Plenty of Plots to Go Around

skullscotOur battle had been a desperate one, although we had won in the end. By the valor of Skalrag (how often does one say that?), most of the prospectors had been rescued. However, as we sat a few minutes to gain our breath, my head hurt something terrible—and not just from the heavy axe blow it had taken from one of the orcs now dead on the temple floor. It hurt because this, like every other victory we had won since the Omen of the Goats, only made the whole evil-plot-threatening-to-destroy-all-good-things seem that much more complicated. It all felt rather like trying to unravel a basket of Kalonian water-eels.

Adding to both our information and the complexity of it all were a series of communications that we found on the bodies of our foes. The first was a letter from Nalric to Svernizug, the latter being the treacherous Dark One that we had first encountered in Treepo’s shop in Phirul and which I had now just slain. The second was a message from Grimbol Dune to Torg, the leader of the orcs we had just defeated. The third was from Beauchelain to Zaelis, Skalrag’s nemesis, the shadar-kai witch, together with a letter from Nalric to Zaelis.

In addition to these, we also had the pages from Treepo’s letter and diary, as well as our letter of instructions from Chancellor Invictad, and the weapon’s order placed at the goblin foundary at Bortho.

Aunt Petunia always used to say, “you’ll never keep yer ferrets tidy if you don’t write them down,” so I started a list of everyone we had met these recent weeks, and how they all seemed to tie into this dark plot

Eyeing the Undercroft

It has been one scary place after another since I left Peithras: demon-worshipping Sultorean nobles, angry albino sailors, legions of zombified undead, invading orcs, and even a hungry dragon. As we started to descend the ancient spiral staircase that led downwards into the evil gloom of the Undercroft of Vecna, however, there was little doubt that this was the worst of all. I could almost hear old Uncle Wilburforce admonishing me: “Arr, what ye be doing, yer daft halfling? Ye could be roasting yer toes in front of a warm fire with a pint of Horwhistle’s Olde Best Barley Stout at the Ginger Penguin, instead of creeping toward yer doom in the cellar of a crazed evil god with fewer scruples than eyeballs!”  

Viggo must have noticed my fear, for at that moment he slapped me on the back and grinned. “Fear not, little Arnold! The Raven Queen is with us, even here. And not worry about death, for I am sure Skalrag will meet us there!” The mage winced at the reference, and cast his usual cantrip to light our way. It seemed to function much less well than usual, as did my ever-burning torch. The blackness of the Undercroft mocked our efforts.

Despite Viggo’s efforts to keep our spirits up—truly, he is a ranger with no fears (unless that transvestite dwarven hedgehog-juggler in Peyon is counted)—we were a somber and quiet group as we travelled through the dark passages of the Undercroft. I wished Kiira was here, for we could do with her magicks alongside Skalrag’s in this dark place. The eladrin had stayed behind at Binwin’s cabin to do some research (she was none to clear about what), and had promised to catch up with us later. Little had she known, or had any of us known, where we would now be.

After a while, the passage entered into a chamber of sorts. Ahead of us a stone statue of a dark figure stood, holding a silver sword. To our left and right were smaller statues. We stepped in cautiously—it seemed an ideal spot for an ambush.

spikedchainIndeed it was. Without warning, two figures emerged from the shadows, and attacked. Both were carrying long spiked chains, which they wielded with deadly skill, injuring or knocking prone several of our party.

As if this wasn’t enough, we heard—if heard is the right word—a dark moaning, which rose to a crescendo of anguished shrieks that ripped at our very souls. A hideous incoporeal wraith passed through the largest statue, and also advanced on us.

Viggo shook his head, and first muttering to his grandmama, then uttering words that unleashed the bound-magicks of his weapon. The wraith was thrown backwards and restrained for a time in sinews of magical energy. Skalrag cast a spell—which, oddly, caused the floor to glow a little (he later claimed he knew this all along, but at the time seemed as surprised as anyone). Thor charged at the first of the twirling enemies, and Dirock grabbed at his holy symbol.

For my own part, I drew my dagger, and stabbed at the chain-dancer with little effect. I also backed away slowly from the wraith, having no desire to once more hear its haunted screaming within my skull. Viggo laughed—I swear, he liked this place—and severely injured one of the dancers, which Thor promptly decapitated with a heavy blow from his axe.

The ranger shouted to the other chain warrior, “Szervusz? You with whirly thing? Bozmeg kecske! You see what a sword of the Raven Queen do to  your friend?”

Thor interjected. “Aye lad, ye grazed him an’ left the dwarf to slay him…”

At this point, a new foe entered the fray—one of those accursed dark ones that we had first encountered in Meepo’s dye and alchemy shop in Phirul. He stabbed Viggo in the side with his dagger, then vanished.

wraith

The wraith, now free of his arcane restraints, once more floated towards us…

“NO! By the might of KORD, I command you BACK, I say BACK foul creature of death!” Dirock’s voice boomed and echoed against the stone walls of the chamber as a searing flash of light burst from the small silver hammer-symbol in his hand. The wraith was thrown back into the shadows.

I stepped into the shadows myself—shadows far across the room from the wraith, I hasten to add—and hid, readying my sling. As I did so, there was a POP, and everything went black.

