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The Realms of Enlightenment: The Grey Companions

Hairy Minotaur said:
Welcome to Dahwgonnit's Dwarven full body wax and hair removal spa. :p

Nice big update today Jon, loved it!


Glad you enjoyed it. There are several more like it in the pipe seeing as how the group spent an unexpected amount of time in Floxen doing... well, let's just wait and see, shall we?

As far as the hairless dwarf goes, I wish I could claim him as my own, but I just shamelessly copied the character from another source and twisted him for my own uses. You know, I did the DM thing, in other words. :D

A gold piece to the one who can name the source. And, no, it's not another story hour this time.
 

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Demetrius Wyverneye sat in the back of the darkest corner of the Shining Lantern Inn, mulling over his lambsbread and mead. He built and razed dozens of different formations from the potatoes and gobbets of meat in his bowl, each more intricate then the last. He was sure that the meal would have been one of the best he had had in weeks if he had been paying attention, but his mind was elsewhere.

In the two moonsdances since he left Hillville Junction he had seen more evil than in the previous thirty years combined, and each day now seemed to be bringing new levels of evil previously unknown. The plague of illness and death that had taken so many in Hillville Junction was only the beginning, he had found the same thing in so many of the towns and cities across the Realms and those lands in between.

He left home with no knowledge of how many people just like him he would encounter in his travels. People who had lost a loved one to the plagues without really understanding how broad the scope of the loss truly was. He had held his father in his arms as he breathed his last, and at that moment it was impossible to imagine that another life could be more precious than the one he watched slipping away.

"The evil goddess returns, Demetrius," the elder Wyverneye strained against his dying breaths. "An unbelieveable evil. I fear that none may stop it. But some must try." And try he would. But how? Where does one begin to look for the source of something so big? Armed only with his father's armor and greatsword and the same martial training he had imparted to tens of dozens who had entered the Wyverneye School, Demetrius set out to find a way to help.

Battle City seemed like the logical place to begin; the largest city within a week's ride of Byr would certainly attract those seeking to do the most damage as well as those seeking to do the most good, he thought. He was half right. His arrival in Battle City coincided with the first of the plagues to strike the city, and within days there were bodies lining the streets while hospitals, temples and sanitariums turned away droves more of the sick and dying.

The scene repeated itself in a handful of other towns and small cities he travelled to as he made his way south and west, with tales of similar settings in another ten to fifteen. Wyverneye had found some similarities in some of the cases, either by first hand information or by anecdotal record. But there was nothing substantial enough to piece together. Festivals, harvest celebrations, anything that brought people out and allowed strangers in without too cautious an eye being cast their way seemed to be a common point. But that was the extent of what he knew, so he continued to follow the trail.

News of a festival in Relfren had brought him to this region through the aptly-named Bandit Pass, and he had stopped here in Floxen for a night's rest before heading into town at the first light of morning.

Wyverneye began again to rearrange the morsels of food in front of him once more when the young tablemaid approached. "Is everything okay, sir? You've hardly touched it..." she motioned to the still full bowl. "Mother made it fresh this morning, I'm sure..."

"No, it's fine," he said with an apologetic smile, "it's better than fine really, it's delicious... I'm just preocc-" He stopped short as a brief shouting from behind the bar startled everyone in the quiet room.

"No, no, no! Not in here, not in here !!" shouted the barman. "We've nothing against you. But please, we're trying to run a family business here. Please, please, around back to the private quarters... You'll be served there."

The room returned to quiet as quickly as it had been disturbed as every one of the patrons broke into a whisper. "Oh, my," the tablemaid said with a start, "I'd heard talk that there was a half-ogre about, but I hadn't actually seen him yet."

As many things as Demetrius had seen in the time since he left HIllville Junction, he was still taken aback by something every now and then. The quickest flash of a huge creature retreating from the doorway at the sound of the yelling barman was enough to take his breath away for a moment. "A half-ogre?" he said in stunned disbelief, "and you'll serve him here?"

"He's been about for a few days apparently," the tablemaid explained "some of the sisters at the Temple of Flor have spoken for his civility, so he's okay. Just makes the place look a little rough if you know what I mean."

"Do you often ge..." Again Demetrius broke off, this time as he watched the huge creature's two companions enter the room and begin conversing with the barman.

The two could not have been more opposite each other in appearance, and it almost looked as though they had been paired together as part of some sort of comic irony. One was tall and extremely dark skinned, with a clean-shaven pate that appeared to have been recently bandaged. The other was much shorter, of elven stock it appeared, with milky white skin and equally white long, flowing hair. The elven one turned to survey the room and his blood red eyes caught Demetrius' attention immediately, stopping him in mid sentence.

He was taken back, he was unsure how many years ago exactly, to the strange man standing in his father's office. It was him, it had to be. Demetrius had been afraid of him then, a young boy hiding behind the door as the elf spoke in calm tones to his father. He was very friendly, and his father had seemed greatly happy to see his old friend, but still Demetrius cowered at the sight of him. The image of the white skin and long white hair were without significant detail, but the eyes had been burned into his memory forever. These had to be those very same eyes.

He rose from the table and excused himself to the tablemaid without taking his eyes off of the elf. As he approached, the tall, dark man caught his gaze first and stepped toward him. Demetrius realized that his apporach left a lot to be desired in terms of social graces, and momentarily considered himself lucky that he was not in the sort of establishment where people pulled daggers first and asked questions later.

"Can we help you, sir?" the man asked with a vaguely sinister smile, looking down toward his belt where he revealed a partially unsheathed dagger.

"Oh, oh, no, I'm sorry" Demetrius stammered as he pulled his gaze away from the elf, backing away as he tried to continue, "I mean no harm, I just... I..." He didn't know exactly how to explain, and instantly felt foolish for putting himself in this position.

