drnuncheon's Freeport Story Hour

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Wow.

OK, not to tease you all or anything...well...OK, to tease you all:

We are on the verge of the final battle. Dru, Di'Fier, and their brave companions have cut a swath through the forces of the Brotherhood...but not without cost. Two have died already. Di'Fier's magic is nigh exhausted, and the sinister leader of the cult yet awaits.

The brave companions have everything they need to save the city...but they don't know what to do with it.

Will they survive?

Can they save the city?

Or will all their effort come to naught?

J
 

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Session Fourteen, Part Two: New Mysteries and Old

DM's Note: Sorry Horacio. I'm mean cos I'm a Rat B@$tard DM at heart. :D Yes, it's all over now...we finished up around 3 am. There will be one more session of tying up loose ends and then drnuncheon's Freeport Story Hour will go on hiatus while Dru runs a short game. I've got nearly twenty pages of notes left to write up from two sessions, so answering the question will have to wait. In the meantime, though...an update! Enjoy.


"Daughter." The faint smile on Tensin Naïlo's face was entirely missing from his voice. Then again, it always was.

"Father. What are you doing here?"

Still the smile. "I was invited by my dear friend, Torsten Roth. He knew that I would not wish to miss the presentation of such a prestigious award to my own daughter." He set the book down on the table beside him, and stood.

Dru watched him with a wary eye. One blade in the boot. One up each sleeve. One at the nape of the neck... Her gaze narrowed. Where are the others? "Yes, I appreciate the little friends you've been sending over to play."

"I'm sure they keep you in practice." His gaze took in Di'Fier as well. "Thank you, by the way, for taking care of Kenzil. He was growing bothersome." His expression changed faintly, and the voice dropped a few degrees colder. "Soderheim."

Dru glanced back. Captain Arias Soderheim, of the Council. She knew the name - she'd heard her father's disgust more than a few times. A half elf, representing the interest of elves on the Council? Insulting.

"Naïlo. And is this your famous daughter, and her...partner?" Soderheim smirked at the elf, bowed deep over Dru's hand. "A pleasure."

Naïlo looked at his daughter. "Congratulations, Dru." Was there a flicker of warmth in his voice? Or was it her imagination? Whatever it was, it was gone as swiftly as her father was.

The Chamberlain's voice echoed dimly down the corridor. "High Wizard Tarmon, of the Freeport Wizard's Guild." Moments later, Tarmon arrived, his apprentice in tow. "Ah, Di'Fier. Congratulations, my boy. You've done the Guild proud. How are your studies coming? Have you mastered the third circle yet?"

Di'Fier coughed. "I believe I have, sir," he said.

"Splendid, splendid. Ah, Councilman Arnig," Tarmon turned to greet a stocky gnome, who bowed.

"Please, High Wizard, a moment of your time..."

"Certainly."

The woman who had entered with Arnig smiled at Dru and Di'Fier. Thuron moved forward to make the introductions. "Watch-Lieutenants, this is Petra Fricke, nominee for the Captain's Council. Petra, Watch-Lieutenants Dru and Di'Fier. Petra's done a great deal of sculting for the Temple," he added.

Petra turned her smile on him. "I'm glad you liked it," she said.

Dru raised an eyebrow. "A sculptress? Did you work on the lighthouse?"

The smile vanished from Fricke's face. "No," she said, then sighed. "For some reason, Sea Lord Drac has not seen fit to use local craftsmen for his wondrous project - nobody from the city has worked on it for the past three years." She shaked her head as if to clear the subject from it, and her good humor returned. "I understand you two solved a crime rather close to the hearts of the Craftsman's Guild. The mad alchemist?"

Dru snarled. "He got away," she said bitterly.

"Well, there's been no further problems with him," Petra said. "Which is all we can ask."

"Honored guests," panted the halfling as he entered the room and bobbed in a quick bow. "The Sea Lord requests your presence in the main ballroom." And he was gone.

"I hope we'll have a chance to talk later," said Petra, as they filed out the door.

ys_sep.GIF


"Thank you all for attending this grand ball, to celebrate the opening of the Lighthouse of Drac - a monument to the greatness of our city," the Sea Lord said, opening his arms expansively. "The light of its beacon will shine forth across the world, proclaming the power and majesty that is Freeport."

