Known As: Manitou Sakhahigan (Cree), Wakamne (Nakota
Sioux)
Note: This is a work of speculative fiction inspired by real geography and
traditions. No disrespect is intended.
Overview
Lac Ste. Anne is not merely a lake — it is a memory basin,
a place where belief, pilgrimage, and psychic residue collect like silt. Long
before the Hodgepocalypse, it was known as a site of healing, visions, and
contradictions: miracles and sickness, faith and fear, calm waters and
treacherous currents. In the radiant age after the Fall, these tensions did not
vanish. They intensified.
Today, Lac Ste. Anne is regarded throughout the Capital
Parkland as a Listening Place — a body of water that hears intention,
absorbs excess, and answers only on its own terms.
Before the Hodgepocalypse
Ancient stories speak of something moving beneath the lake,
its passage stirring sudden currents capable of overturning canoes without
warning. Later traditions layered new meaning atop the old: missionary sites
dedicated to Saint Anne, and annual summer pilgrimages where faith, healing,
and community converged.
For generations, the lake was a place where people came
seeking answers — and occasionally found consequences instead.
After the Hodgepocalypse
When the Hodgepocalypse reshaped the world, Lac Ste. Anne
surged with uncontrolled psychic and magical energy. Shoreline settlements were
destroyed or abandoned almost overnight. For decades afterward, the lake was
avoided — spoken of in lowered voices as spooky, wrong, or too
loud to listen to safely.
Nature returned first.
Birds arrived in impossible numbers, drawn by the lake’s
altered ecology. Over time, they grew larger, stranger, and more numerous,
reshaping the shoreline into a living rookery. Their presence fed massive
blooms of blue-green algae — a familiar paradox amplified by magic. The water
could heal or harm depending on how, when, and why it was approached.
Louis, the Lake-Warden
At the heart of Lac Ste. Anne dwells a being known simply as
Louis.
No one agrees on what Louis truly is.
Some say he was once human — a pilgrim, a caretaker, a man
who fell into the lake and was never allowed to leave. Others claim he is older
than the stories, a necessity given shape by the lake itself. What is
agreed upon is his function: Louis consumes what the lake cannot hold.
Waste. Corruption. Grief. Psychic overflow. Unwanted memory.
In doing so, he acts as both guardian and pressure valve,
preventing the lake from tearing itself — and the surrounding region — apart.
Louis does not speak openly. He does not tolerate intrusion.
And he does not appreciate being addressed directly.
The Gnomes of the Shore
A small but influential Gnome community has resettled
portions of the lakeshore. Eschewing pointy hats for baseball caps and tool
belts, they serve as intermediaries between Louis and the outside world.
The Gnomes maintain strict quarantines around key shoreline
sites, citing safety, tradition, and “Louis’ preferences.” They process lake
water for ritual and alchemical use, manage bird domestication programs, and
keep meticulous bead-ledgers recording offerings made — and accepted.
They take great exception to anyone attempting to contact
Louis without proper mediation.
Magical Properties
Place of Power: Major
Domains: Conjuration, Divination
- Casters
gain +2 to Ritual checks for Conjuration and Divination spells cast
at designated shoreline sites.
- Gain
+1 spell penetration for those spell types while within attuned
zones.
- Effects
apply to specific locations, not the entire lake.
Alchemical Use:
Lake water may be used as a potion component. When properly processed, it
increases potion potency by one tier. Failure increases ritual DC by +5;
failure results in a corrupted effect such as Poo Flu or psychic
backlash.
Cultural Role Today
In the modern Upper March worldview, Lac Ste. Anne is
neither a shrine nor a hazard alone — it is a filter. Pilgrims still come,
but they are careful. Offerings are measured. Songs are quieter. Many Nomad Kin
believe the lake listens best when approached without expectation.
“You don’t ask the lake for answers,” goes a common saying.
“You ask if you’re ready to hear one.”
Adventure Hooks
Common Creatures & Threats
- Gremlins
- Riftwing Harbinger
- Tar Oozes
- Louis, the Lake-Warden
Final Note
Lac Ste. Anne endures as a reminder that not all problems
are meant to be solved — some must be contained, respected, or fed
carefully. The lake remembers every era that has tried to claim it.
And Louis remembers them too.
#drevrpg #d20 #apocalypse #relicroadshow
Bob...he's a flower...and he's angry.
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