The Doomed Bastards: Reckoning (story complete)

The fight for Alder/Alden ford is very enjoyable, nice and tense.

The only thing is they don't seem to have an retreat planned other than falling back to the middle of the village.

Got to laugh at Attius, the divination expert, not seeing his own demise.
 

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wolff96 said:
He's an arcanist in the story hour. I'll root for him. It means his life-expectancy might be greater than 30 seconds. :)

Are arcanists in Camar measured for their funereal shrouds and their apprentice robes at the same time? It would save time...

Actually, since he is already dead his life-expectancy is somewhere negative right now... though his current existence will likely be short "lived".
 

Heh, I may let an arcane caster survive for a few chapters at some point, just to shock and amaze you guys. :)

Of course, there is at least one that survived an incursion into Rappan Athuk, and who will return at some point later in the story.

And now, the continuing adventures of the ElevenNine:

* * * * *

Chapter 127

COLLAPSE


Shay felt her muscles weakening as a second touch got through her defenses, sapping more of her strength. Desperate, she swung Beatus Incendia before her in a wide arc. The stroke bisected a pair of shadows, and to her own surprise, both came apart with a faint echo of a shriek sounding in their wake.

She looked around for the last shadow, but there was no sign of it.

Allera faced two more wraiths, including one that had until recently been the Guild mage Attius. The other one was damaged, with insubstantial rents in its faded outline, evidence that at least the wizard had managed to fight back before he’d been killed. Allera went for that one, meeting its attack with one of her own, blasting it with another cure wounds spell. The blue tendrils of energy ripped through it, and it dissolved. The other lunged in to attack her, but again Snaggletooth intervened, deliberately becoming visible as he darted in between her and the wraith, slashing at its face. His claws did no damage at all, but he cast a cure light wounds as he attacked, the spell drawing bright white gashes against the dark outline of the wizard’s face. Attius lunged at the little dragon, but the creature nimbly darted up out of reach, narrowly avoiding the attack.

The dragon’s intervention gave Allera a few seconds of respite, time enough to hit the wraith with her third and final cure critical wounds. Something that could almost have been gratitude flashed in the dead wizard’s eyes, and then he too joined the other undead in oblivion.

Allera staggered back, and fell to the ground beside Talen. Her hands trembled as she took up her dropped pouch and began casting her restoration spell on the stricken knight.

Shay came over to them, holding the flaming holy sword like a beacon. “Will he live?” she asked. But Allera was focused on her spell, and did not respond.

A shadowy figure materialized out of the darkness, and Shay lifted Beatus Incendia to strike. “Stay your hand, scout,” Varo said, as the light of the sword fell upon his features.

Relieved, Shay started to go to Talen, but Varo said, “The skeletons are breaking through; you must help the warriors.”

Shay felt like she could barely keep lifting the sword, but as turned, she saw that the cleric was right; nearly all of the defenders were down, and skeletons were crawling over the low barrier. Lifting the holy sword, she ran toward the barricade. Varo looked around, verifying that all of the shadows, including those that had risen from the bodies of the slain clerics, were held at bay by his rebukes. He could not control any of them, not without relinquishing command over the first two he had dominated. The enemy cleric he’d sent them against may have already regained control over those, but at least it would keep him busy for a little while. His rebukes would only last about a minute; it would have to be enough.

The situation was grim. His summoned centipedes were still keeping about a dozen skeletons busy on the right flank, but on the left, he could see that the skeletal archers were coming out of the woods, switching to melee weapons as they came. These were clearly moving to come around the village, avoiding the barricade entirely to come up upon their rear. There had to be a priest in there, somewhere, giving them commands, but he couldn’t worry about that at the moment. One look at the line was enough to tell that in a few seconds, there would be skeletons all over their position. Varo looked down at Talen, but he knew it would be precious seconds yet before Allera’s spell could be of any help to him.

He walked forward, drawing the power of Dagos into him.

The sight of Medelia being struck down, while he stood helpless to intervene, finally gave Galen the strength to shake off the hold person spell that had left him helpess. The skeletons all around him continued to rain blows on him, but he ignored them, roaring as he charged toward one that was coming toward the unmoving form of Medelia. A skeleton slashed at him, its legion sword glancing off his helmet, opening a deep cut in his forehead that sprayed blood down into his eyes. Half-blind, Galen swept his axe around in a powerful arc that caught the skeleton in the spine, severing it. Galen bent to help Medelia, who was not moving. With his back momentarily to the foe, he didn’t see the skeleton behind him until he felt something cold and hard drive into his body. Looking down, he saw an inch of bloody steel protruding between the links of his chainmail, just under his right breast.

