[D&D 5e 2024] Heroes of the Borderlands

Chapter 40

This time there was no hesitation, no poking about for clues. Leana led them directly to one of the caves situated high along the rim of the ravine, one that they’d bypassed earlier. From a distance it didn’t look like much, certainly nothing that screamed, “secret hold of an infernal cult,” but as they approached each of them could feel something, an inherent confidence that their long and difficult journey was coming to an end.

As they entered, those sentiments were only augmented. A waft of something foul issued from inside the cave, and the décor was equally grim, with red strata and bulging black veins running through the hewn rock. From deeper within the cave came a sinister red glow.

“Ugh, what a stench,” Ravani said.

“I expect that would be Oggdug’s brother,” Folgar observed.

“There’s something… wrong about this place,” Greghan said.

“I feel it too,” Leana said. “Be strong… this place will test us.”

They advanced into the cave. Past the entrance the interior was spacious, with a long hall fully twenty feet wide and twenty feet high extending ahead of them. To the right was a small alcove with a door, but their attention was drawn forward, where a huge looming shape awaited them, silhouetted by the glow of several red-flamed sconces affixed to the wall behind it. Even a casual look was enough to confirm that the ogre was dead; flies buzzed about its body, and its jaw hung slack over gray, unseeing eyes.

“That is… big,” Folgar said.

Ravani drew back his bow and launched an arrow, which pierced one of those eyes, the sharp steel head vanishing deep into its skull. The ogre zombie wavered, and for a moment the companions tensed, hoping against hope that the missile might have somehow penetrated its brain and put an end to it. But none of them were particularly surprised when the thing took a step forward toward them. It carried no weapons; it needed none, not with its size and bulk.

Ravani quickly fell back. “Kick its ass,” he said to Greghan, as he reached for another arrow.

Greghan had already drawn his sword, but he had learned Leana’s lessons well, and instead of charging to meet it he let it come to them. But it surprised him with its reach, and after just two halting steps it leaned forward and smashed one massive fist down into him.

The blow hit him like an avalanche, or what being hit by a battering ram might have felt like. He was spun fully around, and dropped to one knee. There was a pain crushing against one side of his head, and with an effort he managed to yank his helmet off. He could see that one entire side of it bore a massive dent. Better it than his skull, he thought, though as he tried to push himself back up his head swam and he nearly went down to the floor.

“Be strong, brave warrior,” came a familiar voice, followed by a touch on his cheek. Greghan braced himself for the expected magical healing, but what he felt was like a torrent almost as intense as the ogre’s strike. Except that this sensation washed through his body like a warm flood, driving out the pain and the disorientation and even the fear that had crept into him since he’d entered this place. The whole experience couldn’t have lasted more than a few seconds, but when it was over he found himself once again whole.

Greghan looked over at Leana, and said, “What the… wow.”

The cleric smiled back at him. “The Lightbringer has seen fit to enhance my capabilities,” she said. “Now, let’s finish this unholy abomination, eh?”

Greghan nodded and rose to his feet. The zombie made no move to evade as he slashed his sword across his belly, opening a gash that streamed several feet of rotting entrails. A moment later Folgar blasted the same spot with his ray of frost, flash-freezing those wiry strings. The wounds would have given a living ogre pause, but against this undying foe they were barely inconveniences.

The ogre’s heavy, bare foot pounded down onto the floor as it pivoted slowly into another attack. Ravani shot it again, the arrow burrowing into its shoulder joint. Greghan could hear its bones grinding against the metal tip as it swung again at him, but this time he saw it coming and dodged back in time to avoid being struck.

The four adventurers kept blasting it with everything they had, sword and arrows and spells ripping into the dead flesh, slowly wearing down the thing’s unnatural stamina and tearing its body apart. The zombie made no moves to protect itself, its sole focus getting to Greghan, the only foe within reach. It clipped him again, its elbow thudding into the warrior’s chest hard enough to knock him back a few steps. Leana started to go to him, but Greghan raised a hand and said, “I’m all right!” Leana hadn’t been able to land a spell attack thus far, so she hefted her mace and rushed in. She smashed the new magical weapon against its knee, shivering the bones and half-crushing the joint. The zombie tottered but remained upright. Greghan rushed forward to get its attention again before it could stomp the cleric. His sword cut into it again, but even though long strips of flesh hung from its limbs and torso, slashing it seemed to do little. Rather than bleed, thick trails of coagulated blood and rotting viscera dangled from its wounds, adding to the almost overpowering stink that filled the hall.

