The Doomed Bastards: Reckoning (story complete)

wolff96 said:
So... for someone that doesn't have the module (if the Ravagers are from that source), what is the deal with finally killing them? Is the dagger special, or do they just have some kind of "Can only be finished with xx special material"?

Either way, that was a brutal fight. Dar is *so* my favorite character this time around. :)
You mean in lieu of Varo :p I've always liked Dar of course, it's just... I'll miss Varo.

Still, with all these Red Sh... Arcanists around, there will be lots of bloodshed soon and, I think quite likely in spectacular fashion.

In any case I'll enjoy starting my day with my fav read, thanks again LB!
 

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wolff96 said:
So... for someone that doesn't have the module (if the Ravagers are from that source), what is the deal with finally killing them? Is the dagger special, or do they just have some kind of "Can only be finished with xx special material"?
Per the book they are virtually unkillable, as they treat all damage as subdual except for epic weapons and artifacts. While Valor may go epic if its owner does, at the moment it does not meet that threshold.

I allowed the dagger to finish off the spawn, because a) the red-gem dagger has the wounding property, and b) the mithral daggers (we've seen several in the story thus far) are linked directly to the Ravager's prison. The connection will likely be expanded on later in the story.

I've recently started writing again after a brief hiatus while work was busy. I'm still well ahead. The story's been feeling a bit repetitive (as others have noted, especially via the battle scenes), and that was one reason why I elected to rotate in some new characters from time to time. Fear not, we haven't seen the last of Varo (though it may be a while before he makes a reappearance).

* * * * *

Chapter 226

DOWN THE WELL


They descended into the Well.

There had been a brief conversation about how to proceed. They had expended considerable resources, including considerable quantities of their blood, in defeating the ravager. But after speaking quietly with Honoratius, Talen elected to push forward, and investigate the Well. Although retreat and recovery of spells might have been the more prudent course, each of them felt a sense of urgency in the backs of their minds, a ticking clock that warned of more events like the Night of the Dead in Camar’s future, if they lingered overlong.

They made it down through the valley to the Well without incident. Talen, Shay, and Allera had come this way once before, when they had sneaked into Rappan Athuk to seek out Velan Tiros. They had been too late, that time.

The dark stone circle of the Well, ten feet across, gaped black and open before them. Shay investigated the perimeter, running her fingers through deep gouges in the stone.

“Thing made quite an entrance,” Dar said.

“There were scratches like this before, when we came last time,” Shay said. “They were very old.” She pointed out a pair that were fairly close, the fresh ones obvious from the sharp edges of the cuts.

“So those creatures have come up to the surface before,” Mehlaraine said. “Perhaps there is a lair of them somewhere far below.”

“They are not creatures of the Demon,” Honoratius reminded them.

“Just one of those monsters nearly destroyed the town of Highbluff,” Talen said. “They pose a threat that we cannot simply ignore.”

Shay rigged up a couple of ropes, driving pitons into the solid stones at the base of the Well. Even as she tossed the lines down into the shaft, however, the elves simply rose up into the air using their still-effective overland flight spells, and hovered over the opening. Mehlaraine said something in elvish, and her slender sword began to glow.

“We will investigate,” Alderis said. “If there is danger, we can withdraw quickly.”

Talen nodded. “Be careful. When we came this way last time, there was only a deep pool at the bottom, and a couple of very narrow tunnels leading into the complex. The creature’s movements have likely changed the situation.”

The elves descended into the pit, while the others gathered around the perimeter of the Well to watch. They could see the globe of light surrounding Mehlaraine, descending deeper and deeper into the black shaft.

“Damn, that’s deep,” Dar said. The fighter had recovered his club, and he was absently working to repair its leather throng as he watched.

“Quiet,” Talen said.

The elves had descended so far that it was difficult to make out details of what they were doing. But at least they were not being attacked. After another minute, they saw the trio ascending rapidly, and within a few more seconds they were hovering before them in the Well’s mouth.

“What did you see?” Talen asked.