Thor’s voice called out: “Ah cannae cut th’ heids aff ay these evil folks if Ah cannae see them! Skalrag, whit is gonnae oan?”

“Its not me!” I heard the mage reply. 

POP! The dim light returned, and there in the room stood the dark one, ready to plunge his blade into Viggo’s underparts. He didn’t get the chance. I let my sling-stone fly, and it hit the creature square in the middle of the head. It fell dead at the ranger’s feet. The other chain warrior was soon dead too, leaving us only with the wraith to deal with. Skalrag and Dirock made short work of it.

We examined the sword. It appeared to be more ornamental than practical, but it did appear to be made of solid silver. I put it in my bag of holding for possible resale. How much would a sword of the one-eyed one fetch in the markets, I wondered?

Beyond this passage there lay another, the walls carved with strange patterns, scripts, and figures. At one point, however, a carving projected further from the wall than most—a small semi-statue of a figure stood near the floor, its hands held upwards as if to hold some spherical object…

I guessed quickly what the object might be–the platinum eye I had taken from the large orog leader in the Monastery of the Sundered Chain. I had dropped it into Dirock’s pocket, partly as practice, partly as joke, and partly for safekeeping. He hadn’t mentioned it, though.. had he perhaps not found it among the many religious tracts and symbols that he kept on his person?

I brushed past our cleric, and—with a quick covert filch—retrieved it. It fitted perfectly in the statue’s hands, causing a secret door to grind slowly open. “This way, I think…”

The secret passage continued for some forty or so paces before opening up into a chamber with a vaulted opening to our left. The walls here were carved with a scene of stick-men with spears, and some sort of bizarre-looking dragon. A hunting scene, perhaps? But why here, in the Undercroft? We searched, but found no more secret doors. We thus continued on through the opening, and to another passage beyond. It went a further fifty or so paces, and turned to the right—where a large pit blocked our way.

I volunteered to climb down, and have a look. I could find nothing of interest (although Viggo would later find panels in the stone that I had missed), and so I climbed up the other side. My companions all jumped across safely.

We continued on some more. We passed an area of dart-traps, but none of us were injured. Soon, we saw a light up ahead—a stone pedestal stood in a tall circular cavern. A single beam of arcane light shining down upon it from above.

ram0046As if that wasn’t marvel enough, there was the even greater marvel of what stood on the pedestal. An ivory goat! As Aunt Petunia used to say, you could have knocked me down with a wet ferret … what was it doing here?

Skalrag walked around the dais, and pronounced that the goat seemed to be magical. Viggo and I searched for traps, but could find none—although we both presumed that this was because we could not find them, not because they were not here. After all, who leaves a magical goat on a pedestal in their undercroft unguarded?

Nevertheless, it was all too much to pass up. As all of us (except Viggo) stepped back, Skalrag used his arcane mage hand to lift the statuette from its location. No sooner than he did so than things began to happen.

RUMBLE! First, the room began to shake, and large blocks started falling from the ceiling. 

Next, Viggo grabbed the goat as it floated past him, and thrust it under his cloak.

GRRRRCLICKCLICLCLICKCLICK… as he did so, I heard a grating sound further back along the passage—an iron portcullis was descending to cut off our escape! Faster than you could say “Old Derrick Darrowtoes grows very large Talonian rutabagas in the sunny patch of upper meadow near Farmer Brownlee’s prize cow Bessie and her four spotted calves, one of which he’s named Mildred after his spinster aunt for reasons he won’t divulge, sober or otherwise,” I raced down the corridor, leapt over the pit, and slid toward the grate, desperately hammering an iron spike into the wall in an effort to block its passage. Moments later Thor and Dirock joined me, doing the same (and with rather more success).

As the passage behind us continued to crumble, Viggo ran past clutching the goat. Skalrag followed, turning into the next passage for safety. This wasn’t such a good move, as it turned out.

CRASH! A large stone sphere came crashing through the wall, smashing heavily into Skalrag before continuing down the passage. We chased after it, planning to step out of the way at the next turn in the corridor.

easleyskeletonwarriorTHWORPLING! There was a sound of an enchantment being tripped, and suddenly the chamber that had once featured engraved stick-men and a dragon on its walls suddenly sported a bare section of wall, a dragon, and a collection of skeletal warriors. They clattered towards us.

I stepped aside, waiting for them to come closer. Closer they came too, so close in fact that the dragon knocked Skalrag unconscious with a blast of its fearsome breath weapon. He fell, groaning and bleeding in his traditional way. As Viggo and Dirock bickered over who would save him this time, Thor kept the dragon busy with his axe, cutting into it with powerful blows. I decided to help—stepping out from my hiding place to throw a handful of spinnyblades at our enemies, blinding the dragon and cutting down several of the skeletons. I then used a move that I had first practiced on the gray dragon at Chenth: slipping under it, I stabbed it hard, then kicked it harder, pushing it several feet back. One more cut of my dagger and it was dead. Or more dead, perhaps—it seemed almost stitched together out of dragon parts, an undead zombie draconid of sorts.

Skalrag regained consciousness, muttering something about Death. By now we had grown accustomed to it.

Injured, tired and hungry as we were, we decided to rest for a bit. This seemed as good a place as any to do so—there was but the one secret entrance, which had closed behind us when we had removed the eye-orb from the statue. For good measure we pushed the stone sphere to block the passage, and took turns on guard duty as the others slept. Our dream were haunted by this place, but we nonetheless all felt better for having rested.

