ForceUser's Vietnamese Adventures Story Hour! (finis)

Session Three, Part Four

SMOKE WISPED past Mai’s face, stinging her eyes and causing them to water. The pig on the spit sizzled as the matrons turned it, and moisture dripped off the meat and evaporated, wafting up through the central smoke-hole in the communal hut. Children crowded around her, smiling and giggling, and the men of Kim Phe sat together on the other side of the fire, cross-legged on mats. In the corner behind them, a maiden sang a languid song of hope and deftly plucked a dan day*.

Lei, Tam, and Woo sat with the village men, talking. Mai watched as they gestured with their hands, no doubt dramatizing the events of the last few days. The locals listened, interjecting occasionally, and painted with their hands a tale of their own. Mai wondered what that was. A little girl next to her, no older than three, grabbed her leaf hat and pulled, knocking it onto her face. Mai heard the girl’s mother scold her, but she just laughed and pulled the toddler into her lap.

Then the setting sun shone in her eyes, dazzling her, as a figure threw back the flap of animal skin that served the hut as a door. Several figures tromped in, and after the curtain fell back into place, Mai saw four more men join their fellows – Trinh Xang Duc, the local leader, and her companions Hien, Vinh, and Tran. The aristocrat looked frustrated, and the shaman sad. Vinh squatted next to the fire and spoke to the others. Several men shook their heads at his words, and Lei snorted and picked dirt off the bottom of his sandals. Woo frowned.

Hien looked around while Vinh spoke with the elders, spotted Mai, and sidled up to her, skirting the women who now carved roast pork from the pig’s carcass. “Nat Hung is beyond our help,” he began, “He has been cursed by this evil Monkey Woman into madness. Vinh spoke with him at length but we could find no trace of sanity. He raves and trembles at his own shadow.” He sat down beside her and crossed his legs. “The villagers say that the Monkey Woman allows no passage in or out of Phau Dong valley, and that her monkey servants patrol the hills and forests here in search of human prey. They have had to keep their flocks close to home, and they have armed the men. Food is plentiful for now, but they fear to tend their crops. The women are no longer allowed to forage for herbs and betelnuts. They are prisoners here.”

Mai let him speak, but she’d already heard much of this from the women. Finally, she asked, “What will we do now?”

“I don’t know,” the young man admitted, “I think we’re going to visit the other village tomorrow. Phet Lo. Xang Duc says we should speak to Pham Xi Quan, the shaman of that place. He was once married to this Monkey Woman, they say, and he warned Kim Phe that his wife had become a pawn of evil.”

“A pawn?” asked Mai.

“That’s how he portrayed her. Xang Duc isn’t sure what to think. He has reflected on the shaman’s words for many months and come to no conclusion.”

“Why didn’t they try to leave?”

“Some did. These people don’t know if they are alive or dead; those who left never returned or sent word of their safe passage. How could they?”

They sat in silence until supper was served.

The next day, the party rose at dawn and prepared to leave. Lei groomed and saddled the horses while Woo and Vinh meditated, and Hien left the village for the stream, claiming he wanted solitude to pray for guidance and power. Mai spent the morning brushing her long black hair and washing her clothes. Tran spoke with the village elders at length while the younger men of Kim Phe armed themselves and prepared to let their herd of goats out to graze. Tam spent the early morning indoors preparing his spells. After half an hour, Tran and Xang Duc bowed, and the aristocrat walked to his horse. Behind him, Duc and his son Lap followed. Surprisingly, Lap wore a fitted jerkin of hide over mountaineer’s clothes, and carried his bow slung across his back and his dagger at his belt.

“My son Lap will guide you to Phet Lo,” Duc said, “He is a dang-ki**, a skilled hunter and woodsman. He will show you the best path for your horses.”

Lap nodded at the group. For the first time, he spoke. His voice was soft and boyish, “The valley is rocky past here and the grass is poor. The journey to Phet Lo will be about two days. I will show you where to graze and where to ride.”

Vinh replied, “Thank you.”