“It appears that the creature came up from below,” Alderis reported. “The pool is gone, and the water is draining through a large hole at the bottom. It appears that there was a hatch buried under the mud beneath the pool; the threshold is largely intact, and is made of mithral.”

“What’s below?” Shay asked.

“We did not scout far, but it appears that there is a significant cavern, possibly a larger complex.”

They looked to Talen, who pondered the information for a moment longer. “All right,” he said. “Let’s go check it out.”

The elves led the way, flying down the shaft once more, while the others used the ropes. Honoratius cast a spell, and rose up into the air, descending the shaft alongside the climbers. Getting down was not difficult, although as Dar was quick to point out, the climb up would involve a lot more effort.

The made it to the bottom without incident, and gathered at the opening. Mud from the pool slicked everything, making footing treacherous, but the water that continued to trickle down through the opening had washed enough clear to reveal the silvery shine of mithral. The opening was eight feet across, and from the depth of the mithral ring, the hatch had likely been four or five feet thick. Only one of the hinges of the missing portal was still intact, and Honoratius bent over it, her boots floating just an inch above the slippery mire.

“I wonder where the door is,” Dar asked.

“Likely buried somewhere below,” Selanthas said. “There is a large pool below, and a great deal of mud.”

“We would have never known that this was here,” Shay said. “When we came down last time, this was all under at least ten feet of water.” She pointed to the narrow tunnel openings up above them.

“Looks like didn’t want those bastards getting out,” Dar said, examining the inside of the mithral shaft. “Gods, this has to be a ton of mithral here, a freaking fortune.”

“Commander,” Honoratius said.

Talen turned to her. “What is it, archmage?”

Honoratius pointed to the ruined hinge. “The metal is growing back.”

Everyone turned toward her. “What?” Talen asked. “You mean it’s regenerating?”

“Yes. Very slowly. I would guess that the hatch that sealed the opening is reconstituting itself.”

“How long?”

“Assuming a constant rate of growth, I would estimate about three hours.”

Talen looked back down the shaft. “Well?” Dar asked. “We go down and see what’s what, or we head back and wait for the next one of those things to claw its way free?”

“I wouldn’t want to get trapped in there,” Shay warned.

“My magic should be able to defeat the hatch, if it comes to it, but it is possible that there might be wards that would counter my talents, when the barrier is complete,” Honoratius said. “Clearly whoever constructed this anticipated a breach, and placed considerable countermeasures in place.”

“On the other hand, we might not get a chance like this again,” Allera said.

“All right,” Talen said. “We go in, but I want a close check on time. Allera, take one of the backup lanterns from Shay’s bag, and set a slow-burning wick. After two hours, at the most, we cut out. Archmage, how much longer will you be able to remain with us today?”

“Approximately two hours and fifteen minutes.”

“All right. By then, we’re out of here, everyone understand? Shay, we’re going to need more ropes.”

The scout was already drawing out more coils of light silk rope, knotted for easier climbing, from her bag of holding. Within a few minutes, they had descended into the cavern below, the elves flying ahead to ward against any threats.

The cavern was large, as the elves had said. The ropes dropped them to a mud-slicked promontory of rock that rose up of the new lake that had formed covering the floor. The rock shelf formed a ramp of sorts that sloped down to an apparent exit to the north. There was no sign of the mithral hatch; likely it had fallen into the pool and been buried, as Selanthas had suggested.

“The stone here, it is odd,” Mehlaraine noted, as she floated across the cavern toward the exit. Honoratius drifted over to join her, and examined the rock. It was a deep gray, but mottled through with striations of yellow, blue, and red crystal, which flickered slightly in their light.

“There is a powerful and ancient magic here,” Honoratius said.

“Wonderful,” Dar said, as he sloshed and slipped through the mud toward the opening, the others trailing behind. Shay had taken out another rope to connect those walking, a caution against the treacherous footing. By the time they made it to the end of the ramp, they were all covered in mud from the waist down. Dar continued to mutter to himself, his comments including references to “freaking elves” and “gods-damned wizards.” Had he known how sharp the ears of the elves floating above were, he might have been more circumspect; on the other hand, being who he was, he might not.