A smattering of polite applause died as he held up his hands for silence. "But tonight...tonight we also honor two heroes of this city. Heroes that have delivered us from the evils of the late Councillor Verlaine, and the dark Brotherhood of the Yellow Sign. If not for their vigilance, our city might have fallen under the sway of an indescribable evil."

"Come forward, my friends, and accept the Order of Drac...with our sincerest gratitude."

Dru and Di'Fier stepped forward in unison, marching to the dais and bending their necks to accept the heavy gold medals. They turned to the crowd, which erupted into applause.

"And now, my friends, let the ball truly begin. Musicians!"

ys_sep.GIF



Dru leaned up against the wall and loosened the high collar of her dress coat. "Gods, I thought we'd never get out of there. I hope we don't have to fight, my hands all numb from being shaken so many times."

Di'Fier nodded in agreement, but his words were forestalled by the sudden appearance of Sister Gwendolyn. She smiled briefly at the pair, and said in a hushed voice, "Lady Elise would like to speak with the both of you. Here, in the sitting room."

"Of course." They let themselves be lead to a large and comfortable room, where both Lady Elise and Councilman Arnig awaited them.

"Please, do sit," Lady Elise said. "I am told that you have been conducting some investigations into the matter of the lighthouse." She paused a moment. "Have they uncovered anything?"

Di'Fier thought a momentm choosing his words carefully. "We have...suspicions, nothing more."

"I see. Ah, Captain Gordon. Join us." Lady Elise turned her gaze back to the Watchmen. "I propose we lay all of our cards on the table, Watch-Lieutenants. At this point, hiding what we know can only lead to problems. Xavier?"

Captain Gordon let out his breath. "I've had one of my privateers in the vicinity of the lighthouse, mooring nearby at night. The captain reported that a ship without lights landed there and unloaded some cargo. The man in the crow's nest used a spyglass to watch them, and he swears he saw a passenger with a serpent's tail."

Dru frowned. Di'Fier didn't look much happier. "That's about what we expected, though," he said.

"One of the priests of my temple was watching the lighthouse from his window," began Sister Gwendolyn. "He saw strange flashes of light. I was able to speak with some of the workers, and one of them said that they found the bodies of two strange creatures at the base of the lighthouse - with the bodies of bears, and the heads of some kind of bird. I've never heard of anything like them before."

"From what I understand," said Di'Fier, "Freeport is at some kind of a nexus of ley lines. I don't know much about them myself - I saw it in a..." he hesitated. "...colleague's research. But between that and the bricks we found..."

"They have the Yellow Sign in them," Dru explained. "The symbol of the Brotherhood."

"Then it is even worse than I suspected," said Lady Elise. She looked pale, but still controlled. Her eyes bored into Dru and Di'Fier's. "I must ask you to go, speak with Drac's servants. You are not yet marked as one of my supporters - listen to them. Perhaps they will let something slip."

ys_sep.GIF


"So, it is almost over." Arias Soderheim swirled the brandy in his glass as he gave a sidelong glance to Guildmaster Torsten Roth. "I'll be sorry to see it go."

"You [u[would[/u] be," Roth muttered. "With your exclusive rights to the shipping."

"Tch, tch, Guildmaster." Soderheim took a sip. "There was more than enough gold for everyone. Don't think I don't know about the special orders the Sea Lord made through you. What was he looking for?"

"So there are things you don't know, eh? Rare for you to admit that, Soderheim. You'll just have to be curious," Roth said smugly. "It took me two years to find it..." Here his mood darkened. "And Drac still hasn't made good on his promise."

"The nomination?" Soderheim chuckled. "Drac has dangled that in front of so many fish over the years its a wonder he has room for them all."

Unnoticed, Dru wandered away from the pair.

ys_sep.GIF


"So, Lord Drac..." Nothing like grabbing the bull by the horns, right Di'Fier?[/u] he asked himself. "Now that the lighthouse is finished, what will be your next big civic project?"

"I...haven't considered it much," the Sea Lord smiled. "Perhaps...a new headquarters for the Guards."

ys_sep.GIF


Tomas Fleetfoot, High Chamberlain for the Sea Lord's Palace, sat heavily down on a bench and mopped his brow. "There hasn't been this much activity since that man jumped out the window."

"Oh really?" The voice made Tomas jump to his feet. "No, no, sit down." Dru emerged from the door she'd been standing in. "Don't mind me. I may be a guest, but I'm a public servant, too."

