Murbreistra Starnar was a renegade sorceress of Halruaa based in Phelzol in Semphar in the 13th century DR. She was the sister of Halatha Starnar.[1]
Activities[]
Murbreistra, together with her sister Halatha, was a wicked mage who enjoyed breeding monsters, leading to the creation of many bizarre creatures and even mongrelmen. This practice attracted many enemies and thieves, particularly old foes from Halruaa. For impulsive young Halruaan mages looking to prove their might, flying skyships overhead at night and dropping in on ropes to try to raid their walled estate turned into popular recreational sport. When the Starnars used spells to teleport a number of crimson deaths into the gardens whenever they wished, this sport quickly died out.[1][note 1]
Relations[]
The sisters seem to have had as a minion, willingly or unwilling, an unnamed dwarf who was never seen without two ravens perched on each shoulder whom he apparently communicated with and even obeyed.[1]
Home[]
Murbreistra and Halatha dwelled within a sprawling mansion of countless rooms and porches connected by breezeway passages and doors opening into the mossy-rock garden. The whole estate was surrounded by a high wall.[1]
History[]
After the Year of the Bright Star, 1231 DR, an adventuring company known as the Talons of Timindar went to Khôltar in the Shaar, where they sold Yornar's Trail Companion for 90,000 gp and a pair of slippers of spider climbing to a strange dwarf who didn't give them his name. This was likely the agent of the Starnar sisters.[1]
During one of the earliest raids on the Starnar estate, in the Year of the Defiant Keep, 1244 DR, a local thief, Andaren Robyth, used the spell-battle as a cover to scale the wall and infiltrate the house. Amidst lightning bolts, fiery blasts, conjured jaws, and transforming spells, he got away with a sackful of magical items from the sisters, including the Companion. But he did not escape unscathed: a partly polymorphed reptilian left arm made him an outcast.[1]
Appendix[]
Notes[]
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Ed Greenwood and Doug Stewart (1997). Prayers from the Faithful. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 118. ISBN 0-7869-0682-0.