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Alexis Veenendaal

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Amateur Gods

Amateur Gods (Full Story)

Posted on September 10, 2018April 19, 2022 by alexis

Over the past few months I have been publishing this story in parts. Now that the story is complete, here is the full version:

A few months ago, a group of friends got together to play Dungeons & Dragons for the first time, and started on what we thought would be an easy, three-session adventure. Due to many side quests and not really knowing what we were doing, we ended up caught in something much bigger. Special thanks to Ian for being our Dungeon Master in this adventure. As you will probably be able to tell, I play the Dwarf Falkrunn, and I have started the main focus of this story on where our most recent adventures took us…

The Cult of the Dragon

There were five companions in all, though companions was a generous term for the odd relationship these strangers-made-accomplices had developed over a mere handful of days. In fact, now that Falkrunn thought about it, she was pretty sure that the last few weeks of her life were some elaborate, cosmic joke being run by a bunch of amateur gods who were fascinated by the sadistic antics that had nearly killed her more than once.

It all started when she received a letter from her uncle Gundren, asking her to come to the city to help him claim back the lost mine of Phandelver. The prospect appealed to her, being a Mountain Dwarf, and she jumped at the opportunity. (Okay, so jumped was a strong term for it. Being a Dwarf, it was rather difficult to get any sort of vertical momentum out of her, though not for lack of trying.)

After being on her own for so long, reuniting with a piece of her past was something she couldn’t set aside. Despite everything, she felt that she was finally ready to rejoin civilization.

The quest, if you could call it that, quickly got out of hand. Somehow, Falkrunn had been roped into working with this band of misfits that seemed to have nothing in common, yet her uncle had arranged to be there. It was exhausting, and made her focus difficult.

The journey had started out like any other, but soon quickly devolved into a chaotic stream of events: goblin attacks, finding out her uncle had been kidnapped, nearly being cut apart by a massive Bugbear, being abruptly awoken by a strange Rock Gnome who had dumped a bag of flour over one of her companion’s heads, and burning half a forest to the ground. Heck, she’d even had a full-blown conversation with a pack of hungry wolves, convincing them not to eat her. That was a weird day.

The further Falkrunn got through this deep mess, the harder it was to climb back out. In fact, she had fallen through several underground caverns, and had difficulty climbing out of those, too. She could no longer distinguish whether it was her who caused this mayhem, or the others.

Despite the near insanity of her crew, she had grown fond of, well, some of them. There were two elves that, despite thinking very highly of themselves (which most elves did), were decent fighters and had presumably good intentions. There was Olara, the one who did back-flips off trees as easily as Falkrunn could pop her knuckles, and Keyzana, the blue-haired Elf with an affinity for spellcasting.

Then there was that Dragonborn creature, Lorskan, who was always lumbering ahead of them, barely saying anything except for the occasional grunt that signified his recognition of the common language. Falkrunn didn’t mind him in a battle, though. He was a fury of fire and fight.

The Rock Gnome, Albus, was only with them for a short time. The strange hermit followed after them on legs shorter than Falkrunn’s own, and would make the strangest comments. Falkrunn suspected he was the least sane of them all, but she admired the tenacity of the little creature. He helped them beat down a crew of red-cloaked bandits on a couple of occasions before disappearing back into his half-burned forest, muttering something about taking his wife on a long trip. (Falkrunn very much doubted the existence of his supposed female counterpart, but kindly patted him on the head and thanked him before he departed.)

A couple of days ago, Falkrunn and her companions encountered a downtrodden group of townsfolk on their journey, and agreed to help them rid their town of a large number of the red-cloaked bandits. They were ruling the town with an iron fist, at the behest of some unknown, powerful leader, and had taken to calling themselves the “Red Brands”.

After a few cuts and bruises and getting lost several times in some underground mansion tunnels (not to mention the gruesome murders), they freed the town from their oppression, and Falkrunn was reminded of something she once treasured: It was a feeling of being good again.

The Red Brand’s leader was nowhere to be found. They discovered his self-appointed name, though: Glasstaff. Falkrunn’s company stowed that information away for the time being, returning to their mission of finding her kidnapped uncle.

Unfortunately, while freeing the town of Phandalin, they inadvertently took on their fifth and final companion who, despite their shared complaining, seemed to be a permanent member now. They had yet to see what this human Flavio fellow could contribute, and he had yet to see their faces, for his nose was so highly raised in the air that Falkrunn suspected he could smell everything, including the distinct charred smell of the Dragonborn fighter, Lorskan.

So, it had been about five days in total, and now Falkrunn stood, four feet off the ground, surveying a dark treeline that seemed to stare back at the group with ominous, arching branches. Falkrunn drew as near to the forest as she dared, pulling felled branches into her short arms. When she had collected an armful, she dumped them before the Dragonborn, who, with a lung-filled breath, made the wood burst into hot flames.

Satisfied, Falkrunn threw down her pack and bedroll, and curled up next to the fire, exhausted. With eyes half-closed, she watched Lorskan walk a distance from the ring of light to take first watch. The two elves gracefully curled their legs beneath themselves and went into a meditative trance, a faint blue glow emanating from their lithe bodies. Flavio bent to perfectly position his bedroll over a pile of leaves he had collected. He sniffed in disdain as he shuffled around, finally straightening his cloak just right and crawling into his bed. He muttered something about needing a proper writing desk and closed his eyes.

As Falkrunn drifted off, she thought of a letter they had found hidden in the Red Brand’s hideout. She and her companions had drawn the attention of someone called the Black Spider, who wanted them very dead. This enemy had appointed Glasstaff and the Red Brand’s to remove them. How had they known about their small group of fighters? What had her uncle gotten himself into? What had he gotten her into?

The Dwarf let her dreams take her. They were dark and full of long, hairy-legged creatures with snapping pincers and beady eyes. Beneath their thick bodies she could see her uncle Gundren, beaten and bloodied, reaching out to her. She couldn’t reach him, and began shouting his name. There was a loud CRASH.

Falkrunn awoke with a start to the fire nearly out. Thanks to her darkvision, she caught the sight of four massive Hobgoblins stumbling from the underbrush with weapons raised and snarls upon their collective faces. “There they are! Get them!” The leader cried, and suddenly everyone was on their feet in a panic.

Falkrunn saw the two elves leap into action first, the blue glow around them immediately vanishing, and Lorskan had emerged from the darkness.

Falkrunn didn’t notice where Flavio had gone, but drew her hands up into the air and emitted an eruptive, booming force from her splayed fingers. With a crash, her Thunderwave spell threw three of the Hobgoblins off their feet. It looked as though the other had already been hit with a clean arrow shot between the eyes. Lorskan stumbled back as Falkrunn’s spell took effect.

Two of the creatures regained their footing, still alive, and moved in for another attack. Flavio jumped in with his warhammer raised towards one of them, but his blow glanced off the Hobgoblin’s armour. He fell back with a terrified screech.

Falkrunn turned, drawing her longsword, and saw that Keyzana had begun a spell of her own, her blue hair flying around her hauntingly. The Elf’s hands moved through the air in complex gestures and she muttered an incantation under her breath.

Olara jumped from somewhere in the trees and attacked one of the Hobgoblin’s from behind. Her short sword stuck in his back and he shook her off, howling. She fell back and landed in a half turn with her feet solidly on the ground. Suddenly, the Hobgoblin’s body was encircled with a cloud of energy. Keyzana’s spell had taken affect. Glass shards emerged from the cloud and in a flurry of enchanted wind, it sliced through skin and bone and leather, leaving a fallen heap of shredded enemy behind.

The final Hobgoblin hesitantly stepped forward with weapon raised, seeing his fallen companions, and screamed and the top of his lungs as he ran to attack Lorskan. With one fell swoop of his gleaming silver sword, the Dragonborn cut the creature down. It fell in a second, and Lorskan wiped his blade upon its torn tunic.

“Huzzah! A grand victory! How lucky you all are to have me as your champion,” Flavio cried, raising his warhammer and looking at the group with a toothy grin.

Falkrunn dropped her blade into its scabbard with a generous roll of her eyes and stepped up to the nearest body to search for gold. The others picked through the remains as well, leaving Flavio to his self-celebration.

Lorskan pulled out a long piece of parchment from the belt of the Hobgoblin with the arrow in his forehead. He unfolded the paper and after studying it for a moment, showed it to everyone with a frown. It was a drawing of none other than Falkrunn herself, with the call for a reward of her death or capture.

“25 gold. That’s it?” Falkrunn snorted, looking at the page with crossed arms. “I’m worth more than that.”

Lorskan stuffed the parchment away and, with eyes glowing, stepped towards the dwarf with a thick, long-nailed finger raised in her face. “What is this about?” he demanded.

The Dwarf, now unamused by the accusation, stood as tall as she could. “Excuse me, dragon-man. It’s a call for my arrest, obviously. Someone wants me dead.”

“Why? What are you not telling us?”

The others watched with blank expressions at the exchange, clearly not wanting to get involved.

“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Falkrunn breathed.

“Why would they want you, little dwarf? What have you done?”

“Nothing the rest of you haven’t done,” she said defensively, keeping her feet firmly planted. Lorskan was twice her height, if not more.

Unsatisfied, the Dragonborn grunted but stepped back. She could see the distrust in his eyes, and reminded herself to keep a better watch on the big brute. She had only known these people for a handful of days, after all. No one could be trusted, least of all this massive, scaly creature. Well, I think that’s the most I’ve ever heard that beast say, she thought.

“Okay,” Olara calmly said, now that the tension had lessened, “let’s go back to sleep and we can sort this out in the morning. We have a long journey ahead of us, and we need our rest.”

Falkrunn grunted and returned to the fire, where Flavio was tucked back into his perfect bedroll. She shook her head at the human, completely mystified. What is the point of this man, anyways? Why are we keeping him around? She thought. With that, she curled up and went back to sleep, keeping her dagger close at hand.

The next day was uneventful as they walked along the treeline. Lorskan walked ahead of the group as always, brooding more than usual (if that were possible). Flavio was left in the back of the group, boasting about something or other, and being generally ignored. Falkrunn walked with the two elves and listened with interest as they described their homelands.

They took their break when the sun stood at its zenith. While everyone else sat and ate their bread and hard cheese, Lorskan walked a short distance off and conjured his familiar: a small, dragon-like creature he had named Algernon. He knelt in the grass and pulled a piece of parchment and writing tools from his pack and began scribbling something. Then he tied the note to Algernon’s leg and set him off into the skies. The companions watched this strange display, Falkrunn feeling especially suspicious. What was he up to? Was he trying to get her killed?