"Well...if you don't mind." Fleetfoot sat down heavily. "They've run me ragged with last minute preparations."

"I imagine so. This fellow who jumped out the window. That was the merchant?"

"The Sea Lord's factor in Highgate, yes...Weggit."

Dru put on her best look of concern. She must have been at least partially successful, as the Chamberlain wasn't turning pale and shaking the way peple often did when she questioned them. "Why would he jump? Was there some kind of trouble?"

"No...I don't think so. It was really the most terrifying thing. I was walking down the hall, and he came bursting from his room just in front of me, screaming like there was a devil pursuing him. He ran down to the end of the hall and leaped through the window." Tomas paused to wipe his brow again - he had broken into a cold sweat at just the memory. "When I went to check his room..."

"Yes?" Dru prompted, as gently as she could.

"There was a book lying open on the table, and inscribed on one of its pages..." Fleetfoot hesitated. The officious Chamberlain was completely gone now, and in his place a tiny, frightened halfling. "...a strange yellow symbol. It took all my willpower to leave the room and not follow Weggit."
 
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drnuncheon's Freeport Story Hour: The Lost Episode

Yes, it's finally done! Find it here, lovingly placed in chronological order. What did go on in the asylum? Hear it direct from Dru, Di'Fier, and Paden...

Also, Paden's stats have been updated in the Rogue's Gallery.

J
 
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Wow! Wonderful, as ever!

After the hiatus, will you continue with Dru and Di'Fier adventures?
 

Horacio said:
Wow! Wonderful, as ever!

After the hiatus, will you continue with Dru and Di'Fier adventures?

You won't get me to give away anything that easily. ;)

I will say this much: After the hiatus, I will continue with drnuncheon's Freeport Story Hour.

J
:D
 

GREAT!!!!!!

And I will add, while the hiatus I will bump this as strongly as I bumped Lady Despina's story! :D
 

Session Fourteen, Part Three: A Strange Alliance

The High Wizard of Freeport sat at a table, the smoke from his pipe curling around his head. In his hand he held a piece of folded paper loosely, as he stared at the dancers - or more accurately, somewhere past them in the same general direction. Dimly, he became aware of a presence nearby.

"Ah, Di'Fier...sit down, my boy, sit down. Quite a change from the Guild Dinners, eh?"

"Yes, sir, it is."

Tarmon glanced down at the paer in his hand, slid it across the table to Di'Fier. "Here. Tell me what you make of this."

Di'Fier looked at the sketch. It was a complex drawing of some kind of crystal, covered with angle calculations and other mathematical formulae. He began puzzling out some of the equations. "It looks like it's designed to channel some kind of magical energy," he began.

"A great deal of magical energy," Tarmon confirmed. He tapped the paper with the mouthpiece of his pipe. "Arnig gave that to me, said that the Sea Lord had it commissioned. On the mainland, no less."

Di'Fier's mind was already racing...back to the books he had seen in Kenzil's manse. "Do you think it could be used to affect...ley lines?"

"Ley lines?" The High Wizard's brow furrowed as he pondered the possibility. "I suppose it might. You'd need something damned large to channel the energy through to do that. Not just the crystal. A building of some sort."

"Like the lighthouse."

ys_sep.GIF


"Watchman!" a voice hissed urgently.

Dru spun from where she'd been watching Fleetfoot dissappear in the direction of the kitchens. "Who is it?"

A figure stepped forward out of a shadowy doorway. "My name is Brock Wallace."

Dru's eyes narrowed. "Captain Wallace, of the Captain's Council?"

"The same." Captain Wallace was a large man, and not all of it was muscle. He dressed fashionably, and a black tricorn was set at a rakish angle atop his rather lamentably bald head. "Please, I must speak with you. I have information, and I believe that you and your partner are the only ones who can help me."

"All right," Dru said. Her left hand slid unconsciously to the scabbard at her hip, thumb ready to push the blade towards her sword hand...and then she remembered it was wired closed. With a mental curse, she followed Wallace into the room.

Wine bottle - that'll do, she said, taking note of her surroundings. She moved to stand by the improvised weapon of her choice, watching Wallace all the while. "So, what can the City Watch do for you, Captain?"

