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Monday, March 30, 2026

Chapter 3 / Episode 93 – Rot Beneath the Walls

Chapter 3 / Episode 93 – Rot Beneath the Walls

Date: Planting 14, 576 CY — Deep Night
Region: Drachensgrab Hills, south of Highport — Slave Lords’ Stockade
Weather (Outside): Cold drizzle falling without pause. The slave road churned to black mud under unseen passage.
Weather (Within): Damp, stale air thick with decay—stone that has known death for too long.


Players

Dog the Ranger
Irving the Reluctant
TerryOr the Cleric of St. Cuthbert
Silversun Ubermage the Magic-User
Slash the Bard
Tiger Wong, Monk of the Eastern Lands
Kern Blackshield of Safeton
Lady Morwen Ellisar (NPC)


Planting 14 — Behind the Brick

The torture chamber still smoldered when they returned to their search.

Barrels were cracked open—wine, oil, provisions for a place that did not intend to starve. The rack still creaked faintly where it had been left, as if memory alone could keep it moving.

But it was the wall that drew attention.

Fresh mortar.

Wrong color.

Too clean for a place this old.

Kern pressed against it first, testing the give.
“Something’s behind this.”

Dog didn’t argue. He stepped back, eyes scanning the room, bow still in hand as if expecting whatever lay beyond to come through on its own.

“Make it quick,” he said.

The stone broke under repeated blows, crumbling inward with a dull, hollow crack.

And the smell came out first.

Rot. Dry. Ancient.

Too late for whoever had been sealed inside.


The Mummy

The chamber beyond was small—barely enough space for a man to stand upright.

Wrapped in linen, unmoving.

Until it wasn’t.

The thing slipped through the broken opening with unnatural speed, its movements wrong in a way that no living body ever was.

Dog struck first, arrow driving into its chest.

Kern followed, blade carving into ancient wrappings that fell away in strips—but the thing did not slow.

Terry, still half inside the chamber, stooped to gather what had been left behind—scrolls scattered across the stone floor as though dropped in haste.

“Don’t let it past!” Kern barked.

It nearly did.

The mummy’s hand lashed out, striking with a force that felt heavier than it should have been. Kern staggered under the blow, the impact carrying more than simple strength—something deeper, something that clung.

Dog moved to flank. Slash came in low. Tiger Wong struck with controlled precision.

Still, it endured.

Fire was the answer.

Oil was thrown. Flame followed.

The wrappings caught, smoldering first, then burning.

Even then it fought.

It took everything—steel, flame, and stubborn refusal—to bring it down.

When it finally fell, it did not collapse like a man.

It crumbled.


The Cost of the Dead

Victory did not bring relief.

Kern stood still, breathing hard, then slowly looked down at his hands.

“Terry…”

The cleric already knew.

The touch of the mummy had carried more than decay.

Mummy Rot.

Not a wound.

Not poison.

A wasting curse.

Terry checked himself next.

The same.

The disease would not be healed with magic—not yet. Not until it had time to take hold. Not until it could be named and driven out properly.

“Next rest,” Terry said quietly. “Cure disease. That’s the only way.”

Kern gave a slow nod.

No fear. Just acceptance.

That made it worse.


Scrolls of Another Path

The chamber had not been empty.

Four scrolls lay scattered across the stone floor, preserved despite the rot that surrounded them.

Slash and Terry both tried to read them.

Nothing.

The script was arcane—tight, deliberate.

Silversun stepped forward, eyes narrowing as he traced the lines.

Recognition came slowly.

“Magic-user,” he said.

That alone was strange.

Within the Slavelords’ stockade, among torture rooms and sealed chambers, lay scrolls meant not for priests—but for arcane study.

Among them:

  • Find Familiar

  • Hold Portal

  • Knock

  • And others yet to be fully understood

“Not random,” Silversun said. “Someone stored these.”

“Or hid them,” Dog replied.

Both answers were bad.


The Hall of Old Tracks

They moved on.

The corridor narrowed again, air growing thick and still. Dust lay undisturbed along the floor—except where it didn’t.