Keyzana quickly summoned her own familiar, a regal hawk, and it took off into the air after the small dragon. Keyzana watched through its eyes for a moment, then shook her head and looked around at the rest of them. “I lost him,” she whispered, just as Lorskan returned to the group.

Feeling uncomfortable, Falkrunn ate her meal quickly and packed up, anxious to keep moving. They walked through the field until nightfall, then made camp. This time, both Keyzana and Olara took first watch while everyone else slept.

The group managed to get a few hours of sleep before once again being rudely awakened by Keyzana’s shouts. “What hell is this, now?” Falkrunn demanded as she stumbled sleepily from her bed, dagger in hand. She quickly regained her wits as she saw a huge Owlbear bowling straight towards Keyzana from the trees. Keyzana reached up to pull out her sword, but the beast was too quick and knocked her to the ground, taking three quick slashes at the Elf. The beast was a massive, hulking creature with thick black fur and the ferocious look on its beaked face. What had startled this animal out of the woods?

Keyzana lay quite still, and the Owlbear quickly started snuffling at her unmoving body. Falkrunn dropped her dagger and took out her longsword, then raised a hand towards Keyzana and muttered a quick healing spell. The Elf stirred on the ground, and the Dwarf breathed a sigh of relief.

The ground shook beneath them. Falkrunn turned and looked at Flavio, who was lying still with his hand against the ground, glowing red. He had cast some strange spell that was now vibrating the ground beneath them, but otherwise seemed ineffective.

Falkrunn turned back and jumped towards the creature, slashing at it. The heavy blow cut the length of it, and the animal snarled and turned its attack on her. She nearly dropped her sword as she danced out of the Owlbear’s reach. She wasn’t quick enough, and her ribs were raked with a thick set of claw marks. She cried out in pain and fell back. Gods, this beast was strong.

Lorskan was up now, and moving towards the Owlbear, and Keyzana had regained her footing and was reaching to cut off the beast’s head. The Owlbear attacked Falkrunn before she could stumble to her own feet, and all she saw before falling unconscious was a massive black paw coming straight for her head.

“Look at that! I saved you!” Flavio said with a self-satisfied grin on his face.

Falkrunn awoke, rubbing her aching head and looking around. Flavio had cast a healing spell to stop her bleeding. Her ribs ached, but the gashes were gone and she watched as the skin of her arm began knitting itself back together. “Thanks,” Falkrunn sighed in relief. She saw Lorskan’s hulking figure, and his eyes burned into her before turning away.

“You had better get some more sleep. We have plenty of hours before daylight,” Keyzana said. “I’ll take watch.” Olara piled some more wood on the fire, and Falkrunn fell back into an exhausted sleep, wondering if they would ever get a full night’s rest without something going amiss.

Another day of walking preceded that. Falkrunn’s head still ached, and her legs were stiff from the days of journeying with these long-legged folks. She was thankful when they arrived finally at their destination: Thundertree. They were told a Druid lived in this abandoned town. Falkrunn hoped he could help them find where her uncle was supposedly taken hostage.

As they skirted the edge of the forest, the abandoned town of Thundertree came into view. The town had been completely destroyed by a volcano eruption years past, and was now overrun with huge trees and long, winding creepers. The buildings were half caved-in, and covered with various plant life. A worn sign had been hastily planted in the ground not far from where they stood, twenty yards from where the town began. In black paint, the inscribed words read: Do not enter here. Plant Monsters and Zombies reside.

“Okay, so that sounds promising,” Keyzana said with raised eyebrows.

Without a word, Lorskan entered the town, followed distractedly by Flavio.

Keyzana conjured her familiar, and the hawk took flight and surveyed the town. Her eyes glazed over as she looked through the bird’s eyes, and relayed a description to her remaining companions. “The buildings have all been overrun by plant life, but there stands a tower still, though the roof is caved in. The druid might be in there.”

“Do you see any undead walking around?” Olara asked.

Keyzana shook her head.

“Can you see into the tower?” Falkrunn asked the Elf.

She was silent for a moment, and then looked at them with shock. “Lying within the tower is a green dragon curled about a pile of gold.”

“A dragon?” Falkrunn hissed, the hairs on the back of her neck standing on end. She recalled what she knew about dragons from her studies as a youth. “It’s green, you said?” Keyzana nodded. “That means it spews acid.”

Keyzana swore, and Olara looked stricken. It seemed that neither of them had fought a dragon before. Falkrunn nervously hoisted her pack higher on her shoulders and said, “let’s hurry up and find that druid. Oh, and we should probably tell our idiot companions to stay quiet. I really don’t feel like getting melted by acid today.”

They crept forward, weapons drawn and eyes alert. Flavio had moved on his own to the side of a house, and was standing over a burning bush, eyes wide. He shrugged smilingly and gave no explanation as they passed him. They made their way up to the house near the tower. Lorskan was nearly across the town already. What is he up to? Falkrunn wondered suspiciously, not for the first time.

Keyzana gasped in surprise, and Falkrunn looked over hastily. A vine had wrapped itself around her ankle and was trying to pull her to the ground. She quickly slashed at it, and it curled away. A second later, a mass of twigs began joining themselves to each other, growing into a rickety, humanoid structure. There were three of these wooden creatures, and they began attacking within seconds of being fully formed.

“Where is that dragon-man?” Falkrunn growled as she replaced her sword with two throwing hammers. Fire would be useful. Unfortunately, the three of them couldn’t conjure it out of thin air like Lorskan could.

Olara and Keyzana jumped forward and cut at the stick-creatures, slashing out pieces of them. Falkrunn threw both of her hammers. One struck the nearest creature in the arm, and the other struck its chest and it exploded into splinters.

Falkrunn left the other two tree-creatures to the Elves and turned and ran for the road, hoping to catch up with Lorskan. She reached him with no more breath to spare, and hurriedly explained to him that there was a dragon in the tower. “We need your help,” she told him, hating that she was asking for it. “The plants are alive, and they’re all trying to kill us.” Then she turned and ran back down the road, Lorskan following at her heels and soon overtaking her in strides.

The two Elf women appeared with weapons drawn, and were staring across the road at a lone figure. It was an old, white-haired man and he was gesturing at them frantically. Flavio jogged up from behind a house, looking uninjured. “Hurry,” the old man whispered to them. “Come with me.”

Sharing glances, the group trotted after him as he led them through a sunken doorway and slammed the wooden door in behind them. “What are you doing here? Who are you?” The man demanded with authority.

Falkrunn stepped up tentatively, “sir, are you the druid who resides here?”

“Resides? Yes, yes. How do you know of me?”

Keyzana stepped up, “we were told by our friends in Phandalin that you might be able to help us find this Dwarf-woman’s uncle, Gundren. He was taken captive, you see.”

“Captive? Where? By whom?”

Falkrunn answered him: “goblins took him, but we believe they are led by someone named Glasstaff. Have you heard of him?”

The druid shook his head.

“What about the Black Spider?” Lorskan asked.

The druid shook his head again.

“We think he may have been taken to Cragmaw castle,” Olara provided.

The druid’s eyes finally alighted. “Ah, yes. I know of Cragmaw castle. It’s here in this forest.”

“Great!” Falkrunn exclaimed, “can you tell us how to get there? Do you have a map?”

“First, I need something from you,” the old druid said, looking the companions up and down critically.

“With what, exactly?” Keyzana asked.

“I need you to help me remove a dragon. Do you think you can do that?”

Falkrunn eyed the uncertain group. “Uh, we have a can-do attitude that says we can! In fact, I myself know a bit about dragons. I think we can help you out, if you help us in return.”

He looked at them doubtfully, then sighed and said, “alright, adventurers. We have a deal. You help me rid this old town of a green dragon, and I will take you to Cragmaw castle.”

Why would he want to take us there? Falkrunn wondered, but said, “alright, let’s do this. But first, we should probably think out how we’re going to do it.”

Lorskan pushed a dust-ridden desk out from the corner of the room, causing Flavio to cough airily, and they began to lay out a plan.

Falkrunn thought again about how these circumstances truly were the work of some sadistic, amateur gods…

Let Sleeping Dragons Lie

Falkrunn couldn’t decide what she liked more about her group of companions: their aptness for being distracted, or their complete inability to agree on almost anything.

“Why don’t we just talk to the dragon?” she asked the group, feeling frustrated by their lack of progress. “Druid, can it be reasoned with?”

The wizened man creased his already wrinkled forehead and shook his head. “No, I don’t believe it can be reasoned with. This is a young dragon, who is especially fierce and thinks itself noble.”

“How often does it leave the tower?” Keyzana asked, pacing the dirt floor with hands clasped behind her back.

He shrugged. “Only to feed and pillage, neither of which stirs the beast to wing on oft occasion.”

“So we are at a loss,” the Elf said, stopping in her tracks. “Why not come with us, Reidoth? Leave this place?”

He shook his head a second time. “I cannot leave, noble Elf. It is my duty as a Druid of this forest to maintain a balance. The dragon in that tower disrupts the balance of nature, and that must not continue.”

There was a short silence.

“We are not strong enough to defeat a dragon, nor to drive one off,” Olara told the group, “so we must find another way.”

Keyzana stepped towards the Druid, opening her hands in a plea. “Draw us a map to Cragmaw Castle, if you will not come with us. We will return once we have saved Falkrunn’s uncle and have drawn up a better command. Right now we are five individuals, lacking all cohesive skill. Help us, and we will find a way to defeat the Green Dragon another day.”

The Druid looked around the table at the Dragonborn, Human, Dwarf and two Elves. With a laboured sigh he dropped into a nearby chair, dust erupting from it in sparklets of silver. The dust particles rose in the streaks of afternoon sunlight that peered through the shutters of the boarded window. “Very well,” he said finally, clearing his throat. “Very well,” he repeated, more firmly, “I will draw your map, though I don’t claim any great skill at cartography. It has been a long while since I have seen Cragmaw Castle.”

Falkrunn walked around the table and placed a hand on the old Druid’s shoulder, catching his green eyes in hers. “I promise, on my honor as a Dwarf of the Rockseeker clan, that we shall return and free Thundertree of the Green Dragon that haunts it.”

She thought she saw redness in his eyes, but he quickly said, “thank you,” and turned to pull out a stack of parchment and some ink, then set to work on his drawing.