“We appreciate your hospitality, Xang Duc,” Tran exclaimed, bowing again and grasping his fists in front of him.

“You are most certainly welcome,” the man replied, “We hope that you can learn more about the Monkey Woman’s curse and lift it. I fear that were it not for our ancestors watching over us that she would already have killed us all.”

“We will do our best,” said Vinh.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The trip to Phet Lo took less than two days. Lap was indeed a talented outdoorsman, and he steered the party clear of broken earth, sheer climbs, and hungry mountain cats. By late afternoon of the second day they came within sight of Phet Lo.

Unlike Kim Phe, Phet Lo was walled. Twelve-foot tall wooden spikes encircled the tiny community, pointed outward. A lookout post rose above the walls by another five feet, and it appeared to be manned. Beyond that the group could see thatched roofs and a single curl of white smoke indicating a cook-fire. A large single gate stood out from the fort on this side. Nodding at the walls, Lap hitched his pack and turned away.

“I go no further.”

“Really?” asked Vinh, “Why not?”

“These people act strangely and are not warm-hearted. They do not seek friendship with my father's people. I do not speak to them.” He looked around at the others. “I want to tell you something. You are not the first fighters to come to the valley since the Monkey Woman took control.”

This surprised them.

The woodsman continued, “Another group like yours came here two months ago. They did not stay in our village, but went right to the mountains seeking something. I have not seen any of them since.”

The group digested that information. Lap waved, they thanked him and said their farewells, and soon he was just a black speck moving rapidly down the valley slope.

The adventurers approached Phet Lo. When they came within shouting distance of the walls, a gravelly voice shouted “Halt! Identify yourselves!”

They did. The challenger was a man, short and muscular, who stood in the guard tower and devoured them with his eyes. He seemed neither young nor old, but he moved like a cat. He carried in his right hand a kama-do, Vinh’s weapon of choice. This man’s polearm, however, bespoke a proud heritage with carvings along its length, which was golden, and engravings on its curving blade, which was silver. Vinh wondered why such a man lived here.

“I see,” the man said, “And why have you come to Phet Lo?”

“We wish to speak with the shaman Pham Xi Quan to learn about the Monkey Woman.” Vinh announced.

“Yes, he’s quite popular these days,” said the guard.

As they puzzled over that, the gate creaked and swung upward, revealing more denizens of the remote village, all of whom appraised the party frankly. One, an unusually tall woman, stepped forward and spoke. “I am Vo Thi Chao; I lead here. I will take you to him. Perhaps you are the ones he spoke of in his dreams.”


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

*A dan day is the Singer's Lute, a vietnamese string instrument used to accompany the A-Dao (professional singers).
**A dang-ki, in my campaign, is a ranger. In the OA book it's a Chinese word meaning shaman. Since there is no Chinese word for ranger, I altered the meaning to suit my campaign.
 

log in or register to remove this ad


Session Three, Part Five

XI QUAN smiled weakly from his bed at the assembled strangers. He appeared ancient in the way that only the extremely old can. His hair was shock-white and long, and it fanned out behind him on his sleeping mat; his body was spotted from age and his skin sagged off his bones. His face displayed a withered road map of deep creases and wrinkles, and when he spoke the party had to remain completely still to hear his words.

“So one has come…” he whispered as he weakly lifted his head. Although his body trembled, he held Hien in a steady gaze. “I am gladdened to see another Speaker within these walls…” Hien bowed his head in a gesture of reverence for his elder.

Thi Chao, the tall woman, spoke gently, “They have come seeking answers, Wise One. They wish to know of Thi Nhu.” “Ah,” he replied, then jerked as a wracking cough consumed him. Hien started forward, but Thi Chao shook her head. For several agonizing moments, the old shaman shook and hacked, and Hien could hear the fluid rattling in his lungs. Then it was over, and he settled back onto the mat with a sigh. Blood stained the corner of his lips as he continued softly, “My wife. Like you and I, she communes with the Spirit World. Her heart has always been free, and though she loved life with a rare vigor, she disdained to take counsel. I love you, she would say to me, but you do not rule my thoughts.”