Dog knelt.

“These aren’t fresh,” he said. “Weeks. Maybe months.”

That made them more dangerous, not less.

Old tracks meant something had moved here once.

And might again.


The Storeroom of Silence

Beyond the hall lay another chamber—larger, cluttered with barrels, furniture wrapped in burlap, and long-forgotten supplies.

Nothing moved.

Nothing breathed.

And yet the sense remained that this place had not been abandoned—only paused.

An armoire yielded linens and clothing. Within it, tucked carefully among the folds, they found a small item:

A mother-of-pearl stick pin, simple but finely crafted. Worth coin—but more than that, it felt out of place.

Personal.

Not functional.

Someone had lived here once.

Or been kept here.


The Next Door

They returned to a familiar junction—one door yet unopened.

Terry checked for traps.

Nothing.

The door opened.

The smell changed immediately.

Wet stone. Rot. Something alive.


The Creatures in the Dark

They came fast.

Small. Twisted. Long arms dragging along the ground as they lunged forward with claw and bite.

Terry took the first hit.

The bite sank deep.

“Disease,” he hissed through clenched teeth.

Kern moved immediately, stepping in to intercept. Slash followed, blade flashing in the narrow space. Dog shifted position, bow useless at this distance, drawing steel instead.

The fight was brief—but vicious.

The creatures died hard.

And not cleanly.


The Orb

They had little time to regroup.

A glow appeared down the hall.

Faint at first.

Then growing.

Dog saw it clearly—a hovering sphere of pale light drifting toward them without sound.

“Don’t touch it,” he said.

Too late.

The orb struck him with a sudden burst of energy, the impact sharp and unnatural.

Kern swung at it, blade cutting through the glow—and hitting something solid.

It recoiled.

Then changed.

The light collapsed inward, reforming into something humanoid.

Featureless.

Approaching.


The Vanishing

Terry raised his holy symbol, invoking St. Cuthbert with what strength he had left.

No effect.

The thing reached Dog.

Grabbed him by the throat.

And vanished.

Gone.

Just like that.

No sound.

No trace.

Dog staggered back a moment later—alive, but shaken.

“Not done,” he muttered.


Outcome Notes

  • Mummy destroyed (fire and melee)

  • Terry and Kern afflicted with Mummy Rot

  • 4 Magic-User scrolls recovered

  • Secret chamber breached behind bricked wall

  • Mother-of-pearl stick pin recovered (~50 gp)

  • Disease-bearing creatures encountered and defeated

  • Unknown entity (orb → humanoid form) encountered

  • Dog temporarily seized and released by entity


XP Awarded

  • 1,000 XP each


Current Status

  • Mummy Rot active (Terry, Kern)

  • Cure Disease required after next rest

  • Spells critically low

  • Unknown entity still present in dungeon

  • Evidence of hidden arcane presence within stronghold

  • Markessa still unaccounted for


Chapter 3 / Episode 92 – Fire in the Torture Hall



Chapter 3 / Episode 92 – Fire in the Torture Hall

Date: Planting 14, 576 CY — Late Night
Region: Drachensgrab Hills, south of Highport — Slave Lords’ Stockade
Weather (Outside): Cold drizzle under low, unmoving clouds. The slave road churned to mud beneath unseen traffic.
Weather (Within): Heat, smoke, and the stench of cruelty made permanent.


Players

Dog the Ranger
Irving the Reluctant (restored? — or still stone depending on your ruling, but I’ll keep him active here since he acted)
TerryOr the Cleric of St. Cuthbert
Silversun Ubermage the Magic-User
Slash the Bard
Tiger Wong, Monk of the Eastern Lands
Kern Blackshield of Safeton - abscent
Lady Morwen Ellisar (NPC)


Planting 14 — The Fortress Breathes

Eight hours.

That is what they took.

Not comfort. Not safety. Just enough time to close wounds, steady hands, and let the worst of the poison and exhaustion bleed off. Dog kept watch through it all, unmoving, listening to the rhythm of the stronghold above them—the patrols, the distant boots, the faint clatter of chains.

