by Gielnor » 08 Feb 2015 01:36
FROM THE JOURNAL OF BARUN BURADUM
DAY 7
I pen this entry not from the comfort of my room at the Rusty Dragon, but from the cold, rocky floor of a dungeon basement beneath a hodunk mess of a goblin fortress. After all the crazy shit that’s happened today, I’m just happy to be relaxing for a bit instead of dead or… oh shit, I gotta stop snickering before Kane notices me.
Let’s start with last night. When Kane and I got back from pulverizing the altar in the catacombs, we found Shalelu waiting for us at the inn. Long story short, she didn’t want to wait for Sheriff Hemlock’s return any longer. The town was at too much risk, and the best defense is a good offense: she proposed a direct preemptive strike on Thistletop, the goblin camp where Nualia has been hiding. The latest news Kane extracted from Tsuto only sweetened the deal, and we determined to set off for the base the next morning.
We needed to trek through the dense woods outside of Sandpoint to reach the camp, and so Talathel insisted on a quick stop by his old haunt to retrieve something he had been meditating on. Yeah, “meditating”. We came to rest in a grove just outside of town. Talathel stepped before a thick, stumpy tree and began gently speaking to it. I assumed he was probably high again and we were wasting time… until the tree nodded in response. With a shake and a mighty groan, the tree’s limbs began to move as it lifted its roots free from the soil, revealing a pair of foot-like roots. Now I could see the tree’s uncannily human resemblance was not a coincidence. Pleased with his work, Talathel gave a big hug to his treant, then turned to the rest of us.
“Everyone, meet my bro, Marin.”
I didn’t question any of this for the protection of my own sanity, and at any rate he looks like a strong brute, so with our new tree friend in tow we ventured deep into the woods, Shalelu and Talathel scouting ahead of us as we pushed through the dense undergrowth. By noon we arrived at a thick bramble of briars, stretching for hundreds of feet between the trees. The soft crash of waves against the shore could be heard just beyond the forest.
“This is the entrance to Thistletop,” Shalelu announced, approaching a thick patch of briars in a gap between the trees. “The briar patch might as well be solid walls through most of the forest, but the goblins have carved a few tunnels through it. Keep pace and I’ll lead you through.” She grabbed a particularly thick section of briar and pulled, revealing a rough door opening to a mangled mess of a passageway. I made sure to keep my arms close to my sides as we entered the thick mass of thorns.
The trek through the briars was mostly uneventful: we did find a cavern entrance that emitted the wails of something Talathel identified as a bunyip, which from his description I am not at all inclined to try and meet. Walking around a bundle of trees, however, we stumbled upon a group of goblin dogs, crudely tied to a post. I asked Shalelu her opinion on how to sneak past them. She replied, “Kill them.”
Not seeing any fault in her plan, the goblin dogs were quickly dispatched by arrow and spear before the goblin dogs even knew we were there. The alarm silenced, we continued down the tunnels and before log we emerged back into the sunlight. Before us was a rickety and waving rope-plank bridge soaring nearly a hundred feet between the jagged cliffs above the surf, leading to an island with an even more ramshackle fortress perched atop it. The fort was a jumbled mess of what appeared to be the salvage of wrecked ships. Shattered masts, tattered sails, and warped keel plates were vertically stacked in what could almost be called a building. Looking back to the swinging rope bridge before us, I carefully examined its construction.
“Well, believe it or not lads, this bridge should hold all of our weight just fine, as long as no one tries jumpin’ about on it.” Talathel tapped my shoulder and pointed to the opposite end of the bridge.
“Yeah, the bridge might, but that knot over there sure won’t.”
He was right: the far end of the span had been knotted in such a way that if more than about three people crossed, the span would give and send us all plunging into the cold waters below. Erring on the side of caution, we decided to cross in pairs and eventually we all made it across safe and sound. Shalelu held the end of the bridge up while I retied it into a safer knot, just in case we should need to make a hasty escape later. Shalelu decided to stay behind at the bridge, since it made an excellent choke point to pick off unlucky stragglers.
Our exit strategy secure, we carefully creeped up to the fortress walls. The scattered pattering of goblins could be heard running about inside. We wasted a good few moments trying to find alternate entry routes before I became impatient.
“Oy, let’s just barge in and get this over with already!”
The rest of the party glared at me. I covered my mouth as soon as I realized how loudly I had been speaking. Luckily, no one inside seemed to hear me. Not seeing any other means of entry, Talathel spoke to his treant. “Hey man, can you open this door for us?” The tree nodded, and grabbed the door handle while the rest of the party prepped our weapons. Unfortunatley, the door stayed shut fast – it was barred from the other side.