Shay bent down to examine the floor at the end of the ramp. “This plate doesn’t match up exactly with the surrounding floor,” she said, indicating the creases that indicated a roughly twenty-foot square slab of stone.

“Trap?” Talen asked.

“I don’t know. But it’s not right.”

The elves drifted forward. “The space ahead is more regularly defined than the cavern,” Selathas said.

“What in the hells does that mean?” Dar asked.

“Deliberately worked,” Allera said.

“Well, why the hell doesn’t he just say that?”

They moved ahead, wary of the stone plate, but the ground did not shift under them, nor did any other danger manifest as they passed into a large rectangular chamber. This place’s most prominent feature was row upon row of metal pillars, each about five feet apart from the others. There was an obvious path through the middle of the room, marked by pillars that had been bent, or in at least one case completed destroyed, the gap in the forest of pillars surrounded by fragments of shattered metal.

“Well, we know it came this way, at least,” Shay said.

Dar walked up to one of the pillars and tapped it with his gauntlet. “Steel,” he said. “Good quality.”

“Not good enough, it would seem,” Nelan commented.

“Who could have built this place?” Mehlaraine said.

“It bears the hallmark of an ordered mind,” Honoratius said, but she did not elaborate.

“Let’s keep moving,” Talen said. “Watch out for traps. Shay?”

The scout started forward, but she had gotten barely three steps forward when Selanthas shouted a warning. They followed the archer’s pointed finger to the space in the floor where one of the pillars had been destroyed. Rising out of the gap in the floor where the pillar had been was a dark black figure, a cohesive cloud of shadow. As it emerged from the floor it spread broadly, until it was as large as an ogre, and they could see the twin points of malevolent red light that shone within its “head”, staring at them with an undisguised hunger.

More of them were already beginning to seep out from the floor, either around the bases of the damaged pillars or from the cracks in the slab behind them. Within seconds they would be surrounded.

“Dread wraiths!” Nelan cried, and then there was no time for speech, as the undead monsters swarmed upon them.
 

Chapter 227

DARK GUARDIANS


It appeared that the wraiths could not simply pass through the floor, but that disadvantage seemed minor at best, as the undead creatures swarmed up through the tiny gaps to attack. There were fully nine of the creatures, each far more powerful than a typical wraith, and far more deadly.

The one that had appeared first reacted with incredible speed, attacking even as the last of its substance drifted up out of the opening in the floor. It swept forward and lunged at Dar, its insubstantial claws tearing through his armor as though it was not even there. The fighter gasped as life was torn from his body, and the wraith seemed to pulse eagerly as it fed. The creature did not linger beside him, and drew back with the same speed with which it had attacked, just far enough to force Dar to give chase if he wanted to harm it.

“There’s too many of them!” Shay yelled. She started forward to engage another wraith that was rising up around another pillar, but Honoratius cut her off. “Stand your ground!” the archmage shouted, summoning her magic with a blur of slender fingers and a brief incantation of power.

A wall of force appeared across the room ahead of them, materializing scant feet ahead of a surprised Shaylara. The wraith engaging Dar was on their side of the barrier, but the four other wraiths on that side pressed up against it, unable to pass through it. They did not linger for more than a second or two before retreating to the nearest gap in the floor, dissolving back through it.

Behind them, another four had almost fully emerged from the stone plate in the entry. As the two younger elves spun and drew back to protect him, Alderis cast his own spell. A blazing wall of fire appeared in the gap, right on the edge of the slab. The wraiths drew back as the heat and light from the barrier washed over them, but such was their hatred and lust for the living that they surged forward through it, the flames burning great rents in their bodies as they passed the wall.

Allera opened her mind and spread her hands, filling the chamber with a surge of positive energy. The mass cure moderate wounds spell struck the wraiths with the force of a hammer, and the quartet split, with two flying straight for Alderis, the other pair making a beeline for Allera. The healer blanched, but held her ground, calling for her magic again, knowing that it would not be in time.

