Session 2 – Chapter 2
Irontooth
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Before Osivan even stepped on the branch, Greldo was moving. He’d seen the branch and knew what was coming, and now was a blur moving into the cave. As the crack was still echoing from the valley below, the two kobolds were dead, their throats cut. Greldo had failed to notice a third party around the corner. A kobold skirmisher looked with eyes wide at the halfling and yelled “INTRUDERS! TO ARMS!”
All at once, bodies started moving. The horde of kobolds in the valley surged toward Osivan, and a clattering of armor filled the cave above.
Osivan backed up the hill and cast his ghost sound beyond the bushes to the west. A group of kobolds broke off and ran in that direction. Gloraen moved to fortify a position at the cave’s path nexus, looking to bottleneck the valley attack and give Osivan someone to stand beside. Moltezom and Lathon rushed into the caves.
The paladin swung his longsword at a kobold, and the kobold flinched so that the blow missed. The kobold chuckled and hissed as several of his fellows ran up behind him, brandishing spears. Lathon opened his dragon’s jaws and a green-yellow cloud billowed out from his lungs. Acid chemically cooked the kobolds where they stood, and they fell to the ground as clattering slimed bones.
Moltezom and Greldo began working in tandem, flanking opponents and killing them in swift order. The dwarf fighter succeeded admirably in gaining all their attention, when the real threat was behind. Greldo would work a dagger between the chinks in their armor and have them gurgling on the ground within moments.
Osivan allowed the kobolds from the valley to fill the bottleneck Gloraen had formed on the hillside path, then stepped around to the side and spread his hands toward them. Flame erupted from his palms and roasted a great number of the screaming horde.
“WARN IRONTOOTH!” a kobold yelled. He was, like the one from the day before, loading a ceramic globe into a sling. He fired it at Osivan and missed. The globe exploded against the cave wall in a glut of viscous white.
“Which of these do you think Irontooth is?” Moltezom called.
Lathon laughed. “I’m not sure, but I’m not impressed.”
A clanking of armored footsteps issued from deeper in the cave.
Greldo stabbed a downed foe and cocked his head to the noise. “What’s that?”
Moltezom began retreating toward the entrance. “A second wave is coming… fall back Greldo, fall back!”
Greldo turned to see the approaching threat. At the rear of the main group was a kobold wearing robes and mouthing silent incantations. Two kobolds carrying dragonscale shields walked point. Between them stood the biggest goblin the halfling had ever seen. He stood at around five feet tall and was thickly muscled. He carried a battleaxe and wore a chain shirt and a wolf’s skin headdress. Scars lined his body and he rushed toward Greldo, smiling. Hammered metal shards glinted from his gums.
“That’s Irontooth,” Greldo gasped.
The battleaxe slashed across him. The dragonshields followed close behind and one raked the halfling with his sword. The other swung and Greldo rolled beneath the blow, getting to his feet and hobble-running across the cave to Moltezom, who beckoned him. Greldo left splatters of blood with every step.
Irontooh and his dragonshields advanced on Moltezom in a line formation, keeping pace with each other. Moltezom shifted his maul in his hands, looking for weaknesses. Greldo stood behind the dwarf, his back was to the waterfall and a thirty foot drop to the valley below. It wasn’t safe to move anywhere else- kobolds still outnumbered the group and combat raged on outside the cave. The kobold priest darted from behind a column in the cave and fired an orb of energy at Greldo, who dropped to the ground.
“Gloraen,” Moltezom urged. “We need a spot o’ healing, and quick!”
Lathon was now engaging the kobolds en masse at the footpath, so Gloraen broke away and moved toward the caves. He stopped as he saw Irontooth and company advancing on Moltezom and Greldo lying on the floor. He looked back to see the kobolds and Lathon and Osivan. Everyone was in range… it would work. The cleric held up his holy symbol and cried to the sky. “Bahamut, in your name, I call upon a beacon of hope. Let your good works be done!” The silver symbol flashed brilliantly and bathed the area in light. As the light washed over the group, small cuts and wounds were closed and Greldo’s eyelids flickered open. Several of the kobolds were sticken with the holy power and moved at a crippled pace.
Greldo got to his feet shakily. Moltezom parried a thrust by Iroontooth and said “Stay back Greldo… you can’t be healed enough to fight.”
“Nonsense,” the halfling coughed. “I’m feeling well enough to take them all on without you.” He limped back into battle as Osivan fired a magical arrow into Irontooth, splashing his dragonshields with acid and killing them. Irontooth was now alone but looked as though he were hardly injured by Moltezom’s mighty swings.
The kobold wyrmpriest approached cautiously, stopping at the waterfall’s edge. He had a fine line of sight to the halfling, dwarf and cleric here, so he cackled and began casting. Then, Greldo darted toward him and feinted with his dagger at the priest’s left side. The priest instinctively lurched his weight to the right, which was exactly what Greldo had intended. The halfling grabbed a handful of robe and pulled, tipping the kobold far off balance. The wyrmpriest was flung far out into the open air and fell screaming into the churning shallows at the base of the waterfall.