When he finally woke them, it was not with urgency.

It was with certainty.

“They’re still moving,” he said quietly. “We move now.”


The Hidden Door

The corridor beyond the storeroom narrowed, the air growing thick and stale. Dog paused, crouched low, fingers brushing along the stone. Tracks. Recent. Heavy.

He found the seam.

A door hidden well enough that only habit and instinct would catch it.

Inside—

Ogres.

A crude chamber, low fire burning, a chest used as a gaming table. Cards scattered across it mid-hand. They had been here recently. Drinking. Gambling. Waiting.

“Slavers don’t relax,” Slash muttered under his breath. “They wait.”

They did not engage.

Not yet.

The sound came first.

Screaming.


The Door to the West

It was not a shout. Not a battle cry.

It was pain.

Raw. Repeating. Breaking.

The party stacked along the wall, weapons drawn, spells prepared. Terry stood at the door, hand resting against the wood. Silversun positioned himself carefully, already calculating the space for a fireball if the room opened wide enough.

Irving—through Harvey—moved ahead first.

Small. Quiet. Listening.

“Just one voice,” came the whisper back. “No guards speaking.”

That made it worse.


The Torture Chamber

The door opened.

The smell hit first.

Iron. Rot. Burnt flesh.

A goblin clung to a rope, swinging a crude chandelier back and forth like a child’s toy. Below him, sixteen more goblins surrounded a man stretched across a rack, his limbs pulled tight, his body shaking with each turn of the mechanism.

Chains. Hooks. Implements laid out with care.

This was not chaos.

This was work.

Dog and Irving moved first, dropping into the room as the chandelier crashed downward. Both avoided the falling debris by instinct alone, landing inside the chaos as the goblins turned in surprise.

“Now,” Silversun said—and the world turned white.


Fireball

The spell filled the chamber.

Thirty feet of burning air expanding outward in a perfect sphere, consuming everything it touched. Goblins did not scream long. The rack splintered. The ropes burned through.

When the fire collapsed back into itself, the room was ash and ruin.

A few survived.

Not many.

And from the smoke came another sound.

Growling.


The Wargs

They came fast—ten of them, bursting from adjoining passages, drawn by flame and death.

Dog braced, spear leveled.

Terry stepped forward beside him, shield raised, invoking what strength he had left.

Tiger Wong moved like wind—his body lifting, turning, and striking in a single motion as his foot drove into the skull of the nearest beast.

Slash intercepted another mid-charge, blade catching its leap and dragging it sideways.

Silversun, already wounded, held position—choosing targets carefully, letting the fighters hold the line.

And intended not to repeat it.


The Line Holds

The battle was tight.

Close.

Brutal.

Wargs do not break easily—but they break eventually.

Steel, spell, and stubborn refusal to fall carried the fight.

One by one the beasts went down.

The last died under Terry’s strike, his mace crashing through bone as the creature collapsed at his feet.

For a moment, no one moved.


After the Fire

The man on the rack still lived.

Barely.

They cut him free.

Water was given. No questions yet. Not until breath returned.

The chamber told its own story—of slaves broken, of information taken, of pain turned into currency.

They searched what remained.

Keys.

Chains.

Marks burned into wood and flesh alike.

This was one of many such rooms.

Not the only one.


Fracture Within

What followed was quieter—and more dangerous.

The tension that had been building finally broke.

Words turned sharp.

Accusations surfaced—intent, trust, control.

Harvey struck.

Slash answered with his magic sword. Clashing against the mace.

Tiger intervened.

And in the end, the party did something harder than fighting monsters.

They restrained their own.

Harvey was bound. Stripped of advantage. Reduced, for now, to something less dangerous.

Not banished.

Not forgiven.

Contained.

Terry stood between them all.

“Not here,” he said. “Not like this.”

No one argued.

St Cuthbert appeared before Irving, "You are no longer a Paladin for this Chaotic act!"


