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The Doomed Bastards: Reckoning (story complete)

javcs said:
Doncha mean INT score? :D
Just messin' with you.

Probably both INT and WIS ...


Actually I was impressed with his seemingly improved CHA

In any case, Varo certainly has used all three to great effect...
and I also wonder if a return to the place they all swore never to return to is in the wings.
 

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I think Dar giving up the gemstone just explained his expanded vocabulary and wits lately. He got it off a priest in the temple of Orcus. Anyone want to wager on the likelihood of it being a WIS-booster?

Although I have to really chuckle at the guy under the effect of the Wisdom-boosting item being the one to blackmail the healer into that 'arrangement'.

LB, sometimes you really crack me up.
 

Ha!

"His ban on the casting of spells in his presence is unprecedented, I believe. And from what I have heard, the entire Palace is warded to reveal the use of any magic upon its premises."

What do you want to bet that the Duke is an agent of Orcus? And to think that the patriarch of the Shining Father is in league with him! We're dealing w/ some crooked crooked folks here.

Dar gave Allera a glowing green gem that he got from Rappan Athuk? I "think" I know what that is... but I'm not going to spill any beans.

And our good friend Varo, what's he up to? I feel two threads coming back together again. I'm excited to finally meet the "mad elf".

Varo drank a potion eh? Wonder if he actually hadn't left after all.

As always LB, you're a master at your craft.
 

jfaller said:
Varo drank a potion eh? Wonder if he actually hadn't left after all.

As always LB, you're a master at your craft.

Well, since he has the Trickery domain, making a potion of invisibility is certainly within his capabilities.
 


Pfew! Finally I caught up. I found out about this thread after revisiting the Shackled City SH on Monday.

LB, I must thank you on another SH well crafted. After starting to read the Shackled City, I read the Travellers, just because I enjoyed your writing so much. Since the end of the adventures of the Heroes of Cauldron, my visits to ENWorld had grown more sporadic. With this new SH, you just brought me back to regular reading of ENWorld.

Looking forward to your excellent cliffhangers.

P.S.: Man my thesis supervisor is not going to like this! :p
 

Just got back from my business trip, so here's an update a bit later than usual for me.

jfaller said:
And our good friend Varo, what's he up to?
Read on!

Guillaume said:
I found out about this thread after revisiting the Shackled City SH on Monday.
Glad you found us, Guillaume!

As for the Duke, we'll find out about him in tomorrow's cliffhanger.

* * * * *

Chapter 80

PURSUIT


Varo realized that he was being followed.

Getting in and out of the Patriarch’s private office above the nave of the Cathedral of the Father without being detected had not been as easy as he’d made it seem. He’d already burned a good number of his daily allocation of spells, and only the newest higher-order divine spells granted by Dagos had made the operation possible. That and the cache of potions that he’d taken from Banth’s laboratory.

The potion of gaseous form that he’d used to leave the Cathedral had not lasted long enough for him to cross Camar and return to his hideaway in the Docks Quarter. He’d barely managed to get to an alley branching off the Great Square before he’d rematerialized. He had already used his power to disguise self earlier, so he adopted a more mundane camouflage, taking out a ratty old cloak from a sealed oilskin wrap and tugging it down over his body. The garment stank, and augmented with some filth from the alley, the disguise was quite convincing. Ordinarily, a beggar moving about near the core of Camar’s busiest mercantile district would have drawn attention from the Watch, but with the city bound up in the excitement of the pending Founder’s Day holiday, things were rather more chaotic than usual. Tomorrow, at least, nobody in the city would go hungry.

Walking with an affected limping gait, the cleric made his way quickly back to the Docks. It wasn’t until he’d passed through the huge iron archway of the Ravager’s Gate—named for one of the less praiseworthy of Camar’s rulers—that he began to feel the familiar twitch between his shoulder blades. The feeling wasn’t quite supernatural, but Licinius Varo had long since learned to trust in instincts.

He started a few minor maneuvers designed to shake whoever it was that was following him. He wasn’t really expecting those to work; if whoever was tracking him was any good, they likely wouldn’t have any effect. And if it the source was magical in nature...

Varo had made heavy use of warding spells since returning to Camar... nondetection, obscure object, undetectable alignment, and false vision. But he knew that such magic was rarely foolproof, and that if the Duke, or the Guild, had learned of his return, then he would be marked as a threat to be eliminated at once.