By this time, the elf had caught sight of the exchange and stepped toward his companion quickly. "Huzair, what's the problem?" he sighed and rolled his eyes. "Why do we have to end up in a mess everywhere we go?"

"Fine, I'll let the crazed-looking whackjob attack you next time" he retorted quickly as his smile disappeared, eyes never leaving Demetrius'. "You're welcome, by the way."

Demetrius was somewhat embarrassed at being the "crazed-looking whackjob", but tried to explain as quickly as possible, which only seemed to make matters worse. "I was afraid of you then, but now I just want to... my father...

"You were afraid of him?" Huzair's raspy chuckle interrupted, "I can't possibly imagine why!?!?"

"You'll excuse us, Huzair. Would you go check on Feln" the elf motioned him away, "I'm sorry, sir. What were you saying?"

Huzair lingered for a moment, eyes still locked on Demetrius as he pulled a cigar from his vest pocket and lit it before slinking out the door. "Always with the babysitting the half-ogre" he said as he slipped away.

"Forgive my clumsy introduction" Demetrius said, "but I know that you know my father." He corrected himself quickly "I'm sorry, 'knew' my father. I am Demetrius Wyverneye. My father Arwold passed recently and it's still hard to refer to him in the past."

The elf's red eyes widened at the mention of the name. He extended his hand and introduced himself, "My name is Morier Thulien, your father was a great friend of mine and I am deeply saddened to learn of his passing. I learned much from your father. In fact," Morier paused while he pulled a chain from around his neck and turned the medallion on it so that its obverse side showed, "I think you'll understand this inscription better than most."

"Amin khiluva lle a' gurtha ar' thar," Demetrius spoke in flawless elvish, tears filling his eyes as he instinctively translated the phrase he had heard his father's students repeat thousands of times... "I will follow you to death and beyond."

"Goodman Wyverneye perhaps you could join me outside," the albino said, his red eyes flashing with intensity. "I think we need to talk."



Morier and Demitrius stepped out of the Shining Lantern onto the rutted earthen street in the brisk evening air of Floxen. There was a chill in the air that spoke of colder temperatures to come. "I've been searching, Morier," Demetrius said as they walked, "for something. Something that will guide me. My father spoke of an evil rising across the Realms... but he was gone before I could ask him to explain what he meant."

"Arwold was a wise man, and it seems that he knew much. I sought his counsel when my companions and I were in Hillville Junction last. When I left town Goodman Midzier said your father had ridden off to seek answers... Now I know why," Morier said, wondering how much Arwold might have known, and how much he himself had yet to learn.

"I want to be able to help, but it's difficult to know where to start when you don't know who you should be helping and who you should be fighting." Demetrius' voice was straining against his thinly veiled emotions.

"Believe me, I understand your dilemma..." Morier pondered the many thoughts that rolled in his mind about the things he and the rest of the VQS had encountered in the last many weeks. "Come and sit with my companions and me. We'll talk and perhaps we may learn something from one another."

"I'd like that," Demetrius admitted.



Huzair was in the middle of a story when Morier entered the private dining area via the back door. "And there he was standing buck naked in the woods looking suprised to see me!" he paused to laugh smoke and Feln was grinning at the humorous tale. The wizard caught sight of Morier and motioned for him to sit down. "Hey, nature boy! Come on in and join us. I was just telling Feln the story of how we met up in the woods there."

Morier decided that it wasn't worth taking Huzair's bait and he hurried to step aside allowing Demetrius entry to the cramped dining room where Feln sat surrounded by mountains of food. "Where've you been?" the half-ogre started. "We were about to start withou-"

"Out defending the honor of some fair maiden, no doubt," Huzair said with a disinterested tone. "Now let's eat."

"If you'll allow me, I'll make the formal introductions," Morier said. "Feln and Huzair, I'd like you to meet De..."

"So the nut job will be dining with us then?" interrupted Huzair. A frustrated sigh from Morier was the only acknowledgement that Huzair had spoken.

"...Demetrius Wyverneye, son of Arwold Wyverneye - the ranger I sought to speak with when we were in Hillville Junction last." Morier immediately felt a twinge of sorrow at the thought that he and Feln were the only two members of the group who were left from those days. In an instant it seemed like both ages ago and just yesterday.

"I remember the name," said Feln. "You thought the ranger might know something more about the creatures we found in the caves north of the village." Turning his attention to Demetrius he asked, "Do you bring news from your father?"

"My father has passed from sickness brought by a plague" Demetrius said, noting to himself that it got a little easier to say each time admitted the truth. "It is purely chance that I have encountered you this evening."

"Lucky us," said Huzair before stuffing a crust of bread into his mouth so as not to feel obligated to continue the discussion.



The three sat and talked late into the night; Demetrius explaining how his days at his father's training academy had turned into the chase for disease and rot he had followed across three cities, and Morier, Huzair and Feln decribing the chaotic scenes in Miller's Pond and the manor house. As Feln finished talking serenely about the epic battle that had laid two of his companions dead, his eyes suddenly brightened. "Morier, the conversation we had on the way over here... about the manor!"

For a long few moments the half-ogre and the elf sat in silence looking in each other's widened eyes as though they were having a conversation that nobody else in the room was privvy to. "Perhaps!" Morier said at last.

"Perhaps indeed," laughed Feln.

"Would the two of you lovebirds like to share your moment with the rest of us?" asked Huzair.

In a sudden flurry of sound, both Feln and Morier spent the next hour taking turns explaining their vision for the now empty Manor House: A fortress for the training of adventurers that might assist them in their constant fight against evil. Someone to turn well-intentioned men and women into fighting forces who could hold their own against the worst Aphyx could send at them. A place for the VQS to call home. It was all coming together now.

