Session Twenty-Three, Part Five: The Limestone Throne
"Were we optimistic to think that we'd ever get back home?" Dru poked at the fire with an elongated splinter.
"We will. Somehow. We haven't found the wizard yet," Di'Fier reminded her.
"He probably teleported back home." Dru threw the bit of wood into the flames and watched as they began to lick at it.
"I don't think he would have left his spellbook in Mantru. Most wizards wouldn't. No, I think something happened to him."
Benares shifted, sitting up against the wall. "The villagers said that he went to the City of the Gods, and he took many people with him. They say those people became the first cannibals."
"If they were looking for something and found that statue," Di'Fier mused, "They might not have been able to resist it, even if the wizard was."
"They probably ate him," Dru muttered.
Di'Fier stretched, his neck popping. "Something came to me while I was sleeping," he began.
"It didn't try to take over your mind, did it?" Dru asked.
"No...but we never did explore the rest of that cavern."
"Probably filled with stupid three-tailed mud monsters."
"All the same, let's go check it out."
After Di'Fier perused his spellbook, the foursome made their way down to the cavern. The muggy air and the stench felt like home for the Freeporters, although Benares and Shesara wrinkled their noses and tried not to breathe. Once agen they wound their way along narrow limestone paths before Di'Fier paused.
"We already
got this far, Di'Fier. This is where I lost my sword."
"I know. Wait." The mage raised a hand and shouted forth a summons. Nothing seemed to answer his call, but he nodded in satisfaction. "Go beneath the surface of the mud and find a sword," he said to the air. "Bring it back to me."
For long moments, nothing happened. Then, slowly, something began to float to the surface of the mire. Dru's blade detached itself from the muck and wobbled through the air to Di'Fier. Another word from him, and the mud sloughed from the blade, leaving it bright and clean. He handed it over to Dru. "I never thought I'd use those spells for anything more important than housework," he chuckled as they moved on.
"Looks like the cavern ends," said Dru with disappointment. "No magic portal back to Freeport, just a weird rock that looks kind of like a guy sitting down." She squinted. "Wait..."
They moved forward quickly. "...it
is a guy sitting down," Dru said. "Well, a skeleton. Turned to stone."
"Not turned to stone, but covered in it," Benares said. "The water drips from above, with dissolved limestone in it, then evaporates, leaving the stone behind."
"It's too tall tobe an islander," Di'Fier said. "And it looks like it's got something on its lap." He tapped the rock experimentally. "Maybe his spellbook. Shesara, hand me that thunder rod."
She did so. "We still don't know how to use- oh," she finished, as Di'Fier brought it down on the stone, cracking it. Beneath was a sheet of polished metal, incised with runes.
"It's a spellbook, all right!"
Within moments, the rest of the book was freed. It had fared far better than the one left in Mantru - the slim metal covers had largely sealed out the moisture, and the spells were readable. "See if he has anything else," Di'Fier suggested, turning pages.
Benares moved forward, motioning Dru to come with him. "If we look carefully, we can see if there are any magical auras on the statue."
"You need a spell for that," Dru told him.
The scholar shook his head, and grinned. "No spell, just knowing how to look the right way. The spell is a lazy man's shorthand. Unfocus your vision..."
Di'Fier glanced up to see Dru and Benares staring intently at the skeleton, while Shesara kept watch. He shrugged, and returned to his reading.
I think
this is his teleportation spell...
"Did you see it?"
"There...on the finger?" Dru reached forward, breaking the thin crust of stone. Beneath it lay a glittering ring.
"Good. With practice, you'll be able to be more consistant about it...and even get an idea of what spells there are, judging by the aura."
"There was something else. Down here, at his feet." Dru fetched the rod, probing at the stone looking for a likely place. An odd expression came over her face. "Maybe I'd better be careful about this one. Do we have anything we could use as a chisel?"
With the help of a knife and the rod, Dru gently chipped away at the soft stone until it fell away. Gradually, another blade emerged from beneath, the rotted leather of the sheath crumbling away at her touch, leaving the blade stained and mottled. "Doesn't look like much," she said, squinting at it. "Still got a good edge, though. Might as well keep it. Di'Fier, how's that book going?"
"I'll need more time to study it. But the pages are wrinkling, here, from the humidity. We should return to the surface."
They trooped back along the paths, pausing once again by the mud pool where they had fought the creatures. "Maybe we should take a head back to show the people in the village that we've ended the curse."
"I'm not diving in there. Falling in once was bad enough."
Di'Fier considered. "Well, as my teacher in conjurations used to say, if you don't want to do the dirty work yourself, summon someone else to do it." He reached for his components, drawing forth a tiny mud-caked bag and a mostly melted candle, and set to work.
Dru watched the creature materialize from the air to receive its instructions from Di'Fier. "If you can bring flaming dwarves here from somewhere else, why can't you just send us home?"
"I don't really bring the dwarf, er, the azer," Di'Fier explained. "The magic...sort of makes a temporary body for them. If any of the creatures I summon gets killed, they don't really die."
"Sounds handy."
"It's also a lot easier to bring things to you than it is to move them away."
Dru shrugged, watching as the dwarf returned to the surface with little more than a skull - the mud had boiled the flesh away from the bone. She took it from him as he climbed out of the pit, the mud drying on him almost instantly.
Di'Fier nodded. "You can go now," he said, and the dwarf vanished, leaving behind a brief shower of dried mud.
Later that day, Di'Fier looked up from the book. "I'm not going to be able to
teleport us off of the island. I've been trying to understand the spell, but it's fifth circle, and I'm nowhere near ready for that."
"So we're stuck here for years?" Dru snarled. "Perfect."
"Not necessarily..."