After gnawing on some dry biscuits, we decided to reenter the main passage through the secret door, and continue further along it. Eventually it ended in a junction. The passage to right led to a set of stairs spiralling deeper into the Undercroft. The passage to the left led into a large dark chamber. Before us, set into the wall of the junction, was an imposing stone door. It was locked. There were, however, clues as to how it might open: a depression large enough to hold a small orb, and an inset in the wall where one might place something… like a hand.

Dirock looked at it, and immediately recognized the significance. “The lock here bears the iconography of Vecna… the depression for an eye, and a place to put a hand, symbolically representing the very disfigurement of the Whispered One.” We tried the platinum eye we had found, and a skeletal hand, but to no avail. If there were magical keys to be had, they weren’t ones that we yet possessed.

At this point, Skalrag spoke up. “I have an idea.. let us consult the Blue Hand of Wisdom!”

The suggestion brought back memories—I had remembered the Blue Hand of Wisdom playing their ever-popular music at the Harvest Festival, and it was common indeed for an inebriated patron or three at the Ginger Penguin to try to sing their classic “Get Yer Hands Out Me Pockets, I’m Not Dead Yet,” usually loudly, and rather off-key. I was unclear, however, how a halfling fiddle trio could help us out here, or indeed how they could even be lured to perform in the undercroft of a malevolent, twisted god.

“No, no,” Skalrag said as I asked him about his plan. “Not that Blue Hand of Wisdom—they’re good, by the way.. I meant the.. what’s it called? The… Hand of Fate. Yes, that’s it. Hand of Fate.” 

The mage opened his ritual book, and murmured an incantation. As if by magic—well, precisely by magic—a large hand appeared, floating in midair before us. It was blue too, which added to my confusion, and possibly his.

“Are you the the Hand of Fate?” asked Skalrag. The hand responded with a thumbs-up, to which the mage winced in reply. He had just used up one of his three questions.

“Which path would most benefit us?” The hand seemed uncertain—clearly, each of the paths had some gain. Perhaps all three of them were even necessary. Skalrag asked something else—I don’t remember what—and then released the Hand. It responded with a V-sign, and then vanished.

We all agreed that it made sense to go to the left and explore the large chamber before descending into the Undercroft further, and so in that direction we headed. Entering the room we found three large capstans set into the floor, each marked from zero to nine in what looked like a giant combination lock. An engraving on the wall provided what seemed to be a clue:

Witness the nascent warlord, once prisoner

He who would unite the tribes around his banner

He who would betray his people in our name

He has come full circle, as must those

Who would witness his reward

What did it mean though? Perhaps we should rotate each of them a full circle to unlock whatever it was they unlocked?

“No,” said Viggo. “Viggo think we must go round like the days and seasons, and the sun in sky, which is 365, except not is 365 of us, is five, so…” He started to do some math on his fingers.

In the meantime we tried my solution. It was the wrong one, and Viggo, Skalrag, and I each received a painful bolt of necrotic energy in punishment. A short while later, Viggo finished his math.

“360!” While his logic was unclear, it did have the advantage of being the number of degrees in a full circle. Moreover, I was quite sure that my capstan, the third of the three, had let out a louder “click” when I passed the number zero, which also buttressed the ranger’s theory. We tried it.

“CLICK… CLUNK…… WHIRRRR.” Rather than more necrotic pain, this time we were greeted with the sight of a secret door opening at the far end of the chamber. We walked over to investigate further.

The door led into a labyrinth of small passages, each more roughly hewn than those we had seen earlier. Moreover, the very walls here seemed to be embedded with bones and skulls, in a sort of macabre stucco. I shuddered—it wasn’t a home decorating technique that I was likely to ever use in my own barge or burrow.

We explored the tunnels for several minutes, and found them finally to converge on a small central cavern. There stood a motionless skeletal warrior, with four arms and a scimitar in each of its four hands.

“Well, as they say–four-armed is forewarned…” My companions groaned.

“Aam sure ‘at if we tooch heem, he’ll jist wake up an’ lat at us.” said Thor. “Ah aam sooo siick an tayerd ay bein’ attacked! Ah say we jist lay intae th’ creature an’ chop it up intae wee shards ay bain afair it can dae much damage.” It was a brutally simple plan. And so that is what we did: we ringed the skeletal creature, and at Thor’s signal unleashed our attacks. As soon as we did so it began to stir, and then lashed out furiously with its blades. 

skullwarriorThe fight went well enough from my vantage point skulking around a corner and flinging stones at the thing. I became aware, however, of a complication: several skeletons had emerged from the very walls of the tunnels, and were converging on our location. I stabbed at one with Petunia, missing, and then called out for assistance.

Thor stepped back to assist me, and between us we destroyed two of the undead nearest me. In the main chamber, Viggo and the others finished off the four-armed warrior. We all then went skeleton-hunting.

I couldn’t see so well in the dark, but soon heard Thor cursing as he found himself facing another. Unable to squeeze past him to assist in the narrow chamber, I instead ran up, jumped on his shoulders, and tried to summersault over the skeleton’s head.