Dar had his hands full with his own opponent. The wraith was a canny enemy, dodging away just enough to prevent a full attack, then knifing forward to deliver another devastating swipe of its claws. Dar was tough, and his stamina was considerable, especially augmented by his magical amulet. But each touch drew more of his strength out of him, and thus far his powerful swings with Valor had made no impact upon the wretched undead being’s substance, passing harmlessly through it. Furthermore the forest of steel pillars made it difficult for him to maneuver, making it almost effortless for the wraith to evade him from one exchange to the next.

For the moment, none of the fighter’s companions could come to his aid. The four wraiths that had come through the wall of fire had been sorely injured by Alderis’s barrier and Allera’s healing pulse, but the dark energy that sustained them was potent, very potent indeed. Nelan tried to turn them away, but the light of the Shining Father may as well have been the flicker of a candle for all the effect it had upon the dread wraiths. It certainly did not distract them from their chosen foes.

Mehlaraine and Selanthas tried to shield Alderis from the two coming at them, but their weapons were better suited for fighting living, breathing enemies, rather than the undead. Mehlaraine’s rapier passed harmlessly through the first, and while one of Selanthas’s shots tore through its substance, the wound was not enough to distract the creature from its target. Both wraiths hit Alderis, and the elf seemed to shrink as they eagerly sucked upon his life force. He started to float back away from them, but his focus on his spell flickered as he lost consciousness. The wraiths pursued, eager to finish off this foe, to bring another ally on to their side.

Allera fared slightly better, but mainly because her foes’ charge took them past Talen. The knight lifted Beatus Incendia and smote the first wraith, the holy blade flaring as it tore through the dark creature’s substance. It came apart, hissing slightly as it expired. The other one continued on and lunged at Allera, but the healer fought off the tug of its claws upon her life force, and thrust her hand into its body, blasting it with a powerful healing spell. The wraith exploded from within as blue light flared from her fingers, dissolving into nothing in less than a second.

Dar staggered against one of the pillars, shaking his head in a vain effort to clear it. His body was shaking, and he felt cold through to his bones. The wraith, on the other hand, seemed stronger than before, and if anything, was getting faster.

“Bastard,” Dar hissed between clenched teeth. He wasn’t sure if he had the strength to chase after it any more, so he put his back to the pillar, and waited for it to come to him.

He did not have long to wait. The wraith spun through the forest of pillars effortlessly, pouring between them like a waterfall. Dar was ready for it, but once again Valor passed harmlessly through the wraith, and a feral hunger blazed in its eyes as it enfolded him in its swath.

Darkness closed around him.

The two wraiths closed on Alderis, claws extended to finish the dying elf. But at the last instant a globe of force appeared around him, forming an impenetrable barrier that kept the frustrated creatures at bay. They swept around their intended victim, and spotted Honoratius hovering a short distance away, having saved the elf’s life with his resilient sphere. Unfortunately, that now meant that he was the prime target of the wraiths, and they surged forward to take him out.

Meanwhile, the wraiths that Honoratius had foiled earlier with his wall of force began to issue from the floor on the far side of the wall of fire. Having been denied once, they were not about to be cheated of their prizes a second time, and as soon as they were clear they surged through the barrier, accepting the pain of the raging flames as a price to be paid.

With nothing else standing between them and the vivid sources of life of their victims, the wraiths surged forward to the attack.
 

Chapter 228

THE MYSTERIES OF THE ARCANE


Honoratius felt the cold touch of the wraiths stealing the life energy of his borrowed body. He loved his niece, and a tide of emotion threatened his equilibrium, but the aged wizard was a creature of intellect, and that maintained a rigid control over his thoughts as the wraiths harried him.

Looking past the dark shadows, he saw the four other wraiths pass through the wall of fire, and his mouth twisted into a slight smile.

Opening his mind, Honoratius let the potency of his magic course through him.

Fire exploded through the room. Funneled by the wall of force behind him, the flames splashed out in a wave, until they joined with the continuing inferno of Alderis’s wall of fire.

The companions saw the flames rushing toward them; there was nothing they could do to avoid them. But as the delayed blast fireball swept past them, the flames parted, forming hollows within which the fire did not touch. Every living being in the area was spared.

