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Travels through the Wild West: a Forgotten Realms Story

A shade?! If that is true, I am definitely going to enjoy the ramifications of the hero's involvement....

I want to see them finish the other conspirator/s soon. When you gonna post?
 

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Wow! The plot is getteng denser and denser. A true conspiration... It seems the heroes are paying their good performance againt the hobgoblins. They must have pissed off some big foes.
 

Part 26

The noble estates of Elturel were located for the most part on a low rise just inside the city walls near the eastern gate. In stark contrast to the crowded blocks of the rest of the city, the opulent manor homes and well-tended gardens in this district were spread out lazily over the gentle slopes of the hill, with the size of each estate giving a not-so-subtle clue as to the long-term standing of that family in the affairs of the city. Few of the city’s commoners came up here without pressing business, and armed guards in the livery of their lords were commonplace, watching all pedestrians with hawk-like eyes.

But the clean and well-maintained streets of Lords’ Hill were empty now, as the hour approached midnight and the rain continued unabated. That did not mean that eyes were not watching, as the noble lords paid well to ensure that their luxuries were protected at all times of day, and in all sorts of weather. But no one saw the four shadowy forms that made their way up from the more crowded section of the city via shadowed alleyways and neglected shortcuts. The night was so deep that even the miserable patrols of city watchmen who splashed through the streets in sopping cloaks could not see beyond the faint circle of light cast by their lanterns, and they were easily avoided by the stealthy quartet. At last they neared their destination, a darkened estate surrounded by a high stone wall with a heavy iron gate facing out into the street. The dark shadow of the manor house was just visible back in the distance, shrouded by numerous evergreen trees.

The four crept up to one of the walls that ran along the side of the estate, ducking down amidst the bushes that grew right up to the mold-encrusted stone.

“Well, here we are,” Benzan said.

“How did you know how to get here?” Cal asked, his voice a harsh whisper.

“Well, I had an idea that we might end up on the Hill at some point, so I asked some questions,” Benzan said. “You’d be surprised what you can learn if you keep your ears open.”

Cal frowned at the tiefling, but didn’t question him. Whatever his motivations had been, his knowledge had gotten them here.

“Well, which way do we go?” Lok asked. “Front gate?”

“I wouldn’t recommend that,” Benzan said. “If I was responsible for security for this place, that’s the first place that I’d put a trap. Let’s take a look around back.”

They followed the tiefling along the length of the wall, trudging through the mud at its base. Delem, who could not see at all, stayed right behind Lok, one hand on the genasi’s shoulder and another on the wall to guide him. At least they took some solace in the fact that if he could not see anything, it was unlikely that anyone would be able to see them.

That was the thought, anyway.

They followed the wall for its entire length before it gave way to a hedgerow of roughly equal height that ran along the slope of the hill for as far as they could see. After a quick look around, Benzan crept forward and peered through the thick vegetation.

“It looks like another estate backs up against this one,” he told the others. “The wall continues straight ahead, perpendicular to the way we just came.”

“Looks like we have to go over,” Cal said, looking up at the top of the obstacle, fully five feet higher than the top of his head.

For Benzan, however, it was just a few extra feet. “Boost me up,” he said to Lok, who looked like a wall himself as he leaned back against the stony surface to provide leverage for the tiefling.

“It’s not that high—why don’t you just jump up?” Delem said. He could distinguish the line of the wall’s upper edge above them, but that was about it in the darkness.

“Because, if it were me, I would line the top of the wall with shards of broken glass set in mortar, to discourage just that sort of activity,” Benzan said, his tone slightly condescending as Lok carefully levered him upward against the wall. The tiefling peered over for a long moment, then dropped back down to the ground. “I didn’t see anything, but there will probably be guards,” he whispered.

“So, what’s our plan?” Delem asked.

“Benzan will lead,” Cal said. The others, including the tiefling, nodded, respecting Benzan's abilities of stealth. “But be careful,” he said, to all of them. “Remember, we’re still invading the private home of a noble, and we still don’t have any hard evidence that would stand up at an inquiry, just hints and circumstance. And we might be wrong, after it all. Let’s not kill anybody until we find out for sure, one way or the other.”

