House Scarlioni
Antiquities Theft and High-Society Criminal EnterpriseDescription
Affiliated Characters
Event Involvements
Events with structured involvement data
Count Scarlioni’s organization is implicated through Duggan’s knowledge of him as a known antiquities thief and suspect in the Mona Lisa heist. The Doctor’s provocative references to Scarlioni force Duggan to confront the organization’s involvement, shifting the investigation from a local ambush to an international conspiracy.
Through Duggan’s prior investigative knowledge and the Doctor’s oblique references, though neither Scarlioni nor his agents are physically present
Scarlioni’s organization wields covert financial and criminal influence, but in this scene it is represented through outsiders (gunmen and Duggan) reacting to its shadow
Count Scarlioni’s organization is represented through his armed Black-Hatted Enforcers, deployed to intimidate or detain the Doctor, Romana, and Duggan. Scarlioni’s name is invoked as a known criminal figure involved in art theft and forgery schemes, with Duggan linking him directly to the Mona Lisa theft. The organization’s presence is felt through the enforcers’ actions and the Doctor’s probing about Scarlioni’s 'angle.'
Through the two Black-Hatted Enforcers acting under direct orders to control the scene
Exercising overt coercive force within the brasserie, reflecting the organization’s ability to infiltrate human spaces and impose its will
House Scarlioni manifests through ruthless aristocratic command structures, using Hermann as direct enforcer to intimidate and confine enemies. The nobility facade serves to mask criminal enterprise, with the Countess interrogating through charm while Scarlioni exercises cold authority to protect the Mona Lisa heist.
Through Hermann executing direct violence on command, the Countess exercising calculated interrogations, and Scarlioni asserting aristocratic authority to threaten and control opponents
Exercising absolute authority over intruders through aristocratic intimidation and armed enforcement
The infiltration of aristocratic institutions by criminal enterprises reflects broader themes of deception beneath cultural respectability
Hierarchical control with Countess and Count sharing strategic oversight, while Hermann operates as unquestioning enforcer
House Scarlioni operates through formal aristocratic guise while enforcing a violent, precise criminal operation. The Count and Countess direct the household with aristocratic detachment, using charm and violence in equal measure to maintain control. Their questioning and imprisonment of the intruders are tactical moves to protect their temporal heist, embodying the organization’s duality of refinement and ruthlessness.
Through Count Scarlioni and Countess Scarlioni orchestrating the interrogation and imprisonment, with Hermann as direct enforcer
Exercising total authority within their domain, enforcing obedience through coercion and aristocratic manipulation
The organization’s seamless blend of cultural prestige and covert criminality reflects a broader theme of art and history exploited for temporal manipulation. Their internal harmony masks the moral decay of using cultural heritage as a tool.
Tightly controlled hierarchy with Count Scarlioni at the apex and Countess as closest operative; Hermann operates as obedient extension of Count’s will. No visible dissent or internal conflict.
House Scarlioni operates as a criminal enterprise masquerading as aristocracy, leveraging etiquette and violence interchangeably to maintain control. Within the drawing room, the organization asserts dominance through Count Scarlioni’s commands and Hermann’s coercion, transforming hospitality into confinement. The bracelet’s theft unmasked the Doctor’s group as threats, prompting the family to prioritize the Mona Lisa heist by neutralizing witnesses.
Through Count and Countess Scarlioni issuing orders and Hermann executing them, the family enforces its will with seamless aristocratic authority
Exercising absolute coercive authority over interlopers, subordinating social deception to brutal containment to safeguard temporal criminal operations
The organization’s revelation of ruthless containment over social games illustrates how institutional power dictates life and death, especially when time itself is the target of theft
House Scarlioni maintains control through physical confinement and psychological pressure, using the cellar as a holding area before eliminating prisoners. The organization’s presence is signaled through Hermann’s threats and the barred grill leading to the lab, where their temporal crimes are orchestrated. Their methods rely on enforced silence and mysterious technology.
