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Introducing Tales of Renaissance Wizardry: The Queen's Necklace

Tales of Renaissance Wizardry is a new blog series of plot outlines for Magonomia®. A plot outline is a starting point for planning an RPG adventure based on an original, unique concept. Using the outline and perhaps some downloaded maps or a bit of online research, an experienced GM should be able to prepare an entire game session in one hour or less.

These plot outlines are designed for Magonomia but they should be adaptable to most other fantasy games.


The year is 1579. A jeweled necklace is missing from Queen Elizabeth’s Royal Wardrobe. Since the necklace was a gift from a royal suitor, a diplomatic incident looms. The wizards are tasked with recovering the necklace quickly and quietly.

Synopsis for the Gamemaster

The necklace was a gift from Francis, Duke of Anjou (France), who is the last of Queen Elizabeth’s suitors. The Queen is expected to wear the necklace at an upcoming royal ball. Failure to do so will insult the Duke and threaten the marriage.

Conspirators have recruited a sorcerer, Thomas Smith, to steal the necklace. Smith breezed through the burglary using his spells. He over-relies on the spell Nothing to See Here. Everywhere he goes, witnesses remember seeing someone whom they felt they have seen around before and who seemed to belong there. When pressed, they can give only a vague description and they realize they don’t really know the “familiar” person’s name or anything about them. Witness descriptions do not even match up: two people who saw Smith at the same time will give very different descriptions of him.

Smith is lying low in a village outside London waiting to hand the necklace over to his handlers. Ordinary detective work could never track him down, but many magic spells are available that can lead the wizards right to him.

Plot Outline

Scene 1: Mission Briefing

The wizards are summoned to a safe house in London by a low-ranking spy handler in Her Majesty’s intelligence service. It’s more likely the spy handler will appeal to patriotism than to greed: spies in Elizabeth’s time were generally not paid. Give some thought how to motivate the wizards.

From here, the spy handler ushers them to the next scene: an appointment at the Royal Wardrobe chambers in the Tower of London, where the wizards can interview witnesses and inspect the scene of the crime.

Scene 2: The Royal Wardrobe Chambers

The royal wardrobe consists of several rooms in the Tower of London where Her Majesty’s hundreds of outfits are stored and maintained. Access to the whole complex is restricted to hand-picked royal servants. Jewelry is stored in a special room to which only a few people have keys. However, the jewelry room is often open during the day.

Thomas Smith slipped in by following along with a handmaiden. People thought he was one of the handmaidens! He had to loiter for a while until the jewelry room was opened.

Lady Dorothy Stratford is the Mistress of the Robes, manager of the entire royal wardrobe complex.

Clues to where Smith went with the necklace:

·         While he was loitering, one of the guards or servants engaged him in small talk. Smith tried to end the conversation as fast as possible. The key point is that the witness asked where Smith was from, and in his panic he gave the name of the village where he was planning to flee after the burglary. Perhaps it’s Harrow on the Hill, 3 miles northwest of London.

·         Nearly any divination magic, including General Divination, can reveal the town or village where Smith is hiding.

·         Search for Lost Property is an obvious spell to use, but it normally requires the lost item’s owner. There’s no way to get an audience with the Queen—she doesn’t even know the necklace is missing—but Dr. Dee can give access to her horoscope, which is enough to cast the spell. Alternatively, Lady Stratford is caretaker of the necklace and you can let her substitute for the owner for purposes of the spell.

Scene 3: Finding the Thief

Smith’s rendezvous with his co-conspirators is set for a village he knows well. This gives him a chance to spot strangers who might be on his tail. It also means the people around will probably recognize him. He’s stashed the necklace somewhere and is using Nothing to See Here to keep watch for his contacts without being identified. The inn is too visible; instead, he’s simply moved into a big house with few people in it and is using his spell to pass as an extra servant. If you prefer, it can be the house of someone who’s away on business.

Scene 4: Things Get Complicated

Smith’s handlers show up sooner or later. If you haven’t decided already, now is the time to figure out who they are:

  • Protestant agitators keen to block the Queen from marrying a Catholic Frenchman

  • French conspirators keen to block the Duke of Anjou from marrying the Queen of England

  • Spanish or Scottish spies who want to block an alliance between France and England

Really, nearly any conspiracy that fits your campaign can be behind this theft. Smith might be deeply involved in the conspiracy or he might be someone they recently bribed or blackmailed into performing this mission.

If Smith has spotted the wizards on his tail, he either goes deep into hiding or flees town entirely. Will his co-conspirators cross paths with the wizards, and what happens if they do? Maybe rumors of the theft have got out and some other interested party—a gang of London jewel thieves, agents supporting the Duke of Anjou, or some opportunistic wizard—also comes looking for the necklace.

Adapting to Other Games

This plot outline relies heavily on a distinctive spell, Nothing to See Here, and details of how it works. To use the plot in another game system, change Smith’s modus operandi to fit the particulars of your favorite disguise spell from that game. For example, in 5E he might be using Disguise Self . His pattern would be to impersonate a specific person who has access to a given area. The telltale sign of his presence isn’t that every witness perceives him differently —- it’s that the person he’s impersonating is seen in two different places at the same time.