Grimacing, the knight turned enough to see the skeleton that had stabbed him. It still wore the remains of a Camarian legion coat. He recognized the faded insignia, crusted with mud and old blood. The markings were those of a Camarian colonel.

That was the last thing he recognized, as he fell forward, the skeleton’s sword stuck in his body.

The skeletons started forward, but a wave of power washed over them, holding them in place.

On the other side of the barricade, the troll skeleton smashed Sextus hard on the side of the head. The armsman’s helmet kept his head from coming apart, but the blow still hurt, and he staggered back, falling to his knees. With him down, several man-sized skeletons surged forward, clambering over the barrier toward him.

Boosted by her magical boots, Shay leapt up onto the edge of the fallen cart. The troll skeleton started to turn to face her, but she was moving too quickly, and before it could bring around a claw she leapt past it, the holy sword flaring in her hand as she swept it through the skeleton’s skull. The troll’s skull exploded in a shower of hundreds of fragments, and as Shay landed lightly on her feet a few feet away, it collapsed to the ground.

Unfortunately, the scout looked up to see three more large skeletons, along with a handful of the man-sized ones, charging straight at her. Varo’s centipedes were gone, either destroyed or banished back to where they had come.

She also saw the duo that stood alone in the shadow of the forest. One moved, slightly, lifting an arm to point at her. That was all the warning she got, as a second blast of eldritch energy shot out at her, a probing, deadly surge of magic. Instinct alone saved her, as she flung herself to the side, coming up into a roll, her skin tingling with how close the blast had come to hitting her.

“Fall back to the cottage!”

Talen’s voice sounded loud over the din of battle. The knight commander stood leaning against the overturned cart, Allera at his side, continuing to pour restorative energies into him to replace the drained strength and constitution that the undead had torn from his body. He had drawn his backup weapon, the glowing sword that had carried him through dozens of fights in Rappan Athuk. As he strength returned, he held the sword above his head, drawing the attention of his companions, and their foes.

The fighting men and women of Camar fell back, still battling the skeletons that continued to press at them from all sides. Varo gave them a brief respite, as he directed the skeletons he’d dominated to assault their attacking peers at the barricade. That allowed Talen and Allera to drag Galen and Medelia to the cottage door, while on the other side of the barricade, Shay leapt back over to help Sextus with the crippled Octavius. Keeping her head low, wary of exposing herself to another magical attack, she glanced back once to see what the shadowy spellcaster was doing, but he was gone, swallowed up again by the night.

Eleven skeletons had been sent back into the fray as soldiers of the Dark Creeper, hacking apart their fellows. The few human and hobgoblin skeletons on the enemy side were quickly decimated, but the three giant-sized skeletons started ripping through Varo’s temporary allies, their clubs smashing them into fragments of bone. But they served their purpose, giving the defenders a chance to retreat with their fallen companions back to the cottage. Varo was the last inside, and just as Talen slammed and bolted the door, they caught sight of the group of skeleton archers from the forest group pouring around the undefended end of the house across the way to the left. At the same moment, the last three large skeletons tore through the original barricade, surging toward the cottage.

“Commander, the rebuked shadows... they will attack us again, once my power fades,” Varo said, as Talen barred the cottage door. Shay had come back to help him, her forearms covered in blood from handling Octavius, and she helped him move a bureau from the nearby wall to reinforce it.

“Varo... I’ve got a few things on my mind right now, okay?” As if to confirm his words, the door shook hard in its frame, but the bar held, for now.

“If we do not destroy them, then they will be able to pass through these walls with the same ease as before. I do not know if I will be able to stop them, this time.”

Talen grimaced, as the door shook again. A moment later, the cottage itself seemed to shake as a hard impact battered the wall.

“Damn it! How long?”

“About thirty seconds, give or take.”

“Well, there’s nothing I can do about it right this second,” Talen said. “Help the wounded!”

The cleric nodded, and walked over to where Allera was trying to channel healing into their stricken companions. Galen groaned as the healer drew out the sword impaled through his body, pouring positive energy into him as she did it. Serah was conscious but very weak, unable to move. Octavius was likewise conscious, if in obvious agony, and Sextus was helping to feed him a healing potion. But Medelia did not move at all, her chest and neck blackened where the enemy spell had hit her.

