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Soon after Cola had received the acclamation of the people, and some gold from Cardinal Colonna, we were rich. Well, rich enough for a poor soldier who arrived at the gates of Rome with only a handful of coins and the clothes on his back. Why we were now rich enough to almost afford the hat a noble might wear walking about town! Still, it was enough to buy me some more war-gear and have a tidy sum put aside for hard times. For those are never more than a broken bone away, and those of us who live by hard knocks know that all too well.


After a wink from Cola, we reasoned amongst ourselves for a while and decided that the House of Crows might make a handy base to explore the tunnels of the ancients that lie below the streets of the Eternal City. The place needed some money spent on it to make it habitable again, so we all chipped in some of our new money. Soon a man-of-business was found to make the great pile of necromantic bodies disappear, one piece at a time, while his gang set to clearing the courtyard orchard which was completely choked with brambles and briars. It would take weeks of work but would allow us to plant a kitchen garden later in the spring, and give us a space to walk about in peace.


Now we had moved in and made a start at making the House of Crows a decent place again, it was time to explore the great darkness below the Eternal City. We had received a tidy pile of alchemical stuff in return for the contents of the Sorceror's laboratory - healing salves, alchemical torches and darksight eye ointment looked especially apt for our needs. So Rocco, Astore and I, accompanied by Father Arturo and Friar Giovanni clambered down the cramped passage below the Sorceror's lair in the basement of the House of Crows. After a few minutes squirming down a tiny passage we found a page of script untrampled on the floor, showing we were indeed on the trail of our quarry.


With the help of Friar Giovanni I write this Journal to aid my recollection in the years ahead, or to help those that come after me. For most who live by the sword do not die peacefully in their beds, surrounded by their family and a priest. Instead they leave this world in pain, mired in mud and blood or wine. Many meet their fate in darkness, but few in a darkness as absolute as the underworld below the streets. It is utterly black there, so a man cannot see his hand in front of his face, and the light of a candle is swiftly swallowed up by the immensity of shadow around it. So we took several lanterns with hours of fuel and extra torches in case of delays, and an alchemical torch as a last hope should all other lights go out.


We proceeded in single file, with a soldier at both front and back and unarmoured priests in the middle - for danger comes swiftly on the unprepared, from any direction. So it was for me, as I passed a low passage joining the the cramped tunnel we were following. Out of that dark opening lunged a srawny thing of claws and teeth, barely visible in the flickering light cast from those behind me. I bore a shield instead of a torch, which served me well as the thing that once might have been a man slashed at me, avid for living flesh. So cramped was that place that no-one could come to my aid while I strove with falcata and shield against this undead horror. A dagger might have served me better in such a squeeze, but at last the thing crumbled into a pile of mouldering bones. All we found was a small gold ring on its finger and a dead end, so onwards we went into the endless night.


Now Astore took the lead while I caught my breath as the rearguard, and it was his turn to face unexpected danger. As he checked out a small side passage, a horde of large rats swarmed around our feet. After a frenzy of stamping, stabbing and cursing he was assailed by a rat so large it walked upon its hind legs and gripped a fine dagger. After a brief struggle this Mother of All Rats was dispatched, but all we found in her nest was a fragment of parchment and a few coins before another dead end.


So much for the treasure of the ancients - we had barely found enough to buy some food and firewood for a week. We needed more, or at least a sign the Sorceror had passed this way, so on we searched , hour after hour. After many twists and turns - carefully marked with charcoal on the walls lest we become hopelessly lost - we saw a faint glimmer of light ahead. A careful advance found a great pyramid of rubbish in the centre of a huge space, illuminated by a beam of light coming from a shaft far above in the ceiling. At the top of the midden, basking in the little shaft of golden light from the living world above, was a creature.

She has been the subject of much debate since, as her form was mostly that of a human female, albeit with prominent horns in her hair and some uncertainty as to her shape below the waist. Some think she had legs to walk upon, while I suspect a more snake-like means of transport through the garbage of centuries. Both Father Arturo and Friar Giovanni believe she was a minion of Satan, left on earth to tempt men from the path of righteousness and squander their souls in foolish bargains. Indeed they were most vehemently of this persuasion, so I record it here in my Journal, although in my own mind I am not certain. For she spoke passable Italian, and conversed politely awhile with Rocco, and made no move to harm him, but introduced her two sisters instead. Now there were three of these unhuman creatures to keep an eye on, but still they made no move against us.


Rocco tells me they gave their names as Aglaia, Euphrosine and Thallia , and were dismayed that none of us had ever heard of them, and did not come to make offerings or sacrifice for their goodwill. They said that this had been the custom of the ancients, and they could bestow Light, Joy and Blooming - or at least something like that; it was hard for me to be sure exactly what they meant for their accent was not what I am used to in Pitigliano. Rocco took courage from this, and gave them his flask of wine as a remembrance of the world above; in return the Maidens of the Midden took a pebble and imbued it with a gleam of sunlight from above, giving it to Rocco as a keepsake. It shone in his hand after he took it from them, and might be a handy thing if it lasts.


Whilst Father Arturo and Friar Giovanni have loudly warned that converse and traffic with demons is a mortal sin, I have to say that Rocco seems quite intact and untainted to the eye of someone less zealous or holy.