“And once we’re inside?”

“Delem, can you use that spell that you used on the smith again?” Cal asked. The sorcerer nodded. “Lok, you stay with Delem, and be his eyes. If necessary, use sleep spells to take out any guards. I’ll use my own magic as well, and keep your weapons ready, but remember… quietly!”

“All ready, then?” Benzan asked. Once everyone had whispered their assent, he leapt up and nimbly darted back up atop the wall.

“All clear,” he said. “Lift up Cal, and then I’ll set a rope to help Lok. Delem, you go last—you should be able to jump right up.”

They navigated the wall quickly, and within a few moments they were all in the lee of the far side.

They were committed.

* * * * *

Another was committed, as well.

In a shadowy room encased in stone, the ordinary-looking man in the common woolens sat quietly in a small chair, his eyes half-closed as if he were about to fall asleep. He swayed slightly as his thoughts ranged far, but opened his eyes as a shadow entered the room. This shadow was not merely a stealthy man, but rather some entirely different manner of creature, for it passed through the wall, and what little light did reach it seemed to pass right through its insubstantial body.

“They draw near,” it said, its voice a sibilant whisper that sounded like the soft promise of oblivion to a dying man.

“Very well,” the man replied after a moment. The news was not that great a surprise, not after what he had seen of the fate of his agent in the warehouse along the docks. “Monitor their progress, and hinder them if you can, but do not reveal yourself to them until they have reached the first ward.”

The shadow hovered there, and for a moment it seemed to be undecided, for it drifted a short distance into the room, toward a dark object nearby.

“Stop!” the man said, and his voice held an echo of power that indeed brought the undead thing to an immediate halt. “You were bound over to me, and you will obey!”

“Yes, master,” the shadow hissed, and it retreated back through the stone.

The man rose, and walked over to the object that had so lured the shadow. He brought one of the candles with him, and touched the flame to two other tapers atop a table there. The brighter light illuminated the dark object enough to reveal that it was a man, gagged and bound securely to a heavy stone chair. The prisoner looked up as the man approached, and he started to struggle faintly but earnestly against his bonds.

“I am sorry that it had to come to this,” the man said to the captive. “But it seems as if our secret is out, and I’m afraid that your usefulness to me has come to an end.” The prisoner’s struggles intensified as his captor paused, and uttered a brief invocation. In response, a glowing energy surrounded him momentarily, seeping into his body, strengthening him with divine power as it faded.

The prisoner was trying to say something through his gag, but the spellcaster ignored him. He walked a short distance to the end of the table, where a rack held a breastplate that reflected the light of the candles in the polished metal. He put the armor on quickly and efficiently, then turned back to the prisoner.

“You can take some solace in that you will make one last sacrifice for the cause,” he said, taking a scroll out of an inner pocket as he spoke. “Though I don’t imagine that it will be that pleasant an experience…”

Ignoring the prisoner’s desperate struggles, he unrolled the scroll and began to read.
 


Slow day at work today... let's make it a double-post day!
LB

* * * * * *


Part 27

“It’s been easy thus far,” Benzan said, as he checked the knots again before standing. “Too easy.”

They were in a small guardroom that adjoined the rear wing of the manor house. The bound and gagged forms of three guards in studded leather armor lie flat on the floor, struggling futilely against their bonds. Well, two of them struggled, anyway—the one that Benzan had knocked unconscious just lay there, unmoving.

“Let’s just find out what we can and get out of here,” Cal said.

Getting inside had not been difficult, for all of their wariness. There had been no traps or alarms that Benzan could detect, and they hadn’t even had to work the back door, as Benzan had spotted a guard walking the perimeter of the building and waited for him to open the door before knocking him out with the hilt of his dagger. They found two other guards in this room, half-asleep already before Delem’s wand sent them to join their companion in unconsciousness. By the time they woke, Benzan had already secured them.

