Thanks for coming out of lurkerdom for the praise, Oversight. I appreciate it.
And Neurotic, perhaps part of my position in the SH forum is simply outlasting most of the other longtime posters.
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Chapter 10
Beetle led them forward almost at a run, barely pausing at intersections to ensure that they were following before shooting off again down another tunnel. The route off the main tunnel was truly a labyrinth, and they’d barely gone five hundred paces before they’d had to decide between at least a half-dozen tunnels and branching side-corridors. The passages were much tighter here, and some of the openings they’d passed were little more than cracks that might have led nowhere—or to some other mysterious place far from here.
Jaron wondered just how far afield Beetle had gone in his wanderings, and how he’d managed to avoid getting lost in this warren. He glanced back at his companions, and saw that the dwarf was making markings on a small piece of parchment. He nodded to himself; the dragonborn and his wizard were cautious veterans, and would not plunge headlong into danger.
Vhael now held a torch, the bright flame driving back the darkness in a ring around them. His eyes were wary, probing, and he glanced down at Jaron, briefly meeting his gaze as if evaluating the trustworthiness of his cousin through him. Jaron didn’t know what to say in response, so he turned back and hastened to the last bend ahead around which Beetle had most recently vanished.
He rounded it to see his cousin stopped about forty feet ahead. The tunnel continued on ahead, but there was an alcove there, from which a slab of light stabbed out into the passage, as though a doorway.
Jaron quickly dropped back around the corner to where the others were rapidly approaching. “Light ahead!” he whispered, loud enough for them to hear, but not for the sound to carry off the walls of the tunnel.
Vhael doused his torch at once, and darkness rushed in to embrace them. The dragonborn continued ahead much more slowly, unlimbering the big sword from across his back. The others followed, careful not to make any noises that might alert the foe, even the nobleman carefully pressing his weapons against his legs to keep them from jostling and making noise.
Jaron hurried ahead toward Beetle. His cousin saw him coming and raised his finger to his lips. Before Jaron could do anything to stop him, he then darted into the alcove. Jaron rushed after him, but stopped before following him into the lighted space beyond; he could hear voices now, harsh, guttural sounds speaking a language with which he was all too familiar.
“Goblins,” he muttered to himself.
He raised a hand to warn the others, in case they’d missed hearing it themselves, then slowly edged forward, until he could peer into the alcove without drawing the attention of those inside.
There was a set of heavy double doors there, ill-fitting and obviously old, quite the worse for wear. They stood partially open, the light slanting out through the gap into the tunnel passage. Beetle had vanished through the opening, and with a silent curse, Jaron crept silently up to the door, the muffled steps of his companions behind him sounding deafeningly loud to his ears. But the conversation beyond did not break off, and there were no shouts of alarm.
Moving slowly, so as not to draw any eyes that might be looking in his direction, he leaned forward and peered through the gap in the doors.
The chamber was irregularly shaped, its corners cluttered with old crates and debris of furniture, including a few small rickety tables. A row of huge wooden kegs ran along the wall to his right, almost big enough to reach the ceiling, their slats cracked and obviously empty. There was no sign of Beetle, but Jaron couldn’t spare much thought for his cousin at the moment; the five hobgoblins in the room drew his more immediate attention.
Four of them were soldiers, by the look of them, their shields and heavy flails slung across their broad backs but within easy reach in case of trouble. They stood in a rough line, facing away from the door, toward the far side of the room. One was bent over something, and it took Jaron a moment to realize that it was a prone figure, small enough to only be the halfling that Beetle had mentioned earlier.
“Not speak so bold now,” the soldier looming over the halfling grunted. He kicked the halfling, who appeared to be unconscious.
“The Grimmerzhul will scour his pride from him,” the last occupant of the room hissed. He was a tall but lean hobgoblin, his exposed skin covered with a crisscross hatching of scars old and new, clad in a drape of old leather over a hauberk of metal rings. Jaron didn’t need to see the tiny fetishes woven into his hair or the markings carved into his long hooked staff to recognize this foe as a warcaster; the ranger had met his type before, and knew enough to recognize how dangerous this enemy was. Obviously, he was the leader of this group.
For the moment, the hobgoblins were oblivious to the threat lurking just a few feet away, but Jaron knew that their advantage would not last long. Even if his companions did not give themselves away with a too-loud whisper or a clank of metal, hobgoblins were not known to be careless, and now that the distraction of the halfling prisoner had been taken care of, it was almost certain that they would return their vigilance to the gates to their lair.
