Great Delve 7
20 Flamerule
Ashnern, you should have seen the look on your face when I told you that we killed a dragon in the depths. Your excitement was a fine reward all its own, and your gratitude even finer. Now we are in the possession of no less than four potions and a magical wand in exchange for a dragon corpse! You told me that the wand produces fireballs when pointed at an area, but cautioned me to be careful. Little do you know that careful is my middle name!
Selise has determined to assist the Lady Tess in the regaining of her ancestral lands. I’m no revolutionary, but I cannot help but to think that any ruler, no matter how young or inexperienced, would serve better than this abysmal Lord Truesilver. He is as dense as one of Tickler’s day-old biscuits, and I've known Zhentarim enforcers who were more personable. And his breath? Gods in their heaven, I have never smelled such a foul odor emanating from something that was not yet dead!
His wife does seem quite delectable, however, and with any luck I shall have the truth of her!
23 Flamerule
Selise made her trip to Eveningstar, and obtained a scroll containing the spell that raised Bern from the dead. I can say with some surprise that I’m glad to see the gruff old cleric, and I think he’s glad to be back as well.
After playing at being Gods with the body of Bern, we returned to the entrance of the Great Delve and were set upon in a most cowardly (if well-planned) ambush!
Goblin archers and skirmishers had dug in to the cliffs surrounding the opening, and before we even knew we were in a fight, we were riddled with arrows! Wolf-riders completed the pincer-move, attacking us from within the Great Highway, and I daresay if it wasn’t for Selise’s counter-shooting, and Bern and Enkil’s heroism, none of us would yet live.
The wand of fireballs given to me by Ashnern works fine, although I’m ashamed to admit that I was thinking about the new Lady of Storm’s Rise when he was explaining it to me. I pointed the wrong end at our foes, and set off a fireball in our midst. The blast knocked me unconscious, but my friends tell me that it was quite impressive.
Alas, when I awoke, I learned that Enkil has been sent to join the Twenty Martyrs of Moradin that he made us memorize. He was guarding our retreat into the Delve, when he was struck to the ground and literally de-faced by a goblin’s cowardly coup-de-grace. If the body wasn’t wearing Enkil’s armor, I would not have recognized it, I’m afraid.
Bern thinks that Enkil should be left in the Temple to Moradin here, along with all his magic! I argued that we should sell his items, but the party supported Bern. It is probably just as well, for I confess I am ignorant about Metaphysics, and if Bern says Moradin would be angry with me for selling His Holy Relics, he surely knows best.
But I’m sure that Moradin would not begrudge me the coin value of Enkil’s masterwork armor. After all, who really wants to worship a stingy deity?
23 Flamerule
Thanks to Selise’s quick thinking, we captured one of the goblins, and the little dirty thing was quite informative. Apparently, these goblins are from the Stonelands, and entirely ignorant of the goblins within the Delve. They have found a pass through the mountains into Cormyr, and begun to raid through it. Worse yet, this attack on us was contracted by some human who gave the beasts our description and location! Would you think less of me, Ashnern, if I brought your name up during our discussion of possible culprits? Of course, the Lord Truesilver was also mentioned, but whatever mechanisms would place the man responsible with guarding the pass in an alliance with the goblins who intend to exploit it are beyond me.
In addition, the creature told us of a captive, an elven woman that they were fattening up like a liver goose. We discovered her in a nearby cave, and after Bern healed the worst of her wounds, she volunteered to cast in lots with us. She fights in the style of her people, with sword and spell at the same time. Her name is Aree, and she seems to be the worst sort of elf—arrogant, snobbish and aloof. Much like my mother, although without my mother’s fine appreciation for cruelty.
I suspect Merkatha will murder Aree before too long, if first impressions count for anything.
26 Flamerule
No time for a proper entry—I have a secret meeting with the Lady Truesilver to attend, and I will be Damned if I cannot find some way to smell pleasant before this sun goes down!
29 Flamerule
I write this from a very-well appointed chamber in the Royal Suite at Arabel. We have an appointment with the Steel Regent that she is currently two hours late for, so until she arrives, I will keep busy by bringing this journal up to date.
Our explorations beyond the Hanging Gardens led to a flooded passage, similar to the Great Highway, but under some five feet of water. Midway along this passage, we discovered a gruesome and mystical sight: A dwarf, certainly long dead, floats in the air above the flooded passage, dripping a steady stream of what looks and tastes like blood! (Yes I tasted it, Ashnern, please don’t tell the others.) Whatever this fellow did to be cursed in this way must have been truly heinous!
Venturing past the corpse through the flooded passages, we discovered a most impressive site, named All Roads Meet by the dwarven runes that decorate the place. There seems to be a central chamber that extends up through to the top of the mountain, and likewise below to an unknown depth. A central shaft pierces it in both directions, and there is a moving platform inside that shaft that must be sufficient in size to ferry a score of mounted men. Along the sides of the shaft are stairs, for those who cannot or would not wait for the platform.
This shaft is the key to the whole of this Great Delve. Through it, we could ascend to its heights, or plumb its depths, as we see fit. Of course, we have not fully explored the level that we entered into, and there is a certain school of thought that would argue against leaving unexplored caverns behind you, but temptation fouls the plans of even the wisest adventurers, so up we went.