He paused and shuddered as he suppressed another fit of coughing. “She was fascinated with the way people sought the divine. She journeyed across Dai Viet, talking with great thinkers and monks. She studied the Buddha and the Tao, and even the teachings of Confucius. She debated these things with many people and the spirits of earth and sky.” He squirmed on his mat, and Thi Chao stepped forward to smooth a sheet under him that had bunched up. He nodded in thanks and continued. “She learned of a sect of Buddhism called Hinduism. The Hindu revere certain powerful spirits as gods, and believe that serving these spirits will bring great fortune and happiness in the next life.” Tam nodded, a worried line creasing his brow; he knew that the Cham people to the south, enemies of Dai Viet, were Hindus.

“She discovered that up in the mountains here, near Phau Dong valley, lay an ancient monastery devoted to one such spirit, the monkey-god called Hanuman. So here we came and met the people of Phet Lo, who have been kind to us.” Thi Chao smiled at the shaman. “Following directions given to her by a wandering Siamese ascetic, we ascended through a gap in the mountains west of here. We spent many days braving the wilds of the old country, but at last found the monkey-god’s retreat.”

The shaman’s eyes clouded, and the listeners looked away respectfully as he mastered his emotions. “I...I do not remember much more. I know we entered the monastery and found…a great room, an altar, with a large black stone upon it. Looking upon the stone weighed heavily on my mind and I became fearful, but Thi Nhu…she would not leave. We argued, but she approached the shrine and laid her hands upon it. Something happened then, I know not what, but I fell into nightmares and remember little else. I saw…I saw my wife holding the stone aloft, and her form was subsumed within another, darker one. I…I think I fled, or was forced away...or…I…” He choked back tears and began to shake; deep wrenching coughs intermingled with sobs. The party looked away again, embarrassed to have witnessed such private grief. After a long while the old man continued, “I do not know how I came to escape the monkey-god’s temple. I remember claws in my soul, and fighting an evil inside me. I remember falling at one point…down a hillside. I landed on a rock and it caused me much pain. I crawled...for some time, and felt a great void in my heart, for I knew my wife was gone, and the spirits had deserted me as well. I thought I had given them great offense, though I did not know how.”

He struggled to raise his head, and Thi Chao folded the sheet in her hands and placed it behind his neck. “One of the villagers here, Tuyen, found me and carried me back to Phet Lo. This was…half a year past. I have been confined to this bed most of that time, too weak to even feed myself, though once Tuyen took me to Kim Phe to warn them of the great evil that possesses my wife. I was saddened to learn of the suffering that she has caused the people of this valley.” He coughed again.

As the adventurers looked at one another, the old man spoke once more. “I believe that if someone were to find her and separate her from the black stone, they would free her of her curse. They would free us all. I would…I would, but I am too frail now, too frail.”

“We will do it, old one,” swore Hien. He stood as he made his pledge.

The bed-ridden shaman whispered, “Perhaps. Perhaps. But beware, there are evil magics within the temple, and they have cursed me. I am not so elderly as I appear. I am thirty-five years old…”
 


Session Three, Part Six

”HE LOANED me his staff,” said Hien. He and Woo admired the weapon. It was six feet long, made of varnished Banyan wood and carved with scenes of nature spirits protecting their domains from intruders. Atop the weapon, a carving of a great mountain spirit sat as though surveying everything below it. Hien hefted it; it was well balanced and solid.

“The journey will be difficult for horses,” said Vo Thi Chao, “They will likely slow your progress, and could be injured by the uneven terrain. You can leave them with us if you wish.” Lei looked at the small stables in the compound. “Are you sure?” “Yes,” the woman replied, “We have handled such beasts before.”

Lei grunted and began to remove their packs from the horses, and Tran and Tam helped him, sorting their gear into piles and deciding what would remain and what they could carry on foot. Woo and Mai listened as Thi Chao gave directions to the gap, and discussed where the monastery was likely located. Hien led the now-barebacked equines to the stables, and Vinh looked at the walls and the buildings in the small compound. He surmised that it could house perhaps fifty people, though there seemed far less about.