Wallace doffed his hat, rubbing his bald scalp with his other hand. "Watch-Lieutenant, I...I know that you have spent some time investigating the strange goings-on in the city. And of course there was the matter about Councillor Verlaine." He stepped closer, looking from side to side. "We both know that he was not truly the head of the cult."

Dru nodded carefully.

Wallace took a deep breath. "I have discovered Drac's plan for the lighthouse...and the city." He paused to let that sink in a moment, then continued. "Drac plans to use the lighthouse as a magical beacon, a focal point for summoning an army of monsters. He thinks that he can use them to attack the mainland, and bring back the glory days of Freeport." He swallowed nervously. "He's a madman. I don't think he can control what he summons, but he plans to do it anyway."

Dru studied Wallace carefully. "You've supported Drac, though. Why this change?"

"I wasn't always on his side. In fact, I never was. But when I discovered his plans, he...I have a family," Wallace said. "He threatened to kill my wife and daughter if I told anyone - and nobody would have believed me anyway. Until you came along."

"So what is it you want from us?"

"I want you to kill the Sea Lord."

ys_sep.GIF


"...he said he'd lure the Sea Lord into one of the sitting rooms, and we could kill him. Then he'd help us hide out until the furor died down, and get the Council to pardon us after all the evidence came out."

"What did you tell him?"

"I told him we'd think about it," Dru said. "It would certainly solve our problems...but...it frightens me that I can't tell whose side Wallace is on."

Di'Fier sighed. "Everything he said seems to fit, though. The bricks and crystal would channel the energy of the ley lines...Arnig tells me that Maeorgan brough back a shipload of ritual candles - candles that are used in summonings. And we know Drac is up to something."

"So let's go kill him." Dru started towards the sitting room.

"No, no, wait! We don't know if we can trust Wallace."

"Who cares? We kill Drac, he turns into a snake, it's all over."

"I just have a feeling it would be a bad idea."

"Well...all right," Dru grudningly relented. "I wont kill him." She brightened. "Unless he forces my hand." Glancing across the room, she spotted Wallace, giving him a discreet headshake, then turning away from his pleading look.

The crowd began to murmur and part for someone. Dru and Di'Fier turned to see the new arrival.

A man, impossibly ancient, bent and withered, hobbled slowly across the ballroom floor. His ragged brown robe was tied by a belt of dirty rope, and his beard and long hair were unkempt and tangled. How he got in past the guards was a mystery.

The crowd moved back from him in an ever expanding circle as he reached the center of the floor, and then raised his stick-thin arms. "Heed me well," he rasped. "The words of an old man should not be ignored. In the ancient scriptures of Yig, it is written..."

Dru looked at Drac. His face was flushed as he gestured for his guards to take the old man. But the guards seemed strangely hesitant, as the old man began to chant:

The Yellowed Sign once again shall appear,
Then the time for Yig's revenge will be near.
As the finger of evil rises towards heaven,
One must pay heed to the call of his brethren.
Search below waves for that which was unmade,
And return with the serpend carved of jade.
With the madness unleashed upon the land,
The icon of jade alone shall stand.
The end of the creature from outside,
Contained in the serpent from deep inside.


"Remember these verses well, citizens of Freeport. The prophecies of Yig do not lie." As his words finished, the man seemed to shrink. His robe collapsed to the floor, and a snake darted from its folds across the marble. One guard, of sterner stuff than the rest, stepped forward to impale it with his spear. There was a puff of smoke, and the serpent was gone.
 

Greetings all,

I stumbled across this story late last night, and let me tell you something, I had a REALLY late night after that.

drnuncheon I think you have done a great job keep it up. I really
am looking forward to the next update.

I am now officially a Dru & Di'Fier groupie :D
 

Session Fourteen, Part Four: Black Dog's Cave

"...and so Thuron thinks that we need to find an artifact called the Jade Serpent of Yig," Di'Fier explained. "He thinks that's what the prophecy was referring to. Some kind of holy statue."

Garto nodded. "Makes sense so far. And yer want someone who can read Valossan."

"Exactly," said Dru. "We figured you and Gothos would be interested."

"Well, I'm yer dwarf...but Gothos is a little, ah, busy." Garto waggled his shaggy eyebrows, leaving little doubt as to his meaning. "He's been shacked up with that half-elf that works for yer father."

"My father doesn't have any half-elves working for him," Dru said. "He hates them."

"Yeah? Well, I guess nobody told her that, eh?" Garto laughed. "She's got Gothos whupped, so he won't be comin'. Now, how do yer plan to find this sunken temple place?"