Outcome Notes

  • Torture chamber cleared

  • Internal conflict erupted within the party (Harvey restrained)


XP Awarded

  • 5,000 XP each (exceptional roleplay, combat, and decision-making)


Sunday, March 15, 2026

Stronghold Stress

Gameday: Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Stronghold Stress

Episode 90/91 – Inner and Outer Violence

Date: Planting 13, 576 CY — Night
Region: Drachensgrab Hills, south of Highport — Slave Lords’ Stockade
Weather (Outside): Cold drizzle beneath a blanket of low clouds. Mud and mist clung to the hills and the slave road alike.
Weather (Within): Damp stone, stale air, and the lingering smell of blood and confinement.


Players

Dog the Ranger
Irving the Reluctant (petrified)
TerryOr the Cleric of St. Cuthbert
Silversun Ubermage the Magic-User
Slash the Bard
Tiger Wong, Monk of the Eastern Lands
Kern Blackshield of Safeton
Harving 
Lady Morwen Ellisar (NPC)

 I, Silversun of Greyhawk, write this entry with the dark feelings. I look for guidance in the blood drying upon my robes. My mind screams get out! What transpired in the depths beneath the Slavelords’ Stronghold was not merely battle—it was a descent into madness, treachery, and violence. At what we had done… and by what we had nearly done to each other.

It's only been a day or two in the stronghold but it's already felt like weeks. After the dreaded Gorgon incident we have continued and pressed deeper beneath the fortress. The rotting stench of the decaying Gorgon head finally overcame the reek of the stronghold itself, so we disposed the head in one of the rooms. The stone corridors below the stockade were far older than the walls above—ancient passages forgotten by the sun and abandoned to time.

Dust lay thick upon the floor. The air smelled of rot and damp stone. Most troubling of all were the webs, they covered the hallway from ceiling to floor. Great curtains of grey silk hung down the walls, stretching across the hall like the shrouds of forgotten tombs. Some were as thick as ropes, others layered so densely they formed pale barriers that blocked the passage ahead.

Kern Blackshield led the column, his sword ready, the light from the lantern casting nervous shadows across the webs. Dog followed close behind him, arrow already knocked to string. Terry Or came after them, muttering quiet prayers to St. Cuthbert while his eyes searched the stone for hidden traps. I walked near the center of the marching order with the lantern held high, Tiger Wong and Slash guarding the rear like silent sentinels.

The webs were too thick to simply push aside. Terry solved that problem in typical clerical fashion. He hurled his lantern forward. The noise it made had us all looking at the Cleric like he had  single digit intelligence, especially with that smirk on his face. The oil-soaked flame burst upon the silk with a hungry roar, fire racing along the webs as they shriveled and burned. The flames crawled along the walls and ceiling in twisting orange tongues, consuming the suffocating silk.

For a moment, it seemed the path would clear easily. Then the webs began to move. Three enormous black spiders dropped from the ceiling without warning, their bodies nearly the size of shields, their long legs scraping against stone with a dry chittering sound that made my skin crawl.

Kern barely had time to raise his weapon before the first spider lunged. It struck him like a falling anvil. The creature slammed into his shield, its hooked legs clamping around his arm while its fangs snapped inches from his throat, venom dripping from them like thick black sap.



Dog reacted instantly. His arrow buried itself deep into the monster’s abdomen, bursting its slick carapace and spraying black ichor across the walls and Kern’s armor. That was one, two more shapes descended through the burning webs.

The two additional spiders scuttled down the walls, their legs clattering against stone as they rushed us with terrifying speed. I searched my mind instinctively for a larger spell—but the narrow corridor and the raging flames made such magic far too dangerous. Instead I drew a dagger and hurled it.

The blade struck one spider squarely between its eyes, sinking deep into the chitin with a wet crack. I chuckled silently at my good fortune. Tiger Wong moved with calm precision. His quarterstaff snapped across another spider’s carapace with a sharp report that echoed down the hall like a lightning bolt spell in a wet room..

The fight devolved into brutal chaos. Terry swung his mace with determination, but the cramped corridor betrayed him. His weapon glanced off stone and flew from his grip, clattering loudly down the passage behind us.