Demetrius, for his part, took in most of what was being thrown at him. He asked a few questions and then sat silently and pondered what the two adventurers were saying to him. "You'd like me to be the steward of such a place?" he asked, trying in vain to mask the incredulousness with some sense of confidence.

"It would be perfect," Morier said, "You've spent the last fifteen years helping to train students at your father's academy. What better way to serve his honor and to avenge the evil that took him from us than to use that experience to train more to be just like him?"

Demetrius looked down and fingered the pewter tankard in front of him for a moment before answering with a very simple, "Absolutely."
 

They answered Melonna's urgent summons and found her in the temple's healing hall. She looked drawn, her red-rimmed eyes surrounded by dark circles; a few wispy strands of gray hair had come free of the crown of woven daisies that she wore and hung loosely across her face. She and several of the other priestesses were crowded around one of the curtained beds, but she drew herself reluctantly away from the patient laying there at the VQS' approach.

"You have brought a great evil to Flor's house," the high priestess hissed as she met them. Her eyes darted around, nervously searching for any unwanted listeners who might be within earshot.

"What do you mean?" Morier asked, although he thought he knew already. Melonna shook her head in response and started to turn.

"Not here," she whispered, casting her concerned gaze on the patient in the bed and motioning for them to follow toward the door at the rear of the main hall. As they passed, several of them caught sight of the maiden lying beneath the bleached white coverlet. She appeared drained of vitality, looking more like a living corpse than a girl in her teens.



Melonna was obviously weary and she sagged against her desk for a moment before speaking. "The mace," she said finally, confirming Morier's suspicions. "It's extremely powerful and evil beyond... beyond anything I have encountered before."

"We dinna find it in the happiest o' places, lass," Karak sighed. "I'm nae surprised that the thing be tainted."

"I don't think you understand, good dwarf," Melonna corrected. "It's not tainted; it is taint."

"Huh?" Hiuzair asked, drawing a cigar from his pocket. "What's that supposed to mean?"

"Please don't smoke in here," the cleric chastised and Huzair rolled his eyes in disgust. He returned the cigar to its hiding place and Melonna went on. "The mace is pure - if such a word can be used to describe it - divine evil given form. It's not a weapon forged so much as it is an extension of the Rot Queen's dark power. Poor Beorna came in accidental contact with it and was... drained. It almost killed her."

"I'm sorry, Matron Melonna," Morier apologized. "We should not have brought this evil to you."

"No. Here is exactly where you should have brought it!" the cleric countered. "Such an implement of evil cannot be left lying around for just anyone to stumble upon."

"Is there any way to make it safe?" Feln asked, tightening his fists as if imagining the haft of the weapon in his hands.

"Not that we know of," the cleric replied. "Nothing we've tried seems to injure it. We've sent messengers to Widdershin seeking a means to unmake the thing, but it will be several weeks before they return. In the meantime, we will keep it secured in the vaults beneath this temple."



After leaving the tired high priestess, the VQS retreated to the cramped private room that had been set aside more-or-less exclusively for their use in the back of the Shining Lantern. A tray of foamy tankards had been brought in and left on a sideboard near the door as was the usual practice. Huzair and Karak each took two of the steins before settling into hard wooden chairs. Feln eschewed the ale and paced back and forth in the small room.

"The cleric overstates the danger of the mace," he said, driving his fist into the palm of his opposite hand. "I could over come it! I know I could!"

Karak sputtered over his mug of ale, sending specks of foamy head across the tabletop. “What in the nine dwarven hells are you talkin' about? Are ye figurin' on using that black mace?"

"I thought I might," Feln snapped back and Karak shook his head.

"Why I can nae believe it! That weapon's gotta be cursed for sure. And evil besides!" the dwarf grunted. "Why it took the stuffin' right outta Morier there. I never thought an albino elf could turn more white than 'e did when that wicked thing hit ’im in the chest. And ye're thinkin’ of using it? Shaharizod’s beard! It ain't right, I tell you. It ain't right.”

The dwarf took a pull off his mug and then slammed it down on the table. “And another thing: I won't stand for it, and Ledare would not either!" Karak thundered. "As I sit here before ye, and on her grave, I won't allow that cursed weapon to be used in our midst!”

"Dwarf, let's be clear on who chooses my weapons," Feln growled back, leaning in toward Karak. "It's me!"

Huzair pushed himself back from the looming confrontation and drew a wand from his sleeve. "If you think I am going to let some assassin use a weapon that could make him turn on all of us, you are mistaken," the mage said once he was in a good tactical position to use his wand. "Ogre, you have no understanding of what magic power this thing has. It will possess you eventually. I will not let that happen."

Feln turned to regard Huzair and bared his fangs menacingly. The intimidation tactic seemed to have no effect on Huzair at all. The wizard was either supremely confident or completely drunk. It was tough to tell which.

"What simpleton thinks he can handle the dark powers of Aphyx?" the mage went on. "Gods! The death knight wiped out half our party and if it were not for Morier's excellent decision to disarm Blackheart, I think there would have been four funerals... if not actually seven! And I know Shamalin would not be here now. Come on! Stand up for me, Morier! You know I am correct on this one." Huzair turned to look at the eldritch warrior and Morier sighed. He turned reluctantly toward Feln.

"As much as I hate to say it, and as difficult a time as he is having saying it in a sensible manner, Huzair does have a point," Morier told him. "This thing should be destroyed or placed somewhere under protection so that it never again becomes a tool of evil. I don't think that Melonna would let you have it even if we all thought it was a good idea."