The same could not be said of the wraiths.

The two directly in front of Honoratius dissolved as the fire cut through their insubstantial bodies like a knife. One of the four reinforcements were likewise overcome, but the other three weathered the blast well, their incorporeal natures protecting them from the violence of the spell. They surged forward to attack.

But the companions were ready for them.

An arrow passed through the head of one wraith, punching a hole through its substance that trailed long fibrils of black energy in its wake. The injured wraith screamed and rushed at Selanthas, but was intercepted by Mehlaraine. This time, the elvish woman’s magical blade bit through it, and as she swept the blade through its “neck”, the creature came apart.

Two others came forward, but they were greeted by another wave of positive energy from Allera. One collapsed, and the other found itself faced by Talen. The wraith scored a hit on the knight and managed to draw some of his life energy from him, but in turn was bisected by Beatus Incendia, and was ended.

Dar felt the rush of heat from Honoratius’s fireball, although he could still not see clearly through the mass of the wraith. The creature took some damage from the blast, but it had been partially protected by its proximity to Dar, and it continued to press its attack. Dar felt a tug on his life force as its claws struck, and he knew that if he faltered, he was dead. The fighter screamed as he fought back against that tug with everything he had, although his body shook with the effort of remaining conscious. He felt cold, and could no longer feel his arms or his legs. He only knew that he had to keep on attacking.

Then the wraith shrieked and twisted. Dar could just see the outline of Nelan, but the bright glow of blue light around his hands was clearly visible even through the creature’s body. It turned on the cleric—why wouldn’t it, given that Dar had not been able to harm it at all? It struck him, but the cleric resisted the life-drain, and the wraith hissed in frustration.

Being ignored as a non-threat pissed off Dar even more than being dragged to the brink of death by what amounted to a floating cloud of black gunk. The fighter roared and brought Valor up through its body in a glittering arc. This time, finally, the axiomatic blade bit into semisolid substance, and the dread wraith finally collapsed in upon itself, dissolving into wisps that were gone within a second.

His swing overbalanced him, and Dar fell back against the pillar. For some reason it wasn’t enough to keep him balanced, and he slid off it, slumping to the floor, consciousness slipping away like a leaf on the breeze.
 

You'd think, after so many encounters with the dead, someone would go to the trouble to find/create a Ghost-Touch weapon. Heh.

Even if that just means borrowing Varo's dagger...

Still, it's nice to see an arcanist survive for at least a couple of 'sessions'. ;)
 

wolff96 said:
You'd think, after so many encounters with the dead, someone would go to the trouble to find/create a Ghost-Touch weapon. Heh.

Even if that just means borrowing Varo's dagger...

Still, it's nice to see an arcanist survive for at least a couple of 'sessions'. ;)

Shhh! Don't remind him!

Heh heh... as to the Ghost Touch, what about a simple Death Warding item, I mean, sure not everyone would have one... but None of them? Esp the priest... seems just wrong.
Back to the story - I misread the first description of the room, re-reading it appears that it is full of steel pillars... but the middle pillars have been destroyed (by the Ravager) is that about right? My question revolves around the Dread Wraiths... were they released from the destroyed pillars or did they come up through the floor where it was damaged or ?
 

hmmm...my memories of that section of rappan athuk are obscure, as my party never found it. they died well before the 11th level >) , but they liked it...in a twisted sense.
 

Richard Rawen said:
Shhh! Don't remind him!

Heh heh... as to the Ghost Touch, what about a simple Death Warding item, I mean, sure not everyone would have one... but None of them? Esp the priest... seems just wrong.
Actually, that very topic will come up in a little while. But I wouldn't call an item that grants a Death Ward "simple"; an always-on item would cost 112,000gp by the item-creation rules in the SRD. A wand would be cheaper (but not cheap), but as you've probably noticed, Camar does not have a particularly large number of spellcasters of 7th level or higher.