Finally, Ravani managed another precise shot that drove into its other eye. The body of the dead ogre was almost falling apart, but somehow it refused to go down. “Why isn’t it dying?” the elf asked. The zombie looked like it might collapse with every step, but it still managed to pound Greghan hard on the shoulder, drawing a fresh grunt of pain from the warrior.

“The body is just a shell!” Leana said. “We need to destroy the force that animates it!”

“And just how do we do that?” Greghan asked.

Leana responded by holding up her sigil, conjuring a bright radiance that started to congeal around the zombie’s head. But the thing ducked forward before the sacred flame could take hold, and it bent low as it started to reach for her. The cleric refused to retreat, grimacing with effort as she held her sigil aloft.

Greghan didn’t wait to see whether whatever she was trying to do would work; despite his multiple fresh wounds he rushed forward, bringing his sword up over his head. The zombie didn’t even glance over at him, entirely focused on Leana, so it had no chance of evading the powerful downward stroke that caught it solidly at the base of the skull. With a heavy crunch its spine parted, and the ogre’s head plopped heavily onto the ground. Greghan staggered forward, sweeping up Leana with one arm as he dove clear moments before the zombie’s body toppled over and landed with a ground-shaking thud.

The four companions stared at the fallen corpse—now so for good—of the ogre. Ravani let out a low whistle.

“That also works,” Leana said from Greghan’s grasp.


Game Notes:

The party’s luck took a decisive turn for the worse here, starting with the ogre zombie’s crit on Greghan and continuing into the upcoming battle. The warrior took a total of 42 points of damage in this fight. Leana’s second level
cure wounds healed 21, which made the difference. The ogre, with a -2 Dex save, made two saves against her sacred flame during the fight.
 

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Thanks! But the ogre zombie was just a warm up...

* * *

Chapter 41


“They certainly would have heard that,” Ravani said, edging forward again to scout. The hallway bent sharply to the right a short distance beyond where the ogre zombie had been waiting, and the elf warily approached that corner as if expecting a horde of undead to appear at any instant.

Greghan placed Leana down carefully. “Are you hurt?” he asked her.

“No,” she said, summoning another healing spell, which eased some of the pain caused by the zombie’s pounding. “I’m sorry that you have to always be the one on the front line,” she said.

“That’s why you hired me,” he said. “And besides, I saw you charge that zombie and do a number on its knee.”

“To little effect, I fear,” she said.

“We’d all be dead several times over now if it wasn’t for you,” Greghan insisted, but he turned as Ravani returned to them in a hurry.

“I hear chanting,” the elf reported.

“Chanting like in the forest, or ‘something bad is about to happen’ chanting?” Greghan asked.

“How am I supposed to know?” Ravani said. “But I’d put my money on ‘something bad.’”

“All right, let’s go,” Leana said. “But be careful.”

They advanced around the corner, careful of traps or any other threats. A large chamber was visible ahead, its walls shrouded in violet drapes that seemed almost black in the ruddy lamplight. The chanting was coming from this room, and as they drew close they could finally see its source.

The chamber was obviously some kind of fell temple; three stone altars stood before a dais as the far end upon which stood four chairs made of bones that flanked a high-backed throne. Closer to them, in the center of the room, an ominous black iron bell hung from a stand. Behind it stood a man clad in red robes. His face was covered by a hood, and a mace with a head made from a large humanoid skull hung at his side. He was the one chanting, and with each verse he was flecking blood from a bronze bowl onto heaps of bones that had been gathered along the north wall. As the cultist continued his chant, errant giggles crept in, suggesting that his mental state was perhaps not entirely sound.