I had seen enough. Arcane power surged through my hands. No Fireball but the ever faithful Magic Missile spell. Three missiles burst from my fingertips, streaking forward like comets of blue-white force. They struck the nearest spider with such violence that its body split apart, the creature collapsing in a twitching heap as glowing energy burned through its insides. The remaining spider fought savagely.

Venomous fangs struck again and again. Kern had planted himself firmly between the monsters and me, his shield vital in our defense. Tiger Wong’s fists and feet flailing at the Spider’s hook like appendages. Everyone was on the defense knowing one spider bite would kill any of us, well most of us. Finally the last spider reared back, its eight eyes gleaming in the torchlight. Dog’s arrow pierced them all at once. The creature collapsed heavily to the floor.

Victory came—but not without cost. During the fight one of the spiders had struck Tiger Wong with its nasty fangs. At first he showed little reaction, standing calmly as ever, but once the battle ended he swayed upon his feet before collapsing heavily against the stone. Kern dragged him away from the webs while Terry knelt beside him. For several long and dreadful moments the monk did not breathe. More than one of us believed the venom had claimed him. At last Tiger’s chest rose again. A narrow escape. Monk discipline—and perhaps stubborn fate—had preserved him.

Further along the corridor we found another grim reminder of this dungeon’s hunger. A corpse hung wrapped in fairly fresh webs like a cocoon. Kern carefully cut it down. The remains were little more than leather armor stretched across dry bones. Whoever he had been, the Spiders had erased his name. We left him there.

Beyond the webs we discovered a wide storage chamber stacked with crates and broken pottery. The contents proved to be trade goods intended for slaver caravans. Among them were crates of delicate porcelain. It was fine dinnerware worth nearly four hundred and fifty gold pieces by my estimation. It was tempting wealth—but far too fragile to carry while exploring a hostile fortress. Reluctantly we left it behind.

A nearby door revealed something stranger still. Inside the chamber appeared a pale, translucent figure—an elf chained to the wall. His, or was it a her?, gaunt face twisted in agony as he struggled against the shackles. Suddenly he tore free and rushed toward us screaming, running out the door—then vanished.

Moments later he appeared again in the exact same position. Chained and struggling. Then magically breaking free to charge at us once again, passing us then disappearing again. This happened a half dozen times.

It was no spirit attacking us. It was a memory—an echo replaying endlessly through time.

Dog even opened the door for him, as if trying to grant the ghost escape. Terry Or tried to turn the undead creature but to no avail. The apparition ignored us completely. Finally, in one strange repetition, the phantom ran down the hall in the opposite direction and stopped at the northern corner before fading again.

That was where we found the secret door. Did it purposely lead us there to help us? Or to lead us to a quick demise?  There was a five foot wide secret passage behind the secret door. 

“Let’s rest in there.” I blurted out. “I need to study”.

“If we’re found it’s a death trap.” Dog stated. “Let’s go back to the storeroom”

After getting in the storeroom we discovered another room behind one of the walls. Inside were several cots, a rough wooden table, and the remains of a crude meal—horse meat and thin beer. A brass chest rested against the wall, trapped with a thin wire that Tiger Wong disarmed with careful hands. Inside, hidden under some old clothes, were 450 gold pieces. There was also a small alcove with machinery revealing the room’s true purpose: a winch connected to that concealed pit trap in the corner right outside in the hallway. It was in good condition so we reset the trap.

Our strength was fading. Terry had spent nearly all his healing magic. I had also already stated my spells were dwindling. Everyone bore wounds and exhaustion. We decided to take the chance & rest but not before precautions.  Dog said he would stand the watch, so I cast Invisibility on him.

Dog stepped into the hall unseen and we barred the door, I immediately reached for my spellbook.

About eight hours later I was the last to wake, trying to study, memorize and get enough sleep has proved taxing on my soul and probably my judgment, we will see. Dog was there and told us a patrol had walked the hallway while we slept. They didn’t open any doors, never noticed him

We agreed to go immediately to the secret passage. When we emerged from the room and stepped into the hallway, we encountered something that froze the breath in our lungs.

At the end of the hall stood Irving, alive & whole…but shorter. Ready for battle.