Back to the story - I misread the first description of the room, re-reading it appears that it is full of steel pillars... but the middle pillars have been destroyed (by the Ravager) is that about right? My question revolves around the Dread Wraiths... were they released from the destroyed pillars or did they come up through the floor where it was damaged or ?
This part of the dungeon has unique properties that limit magical transportation. I ruled that this kept the wraiths from traveling ethereally through intact walls and floors, thus they had to come up via the crack in the floor (it's actually a stone plate that fell to cover a pit when the outer seal was breached), or via the damaged pillar.

The steel pillars are actually part of an elaborate trap designed to stop or delay the Ravager from escaping. Only a few were sufficiently damaged to allow the wraiths to slip through.

This entire sub-complex is not in the original modules (AFAIK), only the RAR boxed set.

It's Friday, so you know what that means...

* * * * *

Chapter 229

ONWARD


Dar’s “rest” was not very long. Nelan brought him back around with a minor healing spell, although it did little to dispel the chill that seemed to pervade his body. Allera helped that with a restoration spell that replaced the life force that had been stolen by the dread wraith. She then did the same for Alderis, Honoratius, and Talen, using her wand of lesser restoration to supplement her own healing abilities. Nelan assisted, using cure wounds spells and one of his own wands to counter the more mundane effects of the wraiths’ chilling touch.

In the end, they were brought back to nearly full strength, but it had been another close call. Dar, Honoratius, and Alderis had been brought to the brink of death, and only the archmage’s quick thinking and potent magic had saved them.

“Your mastery of spell-shaping is impressive,” Alderis said to Honoratius, once he had been revived. “Even when I was... at my best, I could not accomplish that feat.”

“With discipline, study, and practice comes mastery,” the archmage said simply. She adjusted the seating of the Web of Transposition on her head; some of the strands of her hair had come loose in the brief melee.

Shay and Talen stood close together on the edge of the forest of steel pillars. “Talen, we’re in way over our heads here,” the scout said. “Just one of those red bastards up there nearly tore us apart, and we don’t know how many more might be down here.”

“And if they all break out together, and head for Camar?” Talen asked quietly.

“It’s your call. If you say we go on, we go on.”

“Shay...”

But they were interrupted as Dar came over to them. “Nothing like a good old-fashioned ass kicking, eh, commander?” He grimaced and popped his back. “Damn it, I think Allera missed a spot on that last healing.”

“She probably leaves a few wounds to remind you that you’re not indestructible,” Shay said. She drifted back from Talen; the moment between them was broken.

The others came over to join them. “How are you doing for spells?” Talen asked the mages.

“You have witnessed the casting of numerous spells from my higher valences, commander,” Honoratius said. “My more destructive magics have been depleted, but I have adequate means for self-defense left to me, should it come to that.”

“Alderis?”

“I am prepared,” the elf said. He looked no worse off than before, but that was not an ideal indicator, as he looked barely healthy at his best.

Allera came up to them. “I think we need to go on, Talen.”

“Why?”

“I... I don’t know. It’s just a feeling I have. I’ve had it ever since we entered this place. There’s something... important here, that we need to see.”

“Those wraiths were nearly the death of us,” Mehlaraine said dubiously. “If they were just the door guards, we could expect further resistance deeper in.”

“Yeah, they certainly punch a hole in the ‘not aligned with Orcus’ theory, eh mage?” Dar said.

“Not necessarily, colonel,” Honoratius replied. “Such creatures, while not mindless, can be bound to a place to serve as defenders. There are other plausible explanations as well.”

“Or maybe Orcus also has an interest in these monsters, and where they came from,” Talen said. “All right, we’ll go a bit farther, but keep an eye on the time,” he said to Allera and Honoratius.

They made their way through the forest of steel pillars, wary of another attack. But they were not molested by more wraiths or by anything else, and soon they found their way to the other side, where another round opening, partially blocked by a mithral door, greeted them.

“Growing back?” Talen asked. Honoratius investigated, and then nodded. The circular portal filled almost half of the space of the opening. It was regenerating too slowly to see with a casual glance, but the knowledge that it was slowly resealing added a certain urgency to their steps.