The half-ogre grunted noncommittally and Morier turned his attention on the wizard. "I think Feln gets what you're saying, Huzair," he explained. "And I'd put that wand away before we have to spend a day looking for someone to remove it from wherever Feln decides to stuff it." Huzair shot the half-ogre a reproachful glance as he slipped the wand back into its wrist sheathe.

"I'd like to see him try," he muttered as he returned his attention to his ale.

Karak drained his first and started in on his second. “While we're talkin' on it, I know you all been sayin’ behind your backs that I should use the black plate of that chaos knight I dispatched. But I do nae like that one bit," the dwarf growled, wagging a thick finger at the others. "Why, who knows what evil runs amok in that thing? See, you ‘ummies an' faeries an' half-bloods do nae know a thing or two about armor and weapons. It takes spirit to make those weapons. It takes life force. Just ask Balazaar. He’ll tell ya. So I do nae know if I wish to wear the black armor from a chaos knight.”

"I guess I don't blame you," Morier said with a nod as Karak upended his mug and slurped down the entire thing. "I'm not sure I'd want to be reminded of Blackheart every time I put my armor on either."

“Now, now, I know you must be thinkin’: well, he be wearin' Sir Brin’s armor, now what is the difference?” Karak went on as if he hadn't heard Morier's comments. The dwarf motioned for another tankard from the tray. “Well, I’ll tell ye. The difference is, I killed Sir Brin in hand-to-hand combat - one warrior to another. I, as the victor, am entitled by dwarven rights to his weapons and armor. But that black chaos knight be a different matter. I do suspect he be more demon than mortal. More the very stuff of chaos than naught. He died a wicked death of magick. That was no honorable fight an' would be nae an honor for me to wear it. I tell ya.”

He drank deeply of the offered ale and then reached beneath the table, pulling his massive war axe into view.. “Now, as I was sayin' before, it takes life and spirit to put magic into a weapon. Let me tell you how I started with this ‘ere beloved war axe," the dwarf's eyes grew misty with nostalgia. "Why, I remember the morne... It was bright and sunny on the mountain 'fore I descended the elevator shaft to the bottom o' the mine, and I knew this would be a good day...”

Karak's ale-fueled tale rambled on, the teller oblivious to whether anyone listened to it or not.



The next day, while Morier and Feln returned to the manor at Miller's Pond with Demetrius, Karak once again sought the help of Balazaar. He found the bald dwarf in his improvised work room, stroking his deeply-cleft chin and reading a thick book bound in leather. He looked up as Karak entered, waving his war axe.

"Well, runesmith, I have given it over to a lot of thinkin'," he announced. "I have made counsel with myself, with Shaharizod, and with me chalak."

"And what is it you wish of Balazaar, the mighty dwarven wizard?" the mage asked, closing his grimoire.

"This 'ere axe's been with me for a long time, as you know. I have raised it up from ore and forged it with sweat and fire," Karak explained, turning the weapon in his hands and studying the blade like a lover's face. "It has slain orcs, goblins, and chaos filth. I have oiled it and cleansed it from orc blood." He sighed, laying the weapon atop Balazaar's workbench.

"I miss my twin brother like it was yesterday - and it seems to me like it was just yesterday - when he and I roamed the halls of the fallen monk monastary in the Thunder Mountains," Karak said. His tone was somber; his voice seemed robbed of its thunder. "We barely survived that cold adventure, but what a time we 'ad. I have this buckler and these boots from that place, and I think it only fittin' that my blade be given a magick to remind me o' that time. I choose the Frost rune."

"A good choice," Balazaar told him. "And one that my mighty powers can provide for the gold you have offered."

"Now I got another questions for ye," Karak said with a nod. "One o' my companions has this crazy idea that they can take the fallen Chaos Knight's mace and destroy it."

"Bloody idiot," Balazaar snorted. "Melonna's already consulted me on the matter of the mace."

"I say they'd easier destroy a mountain. I do nae believe they can just destroy it," the warrior nodded. "Can such a thing be destroyed?"

"Surely it can be destroyed. Everything can be destroyed!" Balazaar harrumphed. "Of course, its unmaking may require a blow from Moradin's hammer, or being tossed into a Sphere of Annihilation. In other words: no simple matter."

"What do ye recommend we do with it?" Karak asked. "I say we just got a tool of chaos we should lock it away from the enemy nice and tight. What say you?"

"There is a certain dwarven sensibility in that," the mage admitted. "And, until such time as we actually learn the exact method by which the mace may be destroyed that seems the best course of action."

Karak nodded in reply, adding, "And when can you have me axe ready? I do feel as if the White Elf grows impatient with all this waiting." Balazzar harrumphed at that.

"Elves," he grumbled, shaking his head. "Tell your pale friend it'll be four days."
 

Ahhh, some intra-party spatting. All that's missing is an umber hulk to burst in and confuse half the party to attacking the rest of the party. Then it'll be like reading my own game. :p
 

Hairy Minotaur said:
Ahhh, some intra-party spatting.

If I had a nickel for every week that DIDN'T involve some intr-party spatting, I'd... have about 15¢. :lol:

All that's missing is an umber hulk to burst in and confuse half the party to attacking the rest of the party. Then it'll be like reading my own game. :p

Ooohh... I can't wait for that! Truth be told, I'm still trying to get the mental image of a naked, story-telling Paquito out of my head.
 

Morier stood in the doorway of the Manor house, squinting into the brilliant red-orange glow of sunrise. Even at this early hour, maybe a dozen or so workers had already appeared from their quarters to continue the work of transforming the manor from a place of unspeakable horror and evil into a livable shelter. For now they had crowded themselves into stables and makeshift lean-tos to sleep, for none who had seen the place as the Defilers had left it could yet bring themselves to sleep within its walls.

