Session #30
The party settled into the lean-to for the night.
“Maybe in the morning we should see if Siram or someone has bows with stronger pulls for sale, for Ratchis and Jeremy, since they’re the best shots,” Kazrack suggested, laying his bedroll near the hearth.
“I don’t have much coin,” Ratchis said.
“We can pool our resources,” the dwarf said. “We should have enough.”
Osilem, 17th of Dek – 564 H.E.
Morning came, and there was still no sign of anyone being around; even Toothless Jabnit had disappeared.
Kazrack and Ratchis did their morning prayers while Jeremy and Beorth practiced their swordplay.
“I guess a place like this doesn’t have a market,” Kazrack mused, when he was done lying with his forehead on his prayer-stone for an hour.
“This is the market,” Martin said, just finishing his preparation of spells.
“They probably only convene the market every few weeks,” Beorth suggested.
“Well, it was just that I was curious what Jana needed to acquire to cast a lightning bolt like Rindalith did,” Kazrack said.
“What!?” Ratchis asked with surprise.
“Remember, he had a ring that allowed him to do that,” Jana said.
“I didn’t see that,” Kazrack said.
“I must have been the only one who noticed,” Jana said. (125)
“We can always cut the ring from his hand when we kill,” Beorth offered.
Everyone turned and looked at the paladin strangely
“Well, that is one way of dealing with the situation,” Jana said, with a smirk.
“My first thought was that it would be useful to be able to do that,” Kazrack said, arranging things in his pack.
“My first thought was that it hurt a great deal,” Ratchis said, wryly and threw his pack over his shoulder, stepping out into the morning sunlight.
Around them was the sound of dripping snow melting off the trees while birds chirped happily.
Kazrack tried to heal himself with a spell, but the pain of his broken arm was too much the first time and the spell was disrupted. He tried again, calling to Rivkanal, dwarven goddess of motherhood, mercy and protection, “Lady of the Raised Shield, please heal me that I may protect Derome-Delem in your name!”
The Cure light wounds spell functioned, and the last of the wounds the dwarf had suffered from the battle with Rindalith and the manticore were gone. He was also free of boils and blisters (even the scars of them were gone), and he felt fit and clear-headed.
The party walked over to Siram’s treehouse to ask him about purchasing strength bows, but no one was home.
They began their march westward.
“How long does a full moon last?” Kazrack asked when they had been marching just over an hour.
“Three days,” Martin replied.
“Then I hope we get there within the day,” Kazrack said. “The moon was full the last two nights, when it could be seen at all.”
“Why do you care about the full moon?” Beorth asked.
“Because my geas states that the sickle must be forged beneath the full moon,” Kazrack replied.
“Um, can you even make a sickle in one day?” Jeremy asked.
“No,” Kazrack said.
“There was something I wanted to make clear to you all,” Jana suddenly said. “If we run into Rindalith again, I want you all to know that I would not go with him. He has been known to charm people, so…”
“He won’t charm me,” Ratchis said. (126)
“So, if we see you going with him willingly we know that it is not truly your wishes?” Beorth said.
“Yes,” replied Jana.
The day was cold, but not the coldest they had endured while traveling the wilds of Gothanius for the previous few months. However, it was clear and nearly windless. Soon, Ratchis took a leads of a few score yards and led the way northward when they came to broad stream that was frozen in several places.
They marched on for another couple of hours, Ratchis scouting ahead in his magical boots that allowed him to keep on top of the snow and not leave a trail, while the others were forced to blaze a trail through snowbanks of various heights, keeping close to the stream where most of the snow had slipped into the water, and far from the treeline to the their right. Most of the time Ratchis was so far ahead that that the others could not see him, but it was not long after their break for a mid-day meal that he came jogging back to them.
“There are some travelers or natives to this area across the river, about 100 yards upstreadm,” the half-orc told the others. “I only saw one person. I think they were filling a skin on the bank, but there could have been others.”
“How were they dressed?” Beorth asked.
“Couldn’t really tell,” Ratchis replied.
“Is it safe to assume they are one of the hunters?” Kazrack asked.
“I have no idea,” Ratchis replied.
“Why don’t we just go and greet them?” Kazrack suggested, and the party agreed, continuing their march upstream, but with Ratchis keeping with them for now.
However, by the time they got to the spot Ratchis had seen the mysterious figure it was gone. They decided not to take the time to go across and look for signs of the person.
And on they marched. Ra’s Glory passed over their head from the right to the left and began its slow descent to the underworld. Soon they could see the tall ridge that ran parallel to the stream came into another taller ridge with a flattened top. They could see a multitude of trees atop it. They came to a spot where the stream was much broader, but shallower, and there were stones that allowed passage across without getting wet.