“I will need a few uninterrupted moments,” the cleric said, kneeling beside Serah.

Talen nodded, though he wasn’t sure what he could do to guarantee that right now. The door continued to shake, and several of the planks shattered inward from a hard impact. Through the gap, he could see a lot of moving bones. He hadn’t seen exactly how many skeletons were in the second cohort from the woods, but it had been at least a score, and maybe more.

“Are you okay?” Talen asked Shay.

“A little weak,” she said. “I can fight. Here, you’d better take this.” She handed him Beatus Incendia. For now, the sword was dormant, and Talen quickly slid it back into its scabbard, leaving his hands free to bolster the bureau pressed up against the door.

A few feet away, a section of the wall about three feet high and a foot wide collapsed into the room. The metal-studded head of a club appeared in the opening for a moment, before its owner yanked it back.

“Varo...” Talen said, glancing back to see that the cleric was still focused on helping the crippled cleric. Sextus and Octavius were both back on their feet now, restored somewhat by the healing draughts they’d consumed, but both armsmen were still pale from loss of blood. Allera was continuing to pour healing into Galen, reversing the mortal wound he’d taken, dragging him slowly back from the brink of death. There was no sign of her little dragon; if he hadn’t followed them inside, he would have to fend for himself.

The door continued to come apart. Even with Talen and Shay both pushing against the bureau, it would only take a few more blows to cave the entire door in. Skeletal hands gripped the slats of the door, ripping them away. The club hit the wall again, expanding the hole, now nearly five feet high and two across. The cottage had only two rooms, and they heard a clatter from the back room, where the only window was located.

Talen caught the eyes of the armsmen. “Go,” he told them, and both went to investigate whatever was trying to get in that way.

“Talen!” Shay warned.

Talen turned back to the door, and barely avoided being grabbed by a skeletal arm that had thrust through the wreckage of the door over the bureau. He drew back and thrust Beatus Incendia into the skeleton. The sword itself did little damage, the blade passing right through its ribs, but the holy fire scorched its body, and the skeleton fell backward out of view.

Unfortunately, that gave an opening for the troll skeleton, which surged forward, smashing the damaged bureau out of the way with a single powerful swipe of its claws. Shay and Talen were forced back, and several man-sized skeletons crowded in through the new opening. As the pair tried to form up in a defensive position, they could hear the shouts of the armsmen from the next room.

The enemy was inside.

And if that wasn’t yet enough, Talen felt a familiar cold chill, an announcement that was followed a moment later as three shadows passed through the wall, heading right for him, seeking the feeding they had been denied before.
 

Well this just goes to show that the bloodbath of NPC's (and occasional PC's) doesn't require RA as a setting... just warm bodies to ... chill.

One thing that bothers me: Varo knows enough to cast Death Ward upon himself... a fourth level spell he could have cast on a few key allies at least... They knew there were shadows and wraiths in the enemy force... So why didn't they prepare? Bring scrolls of Death Ward and Negative Energy Protection. Consecrate the area... a few Daylight spells would make a lot of difference... it just seems like they didn't know what they were getting into, yet the castle briefing seemed pretty accurate.
Tis a minor complaint in an otherwise fun story... let the slaughter continue.
 

Richard Rawen said:
Well this just goes to show that the bloodbath of NPC's (and occasional PC's) doesn't require RA as a setting... just warm bodies to ... chill.

One thing that bothers me: Varo knows enough to cast Death Ward upon himself... a fourth level spell he could have cast on a few key allies at least... They knew there were shadows and wraiths in the enemy force... So why didn't they prepare? Bring scrolls of Death Ward and Negative Energy Protection. Consecrate the area... a few Daylight spells would make a lot of difference... it just seems like they didn't know what they were getting into, yet the castle briefing seemed pretty accurate.
Tis a minor complaint in an otherwise fun story... let the slaughter continue.
This very point is actually addressed in tomorrow's post. After the last few battle scenes, I'm trying to be very careful in spell allocation, since I know you guys are good on catching me on tactics.

And remember that the party teleported just a few hours after the castle briefing, not enough time to rest and reallocate spells.

Just one quibble, there is no more Negative Energy Protection spell (AFAIK) in 3.5e; its fuction is entirely subsumed within Death Ward. Also, a daylight spell does not hinder shadows or wraiths in any way except to make it harder for them to hide (a moot point in this case, since they approached via underground). Seems like searing light is a more effective spell when fighting most undead. Consecrate is a good idea, but of course it would not have helped Varo any.