The space beyond the door was a large, irregular chamber, and it was packed with junk.

The objects that cluttered the room looked as though they might have been valuable at one time, long, long ago. A lot of the clutter was made up of remnants of wood or soft metals, and some were still recognizable, crates and chests and assorted objects of furniture or art. A strong hint of decay filled the place.

“Well, our friend left us a clear trail, at least,” Shay commented.

A swath of destruction passed through the room, the already ruined collection of objects pulverized into small fragments by the passage of the ravager. The creature’s path left an open avenue that they used to cross the room. There was another vault door there, again partially reconstructed, and beyond they could see another room.

“Light, up ahead,” Selanthas warned, fitting an arrow to the string of his bow. The head of the missile began to sparkle, strings of electrical energy flaring around it as the bow imparted its magic to the shot.

They made their way cautiously forward. The space beyond the door was cluttered with bits of debris; apparently some of the contents of the storeroom had fallen or been knocked into this next room when the creature had moved through. But they could not see that far into the new chamber, due to the glowing grid of energy that cut the chamber in two directly ahead.

“What is that?” Dar asked, taking a step forward.

“Careful,” Shay said. “If that’s not a trap, then I am a half-dragon.”

“Who your mother slept with is none of my concern,” Dar said, but he kept his distance from the flickering barrier. The pattern of interlocking lines of force was exceptionally precise, forming perfect squares one inch across through which they could see the room beyond.

“I do not see any exits,” Selanthas said, peering through the barrier.

Shay crouched low for a moment. “Some of the debris from the last room... it’s on the far side.”

“How does it look?” Talen asked.

“Intact,” Shay replied. She ran her fingers across the floor. “Something here... I’m not one hundred percent certain, but I think that the creature made it through here, and the barrier hurt it.”

Dar took a small object from his pouch and tossed it at the barrier. Everyone flinched, but the object—a silver coin—passed through harmlessly, and clattered on the ground beyond.

“That was an unnecessary risk,” Nelan chided him.

“The sands are trailing down, or have your forgotten?” the fighter said. He sidled toward the barrier, and drew out his club.

“Dar,” Talen said.

“Don’t worry, I’m not going to try to jump through or anything.” The fighter carefully tapped the shield grid with the end of his club; the head of the weapon passed through it unharmed.

“Maybe it was created to only hurt the monster,” Allera suggested. Dar nodded, and reached out his hand to touch it.

Honoratus had closed her eyes; now she opened them and looked out over the room with a distant stare, seeing more than what was visible to mundane sight. “There is power here,” she said. She fixed her stare on Dar. “Do not touch it.”

Dar paused, his fingers an inch from the glowing lines. The archmage came forward, until she was standing right in front of it. “This barrier is fashioned of brilliant energy,” she said. “Unliving items pass through harmlessly, but living flesh would be cut like the edge of the sharpest blade that you could imagine.”

“Nasty,” Mehlaraine said. “How do we pass it?”

“Or do we even want to?” Shay asked. “There doesn’t appear to be anything up ahead, just a dead-end room, with some biers along the edges. It looks like some kind of tomb.”

“That appearance is misleading,” Honoratius replied. “The creature came this way; there is a residual trace of magic upon the floor, where I assume it burrowed up from another place below. The stone walls here are laced with the same regenerative magic that is reconstituting the doors. There is also some sort of shielding around the biers, possibly some kind of wall of force.”

“Can we follow its course?” Talen asked.

“I will need to examine the room in more detail,” Honoratius said.

“Well, unless you want to be turned into diced mage, I assume you have some means of getting past this barrier,” Dar said.

Honoratius nodded. “Stand back, if you will.”

The others retreated to the doorway, while the mage spread her arms wide and began an incantation. The spell took only a few seconds, and was answered by a faint rumbling, which grew as a hulking form materialized before her.

The earth elemental was not big for its kind, standing maybe a foot taller than Dar. But it moved with a ponderousness that belied its considerable mass. The creature looked down at Letellia, who spoke to it in a husky, gravelly voice. The creature listened impassively, then turned and walked over to the wall.