“Well shoot,” Talathel said, scratching his neck. “Guess we’ll have to find another way i-“
He was interrupted with a deafening smash as the tree reared back and smashed into the door, utterly destroying it. Apparently he took “open the door” to mean “open it no matter what.” Talathel gave the rest of us a sheepish grin as he shrugged. “Sorry, he’s new.” We all winced as we realized our cover was completely blown. Sure enough, two pairs of goblins leaped from the brambles adjacent to us (they must have been sleeping in them as we walked past). They were all taken care of pretty quickly, but any hope of subtlety was gone now: the alarm was sounded.
“Well lads,” I said, gripping my Warhammer, “No sneakin’ around anymore! INTO THA BREACH!”
We charged inside, only to find the room completely empty. The now frantic shuffles echoing around us, however, let us know that time was of the essence. Despite the urgency, Kane insisted on perusing every single room he could for valuables, and after the entrance hall was cleared of a collection of daggers we made our way to a locked door in the adjacent hall. Talathel again commanded his treant to open the door.
Marin interpreted this order by grabbing the door by both sides and ripping it free from the frame, hinges and all. Talathel patted his companion on the back. “We’re gonna need to teach you how to open doors, but… good job.”
The closet turned out to be filled with nothing but pickles. Just hundreds of jars of pickles. Kane still insisted on searching the room thoroughly, uncovering further pickles. Just pickles.
“Well, maybe we can carry off these pickles…”
“Kane, no one is gonna want ta buy two hundred jars of shitty goblin pickles…”
“I’m sure we can find a buyer-“
“I AM NOT CARRYIN’ GOBLIN PICKLES IN BULK TA MAGNIMAR AND BACK, KANE!”
Our debate was interrupted with a sharp shout from outside: “INCOMING!”
We scrambled back to the entrance of the “lobby” as half a dozen goblins began careening from the opposite hall. In a matter of seconds, a pair of them were dead, one struck down by Shalelu’s crossfire, and the other pinned to the wall by Ty’s arrow. A third one was nicked by Talathel’s spear, but managed to keep careening forward as blood gouted from its side. I attempted to whack a goblin, but missed, and used the follow-through to glance back at the mage.
Apparently he had hung behind to keep inspecting the pickle room, and now that he was in the back of the group he had no line of sight. He decided to take advantage of his personal lull by cracking open a book.
Prick.
Another few seconds saw another half of the goblins taken down by hammer and arrow, as Kane continued his adventures in reading. Ty seemed to have enough of his bullshit: without a word he pulled a handful of coins from his pocket and threw them hard at the sorcerer. They smacked him directly into his face and toppled into the spine of the book. Kane merely blinked, then calmly collected the coins and continued reading. A few moments later a final volley from Shalelu took the last goblin down. Kane noticed the silence and closed his book.
Thanking Shalelu, we soon navigated our way into an inner courtyard. A quarto of unleashed goblin dogs suddenly tackled us, but we took care of the pests quickly (Kane found himself out of Line of Sight again and took the chance to straighten his hair. What.)With the distraction gone, we noticed a pair of goblin corpses collapsed by an outbuilding. A frantic shuffling could be heard inside. Talaltel kneeled down and did some quick forensics – the goblins had been trampled to death by a large horse.
“Well, seems we know what’s inside here, then.” I said, grabbing the shed door. “Everyone prep fer a very angry beast.”
Inside the shed was a beautiful back horse, but one starved, obviously abused, and very angry. However, it seemed to take pause at the fact that we were not goblins. Kane used the hesitation to pull a handful of trail rations from his pack and throw it before the horse. The horse cautiously accepted the gift, and before long Kane was gently brushing its mane with his vanity kit. He glanced at me.
“So, Barun. Are you in the market for a warhorse?”
[OOC INTERLUDE: Twi mentioned at this point that he didn’t have a picture of the horse because by default it had an awful generic name: Shadowmist. This led to a masochistic Google image search for and . Oh god it hurts.]
Five minutes later we had lead the horse back outside to have Shalelu watch it (I still need to think of a name for it) and continued our venture back into the fortress, with Talathel’s tree friend continuing to rip doors from their frames for shits and giggles and Kane obsessively scanning every room for valuables. Talathel must have noticed Kane was on-edge an offered him a joint, which Kane accepted but stuffed into his pack with the rest of his valuables. Most of the rooms were unremarkable, but as I looked into an otherwise rancid refuse room I noticed that it was significantly shorter than it should have been. Sure enough, a light push on the far wall revealed a chest, a human-crafted one by the looks of it, of the type usually found on ships. We weren’t going to brute-force it open, so we decided to hunt for the keykeeper.
