JollyDoc's Savage Tide-Updated 10/8!

Epic is right. What's up with Joachim, anyway? We haven't heared from him since Shackled City.

The only thing I missed from gfunk's SH was the resolving of the end of Lich Queen's Beloved. I didn't quite get what happened from where the party searches for the lich queen's phylactery and Amal sees either the lich queen or Entropy disguised as her on the throne to the epilogue, where Amal defeats Fzoul (which is not in the archive, btw). Maybe I missed something or am just a little slow, though. :)
 

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Amal defeating Fzoul is in our Shackled City Story Hour. It is in the "Red Dawn" update under "Asylum." Also, our reasons for not finishing Lich Queen's Beloved are on that page. Briefly, we squashed Vlaakith easily the first time, we wanted to start Shackled City, and we had several new players who were not ready to start @ 21st level.
 

Thanks for clearing that up (again). When age comes, the mind goes...
Then I guess the only remaining question would be: Was it Vlaakith sitting on the throne or one of Entropy's pranks? :]
 


SUNDAY NIGHT TEASER

1. For the small price of an apology, the Legion gets to go on Mr. Charon's Wild Ride

2. This ride doesn't exactly end at Cinderella's castle...but they do find the home of a Queen.

3. The company is reunited with some old friends, just before the castle watchdogs are sicced on them.

4. Mandi takes a trip to tell Sepoto its closing time at the tavern and time to pay his tab

5. Iggwilv's house is full of warm welcomes and Witch Queen impersonators. The heroes follow a stray cat to the mistress's chamber, only to get caught up in the demonic wizard apprentice equivalent of a food fight.

6. Finally, the Legion comes into the Presence Herself, where new insights are gained and new horizons opened.

7. Daelric finally learns he really is evil after all.
 



AN EVENING WITH THE WITCH QUEEN

Mandi recognized Charon, the ferryman of the dead, immediately, and she also knew that his presence here did not bode well. As soon as he reached the shore of the new lake, some thirty feet from the Legionnaires, he spoke. Though his voice was only a whisper, it was clearly audible over the gurgling water.
“What have you done to my river?”
Mandi was momentarily taken aback.
“Your pardon, Lord Charon,” she stammered, “but this was not our doing. In fact, the touch of your river’s waters has robbed us of the knowledge of how we even came to be here. I can tell you, however, that it was our intention to come here to free Shami-Amourae, which we have done, so that she could aid us in our quest to stop the Prince of Demon’s mad quest to unify his dual natures at the expense of our home world. I believe the disruption of the River Styx is in fact Demogorgon’s doing in an attempt to stop us from speaking with the Lady of Delights.”
Charon pondered this for a moment, then nodded.
“I seriously doubt mortals such as yourselves would have the power to accomplish such a thing, and yet you still owe me an apology, for if you had never attempted to release Shami-Amourae in the first place, none of this would have happened.”
Mandi took this in, then looked at each of her companions in turn, nodding imperceptibly.
“We accept that responsibility,” she answered, “and we do indeed offer our most sincere apologies.”
“Apology accepted,” Charon replied. “Now, if you wish, you may all come aboard and I will take you from this place so that we may speak further.”
For the second time in a matter of minutes, Mandi was shocked momentarily speechless. A boat ride? With Charon? On the River Styx?
“Umm…certainly, and thank you,” she answered. “May I ask a small boon of you first?”
The ferryman nodded slightly.
“Can you tell us how we might regain our memories?”
“Heal yourselves,” Charon replied, then waited patiently as they boarded his skiff. As soon as they were ready, he turned to face the rift in the sky above and, with a wave of his staff, the flow of the stygian waters reversed. Very quickly, the boat was swept up and through the fissure, which closed behind them.
________________________________________________________________

As it turned out, Charon was correct. Once Daelric had woven his most powerful healing spell about each of them in turn, they found their amnesia was gone, their memories of the past eight hours coming back to them in a flood. As soon as she was able, Mandi sent her thoughts out across the planes, questing for Sepoto.
‘Sepoto, if you can hear me, tell me your location.’
The reply was immediate, if somewhat slurred.
‘Icewind Dale…Ten Towns…a bar…’
Mandi knew that she would be able to retrieve the goliath, but the effects of the banishment would prevent his return to the lower planes for twenty-four hours. His recovery would have to wait.