His visit to the Patriarch had almost ensured that this was the case. But it was a risk he’d had to take. He still wasn’t sure what was going to happen when he returned to the planar sanctuary, but he suspected that events were going to take a sudden and dramatic turn, one way or another. It was the same feeling he’d had when he’d first looked upon the valley of Rappan Athuk.

He cut through a crowded shop, shedding his disguise as he did so, and emerging in a rare form—his natural appearance. But that lasted only long enough for him to duck behind an open stable door. Once there, he quaffed a potion of invisibility—another of Banth’s presents—and scanned for any magical auras that would suggest magical scrying. He detected none, but that didn’t necessarily mean that he’d lost his pursuers.

It took him the better part of an hour to travel the two hundred yards separating him from the tiny courtyard where Armides lived. The cleric put into use every trick and deception he’d learned from a cult that lived and breathed such. Even so, he was not confident as he headed down the alley and ducked into the narrow side passage. This would be the last time he used this access point, however. He’d already come here more times than was safe, but with most of the hiding places of the Creepers already coopted, he had little choice.

The little plaza was empty. Armides had already sold the mule, and the sounds of the city were muted, the thousand different noises of the Docks blended into a single background buzz.

Varo entered the building. The dismal hallway inside swallowed him up. The small side rooms near the entry were empty. Almost reflexively he checked the trap on the door in the far back; everything was as he had left it. Neutralizing the trap, he moved inside.

The room was dark; the small candle he’d left burning had gone out. Closing the door behind him, he summoned light.

The first thing he saw was Armides, hanging from the rafters, gagged and bound, an ugly purple bruise swelling over his left eye.

The second thing he saw, as he spun to his right, was that he was not alone.

His good eye widened in surprise, as he saw something he had not at all expected, and which completely shattered his carefully laid plans.
 

Lazybones said:
His good eye widened in surprise, as he saw something he had not at all expected, and which completely shattered his carefully laid plans.

Darn! I've been waiting impatiently for an update and you post a short one with a cliffhanger?! You are a cruel cruel writer LB! :mad: But then you have been nicknamed the Cliffhanger King... :D
 


Chapter 81

REVOLUTION


Camar was ablaze in lights, as the city enjoyed the festivities of Founder’s Eve. In public squares, raucous taverns, and in small private gatherings, the people of the city celebrated the holiday in a loud and vigorous fashion.

The noise radiated particularly powerfully from the Great Square, in the city’s Gold Quarter. The lights were especially bright there as well, and on a closer examination some of the illumination would have been seen to come from bonfires, and from an assessor’s house that was on fire. The light from those fires glinted on the angry faces of shouting people, and on the gleaming breastplates of soldiers from the Duke’s Guard, sent to quell the disturbance and restore order. At more than a few places, blood already stained the cobbles of the square, and it was almost certainly likely that more of it would flow before the night was out.

Within the Ducal Palace, an almost preternatural quiet filled the place, a jarring contrast to the revelry outside. The marble halls of the palace were almost unnaturally pristine, the white monotony of the stone walls occasionally broken by a fine tapestry or an expensive, rare vase on a small pedestal. The place was a museum, and at night, the halls felt haunted by the spirits of those leaders that had come before, for good and for ill.

A sound of metal clattering on the marble floor echoed unnaturally loud through the silent palace. The noise was followed by a cry of pain that was abruptly cut short. The source of the sounds was an alcove where huge double doors of polished mahogany were flanked by life-sized statues of armored knights, staring down in mute judgment. At the moment, they were looking down at two unconscious men, and a third who was bleeding out a copious amount of blood from the arrow that pierced his chest.

“Bind them, quickly,” Talen said. His men leapt into action, securing the unconscious guards with short lengths of silk cord. The burly northman Baraka Suhn bent to check the wounded man, and shook his head.

“It had to be done,” Talen said to Pella, the archer. The woman nodded, as the gruff ranger finished the injured man. “We will all have blood on our hands ere this night is through, captain,” she said.

Thus far, their plan had worked far better than they could have hoped. Alucinor’s gas had taken out both the kitchen staff and the guards. One man had gotten away, but Suhn and the two scouts he’d brought with him had run him down before he could get to the thick door that led out into the palace proper. Only two of their men had been hurt, suffering just minor wounds.

After securing the captives, the strike teams had moved quickly forward. A guard station was neutralized with efficiency, allowing them to toss four bombs into the adjacent barracks. All twelve guards were taken out without the attackers suffering a single wound. Suhn detected a wandering patrol before they got close, allowing them to jump the four guards, and again take them down without problem.