“You any good with that?” a voice behind him said. He turned and faced the guard they’d first met when they arrived. The man carried his masterful kama-do with easy confidence, and up close Vinh could see that his dark face was weathered from long years outdoors. A campaigner, perhaps. He gestured at Vinh’s own kama-do and spoke again, “Well?”

“I am trained in its use,” Vinh replied cautiously, “I studied at Han Bai.”

“Ah, White Crane!” said the warrior, “Good school! I am Tuyen.” He grinned and inclined his head slightly, a mildly rude gesture of acknowledgement indicating that he chose not to bow. Stiffly, Vinh leaned his kama-do against a wall and bowed properly, grasping his right fist in his left in front of him. “Han Vinh,” he replied.

“Show me what you can do,” the older warrior continued, provocatively. He gestured at Vinh’s weapon for emphasis. “I’m not sure that is appropriate…” Vinh began. “Come on!” said Tuyen, “I want to see you fight!” He dropped into a ready stance and leveled his polearm at Vinh, grinning wider. Sighing, Vinh reached for his kama-do…

…and threw it in front of him in a cross-pattern, immediately on the defensive as the heavier Tuyen slammed his own weapon down with furious force! The ringing of the kama-dos startled everyone in the yard, and they turned to watch.

They sparred. Tuyen led Vinh in a whirling blur of motion, as he struck again and again and again, hammering the young no-sheng back across the yard as he desperately tried to block each blow. The older man was incredibly swift, forcing Vinh to fight conservatively, keeping his weapon close to his body so he wouldn’t have to move as far to react. For his part, Tuyen worked Vinh’s defenses, attacking high, then low, reversing his direction of thrust unexpectedly. He left an opening on his right flank, and Vinh took it, surging forward. Tuyen’s last thrust had been wide, and his weapon too far from his exposed side to counter Vinh’s attack. But he deflected it anyway, switching his grip by choking up near the blade of his weapon and batting the thrust away with its heel, wielding his kama-do like a staff.

Vinh stopped, breathing hard and sweating, “How did you do that!? I have never seen the kama-do wielded that way! What style is that?” Tuyen stopped and stood. “You’re pretty good. Maybe one day I’ll teach you.” Then he grinned again, bowed properly, and walked away.

“Anyway,” continued Thi Chao to Lei and the others as she returned her gaze to the group, “There is more you need to be aware of. Another group of fighters came through here several months ago, asking questions about the area. They did not say what they were looking for, and they left soon after they arrived. We have not seen them since. Also,” and she paused to glance at each of them, “be aware that these mountains are very old. There are things up there that have existed since long before the time of Men. The mountains keep their counsel well, but we have learned some of their secrets. You must be wary of the Wang-liang.”

“Who are the Wang-liang?” Woo asked. “They are giants,” she replied, “magical and terrible, and they hate Men with enduring passion. They were once the lords of the earth, but have fled to the far places for refuge as we have waxed and their people have waned. They harbor great anger for their lot.”

“Oh…not good,” said Tran.

At the request of Thi Chao, they slept that night on the slopes out of sight of the fortified village. Disgruntled but polite, the party had collected what things they could carry and marched off into the night. “Why is it the horses get to stay inside, but we have to leave? And ‘out of sight’? Does the sight of us offend them?” Tran complained, shivering. “Get some sleep, master,” Lei replied, hunkering down into his bedroll. The wind howled down across the rocks and stubby vegetation, and a panorama of stars shone throughout the night.

The next day, they began their trek to the lost temple of the monkey-god.
 

I really like the characters of the old (young) spirit-talker, and his wife, the monkey-god's thrall.

(snatch)

That was the sound of me stealing that idea.

:)
 

Glad you liked it!

What will the players find in the temple of the monkey-god? In a word, trouble. Stay tuned; we're getting to the good part.
 