As the Druid’s busy hands scratched away, Lorskan released his familiar and it flew above the ruined town. With glazed eyes, the Dragonborn relayed what he saw, “There is a giant web across the main road, and a great black spider stands hidden in a broken cottage. I see no other creatures besides this.”

So just the dragon and one exceptionally large spider. Great. Falkrunn thought to herself.

Lorskan returned his gaze around the room, then said, “I am leaving to walk ahead.”

“Leaving?” Olara asked in surprise, turning from the Druid’s map making.

The Dragonborn nodded and made for the door without another word of explanation.

“I’m coming too!” Flavio said, trotting up to the Dragonborn.

Lorskan eyed him quickly and said, “fine. We will return.” The two left without another word, or to see if the others would follow.

“Odd, him,” the Druid muttered to the remaining three companions, continuing his drawing.

Falkrunn glared back at the closed door. “I don’t like it. I don’t like any of it. What’s his deal?”

Keyzana nodded in agreement. “He’s up to something. I will send my hawk after him as a scout.” She summoned her familiar and opened the door again to release him.

“I wonder,” the Dwarf added, “what does it have to do with the human?”

The two Elves looked around doubtfully. They had only met Flavio in Phandalin when they saved him from the Red Brands. Perhaps they needed to search more into the human’s past. Falkrunn still couldn’t shake an odd feeling about the man. Why had he joined their crew? What did he have to gain? It couldn’t all just be for gold.

They sat waiting as the druid sketched out the length of the forest in quick, ink-blotched lines.

Flavio followed behind the hulking Dragonborn as they skirted around the town’s edge. The creature Lorskan said nothing, and Flavio began to look around nervously, regretting his decision to follow. However, something stronger than doubts kept his resolve, and he took comfort in placing a hand over his warhammer.

They crossed the treeline and made for the road. The road was lined with a scattering of broken and rubble-strewn homesteads. Trees grew in every uninhabited inch, and had even forced their way through stone where it pleased them.

The human and Dragonborn reached what looked to have been the town’s square, featuring a central figure: a towering wooden statue depicting a human man dressed in finery and puffing out his chest with dignity. Flavio looked up at the monument and stood a little straighter, nodding at it as they passed.

Directly behind the statue was a large, solid building with patches of vines that had dug partially into the stone. Flavio muttered a quick prayer to himself as he watched the Dragonborn reach for the door. What was he doing?

He thought he heard a thump coming from inside. Flavio held his breath.

A man in black robes appeared from around the door and they exchanged words. Lorskan looked back at Flavio with a distrustful expression and said, “don’t follow,” then pushed through the door and slammed it behind him.

Flavio wrung his hands nervously and crept up to the door, pressing his ear to it. Something snapped at his feet. He tripped and fell into the nearby brambles, gathering an accumulation of scratches across his face. He cursed silently and pulled himself out of the thorns, then prayed for forgiveness, returning his ear to the door.

The Druid Reidoth stood and sprinkled sand over the parchment, letting it soak up the extra spots of ink. Then he gently lifted the parchment and waved it through the air. He handed it to Falkrunn and she took it reverently, folding it and pushing it into her breast pocket.

Olara nudged Keyzana, and she returned her gaze to the room, leaving her hawk to circle the skies. She looked at her companions in confusion. “Lorskan and Flavio have gone to the town square, where” she told them with a pause, “Lorskan has entered alone into a building and left Flavio behind.”

Well, isn’t that just the gem in the crown. “Let’s go,” Falkrunn growled, pushing through the door and making her way to the forest’s edge. The Elves followed closely, their steps silent in the long grass, their fingers poised for attack.

Six cloaked figures emerged from the building and marched across the town’s square, followed by a seventh, much taller cloaked figure. The six wore masks with great black horns. The seventh was quite clearly the Dragonborn himself.

Flavio stumbled back, and the cloaked figures turned towards him. The one at the front spoke to the tallest of them. “What does he know?”

“Nothing,” Lorskan’s voice emerged distinctly from behind his black cloak, “and he will not follow us.”

The six began to walk in the direction of the tower. Lorskan turned and grabbed Flavio roughly. “Follow me, and I will kill you, human.”

Flavio yelped and fell back as Lorskan turned and followed the others. He watched them walk away.

Suddenly, a giant hawk dropped from the sky and landed lightly on Flavio’s shoulder, peering at him with large eyes. He cried out in surprise. It cocked its head, then took flight southward. Flavio got to his feet and brushed off his coat. “What a strange eagle,” he said, then shuffled away, following the black cloaked figures with some distance between them, one hand still clutched on his warhammer.

“You won’t believe this,” Keyzana breathed.

“What is it?”

“Lorskan, cloaked in black and following six humans. They make their way to the tower of the Green Dragon as we speak.”

“And Flavio? What of him?” Falkrunn asked, peering out of the broken window of the weaver’s shop in which they now hid after catching sight of a spider in the distance.

The Elf grimaced. “I sent my familiar down to warn him and lead him to where we hide, but he ignored it completely.”

“Perhaps he didn’t recognize the hawk,” Olara suggested.

A bark of humourless laughter escaped the Elf. “He’s seen the hawk before, many times.”

Falkrunn shrugged, “from what I hear, Human’s aren’t the smartest of creatures.”

The two Elves nodded in agreement. After a moment’s silence, Falkrunn said, “what should we do about Lorskan?”

“He is a traitor, as far as we know. Or, he was never on our side to begin with.” Keyzana said, a hint of sadness in her voice.

“If he wakes this dragon, there will be no fighting it,” Olara whispered. “We cannot win.”

“So we hide?” Falkrunn asked, stomach twisting.

“It is that, or run,” Olara told her.

As way of answer, Falkrunn collapsed into a chair and put her feet up. “So we wait and see what happens.”

“Anyone know how to give a good massage?” Keyzana smiled, sitting on the floor and returning to the eyes of her hawk.

“Actually,” Falkrunn said, grinning, “a massage sounds great.”

CRACK. There was a sudden burst of sound as the door to the weaver’s cottage broke open in splinters and six full-sized twig creatures broke their way into the room. Olara quickly pushed Keyzana into her own mind and the three tore out their weapons and stood to face their enemy. The creatures clacked and snapped like many breaking twigs, and Falkrunn suspected they were communicating with one another.

Olara leapt forward on powerful Elven legs and cut the leading twig creature in half with her short sword, spinning her weapon through the air with incredible force. Keyzana circled her right hand in the air, then cupped it with her left hand and emitted a huge cone of hot flames that engulfed three of the blights and some of the nearby furniture. They exploded into tinder and ash.

Falkrunn raised her longsword and cut at the nearest foe, but her height was against her. It stuck firmly in the creature’s armoured bark, and the blight clacked at at her angrily. She grimaced and she tried to pull the weapon free, but the blight reached out a sharp hand and grabbed at her, slashing a shallow cut across her cheek. The blade came free and she stumbled back. Olara side-stepped in and with a backhanded cut, she tore across the middle of the creature and it burst apart.

There was only one twig creature remaining, and Keyzana stepped up to it, grabbed it by the arms and kicked it in the chest. It exploded into tiny shards of wood as she tore the thing limb from limb.

With trembling hands, Falkrunn returned her sword to the scabbard at her back. “Thank the gods for Elves.”

The two elves looked at each other and grinned.

Falkrunn and the Elves ran from the weaver’s cottage and went in search of Flavio. Falkrunn’s heart was nearly beating out of her chest, and she looked forward to putting her back to the forsaken town of Thundertree.

Flavio was hidden behind a tree with his back to them as they approached, looking out at the tower. Keyzana grabbed his attention, and he shot around with a wild expression that softened upon recognition. “Oh, it’s just you.”

“Just us?” Keyzana growled, her eyes furious. “Next time you see a giant bloody hawk land on your shoulder, it means hey, follow it. We were nearly torn apart by plant monsters just now.”

Flavio looked genuinely shocked. “Just so you know, Lorskan threatened to kill me, then went trouping off with a group of black cloaked cultists.”

“Huh,” was all Keyzana said in response, and they all gathered round to watch the tower, evidently over the hawk incident.

Minutes later the cult emerged from the tower and headed in one direction, leaving Lorskan behind. “We need to do something about this,” Falkrunn whispered to the rest.

“I can interrogate him,” Flavio said, and the other three looked at him doubtfully. He raised a hand in defense, “I have a spell,” he said, as though explaining it to a gaggle of children. “If it works, he will have no choice but be compelled to tell us the truth. However, he will be aware that he is under the spell. He can withhold what he wants, but he simply cannot lie.”

“Well, then we’d better think what to ask him,” Falkrunn said. “Let’s go.”

The companions caught up with Lorskan when he was nearly out of the town. He no longer wore the black cloak of the cult. “Hey!” Olara called to him, and he stopped to wait. “Where have you been?” Her voice was accusatory. “Flavio tells us you threatened his life.”

Lorskan shrugged and continued walking. “Hey,” Olara said again. “I think you owe us an explanation.” She grabbed for his shoulder.

“Nothing for you to worry about,” the Dragonborn said. “Do you have the map?” Annoyed, Falkrunn nodded. “Good,” he said, “we will go to Cragmaw Castle now.”

The uncomfortable companions made their cautious way through the fields, keeping an eye out on the looming forest flanking their left.

A few hours later, night fell upon the forest and they made their customary camp. Falkrunn prepared soup with boiled meat and cabbage, then pulled her carved wooden flute from her cloak and began to play a soft melody. The melody was a song her father had taught her long ago. It spoke of the destruction after courage. It sang of sadness and betrayal.

When the song was finished, Falkrunn looked pointedly at Flavio, and the man stretched out his fingers, subtly whispering an incantation under his breath. The spell flowed smoothly across the fire and they watched as Lorskan breathed it in. His eyes seemed to soften, and a faint smile touched his lips. Flavio nodded slightly and gave a thumbs up, indicating the spell had taken effect.

The most important question came first. Flavio cleared his throat and in a surprisingly authoritative voice he asked: “Are you on our side?”

Lorskan tilted his head slightly and said, “for now,” in a deep voice.

Falkrunn restrained herself as Flavio asked the next question: “Who are the black cloaked figures whom you followed into the tower?”

“They are of the cult of Tiamat”

Flavio looked around, but the rest shared looks of confusion. “What is Tiamat?” He asked in way of clarification.

“Tiamat,” Lorskan said slowly, “is the Dragon God of Evil.”