And now they were standing at the doors to the Duke’s private chambers. “This is going far too well,” Talen said quietly.

“Yeah, it sucks when a plan actually works,” Dar said. “Well, there could be a hundred crossbowmen behind that door, or twenty wizards, or a dragon, or nothing. There’s only one way to find out.”

Talen gestured to his scouts, who took up flanking positions. Then he himself walked up to the doors, and with a heave pushed them open.

There wasn’t a legion of waiting guards beyond the doors, only a broad, empty chamber. Unlike the bare outer corridors, this one was richly carpeted, and decorative hangings covered every wall. A cool evening breeze wafted in from a narrow slit window, its shutter left slightly open. The room was unlit, but starlight drifted in through a large round window that dominated the wall to the right, comprised of thirty heavy panes of clear glass set in thick bars of iron, like a spider’s web. The window offered a dramatic view of Camar below, with pinpoints of light visible all over the city.

Talen pointed toward the double doors on the far side of the room. The strike team darted into the room, moving silently into position. Dar shadowed Talen, as the captain moved up to the door. He looked at his troops, meeting the eyes of each in turn. Once he was sure that they were all ready, he turned back to the doors.

“For Camar, for Tiros, and for justice,” Talen said, thrusting his shoulder into the near door. Opposite him, Dar did the same on the other portal.

The fourteen assassins burst into the room. The place was a spacious hall, set up as a conference chamber. The décor had a military theme, with tapestries showing scenes of notable battles from Camar’s history, suits of armor arranged on stands, and various weapons hanging from mounts high along the walls. A huge oval conference table, fashioned from a slab of pure white marble, dominated the center of the room. Gathered around the table were the thirteen noble lords of the Duke’s inner circle, men of power, influence, and prestige. Lord Sobol was among them, seating at the place of honor on the Duke’s right.

And next to him, standing with his palms upon the surface of the table, was the Grand Duke of Camar, Nicolidas di’Tenerassa. The Duke was a man of high middle age, and he bore a mantle of authority that hung about him like the folds of the long blue cloak that he wore. His eyes were a dark, deep blue, and as cold as a mountain lake.

“What have we here?” he said, his voice deep and powerful. “Uninvited guests.” His nobles had turned to look at the armed intruders, but none of them had stirred as of yet. The nobles carried weapons as well, mostly long, slender swords that hung in their scabbards from the backs of their high-peaked chairs.

“We have come to put an end to your tyrannical rule!” Talen yelled. “Too long have you bled the people of Camar for your own gain!” Behind him, his soldiers had readied bombs and arrows, but like the Duke’s men they held their attacks, as if the tension between their leader and their enemy had frozen everything in the room except the two of them.

“I think not,” the Duke said. “Camar... and its people... are mine.”

Talen made a gesture. An arrow from Pella’s bow shot across the room, striking the Duke in the chest. Under his tunic, he had to be wearing armor, for while the arrow drove him a step back, it failed to penetrate. A second arrow, from one of the scouts, narrowly missed, shattering on the wall behind him.

A pair of alchemical bombs hit the table and exploded in a swirl of white smoke. The cloud obscured the table for a moment. There was a slight scraping noise, of chairs being drawn back, but there were no shouts, no desperate coughing, no sound of bodies hitting the floor.

The cloud persisted for only a few seconds before it started to dissolve. When it revealed the Duke’s high council to them again, their appearance had changed dramatically.

Twelve of the noble lords, while still clad in their finery, now sported large bat-like wings that spread from their backs. Their expressions had also changed, their human countenances replaced with fiendish visages complete with horns, deep red skin, and protruding jaws filled with pointed teeth. They were half-fiends, creatures of diabolical origin.

Sobol had changed as well. His clothes, covered by some sort of glamour, had morphed into a suit of dusk-gray spiked mail. He’d drawn a sword of black steel flecked with spots of red that radiated an ugly pale light. His appearance, too, had shifted, his already sinister look further warped into the gaunt features of a narzugon.

Only the Duke had remained outwardly the same. But as he looked upon the would-be assassins, they could see that the cold blue pools of his eyes had been replaced by flickering red flames.

“Only now, in the hour of your death, do you understand,” the Duke said, lifting his hand. Flames exploded around his fist, coalescing into an angry ball of fire.
 
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