He spotted Demetrius among the flurry of motion out on the front lawn, struggling with a huge rolled tarpaulin and what appeared to be several feet of sail rigging spooled onto his arm. Feln appeared from below the steps of the house and relieved him of his burden, tucking both items under one arm and picking up a huge bucket of water with the other to boot. Demetrius smiled at the half-orge's strength and drive in making this project a reality. It had been Feln's idea to turn the manor into a training academy, and he had been tireless in his efforts to make it so once the work had begun.

Demetrius continued up the stairs to the front door and laughed as he approached Morier. "Supervising the worker bees are we?"

Morier, snapped from his thoughts, smiled back at Demetrius and said sarcastically; "I'm feeling rather like a Lord, looking out over my subjects as they go about their work."

"Lord Morier, your humble servant Demetrius Wyverneye at your service..." he chuckled and made a grand gesture of bowing.

"I didn't expect that there would be this many so soon," Morier said "so many, so eager to turn this place into something."

"If half of them stick out the first week of training it'll be a miracle, but it's possible. The work they've done so far has been either gruesome or backbreaking or both, and we've only had three leave so far. I just hope we can turn them into real fighters in time to do something about things in the village down below." Wyverneye gestured toward the buildings of Miller's Pond, where exaggerated stories of zombies had mixed with reality to the point that nobody really knew what was true anymore.

Both men stopped their conversation as a wagon carrying another twelve or fifteen villagers, presumably from Floxen, came rolling up the road. As it slowed to a stop, most of the men jumped over the sides and took quickly to the task of helping to build the short stone wall around the perimeter of the yard. A single figure remained behind however, cautiously withdrawing from the wagon once it came to a complete stop. She turned and faced the Manor house where she seemed frozen for a moment before she began walking up the path, eyes fixed on the front of the house as she moved.

"Is that???" Demetrius started.

"Yes, it is," Morier answered as he darted out of the doorway, taking the steps two at a time as he rushed to greet the stunned looking Florian heading toward the house.

"Shamalin! You didn't have to come here." Morier tried to soften his voice as he spoke. The half-elf regarded him levelly.

"Yes, I did... I did have to come...There's so much to... But I..." she struggled to gather herself, such was the horror that filled her at the mere sight of the house. Sighing, she began again, stronger this time. "What you're doing here is... it's more than admirable. I needed to see it."

"We're trying, and not without a lot of help from these people you brought with you... how have you been able to recruit so many?" Morier asked.

Shamalin paused a moment before she answered, "They're mostly Florians, but their purpose is not really one of worship... I think they just want the chance to do something good for a change. We all want that..." Her voice trailed off.

"I'm headed back to Floxen this morning," Morier said, "as soon as Demetrius and I get our strategies sorted out. You'll ride back with me then?"

"I want to see this place first, in the light. I need to see that it's gone..."

"I'll walk with you then if you'd like, just to be sure you're okay?"

Shamalin couldn't argue... the idea of Morier's sword just a few steps away would be at least a small comfort as she revisited the site of the macabre prison in which she'd so many times believed she would die... and at times prayed for it to happen.

Morier led her through the manor halls, pointing out the various changes which had been made. Shamalin said little, nodding occasionally. As they passed through the dining hall she stiffened, her eyes drawn to the adjoining room. Morier slowed and would have offered to retrace their steps so as to avoid the L-shaped room with it's six doors, but Shamalin was moving ahead without him. He followed her, thankful that Demetrius had seen fit to have the place scrubbed clean. The atrocities they had found in the process were unspeakable. He only prayed that she had not known the half of it.

She walked purposefully from room to room, opening doors. She stood for a long moment in each, her face unreadable. Then at last she turned to Morier and placed a hand lightly upon his arm. "Thank you." She fought to control the quake in her voice. "There is a clearing to the east of the manor - just off the road. Take whatever time you need to finish your business. I will wait for you there." And with that, she turned to make her way out, suppressing an urge to run.


-------------------------


Gruin Foxtar strained once more against the chains binding his hands, driving the metal cuffs of the manacles deeper into the already raw flesh around his wrists. He grimaced but kept at it.

"What do you suppose they'll do with us?" Ruull Wicche-sheld wondered aloud. He too was bound by heavy chains, but he'd given up struggling to break them; they were far too stout for him to possibly succeed, he realized. Gruin wasn't nearly so bright, which was probably why he had never grasped the subtleties of combat expertise and so was lagging behind on mastering the Crescent Moon fighting style. Ruull secretly believed that, despite Gruin's obvious strength and skill at arms, the man would never master it.

Gruin growled and glared at Ruull fiercely. "What's the matter, Wicche-sheld? Afraid?" he snapped. "I've been locked up here for nearly a moonsdance and all they do is talk to me about their fool goddess. It's all 'mercy' and 'forgiveness' and 'compassion'." He spat onto the floor as if the words tasted foul in his mouth before renewing his ineffectual struggles against the chains. "They're weak! And when I get free, I'll kill them all!"

Ruull let his fellow Defiler Initiate grunt and grimace for a while before adding: "Aphyx will cull the weak from Oerune, Gruin. Her touch will spread across the land, leaving only the strongest in its wake." He had a wistful look on his face as he spoke, utterly convinced of his place amongst the strong. "We'll have out revenge on these Florians soon enough. When they are weakened and dying by Our Lady's hand... then... then we'll feast on their flesh! Oh yes... It will be sweet..."

He grinned, turning his eyes up to the single open window set high on the wall. It was well out of reach, but it offered a glimpse of the blue sky beyond the dreary walls of their prison.



Sparky flew away from the open window to deliver word to Huzair regarding what he'd overheard.