Another note: I'm going to hold off updating stats in the Rogues' Gallery until after this battle, as their gear changes somewhat with the next level-up.
 
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Something that I noticed... but I have no real experience with dominating Undead as a Cleric since I prefer the goody two shoes route and blasting them apart any chance I get. (For some reason, I truly loathe the Undead.)

I noticed this:

Varo looked around, verifying that all of the shadows, including those that had risen from the bodies of the slain clerics, were held at bay by his rebukes. He could not control any of them, not without relinquishing command over the first two he had dominated. The enemy cleric he’d sent them against may have already regained control over those, but at least it would keep him busy for a little while. His rebukes would only last about a minute; it would have to be enough.

Then this:

Varo gave them a brief respite, as he directed the skeletons he’d dominated to assault their attacking peers at the barricade.

I didn't see where he dominated more skeletons and from the first quote, I didn't think he could. I saw that he sent the two shadows he controlled up into the night, but I don't understand the implications of that. I thought he was up to something else, not releasing them. But I think that happened before that first quote, so he still had them under control as far as I can tell.

Anyways, I'm guessing I missed something but wanted to get it clarified. Thanks!
 

Brogarn,

Varo dominated the skeleotns at the point in the story where Galen was "stuck" with the colonel's sword "The skeletons started forward, but a wave of power washed over them, holding them in place."

Varo had sent the shadows to attack whoever was leading the undead (his assumption). Varo also believed that they would probably be rebuked and sent back against the DB's anyways "The enemy cleric he’d sent them against may have already regained control over those, but at least it would keep him busy for a little while. His rebukes would only last about a minute; it would have to be enough."

As far as whether or not Varo can dominate two sets of undead I guess it depends on the HD he is able to turn/rebuke. (I too don't typically play a cleric. I usually play one of the redshirt arcanists :)
 


Mahtave said:
As far as whether or not Varo can dominate two sets of undead I guess it depends on the HD he is able to turn/rebuke. (I too don't typically play a cleric. I usually play one of the redshirt arcanists :)
Varo is 11th level; with their +2 Turn Resistance shadows are considered 5HD for turning purposes, so the most he could control was 2 at a time. He released the two he'd been controlling in order to control the skeletons, assuming that they'd served his intended purpose (to distract the enemy clerics) and been either destroyed or re-controlled by then.

The rest of your post was right on the money.

Note that in the SRD it's not clear if a priest that rebukes undead can elect not to command if he is capable of doing so, and instead downgrade to a mere rubuke. I am obviously assuming he can for the purposes of this story.
 

Chapter 128

FURY AND DESPAIR


As Talen and Shay held the rapidly collapsing door, Varo had completed a restoration spell, returning the strength that had been stolen from the cleric Serah. As the cleric regained control over her muscles, he thrust her holy symbol into her hand. “When the shadows come through that wall, use this,” he commanded.

The woman’s hands shook, and she barely maintained her grasp on the small silver torch. “I... I cannot... before... failed...”

“Use it, or you will become one of them, like your companions,” Varo said harshly, lifting his own divine focus as the door crashed open, and Talen and Shay staggered back into the room.

The shadows came, just as he had expected. Varo raised his symbol, but before he could act, the brilliant light of the Father filled the room, and all three shadows fled, turned by the divine power channeled by His cleric.

“Good,” Varo said, looking down at the woman, still sitting in the middle of the floor. “There will be more, be ready.”

She nodded, still pale.

Talen and Shay met the skeletons surging into the room, joined a moment later by Galen, who still looked terrible, the lower half of his tunic drenched in his own blood. The young knight had lost his axe outside, but he had drawn his dagger. Neither Galen nor Shay were able to destroy a skeleton with their edged weapons, but Talen’s holy sword cut through them like a scythe through ripened wheat, and two had been shattered into fragments within a few seconds.

Two more shadows came through the wall and fixed on Talen at once, but once again, before they could attack, Serah summoned the power of the Shining Father and drove them back.

Varo had been chanting, holding his divine focus; now he opened his eyes, and pointed through the opening in the wall.

A loud roar sounded, and the noises of battle sounded from just outside the door.

Shay had seriously damaged the skeleton she’d been fighting, and now kicked it solidly in the pelvis, knocking it back into the doorway. Talen’s sword clove through it a moment later, along with another one that was still trying to get in. The commander turned to help Galen, but the injured knight had gotten a solid grasp on his foe, and drove it into the wall, smashing it to pieces. Galen bore fresh scratch marks on his cheek and forearm from the skeleton’s violent resistance, but at Talen’s look said, “I’m all right.”