Kazrack led the way across, hopping from stone to stone very slowly and carefully.
“Be careful, the stones are very slippery, even a bit icy in places,” the dwarf called back.
Jana followed, and soon Martin and Jeremy had made it across as well. However, Beorth had not gone a third of the way across when his infamous clumsiness led to his slipping and splashing into the icy cold water.
“That stone is slippery,” Beorth said, weakly.
Jeremy erupted into laughter.
Ratchis hopped quickly from stone to stone to reach the ghost-hunter and help him up, but reaching down he slipped as well and joined him in the water.
Now Jeremy was on the ground holding his stomach as he pointed and laughed.
“Jeremy!” Martin scolded.
“What? That is really funny!” the Neergaardian replied through guffaws.
Ratchis stood in the shallow water and helped Beorth to his feet and then clutching his holy symbol called to his goddess, “Nephthys, please protect this holy warrior from the cold this evening.”
Beorth felt the divine warmth wash over him. “Thank you,” he said.
Soon enough, they were at the base of the steep climb up to the top of the ridge. It was soon determined that there was not easy way up within sight. They continued to walk north along the ridge in the dimming light looking for a place to ascend. Finally, Ratchis spotted a series of very large stones that made a staggered and immense stairway up the side.
As in most of their endeavors out in the wilderness, Ratchis took the lead, climbing the first stone and then lowering a rope to pull the others up one at a time. They repeated this four times before they were at the top of the ridge, but by that time the sun had finally set, and the moon, full, gray and unfocused (127) rose, revealing a wondrous sight.
As far as they could see the was a forest of towering pines and firs. The moonlight washed over the snow-capped tops of the trees giving the whole place a ghostly sheen. However, all about the forest was a all of twisted and tightly packed thorns that reached nearly to the upper branches of the towering trees. There was no obvious way through the thorns.
“That’s amazing,” Martin said.
“This is quite a sight,” Jana added.
“There must be a way in,” Ratchis said. “Let’s take advantage of the moonlight and try walking north along it.”
The party began to walk around the edge of the forest, only a few short feet from the tumble off the edge of the ridge.
They walked for nearly an hour with no sign of an entrance.
“Maybe we should just announce ourselves,” Martin suggested.
“How? Start a fire?” Kazrack asked.
“Very funny,” Ratchis was not often sarcastic.
Kazrack stepped closer to the thorns and reached out to see how much resistance they gave, when suddenly one of the thorns was impaled in his hand! He drew it back, as blood pooled in his cupped hand. The dwarf cried out.
“I swear they moved to stick me!” Kazrack said.
“Yes, I saw the move, too,” said Beorth.
“Well, hopefully that announced us,” Kazrack said.
“Announced us? Looks like we’re not getting the warm welcome from Osiris I expected,” Beorth said.
“I could’ve told you that,” Jeremy said under his breath.
“Oh ye of little faith!” Ratchis said. “It is not like we can expect to be welcomed by a marching band.”
The party continued walking, most of them feeling discouraged and tired., but Beorth hesitated.
Martin and Jana noticed Beorth peering deep into the thorns as if trying to get a better look at something.
“Ratchis?” Martin called to the half-orc who was still walking.
Kazrack heard and turned to see Beorth and the others standing still, “Ratchis, hold!”
“Beorth, what do you see?” Jana came up beside the paladin and placed a hand on his shoulder.
Beorth was silent for a long moment, and then stepped right up close to the thorns.
“The most beautiful creature I have ever seen in my life,” Beorth said, softly. “A ram…”
“Careful, Beorth, do not allow yourself to be beguiled,” Ratchis warned.
Beorth suddenly held his arms open to the sky and looked up. “Osiris, please grant us passage into your realm. I believe you are aware that my friends and I have a quest to fulfill within these walls!”
There was another moment of silence as Beorth’s companions looked back and forth from looking at each other to trying to look past the thorns to see if they could see the ram the paladin spoke of.
“It is moving this way,” Beorth said and stared walking northward again. The others followed.
“What does it look like, Beorth? How can it be that we do not see it?” Kazrack asked, as Beorth s tumbled along, occasionally pausing to strain his vision and then going on. After a few minutes of this he stopped suddenly.
“It will not go further,” Beorth said, stepping towards the thorn wall where it was between two particularly large trees. He did not stop and stepped right into the wall, but it parted for him with a gentle rustling.
“Wow,” said Jeremy, his jaw dropping open.