Without preamble, Charon began to speak.
“We are both Demogorgon’s enemies,” he began. “If you would seek to oppose him, the parting words of the Lady of Debased Eros are wise. You must recruit an army of his enemies. The Prince of Demons has thousands of them, but only a few are capable of mounting a force to truly threaten him. Assaulting Demogorgon alone, no matter how powerful you think you are, is suicide. I should know. I’ve taken enough of those fools to their rewards over the span of the mortal stain.”
He paused as he shifted his boathook form one hand to the other. As he did, the shores shifted and wavered as the Styx passed from one lower realm to the next.
“You need distractions and allies,” he continued. “I know of some of his enemies…the Dark Prince, the Lord of Undeath, the Prince of Vermin, the Court of Stars. Yet I know not which ones would make good allies, nor how one might secure their aid. And again, the Lady’s words are wise, for there is one who does possess the information you seek. As it happens, I know of the Witch Queen Iggwilv. Few know where she lives these days, but I am one of these few. I can take you to her home, but your negotiations with her are your own to forge. Will you accompany me?”
The cloaked figure stood perfectly still, awaiting an answer.
“Yes, of course,” Mandi answered without hesitation. “You have done us a great service this day, and we shall not forget it.”
Charon did not answer, but instead continued to pole the skiff along the dark, greasy waters.

Time passed as the boat moved quickly along, passing through dozens of landscapes of death, despair and ruin, each more depressing than the last. Finally, after what might have been hours or days, they reached a dull and depressing place. Mandi recognized it as Niflheim, one of the glooms of the Gray Wastes of Hades. Ragged tors and cliffs lined one bank of the river, while the other stretched off into an endless swampy moor. Gray mists writhed and twisted, obscuring the horizon, and the entire realm seemed devoid of color. As Charon continued to pole along, vision through the fog dropped dramatically to no more than one-hundred feet. Soon, a dark shape loomed before them, and as the skiff grew closer, it resolved into a welcome but unexpected sight…the Sea Wyvern! The ship’s confused crew milled about on deck, unharmed but obviously baffled. The ship itself was docked at a gray wooden pier that protruded from a rocky shore, beyond which a ledge lead up into the unseen mists above, along one of the looming cliff faces.
“You have arrived at your destination,” Charon explained, “and I have brought your vessel for your use. I grant you permission to ply my river as long as we share the same goals.”
As the skiff drew nearer still, Mandi could see that the wyvern figurehead of the ship bore Charon’s mark upon its face…a pair of gold coins affixed to its eyes. The skiff pulled alongside the caravel, and the Legionnaires debarked to the shouted “Huzzah!” of the crew.
“Iggwilv’s manor awaits at the top of this ledge,” Charon said. “Tend to your crew first. They won’t be happy when they realize where they’ve come to, and it would not be well for them to stay long here. Take care on your approach. The Witch Queen does not leave her grounds unguarded. I must take my leave of your for now, but when you have gathered your army and are prepared for the assault, whisper in your ship’s figurehead’s ear and I shall return to aid you one last time.”
With that, Charon pushed off the Sea Wyvern’s hull with his pole and in the span of only a few seconds, he faded into the mist and was gone.
 

The crew of the Sea Wyvern was indeed agitated and confused, but Daelric’s diplomatic reassurances gave them confidence that their services were once more vital to the cause, and that the Legion would stand ready to protect them as they had done before. The young priest was just warming to his audience and preparing to deliver a truly inspiring soliloquy, when Tower Cleaver tapped him on the shoulder. Irritated at the interruption, he turned sharply.
“What?”
“Who that?” the minotaur asked, pointing to the cliffside path. When Daelric and the others looked in that direction, they all saw a wolf-headed humanoid figure approaching the pier, waving them off. A moment later, the waters along the shore churned and frothed as two immense monsters, snakelike dragons with gray scales and long, thin snouts, surged up onto the shores to roar angrily, although it was unclear if they had taken offense at the intrusion of the Sea Wyvern or the wolf-headed man. The creature himself wore fine robes and his ears were adorned with expensive rings.
“You aren’t expected by Her Excellency,” he said loftily. “If you value life, you will debark from here now, before her pets grow braver. You are not wanted here!”
He didn’t wait for a response, instead signaling to the dragons with a flip of his hand before he vanished into thin air.