We’ve made no sense of how or when the platform travels, save that we can hear it rumbling along in the shaft, and we see its tracks. As we have not discovered the truth of it, we were forced to take the stairs. The journey upwards took us the better part of a day (if my sense of time is still with me), and I stopped counting steps at three thousand and five.
Once above, we ran afoul of a pair of winged humanlike monstrosities, seemingly carved whole of stone. We managed to dispatch them, but only with a great effort. Exhausted, we determined to rest a while, then return to the more familiar Great Cavern, and finish the exploration of it.
As we made our way back to the fungal forest, we stumbled upon a group of dwarven mercenaries—adventurers like ourselves judging from their equipment and the way they attacked us completely without provocation. Their spellcasters fell to our counter-attack, but their warrior proved to be the cream of the crop. Honestly, he very nearly defeated us all single-handedly, but in the end we were victorious.
Sadly, Bern was killed by this mighty dwarf, and his spirit seems to have gone missing.
As we ransacked their warm corpses for magical loot, one of us (I think it was Selise) stumbled upon a most troubling letter. These dwarves, it seems, were emissaries from a nation to the East. Here is the whole of it:
Lord Uqaraq,
Our time is near. Our forces rally on the human’s eastern border. We shall push through effortlessly. Like all humans, they have no stomach for war. But these are especially weak, as their king is but a babe and they are led by a woman.
There will be no resistance, and soon we shall be reunited again. Millennia have passed since we could say this, but now the time is at hand. Kor’En Eamor will be ours again. And the Great Father God Hepis will return to lead us out of the darkness.
Hepis’ speed,
Crown Prince Rellerik Strongsoul
Regent and Heir to the Kingdom of Vesper Hall
Scion of the Qarlur Thalbarak
Of course, you don’t need me to tell you that despite these dwarves’ most fervent wishes the Eastern border of Cormyr is already occupied. We call that place Sembia, and if this note is true, the Sembians must be in league with these dwarves from Vesper Hall. It is well known that the Sembians covet Cormyr’s land, and perhaps now they think they have found the allies to help them take it.
“Qarlur Thalbarak” is an ancient phrase that means literally “Treachery’s Killers”. A dwarven military order? It seems that the worship of Hepis is not lost to the mists of time after all. Whoever Lord Uqaraq is, I suspect that he dwells within the Delve, and it was him that the dwarves were seeking when they attacked us. At least, we know now who the degenerate dwarves we first faced within the Delve belong to, and what they desire. But I cannot believe that there is an entire dwarven nation worshipping an unknown god. Perhaps Enkil is wrong, and the dwarves have hidden wicked cults among their number as well? And if this cult holds sway over the heir to Vesper Hall? This is exactly the sort of thing that starts wars, I tell you, and wars are notoriously bad for those of us in the adventuring profession.
It is none of my business what these Southerners do with their spare time, and frankly I could care less who authorizes our adventuring charter, but I am starting to fear that this Steel Regent will conscript us, or at the least force Selise into service.
Curse these humans and their half-measured attempts at political contrivances. Where is a pit-fiend to show them how it is done when you need one?
29 Flamerule
You would scold me, Ashnern, but I have given the Lady Truesliver a magical potion from my own treasure hoard. It a simple potion of endurance, good for a few hours’ pleasant vigor, but wasted on her. Of course, my intent is simply to encourage her to drink any further potions I might offer—surely I can commission a love draught here in Arabel!
Life is grand.
30 Flamerule
I knew it.
It is the studied opinion of the Steel Regent that Kor’En Eamor represents a “great and necessary resource for Noble Cormyr”, and that we are to suffer a Royal Command to “explore and secure the treasures of the Great Delve for the current War Effort”.
Bleh. As if Noble Cormyr has any say-so within the Great Delve. Of course, Selise will kowtow to her liege, but at least we are all agreed that the less that oafish Ilthais Truesilver knows about our efforts, the better. If there is one thing I simply cannot abide, it is supervision.
Alas, Ashnern, the Steel Regent has sent a sage back to Storm’s Rise with us, in the hopes that he can assist you in determining the truth of the Great Delve. Rath is his name. He is a pale and gutless fellow, and Merkatha has already terrified the poor lad to his core. I am amused by his cowardly antics. I hope you find him more pliant than we have, but I fear he will be useless to us all.
1 Eleasis
(Written in a shaky hand)
I am as hung-over as I have ever been. They certainly know how to light the Midsummer Fires here in Arabel.
6 Eleasis
While Bitzfit prepares scrolls, and Selise visits her kin, I have been left to prance about after Chance, who is prancing about after that ridiculous bard she is so enamored with. Gods take us all, she behaves like a besotted schoolgirl, and I none the better.
To complete our three-part-rod of stupidity, the bard (of course) prances after himself. To quote the famous poet, “There are no victors in war / only those who do not succumb”. I think we can say the same for love.
Take me back to the Delve, O fates, where at least the beings that want you dead will do you the courtesy of being obvious about it.