Ravani didn’t pause for comment; he raised his bow and shot the man in the back. The arrow plunged deep; the man was wearing only the scraps of a mail shirt under his robe, which didn’t do much to stop the shot from penetrating into his body. The wound was terrible, but the man only spun and laughed, the sound confirming that there was something quite wrong with him. As he hefted his mace, the skull began to radiate a flickering black nimbus.

“Ware his weapon!” Leana warned. She raised her sigil, but the man was faster, even was wounded as he was. He darted forward and swung the mace, not at any of them, but at the iron bell. The impact filled the room with a loud clamor that seemed to build until it was almost deafening. In response, the heaps of blood-spattered bones began to knit together and rise, forming into four animated undead skeletons.

The hooded man smiled, blood flecking his lips. He lifted his hand, and unleashed a pulse of dark energy that struck Ravani solidly in the chest. The elf staggered, clutching his heart. The cultist’s grin only deepened as he launched a second bolt that struck Ravani in the center of his brow. Instantly all of the elf’s muscles went limp, and he collapsed in a motionless heap.

“Ravani!” Leana cried, rushing to his aid.

The cultist raised his mace and pointed with it, but before he could issue a command to his undead legion, Folgar cast a new spell.

A pulse of thunderous sound filled the chamber, making the earlier tolling of the evil bell seem quiet by comparison. It enveloped the cultist, whose eyes went vacant as blood erupted from his nostrils, ears, and the corners of his eyes. The iron bell was knocked over, and two of the skeletons staggered, damaged but not destroyed by the shatter spell. The cultist collapsed, still laughing, one arm outstretched toward the far end of the room. “Mistress…” he gasped out before he died.

Greghan rushed forward to confront the skeletons and prevent them from attacking Leana and Ravani. He delivered a solid blow to the first, but even damaged as it was from Folgar’s spell the unnatural force animating it kept it intact despite the bone fragments that pattered against the dangling violet drape like hailstones. Missing one arm and half its ribs, it still managed to swing a rusty old shortsword hard enough to clang loudly off of Greghan’s breastplate. That one didn’t get through his armor, but as two more of them came at him from behind he felt a sharp pain in his leg as one jabbed the top of its weapon into his thigh.

The warrior held his ground, but the last skeleton was still able to skitter around him and lunge at the fallen elf. Ravani’s eyes shot open as Leana channeled another powerful healing spell into him, but he could not react in time to stop the skeleton from poking him in the side, opening a fresh and deep wound. He rolled to his feet, grabbing his bow and firing as soon as he got clear, but the hasty shot missed the skeleton.

As if that wasn’t bad enough, the curtains to the right began to move, eventually parting to reveal several groaning forms that emerged from a concealed alcove. These zombies, thankfully, were only human-sized, but they still marked a fresh and dangerous threat.

“I think we’re in trouble here!” Ravani warned.

In response, Leana held up her sigil and called upon the power of her god. Bright light exploded from the disk, filling the room with a holy radiance that felt pure and clean in contrast to the corrupted red glow of the temple lamps. It only lasted for a few seconds, but two of the skeletons and three of the zombies recoiled from that surge, staggering back as they were turned by the cleric.

Folgar stepped to the side to give himself a better angle, his hands moving in arcane gestures. “Don’t hit any of the turned ones!” Leana warned, but the wizard had already picked his target, one of the damaged skeletons still hazarding Greghan. His ray of frost scored a critical hit that froze its joints from hips to shoulders, and it toppled over, it spine shattering as it struck the ground.

The warrior attacked the last skeleton still in the fray, but his wild swing only grazed it. Overbalanced, he couldn’t do anything to stop the skeleton from jabbing its sword under his shoulder plate and into his arm, opening a fresh gash that quickly began trailing blood down the limb and onto the floor in bright red spatters. Greghan was starting to feel a bit woozy, and had lost track of how many times he’d been wounded since entering this damned cave. But he didn’t run, didn’t turn away from the danger as he faced off against this persistent, unnatural foe. He glanced over at his friends, who were being hazarded by the last zombie, the sole one to have resisted Leana’s power. He recognized it, and was so startled that the skeleton almost skewered him before he managed to parry with his sword.

