THE HUNTING PARTY
I, Silversun of Greyhawk,
having survived fire, steel, and the predictable failures of honorable men, do
here continue my record—not in comfort, but in the aftermath of battle, with
ash still clinging to my robes and the stink of burned flesh refusing to leave
my hands.
Know this: what follows was not
chance, nor ambush, nor the misfortune of wandering heroes. It was measured
violence, met with intent and answered in kind. I observed. I calculated. I
acted. Others prayed, charged, bled, and endured—but it was magic that decided
the field, and steel that spared us annihilation.
I set these words down while the
dead yet cool, while the spoils of the fallen lie unclaimed, and while the
echoes of marching boots still haunt my thoughts. This account is not written
to flatter virtue nor excuse brutality. It is written because truth rots
when left untended, and because someone must remember how the killing was
done.
Let those who read understand: this
was the moment the road ceased to be a road and became a battlefield—and the
moment I ceased merely to survive it.
What follows is not heroism.
It is record.
I knew the moment Dog stiffened that
violence was coming.
The ranger grabbed the woman and
scampered ahead of us all, melting into brush and shadow as he always does,
when the land itself betrayed the enemy—too many boots, too even a cadence.
Shapes crested the ruins at a distance, a hundred yards out, and at their head
lumbered something vast and stupid enough to believe size alone was destiny.
Patrol… or battalion.
We could not make it out but behind
it marched discipline: hobgoblins, archers fanned wide, polearms bristling like
a hedgehog’s spine. Not raiders. A large, organized hunting party.
While the others crouched behind
trees and broken stone, I did what I do best—I vanished. Invisibility folded
around me, and I drifted sideways through the world, counting heads, measuring
angles, tasting the battlefield before blood ever touched it.
Irving, of course, did not hide.
He stood in the open, sending Harvey
the hare to the side of the road, shield ready, virtue blazing like a beacon
screaming strike me. When he finally hailed the troop, we recognized it,
a Bugbear—who looked like he had
already scented the ranger—lifted his head, locked eyes with the Paladin, and
charged.
And then—
Fire.
I spoke the words, traced the sigil,
and hurled a Fireball into one of the archer nests—the closest group to the
left. In that instant, the entire patrol revealed itself. The bugbear led,
eyeing Irving with frothing curses, drool spattering the head of his mace.
Behind him marched two groups of six archers each on the left, another group on
his right rear flank. A mounted hobgoblin and four halberd-wielders followed
close behind. Farther back, an ogre dragged a cart—dropping it square in the
road the moment it saw us.
I had already decided. I merely
counted.
Flame bloomed like a newborn sun in
the late morning light, rolling heat and screaming death across the scrubland.
Armor glowed. Flesh blackened. I smiled. Monsters—slaver sympathizers—burned
alive as they tried, futilely, to reload their bows. The fireball tore through
them instantly, barely missing the horseman, who now thundered toward me at
full gallop.
The lines met in thunder.
Like lightning, Tiger Wong exploded
from the roadside, delivering a vicious kick to the bugbear’s skull. The
monster answered in kind, wounding the monk with extreme prejudice.
Irving slammed into the bugbear
vanguard and paid dearly—the brute’s massive weapon carving into him—but both
held, stubborn and unyielding. Irving stood fast, face-to-face with the bugbear
leader, anchoring the chaos where we all needed it most.
That is the difference between faith
and power.
I burn those who show no quarter.
Irving stood ready to deliver justice.
Slash sprinted to Dog and Lady Morwen,
and together they formed a plan to bring down the approaching ogre. Morwen
revealed her skill with the sword, and they positioned so all three would
strike.
Terry Or raised his holy symbol and
called to his old god, attempting to freeze three souls at once in righteous,
bone-locking paralysis—but only one enemy stiffened and held like a statue
mid-blasphemy. The other two remained cruelly mobile.
The price of that failed perfection
was immediate. Arrows hissed out of the chaos and struck true—piercing Tiger,
Irving, Lalaith, and Terry Or alike. Blood spilled hot and fast, soaking the
dirt. Terry clenched his teeth and held his faith together by sheer will. His
god had listened—but not kindly.