“We must enter now,” Beorth said walking into an ever-lengthening corridor between walls of thorn.
Ratchis did not hesitate and followed. Kazrack looked at Jeremy and said, “Take the rear.”
He followed Ratchis and then came Martin and Jana. Jeremy was last.
“It is leading us,” Beorth said to Ratchis. “Can’t you see it?”
“Describe it so that we may know what we look for,’ Kazrack said, over-hearing.
“It is huge. Larger than any normal ram, almost as if it were what every ram would aspire to be. It’s fleece is as spun gold, it is as tall as a man at the shoulder, and even its broad horns are honeyed in color,” Beorth said, as if in a trance.
Ratchis squinted his eyes, and for a second he thought he did see a sudden flash if gold between the thorns that slowly opened for them about 60 feet ahead in the dim moonlight. But then there was nothing.
Behind them, the thorns closed back up.
“Are we sure we are going the right way?” Jeremy asked.
“There is only one way to go,” replied Martin, holding his lantern as high as he could as to not loose sight of Beorth and Ratchis who led the way.
The path opened before them and closed behind them, all along Beorth following the immense golden ram that no one else could really see. It seemed a noble creature to him, moving confidently at the edge of his vision, the thorns opening before him. The path itself wound back and forth from the left to the right and back again, meandering almost as if by random, but definitely taking the party deeper and deeper into the woods, just very slowly.
It was oddly quiet. There was no sound of animals, birds or insects around, just the sound of their boots in the snow.
“If we got attacked here we’d be sitting ducks,” Kazrack commented.
No one replied.
After the meandering for a half hour, the path seemed to straighten again. As best as Ratchis could tell they were going north by northwest. Suddenly, ahead on the right they saw the glow of a large bonfire. The path passed a clearing on the right, which was just on the other side of a few feet of thorns. The bonfire was in the clearing, but they could not determine how large the clearing was through the thorns.
“Hello? Is there someone there? Is someone there? Hello?” a frightened woman’s voice came from inside the clearing.
Beorth stopped and stepped closer to the thorns on the right aside and tried peering through. Way up ahead the ram turned left and the path opened for him as he moved out of sight.
“Hello?” the paladin called into the clearing beyond, as Ratchis stepped up beside hum and peered in as well.
The could now see a bier of stone beside the bonfire. Upon the stone was a the silhouette of a woman wrapped in a fur blanket. She moved forward on the stone, but was stopped by a chain which was connected from her ankle to a ring in the stone.
“Oh thank Ra! You have to help me before the monsters come back!” She began to grow more and more disturbed. “Please. Oh god, please! There has been some kind of mistake.”
Ratchis felt his ire rise in him as he saw the chain on her ankle, and his hand went reflexively to his war hammer.
“She sounds like she needs help,” Kazrack said.
“What would a woman be doing in the depths of the thorns?” Martin wondered aloud.
Ratchis looked around frantically for a way into the clearing, but there was none.
“Beorth, move ahead!” Ratchis commanded, hoping the path would lead them around into where she was.
“Hello, who is there?” The woman called again. “Hurry, before they come!”
“Aren’t we going to help the woman?” Kazrack said, puzzled at seeing Beorth and Ratchis begin to hurry forward past the clearing and make for the bend away from it. The dwarf stepped towards the clearing and looked in to see the woman. “Gods! Woman, what is going on here?”
“I really don’t think we should meddle in these things. We really don’t know what’s going on here and what we’re getting involved in,” Jana said, but her warning for caution went unheeded. Kazrack turned his shoulder and tried to walk through the thorns, hoping his armor and covering his face with his arms would protect him, but he was wrong. He could feel the thorns squirm and wriggle to make sure he pressed himself against the maximum number possible, and they were as strong as steel puncturing his chain shirt in many places. The dwarf leapt back, his body streaked with his own blood running from numerous puncture wounds.
Ratchis turned when he heard Kazrack cry out, and began to hack at the thorn wall with his sword.
“No! It’s too late they’ve come,” the woman suddenly shrieked, and the party could now hear snarling voices approaching the clearing from the other side. They voices were goblin-like, but deeper and harsher in tone.
“The ram that Beorth can see must have led us here to save this woman!” Kazrack said, drawing his light flail in his off hand.
“No! The ram led us to the path, not to the woman!” Jana isnsited.
”That doesn’t matter, we still have to save her!” Jeremy said, drawing his long sword.
“This is all a nightmare! A nightmare! “ the woman began to scream.
“Gnarish farsche cunndosh fessa!” One of the goblinoid voices cried in a commanding tone.