It was a bad jump, and the creature swung at me with its rusty sword as I leapt past. In doing so, however, he left himself open to the dwarf’s counter-stroke. Thor cleaved it in two. I picked myself up from the ground, and grinned.

“Hawhaw, ‘at was fin, halflin’! Let’s gang fin’ anither!”

It didn’t take us long. Once more as Thor engaged it, I leapt onto his shoulders, and attempted a summersault. It wasn’t much better, and I fell prone behind our foe. I stood up, blade in hand, when I heard Viggo behind me.

“Viggo want to try, like Arnold!” The ranger ran up behind me, and tried leaping on my shoulders. The effect as was might be expected: he knocked me to the ground, barely cleared the skeleton, and started falling toward Thor. The dwarf bashed him down a side passage with his shield, then together he and I finished off our skeletal opponent.

We returned to the small central cavern, where Dirock and Skalrag waited for us. They also had eliminated a skeleton or two, albeit in more traditional fashion.

TO BE CONTINUED

Into the Janech Vale

Returning to Rolus Keep, we soon met up with Thoradrin again. He had been busy in our absence, leading a  small band of trainee Defenders to the Xiber Pass where they helped to repel the orcish assaults there. It seems they had slain at least as many as had we during our time in the Nexus.

Although the elders of Rolus Keep had no wish to let their citizens know how close the orcs had come to a successful invasion, they certainly showed their gratitude for our successful mission in the form of an ample reward. We were undecided, however, as to whether we should share with them the real reason for our journey to the northern border: to find the group of miners that had been sent beyond the Slatespire Mountains by Chancellor Invictad to prospect Janech Vale. Finally, after some discussion, we decided to do so.

Elder Morgoff Stonefist was kind enough to see us almost immediately. He was surprised by our news, and surprised that we had chosen to share it with him despite the promises of secrecy we had made to the Chancellor. He was able to reassure us that the prospecting, although secret, was not anything that particularly troubled the dwarven leaders. He also agreed (at my suggestion) to facilitate our surreptitious crossing of the border by briefly reducing the number of military patrols in the area.

Before leaving, we stocked up on the provisions that would be necessary for our long and difficult journey: food, warm clothes, and a hunter’s flint. While Viggo doubted we needed the latter implement, I had no desire to attract unnecessary attention to our campsites and every wish to sleep each night before a warm and toasty magical fire. Unfortunately, it seemed as if we would have to undertake our quest without the aid of either Kiira or Skalrag. Both, apparently, had urgent business with the Mages’ Guild.

As Viggo, Thor, Dirock, and I set off the next day, the weather seemed fine. We had been warned, however, that it would grow far more unpredictable as we climbed deeper into the mountains. Sure enough, after skirting the base of the peaks for several days amid pleasant temperatures, we soon found ourselves beset by chill winds and overcast skies as we began to pick our way through the valleys, passes, cracks, and crevices of the mountains.

d_d4th__wererat_by_udoncrewIt was five days after our departure from Rolus Keep that we had our first hostile encounter: a group of three rat-men, each mounted on a huge wolf, circled us a few times then galloped in to attack. They were, I feared, were-rats—the very same creatures that had once infected Edgar Stoat and his party in Edgar Stoat and the Lycanthropic Vermin of the Great Misty Mountains.

Given our lack of either a nubile Hedazistanian dancing-healer or the requisite handful of rare Fallowroot spores, I hoped that we too would not meet a similar fate.

As Viggo readied his bow, I prepared a spinnyblade until the first rider approached. As it came within range, I threw it low and hard, cutting the wolf on a leg-tendon and causing it to stumble and throw its rider. Viggo loosed his first arrow into the lycanthrope, hitting it. We both then backed up a little.

direwolfMeanwhile, the other two attackers were closing rapidly. With a shout, Thor charged one, laying hard with his axe into one of the wolves while it snapped and growled, and its rider thrust at him with his short, sharp sword. The third wolf and rider charged into our flank. Soon they were all upon us.

I glanced over to see Viggo knocked over by the wolf I had wounded, while the rat it had been carrying attacked him too. He waved off my assistance, however, and with a sword in each hand, slew first dire-wolf then its former rider. With my own blade, I dashed over to assist Thor, flanking the wolf before him, and then slipping under it to strike a deadly blow. Thor followed up, swinging his axe to slay a wererat then a second. Finally, Dirock mustered the power of Kord to bring our final opponent down.

All three lycanthropes were dead, with not one of us having been bitten and possibly infected. Moreover, we now had three magnificent dire wolf pelts! Viggo eagerly started to skin our prizes, and would later spend the evening before our magical campfire, scrapping and curing them.

That night Viggo tossed and turned, mumbling in his sleep. It was odd for him—he’s usually such a sound sleeper. When he woke he recounted an odd dream, in which his mother (or grandmother or great-aunt—I can’t quite remember) told him to seek a missing crown. He believed it to be a message on behalf the Raven Queen herself.

valeofeamonsmallAfter a hearty breakfast of dried biscuits, we packed up camp and headed north, towards the dig-site marked “Chenth” on the map that the Chancellor had given us. It was a much clearer day than most, and around noon we came upon a small box-canyon with a small river running through it and a waterfall at the far end. There was also something else in the valley too: kobolds. Viggo spotted several on guard near the waterfall, and some tunnels in the canyon there that likely marked their lair.