They hadn’t even needed to use Delem’s charm spell, as the guards had readily revealed what little they knew with only a little prodding. After getting what information they could from them, Benzan gagged them.

“Not very loyal to their employer,” Delem remarked about the guards as they crept quietly back out into the main hall that bisected the wing. From what they had learned, this part of the building was deserted at night save for the guards, and the servants and the lord generally slept on opposite ends of the main wing. If they were careful, they should be able to find the lord, surprise him, and confront him with what they knew. If necessary, Delem’s charm could be used to help persuade him to be forthcoming.

“Loyalty and foolishness aren’t always the same thing,” Cal said. “Those guards will—Benzan, what’s wrong?”

They all turned as the tiefling staggered, leaning against a nearby wall for support. His breath came in sudden gasps, and he shuddered as if a sudden chill had come over him.

“I… I don’t know,” he said. “Something… like a tear in the world, I could feel it…” He glanced down at the large pouch that he wore at his belt, the pouch where a carefully wrapped item had rested, all but forgotten for some time. He wrenched his gaze back up to his companions with an effort, and after a moment the confusion in his eyes began to clear. “It’s below us, here, beneath the house, close.”

“Let’s find the stairs to the cellar,” Cal said, and they moved out with determination.

None of them looked back into the guardroom as they left, so they didn’t see the dark shadow that rose up out of the floorboards, and hovered greedily over one of the bound guards.

* * * * *

The very air around him seemed to roil with dark energy as the cleric continued reading from the scroll. His voice became a hoarse shout as he reached the crescendo of his incantation, and released the power of the spell stored in the writing.

A dark rent opened in the air in front of him, and a thing stepped through it into the room. A choking, charnel smell followed it, and wisps of smoke rose from its body. It looked like a giant ape of some sort, like the powerful orangutans that trappers sometimes brought out of the jungles of faraway Chult. One look at its face, however, was enough to reveal that this creature was no ordinary animal. Its massive jaws slavered hungrily, dripping hot beads of ichor that steamed and sizzled as they hit the stone floor. Its features were beyond bestial, unnatural and vile, with splotched, unhealthy flesh covered by thick hairs that bristled like tough wire. But it was its eyes that were truly unnatural, eyes that possessed an intelligence that was otherworldly, alien, deadly. Before the creature, the cleric seemed a pathetic nothing, only moments from becoming its first victim.

It opened its jaws to snap at the air, and then, improbably, it spoke.

“Hoo-man,” it said, its voice like iron nails dragged over stone. “Call you me why?”

If the priest was affected by the thing’s horrid appearance, he gave no sign. His voice was calm and in command as he replied, “I have summoned you to complete a task for me, demon. There are intruders approaching this stronghold, servants of the forces of good in this world. You will aid me in destroying them.”

The demon seemed to mull this over. “You call Bar-lgura, bring to this world. What give Bar-lgura, kill these for you?”

The cleric stepped slightly to the side, and indicated the prisoner. “I offer this man, a powerful member of my own order. A fitting sacrifice, for one such as yourself. His soul is yours, if you do this for me.”

The demon shuffled forward, its nails digging gouges in the stone floor as it walked. It hovered over the prisoner, who mercifully could not see it—he had passed out just moments after it had appeared, and a foul odor wafted from the chair in which he was seated—as it sniffed at him. The demon’s otherworldly senses weighed the offering, penetrating beyond what mortals could detect into the very essence of the unconscious man.

It turned back to the cleric, and nodded.

“Very well, then,” the cleric said. “They will be here soon—let us make preparations.”
 

Adoring Praise

Wanted to pop by and put my two cents in....I absolutely love your story and I look forward to more. I have to check for new posts at lunch during work, because I can't wait. Anyway, Benzan is my favorite, but what can I say? I always choose the bad boys. :D Keep it up, I'm addicted!
 

More spooky, creepy and scary than ever... Your story hour has completly captured me since the beginning, but now it's getting ever better.

More! More! Please...
 