“Let’s try and find another way around,” Ratchis cried to his companions when he realized that his chopping was virtually ineffective and that it would take too long to chop all the way through. The thorns moved and regrew almost as fast as he cut at it.
“Woman, have you met any druids?” Ratchis called.
“No! There are no druids here!” She replied.
“ Why are you a prisoner?”
“Just help me, please help me! Help me!” The woman begged.
“Why were you brought here?” Ratchis continued to question.
“The monsters just grabbed me!”
“We gotta help the lady!” Jeremy insisted.
“Those creatures might be the druids,” Ratchis warned.
“That’s what I think, let’s see where the path leads,” Beorth said, drawing his own sword, and leading the way.
Martin joined Kazrack in peering into the clearing and now both could see two large hairy humanoids, broad-shouldered and with visible fangs. They were covered in long dirty brown fur, and their red eyes glowed faintly in the dim light.
“Goresh feeshee knach-knache!” One of them growled.
“I hate to sound callous, but we don’t know what’s going on,” Jana said, following Ratchis who took off after Beorth. “Maybe this is some form of punishment for her.”
“Those are bugbears!” Kazrack cried out. “Bugbears can be druids?”
“Sumnus! Martin cried, casting a handful of sand through the thorn wall. One of the bugbears swayed and fell, snoring loudly at the feet of his companion.
“Loxxo Far-geeva karsh!” the other bugbear screamed, and ran back the way he had come. “Farna-loxxo! Farna-Orsho!” he could be heard to yell.
“How long will that last?” Kazrack asked Martin.
“A few minutes,” Martin replied.
“Hopefully that will last long enough. It seems the other one went to get reinforcements. We need to find a way around,” Kazrack said.
“Help! Please! Help!” the woman cried.
“We are trying to find a way around. We’ll be right back,” Kazrack called to the woman, pushing Martin ahead of him. Jeremy took up the rear.
“This doesn’t seem to be going in the right direction, but I don’t see what other hope we have,” Kazrack said, as the path turned right again, leading the party further away from the clearing.
Jeremy paused and looked back. He could hear the woman screaming more and the bugbear voices yelling what he thought were jeers and insults at him and the others.
They walked onward for another ten minutes until the cries of the woman had faded away. The path turned left again. They were moving even further away.
“This isn’t going to lead to her.” Said Kazrack, obviously frustrated.
“It is very possible that that woman is to be a human sacrifice,” Ratchis said, calmly, but not slowing his pace.
Beorth still led the way, and he could still see the ram leading the way.
“That’s horrible!” Martin exclaimed.
“Who would practice such a foul ritual?” Kazrack asked.
“The druids of Osiris, that’s who,” Beorth said, matter-of-factly.
Kazrack stopped dead in his track and hung his head, “Who have I sworn aid to…?”
“Don’t worry, Kazrack,” Ratchis said, trying to sound reassuring. “They only sacrifice prisoners.”
“It matters not!” the dwarf retorted.
“Prisoners who volunteer,” Ratchis added.
“Volunteers I can almost accept,” Kazrack said, beginning to walk again.
“Remember Kazrack, just because you see something in this place doesn’t make it real,” Jana warned.
“Dwarves cannot be fooled by illusions!” Kazrack said stubbornly.
“Yes they can,” Martin said.
“No, they can’t,” Kazrack maintained.
“What about when you heard those false voices when we were attacked by those demon gnomes?” Jeremy asked.
“That wasn’t an illusion. It was voices,” Kazrack would not give in.
“No, that was an illusion,” Martin said, condescendingly.
“Bah!”
They continued to walk. Occasionally, Beorth would lose sight of the ram, and quicken his pace only to find him having turned again on the long meandering course.
“So, we are just going to leave that woman to die?” Jeremy asked, sounding upset.
“If she’s here by her own choice…” Beorth began.
“She didn’t seem to be here by her own choice,” Jeremy snapped. “And if she did come her by her own choice, she chose a bad time to change her mind.”
Kazrack threw his flail down and kicked the dirt. “Martin, what do you say?” the dwarf looked to the watch-mage for direction on the matter.
“I will trust Beorth’s and Ratchis’ judgment in this matter,” Martin replied.
They continued to walk, and Kazrack took up the spot beside Ratchis.
“Will you call upon your goddess to heal the wounds I took while attempting to go through the thorns?” Kazrack asked the friar.
“If you will have an open mind about what we find here,” Ratchis replied.
“I always have an open mind,” Kazrack said, and Jana rolled her eyes.
“I just need you to understand that we may not have the power to do certain things here,” Ratchis said.