Wait.

That’s Irving alright but his ears are real long. The figure shifted and it was...

Harvey! It was Harvey the rabbit standing upright, uh, with a mace and armor.

Wait.

Chaos had truly struck the lawful Paladin. Before us stood a strange fusion of rabbit and man.

“I’m back!” the creature declared proudly. “Chaos beware!” it shouted.

It was Irving Reluctant no more! No, it was Harvey the Rabbit. No it was Harving.

Ensuring we weren’t cursed or affected by some fungus…we accepted the fact that Harving was one of us now…again I mean. Whatever.



The narrow passage soon opened into a small chamber containing a table and strange playing cards. Old crates and empty barrels were in the corners Then Harving announced he heard screaming as he ran for the door.

“Hold on rabbitman” I yelled. “No more opening doors to quickly, this is why you look the way you do.” I stated. I also grabbed the cards off the table.

When we were ready Slash opened the main door and we saw a descending staircase. We rushed down towards the moans and screams and found a room of death. It was a wide room with thirty-foot ceilings. The torture chamber was complete with braziers, holding cells, an iron maiden and a man stretched upon a rack. No less than sixteen goblins laughed as they turned the crank, pulling the prisoner’s limbs from their sockets.

I found the screams unbearable.

Suddenly a chandelier crashed from above, goblins clinging to it as it nearly crushed Dog and Harving.

That was enough.

“By the Nine Hells,” I roared, “die, you vermin!” I stepped forward and unleashed Fireball.

Flame devoured the chamber. Goblin bodies burst apart like overripe fruit as their burning flesh splattered the walls. The rack exploded and the screaming ended in seconds.



The smell of burnt hair and wood was intense but I still smiled at the devastation. That’s when the Worgs burst from the corner stalls. Three monstrous wolf-beasts came charging at us. Everyone drew their weapons as Slash and I tried to jump out of the Worg's path.

The Bard easily dodged the beasts but Wizard robes aren’t meant for graceful jumps and one Worg slammed into me. Its jaws tore into my side, bright red blood sprayed the floor. I screamed and stumbled toward the stairs just as Bugbears appeared above with crossbows.

Once again Slash and I were under fire. One bolt missed Slash, whizzing by his head as the other struck me directly in the backside. I collapsed, barely alive with a fucking crossbow bolt lodged in my arse.

Chaos exploded around me. Dog, Tiger Wong, and Harving cut down the Worgs. Terry Or attempted a spell on the Bugbears but was struck by another attack mid-casting. I rose and was lucky enough to blast one bugbear with Magic Missile.

Then Slash noticed the bugbears had frozen. Terry’s Hold Spell had somehow succeeded. Slash pointed to his dagger and then to mine. We climbed the stairs and slit their throats. The amount of dead bodies was incredible. The smell of burnt flesh and fresh blood was intense. The scene was truly chaotic…and chaos is never finished with fools.

I got the worst of it and had to pull the crossbow bolt out of my own back side myself. Terry Or had come over and just finished healing my wounds when death came for me again. Harving, insane with rage, raised his mace.

“Chaos must be beaten! You are a murderer!” He announced as he swung for my skull. I was dead and he & I both knew it, but…



Slash intercepted the blow at the last instant.

“That will not happen today, young Paladin,” the Bard declared calmly. Slash's sword of chaos parrying the death blow from the Mace of Cuthbert!

I immediately cast Invisibility on myself. Someone wants me dead and I can not make it easy for them. Tiger Wong snapped with rage. Not understanding how another lawful good humanoid could act like this he attempted to knock Harving unconscious.

Slash was already there and easily maneuvered his sword and tried to block him—but the monk’s kick smashed through the defense and struck Harving square in the head. The rabbit paladin died instantly and silence filled the chamber. 

That saved me from having to attempt my own assassination of Irving. I was going to try while I was invisible and the scene still chaotic.

Terry rushed to resurrect him but not before I grabbed him by the shoulder.

“Let me slash his throat Cleric, I will rid you and myself of this scourge of Cuthbert”. I whispered.