Doubling back, we found a vile butchery littered with, among other things, human remains. Kane grabbed a fat haunch of some strange animal, wielding it like a club, and cautiously opened the door to the next room.
The hall was much wider and “grander” than any previous room. Four thick columns menacing with spikes of iron pierced the center of the hall, and the walls were adorned with hides of dogs and other beasts. Of immediate concern, though, was the “well-dressed” goblin at the far corner of the hall. He was adorned in a rather thick breast plate, and by his side was a monstrous green lizard. He didn’t jump for us like I would expect, but simply stared at us, studying us… if goblins are capable of studying. Kane cocked his arm and chucked the haunch at the goblin, causing it to land at his feet.
The chieftain grinned and stroked his lizard HIS PET LIZARD I MEAN OH GODS. “You show me that you enjoy chaos. Good! Approach me, elf, and Ripnugget will grant you audie-“ he stopped as he was struck by a spell. Then shit got crazy.
You see, I’ve been around Kane long enough, and have gotten sensitive enough to magic, that I can tell when a spell goes wrong. And the spell Kane tossed at the chieftain went wrong. As the bolt struck the goblin, his muscles began to grow, and within seconds he had become a bulging pile of flesh. The bewildered goblin glanced at his new pecs, and grinned maniacally.
Mother. Fucker.
[OOC Note: Luna’s spell crit failed and boosted Ripnugget’s STR by +8. Jesus christ.]
Ty immediately began firing a flurry of arrows downrange as I charged up to his throne, blessing my weapon to smite evil as I plowed into Ripnugget. The goblin’s newfound strength combined with his small stature combined into a counterattack straight into my ribs like a ton of bricks. Fucker hurt. Luckily Talathel immediately ran behind me and surged healing energy through the wound.
As Ty and Kane continue chucking missiles downrange, I take my revenge. With a mighty swing, I wind up and slam the hammer straight into the side of his head, denting his crown. By some dark miracle he was still standing, but he clearly didn’t like standing next to me. With a strange cackled order, he climbed onto the back of his gecko as it carried him straight up the wall and onto the ceiling, where he chugged a potion.
Again, for the record, not fucking fair.
Luckily Ty was on top of things, and fired directly at the gecko. With a screech it lost its grip and collapsed to the ground, dead. As Ripnugget stood up I calmly walked over and knocked him out. His unnatural muscles began to fade, but before he could stand up again I grasped my hammer with two hands and brought it straight down on his skull.
Kane politely clapped as I stepped away from the splash of gore. I wiped Fury on a nearby dog fur and took a bow. “Thank ye, thank ye. I’ll be here all night.”
Among Ripnugget’s belongings was a small brass key that looked suspiciously like the one we were searching for. Returning to the hidden closet, Kane carefully inserted the key into the lock, and with a clank the chest opened, revealing both a giant pile of valuables and a rusty blade that would have cut off Kane’s hand if he had turned the key the wrong way. He didn’t seem to mind, and he turned to me as he sifted through the pile of coins.
“It would probably be easier to carry they entire chest rather than try and cart everything individually. Do you mind, Barun?”
“Eh… I may be strong, lad, but even I can only carry so much.”
“Fine. Hold out your hands for a moment.”
I did so, and Kane pulled some strange cords from his sleeves and wrapped them around my shoulders.. “There,” he said, tying the cords into knots, “Now try lifting the chest.” I braced against the wall and started to lift, only to nearly stumble as the chest soared to my head: it felt like it weighed only a couple of pounds. Kane smirked. “Good. Now throw that on your back and we can continue downstairs.”
We made our way into the basement, coming upon a rickety table in the entrance chamber. By the looks of it, this is where the goblin raids were planned. There was a map on the table, but it didn’t tell us anything Tsuto’s journal had already revealed, except that we now had a name to pair to those OHGODSKILLITS – Sinspawn. Makes sense considering the context. Kane gestured to a closet in the corner of the room, asking me to open it. As I did so, I was greeted by a gout of fire to the face.
Turns out there was a wizard behind the door; a dark-skinned girl with a white cat and an evil aura. Great, even closets want us dead now.
Seeing the burst of fire, Ty dashed across the room and fired a volley into the closet. The arrows struck true, but disappeared with a burst: an illusion! I leaped into the room and took a swing, missing but evaporating another figment. Both Talathel and Kane tossed spells into the room, but to no effect. Suddenly, I notice my hammer begin to vibrate, and before I know what’s happening the head pops free of the handle with a crack. DAMN BITCH BROKE MY HAMMER FUCK ASS SHIT OIRJBKGSS.