“Regardless of whether something is possible, you still have to try it if it is the right thing,” Kazrack said.
“What would you have done? Gone back and shouted at them? That would have been helpful,” Ratchis said, growing more and more comfortable using sarcasm from the months of spending time with these people.
“I’ve bowed to the preference of the group. Is that not enough?” Kazrack said, sulkily.
Ratchis cast a curing spell on Kazrack.
The companions marched for another half hour, their fatigue growing.
“The ram is gone, but it looks like maybe there is something ahead,” Beorth called out. For a moment it looked like the path opened into a clearing, but suddenly a cloud passed over the moon, and Martin’s lantern did not seem up to the job of piercing the ominous dark.
“It’s a good thing we don’t necessarily believe in omens,” Jana said, looking up as the last bit of moonlight disappeared.
“I do,” Kazrack said.
They stepped slowly into the clearing, and found that the “mouth” of it was a bit wider than the path by about ten feet on either side, but beyond it was inky blackness of a much huger clearing that went far past the range of the lantern.
“I have a bad feeling about this,” Jeremy murmured.
They heard a grunt from the darkness before them, and then the sound of something crunching through the snow, loudly.
The party let out a collective gasp a bear stepped into the circle of lantern light. However, it was like no bear any of them had ever seen. It was twenty feet long and tall than a man at the shoulder. It reared up on its hind legs and bellowed.
“By the gods!” Kazrack exclaimed.
Beorth fell to his knees, “ The druids know we are here.”
Ratchis put his hand out towards the bear and took a half-step forward. The immense bear let out a breathy grunted, and fell back to its four legs and stepped toward the party.
“Ratchis, beware…” Kazrack warned, reaching for his flail. The bear roared again, and Ratchis could see the huge maw open before him. The bear could easily rip the head and shoulders off the half-orc’s body with one bite, but Ratchis did not flinch. Instead, he put his other hand out gesturing for Kazrack to step back.
The bear snorted and began to sniff Ratchis. The half-orc felt the cold and moist nose of the bear on his face, the mucus and saliva of the bear smearing off onto his face. He could feel its hot breath, in and out, pulling on his skin, and the animal’s stinky breath. The bear sniffed him up and down, the force of his snout knocking the huge ranger back a few feet, but he always stepped right back up to it with no fear. The bear turned its head and looked at Kazrack, and yawned. It then turned and walked back to the darkness.
“Kazrack, take up the rear,” Ratchis asked the dwarf. “Beorth, you walk up front with me.”
They stepped forward into the inky darkness of the huge clearing. The light from Martin’s lantern seemed to almost struggle against the night and barely persevere. Suddenly, there was a sound like many feet crunch in the snow from several spots up ahead in the darkness the bear had disappeared into.
There was the suddenly light of three huge fires lighting up, two about sixty feet from the party and third between them, but another ninety feet back. And all about them in a semi-circle were scores of the large hairy goblins. They held spears, and began to speak in their harsh language, their individual murmurs turning into a collective roar.
The party froze in their tracks, outnumbered at least ten to one, maybe even twenty to one.
The cloud rolled away from before the moon, and the crowd of bugbears opened creating an aisle from which emerged several robed figures. At their lead was a tall figure nearly seven feet tall. He wore a brown cloak, with the hood over his head, and at his side he wore the curved blade of a scimitar. At his right side, was the only uncloaked figure of those that came forward, it was a huge bugbear (at least a head taller than the others), but his face was shaved showing his pinkish-yellow skin covered in intricate war paint of blue, black and red. This bugbear’s fur was dyed blue and black in places, had a ring through his nose and he wore a collar of tanned human skin. On the bugbear’s right was another black cloaked figure, but only slightly taller than five feet in height. On the central figure’s left were two cloaked figures of about equal height, but one had a great girth, and the other was tall and lean.
The central cloaked figure raised his hand and the scores of bugbears all quieted suddenly with a sound like a break in a rainstorm. He brought his hands up to his hood and pulled it back, revealing a non-human face. His face had a furred muzzle, brown and dappled with spots of black and streaks of white. It was nearly canine in look, but not like any dog any of them had ever seen, except perhaps Ratchis.
“A gnoll,” Martin murmured.
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Notes:
(125) Jana is the only one in a position to make a spot check to notice the ring (at DC 18) that actually made the check.
(126) Friars of Nephthys automatically save against all compulsion spells that allow a save, and are allowed a save against those that normally don’t.
(127) Aquerra’s moon is called Mind’s Eie, is a gray color and appears blurry in the sky for unknown reasons.