Jourrael

 is a nightmarish specter, an ancient assassin of Lolth, the Spider Queen. As an NPC, is played by Matthew Mercer.

Appearance
Jourrael has the appearance of a drow woman with reddish hair pulled back a little bit by a black bandana, swathed in a cloak and leathers. She has a semi-spectral form.

Background
Referred to as the Caedogeist, Jourrael was a chosen assassin of Lolth, the Spider Queen, exalted through an arrangement with Asmodeus during a brief era of unified interests. Jourrael was a nightmarish specter who walked through walls and mountains like water. Known colloquially as the Inevitable End, Jourrael could not be completely destroyed unless the contract of the agreement between Lolth and Asmodeus was destroyed. In the bloodshed at the end of The Calamity, this attempt failed, so the body of Jourrael was sundered and sealed apart in secret. The heart was buried within the Lotusden Greenwood in the Wraithroot tree, and the skull entrusted to the elves in the Veluthil. The skull was recovered from the ruins of Molaesmyr and sold to the Stassman family of Kamordah.

Obann and his party obtain the skull of in Kamordah.

Obann managed to recover the heart from the Wraithroot tree, while he and his party are under attack by the Mighty Nein.

The party is at the Invulnerable Vagrant purchasing equipment and supplies, when suddenly, Caduceus feels a searing pain in his back as he is attacked and seriously wounded by a red-haired female drow specter that immediately shifts back into the ground like a ghost.

Obann
Obann recovered her remains and revived her, taking magical control over her in the process. She did his bidding while under his influence.

Drow Abilities

 * Fey Ancestry
 * Sunlight Sensitivity
 * Innate Spellcasting
 * Mirror Image
 * Faerie Fire

Specter Abilities

 * Incorporeal Movement
 * Immunity to Grappling

Class Features

 * Sneak Attack

Feats

 * Parry (reaction, adds 5 to AC)

Notable Items

 * Two poisoned daggers

Trivia

 * The title Caedogeist likely comes from a combination of Latin and German, which would literally translate to "the spirit of kill", with 'caedo' meaning to slaughter, kill, or fell, and 'geist' meaning ghost or spirit (as in zeitgeist, the spirit of the time)