“I knew it,” Falkrunn hissed, casting glares across the fire. Lorskan barely acknowledged her, his focus now solely on the Human.

Flavio folded his hands before him and leaned in. “And what did you do with the Green Dragon in the tower?”

“We offered it diamonds, and the cult asked for it to look on them with favour. They worship dragons, even try to resurrect those who have died.”

“What is your association with the black cloaks?” Olara chimed in, and Lorskan turned his gaze on her.

“My job is to… eliminate the cult,” he replied with some difficulty.

There was a collective sigh of relief, and Keyzana said, “he’s trying to destroy them, not work alongside him.”

“Remember that he said he was on our side for now, not forever.” Falkrunn told them, her doubt not fully diminished.

“The spell is wearing off,” Flavio told them, shifting back in his seat.

“We’re okay,” Olara assured them, “at least for now. He will not kill us in our sleep, at least.”

“Except that he knows we’ve just interrogated him with magic,” Falkrunn pointed out.

Keyzana smiled mischievously. “One last question.”

“Yes?” Lorskan asked, annoyance appearing at the corners of his black eyes.

She folded her arms and peered at him with her head cocked. “Which one of us is your favourite?”

“Albus,” Lorskan said without hesitation.

“The crazed Rock Gnome?” she demanded. “He’s not even with us anymore!”

“Flavio is my least favourite,” he provided, and it was clear he was shaking out of the spell.

“Well, I think that’s all we needed,” Falkrunn said, standing and heading to the trees. She needed to clear her head.

The evening was starless and heavy, and soon everyone but Olara was asleep. She knelt and watched and waited.

Falkrunn awoke to the light touch of a hand on her shoulder. Her eyes flew open immediately, and she saw Olara standing over her. She nodded and they both stood quietly. Tiny droplets of rain misted the cool night air, and thunder rumbled off in the distance. Falkrunn crept forward on short legs and skirted the dying fire, moving to where the huge Dragonborn lay deep in sleep. She put her hands over his black-scaled body and whispered a Sleep incantation, but it was difficult to tell if the spell had worked or not. She thought perhaps it hadn’t, but had to risk it anyways.

Dwarf and Elf both knelt down and dug through the Dragonborn’s possessions, carefully taking out each item and inspecting it. Olara pulled out a thick scroll, eyed it, then handed it to Falkrunn. She turned it over in her hands and unrolled it, but didn’t recognize it. They shared a look and Falkrunn went over to wake Keyzana and ask her. Keyzana woke from her trance and unfurled the scroll, reading it with eyebrows raised. “It allows the user to divine their next course of action.”

“It can tell the future?” Falkrunn asked, amazed.

“Only once, if I’m not mistaken,” Keyzana told the Dwarf, handing it back. “What else have you found?”

“Not much,” Falkrunn whispered just as Olara gestured them forward.

The Elf held a small piece of metal that was engraved and painted: a blue crest with the white head of a dragon in the foreground. “What is that?” Falkrunn asked.

Olara’s lips parted in a half-smile. “It’s the symbol of Bahamat – the Dragon God of Good.”

“So he is good after all,” Falkrunn muttered. Lorskan shifted in his sleep. They quickly replaced everything back into his bag and returned to their spots. Keyzana took watch and Olara went into her trance after a few minutes.

Falkrunn covered her face from the light patter of rain and fell back asleep, exhausted but feeling slightly more reassured.

The following day was long and overcast, but by evening the skies cleared up and a long stretch of orange and pink sunset spanned across the horizon. As soon as they made camp, Lorskan went off in silence and practiced his fighting maneuvers. Olara pulled out a pouch from her satchel and began brewing some tea.

“What’s in it?” Flavio sniffed at the liquid.

“It’s mushroom tea,” Olara said innocently.

Falkrunn held up a hand as the Human went to take a sip. “It’s special tea, Flavio. You might not want to drink it. It makes the drinker… feel strangely.” He looked confused, so she elaborated by gesturing around her. “Everything goes a bit askew.”

Flavio looked aghast. “I am a cleric! I would never partake.” He sniffed and walked to the other side of the fire as Olara passed a steaming cup to Keyzana and then Falkrunn.

Hours later, everyone but Keyzana went to sleep. Falkrunn constantly admired the Elves for their need to only have a few hours of trance-sleep per night, and she was grateful to have them around as their nightly watchers.

“Up!” Keyzana cried. “Awake!”

Okay, this has to be some cosmic joke. There’s no other reason for it, Falkrunn thought as she rolled from her bed with her longsword drawn and ready for any invader.

“The skies!” Olara cried, and sure enough a massive winged creature swooped low over the fire and dived straight for Keyzana.

“Stirges!” Lorskan yelled, and Falkrunn saw it was true. The large, bat-winged creatures had long, beaked noses and hairy backs, and reminded her vaguely of a giant mosquito. The sky seemed to be full of them.

Just as one of the Stirges hit Keyzana, she managed to erect a shielding spell. It’s long nose broke through the shield and pierced her through the shoulder, immediately sucking blood and filling its belly with the red liquid.

Another struck Lorskan and began pulling blood from him. Olara managed to roll out of the way as one dived towards her and its long beak struck the ground, leaving the creature to flap its wings fiercly and try to pull itself free.

A second Stirge went for Keyzana, and though she was weakened from the first she managed to hold her shield spell and it glanced off the invisible wall.

Falkrunn ducked and rolled, but was hit from above and cried out as pain lanced along her collarbone. Lorskan batted at the one stuck in his shoulder, but it twisted and flapped and remained firmly implanted. He roared in rage and grabbed at it, pulling it out by the beaked nose and cutting off its head with his gleaming silver sword.

Falkrunn fell back and grunted as she hit solid ground. She had dropped her longsword and tried desperately to reach it. Quickly she invoked her bardic magic and began to sing an inspiring tune. Her voice drifted upwards loudly, drawing the attention of her companions. She directed the bardic magic to Olara, who was as yet untouched by the Stirges.

Suddenly filled with Falkrunn’s spell, Olara stood and aimed her shortbow at the Stirge implanted in the Dwarf’s shoulder. The arrow sailed through the darkness and hit the creature’s belly, which exploded with Falkrunn’s own blood. The Dwarf stood, drenched but grinning. She raised her longsword to the Elf and cried in triumph.

Large magic missiles shot from Keyzana’s glowing hands and hit the creatures that were attacking her. Both shriveled up and turned to dust before her.

Falkrunn scanned the sky and saw another one swooping towards Keyzana just as she fired the last of her missiles. Flavio aimed to attack, but the human did not have darkvision, so his guided bolt missed the Stirge and sailed like a meteor through the darkness and over the treetops. Lorskan stepped up and cut the final Stirge clean through the middle, then wiped his blade in the grass and nodded to Flavio, who sighed in relief.

“Thank the Realm that’s over,” Keyzana said as Olara moved to bind her wounds.

“We really need to do something about the pests,” Flavio said, tending to the fire.

The corpses of the Stirges were burned, and another day of walking preceded that. As they neared the approximate destination of the castle, Falkrunn pulled the map from her leather jerkin and scanned it. The map was rather vague, giving them a wide stretch of forest to search. Flavio sidled up next to the Dwarf and looked down at the map. “Ah, I see. I know where to go. I’m good with directions.”

Falkrunn raised an eyebrow, but handed him the map without protest. There was no way he could do a worse job than she. He took the map confidently and walked in the straightest line she had ever seen.

Hours passed, and Flavio led them directly through an obscured pass in the trees. They followed the pathway along for a while and soon it opened up to reveal a tall mass of towers. The stone was cracked in places, and the front doors hung by their hinges.

“We’re here,” Falkrunn said, catching her breath. “We’ve made it to Cragmaw Castle.”

Goblins and Jibes

 

Cragmaw Castle was a looming mass of gray stone surrounded by thick green trees. The large wooden front doors hung open off their hinges, giving the place a look of haunted abandon. The companions eyed the place warily, wondering if the Druid had been correct in leading them here.

There were very few sounds in the forest.

“I saw a flash of something!” Olara said quickly, pointing up at an arrow slit in one of the towers. “A weapon, no doubt.”

“So, it’s not abandoned,” Keyzana said, walking a short distance off and then returning. “There seems to be a stairway leading up to a side entrance over here.”

“Let’s take the front entrance,” Flavio suggested.

Falkrunn nodded in agreement. “The side entrance is probably still used by the goblins in that castle, but it looks as though this main entrance is virtually untouched. However,” she said, looking to Keyzana, “I don’t think we should just walk in there, weapons drawn.”

Keyzana nodded thoughtfully. “We should disguise ourselves, then.”

“Exactly,” the Dwarf smiled, and the two of them conjured an illusion over themselves. Falkrunn felt the strange sensation of magic sweeping over her, and within a minute, Falkrunn now appeared to be a short goblin, and Keyzana stood a tad shorter than her usual height with the thick arms and hairy torso of a Bugbear.

“Alright,” Falkrunn said, pulling out a couple pieces of frayed rope from her pack and handing them to Flavio and Lorskan, “you two are our prisoners. Olara, can you sneak in behind us and keep an eye out?” The Elf nodded her consent. “Great! Let’s go kill some goblins.”

“Just a moment,” Flavio raised a hand, “can I ask why we’re here again?”

“To save my Uncle Gundren,” Falkrunn answered, not quite sure if he was being serious.

The human nodded thoughtfully. “Oh, yes, that’s right. Okay, carry on.”

With a shake of their heads, Keyzana and Falkrunn took the ‘prisoners’ weapons, and began pushing them towards the front entrance.

The path was overgrown and rocky, and the stairs leading up to the entrance had been smashed in places, evidence of a battle fought long ago. Falkrunn gazed upward as they entered the castle, nervously eyeing the killing holes as they passed beneath them.

Flavio kicked a rock with his foot and it skittered across the floor noisily, echoing through hidden hallways. The place was dimly lit from the scattering of windows that sat high above them. To their right was a doorway next to a flight of wooden stairs leading to a second doorway. To their left was another set of doors.

“Which way should we go?” Keyzana whispered down to Falkrunn. “I wish that Druid had come with us.”

Falkrunn looked back and forth for a second, peering through the darkness. “Um, right?”