Rather than charging in, we decided to reprise our successful strategy from our very first encounter with the orcs: Thor would stumble towards them, as if lost and wounded. When they moved to attack him, we would spring our trap!

It didn’t quite work out that way. When the kobolds spotted the dwarf, they did not treat him as a hated foe, but rather waved and questioned him in their odd draconic language. When the tongue-tied dwarf failed to respond clearly, they summoned an older kobold female from the caverns, who proceeded to ask Thor his business in the common tongue. This, of course, flummoxed the poor warrior even more.

It was painful to watch. Our Dwarven Defender was known for his cleaving blows, not his conversational skills. I stepped forward to parley, as did Dirock , while Viggo remained concealed and covered us with his bow.

As it turned out, we had an odd tie with the elderly kobold and her kin, for she was none other than the mother of Treepo the Alchemist, whose shop (and clever traps) we had encountered in zombie-infested Phirul. While not being entirely honest about how we knew of her son—neither the word “looted his stocks” nor “killed his annoying imp” passed my lips—we were able to turn the connection into an invitation to meet their chief, one Kurnax Gribold. We signaled Viggo to join us. Dirock quickly cast a ritual that enabled him to comprehend languages (an ability he did not inform the kobolds of, however), and then we all entered the small and twisting tunnels of their home.

Kurnax greeted us with surprising warmth, and for a reason: it seemed he was not so much the chief as the ex-chief of this tribe. Some months earlier a dragon had arrived in the valley, and appointed itself their “Queen.” He was clearly resentful, and hoped that the arrival of a brave and stalwart adventurers such as ourselves might provide him with an opportunity to have the interloper killed and his own position restored. He also told us that at least some of the mining party had been this way a few weeks back, and some had been taken to see the queen—possibly, we feared, as snacks.

We had only begun to discuss all this when there was a commotion outside, and a group of heavily-armoured kobolds burst in. They had, they proclaimed, orders to take us immediately to see the Queen’s assistant, Wursop.

They escorted us warily into another chamber, where a self-important kobold in flowing robes sat behind a desk that seemed several sizes too large for him. He demanded to know why we were there, and what we wanted.

“We’re here about the prophecy,” I replied. “You’ll remember how, in the 12th Verse of the Book of Gar-Inth it is foretold that One day, the four shall come/to see the Queen at once/and to see her they must at once/for if they do riches will abound/or otherwise all will perish.” I smiled my most believable smile, and tried to look slightly prophetic.

“What is thizzz? The Book of Gar-Inth, you sayzzzz?? Wursop looked suspicious, but clearly didn’t want to look ill-informed.

“Ah yes—I can see you’re a kobold of great education to know of the Book and its mysteries. May we see her then?”

“Yezz… but the weaponzzzz you must give meee.” the kobold hissed back.

“But what of the 13th verse?” I asked in mock incredulity. “You know, The weapons the heroes must bear/to honour the Queen/and respect her fair…”

Sadly, he wasn’t having it. He signaled to one of the guards to seize our arms. Before he could do so, I ducked, drew Petrunia, and severed the guard’s arm instead. I then positioned myself near one exit, to stop any from leaving the chamber and raising the alarm. Thor did so at the other end of the room, while Viggo leapt across the desk to slash at Wursop with his blades.

Kobolds are shifty things at the best of times, and these were all better fighters than most I’ve heard of  Wursop took several blows from Viggo, an invocation from Dirock, and a spinnyblade of my own before falling dead in a bloody pile. The guards took a little longer, but were soon vanquished too. There seemed to be no general alarm raised, so we did our best to barricade the passage from which we had entered, and then continued deeper into the lair.

I grinned at my companions. “You can’t say I didn’t warn them… or otherwise all will perish indeed!”

We didn’t have to travel far before we entered into a large cavern, open to the sky above, with what seemed to be terraces and primative ornamental gardens of a sort. While my companions guarded our rear and Viggo kept watch to the skies above, I slipped in and began to scout out the place.

I had just spotted what seemed to be a cart and a pile of suplies on an upper ledge when I glanced back just in time to see Thor and Dirock disappear out of sight. Viggo soon vanished too. Judging from their movements, something had come down the corridor to attack them from behind…

dragon-1Abandoning all caution, I raced back to help my friends. As I did so, I failed to notice the huge grey dragon descend from the sky above. It breathed upon me with a sticky acid that bound me in place even as it ate away at my body, then swiped me hard with its sharp claws. Hard grey spines impaled my body.

Viggo, who had turned back to help the others deal with a lone Kobold guard, was the first to hear my cry for help. He rushed back into the cavern, drawing his bow and firing an arrow towards the beast. Thor and Dirock, having slain the single kobold, also rushed back.

As for me, I had never been so near death. Unable to run and hide due to the sticky glob of acid about my legs, I instead drew Petunia and stabbed at the beast, catching it in the wing with a deep gash. While she might eat me, at least she wouldn’t be flying very far very soon.

The dragon roared in anger and  clawed at me again, injuring me grievously. I fumbled at my belt, and drew a healing potion. Moments later, I felt another healing power course through my battered body as Dirock directed Kord’s energies towards me. As he ran closer, Viggo threw me another potion, which I quaffed too in a desperate effort to stay alive.