“Those creatures are linnorms,” Mandi said cautiously as she stepped towards the stern of the ship. “I would advise any non-essential personnel to take cover…now!”
The crew didn’t need to be told twice. Like rats, they scattered towards the gangways and into the bowels of the ship. Daelric, seeming to think that Mandi meant him as well, spread his wings and took to the air, darting for cover behind the ship’s wheel deck.
“Where’s everybody running to?” Marius cried, laughing. “The fun’s right here!”
With a flourish of his hand, the warmage conjured a large, roiling cloud of smoke and fire, and sent it rolling towards the linnorms. One of the dragons screeched as the searing embers landed on its hide, but the second seemed completely unaffected as it launched itself into the air, closely followed by its brother. Ignoring the exposed figures on the ship’s deck, each of them circled behind the ship from either side, until both hovered above a suddenly terrified, cowering Daelric. Then, as one, both of the behemoths drew in great breaths, and exhaled gusts of acidic water, showering the priest with the caustic sprays.

As Daelric screamed, Octurus launched himself towards the ships starboard side, where he could just reach one of the linnorms. His scimitar whickered by, almost faster than the eye could follow, and drew a deep gash across the dragon’s brow, sending a great gout of blood gushing into its eyes, temporarily blinding the beast. Meanwhile, Mandi hurled magic at the second behemoth, tearing out its vasculature with a horrendous ripping sound. With nothing to anchor it, the mass of blood vessels simply dropped into the river below with a sickening plop. The linnorm howled in agony, twisting and turning in mid-air like a landed trout. Then, in a flash, Mandi’s form morphed and shifted until she had assumed the shape of another linnorm. With a deafening roar, she launched herself at the wounded dragon, ripping and tearing at it with her teeth and claws before delivering a devastating slap with her thick tail, snapping the brute’s neck with one blow. It crashed to the water and was slowly carried away by the current.
The remaining linnorm, still pawing at its eyes, was an easy mark for Tower Cleaver and Octurus. The pair hacked and slashed at it until, in desperation, it winked away in a flash of bright light, retreating to nurse its wounds.

“Some welcome,” Daelric said, still shaken as he tended his own wounds. “Are we sure this is where we want to be?”
“We don’t have much choice,” Mandi replied. “We need Iggwilv’s help in this if we want to have any hope of success. This is not Elminster we’re visiting. The Witch Queen may be testing us to see if we’re worthy to come before her presence. While I think we’re up to the task, we’re not going any further without our full compliment. All of you remain on the ship. You’ll be safe here. If you noticed, the linnorms didn’t actually attack anyone on board. They only went for Daelric after he’d left the deck. I think Charon’s protection is real, but we can count on the denizens of these planes to honor it to the exact letter and take advantage of any loophole they can find. I’ll return shortly.”
_________________________________________________________________

Without further adieu, Mandi then opened a rift between Hades and the Prime, shunting herself back to her home plane with gut-churning suddenness. When her vision cleared, she found herself in Tashluta, outside the Seeker’s hall. Quickly, she entered, barging past the clerk at the front desk who gawked openly at her. She made her way to the map room and riffled through the numerous bound parchments there until she found what she was looking for…a detailed cartography of Icewind Dale and Ten Towns. Concentrating, she fixed the location in her mind, and vanished once more, this time reappearing in the frigid, biting air of Icewind Dale. She stood outside a tavern called the Halfling’s Gem. She entered, her sharp eyes scanning the room until she picked out the hulking form of the goliath in a corner booth nursing a large tankard of ale.
“Enjoying ourselves, are we?” she said as she strode to the table and leaned over it.
Sepoto nearly choked on his beer when he saw her, his eyes growing wide.
“I…wasn’t expecting you so soon,” he said.
“Yes, well, tempus fugit and all that,” she snapped, grabbing him by the wrist. At a snap of her fingers a large, spatial rift opened in the middle of the bar, sending patrons running in all directions. A ship was clearly visible on the far side, docked at an ancient pier amid thick fog clouds. Mandi quickly stepped through, dragging Sepoto behind her…
 

The ledge wound up the side of the cliff several hundred feet above the Styx. At the top of the trail loomed the manor, a sprawling mansion of gothic eaves, spiked crenellations, and iron and darkwood wainscoting. Demonic gargoyles leered from the corners of the roof, and a cold iron fence enclosed the immense structure. The gates hung open in absent invitation. Within, a few dead, leafless trees decorated the courtyard. A short path, made of what appeared to be realistically carved, stone faces, led up the tall front doors. Mandi glanced down at the path as they approached the house and realized that the faces were more than just realistic…they were real, chiseled off the bodies of individuals that had been magically petrified. She kept this information to herself.