They pushed Lorskan and Flavio right, pushed being a generous word considering even the human towered above Falkrunn. Olara slipped through the darkness and out of sight behind them as they made for the stairs. The wooden planks creaked painfully as first Falkrunn and Flavio, followed by Lorskan and Keyzana, ascended the steps. The Dwarf hesitantly placed a hand on the door and pulled it open, revealing a small candlelit room inhabited by two goblins, hunched over in conversation. They straightened immediately and turned to the new arrivals.

“Gurtrac kavik soona-hak?” The first goblin demanded, eyeing the strangers with a hand on his belt.

None of them spoke the goblin language, Ghukliak, and Falkrunn felt a sudden surge of panic at their stupidity. She recovered quickly, however, and adopting a goblin-esk voice she leaned in and in a growly voice, said in the common language “this Bugbear commander is from far. He prefer to speak common. Is much better than Ghukliak when travel, he say. He practice and make us speak too.”

The two goblins looked at each other but nodded, seeming convinced. Falkrunn breathed a sigh of relief at their slow minds. “Who you? Where you from?” The first one asked, stepping toward her.

“Wave echo cave,” she told them in her grumbling voice, and turned to the second goblin with a gesture, “I think we cousins. Maybe have same mother?” The goblin looked confused but didn’t reply. Perhaps his common speech wasn’t great. “We come with prisoners. They have bounty.”

The first one’s eyes widened in excitement as he took a closer look at the huge black-scaled Dragonborn and the bored-looking human eyeing the room with disinterest.

“Step up, ninnywags,” Falkrunn shoved Flavio forward. “Let look at you.”

Lorskan stepped forward slowly, deliberately, his hands twisting behind his back in the ropes that were not tied. As the goblins were distracted by their newfound prisoners, Keyzana sidestepped. With a deep breath she drew her sword and slashed swiftly at the nearest goblin. It shrieked and jumped back as her blade cut across its chest in a scarlet arc. Falkrunn drew her own longsword and leaped towards the second goblin, but he was ready for the attack and rolled out of the way. The Dwarf (who still looked like a goblin), jumped back and pulled out her shawm instead, playing a few quick notes on it and directing her bardic magic towards Lorskan.

Lorskan’s chest seemed to swell with the power of the song, and he dropped his ropes and held out a clawed hand, his sword appearing into it in a shimmering instant and disappearing from where it hung on Keyzana’s back. Then he swung it down and severed the first goblins neck clean through. An instant after his head, the body hit the floor and quickly spilled out a growing pool of blood. A leg twitched, then went still.

“Stop!” Keyzana yelled, lowering her bloodied longsword. The remaining goblin screamed furiously and, with frightening speed, leaped up at her and stabbed her arm with a tiny dagger. The Elf who looked like a Bugbear tore at the creature, trying to release its grasp on her. Flavio, who was without any weapons, stepped up and punched the goblin in the side of the head as it clawed Keyzana’s face. The goblin fell off the Elf and landed on his feet, and Keyzana took her sword and drove it down through his collarbone and into the floor. The goblin squeaked pitifully and went limp.

With a grimace, Keyzana slid her blade from the goblin’s corpse and wiped it clean before replacing it in her scabbard. “So much for questioning it,” she sighed, taking back Lorskan’s weapon and handing him back his rope. She tied up her arm with a strip of cloth from her pack to staunch the small amount of bleeding.

Flavio reached down and grabbed his own rope from the ground cheerily, and after all hurriedly scanning the room and finding nothing of interest, the four of them made their way back through the doorway. Falkrunn just barely noticed Olara hanging back in the shadows, and the Elf nodded to her, seeing that they were unharmed.

The door at the bottom of the stairs suddenly burst open and a goblin ran out, evidently hearing the noises from up above. An arrow came whizzing out of the darkness and hit the creature in the forehead, pinning it to the open door. The scream of another goblin came from within the open room, and the disguised goblin and Bugbear, Falkrunn and Keyzana, scrambled down the stairs and ran straight into the room past the pinned goblin body.

“Quick! Grab your weapons!” Keyzana shouted, “the prisoners are attacking!”

There were two goblins in their room, one with a scimitar and the other holding a short bow. They ran past Falkrunn and Keyzana with war cries, believing them to be allies.

Lorskan emerged in the doorway and, his sword once again having appeared in his hand, hacked of the arm of one of the goblins. The goblin screamed in pain and fell back, holding his bleeding stump. The creature whimpered and pushed himself away on his heels.

The other goblin reached in for an attack against the Dragonborn and cut his leg with a dagger. Flavio entered at that moment with a heralding cry and Falkrunn tossed the warhammer to the human. He ran at the goblin who had left a large streak of blood across the stone floor and raised his warhammer with two hands, smashing it down onto the goblin’s head. Blood and brains exploded in all directions as the thing was eviscerated.

Keyzana grabbed the goblin attacking Lorskan from behind, holding him by the throat with her arm so his feet dangled helplessly. He scrambled for a moment and then gave up with a pathetic whimper, acknowledging his sudden defeat.

Keyzana dropped him, and with her sword pointed in his face said, “tell us what we need to know, and we won’t hurt you.”

The goblin frantically waved his arms in front of himself, tear-streaming eyes pleading, “no kill. No kill!”

“How many of you are there?” Keyzana demanded.

“Many, many!” He squeaked.

“Are there any Bugbears in this castle?”

He nodded his head fervently, casting fearful glances at everyone. Olara had emerged from the shadows and now stood next to Falkrunn, watching the interrogation with interest.

“What about a Dwarf?” Falkrunn chimed in. “Are there any captives?”

“Yes, yes, yes, a Dwarf!” the goblin answered.

“Do you know of anyone named the Black Spider?” Keyzana asked, her voice going quieter.

The goblin’s tiny body began to shake uncontrollably, and he shook his head no.

“What about Glasstaff?” Falkrunn added.

The goblin shook his head again. “Wizard left two days ago.”

“Two days,” Keyzana cursed, lowering her sword point.

“Who has the Dwarf?” Falkrunn demanded. “Where is he?”

“King Grol has. In his chamber.”

“Tell us how to get there,” the Dwarf stepped forward, hands clenched into fists. “Tell us exactly. Better yet, show us.”

The goblin muttered for a moment, then looked up at the Dwarf who appeared to be a goblin and nodded in resignation. “Yes. Okay. I tell.”

With silent footsteps the companions snuck along the hallways of Cragmaw castle, clinging to its shadowy edges. They came across a steep pile of rubble that had nearly buried the adjacent door. Through the opening at the top of the pile shone a faint light, and they could hear the clattering of dishes and the pattering of smaller footsteps.

“Stay quiet,” Keyzana warned to her goblin captive in a hushed voice, “or I won’t hesitate with this blade.” She lifted the tip of her longsword and pointed it at the goblin’s face to make her point.

The goblin nodded fiercely and pointed at the opening. “Must go through there!”

Lorskan gritted his teeth and moved up the pile to view the room within.

“So, about this Glasstaff fellow,” Flavio turned to the goblin, scratching his own chin, “he had this fantastic mahogany desk back in Phandalin. I don’t suppose you know where he got it?”

The goblin tilted his head for a moment and then pointed up at the opening. “Desk. Desk in there! See?” Flavio made for the pile of rubble with an ooh of excitement.

“Rotten food and broken tables, plus half a dozen goblins to kill,” Lorskan informed the group in his growling voice.

Falkrunn crawled up next to Lorskan to see for herself. Flavio clambered up with some difficulty beside her and made a disappointed tsk when he saw the rubbish-strewn tables and stacked dishware, no richly designed furniture in sight.

Huge piles of dishes were stacked precariously on the few still-standing tables. It was a mess hall, in every sense of the word. The floor and everything on it seemed to be covered thickly with grime. Small goblins stumbled around the room, heavy laden with various food items and emptied plates. They worked quietly considering their tasks.

An extremely large goblin emerged from a door on their left, his rotund belly guiding him into the room. He wore a floppy hat and a long apron that may have once been white, but was now thick with grease stains and something that looked suspiciously like vomit.

“There’s the cook,” Olara said, having come up on the pile behind them silently. Falkrunn jumped at the sudden voice, then nodded. She couldn’t believe how stealth that Elf could be at times.

“I’ll try to put as many as I can to sleep,” Falkrunn whispered to them, “but the rest of you will need to be ready for a fight.”

“I’m always ready,” Keyzana smiled, sheathing her longsword and climbing lightly to the opening.

Falkrunn gave one last look to her companions, and with a nod she cast the spell. Her vision focused as she breathed out the slow, song-like incantation. The magic floated along the floor in invisible tendrils and reached the three nearest goblins. Falkrunn was the only one who could see it crawling up their tiny legs and twisting into their ears and eyes. The three goblins wavered and collapsed slowly, their dishes clattering to the stone floor and breaking into a thousand tiny pieces. Falkrunn winced. Not too subtle, was it?

The fat goblin moved surprisingly fast as he went to the shoulders of the nearest collapsed goblin, trying to shake him awake. “Sleeping on the job!” he growled, then cursed in his own language. “Wake up, fools!”

With a sharp breath, Lorskan mounted the rubble behind where he hid and leaped into view. He released a thunderous burst of air and fire, which immediately consumed the three sleeping goblins, and left a fourth one screaming and burning, and then finally collapsing in agonized cries. The cook had managed to roll out of the way by shielding himself with one of the sleeping bodies, which was now completely burnt to a black crisp. He shouted and threw aside the burnt corpse, standing with his belly out and a grimace on his wide, ugly face. Falkrunn skidded down the pile of rubble and pulled out a throwing hammer, releasing it into the air towards the cook, missing by inches. She shook herself and stood up, rubbing her knee in pain where she had slammed it into the ground ungracefully. Flavio followed her down with a few inaudible mutters.

The fat goblin rushed at the Dragonborn with a large club and threw it, hitting Lorskan over the head. The Dragonborn stumbled back and reached for his sword. Keyzana had come through the room and was now running forward with her sword drawn. The smaller goblins had backed away, some scrambling for weapons and others staring in shock at the fiery display.

Olara was still crouched over the ridge and released an arrow into the huge belly of the cook. He grunted and pulled the arrow free, casting it aside as if it were a mere bug bite. Keyzana’s sword came down on the goblin but he caught it with his own hidden blade and pushed her back with a heave. He was a surprisingly good fighter, for a cook.

Finally, the other goblins seemed to have caught on, and one rushed forward to attack Lorskan, but tripped over a pile of dishes and dropped his makeshift weapon. A second goblin clambered onto a nearby table that was still standing and, bringing up a short bow, shot an arrow straight at Keyzana. The Elf managed to turn in time and deflect the projectile with a quickly cast shield spell. It shimmered and vibrated as it absorbed the goblin arrow, closely followed by a second arrow that was also stopped midair.