Di'Fier laid the tattered remnants of a logbook on the table. "Thuron had found this in his research. It's the logbook of Black Dog, the pirate. If you look here," he flipped towards the end, "there's a description of a mysterious door with serpent carvings on it. Thuron thought the descriptions sounded like Valossan architecture."

Garto studied the entry for a time. "Aye, that it does."

Dru threw up her hands in disgust. "But all of that is no good, because we don't know how to find the caves!"

Garto laughed. "Don't you worry 'bout that."

ys_sep.GIF


The two Watchmen followed the stumpy form of the dwarven mage as he led them through the narrow streets of the Old City. "Ol' Gareth makes a livin' sellin' the location of Black Dog's cave," he explained. "Me an' Gothos never went, on account of nobody that's tried has ever come back. But since we ain't goin' after the treasure, maybe there's a better chance."

Gareth proved to be the picture of a grizzled old ex-pirate, complete with peg-leg and a wicked scar across the empty socket of his left eye. The remaining eye fixed on them balefully through a hazy film as they mounted the steps.

"I know whats ye want," he said without preamble. "It's the treasure of Black Dog, it is."

"Same every time," muttered the dwarf.

"I remember me days with him well. We frighted every merchantman and schooner from here t'Highgate! Those were the days..." The old sailor took a pull from the bottle at his elbow. "O'course, me accident set me back a bit. Fell through the riggin', damn near broke me back, I did. Now I'm old, and I ain't got much money."

Garto tapped his foot impatiently. "And now the pitch..."

"I could tells ye where the caves are, but what good would that do me? I'm just a poor, half-crippled old salt without much money. If ye could spare some coin for a crippled old man, I'd not steer ye wrong."

"How much?" sighed Dru.

"Two hunnert an' fifty," the sailor promptly replied.

Dru and Di'Fier looked at each other. "I'll get it," she said simply, counting out thick pieces of platinum. She dumped it in a pile on the table next to the sailor, whose eye widened. "And I'll match it if you promise not to tell anyone else where the caves are for a week." More coins joined the first.

The salt's eye locked on the coins. "Up the coast, ye'll find two standin' stones stickin' out of the water, the height of a mast or more," he said softly. "The trick's in the tide - ye'll have t'wait for low tide t'get in. After that, I can't help ye."

"Thanks."

The trio disappeared down the steps, and the crippled old man stared at the pile of platinum. After a moment, his thoughts turned from the uses of so much money to the problem of keeping it...

ys_sep.GIF


"I don't believe that none of us checked the tides," Di'Fier grumbled as he pulled the boat up onto the beach. "We would get out here as it was heading towards high tide."

Garto heaved himself out of the boat onto dry land. "Aye, well, there's not much for it but t'wait," he said, finding a comfortable rock to lean up against. "This'll be the last of the good weather, so let's enjoy it."

"Dru. What is this called?"

"That's an oyster, Varesh."

The ratman pried the mollusc open, pulling the tender meat free of the shell.

"Damn strange friend yer got there," said the dwarf. "Where'd yer find him?"

"Captain Lydon had him locked in a cage. They were going to use him for the rat chase at Swagfest. Have you ever head of anything like him before?"

"Hrrrrm." The dwarf scratched at his beard. "He don't look like a were-rat, an' that's about all I kin think of. Where'd Lydon find him?"

Dru shrugged. "All I heard is that he was from far to the west, across the ocean."

ys_sep.GIF


"It's low tide," reported Di'Fier. The other three gathered their things and piled back into the boat. The sinking sun was largely blocked by the mass of the island as they rowed to the cave.

"T'the right a bit...good...keep it up," Garto called to Dru, who had taken the oars. None of the four had experience with a boat, but she seemed to have taken to it the most naturally. The boat shot forward into the blackness of the cave. "Er...slow down a bit..."

"I'm not rowing!" shouted Dru. "There's a current!"

"Aye, well, it's...hang on!" There was a terrible crash as the boat slammed into the wall of the cave, tipping dangerously onto its side. With a startled yelp, the barely-visible shape of Di'Fier toppled over the side of the boat.

"Di'Fier!" Dru abandoned the oars and reached for her partner...and followed him into the water. The current sucked at her boots, and water closed over her mouth as she was dragged onward.
 

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