Session Three, Part Seven

”WOW,” SAID Tran, echoing the general sentiment among the adventurers. High in the mountains on their second day out from Phet Lo, they stood on a sparsely wooded slope amid waist-high grasses, staring at a massive ruin to the southwest. The mountainside they stood on sprawled far below, disappearing into a jungle-filled ravine only to rise again as part of other peaks farther west. Across the ravine, several miles distant, lay a mile-wide wedge-shaped gorge, and beyond that, the misty ruin of what must have once been a mighty city. Crumbling spires and alien minarets dotted the site, which evidenced much deterioration, even at this great distance. The jungle enshrouded the lower portions of the city, though a wall-like pattern could been seen encircling it. The portion of the city closest to the party appeared to have been swallowed up by the gorge, and in what had once – presumably – been the center of the ruin stood a towering spike of stone and marble, whose peak could only be glimpsed through occasional breaks in the clouds. “Wow,” whispered Tran again. Beside him, Tam nodded in agreement, lost in thought.

“Whose city is this?” said Woo. Sensing a break in the torturous climb, he lowered his pack to the earth and began to massage his neck muscles.

Everyone looked at Tam. The wu jen, old enough to be the father of any of the others, had proven to be more widely traveled than anyone had expected. When he failed to answer immediately, Lei grunted and sat down on a rock, digging into his pack for his waterskin. Mai glanced at Vinh, who squinted at the city, covering his eyes with his hand. She followed his gaze, homing in on the great central spire, glanced at him again, and began to study it. Tam nodded and whistled. “We do not know the origins of this place. Its architecture is unfamiliar to us, and we find it quite odd that such a city could have existed here. It is too far removed for commerce, and does not appear to have been built by any people we know.”

“I see something,” declared Vinh. He pointed at the distant spire. “Around the center tower…flyers. Several flying creatures…they appear to have wings like bats, but they are…much larger.”

“I see it too,” said Mai. Tam calculated sizes and distances in his head, and his eyes widened suddenly.

“Let’s move on,” suggested Lei as he hefted his pack. For once, Woo agreed with him. Nobody argued.

“We would like to come back one day to explore this city,” said the wu jen as they hustled up the slope. “Have fun,” Woo replied.

That night they were attacked. Three monkeys, swollen to brutish size, rushed the group out of the darkness, only braying when they fell upon the groggy adventurers. Mai had been on watch, and had roused her comrades, who quickly leapt up half-asleep and scrambled for what weapons they could. Hien took a nasty bite on his hand, and Tam the wizard was also wounded, bitten on the foot. Mai, the only person wide-awake, exploded into action, a spinning dervish as she single-handedly slew two of the beasts before the others dispatched the third. “Is everyone okay?” Hien had asked afterward, ignoring his own wound. He called forth some minor healing spells and cleaned and dressed his and Tam’s injuries. The others examined the corpses of their foes. In the hasty torchlight, they discovered three black langurs of unusual size, with pronounced incisors and swollen chest cavities. “Abominations,” Hien declared, “Unnatural.”

They moved camp and returned to sleep. The following day, they discovered a road. Ancient and weathered by time, the red bricks had shattered and the mortar had become riddled with weeds and grasses. What was left of the road meandered in the direction they were headed, so they followed it, convinced that they were closing on the forgotten monastery. It wandered up the mountainside at a favorable gradient, leading north along the western face. As the sun passed its zenith, Vinh, sweating, spotted something ahead. In a crease in the mountain’s slope, a bubble of total blackness clutched the mountainside like a cyst. It appeared to be several hundred yards across. He told the others, and soon they saw it too. Again, all eyes looked to Tam, and again he had no answers. “Powerful magic,” he nodded sagely. “You think?” exclaimed Woo, exasperated.

As they continued, the slope flattened somewhat and they spied fallow fields on both sides of the road, which were in turn flanked by dense groups of trees. Ahead, the darkened region loomed close, perhaps two hundred paces away. Tightening their belts and loosening their weapons, the adventurers grimly marched on.