Octurus was the first to approach the entry portal, and at his knock, the doors swung silently open. As he stared into the gloom beyond, trying to adjust his eyes, he saw something floating lazily towards him. His hands were already on the hilts of his scimitars when he realized it was an envelope closed with wax bearing Iggwilv’s seal. Plucking it from the air, he slid his thumb beneath the wax and unfolded the note within:

My unexpected guests…I regret that I have been unable to meet with you to discuss matters of mutual interest, or that my pets may have caused you undue harm.
My researches require my full attention for another hour; please follow my cat and await me in the Demonhunter’s Room. I will join you shortly.’
IGV


Just as he finished reading the letter, Octurus felt something brush past his leg. Glancing down, he saw a glossy, black cat circling around his ankles. It flicked its tail once and began padding down the hall.
“That’s no cat,” Daelric said in an aside to Mandi. “My True Sight shows its real nature. It’s that same creature that met us at the docks.”
“I’m well aware of that,” Mandi replied testily, having imbued herself with the same magic. “But as the saying goes, ‘When in Waterdeep, do as the Waterdhavians.’

The polymorphed feline led them to a door on the left side of the hall, and then pushed it open with its nose. The so-called Demonhunter’s Room (which Octurus liked the sound of) was a well appointed drawing room, its walls lined with shelves of books, a small niche containing a statue of a cowering vrock demon, a small domed ceiling covered in gold leaf high overhead, and four beautiful stuffed leather chairs. One of those chairs floated three feet in the air, and there sat a woman with raven-black hair wearing a rich purple leather corset over a black robe. Mandi noticed several things when she entered the room. First, the woman in the chair was not real, but an illusion. Second, three arcanaloths, for that’s what the wolf-headed creatures were, part of a demonic race called yugoloths, hovered invisibly near the ceiling. Again, she kept her observations to herself, willing to play along with the ruse a little longer.
“My Lady,” the sorceress said, bowing. “We have to come to beseech your aid in a matter of mutual concern.”
“Do not presume to know what does or does not concern me,” the woman answered. “I care little, in fact, for the concerns of lesser beings.”
“Would it make a difference if we told you that a not-so-lesser Prince of Demons is hatching a plan to unify his two personalities?” Mandi asked.
“Just the latest in Demogorgon’s mad schemes,” the lady replied. “None of them have ever borne fruit in the past, so why should I worry about this one?”
“Charon and Shami-Amourae seemed to care,” Mandi said dryly.
“Did I mention my opinion of lesser beings?” she answered.
“Very well,” Mandi acceded. “Perhaps we are wasting your time after all. But before we leave, I believe I have something that belongs to you.”
She reached into her haversack and pulled out the Demonomicon.

In a flash the arcanaloths were in motion, and Mandi shouted a telepathic warning to her comrades. The demons were preparing to cast spells, but the elven sorceress was faster, and she hastily conjured a force wall beneath their feet. When the lightning exploded from their hands, it struck the barrier and bounced harmlessly off.
“We don’t want to fight you!” Mandi called.
“Speak for yourself,” Marius grumbled.
“We only wish to speak to your mistress!” Mandi continued.
In response, the demons vanished. Mandi sensed them teleporting, and thanked whatever powers might be listening that she wove her interdiction around her daily.
“We have about twenty seconds until they appear,” she snapped at the others. “We’d best get ready. Sepoto, Cleaver, Octurus, get up there and be ready.”
She cast as she spoke, creating a shimmering field of green energy in the area she knew the arcanaloths would reappear in…a dimensional lock to prevent them from teleporting again.
Once the three warriors had quaffed their individual potions and flew into the field, she turned to Marius.
“Lock them in,” she commanded.
The gnome nodded and created a second force wall beneath the trio. When the demons reappeared, they would be trapped between the two barriers with a phalanx of steel and death awaiting them.