Ruull hadn't been back in his cell for very long when he heard someone casting a spell outside his door. He looked up in time to see a dark face leering at him though the narrow view slot cut into the iron-bound portal. He didn't immediately recognize the man, but he was happy to hear him hiss through the slot, "Hold on! I'm going to get you out of there."

"Did Callethorn send you?" Ruull asked, smiling hopefully at the familiar scritch-scritching sound on the other side of the door. Before being recruited to the Defilers, he'd spent a great deal of time working as muscle for one of the thieves' guilds in Battle City, and he knew the sound of a lock being picked when he heard it. The man didn't answer, but a moment later there was the blissfully pleasant click of a sprung lock and the door opened.

Ruull had never seen the man who stepped furtively into the cell. He was tall and lanky with skin so dark that it verged on ebony. His ears and nose were crusted with hoops and glittering stones, and his skin was covered everywhere with tattoos, just barely visible against his dark skin. He wasn't wearing any armor and didn't have any weapons with him save for a dagger at his hip, but he looked capable, none the less. There was a large grey crescent of fresh scar tissue running along the side of his bald head that could only have come from battle. Ruull had never met him, but he knew immediately that he was a friend.

"Are you alright?" Huzair asked and the man nodded.

"As well as can be expected, considering," he turned for the mage to see his hands manacled behind his back. Huzair held up with lockpicks.

"Let's see what I can do about those," he said and sat down behind him. As he scratched at the manacles - but not at the actual lock itself, - with his pick he asked, "So what do you have planned once you get out of here?"

"You mean besides killing as many of these Florians as I can?" he chuckled darkly. "Beyond that I don't know. We were just supposed to train at Miller's Pond, you know? Sir Brin was teaching us about being Defilers." He paused for a moment and shook his head. "I can't believe he's dead."

"He was weak," Huzair said, using the knowledge that Sparky had conveyed to him about the two prisoners' earlier conversation. Ruull nodded his agreement and half-turned toward the mage.

"Obviously! But who'd have thought?" he seemed genuinely flabbergasted. "I mean, he was in charge until we dug up the Death Knight. Next to Blackheart himself, Sir Brin was the strongest of the Defilers. I didn't think that anything could touch him in battle. How are you coming with that lock?"

"It's more complex than the door. But I'll get it," Huzair lied. "Maybe Malengar would know what to do?"

"Well, I'm sure he would," Ruull shrugged. "But it's not like I can just ask him for help. That'd be weak. And besides I don't even know where he is."

"Isn't he at Deathshead?" Huzair asked.

"Yeah... But I don't know where Deathshead is. Do you?" Ruull said, twisting to look at Huzair over his shoulder.

"Nope," the mage admitted, keeping his attention focused on "unlocking" the manacles. "I don't even know what powers Malengar has."

"Well, he's the Rot Queen's High Priest ," Ruul said. "But it's not just Her power that he channels. I heard from Bevina that he can drain the life right out of the ground to power his spells. It's called Blight Magic, I think and she and Callethorn were supposed to learn how to do it soon. Nasty stuff!" The prisoner grinned at the thought.

"Yes, I think it would be," Huzair said. "Can he do anything else?"

"Well, he's got the Rod, of course," Ruull explained. "Not sure what it can do, although Bevina said that as long as he's got it, he can't be killed. I don't really get it, but his spirit can jump to a new body so long as there's one close to the Rod."

"Magic Jar," Huzair muttered. Ruull had just described in mundane terms the effects of the Magic Jar spell. The Defiler Initiate shrugged.

"Like I said, I don't really know what it can do," Ruull said. "I just know that he looked like a half-elf when I saw him, but that he's really human. Magic..." He shook his head in resignation.

"Must be some pretty powerful magic to create that thing with all the faces," Huzair quipped. "You know, the one full of maggots."

"You mean the Vessel." Ruull grew quiet and a small shiver ran through him at the thought. "Callethorn and Bevina made that, not Malengar. Some adventurers got passed the zombies, the same group that killed Sir Brin. The Vessel was supposed to guard Miller's Pond in case they came back. Which I guess they did since I'm here. Are you almost through back there?"

"Yeah, I think so," Huzair said standing up. He hit the man on the back of the head, knocking him to the ground. "Dumbass! I can't believe you told me everything!"

Ruull stared up at Huzair, utterly confused. "Wh- what is this? I thought you were here to set me free?! Didn't Callethorn send you?"

"Callethorn is dead!" the mage bellowed, drawing the dagger from his belt. "We killed him and everybody else in that stupid manor! And now I oughta do to you what you did to the Speckled Band members!" He leaned forward with the knife until the cell door burst open.

"Huzair, stay your hand!" Morier shouted and the wizard grinned at him. He spun the dagger back into its sheath and stood up.

"No worries, my friend. I learned my lesson with the other one," Huzair grinned. "I learned a lot more with Charm Person than I did by cutting on his pal. Never you worry your pasty little backside about me."

"You charmed me?" Ruull shrieked from the floor. He started thrashing about trying to get to his feet. "You charmed me, you lying bastard!"

"Yeah," Huzair said with a dismissive wave of his hand. "Get over it."

"I'll kill you, you cheating bastard!" Ruull wailed as wizard and eldritch warrior headed out into the hall. "Do you hear me? I'll kill you!"

"I'll make sure to get scared if you ever see the light of day again, you murdering psychopath," Huzair said and locked the cell door. He grinned though the view slot. "Have a nice day."

The incoherent wailing of Ruul Wicche-sheld, one-time Defiler wannabe, followed the two members of the VQS up out of the dungeon.
 