Thor charged into the fray, muttering a stream of angry but often unintelligible oaths in his thick dwarven brogue as he tried his best to draw the monster’s attentions away from me. ”Lae heem aloyn, ye huir. Pick oan someain yer ain size! What’s th’ matter, afreaid ay a Dwarven Defender an’ his axe? Wa, some thes way an’ mah Moradin’s mailed fist Ah’ll chop ye in wee pieces an’ wear yer teeth around me neck!”

dragoneyeThe Queen turned and bit at the dwarf, missing him. It then limped higher up the terraces,  as Viggo clambered up in pursuit—only to glide back down, attacking Dirock and Thor in turn with its foul breath and terrible spiked claws and tail. Viggo clambered down once more, only to be pinned in position by another one of the Queen’s spikey attacks. His frustration was evident, all the more so because he had dropped his bow further back to draw his swords instead. He could do little else but utter a stream of Kuzian curses.

Thor continued to hack at the dragon with his axe, as Dirock used his powers both healing and offensive.

By this time I had finally worked myself free. I ran past the dragon, stabbing it once and kicking it in the tail back towards Thor with surprising efficiency for such a small halfling boot. I then sought a more sheltered position from which I could launch my spinnyblade at the fearsome creature with maximum effect. As one such throw cut it deeply, it turned in my direction and charged. Once more I grasped Petunia in hand, dodged its snapping jaws, and then lunged in a last, desperate effort….

The blade struck true, cutting the beast’s neck deep and severing an artery. It howled in pain, writhing too and fro and it sprayed a mighty red fountain of its lifeblood in the air and around the dirt floor of the cavern. Finally it slumped down, unmoving.

We looked at each other, battered and bloody, and shared a common thought. The dragon was dead. We were very lucky it had not been the Company of the Ivory Goat instead.

Dye-ing to meet Treepo

8th of Sage’s Vigil, Year of the Horde 

For all the dark mystery that had befallen Phirul, I slept surprisingly soundly on the rough stone floor of Andy’s Armoury. Much of the credit for this, of course, is due to the Everfluffy Bedroll Company, renowned throughout my native Peithris for its fine workmanship and use of only the finest elven fluffthistle (imported from nearby Tre’burale). As they say, “If you can’t sleep on an Everfluffy, you had best become a dwarf!”

We rose early and, after a rather tedious meal of dried rations, set out once again in the direction of the Abbey. This time nothing would divert us from our mission!

Except, that is, a glowing hatch.

It  was Kiira who noticed it first, halting the party to point up at the ceiling. “What’s the red glow there?” she asked.

Viggo looked puzzled—he couldn’t see anything. Nor could I. However, Noctuz could sense it too. “Yes, Kiira, well spotted.. its some sort of illusion. Let’s see what is behind it.” With a wave of his hand, he dispelled the arcane concealment. An inscription of sorts appeared in the steel plate:

TO VISIT THE WONDROUS TREEPO
YOU MUST MERELY SET THINGS RIGHT
AN ERROR WILL BRING A SINISTER PLIGH
T 

Beneath the inscription there were a series of four sliding tiles, each bearing a symbol: grass, sun, a kobold, and a cow. 

I thought a moment. “The sun nourishes the grass, which nourishes the cow, which nourishes the kobold…” Viggo nodded in agreement, but I was far from certain. “Perhaps, Kiira, you might use a mage hand to slide the tiles, while we all stand well back?” I asked.

“Why yes of course, Arnold,” she smiled. She clearly had more confidence in my puzzle-solving skills than I did. A misplaced confidence too, as it turned out too. No sooner had she moved the last tile in place, when a loud click was hear, the panel swung open, and a hideous blob of somethingness fell from the ceiling to engulf her. We had it wrong.

“By Moradin’s long grey beard, its a gelatenous cube!” Thor shouted. “And its eatin’ poor Kiira.. we’ve got tae get her out, lads, or the poor lass will be little more than a pool ay gooey elf-melt!” Viggo had already drawn his bow, and quickly loosed a couple of arrows into the quivering blob. It shuddered from the wounds, to our relief. At least it could be injured with normal weapons. We all attacked it immediately, hoping to save our friend before it was too late. “We’re coming, Kiira.. you just hang on in there lassee!” Thor shouted in grim encouragement to her, as he swung his hammer into the creature’s side.

“By the xlasinthar flaalilnyrin great llanythlis green tree of life, DAMN IT!” I was surprised to hear Kiira’s voice coming from somewhere well beyond the cube, clearly in a much worse mood than she had been before its attack. “I’m kidnapped, locked in a cage by some twisted tiefling, the apocalypse has ravaged Phirul, I’ve had my life force sucked out by dark incantations, almost died, been ambushed, and now that stupid goddamn blob has ruined my only change of clothes? Well, by the happy fairy lights of Llalnthilal, lanalthx that!” With this final expletive, she joined the fray, launching her powerful magicks against the creature.

I had no idea the fey cursed so well, to be honest. It’s a good thing they can teleport to safety, though.

With its intended eladrin meal having safely vanished, the hungry cube turned on Thor. With a loud “GLOOP,” it lurched forward, suddenly engulfing the dwarf. I threw spinnyblades towards it, backing up all the while in an effort to avoid a similar fate. “GlooooooOOP!” Another lurch, and Vigoo too was now inside its semi-transparent body. 