“Watch your tongue mage!” Terry Or hissed. “He is still my ward.”

A furious debate followed with everyone involved. I pleaded to kill the traitor before he killed me or another one of us! Others said banishment was the answer. I scoffed then threatened to abandon them while I slipped out of the stronghold invisible.

Then St. Cuthbert himself judged the matter as Terry Or went under a trance and holy light engulfed Harving. Radiant light over took our sight and the smell cleanliness revived us, but it was temporary. When it faded Harvey's transformation was gone and the creature that stood before us was no longer a paladin.

No longer the reluctant knight.

Before us stood Irving the Fighter and beside him a rabbit.

Judged, changed and forever altered by the wrath of the gods.

Thus ended that cursed chapter beneath the Slavelords’ Stronghold.

And I, Silversun of Greyhawk, write this with the uneasy certainty that I alone have a new true danger that may no longer be the slavers.

It may be the company I keep.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Chapter 3 / Episode 91 – The Webbed Halls

Chapter 3 / Episode 91 – The Webbed Halls

Date: Planting 13, 576 CY — Night
Region: Drachensgrab Hills, south of Highport — Slave Lords’ Stockade
Weather (Outside): Cold drizzle beneath a blanket of low clouds. Mud and mist clung to the hills and the slave road alike.
Weather (Within): Damp stone, stale air, and the lingering smell of blood and confinement.


Players

Dog the Ranger
Irving the Reluctant (petrified)
TerryOr the Cleric of St. Cuthbert
Silversun Ubermage the Magic-User
Slash the Bard
Tiger Wong, Monk of the Eastern Lands
Kern Blackshield of Safeton
Harvy the Hare - merged with Irving the Reluctant
Lady Morwen Ellisar (NPC)


Planting 13 — Fire in the Webs

With the Medusa slain and the lower levels of the stockade now open before them, the party pressed deeper into the subterranean corridors beneath the Slavelords’ fortress. The stone passageways here were older than the stockade above, their walls coated in thick layers of dust and age, and now draped heavily in grey webs that stretched from ceiling to floor like rotting curtains.

Kern Blackshield took the front of the marching order, torch raised high to illuminate the choking darkness ahead. Dog followed closely behind him, bow held ready, while TerryOr advanced a short distance back, muttering quiet prayers and watching the stone floor for signs of traps. Silversun walked near the center of the column, Tiger Wong and Slash bringing up the rear, each watching for threats that might come from the shadows behind.

The webs were too thick to simply push aside. Terry hurled his lantern forward into one of the larger clusters, and the oil-soaked flame caught quickly, burning the silk away in curling tongues of fire that crept along the walls and ceiling.

For a moment it seemed the corridor would clear easily.

Then the webs began to move.

A massive black spider dropped from the ceiling without warning, its body nearly the size of a man’s shield. Kern barely had time to raise his weapon before the creature lunged.


The Spider Fight

The first blow came quickly. Kern staggered backward as the spider struck him with terrible force, its legs clamping against his shield as its fangs searched for flesh.

Dog reacted instantly. His arrow struck the creature deep in its abdomen, sending a spatter of black ichor across the wall.

From further down the corridor, more shapes descended through the burning webs.

Two additional spiders, their long legs clattering against the stone as they rushed the party.

Silversun reached instinctively for a spell, then thought better of it in the cramped corridor where fire and allies stood so close together. Instead he drew a dagger and hurled it with surprising precision.

Tiger Wong stepped forward with fluid calm, his quarterstaff snapping against one spider’s carapace with a sharp crack that echoed through the narrow hall.

The fight quickly devolved into chaos. Terry swung his mace with determination but misjudged the angle badly, the weapon flying from his grip and clattering down the passage behind them.

Silversun finally unleashed a volley of Magic Missiles, the glowing darts streaking forward to smash into one of the spiders with devastating force. The creature collapsed instantly, its body twitching against the stone.

The remaining spiders fought savagely, their venomous fangs striking again and again. Kern placed himself between the monsters and the magic-user, absorbing the worst of their attacks while Dog continued firing arrows past his shoulder.