CRACK. A bolt flew through the air with incredible speed from Flavio’s open hands and struck Keyzana’s shield, shattering it instantly in a flash of light and burying itself into the back of her neck. She barely had time to gasp before she had hit the floor, unconscious and unmoving. “NO!” Olara cried, drawing another arrow.

“Oh,” Falkrunn heard Flavio breathe, looking down at his hands, unsure.

Lorskan bellowed in annoyance and summoned three identical missiles from his open palm, releasing them with a word. They simultaneously tore through the cook and the goblin who had been shooting at Keyzana, dropping them both.

Falkrunn raised a hand and cast her healing spell in Keyzana’s direction, feeling the spell hit the Bugbear illusion and dig out the bolt from her spine, knitting together the nerves, muscles and flesh. She barely had time to register if the Elf was alive before distractedly pulling out another throwing hammer and aiming it haphazardly at a nearby goblin who was charging. The goblin avoided the throw, diving behind a stack of plates.

Olara had strung two arrows to her bow, and as she slid down the rubble she released them both. One missed a goblin by a hairsbreadth, but the other buried itself in flesh. At the same moment, Keyzana raised a hand weakly and released her hawk, who flew in confusion for a few moments before diving at Flavio, pulling up at the last second and causing the human to shriek. Olara strode past him at the same moment and smacked him hard on the back of the head. “Idiot,” she spat, giving him a scathing look as she passed him. He rubbed his head and, looking up at Keyzana’s hawk muttered, “dumb owl.”

The goblin that was hiding behind a stack of plates came out for another attack and with the fastest reflexes Falkrunn had ever seen, Olara fitted another arrow into her bow and shot him straight through the left eye. The goblin dropped his weapon and grabbed at his face, screaming incoherently. Then, he ran.

“Don’t let him get away!” Falkrunn cried, looking desperately to the Bugbear illusion of Keyzana, who was now standing, if a bit unsteadily.

Algernon the familiar sprouted from Lorskan’s hand and flew up, chasing the screaming goblin down as it escaped through the door and turned left through a heavy curtain. That’s going to be noisy, Falkrunn thought frantically, looking around for any more enemies.

She turned when she heard Keyzana swearing loudly. The Elf-Bugbear had pushed against Flavio with her raised forearm and the human ducked under her swing. “If. You. Ever.” She growled, “hit me with your magic ever again, I swear I’ll rip your face off.”

Flavio yelped and backed up.

“We don’t have time for this,” Lorskan said with gritted teeth. “Algernon has him cornered. Let’s go.”

When they jogged up to where the goblin had run, they saw him fumbling at a door with one hand, the other covering his bloody, tattered face. It seemed Algernon had torn his face half to shreds, which made Falkrunn gulp and wonder if Keyzana would ever send her hawk to do the same to Flavio.

Algernon dove and struck again. The goblin held up a bloody knife in defense, but it slipped from his hands and clattered to the floor. “Put him out of his misery,” Falkrunn said, feeling suddenly sick.

Olara drew an arrow obligingly and it struck the goblin through his other eye, felling him on the spot. Algernon screeched and returned to his master, disappearing with bloody talons and all.

“Glad that’s done,” Olara said with a deep breath, replacing her bow behind her. Keyzana pulled a healing potion from her pack, which was disguised by her Bugbear illusion, and downed it in one gulp. Immediately the colour returned to her pale face and she tossed the empty bottle aside with another dark look at Flavio. The glass smashed on the ground amidst old dust and forsaken debris.

Their goblin captive had not gotten far. They found him crouched over the large body of the cook, sobbing uselessly. Falkrunn picked him up by his scruff and shook him, startling him out of his grief. “Where do we go next?” The goblin picked up a trembling finger and pointed it toward the far door. “Lead the way,” she said, thrusting him forward.

A huge Bugbear and a tiny-by-comparison goblin came striding into the barracks confidently, eyeing the messy beds made visible to normal eyes by the lit sconces in the wall. Two Hobgoblins jumped to attention, then, realizing who had just entered, returned to their conversation. “Hey, idiots!” Keyzana grumbled in the best Bugbear impression she could muster. “Two prisoners have escaped and are somewhere in the castle. Didn’t you hear the noise?” The Hobgoblins eyed her uncertainly for a second. “Well!” She barked, “go find them!” They hopped up, drawing their weapons somewhat reluctantly and making for the door. Falkrunn pulled out her sword but tripped as she was going to attack, her blade passing dangerously close to one of the Hobgoblins. He stopped and rounded on her, holding his sword point up threateningly. She held up her hands helplessly and said in her goblin voice, “sorry, sir. Tripped.”

The Hobgoblin said something she missed and turned back to the doorway with the other one. Phew, that was close, she thought. If I had touched him he would have seen through my illusion. Keyzana used the distraction to draw her own blade and stab at the Hobgoblin. She slashed his ribs and he fell back, stunned and bloodied. In the same moment, Olara appeared on the other side of the doorway with her bow, but her arrow flew over his head as the other one stumbled into her.

The Hobgoblin with the serious wound dealt by Keyzana pushed past Falkrunn and ran for a curtain-covered doorway, escaping before she could react or take him down. She didn’t know what else hid behind that curtain, so she turned to the immediate threat.

Lorskan grabbed at the other Hobgoblin and managed to knock it over. Flavio had conjured a spectral weapon, which floated, surrounded by mists in midair and kicked around ineffectively. Leaving his spell to its own devices, he drew out his warhammer and dropped it on the Hobgoblin’s foot. It howled and stumbled back just as Falkrunn tried to cut at its legs. An arrow from Keyzana whizzed past Falkrunn’s ear and clattered against the stone doorway and she cursed aloud, pulling another arrow free. Olara managed to reach through the chaos with a dagger and stabbed at the Hobgoblin, burying the blade hilt-deep into the Hobgoblin’s side between the chunks of leather armour. Realizing he was overwhelmed and seriously injured, the Hobgoblin turned to run where his companion had left only moments ago. Falkrunn anticipated this, and stuck out a stubby leg, causing him to trip and fall heavily to the floor. “Fell for that one,” she said with a humourless laugh and drove her longsword through his back, severing the spine.

There was a cry as their goblin captive turned and ran, arms flailing. Lorskan quickly drew his own bow and, when the arrow hit, the goblin’s cries fell short. He lay sprawled against the ground, lifeless, one arm reaching for the open archway leading outside, an arrow through his back. Falkrunn shaded her eyes against the light of the sun streaming in and turned back to the dim barracks. A low, moaning growl followed by a heavy thump came from another doorway inside the barracks.

“What in the name of—” but she didn’t need to ask, for the growl was followed shortly by a low, echoing hoot.

“Let me get this straight,” Falkrunn said, adjusting the sword at her back. “We have an owlbear in the barracks, a gigantic snake-like creature in the chapel according to our friend Algernon, the tiny flying dragon-hawk, our goblin guide is dead with an arrow in his back, and we still have no clue where my uncle or this King Grol fellow is.”

“Not to mention,” Keyzana added, “we haven’t seen any of the Bugbears the aforementioned goblin told us about.”

They had moved the body of the Hobgoblin out into the hallway and had picked through his belongings, but found nothing of use.

“Be thankful the wizard is not here,” Lorskan grunted. “And it is not just a big snake. It is on the ceiling, and I’m quite sure I heard suction sounds as it moved.”

Falkrunn threw her hands up in their air, pacing. “Scars,” she swore. “That’s even better!”

“Too loud!” Flavio squeaked as the owlbear on the other side of the door slammed and scraped against the wood, which bent a little too easily for Falkrunn’s comfort. She flinched, and they all collectively held their breath. They had lingered too long without making a decision. There was another low, growling hoot, and then, suddenly, the wood gave way, cracking beneath the weight of the giant owlbear. The companions jumped into action, hiding out of the way of the lumbering beast as it beat down the rest of the door and, with a snort, pushed its way into the barracks and started snuffling around. From her hiding place behind the doorway, Falkrunn could see that ribs showed through the fur of the creature. It had been starved for who knew how long, and now it was looking for a meal.

It seemed to catch the scent of blood from the escaped Hobgoblin and prodded its nose through the curtain doorway, disappearing behind it. A minute later they heard a thud, a shriek, and then the sounds of tearing flesh. “Sounds like we don’t need to worry about that one, anymore,” Olara whispered, though they had given up on stealth a long time ago.

They all quietly left their hiding places and moved to the door of the chapel wherein the monstrosity slithered, or, more accurately, clung. Lorskan pulled a torch from a bracket in the wall and in one swift move swung open the door, flung the torch in, and pulled the door hallway closed. Flavio waved a hand and muttered an incantation, and the flame of the torch burned a little brighter, illuminating the walls of the room. He peered in, scanning the ceiling, then turned to the rest of the group and shook his head. “Not there,” he said, peering up at Lorskan. “Wait!” he gasped in a hushed whisper. “There, on the walls. It looks like stone, ten feet long at least I’d wager.”

Enough of this waiting, Falkrunn thought impatiently, striding across the hallway and into a storage room that crossed paths with the barracks. She reached out her mind until she felt the presence of the owlbear, and the singular thought within its slow-moving mind. Hungry.

She nudged into its mind, not forcefully, but perhaps a bit less gently than she had hoped. Food here, she told the beast, come out, this way. I will show you.

It took a moment, but the response she got was a sort of growling purr. Appreciation. More food would be welcome. She pictured the owlbear stepping over the shredded body of its Hobgoblin meal, and she quickly backed up, signaling to the others to step out of the way as she pulled open wide the door to the chapel and ushered the owlbear in. Its steps grew more excited, and it spared a quick glance down at her with giant, black eyes, before stepping into the cold room with the nearly burnt-out torch upon the ground. Falkrunn flew forward as the owlbear disappeared through the doorway, trapping the beast inside with the monster. There was a loud flop as the giant snake dropped to the floor to meet its new prey.

A battle ensued.