His friends had recognized their adversary as well, as it shuffled forward to attack. “Well, I guess we know what happened to Pral,” Ravani said as he reached for another arrow. He shot the dead bandit in the chest, but none of them were surprised when the arrow didn’t stop it. The zombie lurched forward, slowly covering the distance between them. Its three companions disappeared back behind the curtain, while the two skeletons that Leana had turned retreated behind the dais on the other side of the room.

Busy as they were, none of them spotted the figure that slid out behind the curtain extending along the left side of the temple. The new arrival was a human woman clad in bright red robes and an elaborate headdress-helmet that covered the upper half of her face. She held a sigil emblazoned with a leering demon’s head. Upon entering the room, she quickly scanned the various combatants—sparing barely a glance for the bloody, hacked form of the masked man lying on the floor—before settling her attention upon Leana.

“Darkness commands you!” she cried, presenting the sigil toward the cleric and drawing every eye in the room to her. Leana stiffened for a moment, but with a sharp cry she tore free of whatever malevolent magic the evil priestess had tried to hex her with. “The Light protects me!” the halfling said.

The red-robed woman only smiled. “Embrace Chaos, then,” she said. She raised her hands, one of which burst into flame, while the other pulsed with an ugly green radiance. She swung both at Leana, and a bolt of fire smashed into her chest, followed a moment later by a globule of acid that splashed down her arm and seared one side of her face, drawing a scream of agony from the halfling as she dropped to one knee, the glow surrounding her sigil starting to flicker.


Game Notes:

Leana rolled a natural 20 against Ivlis’s
Sinister Command, which was fortunate, as her turning would have ended if she’d failed. But the two Chaos Blasts almost took her down, knocking her from 18 to 2 hit points.

Next time: Boss Fight!
 

I have a party of 8 going thru this now. I'm enjoying how you are playing this out with your party. With mine they are a group of guild members sent from Loftwick and pledged to work for the keep for their first year as novices. Surprisingly they get mostly hurt by the flora (sharp ferns and brambles) and almost drowning crossing the river. They have fought the spiders and were spanked hard by Pral and his bandits. The next session is to find the cultist ritual area. I can't wait to see how it plays out. Yeah Ive had to ramp up the difficulty of the encounters with so many players. I'll figure out how to tie in many other modules like Sunless Citadel, Quasqueton, Saltmarsh, Out of the Abyss, Temple of Elemental Evil, White Plumb Mountain, Undermountain, and Tomb of Horrors.
 

I have a party of 8 going thru this now. I'm enjoying how you are playing this out with your party. With mine they are a group of guild members sent from Loftwick and pledged to work for the keep for their first year as novices. Surprisingly they get mostly hurt by the flora (sharp ferns and brambles) and almost drowning crossing the river. They have fought the spiders and were spanked hard by Pral and his bandits. The next session is to find the cultist ritual area. I can't wait to see how it plays out. Yeah Ive had to ramp up the difficulty of the encounters with so many players. I'll figure out how to tie in many other modules like Sunless Citadel, Quasqueton, Saltmarsh, Out of the Abyss, Temple of Elemental Evil, White Plumb Mountain, Undermountain, and Tomb of Horrors.
 

Wow, eight players, that seems like a handful. I once showed up to a Meetup game at a local pub where there were nine players; I decided that was too much for me. My current groups all have five or six players, which can itself get a bit chaotic at times (and usually requires significant bumps to encounter difficulties).

* * *

Chapter 42


Leana fought through the blinding haze of pain and focused on their foe: the high priestess of the temple of Chaos. She was out of her most potent magic, and further knew that if she went down, or succumbed to the woman’s dark power, then the undead she’d turned would return and destroy them.

And so, while it went against everything in her nature, and felt like an abandonment of her friends, she turned and ran back into the hallway that led to the exit. At the last moment, as she left the line of sight of the evil priestess, she ducked to the side and sidled behind one of the thick velvet curtains.

Folgar incanted a spell and launched a stream of magical darts at the red-robed woman. He infused the spell with extra potency, hitting her with four darts that tore through her robes and pierced her body. But she only smiled at him. “You will have to do better than that, wizard. I am Ivlis, champion of Chaos.”