Through the enforcer Hermann and the physical constraints of the cellar and barred grill
Exercising absolute authority over the captives, dominating through fear and architectural control
Demonstrates how aristocratic fronts can mask criminal enterprises, blending social power with covert control of space and personnel
House Scarlioni’s oppressive control is exercised through the locked cellar and the veiled threat that time is running out, engineered by Hermann. The organization’s hidden laboratory behind the breached wall embodies their ruthless pursuit of temporal theft and cultural plunder, which the Doctor and Romana are unwittingly probing.
Through Hermann’s enforcement of confinement and the auditory presence of the Count’s forbidden technology beyond the door.
Operates from a position of dominance, forcing the Doctor’s party into a reactive stance within confined space.
House Scarlioni remains an off-screen antagonist whose schemes dominate the Doctor and Duggan’s dialogue and motivations. The debate about investigating the lab and stopping the art theft foregrounds the organization’s hidden temporal experimentation and art fraud conspiracy.
Referenced and invoked through objectives, plans, and ideological opposition
Acting indirectly through hidden assets and preparations; faced with reactive investigators
House Scarlioni leverages scientific and social manipulation through Kerensky’s work, turning theoretical temporal physics into tools for theft and destabilization. The Countess’s and Count’s orchestration relies on Kerensky’s unchecked experiments, which serve as both a means to enhance their operation and a liability through instability.
Through Kerensky’s reckless experiment and the presence of the Doctor as an unwitting observer, exposing the organization’s dangerous scientific alliances
The organization exerts control over Kerensky’s research, valuing results over safety, but the experiment’s failure reveals a tenuous grasp on their own dangerous innovations
Demonstrates how institutional power—represented by House Scarlioni—can weaponize cutting-edge science by prioritizing outcome over consequence, risking catastrophic temporal anomalies in pursuit of profit and prestige
Kerensky operates as an autonomous but directed agent; any internal oversight or quality control is suspended, highlighting the organization’s reliance on charismatic but volatile partners
House Scarlioni manifests through Kerensky's dependence on Count Scarlioni's funding and protection. The Count's generous support enables Kerensky's dangerous temporal experiments while his generous facade masks the organization's criminal operations involving cultural artifact theft.
Through Kerensky's unquestioning reliance on Count Scarlioni's patronage and generosity
Exercising financial and institutional authority over Kerensky while serving criminal ambitions
The Count's financial backing enables reckless science that risks catastrophic temporal consequences, illustrating how criminal organizations enable destructive behavior through unchecked resource provision.
Kerensky's work seems to operate independently within the organization without broader oversight, suggesting House Scarlioni delegates technical aspects while focusing on their criminal applications.
House Scarlioni's subterranean facility serves as the operational heart of the Count's temporal ambitions, where Kerensky's experiment becomes a microcosm of the organization's reckless pursuit of power through forbidden knowledge. The laboratory's very existence embodies the family's exploitation of science and status to conceal criminal enterprise.
Through Kerensky's arrogant implementation of the Count's generous funding, turning private science into a weapon of temporal disruption
Operating under the Count's patronage but dangerously beyond institutional control, with Kerensky's ego outpacing operational safeguards
The laboratory's collapse reveals inherent instability in institutional ambitions—uncontrolled science bred by unchecked power ultimately destroys its own sanctuaries of secrecy
Kerensky's individual brilliance and arrogance expose fractures between patron funding and operational oversight, risking institutional exposure through uncontrolled experimentation
House Scarlioni’s subterranean laboratory serves as the operational heart of their temporal heist and technical ambition, now visibly unraveling as Kerensky’s flawed experiment collapses. Kerensky acts as their lead scientist, and the setting’s cluttered desperation reflects the family’s pattern of using high-status fronts for criminal gain, though their direct presence is not felt in this moment.
Through Kerensky and the laboratory’s compromised machinery, representing their investment in temporal technology and disregard for ethical consequences.
Operating with technical overreach and institutional hubris, but exposed as vulnerable under competent scrutiny and rational intervention.
Demonstrates the dangers of institutional overreach when scientific ambition is uncoupled from ethical constraint, inviting catastrophic failure.