Happily, the creture was little match for the arcane magicks of Kiira and Noctuz, not to mention the blows being struck from within it by its rather undigestible prey. With a final shudder, it melted, spraying us with its messy mass.

“Oooh, you do look funny, what with goo in your hair, m’dear!” I grinned at Kiira, as I wiped jelly from my face. One eladrin glare was enough to tell me that this was a topic I had best leave alone, for now at least.

With the trap sprung, we could see above us a small shaft leading into a room of sort. Viggo and I climbed up, as Kiira blinked to join us. It seemed to be a small and dusty storeroom, with a single door set into one wall. Kiira noticed a glass sphere by the door, and picked it up with a smile of recognition. “Its a fey lightball, isn’t it?” I asked, picking another up and giving it a shake. To my satisfaction, it started to glow. “I remember that Uncle Wilburforce had a couple of these.. he traded them for that rusty old Dwarven brew-maker of his, back that year that ol’ Bessy the barge-pony had her twin foals… I remember him taking it down the Draper’s Duck one evening…”

I dwarven voice interrupted. “Shall we try tae open the door? Or just shake the pretty little bauble things?” Thor too was in a bit of a mood since his devouring, and eager to press on. He stepped forward and tried the door. It swung openly easily, into another, larger chamber. We stepped inside.

This room was larger than the other, with a small raised gallery at one end. The floor, curiously, was covered with scorch marks and a puddles of a strange blue liquid.

“Who is this Treepo, Abzurian?” asked Dirock, as he surveyed our peculiar surroundings. “Mmmmmm…” replied the dragonkin, as he tapped his fingers. “Treepo is a dyer… mmmmmmm  yes, a dyer…”

That didn’t really explain the room, however—much less the arcane protections and traps we had encountered on our way in. Viggo and I strode across the room to the gallery, and climbed up. There was another door set in this wall. We gestured at the others to join us.

Unfortunately, Dirock had only taken a few steps in our direction when we all heard an ominous “click” from the floor where he had trod. Almost instantly the door we had entered through slammed shut, and spikes thrust up from the floor–almost impaling the cleric. Even more alarmingly, the various puddles in the room began to assemble into blue rivlets, then a stream, flowing into an ever-enlarging mass. To our horror, a huge blue creature rose up in the centre of the room, swaying menacingly. Then, with no warning, it sent bursts of blue liquid from its huge body, striking most of us with a biting, acidic sting.

Viggo and I started firing into the creature. Kiira blinked to join us on the gallery, and Noctuz also climbed up. On the floor of the main chamber, Thor and Dirock confronted it more directly, as The Abzurian lay huddled in the corner, burnt from the acid blast. The large creature swung blue appendages at the dwarf and cleric, battering them severely before letting forth with another blast of acid. I leapt down to use my dagger, hoping thereby to inflict more damage on the foul foe. Finally it shuddered, and flew apart with a splash, reforming the puddles we had first seen on the floor.

The room was clearly a trap, as had been the hatch we had first entered. Clearly too, Treepo was much more than an ordinary dye-maker.

Viggo jumped back down to the main room, and carefully picked his way across the floor until he reached the door into the cellar that had slammed shut earlier. He was unable to budge it. Our only way appeared to be to move forward. But was this other door trapped too?

The ranger searched the door frame, and the wall beside it. Sure enough, he soon spied a hidden panel in the wall. I opened it and found a single plain lever. Would pulling it set off the trap, or facilitate our progress? I pulled it…

There was a click, and a whir. The cellar door sprung open. The spikes rose up a little from the floor, and stopped. It appeared that the lever deactivated everything.

With this, we opened the door in the gallery, and peered into what seemed to be a rough-hewn hallway, its walls marked almost everywhere with chalk scribbles. Peering more closely, they appeared to be formula of some sort, rather than incantations. A deranged alchemist, perhaps? That would explain the acid-creature.

One end of the hallway led back to the cellar through we had first entered, obviously via a secret door that we had not detected when we had been there earlier. The other end led into a chamber that seemed to confirm my hunch as to what Treepo did when he wasn’t dyeing things. The floor was strewn with sheets of papers, with still more scrawls. The walls were covered with shelves, and the shelves laden in turn with bottles, boxes and bags of strange ingredients, together with tongs, beakers, mortars and pestles, and an odd clay pot.

A single curtain was drawn against the north end of the room. I peered cautiously behind it. The room continued, but this part was far more presentable, with a large desk, pens and ink, and several bound books. It looked like an office, with a door at the far end.

Kiira caught my eye with a gesture, as she pointed out a blue flask on one of the shelves—a healing potion. While I had no wish to antagonize the mysterious Treepo by ransacking his possessions, it did fair compensation for the assaults we had endured from his traps. I nodded at her to take it—the clever fey thought like a halfling.

I knocked carefully at the next door, and opened it slowly. “Hello? Anyone here?” I called out cautiously.

To our surprise, a small creature yipped in alarm, and flittered off down the corridor with a high-pitched yelp of “zombiezombiezombiezombie…”

“What was THAT?” I asked, turning to my companions. “It looked like some sort of flying monkey vole…” I stopped, realizing I had never seen a flying monkey vole, and really had little grounds on which to draw such a judgement.