Greghan had watched Leana’s flight with his heart pounding. He turned from the final skeleton, which swung uselessly at his back, and charged toward the priestess. He swept his sword at her body, but Ivlis darted to the side, taking only a shallow gash along her hip. He kept coming, surging into a backswing toward her head, but again she was just faster, accepting a clanging blow against her helmet that tore off a few of the spiky decorations but failed to inflict a mortal wound.

Ravani fitted another arrow to his bow and began to track the priestess, but aborted when he saw the zombie bandit chief start to follow Leana out of the room. “Hey, come get me, jerkface!” he said, shooting it in the neck. Again the blow failed to take down the undead monster, but it did get its attention. Ravani was forced to quickly dodge out of the way as the zombie swung at his head, and cursed in frustration as he drew it away from his friends, unable to help his companions against the cult leader.

Ivlis reached up and touched the blood smeared on her lips, and smiled. “Your champion of the Light has fled,” she said mockingly. Greghan’s only response was to raise his sword again, but before he could strike, she presented her sigil and summoned her magic once more. The warrior, lacking Leana’s mental fortitude, succumbed to her power, and he just stood there, dazed, as she walked past him. “Now, where did she go?” she asked as she advanced to a spot where she could see down the hallway. Folgar, bypassed, began casting another spell, but Ivlis turned on him and conjured two more chaos bolts, this time hurling sprays of cold and fire that forced the dwarf to hurriedly duck out of the way. Folgar responded with a ray of frost that slashed the priestess’s leg, finally drawing a frustrated hiss of pain as she was slowed by the icy chill that seeped into the limb.

Leana revealed herself just long enough to hurl a blast of sacred flame at the zombie-Pral. The holy fire immolated the zombie, just for a moment, but long enough to sunder the dark energies that animated it. She ducked back into cover, but Ivlis had spotted her. “Ah, fled not so far after all,” she growled, starting in that direction despite her numbed leg.

Ravani, spared being cornered by the zombie, once more took aim at the evil cleric, but again his attention was drawn to an ally in need. He turned and shot the skeleton that was hammering on the unresisting Greghan from behind. The arrow shattered its skull, and it collapsed into fragments. The ones that Leana had turned remained at bay, the zombies having retreated back behind the curtain, and the skeletons to the far corner beyond the dais. “Snap out of it, man!” the elf cried.

Greghan was doing just that, shaking his head to clear it, but before he could do more than take a step, Ivlis pointed at him and snapped her fingers, restoring the magical fugue holding him senseless. She continued moving toward the curtain concealing Leana, but Folgar moved to block her, his hands glowing with another cantrip. Clucking her tongue in irritation, the priestess summoned another burst of fire that seared the dwarf in the chest, followed by a jolt of electricity that briefly formed a white halo around him. When that flare faded, the dwarf collapsed to the floor, unconscious.

“Now,” Ivlis said. “Let’s see about…”

She didn’t get a chance to finish, as the curtain shot aside and Leana charged forward, her mace in hand. Ivlis lifted her arms, chaos energy gathering around her hands once more, but the halfling cleric reached her before she could unleash her evil magic. The silvery metal head of the weapon smashed into her knee, shattering the joint, and Ivlis’s exultant expression was replaced by a look of surprise and pain as she toppled heavily to the floor. The impact jolted her helmet free, revealing a pale face shrouded by tangles of dirty hair and wide eyes tinged with madness.

Ivlis reached for her sigil. “Chaos will…”

Leana cut her off by smashing her mace into her face. “I think we’ve heard just about enough out of you,” she said.


Game Notes:

The one mistake I made in running this fight was not remembering that Ivlis’s
Sinister Command was a rechargeable ability; rather than redo the fight, I just assumed she rolled 5+ on a d6 twice in this encounter. But otherwise, this fight was just as close as it reads on the page. Leana rolled a crit on her final attack, doing just enough damage to take Ivlis out. If she’d missed, Ravani would have only had one shot to take the priestess down before she eliminated Leana and brought two skeletons and three zombies back into the fight. If that had happened, I’m not sure Greghan and Ravani would have been able to turn the tide.
 





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