So we bade the Maidens of the Midden farewell, and searched awhile longer in the great darkness, but discovered no trace of the Sorceror's trail. Eventually our torches and lanterns burned so low we were forced to return to the living world above, but not before some horrible leech-serpent had sucked half the blood from Father Arturo's leg in a trice before being driven back into the water it had sprung from.


When we made a report to Cola he did not laugh in our faces, but remarked that there were many strange things described in ancient texts. If these were from the ancient world they had lived for fifty generations of men at least. Like us, he wondered what manner of creature they might be, and what they might know of the past.


If Rocco turns into a newt, or runs amok with cold steel in the marketplace, we will know that father Arturo was right all along. Until then I shall wait and see what may yet be, for I think we may meet the Maidens again in the great darkness below.




Updated: Apr 11, 2024

Noli, the manservant of Matteo Corsini, seeks out Marco, Rocco, Astore, Fra Giovanni and Father Arturo at the Gatto Nero. It seems that the Scimioni Volanti – the Flying Monkeys - still haunt the streets of Rome at night. Were the party interested in following up and trying further to disrupt or destroy this evil? He had heard a rumour that the Thirteen were offering a bounty on these creatures.


Noli had been studying the ledger from the ruined mansion on the Quirinale where they had previously thwarted the plot to sacrifice a virgin and summon a demon. He had tried to contact some of the merchants named in the ledger. So far none had any clear recollection of their transactions, though it was plain that they had delivered goods and services. None had been paid. None could remember the person with whom they had dealt. To Noli’s mind this was evidence of some sort of sorcery in play.


Father Arturo and Noli set off to see if they glean something more from the merchants with further questioning and the help of the Lord. After a few days of this activity – and a number of slammed doors – they found a name, clearly a pseudonym – Corvo – that came up a few times. Just one witness, a merchant named Borromeo, could furnish a tentative link to a genuine name – Aristofane Caltagirone. Meanwhile the others returned to the Quirinale where they found little but glimpsed a flying monkey and noted the vector of its flight southward towards the Viminal Hill.


Taking their discoveries to Cola di Rienzo who confirmed that the Thirteen were taking an interest. He told them that the Caltagironi were an ancient family fallen on hard times in the last century. Their coat-of-arms featured three crows. He suggested looking for old buildings that bore this sign. Following the vector of the flying monkey they eventually found a palazzo displaying three carved crows on the northern slopes of the Viminali.


Joined by Matteo Corsini, they use his resources to rent an apartment nearby and set a watch, while making discreet enquiries locally. They observe a pattern of regular deliveries of supplies to indicate that the palazzo was indeed occupied. They form a plan to gain entry disguised as delivery men and bribe the real vendors to use their cart.


The plan succeeds and they burst into a courtyard. A sharp fight ensues with a couple of misshapen servitors, some necromantic constructs and three flying monkeys. One of the servitors – a hunchback with one disproportionately long, muscular arm – escapes and bars a door against them. They dispose of their opponents: the necromantic constructs dismembered; two demons slain and a third banished by Father Arturo; the second servitor, a slow witted giant with mismatched legs called Grumio, is captured.


They break down the barred door, to find the other servitor and presumably his master fled. A series of hidden doors are opened to reveal a secret laboratory and an exit which they speculate might lead to the ancient tunnels rumoured to lie beneath the city. They find a deal of glassware, including some strange liquids and a few scrolls. There is an ice-store with a number of human body parts in it and an iron cage surrounded by engraved sigils on the floor. They leave with scrolls, glassware and two demon corpses.


Grumio, who wails endlessly for his master is left in possession of the apartment that Corsini rented in order to watch the Caltagirone place.

It seems that after a bright start, the campaign of the English king Eduardo to claim the French crown has ended in stalemate and a truce.


The English won a great sea-battle in the early summer, defeating a much larger French fleet at Sluys, somewhere off the coast of Flanders. However, a defeat on land for Eduardo’s Flemish allies at St. Omer and a drawn out siege of Tournai robbed the English campaign of its impetus. Further news that a group of treacherous vassals to the north of his realm were taking the opportunity afforded by his absence to rebel, made him keen to accept the French offer of a truce. It is said that another factor bringing the two sides together is simply a mutual dearth of funds – for war is an expensive business. No-one expects the peace to last but there has been a cessation of hostilities for now.


Roman sympathies lie with the English simply because everyone in this city hates the French, but in truth few in Rome have a dog in the fight. The merchants of Tuscany depend heavily on the English wool trade for their prosperity so are minded to favour the King of England. However, if rumours that the English King plans to default on his debts prove true, it will be a bitter blow to the banking houses of Florence, particularly the Bardi and Peruzzi, with whom he is reputedly heavily invested. If so sentiments may change.


The Genoese have long been considered allies to the French. It is said that there were six Genoese galleys commanded by Egidio Boccanegra, the brother of Simone, Doge of Genoa, in the French fleet in the defeat off the Flemish coast. It seems the French are unhappy with his performance in the battle, and have accused him of cowardice and treachery for disobeying the orders of the French admiral. For his part Boccanegra has publicly denounced the French as idiots and the admiral's orders stupid. He has refused to answer their summons.


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