Shay crept up to the doorway, but no further skeletons had appeared; the sounds of violence continued from the darkness outside. “Fiendish apes?” she asked, turning to Varo. The priest nodded.

The noises from the back room had ceased; Allera had gone back there during the battle for the front door. “Sextus, Octavius, you all right?” Talen shouted back.

“We’re fine,” Sextus’s voice came back to them. “They tried the window, but we’re holding it, for now.”

“We should take the fight to them, while the summoned monsters are still there, distracting them,” Talen said, lifting Beatus Incendia. Its light revealed the troll skeleton looming outside the doorway, its attentions, for the moment, focused elsewhere than on them.

“Careful,” Shay said, holding him back with a hand on his arm. “There’s a wizard out there. He killed Medelia and Septimus with some kind of lightning bolt, and nearly hit me with another.”

“No, not a wizard,” Varo said. “That was an eldritch blast. A warlock invocation. I would not have recognized it, except for the fact that I knew such a caster before, who used a very similar power.”

“The one sent into Rappan Athuk with you?” Talen asked. “Nadev, was it?”

“Zafir Navev. Warlocks are very, very rare in Camar; he is the only one I have ever met.”

“And now another. Coincidence?”

“I do not believe in coincidence, commander.”

They were interrupted as the troll skeleton crashed hard into the threshold of the door. The entire cottage, already heavily abused, shook heavily from the impact. Talen was quick to take advantage of the opportunity, smashing Beatus Incendia into the creature’s body from behind. The holy sword crashed through its thick thigh bone, and the skeleton collapsed to the side, nearly blocking the doorway. Something big and dark and ugly fell on it from the opposite side, and for a moment a stench of brimstone washed over them as Varo’s summoned ape ripped apart the huge skeleton’s rib cage.

“I think they’re beginning to run out of steam,” Shay said, looking out the doorway without exposing herself. “Or at least numbers.”

“I would not make that assumption,” Varo said. The cleric was healing Galen with a wand as he spoke. “The enemy may be bringing more undead forward as we speak. Or this may have just been a holding force, sent to keep us bottled up here while the enemy moves up the road, attacking the refugee caravans. Or they may have another plan that remains hidden to us.”

“So what do you recommend we do, priest?”

“What you had originally intended. Fall back on the road. Protect the rear of the refugee columns. Return to Highbluff, and join up with the forces from Camar, and with the Border Legion.”

Talen nodded. “Armsmen! Allera! Get ready, we’re leaving!” He turned to Shay. “Keep an eye out for that wizard, warlock, whatever the hells he is. If he makes an appearance, we have to be ready to hit him, hard and fast, with everything we’ve got.”

The scout nodded. A man-sized skeleton appeared at the smashed-open gap in the cottage wall, but Serah blasted it with holy power before it could crawl through, and it disintegrated, along with several others out in the courtyard behind it.

“How many more turnings do you have available?” Varo said to her.

“Two more,” she replied.

“What about Medelia?” Galen asked, looking at the body lying on the floor, covered by a cloak.

“Shay, Allera, can you... the bag of holding,” Talen asked, as the healer and the armsmen came back into the room. The two nodded, and went over to the body.

“What about Septimus?” Sextus asked. “We left him, out there.”

“And the other priests,” Serah said. “They should be brought back, for the rites of passage, and proper burial.”

“We cannot fit more bodies into the magic sack,” Shay said.

“The bodies should be burned,” Varo interjected. “So they cannot be animated and used against us.”

“It is not right,” Serah said, still trembling, but with a hint of her earlier force in her voice. They all looked to Talen, who stood there, his face grim.

“We cannot spent time on the dead, not while the living need our help,” the knight commander said. “Shay, get the oil from the bag; we’ll form a pyre before we go. Priestess, we will offer prayers for their spirits when we return safe to Camar.”

“Don’t forget to collect any healing potions, scrolls, or other items that we may need from the bodies, first,” Varo said. Serah looked at him with an expression of scarcely-concealed revulsion on her face, but she said nothing. She still clutched her holy symbol, her fingers white with the pressure of her grasp.

Having helped Allera put Medelia’s body into the bag of holding, Shay returned to the door, holding the pouch that contained their oil flasks. The sounds of battle had faded, leaving nothing but an eerie stillness outside. “The apes are gone,” she reported. “It’s quiet out there, for now.”