Sorry. Lost composure. At any rate, I had enough sense to realize fighting a wizard without a weapon is a bad idea, and thus I retreated back into the hall. I had to leap on the way out of the door as Kane summoned what looked like a miniature sun and rolled it into the room. Despite the obvious chaos the wizard did not emerge from the closet. Ty took an overwatch position as I begrudgingly pulled an (admittedly rather nice) scimitar from our earlier spoils and carefully approached the closet door.
The room was empty.
We frantically searched the room for a minute, but it was no use; she was long gone. Kane quickly dashed back upstairs, and within a minute was back with us.
“The stair we didn’t use was opened. Looks like she’s retreated to another part of the dungeon.”
Our quarry escaped, we continued our exploration. We stepped into the closet. Kane was disappointed to see his fire ball had burnt nearly everything of use to a crisp, but not everything was destroyed: my dwarven senses detected a slight crease in the wall. Pushing against it, I found a staircase that led even further down. We decided not to investigate further until the rest of the floor was cleared.
Trekking further into the basement, we soon came to a crudely drawn mural. It was a roughly accurate section of the fort, but drawn in the bowels of the island, below us, was a giant bugbear. If the drawing was to scale, it was probably nearly thirty feet tall.
“But,” I said, writing it off, “Goblins aren’t known for their masterful realistic paintings. I doubt this drawin’ be to scale.”
The mural artistically analyzed, we opened the next door, and came face-to-face with a giant of a man, wielding a massive two-handed sword with one hand and a face-shaped shield in the other. But he did not advance. I did not sense an evil aura about him, and so I decided to be diplomatic.
“Hail! I implore ya to yield fer us.”
“I’ll yield, if you pay me more than Nualia does.”
“What’s yer rate?”
“10 gold a day.”
I quickly conferred with the rest of the party, then turned back to the fighter. “We’ll double it.”
The man sheathed his blade and extended his hand. “In that case, you have yourself a blade. Orik Vankaskerkin, at your service.”
We took advantage of a new friend with experience inside the fort, and questioned him extensively on the inner workings of Thistletop. We learned that the wizard we had just lost was Lyrie, an expelled Pathfinder who was only interested in this post for the archaeology. He also noted that there really was a monster underneath us, but it sure as hell wasn’t a bugbear. The goblins worshipped it as a god, but if any had actually seen the thing, they hadn’t survived to tell the others. There was also a pack of terrifying dog-like creatures somewhere in the dungeon, and the bugbear – the one Shalelu had been hunting -had his “harem” (Talathel visibly shuddered) on this floor. Kane asked him about where the wizard might have gone.
“She’s probably in her room, packing up. Lyrie’s got a temper, but she knows when to get out of a messy situation. Hell, even I was about to collect my last coin from Nualia before you showed up. But… if you want to try and catch her, please don’t hurt her too much. She’s just as caught up in this as I was, and it’s not her fault.”
Kane promised that he only wanted to interrogate the wizard, and so the fighter led us to her quarters, taking care to be quiet as we passed the bugbear’s quarters. Before long Orik indicated Lyrie’s quarters before us; I prepped to tackle her as I gently opened the door. As Orik expected, she was frantically packing her belongings, and didn’t notice the intrusion. She did notice, however, when I attempted to tackle her from behind. Lyrie dodged out the way, but raised her head just in time to meet Orik’s sword pommel. As she reeled back in pain, I tackled her and pinned her to the ground. Kane tossed Orik his special rope, and before long the wizard (and her cat as well – never underestimate a familiar) were restrained.
Kane, of course, sifted through all of her valuables (finding a pouch filled with, among other things, Tsuto’s hair. Ugh.). Her danger cleared, Kane followed me upstairs as I hauled Lyrie back to the entrance for Shalelu to keep an eye on. She agreed to… until we mentioned the bugbear was downstairs. Her eyes narrowed.
“I’m coming with you.”
A few minutes later, we had sent Tyvelian to take Shalelu’s post, and the assembled party was gathered around the door to the bugbear’s haven. The ranger nocked a shimmering arrow to her bow, then nodded to me. “Open the door.”
The door swung open, revealing the bugbear… you know what, posterity doesn’t need to know what a goblin harem looks like. The important part was that his back was turned: Shalelu’s first arrow clattered against the wall before him, but he only had time to turn his head when the second arrow dug deep into his back. The goblinoid roared in pain, and turned about to face his aggressors.