Lorskan pulled the door open a crack as animalistic growls, hisses and hoots emerged from the chapel. After a quick breath, he hunched into the room and ran through darkness, skirting the fight entirely. Falkrunn followed him, pressing against the wall as much as she could and running for a doorway at the end of the room. The torch had all but gone out, but she had the darkvision of a Dwarf, and took an awe-filled moment to watch as monster and beast tore at each other, a surprisingly even battle. The owlbear was ferocious, fighting with a massive gash along his ribcage that had left a thick flap of skin, fur and feathers to hang from him. The giant snake-like creature had a giant maw that opened like a massive flower full of venom and teeth. It hissed and dug into the leg of the owlbear. “Move!” Flavio said frantically, pushing her out of the way. Falkrunn shook herself and ran the rest of the way to the door, only breathing once she was through to the other side. The two Elves came through a second after one another, though Keyzana still appeared to be a Bugbear. Falkrunn looked down at her own illusion and noted that it held securely. How long had they been in the damned castle for? It felt like ages, but when she drew into her magical reserves, she found that it had been less than an hour. Realms, she thought desperately, will I ever find Gundren? Will I ever be redeemed?

Three very shocked, very terrified goblins huddled behind a giant stone altar. The altar itself was overlaid with a white sheet gone red with blood. Along the altar were placed three golden items: a chalice, a knife and a ḉensure.

Flavio tore out his warhammer and with a battle cry ran for the first terrified goblin. He crushed its back and bones before it could even stand, much less defend itself. Falkrunn, shocked into reality again, drew out her longsword and cut another goblin down, feeling a wrench in her gut that could only have originated from—but no, now was not the time.

Fight. Kill. Die if you must. The words echoed in her as blood splattered the wall behind the goblin. She had split his torso in twain. The fight between owlbear and snake-creature echoed from the other room.

When Falkrunn looked up, quickly wiping wetness from her cheeks before anyone else saw, Lorskan had a hand up to the last goblin and his ears were bleeding. Could it be? Had he cast Toll of the Dead? That was a spell for necromancers. What could he be doing with such a power?

The goblin slumped against the walls, eyes glazing over. Then he shook his head, and with a quick burst of speed ran for his life through the door to the room of monsters. He drew his weapon, screaming, and actually jumped onto the body of the snake and began hacking at the owlbear. That, from a goblin? Falkrunn thought distantly, sheathing her sword unsteadily without wiping it clean and bracing herself on the doorframe, watching the goblin fight with an intense bravery she had rarely seen in such a lowly creature. It took a full minute of hacking and slashing before the goblin was tossed aside by the owlbear and his body skittered across the room, barely stirring.

Lorskan had drawn up his hand above Falkrunn in the doorway without her noticing and cast his magic missiles, shooting one at the dying goblin, which struck his shoulder, and two more at the giant snake. “Kill the Grick!” Flavio cried, sending a guided bolt through the room and at the snake—Grick—whatever slimy monster that was. It recoiled in pain as the bolt struck it in the roof of its sprawled-open mouth. Keyzana sent her own magic missile into the room, striking the Grick directly in the eye. The huge monster wavered for a moment, half its body raised into the air, and then collapsed with a heavy thump.

The arm of the goblin bent as if he were going to stand. Panicked, Falkrunn pulled one of her throwing hammers from inside her cloak and pitched it into the darkness. It cracked against the goblins skull, the blow to finally end the brave creature’s final bout.

The injured owlbear came stumbling out of the heaping mess of coiled snake, its breathing laboured, its thin body barely holding together.

Quietly, resignedly, Olara released a final arrow into the room. It struck home in the owlbears chest, and the great beast breathed its last and rolled over with a moan, finally dead. “Thank you, great beast,” the Elf whispered, replacing her bow. Falkrunn entered the room to retrieve her throwing hammer, and, when no one else was looking, she placed a hand on the shoulder of the fallen goblin and said quietly, “Thorok bae barak Grobbi,” she paused, unable to think of a prayer. “Tha yol vad Ka’az” Goodbye, brave Goblin… I’m sorry, Father.

“You won’t believe this,” Keyzana said in awe, and Falkrunn rushed back into the altar room. The others had gone through a side door and into a storeroom. Lorskan held up a long, gleaming blade in the firelight. It shone silver, but the hilt was black, inlaid with the distinctive carving of a wolf.

“It is Sildar’s sword,” Lorskan said in awe, turning the blade in his hand.

“But how? How did it get here?” Falkrunn asked slowly, watching the sword as it reflected her goblin illusion in the blade.

Everyone was silent in their own thoughts.

Glasstaff, she thought with a spike of fear, putting a hand to her dagger and gripping it tightly.

 

Wizards and Wise Cracks

 

The five companions explored every room in Cragmaw castle it seemed, but had yet to find the captured Dwarf, Gundren. They pushed through dozens of doors that led to empty storage rooms, bunkers, and more hallways. A few of them even partook in some Dwarven brandy they had discovered abandoned in large oaken barrels. Falkrunn could not pass up a taste (or perhaps a goblet) of some of her people’s finest, and the slight buzz that filled her head made her worries melt somewhat.

The castle seemed an endless maze, and Falkrunn couldn’t recall where they had started. They had been in the castle for nearly an hour and she could sense the last of her disguise spell slowly draining away. Another fifteen minutes, and she would look a Dwarf again.

Lorskan led the way, pushing through yet another door.

Four Hobgoblins sat in a circle on the ground, tossing rocks and pushing pieces around on a board. It appeared to be some kind of roleplaying game—these creatures were truly quite abnormal. They were so engrossed in their game that they didn’t notice as the five companions entered the room. The new arrivals acted quickly.

Olara notched an arrow and released it without hesitation. It hit her target in the back of the neck and he fell forward onto their game, scattering pieces in every direction. The others looked up in surprise, and quickly stumbled to their feet. Lorskan ran up with his sword drawn, but his target dodged his blow. Falkrunn drew out her longsword and went after the Hobgoblin nearest her, but he managed to jump out of her reach and pull a sword off a rack on the wall. Metal clanged against metal as the fight began.

Another Hobgoblin reached the rack and drew up a Morningstar, raising the massive spiked club at the others in the doorway. He rushed forward but tripped over the fallen Hobgoblin, and his Morningstar went crashing into the open door, burying itself in the thick wood. He howled and tried to break it free and Keyzana took advantage of the opening and hacked through his arm with her longsword. The Hobgoblin fell back, abandoning his Morningstar and staring in shock at his missing arm and the sudden cascade of thick red blood. Flavio took up his warhammer and brought it around to crash into the middle of the Hobgoblin’s chest, crushing bone and knocking him to the floor.

The final Hobgoblin had taken up a longbow and shot a barbed arrow into Lorskan’s side, hitting him between the soft parts of his armour. Lorskan staggered back and Olara shot the archer, who was left bleeding from his shoulder, but alive and cursing in his own guttural tongue.

Lorskan hit the wall and slid down it, unconscious, a gaping wound open in his side. Falkrunn raised her hand and spoke a word of healing, which stitched flesh and scales back together. Then, with her longsword in hand, the Dwarf renewed her attack on the Hobgoblin wielding the sword. He left a gap in his defense and she ducked through his open swing and slashed his hamstring, forcing him to drop his weapon and fall heavily to the floor, wailing in pain. She turned to the sound of a loud, twanging snap and saw the Hobgoblin with the longbow had broken his bowstring while trying to loose an arrow at her. His arrow clattering uselessly to the floor and he scrambled to find a new weapon. The Hobgoblin on the ground cried through his pain and shouted “help! Help! Intruders!” He reached out for his sword but Falkrunn stomped on his hand before he could grab it, and she felt the crunch of tiny bones beneath her boot.

In the mess of blood, shouts and flying weapons, Keyzana strode forward with a huge swing and drove her longsword down over the top of the archer’s head, splitting the skull down the middle. Flavio used his warhammer to silence the one Falkrunn was standing over, and the room was suddenly quiet again.

There was a hissing sound and the smell of burnt flesh as Keyzana branded a sigil from her ring into the face of her downed enemy. Falkrunn rubbed her blade clean and looked over at Lorskan, who was still unconscious. There was a momentary flicker in her mind that perhaps they should leave the Dragonborn behind. He may be their ally now, but she doubted he valued loyalty. The Dragonborn were seldom liked or trusted in these parts for good reason.

Flavio looked over at Lorskan as well, and with an impatient sigh he strolled up to the Dragonborn and slapped a heavy hand down over Lorskan’s face, then prayed a healing spell over him. Lorskan stirred awake moments later, and Flavio stood up and brushed off, looking satisfied with himself. The Dragonborn sniffed and rubbed his nose.

Olara stood at the weapons rack and inspected the various objects, picking up a longsword and eyeing its sharp edge with a pleased glint in her eyes. There were indistinguishable runes written on the blade. She turned her head from side to side and reached over to a nearby table to grab a sheath, then began strapping the weapon to her hip.

They checked the bodies for anything of use but found nothing. Falkrunn moved to the opposite door they had yet to explore and threw it open, stepping through with Keyzana at her side.

Two tiny goblins peered around the corner of the hallway with bows raised, arrows drawn, and arms shaking. They were terrified.

“Hey. Hi!” Falkrunn said as calmly as she could with raised hands, still appearing to be a goblin and using her golbin-esk voice. “Nothing to be afraid of here. We were supposed to bring a message to King Grol, but we can’t seem to find—”

Lorskan rushed ahead and gutted one of the goblins, skewering him on his blade. The second goblin dropped his bow and with a terrified shriek ran straight out the front entrance and outside. It seemed that they had come full circle through the castle and were now back at the beginning. Before he could be slowed, Lorskan pounded after the escaping goblin and released a powerful strike of magic against him. The goblin dodged around the broken doors and disappeared.

“We’re lost,” Falkrunn swore, slapping her palm against the wooden doorframe. “We could have asked that goblin where to go.”

Lorskan returned with a shrug and pushed between her and Keyzana. Olara and Flavio emerged from the room cautiously, watching the Dragonborn leave. The four companions looked at each other, then followed resignedly.

They were back to the barracks on the opposite side of the castle, near where the owlbear had escaped earlier. Falkrunn threw her hands up in the air in frustration. “We need to find my uncle. We don’t even know if he’s still—if he’s still alive.” Her voice broke.

As if on cue, there was a loud clatter and the sounds of scuffling. Then, a low, growling voice broke through. A voice that Falkrunn recognized.

Uncle! she thought hopefully, leaping towards the sound. It came from the room with the shattered door. “Get. Away. From. ME! Get away!” Gundren burst into the room, tripping over the broken door and pushing himself to his feet with an angry shout. He turned and, with a look of astonishment, rushed toward the group. “Thank the Realms you’re here! It’s about time you showed up!” He said, looking surprisingly healthy considering his circumstances. “Where have you been?”