[Realms #328] From Relfren, With Love

Karak walked out of the chill mist of early morning with a large bundle wrapped in an oiled tarp slung easily over one shoulder. He paid little mind to the odd looks he received from the nurses and initiates who moved about the temple attending to their many duties. And for their part, the Florians paid him little more than a passing interest; over the last week, they had grown accustomed to the dwarf's comings and goings and, despite the fact that most had never seen one of his kind before, the novelty of his presence had worn off

"I be lookin' for Shamalin!" Karak barked at the nearest of the faithful and the girl pointed to the door set to the left of the statue of Flor that dominated the rear wall.

"She's in the rectory," the girl told him. "It's just through-"

"I know where it be!" Karak growled and stamped off, his iron-shod boots echoing through the healing hall as he went.



He found her sitting alone in a small room. She was dressed in a simple white robe decorated across the breast with a sky blue teardrop design. She seemed deep in thought, her coppery eyes staring fixedly at the tiled floor. A vast leather-bound tome sat unopened on her lap.

"Well, lass, it seems you be now part of this party," Karak said by way of greeting. The half-elf looked up at the sound of his voice, but it took a few moments for any recognition to show in her eyes. The dwarf didn't notice or didn't care. "It is still a wee bit strange to me that Ledare be dead - 'Shaharizod protect her'. I can nae explain it, but it seems to me that she be gone so that you could live and be here."

Shamalin flinched at that as if Karak had raised a fist to her. The very same thought had been wrapping itself around her guts since her rescue; two had died so that she could live. The idea filled her with self-loathing.

"You both bein' from the same faith, an' all. It seemed as soon as she turned to the path of the holy warrior, she met her death," Karak went on, oblivious to the turmoil his words were causing in Shamalin. He was waxing introspective. "It be strange. I been tryin' to meet my death since me chalak was killed by the filth of chaos, in true Slayer fashion. It seems that Shaharizod be nae through with me yet."

Shamalin grimaced wondering which god it was that had further use for her on the mortal plane.

"Oi, it seems the more I travel among faeries and ogres, the more I ramble on and on and on. My point, is this lass." And saying thus Karak unshouldered the bundle and placed it at Shamalin's feet. He then squated down over the tarp and unfurled it, revealing its glistening contents. Shamalin recoiled from the heavy plate armor within as if it were a nest of vipers, but again Karak didn't notice. He had his eyes down admiring the armor for what it was: a solidly-crafted, heavily-reinforced boon on the battlefield.

"This 'ere be Blackheart's armor. It is extremely well made and of better protection than even my own," he said as he picked up the breastplate. It oozed protective oil, gleaming in the torchlight as he turned it. "Now I have personally cleaned and cleansed if from any taint in true dwarven fashion and had Balazaar check it for cursedness. He assures me it is clean." He then set down the breastplate and got to his feet. Shamalin was staring at the armor with a curious look on her face.

"I want you to have it," Karak said bluntly. "It seems fittin' to me, that Ledare lost her life comin' to my rescue when I was battlin' the Chaos Knight. And since I see a bit o' her in you, I think it only be fittin' for you to have it."

Shamalin looked up at Karak, trying to make sense of what he was saying. Was he really suggesting that SHE wear Blackheart's armor? Was he mad? The very thought was perverse!

"It will also serve to protect you. Because as I am sure you can see, in what our little band be doin', death is as real an entity as this stone here beneath our feet," Karak explained, his scowl deepening as he went on. "For me, it all started out as a missive for the King of Barnacus. You may not know this but me and me chalak be the ones that delivered the scrolls of message to Ledare when she started on this path. Now it has grown bigger than that. It is plain to me that this taint be spreadin'. That the powers of Aphyx be growin' stronger." He paused to spit on the floor in disgust and Shamalin thought she understood Karak's reasoning for giving her the armor. It made sense in a way and the irony of it was certainly not lost on her.

"It be up to us and others like us to stop the tide of chaos. I tell ya this, by takin' that mace and infiltratin' that manor we be in the right direction!" Karak continued and Shamalin forced a smile onto her face as she looked at him.

"You have my thanks, my lord," she murmured and hurriedly folded the tarp back over the bulk of the armor. Karak smiled.

"Ye're welcome, lass," the dwarf said. Gesturing at the armor, he added, "Are ye wantin' help gettin' into it?" Shamalin shook her head quickly.

"No!" she said, with a little more vehemence than was absolutely necessary. She changed her tone to a more gracious one and explained, "I've a few things that I need to attend to first. But, again, I thank you."

"As ye wish," Karak shrugged. "We'll be leavin' tomorrow or the next day at the latest. Me axe'll be ready by then and Morier's gettin' his baldric in a twist o'er that head o' his. The work settin' up the manor is keepin' him occupied, but I can't imagine him lettin' us wait around much longer."

"About the manor," Shamalin said tentatively at first, but gaining in strength as she went. "It is fitting that a place which housed evil beyond measure might grow to be instrumental in its own demise. You give homage to the memory of my slain companions in a way which I could never have dreamed. I thank you for that."

"Do nae go thankin' me, lass," Karak told her. "This was the white elf and the ogre's idea, nae mine. I'm just helpin' 'em sell off some o' our loot to help get it stocked up."

"Have you managed to sell all of the swords and such that were recovered?" the priestess asked.

"Not yet," the dwarf admitted. "Floxen be nae big enough for us to sell the lot. We've managed to barter a few o' them in trade for greatswords, but that's a losin' game for us. The swords we're tryin' to be rid of are better quality by half than what we're able to get in return. It rubs we the wrong way to make such a deal, but accordin' to Wyverneye, it's gotta be greatswords. So I guess we've got little choice." Karak shook his shaggy head in disgust.