And there was Beetle, of course, who as always was the unpredictable wild card in this situation.
Jaron drew back, again careful to move slowly. Vhael was there, looming over him, careful not to place any part of his body or his gear in the line of sight of the opening in the door. He’d heard the voices, Jaron had no doubt, although he did not know if the dragonborn understood the goblinoid speech.
He leaned in close and stood on his toes, and Vhael bent slightly, so that his ear was just inches from the halfling’s mouth.
“Four soldiers, in a row, backs to the door. A warcaster, far side of the room, looking in this general direction. Unconscious halfling prisoner on the floor, between them.”
Vhael nodded. He seemed to have come to the same conclusion that Jaron had a moment ago, and did not wait to brief the others. Instead he communicated through a series of curt but clear gestures that Carzen, Jaron, and Gezzelhaupt were to ready missile weapons, and await his signal. Gez slipped across the shaft of light to the far side of the doors, and fitted an arrow to his bow. Gral required no direction; the dwarf merely took up a position behind the dragonborn and waited.
The preparation took all of two seconds, and then the warlord was moving, driving forward with his shoulder lowered. The doors crashed open and the dragonborn hurled forward into the room, his sword slicing out of its scabbard and up into a ready position even as the hobgoblins, startled by the sudden appearance of two hundred and fifty pounds of armored fury, spun in the direction of the threat. Instead of charging blindly forward, Vhael quickly recovered and shifted to the left. Immediately a flurry of missiles shot through the space he’d just vacated. Gezzelhaupt’s shot narrowly missed its target, but Carzen’s javelin thudded hard into the hobgoblin’s shoulder a fraction of a second later. The missile failed to penetrate the soldier’s heavy armor, but by the way that the hobgoblin snarled in pain, it had clearly hurt him. A second hobgoblin standing in front of the kegs took an arrow from Jaron’s bow a moment later, the shaft penetrating the thinner armor protecting his side as he turned. The hobgoblin got his shield up, but it was obvious that the halfling’s shot had hurt him badly.
Their situation deteriorated further a moment later as Gral hurled a pair of
icy rays at the two injured soldiers. The magical blasts painted a rime of frost across their breastplates, the chill penetrating to the bone. Neither hobgoblin fell, but both were now bloodied, and in dire shape.
But the hobgoblins were tough and disciplined foes, and they quickly reacted to the surprise attack. The two that had not been hit in the initial attack moved quickly to join their fellows, unlimbering their heavy shields to form a line. Trained and drilled in phalanx tactics, the soldiers would have made a strong force had they had time to get organized.
Vhael, however, did not give the enemy those critical seconds they needed. The dragonborn surged forward in the wake of his allies’ missiles, and drove his sword down into the more seriously wounded of the two hobgoblins. The edge of the greatsword came down under the soldier’s shield and clove deep into his shoulder, crunching through mail, leather, cloth, and flesh, finally cracking the clavicle under the sheer force of the impact. The hobgoblin, for all his discipline, could not choke off a cry of pain that turned into a gurgle as he staggered backward and fell. Vhael wrenched his blade free as he collapsed, bright droplets of blood flashing as he recovered into a defensive stance, challenging the three survivors to do anything about it.
The warcaster had recovered quickly from his initial surprise, but as his shoulders shifted to face the attack, he caught a hint of motion out of the corner of his eye. He looked down to see a long leather throng that trailed across the floor. One end was looped around the unconscious halfling prisoner’s wrist, while the other vanished into the narrow gap between the broken kegs and the chamber wall. There was a faint flicker of movement there, and the line suddenly drew taut; the prisoner started to slide across the floor.
The hobgoblin snarled and lifted his staff, speaking a guttural word of command. Magic flowed at his command, and the big tuns suddenly lurched within their bracing; the one at the end slid free as its frame snapped, and it crumpled as it hit the floor.
But the damage was incidental to the warcaster’s intent. As the keg disintegrated a small figure shot out from the wreckage, landing awkwardly with arms spread wide upon the floor just a few paces in front of the hobgoblin.
Beetle looked up at the hobgoblin, who hefted his staff like a weapon. Bright flickers of electric energy danced around its tip.
“Uh oh,” the halfling said.