“Perhaps a homunculus? An imp? A familiar?” Noctuz suggested, equally unsure himself.

There was only one way to find out. We stepped into the hallway, and walked after it, all the time calling out greetings in what we hoped was a reassuring and friendly tone. No response. Four of us continued on, while Kiira, Noctuz, and the Abzurian stayed behind to peruse the office for clues as to identity and fate of the mysterious Treepo.

Soon we entered a large room. To the sides were variious vats and tubes filled with mysterious bubbling liquids. At the far end, three large metal doors could be seen. On the ceiling, a mysterious metal contraption was attached, looking rather ominously like a large metal spider. From the far end of the room, the creature’s odd voice could be heard again from behind a crate. “No, zombies, go away, zombies.”

I flattened myself against the wall near the entrance, looking warily at the device above us. This place had “trap” written all over it. Thor and Dirock, however, resolutely strode forward. “Damnit it ya wee little man, I’m nae a zombie..” the dwarf muttered, as he searched for the owner of the voice.

“Teehehehehe.. got you, zombiezombiezombies!” the voice laughed triumphantly, as a metal barrier slammed shut behind us. Sure enough, it was a trap. The three iron doors in the room opened, and three hideous beasts emerged to attack us: a dark, jumpy spider; a hideous beetle, and a horrific scorpion with gnashing pinchers. Thor confronted them immediately, as Dirock readied himself to call down upon the various thunderous and smitey powers of Kord upon our foes once more. Viggo drew his swords, and leapt into the fray. I.. well, I hid and sniped.

Despite their onslaught, Thor had little trouble holding back the creatures. Dirock, however, soon found himself grabbed from above by the mysterious contraption, and injected with foul and noxious substances. I dashed to the location from whence the voice had come, and found—as I expected—a tube of sorts. If my theory was correct, Treepo or his homunculus were at the end of it, somewhere nearby, controlling the traps and the contraption above us. 

This theory too was soon confirmed, for no sooner had Dirock broken the grasp of the metal claw when a secret door flew open and the homunculus flew out to attack us. It was rapidly slain, as were the rest of the creatures in the room. I set a small fire, and sent smoke wafting down the tube. It emerged a minute later from a small closet behind the secret door. Examination of this revealed an array of levers to control the doors and devices in the room, as well as a second secret door leading back to the office. There Kiira and Noctuz stood reading and collecting various arcane materials from Treepo’s collection, strangely unmoved by the deadly struggle that had ensued.

With nothing else to explore on this level, and still no Treepo to be found, we mounted a spiral set of stone stairs to what we presumed was the ground floor of the establishment. We found ourselves within a room filled with shelves, and the shelves in turn filled with bottles of various kinds. A quick search revealed a few things of interest—including a bottle of Thrudcurrent Ink. Could this be the shop from which Edgar Stoat purchased his writing supplies? I was excited at the thought.

There were no windows in this chamber, only two small secret doors and a set of stairs continuing upwards. The doors, we surmised, led into the shop proper. I opened one carefully, having first oiled the hinges, for I had no desire to alert zombies to our presence.

Sure enough, it opened up into a larger room, with shattered windows, a broken door, and the stock of inks, dyes, and alchemical goods in some disarray. I crept about it quietly, to see what I could see.

What a saw was a little dark man, with a mischievous and far from pleasant-looking smile. Could he be Treepo? I whispered a greeting to him. He introduced himself with a name I could not quite catch, but which most certainly bore no resemblance to the missing owner of this shop. He seemed to be oddly unconcerned as to any zombies nearby, and indeed mocking my considerable caution. Instead, he seemed rather more interested in pilfering items from the store.

I gestured to him to join me, and returned to join my companions in the much safer location of the central chamber. At first I thought he had not followed me. A few minutes later, however, he emerged from a shadow through some arcane trickery. (He was, I would later learn, a Dark One—an inhabitant of the Shadowfell. The zombie armageddon had apparently enticed him and others of his kind to seek profit amid the chaos and despair that was now Phirul.)

We conversed a moment, neither side anxious to give much away in the way of information or tactical advantage. He did, however, suggest that the zombie apocalypse was somehow linked to one he termed the Dark Lord—Orcus, Demon Prince of the Undead Dirock surmised. Mainly, however, the sketchy little fellow mocked us, threw a few bottles at Viggo, but otherwise did nothing that would indicate deadly intent. Finally he left us alone, and departed.

With this, we continued up another flight of stairs, arriving in what was clearly Treepo’s living quarters. Judging from what we found there, Treepo was a kobold, had not been home recently, and he was none to fastidious in keeping his kitchen clean. His journal also provided further evidence that he had sold Thrudcurrent ink to a rather mysterious, and possibly halfling, buyer. Edgar Stoat might have stood in this very building! The thought was so thrilling that I could feel the hair on my toes stand on end.

In another time, when the city was not infested with tens of thousands of flesh-hungry zombie spawn of hell, I would have followed these clues in the hopes of meeting my boyhood hero. For now, however, we had more important things to do. We needed to rest, then continue on to the Abbey, in the hopes of finding there a safer refuge for the hungry survivors huddled on the roof of the Golden Gryphon. We collected what useful supplies we could from this place, and once more returned to the sewers below.