Irontooth was now alone. His minions had all been killed and the enemy was surrounding him. He grunted happily and swung his battleaxe along Lathon’s armor, dragging a new scar into the dragonborn’s scales. The dwarf approached from his left and Irontooth readied a swing. “No, here, I’m the one you want!” the paladin yelled. The distraction served and the goblin’s battleaxe missed the dwarf by inches. Infuriated, Irontooth swung at Lathon, and then at Moltezom, again.
Lathon swung back and cut the goblin deeply. Osivan pelted Irontooth with rays of frost. Greldo sidled into position alongside Irontooth, bandishing his dagger and looking for an opening. He found one and stabbed. The goblin roared and swung his battleaxe in an arc, chopping Greldo about the shoulder. The halfling fell again.
“Greldo!” Moltezom cried. “You leave him be, you cur!” The dwarf whipped his maul around in a half-circle, smashing it against the goblin’s jaw. Irontooth wobbled on his feet a bit. “Is that it, have we got him?”
When Irontooth turned his gaze back on Moltezom, his eyes were going bloodshot and filling in a thick orange-red. His teeth gnashed together so hard that sparks actually flickered amidst the grinding. His arms thrummed and his veins stood out.
Moltezom looked fearful. “What’s happening?”
“We’ve made him mad,” Lathon said. “Good. HERE, you stupid ape, I’m right here!”
Irontooth roared and swung his battleaxe at the paladin, who blocked it deftly and said “I’ll keep his focus on me, keep hitting him with everything you’ve got!” The party hammered at the goblin, raining blows on his back as Lathon commanded his attention.
Irontooth oozed blood from several mortal wounds, but he wasn’t slowing down. “He can’t have much left in him,” Gloraen yelled as he bashed the goblin in the side. Irontooth responded by putting all of his weight against Moltezom, whose back was to the falls. The dwarf grunted, planted his foot on what little space he had behind him and pushed back. A dwarf that does not want to be moved is a very difficult thing to move. The two struggled. Some of the stone crumbled at Moltezom’s heel and fell into the raging waterfall. Osivan struck the goblin in the back with a sizzling bolt of energy.
Irontooth howled “KALAREL, PREPARE MY WAY!” Moltezom regained his balance and swung his maul, killing Irontooth in a final uppercut motion.
The party huffed and waited for a moment to make certain that there were no more kobolds waiting in the shadows to run out. When they were convinced that they had fully defeated the encampment, Gloraen healed Greldo back to consciousness.
“Hey, look! He’s got a pouch.” Moltezom was rifling through Irontooth’s things and he’d found a pouch around the goblin’s neck. “Ooh, it’s got a key in it! And a piece of paper.” He unfolded the note and read aloud.
Irontooth
My spy in Winterhaven suggests we keep an eye out for visitors to the area. It probably doesn’t matter; in just a few more days, I’ll completely open the rift. Then Winterhaven’s people will serve as food for all those our Lord sends to do my bidding.
Kalarel
“…and there’s a little symbol drawn underneath. Looks like a skull with goat horns.” He shrugged and put the note in his pack. “Morbid,” he muttered. “Hey, what do you think this ‘rift’ is?”
Gloraen said “No idea. The skull looks vaguely familiar, though. I think I’ve seen somewhere. Some kind of dark old symbol. We’ll have to ask a few questions back in…”
“Treasure chest!” The distractible dwarf had wandered away. “It’s got a lock, and I’ve got a key I took from the pouch. I want to open it.”
“Go ahead,” Greldo said. “Watch out for traps, though.”
“Traps?” Moltezom paused.
“Oh, yeah. Spike traps, poison traps, exploding fireball of death traps…” Seeing the dwarf's terrified expression, Greldo waved him on. “I’m kidding you. A goblin’s not really likely to have any of those. Go ahead.”
Moltezom turned to the chest and licked his lips thoughtfully. He wiggled his eyebrows and took out the key. He placed the key slowly into the lock and leaned as far back as he could, shielding his face with his hand and wincing. He turned the key.
Click. “Heh. Haha!” Moltezom lifted the lid.
BOOM! The dwarf whooped and fell back on his rump, shielding his face. He trembled, then realized he wasn’t hurt. He unclenched his eyes and looked around. Osivan was laughing. “Did you do that, wizard?” Moltezom demanded.
Lathon whacked Osivan lightly on the back of the head. “Shame on you, picking on poor dwarves.” The dragonborn couldn’t restrain a grin. “The look on his face was hilarious, though.”
“Did you hear how he yelped?” Greldo said, causing Osivan to snicker even harder.
Moltezom chuckled. “Fell right on my ass. That was a good ‘un.”
Soon, the entire party was laughing.
Next time
History Lesson