"I might be able to help you," she said. "I know a master smith named Crofton Mallare. His forge is located off the market square a bit, near the well. My... my friend... used to deal with him when he needed something custom made. He should be able to help you." Karak grinned.

"Aye. That would be a help, lass," he told her. "I was plannin' to get a bit o' food in me belly o'er at the Lantern and then shoppin' a few o' the swords around the market. I'd like it if ye'd join me." Shamalin looked at him and smiled wistfully.

"It'll be good to get out in the world again," she said, not realizing just what the world had waiting for her...



The wall around Floxen had served as a last line of defense against humanoid invaders on several occasions since the town's founding. The tide of both orcish and gnollish armies had crashed against that barricade and been turned aside seeking easier prey and plunder elsewhere. Yes, the wall had served long and well, but it had been many years since any sizable force had set its covetous eyes on Floxen, and no living guardsman had ever had to defend the town.

So it is perhaps forgivable that the guard on duty allowed the coach through the gate.



It came fast across the steppe, too fast, Culun thought to himself. He recognized the vehicle, of course; the Forgeway Company regularly passed through Floxen ferrying the wealthy from one point to another in Pellham. Mostly it was some minor lord's steward or a rich merchant's representative riding within the body of the coach. Anyone with more coin would just use the Wayfarers' Union to teleport where they wished to go, and those with less could scarcely afford the Forgeway Company's rates, which were very steep. They could afford to charge nearly enough gold for their customers to buy their own coach because they provided security in dangerous frontier environments. The coaches themselves were stoutly built and the team that drove them trained in the arts of battle. Short of the Wayfarers there was no safer way to travel across the untamed wilderness of Pellham.

Usually, at least... Today seemed different.

The coach came along the little-road leading northeast out of Floxen toward insignificant settlements like Bereford and Cutter Jack's. And it came fast. As Culun had observed already it was traveling too fast, and while he watched, the coach shuddered over a rut in the trail and careened dangerously to the left. For a heart-stopping moment, the young guardsman was certain that the vehicle was going to overturn, but the horses ran on, dragging it back onto all four wheels.

Culun shielded his eyes against the early morning glare of Orin's Shield and squinted at the approaching Forgeway Company transport. As it drew closer it quickly became apparent that the coachman wasn't in control of the team; he sat askew atop the wagon, dead or unconscious, his body whipsawing wildly with every jerk of the coach. The horses were running hard of their own volition, hides slick with sweat, mouths trailing foam as they came. By the time Culun could see the whites of their panicked eyes rolling madly in their heads, it was too late.

An instant later, they thundered past him through the gate and into the town proper. In their wake followed an unwholesome stench, like dead things left to bloat in the sun. The guardsman darted belated out into the road and watched as the coach rushed into Floxen, making it almost to the river bridge before slamming into a slow-moving cart laden with cut hay.

The sound of screaming horses was horrible to hear and it drew people out of their homes and businesses to view the carnage. Culun rushed away from his post and had to fight his way through a crowd of ghoulish townsfolk in order to approach the wreck. By the time he reached the scene, Mobham Horn Star, one of Crofton Mallare's apprentices, had already come out of the nearby smithy and dispatched the stricken horses with a maul. Blood was flecked on his face and soot-stained leather apron and he looked pained when he glanced up to see the guardsman.

"I had to put them down," he told Culun, pointing to the animal's mangled limbs. Culun nodded and clapped a reassuring hand on the youth's broad shoulder.

"What happened here?" asked a woman clutching a wailing child to her breast. Culun recognized her as Goodwife Nedhne and her comments seemed to break the unnatural silence that had settled over the crowd. There were murmurs from the mob and Culun was thinking how best to handle the situation when another voice cut through the growing din.

"Flor have mercy!" Edwidan Seeblak wailed, drawing sharply back. His hand was slick with dark blood and Culun saw that he had been examining the body of the coachman. The driver had been thrown clear of the crash and landed against the base of the well. One glance told the guardsman that he was well and truly dead; blood soaked his clothes, and his flesh hung loosely from his bones as if all the meat of his body had been turned to pudding. His lifeless face was crusted with boils.

"Plague!" a woman near Edwidan shouted. It was Galaida Sigwyn, always eager to spread the latest rumor of doom. "They've brought plague to Floxen!" The crowd shuddered in preparation for a panicked stampede and Culun quickly found his voice.

"Don't panic!!" he shouted, raising his longspear over his head and shaking it. "We don't know what's happened here. This isn't plague!"

"Then what is it?" Goodwife Nedhne asked. "My baby-" That's all the farther she got before she was cut off by the sound of splintering wood. The door of the overturned coach that faced up to the sky burst from within, exploding outward in a shower of splinters. Before the wood had fallen to the ground, a figure moved gracelessly out from within.

It was dressed in clothes that might have been fine at one point but they were stained beyond repair with blood and other fluids that defied identification. His skin was purple like a livid bruise and it hung loose on his frame, seeming more liquid than solid. He moved with an awkward, shuffling gate, his left leg shriveled almost to half the size of his right. Three fingers on the figure's right hand trailed off into ropy tentacles that flailed sinuously at the air. A mewling cry of madness and pain split the air as the thing lurched forward, thick cables of saliva hanging from its unkempt beard. Even his closest friends would have been hard-pressed to recognize Constable Taunen-baum beneath the layer of pustulating blisters.

He lashed out with his right arm and the tentacles on his hand stretched out, wrapping around Goodwife Nedhne and drawing her effortlessly toward his gap-toothed maw. Her screams heralded the arrival of Aphyx's hand in Floxen.
 
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Nice.

That's was a great update (as was the one prior--I found that I actually liked Huzair for once ;) )

Keep it up, Jon.

~Fune
 


Into the Woods

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