As the companions watched, the elemental pressed its fist, and then its entire arm, into the wall. The crystal-streaked stone seemed to resist it at first, but then the elemental pushed more insistently, and the surface gave way before it. Within a few seconds it was entirely gone, absorbed into the wall.

“Where’s it going?” Dar asked.

“Just be patient,” Allera said. “I’m sure Honoratius knows what she’s doing.”

Dar nudged her. “I see you’re doing it too.”

“What?”

“Referring to him as a ‘her’. Hard not to, in that body.”

“Oh?” she asked, an eyebrow arching. “What about that body?”

Dar was rescued by a deep rumbling throughout the chamber. Large chunks of rock detached from the ceiling and came crashing down, through the energy field. The cascade continued for almost a minute, descending along first the left wall, and then over to the right. In the midst of the damage, the grid dissolved, leaving the way open.

“Swiftly,” Honoratius said, stepping through the now empty space. They could see that the fallen rock was already starting to dissolve into the floor, and the damaged walls were beginning to reform, much faster than the mithral doors earlier. “I believe that the field will be restored once the damage is done, move quickly!”

“How do we get back across?” Talen asked, even as he hurried the others forward.

“I have other resources that will suffice,” the archmage said. “The field requires the surrounding walls to be intact; mundane damage is enough to make a way through.”

“I don’t like this,” Shay said. “We’re cutting off our retreat. What if we have to come back this way in a hurry?”

No one had an answer; they could only watch as the damage to the walls was slowly but inexorably erased.

“Perhaps this will be of use,” Alderis said. The elf had found a panel in the wall about six feet back from the barrier; the cleverly concealed stone plate swung open on a recessed pivot to reveal a gleaming metal lever behind.

“That makes sense,” Mehlaraine said. “Whoever created this place would likely want a safety in case they needed to exit.”

“That assumes they’re still here,” Dar said. He put his club away again, and drew Valor. Honoratius was already searching the center of the room, using her arcane sight to probe the magic here. “It burrowed up through the ground here,” she said, indicating a space of floor that looked otherwise unremarkable.

The attention of most of the group was focused there, but Dar walked over to one of the stone biers set in alcoves around the edges of the room. There were three of them, and each supported a skeleton, clad in fragments of ancient garments that had decayed with age. The skeleton on the bier that Dar was looking at was missing its skull.

“I wonder what happened to him,” Dar asked. He reached for it, but his hand was blocked by an invisible wall of force that protected the bier. “Doesn’t look like he had anything worth looting anyway,” he said, turning toward Allera.

The healer’s face told him that something was wrong. He spun back toward the entry, Valor at the ready.

Another pair of stone panels had opened in the walls. A pair of skulls drifted into the room, suspended in mid-air by some form of magical levitation. Their eyes and teeth had been replaced by huge, multifaceted gemstones, which glimmered with a faint inner light. Their “eyes” fixed upon the companions, and there was a grim power there, accompanied by a deep, ageless malevolence.

“Undead!” Dar yelled, but the others had already sensed the threat, and turned, weapons and spells at the ready. Dar was the first to respond, and he stepped forward to face the first skull, Valor already coming down to smash it to bits.

The blow never landed. One of the skull’s eye-gems flared, and a pulsing nimbus of hollow light stabbed from it into the fighter’s body. Dar stiffened, and the light retreated back into the gem, dragging with it a gray outline of diaphanous vapor. As the surge of light faded, Dar collapsed like a broken doll.

Allera screamed.

The other skull unleashed a howl that echoed through the room. The deadly wail of the banshee tore through the room like an invisible tsumani. Shay clutched her head and collapsed. A moment later, Talen joined her, falling across her body. Mehlaraine and Selanthas both dropped in mid-attack, their weapons clattering from their hands as they fell. Nelan staggered back, calling upon the Father, but he too eventually succumbed, his armor crashing loudly as he hit the floor.
 


Wait, what? Two creatures with a minimum CR of 29? Barring story-related complications, I can't see any way to avoid a TPK, assuming even a halfhearted performance by the demiliches. Jeez.
 

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