At last the final creature reared back.

Dog’s arrow struck cleanly through its eye.

The spider collapsed heavily to the floor.


Venom’s Price

Victory did not come without cost.

During the battle, Tiger Wong had taken a venomous strike from one of the spiders. At first he showed little reaction, but as the fight ended the monk swayed on his feet before collapsing heavily onto the stone.

Kern dragged him away from the webs while Terry knelt beside him, checking for breath and pulse.

For several tense moments the monk did not respond, and more than one member of the party believed he had succumbed to the venom.

Only after several long minutes did Tiger begin to stir again, his breathing shallow but steady.

It was a narrow escape.


The Dead Man in the Web

Further along the corridor, the party discovered another grim reminder of what waited in these halls.

Wrapped tightly in layers of ancient webbing hung a desiccated corpse, its leather armor long since cracked with age. Kern cut the body free carefully and examined it.

The remains appeared to be male, though the years had stripped away nearly every identifying feature. No coins or valuables remained.

Another unfortunate traveler who had wandered too far into the Slavelords’ domain.

They left him where he fell.


The Storeroom

Beyond the web-choked corridor lay a wide chamber filled with stacked crates and broken pottery. The room appeared to be a storage area for trade goods destined for the slaver caravans that moved along the road above.

Among the crates the party discovered delicate chinaware—fine porcelain pieces that Silversun quickly estimated to be worth nearly 450 gold pieces.

The treasure was tempting.

But the fragile cargo would be nearly impossible to transport while still exploring the fortress.

Reluctantly, they left it behind.

Terry suggested the room might serve as a defensible place to rest, though the party remained uneasy about remaining in enemy territory for long.

Before committing to a halt, they decided to investigate one more chamber.


The Ghostly Elf

It was there they encountered something none of them expected.

At the far end of the room appeared a pale, translucent figure—an elf, gaunt and hollow-eyed, shackled to the wall with heavy chains.

The figure struggled desperately against the restraints before tearing free and rushing toward the party with a scream of rage.

Then it vanished.

Moments later it reappeared in exactly the same position.

Chained.

Struggling.

Charging.

Disappearing.

The cycle repeated again and again, like a broken memory replaying endlessly.

Terry attempted to turn the spirit, but the attempt had no effect. Whatever haunted this place was not a simple undead creature.

Dog tried opening the nearby door, hoping the elf might be attempting to escape the room.

The spirit ignored the gesture completely.

It was not reacting to them at all.

It was reliving something that had already happened.

Again.

And again.

And again.


The Hidden Chamber

Continuing their search, the party discovered a concealed room hidden behind one wall of the storeroom.

Inside they found a small sleeping area containing several cots, a wooden table, and the remains of a crude meal—horse meat and watered-down beer.

A brass chest sat against the wall, rigged with a thin wire trap that Tiger Wong carefully disarmed.

Inside the chest they discovered 450 gold pieces.

A nearby mechanism revealed the purpose of the room. A winch connected to a concealed pit trap, likely intended to capture intruders or rebellious prisoners.

Even here the sense of unease remained.

At one point a ghostly chill swept through the chamber as something unseen passed through one of the party members like cold mist.

No one spoke about it for several minutes afterward.


Exhaustion

By this point the party was feeling the full strain of the assault on the stockade.

Terry had already expended nearly all of his healing magic. Spells were dwindling across the party. Even the strongest among them were beginning to show the wear of constant battle.

Kern suggested that the storeroom might serve as a temporary defensive position where they could rest.

Others argued that every hour spent sleeping increased the chance that the fortress above would discover the slaughter left in their wake.

In the end they chose to press on.

Too many prisoners still waited in chains.

Too many Slavelords still drew breath.


Outcome Notes

Monsters Defeated

  • 3 Giant Spiders

Discoveries

  • Mummified adventurer wrapped in webbing

  • Storeroom containing trade goods

  • Ghostly elf trapped in repeating haunting phenomenon

  • Hidden sleeping chamber with trapped chest

  • Winch mechanism controlling a pit trap

Treasure Recovered

  • 450 gold pieces