A moment later, the arcanaloths reappeared, but far from being taken by surprise, they snarled a challenge at the three warriors and then proceeded to erect their own force walls, sectioning off the area even further, leaving Tower Cleaver trapped behind two walls, while Sepoto faced off against one demon, and Octurus was left with the remaining two. Then, in rapid succession, the fiends unleashed barrages of force missiles at the Maztican and the goliath.
Meanwhile, down below, Mandi cursed roundly that her beautiful plan had not worked. She quickly dismissed the lower force wall, and then conjured up a familiar pair of huge, disembodied hands. One of them flew towards the pair of demons engaging Octurus and snatched one of them into its vice-like grip. The second hand mirrored the maneuver with Sepoto’s opponent. Octurus didn’t waste the opportunity. Leaping at the grappled arcanaloth, he struck with the hilt of his scimitar, shattering the demon’s jaw. Then, his blades went into a bewildering display of shining steel that ended with a long, looping cut that completely disemboweled the fiend.

Mandi smiled mirthlessly, knowing she had neutralized the other constricted arcanaloth’s ability to cast spells, since its hands were bound. That left only one to deal with. For the second time in as many minutes, she was shocked and taken aback when both fiends bowed their heads in concentration, and then out of thin air, two more arcanaloth’s appeared! No sooner had the new pair arrived, than their hands were in motion, weaving their magic. Daelric sensed what was coming, and quickly countered one of the spells, but the other was already complete, and rippling lightning surged through the group, arcing from one to the next. Both demons followed this by another bombardment of magic missiles, this time aimed at Mandi and Marius.
“That’s it!” Marius shrieked. “I’ve had enough of toying with these upstarts!”
The little gnome virtually spat out the words to his spell, and as he spoke the last one, a wave of searing heat washed over the quartet of yugoloths, leaching the moisture from their skin with the force of its impact.

At that point, the battlefield truly erupted. Sepoto and Octurus continued to harry their opponents, with the Maztican slashing at the hamstring of his, while Sepoto settled for straight-forward bashing. Meanwhile, the two new arrivals continued to saturate the party with chained bolts of lightning and magical force bolts.
It was then that Mandi sensed something behind her, and as she turned, she saw Iggwilv materialize. Only it was not Iggwilv, but another polymorphed arcanaloth. The other demons, however, didn’t seem to realize this, as evidenced by their sudden halt of hostilities, and their pleas of mercy from their mistress.
“Be gone!” the new arrival said to the pair of fiends that had been summoned, and in an eye blink, they vanished.
“Will you allow these other two to leave as well?” the creature asked Mandi.
“No,” the sorceress snapped, folding her arms across her chest.
The disguised arcanaloth sighed, and took a seat in the floating chair.
“Allow me to apologize for my brothers,” he said. “They are fools and children in many ways. And allow me to apologize for my deception. I am not my Mistress.”
The beautiful female form wavered, and an instant later, the true form of the demon was seated in the chair.
“My name is Landerbold, and I am Her Excellency’s appointments minister. She apologizes for the jealousy and enthusiasm you’ve been exposed to, and has asked me to inform you that you are free to leave, unharmed. I give you my word no reprisals will be taken against you.”
“We’re not leaving here until we’ve had a chance to speak with your Mistress,” Mandi said, pointedly. “We were brought here by Charon himself, on a mission of great urgency. The Prince of Demons is preparing to make a bold and catastrophic move, and if he is not stopped, not even Iggwilv will be safe for long.”
Landerbold sighed again and nodded.
“All is well. I assure you my mistress can meet with you. She’ll understand about the bloodshed. It was overdue…those fools needed a lesson in humility. Gather at the top of the manor stairs in your best finery in one hour. If you lack any fine garments, work up a glamour or something. Her Excellency has discerning tastes, and shabby vagabonds rarely receive her help. Oh, and one more thing: keep your wands and weapons sheathed in Her Excellency’s presence. She keeps demon lords as pets. She’ll have no problem crushing you if you try anything stupid. If you’re assassins, you’re incredibly foolish, and I look forward to seeing your deaths.”
 

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