Kane tapped the ranger, asked her to step aside, stepped into the doorway, and cast a spell.
Remember when I mentioned that I can sense when a spell goes wrong now? Well, if the calamity upstairs was a disaster, what Kane just attempted was an absolute Armageddon. Before I could even react, the most astounding magical blunder ever happened.
As the spray of fire left his hand, the room began to echo with an that seemed to come from everywhere at once, its chords resonating throughout the room. At the same time, both the sorcerer and the bugbear started to become noticeably… shorter. The bugbear opened his mouth, probably to say “oh shit,” but instead a pile of coins tumbled from his mouth. By the time the flame slammed into him, both Kane and the bugbear were about three feet tall. The spell exploded in a blaze of light, killing the miniature bugbear and his entire harem instantly.
Kane raised his hands in triumph, and moonwalked away from the door. As the music was still playing.
Talathel and Orik looked amazed, while Shalelu… I think her brain was just completely broken. From what I had gathered from our conversations with her, she was planning on dramatically ripping the bugbear's necklace from its neck with one hand and ripping out its heart with the other. Instead, bewildered and speechless, she walked into the charred room, retrieved the shrunken necklace, and walked straight toward the door. Talathel handed her a joint on her way out, which it looks like she gladly took.
I, meanwhile, lasted about five seconds before collapsing to the floor in hysterical laughter. Gods Kane, when you fuck up, you fuck up in the best possible way.
I had almost recovered when I noticed Tyvelian coming down the hallway. He looked into the room as a three foot tall Kane was scooping gold from the mouth of a three-foot-tall bugbear while music played in the background… and then he walked straight back out. Cue me not being able to stand up again for another couple minutes.
[OOC DISCLAIMER: ALL OF THIS SHIT ACTUALLY HAPPENED AND WAS ROLLED FOR. FOR REALS. INCLUDING THE DRAGONFORCE. IT WAS THE MOST AMAZING THING TO EVER HAPPEN. LUNA IS NOW PERMANENTLY GNOME SIZED UNTIL HE CAN GET UNCURSED. I WAS THERE. IT WAS REAL.]
Once I had finally gathered myself from the floor, we decided to explore the rest of the floor. We found a jail of no particular note, but upon entering a workshop to the side we uncovered a residual effect of Kane’s mishap. While searching the room he happened to brush his hand against a worktable… and the entire workbench instantly turned to pure, solid gold. Kane was pissed more than anything, because it was gonna be difficult to sell it, let alone move it. We decided to discuss logistics later as we prepared to enter the final unexplored room.
The chamber was a great chapel-like hall, but dedicated to gods of darkness rather than light. In a quick glance I was able to surmise it was a chapel to Lamashtu (big surprise), but before I could study the ornament further two monstrous abominations – yeth hounds – leaped from the darkness and loosed their terrifying howl.
And yet I stood firm. For in that moment I felt the will of fearless Torag flow through me and around me in a great aura. I no longer know fear.
Wow, that sounds really cheesy in retrospect. Oh well, it’s true, deal with it.
With a mighty yell I led the charge into the room, and inspired by my courage the assembled party (including Tyvelian – he had decided he could deal with our madness at this point) charged into the room and engaged the monsters. The fight was hard and brutal, for every weapon blow seemed to bounce off the monster’s mottled flesh. Through a critical mass of effort we were able to slay one of the beasts, but as it collapsed the second hound released its howl.
This time my aura of courage was not strong enough for all the party. Both Talathel’s treant and Orik shrieked in terror. The treant bounded for the door and, rather than trying to open it, simply smashed straight through it, leaving a perfectly tree-shaped hole in the door. Orik sprinted straight through the same hole after him.
In the final moments of the battle Talathel was injured badly as the remaining hound bit deep into his arm, but with a final flurry of arrows from the lad the second monster fell. Once we had gathered our senses, we followed the trail of shed leaves out the front door, and eventually found both Orik and the tree huddled in the corner, grasping each other like frightened children. We eventually managed to get them into a sensible state, and with Orik’s knowledge we gathered that as long as we kept watch on this room, nothing could get out of the lower chambers.
And so I’m here, watching over the secret door as the rest of the party is taking the chance to rest up. All in all, despite the absolute bloody chaos earlier, we have done pretty well today… but my poor hammer. Damn it. I hope I’ll be able to fix it again. I hate to face an evil like Nualia without it.
Thanks for your help today, Torag. Cheers.
-BARUN
Last edited by
Gielnor on 08 Feb 2015 04:55, edited 2 times in total.