Then they heard it. A rumbling, buzzing bass noise vibrated across the air, and as they closed, through their chests. “What’s that?” asked Tran fearfully. No one knew, but Woo was kind enough to whisper “Ssshh!” to the aristocrat, who winced. They crept down the road, feeling woefully exposed, drawing their weapons as they progressed. Eagle-eyed as ever, Vinh spotted the source of the noise first. Disbelieving his eyes, he nonetheless pointed and whispered “There” before returning his hand to firmly grip his kama-do. To the left of the road, about one hundred paces away, a gigantic hive of horse-sized wasps darted to and fro around a nest the size of a townhouse in Thang Long. It hung suspended in the tallest of the nearby trees, and the terrifying insects ambled in and out if it in a gross parody of normal-sized wasps. They were glossy black and brilliant yellow, their wings spanned twenty feet each, and their stingers mimicked shortspears. They did not appear to notice the party. Yet.

“Go,” said Woo, “Slowly…go slowly toward the darkness.” He slipped forward and the others followed. If it occurred to anyone the irony of taking refuge from giant wasps within the cyst of darkness, they kept it to themselves.

They had moved about sixty paces when Lei groaned, startling the others. “Over there,” he pointed to their right. They looked and Woo swore. Emerging from the tree line on the right of the road, another giant wasp dipped and darted through the air on tremendous insect wings, perhaps eighty paces away. It moved erratically, as though searching for food, in their general direction.

“Run!” shouted the monk, sending Tran into a panic. The broke and ran for all they were worth, the echo of the giant wasp at their backs. If the monster followed, no one looked behind to check. Their feet pounded on the uneven bricks of the path, and one by one, the darkness swallowed them whole. Tam, the last to arrive, dove inside and nearly vomited from exertion. He bent over double, holding his sides and attempting to regain his equilibrium. Strangely, the air in here was cool, and it was not utterly dark. He rose and breathed in wonder. Around him, the other adventurers did the same, exclaiming softly.

Within the cyst, night held sway. Constellations twinkled above, and the moon hung in its quarter phase. A cool evening wind rushed past them, and dead leaves rustled at their feet. Ahead, the road straightened and led to a three-story, arched façade recessed into a sheer cliff - the temple entrance. From within, they heard chilling, simian calls, distant screeches, hoots, and cackles. Dead trees flanked the entrance, and dead vines covered the façade, which appeared to depict strange scenes in relief. Men in armor cavorted in battle, arrayed in formation, brutally killing their enemies. Tam took the carvings in, then glanced behind him, and started in surprise as he witnessed the outside world as a murky gray haze, diluted as though viewed through water. He blinked several times and shook his head, then walked forward and examined the sky as though searching for something.

Minutes later, Woo interrupted Tam’s search. “Old man,” said the monk, “let’s go.” The wizard looked around him and saw his companions looking back, resolute. Except for Tran, of course. The nobleman looked more scared than anything. Tam nodded and fell in line behind the others, reviewing his readied spells. At the front of the line, Lei lit a torch and handed it to Vinh before moving on. Several others lit torches as well.

The façade fronted a large open-air foyer fully sixty feet wide that extended into blackness beyond the paltry light of the torches. A huge pit, twenty feet across, ran the length of opening, separating the foyer from the grounds outside. Mai briefly glanced below her, but the darkness extended beyond the torchlight. Must be pretty deep, she thought. The air smelled of mulch, mustiness, and rancid meat, and she wrinkled her nose in distaste. Around them, hanging vines swathing the temple’s exterior swayed in the breeze. Glancing at one another for affirmation, they stepped forward across the bridge, Vinh and Lei leading the way. Hien brought up the rear. As Vinh reached the far side, he stepped forward and felt the stone under his foot depress. Ka-shunk. Before he could wonder the meaning of it, the bridge flipped violently, sending six shocked adventurers plummeting into the void below.
 
Last edited:

Re: Session Three, Part Seven

ForceUser said:
Before he could wonder the meaning of it, the bridge flipped violently, sending six shocked adventurers plummeting into the void below.

Talk about cliffhangers !

Great stuff, ForceUser. More ! MORE ! MORE !
 

Remove ads

Top