Lalaith, was creeping nonchalantly
through the roadside ditch, when struck by the arrow. Not dead, she leapt up
laughing, sprinting across the road, giggling and twisting as pain tried and
failed to claim her. She danced through madness, bells laughing, voice thrown
into the enemy ranks—whispers of doom, commands to flee, lies so sweet even
courage began to rot. The halberdiers fell for it, gave chase, and broke away
from the main fight.
The Ogre bellowed and charged. Not
only did it smell the Ranger & Morwen he could see them.
Dog’s arrows thudded into its flesh.
Slash wove the perfect composition to tilt fate. Morwen raised her sword &
welcomed the slaver scum.
I was already running. I didn’t even
wait to see if the fireball was effective. I just ran—like a madman on fire,
worse, like one about to be trampled. I barely covered 30’ as he covered 70’ in
seconds. I had to veer hard into the street battle, narrowly avoiding the
horse.
I had a window.
I cast Charm Person on the
rider.
I thought I had him.
Instead, he spat and slashed. The
hobgoblin leader’s long sword tore into me, opening a deep, savage wound. I
lived.
Tiger struck the bugbear again.
Irving missed—a rarity. The enraged brute crushed the monk with a savage blow.
Tiger collapsed, blood streaming from his skull as the beast roared in frenzy.
Terry, losing concentration on his
captive, struck the bugbear leader, granting Irving another chance. Irving
missed again—his defense flawless, his offense missing. Still, the monster’s
wounds claimed it, and I narrowly avoided the remaining halberd.
Fog rolled as Slash cried out,
raising a thick Wall of Fog that severed sightlines and sowed panic. Archers
halted, confused. Dog and Morwen wounded the ogre. It lashed out wildly and
missed twice. Then Slash stabbed the creature and Morwen struck again, dropping
the beast and giving Dog a clear shot at the horseman attacking me.
We paid dearly for every heartbeat.
Dog missed.
Irving missed.
To my surprise the horseman missed, but just by inches.
Then came the whistle of arrows
through fog—and Lady Morwen screamed as one struck true. She fell. Our second
ally down.
Dog revived her instantly. When she
opened her eyes and saw her savior, the pact was sealed. She kissed him like we
were in the bloody Blueberry Theater in Greyhawk. The bastard winked, stood,
and fired again at the Hobgoblin leader.
The shot hit true.
I seized the moment.
“He’s hurt,” I thought. “Enough.”
“By Bigby himself!” I
screamed, casting Magic Missile.
The purplish-blue orbs screamed from
my fingers and punched through the hobgoblin leader’s chest, hurling him from
the saddle onto the ground in a spray of blood and armor.
The remaining archers broke and
fled.
The remaining halberdiers were shown no quarter.
Steel rang. Pain and death were
issued freely. Blood soaked the stones. Irving missed so many times we checked
his weapon for curses—twice.
When the last enemy fell, the earth
itself seemed to breathe.
Terry tended Tiger, ensuring he
lived to fight another day. Morwen could not stop staring at Dog. We laughed,
quietly wondering when we’d lose the ranger to something more fun—and far less
lethal.
By battle’s end, twelve enemy bodies
littered the ruins. Some burned. Some broken. All ended by purpose, steel, and
magic. Archers still lurked somewhere beyond, unanswered—but the field was
ours.
So was the cart.
And the horse, which Lalaith claimed.
If I were less intelligent, I might
think the cart was a gift from Cuthbert himself—that sanctimonious old coot. It
even held a cage, slaver tools, and clothing. Naturally, we used them.
There were also four hundred ten
gold, six hundred forty silver, and twenty-two suits of chainmail stripped from
cooling corpses. Potions—one red with promise, another amber and heavy with
stolen strength. Terry healed the faithful and checked for curses again, just
to be sure.
We loaded the loot, lashed the
horse, and placed a body in the cage so from afar it looked like business as
usual. Appearances matter—especially when you intend to steal everything not
nailed down.
Slash, ever curious, discovered
something beneath the water under the ruins—metal and wood, old and
intentional. We left it for later.
Even chaos knows when to wait.
Now we camp. Recover spells. Decide
the fate of the dead. Argue over who drinks the Hill Giant’s strength and who
risks the unidentified brews. We inventory. We interrogate. We investigate.
And then—
We continue.
Because this is no longer merely a
hunt for slavers.
This is the decimation of the
Slavers’ Stronghold and all who profit from it—
war dressed up as coincidence.
So you are Fighter Class huh? Excellent use of Magic Missile.
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