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Chapter 17: Natural Substances<br />

Wild Black Cherry is a poisonous plant in<br />

which the poisonous part is damaged foliage. Cyanide<br />

is released in the plant whenever the leaves are<br />

damaged. Most animals can safely consume small<br />

amounts of healthy leaves, bark, and fruit. As little<br />

as 2 ounces of damaged leaves, however, may be<br />

<strong>fatal</strong>. 10 LP of damage occurs in a character per<br />

ounce of damaged leaves ingested. Some make<br />

poisonous tea from the leaves. Cyanide prevents<br />

the body from being able to utilize oxygen, so although<br />

animals may be physically capable of breathing,<br />

their entire bodies are suffocating. After ingestion,<br />

signs will (60% of the time) manifest within a<br />

1d4 minutes, though it may take as long as an hour<br />

(in this case, roll 1d6 and 1d10 to determine 1-60<br />

minutes). The character will try to breathe more<br />

rapidly and deeply, and then become anxious and<br />

stressed. Later, trembling, incoordination, attempts<br />

to urinate and defecate and collapse is noted, which<br />

can proceed to a violent death from respiratory and/<br />

or cardiac arrest within 3d20 minutes. If an affected<br />

character is still alive 2 or 3 hours after consumption,<br />

chances are good that they will live.<br />

Yew is an evergreen, needle-bearing tree and<br />

shrub that persists through the winter. The fruit is<br />

an attractive scarlet berry. The wood is slow-growing,<br />

strong, fine-grained, and is utilized in cabinetry<br />

and archery bows. The branches are often twisted<br />

or gnarled, and the bark is red and scaly. Yew trees<br />

are often sacred to druids. The foliage and seeds<br />

contain potent poisons that act to stop the heart of<br />

an animal so suddenly that no symptoms are seen;<br />

the animal simply drops dead. The poison reacts<br />

with the nervous system, causing heart block. The<br />

berries are the least poisonous part of the plant. 1<br />

mouthful is enough to kill a horse or cow in 1d6<br />

minutes. As little as 0.1 – 0.6% (roll 1d6) of the<br />

fresh plant per body weight is lethal.<br />

818

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