen (ledger) indeholder håndskrevne poster, der beskriver transaktioner og forsendelser rundt om i verden. Gavigan registrerer alt, hvad han sender til udlandet, med adresser på modtagere og noter om, hvad der blev afsendt. Indlæggene viser forsendelser til Ho Fang i Shanghai, Randolph Shipping i Darwin, Australien og Omar al-Shakti i Cairo, Egypten.

Painting of the Black Pharaoh: a regal-looking pharaoh, whose skin is totally black. The detailing is sublime, especially the eyes, which burn with captivating intensity. While there is no label, it seems clear that this is a representation of the Black Pharaoh.

Wall clock: a chronometer, unremarkable except for it being the most modern thing in the entire house. Swiss-made, it tells the time particularly accurately.

A 6 inch (15 cm) bust of the Black Pharaoh, carved from ebony; a 12 inch (30 cm) high bust of the Black Pharaoh, carved from marble; the top half from a broken wooden statuette of a crocodile-headed man
(a child of the Sphinx); the greater portion of a broken stone tablet, roughly 2 feet (61 cm) square, on which a number of inverted ankhs have been carved, defacing the tablet’s original Egyptian hieroglyphs (the damage makes the original hieroglyphs unreadable). A successful Archaeology or Hard History roll dates these pieces to the Third Dynasty of Egypt.

A tome, written in Arabic, titled Oghniat Min al Jinn (Song of the Djinn).
Physical Description: Manuscript, bound in goatskin with bronze clasp Author: Ghalib al-Sabbah, an aspiring poet and astronomer, originally from Baghdad and lesser colleague of Muhammad ibn Ibrahim al-Fazari and Yaqub ibn Tariq. He later traveled to Damascus to seek out the writings of Abdul Hazred. Nearly all of his written works were destroyed by Persian authorities.
Publication History: Heretical work published in 797 CE, alleged to be the transcript of a discussion between al-Sabbah and a “scorching fire.”

One scroll,  contains the original wording of the Fog-Spawn spell.

Two vials are engraved with star-shaped designs (Elder Signs). Within each is a grayish-white slime, actually a single, tiny larva. Component to Fog-Spawn spell.

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