Lazybones said:


“I… I don’t know,” he said. “Something… like a tear in the world, I could feel it…” He glanced down at the large pouch that he wore at his belt, the pouch where a carefully wrapped item had rested, all but forgotten for some time. He wrenched his gaze back up to his companions with an effort, and after a moment the confusion in his eyes began to clear. “It’s below us, here, beneath the house, close.”


This is a great line!

LB you are rough. This was an actual campaign, right? Sending demons (and Bar-igura!) at 4th level? I have to say, however, that you mean DM's are rubbing off on me. I had an EL13 encounter against 3 ECL 7 PC's last night...

I must have missed something, however. Who is the ringleader?
 

Hey, thanks everybody! I appreciate the words of praise.

MasterOfHeaven, yes, I've been trying to "break in", as they say, for some time. It's very difficult these days, even to get someone to take a look at your work. I've been writing fiction since grad school (ten years now), and have shopped a few novels to publishers and agents, but without luck so far. This story, and the great feedback I've been getting, has motivated me to keep at it.

Broccli_Head, your point is well taken, and it's true that one can take certain liberties with a story that might be dangerous in an actual campaign. The people I used to game with were generally pretty good, though, and I could usually throw tougher challenges than the "book" levels at them.

Of course, this challenge might just be too much for our heroes...

* * * * *

Part 28

The four companions crept down the steeply sloping stair that led even deeper under the ground than the cellar they had just left. All could feel a growing sense of unease that seemed to hang in the very air. Maybe it was Benzan’s earlier awareness that had led them in this direction in the first place. Maybe it was the fact that the secret door that warded the entrance to these stairs had been left slightly ajar, as if whatever lurked below was waiting for them…

“Man oh man, I’ve got a really bad feeling about this,” Benzan said.

“Wait a moment,” Cal said, urging them to pause.

“What is it?” Lok asked.

“Well, if whatever’s down there is prepared, then we should be as well,” the gnome said. With that, he handed his sunrod to Lok, took out his wand of mage armor, and touched it to himself and to Delem, in turn.

“What about us?” Benzan asked.

“The protection won’t help you beyond the armor that you already wear,” the gnome explained. Still, as he put the wand away, he could not shake off the nagging feeling that he was missing something…

Thus fortified, they continued their progression down the stairs. Benzan took the lead, carefully checking for traps. The stairs ended in a heavy stone door that also was open, with a small antechamber located beyond. The light from Cal’s sunrod revealed that the walls and ceiling were fashioned from heavy blocks of stone that seemed ancient.

“How far underground are we?” Delem asked.

“About thirty feet,” Lok said, as they turned to the only feature of note in the small room, a narrow archway through which another room was visible.

Lok moved toward the arch. “Wait,” Benzan said, already moving to investigate.

He was too late.

A flash and a roar of flame announced the triggering of the trap, and Lok vanished for a moment as fire exploded around him. Benzan was caught on the edges of the blast, but his reflexes took over and he dodged back. The flames that did reach him seemed to fade just as they touched his flesh, as if reluctant to burn him, and he landed back by the others virtually unharmed.

The same could not be said for the genasi, who staggered back from the arch ravaged by the explosion. His incredible constitution had allowed him to weather the trap through sheer fortitude, although wisps of steam continued to rise from his armor where the flames had engulfed him.

“Hold on just a second,” Cal said, already coming to his friend’s aid with his wand of healing. He had just reached the genasi when Delem suddenly cried out in surprise.

Benzan, Lok, and Cal spun around to see Delem struggling against a dark form that hung around his torso like a wisp of smoke. As the brilliant light of the sunrod fully illuminated it, they saw with horror that the attacker was in fact a man-shaped, nearly insubstantial being, with eyes like black pits that stared out at the four companions mockingly. They could see the effect that the thing’s touch had had upon Delem, as the sorcerer swayed, clearly weakened.

Their horror deepened as three more of the things, which had until minutes ago been the life essences of the three guards above, drifted through the far wall and moved menacingly toward them.


* * * * *

Part 29, later today...
 

Into the Woods

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