“They may be waiting for us to leave,” Galen said. “Another ambush.”

“If they had more forces, they would not have waited to use them,” Varo said. “As you saw, knight, the incorporeal undead had no difficulty entering the structure. The ambush was perfectly set to remove the greatest threat, our clerics.”

“They didn’t attack you, not at first,” Serah said.

“I had warded myself from their sight,” Varo said. “And from their touch. A pity that the death ward was beyond the four of you. At the very least, Gaius could have provided you with scrolls.”

“How can you just... coldly, while they lie out there, they gave their lives...”

“Serah,” Allera said, softly, putting a hand on the older woman’s shoulder.

Talen drew Varo aside. Putting his body between the priest and the others, he asked quietly, “What are you saying, Varo? That they knew we would be here? How? Do they have spies in Camar, or are they tracking us with magic?”

The priest frowned. “It could be any of the above, commander, or something else entirely. I was thinking, there is a passage in the Codex, that I may have misinterpreted before. It refers to a crucial battle between the forces of Orcus and those seeking to stop them. The passage is very cryptic, but there is reference to events that may refer to what we are doing here. The fragment reads:

And so the clash shall come at the bend of argent,
Where the legion of the fallen shall face the scions of those who came before
The Darkness shall bring forth in answer the very shadow of the land
To blight all hope, and seal the doom of the world of man...


He trailed off, a look of intense focus on his face.

“Are you saying that this book that you are so obsessed with, it predicts the future? If it tells us what’s going to happen, why haven’t you shared the contents of it with us before? Gods, man, if they have this information, and we do not...”

Varo raised a hand to forestall him. “It is not so simple as that, commander. The Codex Thanara is not a work of prophecy, or at least not mainly so. It chronicles events of the past, when the followers of Orcus first tried to take over this world, and deliver it into the hands of their foul master.”

“So you’re saying that this... all of this, what we’re doing... it’s happened before? The same as now? I find it difficult to believe, Varo.”

“It is not the same, but you are right, there are a large number of parallels. It raises interesting questions about the metaphysics of what theologians refer to as ‘free will,’ but we have neither the time nor the leisure to ponder such things at the moment.”

“But you are using the information in this book to guide you, are you not? If you have information that can help us, you should be sharing it with the Council, with us.”

Varo made a negative motion with a slash of his hand. “You do not know of what you speak, commander, and if you really knew your Council and its politics, you would know that what you ask would be an unmitigated disaster for your cause, and for Camar.”

“Perhaps you underestimate us, priest.”

“And perhaps you forget that many swords have edges on both sides. The book, or at least fragments of it, was held by your Holy Church for centuries, its warnings clear to those with the insight and the will to confront them. Ask yourself, consecrated knight of Camar, why does it fall to an outcast cleric of a banned sect to lead the fight against the Demon? Why has Gaius Annochus not marshaled the full power of the church, and called for a holy crusade to eradicate the evil blight of Rappan Athuk from the presence of this world?”

“Camar faces many dire threats...”

“As dire as what you have seen with your own eyes? You have been in the Dungeon of Graves, commander. You have seen what I have seen, for the most part. What do you think?”

Talen, troubled, did not reply.

His voice more even, Varo continued, “The Codex is as much a weapon of the enemy as a potential boon; its words are thick with falsehoods and cloying whispers of hopelessness. To read it, that can be dangerous; to know it, that leads inevitably to madness.”

“You have said before that you are already mad,” Talen said. “If so, how can we possibly trust you, Varo?”

“I do not ask for your trust, commander. But if you listen to nothing else I say, hear this, and know this; for all of Camar’s current troubles, and the many distractions you face, what we do here will determine the fate of this entire world. And it will come down to Rappan Athuk, before all of this is finished.”

Talen turned. The others had all gathered near the door, and were watching him. They hadn’t heard what he and Varo had been saying, but their feelings about the priest were clear in their faces, and their eyes.

The commander sighed. “All right, we’re moving out.”

The companions took up their gear, but as they moved out of the battered cottage, alert for any signs of the enemy warlock or any other undead, they could hear a faint noise in the distance, to the south. A regular, deep thumping noise, a vibration in the earth as much as a sound.

“What is it?” Talen asked.

“Something big, coming this way,” Shay said.

Talen looked at Varo. “It is coming,” Varo said. “We’re out of time, commander.”
 

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