“How did you know we were coming?” Olara asked, stepping up to him.

“The goblins told me, of course. Come on, we need to go, now!“

“Wait a second,” Keyzana said, eyeing the Dwarf suspiciously. “Who were you just talking to?” The Elf who looked like a Bugbear strode towards the room from which Gundren had just escaped.

Gundren reached out a hand and grabbed Keyzana as she passed him. Keyzana looked down at the fingers firmly grasping her forearm, her face instantly gone cold. She tried to pull away from him, but he held tightly. “There’s no time,” the Dwarf warned, his voice growing dark. “We need to RUN!” He bellowed the last word, and Keyzana blinked once.

“Why? Who’s in there?”

“Hobgoblins!” Gundren answered, looking extremely anxious.

“Why haven’t they come out, Uncle?” Falkrunn asked, examining the Dwarf more closely.

In the momentary distraction, Keyzana released her hawk in a flash of light, and the hawk dove through the doorway.

“NO!” Gundren shouted furiously, releasing the Elf.

Lorskan grabbed the Dwarf roughly by the throat and pressed him against the wall, lifting him off his feet.

“Wait!” Falkrunn cried, unsure.

The would-be Gundren gulped for air, his face turning red, then purple. “Give it” gasp “up, Grol. They” gasp “have us.” Gundren’s skin began to bubble and reshape itself. His legs lengthened until his toes were touching the stone floor, and his body elongated. Long, flowing white hair sprouted and his red beard receded to reveal a black-skinned elf with pointed, Elvish ears.

“Dark Elf,” Flavio whispered, watching in awe. “A Drow.” The Elf was female, and she smirked.

Lorskan did not relinquish his grip on her neck despite the transformation. He pressed his scaled fingers deep into her throat. “Who are you?” The Dragonborn demanded, his golden eyes piercing hers. She pressed into his grip as much as she could and hissed threateningly. Falkrunn thought he might crush her windpipe.

The interrogation was cut short by the sound of a low rumble from within the other room. Keyzana stepped back from the doorway, which she was about to enter. Her hawk swooped down and returned to her with a screech and disappeared.

A massive wolf stepped through the splintered door. It was as tall as Flavio. The gray wolf hunched down, raising its hackles and baring its teeth. Lorskan reached around for his sword, but the wolf moved faster. It pounced, flying through the air and knocking the Dragonborn heavily to the ground and ripping into his arm with its fangs. The doppelgänger dropped and rolled out of the way, leaping to her feet and bolting past the wolf.

There was a howl of rage from behind them, and Falkrunn spun around to see a massive Bugbear emerge from the curtained doorway. He wore thick, dented armour and atop his head rested a rusted circlet, indicating a crown. In one hand he held a dagger. In the other, he dragged an unconscious Dwarf. He hefted up the small body and touched the end of the dagger to Gundren’s throat—for this was the real Gundren, though the Dwarf had been beaten so badly and his face was so disfigured, that it was hard to distinguish features amongst the bruises and dried blood. Falkrunn thought she heard a slight groan escape his lips.

“Uncle!” she screamed.

“Back away!” The Bugbear warned, digging the tip of the dagger into flesh, coaxing out a few drops of scarlet.

Falkrunn immediately stepped back, but kept her sword raised.

The Bugbear smiled. “Nobody moves, or I’ll cut his throat.”

With her quick Elf reflexes, Keyzana upstretched a hand and shot an acid-green arrow at King Grol, for it was indeed the king himself.

Grol moved quickly, ducking out of the way, and the arrow exploded on the wall behind him. Thick droplets of acid flew everywhere, splashing onto his back. There was a sizzling sound and he shrieked in agony as the acid burrowed into his skin, burning away armour and flesh as if it were mere parchment. Yet, he held his grip on Gundren. The dagger had cut a jagged line across the Dwarf’s exposed throat, bleeding into his thick red beard. How much blood did Gundren have left? Was he even breathing anymore? Falkrunn moved desperately, her anger flaring to new heights.

“Curses on you, beggar King,” Falkrunn said forcefully, flowing magic through her spell of vicious mockery. She had learned the spell only a few days ago and felt this an appropriate time to use it. She released all her fury into it. “You are nothing. You are dirt, like the royal ground you walk on.” She stepped forward, feeling as though she towered over him, though he was at least four feet taller than she in her goblin disguise. “What kind of name is Grol anyways? It seems your mother was as stupid as she was obese.”

The spell took effect immediately, overwhelming the Bugbear with intense feelings. King Grol dropped Gundren, dagger still in hand, and fell to his knees, tears in his black eyes. He began to blubber uncontrollably, and Falkrunn laughed scornfully. Behind her she could hear Olara attacking the Drow, and she looked back to see the dark Elf’s fist ripple through the air and strike Olara, blasting her off her feet. The Drow turned and sprinted for the curtain, leaping over both King Grol and the fallen Gundren and disappearing behind the curtain.

Seeing Flavio readying a spell, Falkrunn quickly pulled out her flute and released her bardic inspiration to the human, filling him with extra power.

Flavio sent a magically guided bolt at Grol and it pierced the King’s hand, sending his dagger spinning through the air and landing across the room. The King folded his arms into himself, holding his wound to his chest.

Meanwhile, Lorskan fought against the wolf, which still stood over him, barring his escape and dripping saliva. The Dragonborn managed to wrestle his arms around the wolf’s neck and twisted it around until he had it pinned. The victory was short-lived, however. The wolf broke free and sunk its teeth into Lorskan’s other arm, then pranced away. It seemed it had crushed its paw, for it favoured one as it stepped back. Wolf and Dragonborn circled one another, seemingly oblivious to everyone else in the room. The wolf growled, and Lorskan roared back at him in a ferocious bellow. The wolf’s ears dropped back and his tail lowered. He whimpered and backed off, intimidated.

Falkrunn inched forward, hoping to cut down the King whilst he was distracted. The King noticed her movement and dove at Gundren’s unmoving body, picking it up into the air and throwing it against a nearby wall. There was a sickening crunch as Falkrunn’s uncle hit stone. She ran to him, ignoring the King. Ignoring everyone else but Gundren. Before she could reach him, the Drow burst again through the curtains and drove a knife through Gundren’s heart. She barely stopped moving as she leaped again and ran through the opposite doorway.NO!

That was it. How could she save him now? He was gone. He must be. His heart had stopped. Hers had filled with despair. Why. Why did I take so long? Why was I too weak? Why, why, why…

Grol had picked up a Morningstar and ran to his wolf’s side. The fighting continued, but Falkrunn barely registered any of it. She held her hand over Gundren’s chest and spoke a word of healing. She waited with bated breath.

Waited. Waited.

A faint heartbeat. Colour was returning to his stoic face. He was alive.There!

She looked up, setting Gundren’s head gently on the ground.

Keyzana had speared Grol with three magic missiles, which stuck from his acid-burnt back like raised quills on a porcupine. He stumbled to one knee as a fresh arrow sprung through the side of his neck, releasing a spurt of blood and a gargle of pain. Olara lowered her shortbow, surveying the damage, expressionless.

Falkrunn ran to the kneeling Bugbear. She kicked him heavily in the chest, knocking him to the ground, then leaped onto his chest and pressed her longsword against the skin of his bleeding neck. “Why did you take the Dwarf?” She demanded, barely restraining her anger.

The bleeding King laughed, spitting up more blood and nearly choking on it. His arms just held her blade back, sparing him a few more moments of life.

Flavio pared up and took a golf swing at the Bugbear’s head (or, at least it seemed to be aimed in that direction), but completely missed and tripped over his own feet. He rubbed his backside, muttering that he was “never good at the game, anyway.”

Keyzana ignored the human and went to kneel beside Falkrunn, looking down at the pitiful King. “Where is the Black Spider?” she hissed.

Grol coughed up more blood, and she held her blade directly over one of his eyes. “W-wave Echo Cave.” He coughed again.

“What is he?” She asked slowly.

After some hesitation, the King groaned and, frothing blood, said, “he is a man. But, you’re too late,” he smiled through gritted red teeth. “Glasstaff is on his way back as we,” “speak. He will slaughter you all.” He opened his mouth in silent laughter.cough

Keyzana raised her blade slightly, then drove it through the King’s open mouth. His black eyes went lifeless, and the rusted crown fell with a clang to the floor. Falkrunn fell back, exhausted. Her hands shook as she replaced her longsword and crawled back to her uncle to check on him. Olara had her hands pressed over the wound in his chest, which still bled.

Flavio cast a spell and the closed curtain flew open and remained that way. “No more surpises!” He declared, nodding to himself. It seemed the wolf had disappeared with the Drow, because Lorskan now walked up to the rest of them, seeming slightly worse for wear, both arms bleeding from bite wounds. Keyzana released her hawk and sent him through the hallway to fly over the castle. With glazed eyes, she watched for a moment. When she returned, she said “the wolf is pacing the castle outside. I could hear the Drow crashing through the trees. She is gone, it seems. I doubt she will return, now that her master is dead.”

“If that was her master,” Olara said quietly.

“We need to search the rest of the castle,” Keyzana told Falkrunn regretfully, looking down at the unconscious Dwarf.

“Go,” Falkrunn said, “I’ll watch over him. I—I can’t leave him now.” Keyzana nodded and went through the open curtains. Lorskan followed with clenched fists, dripping blood.

Gundren’s eyes fluttered open and he gazed up into Falkrunn’s face, looking confused. “Falkrunn? Is that you, niece?”

“It is,” she confirmed solemnly. “Here, let me help you up.” She placed an arm under him and raised him to his feet. Her goblin disguise had melted away.

The two Dwarves limped into the adjoining chamber where the other companions were searching under furniture and pulling out drawers. It was the King’s chambers, and the room was horrendously grimy, and a thick, pungent smell hung in the air. “Think we could open a window?” Falkrunn asked lightly.

“There is a map,” Gundren croaked, “did you find it?”

“What map is that?” Falkrunn asked, easing him down into a chair.

“It is a map of Wave Echo Cave. They stole it from me when I was captured by those foul goblins.”

“That’s where the Black Spider is,” Keyzana said. “We haven’t found anything, but we aren’t done searching.” She ripped open a wardrobe as she spoke and tore through its contents.

Falkrunn ran to the dirty mattress and pulled the stained sheets free. There was a lump beneath it. She took the dagger from her belt and buried it in the fabric, ripping a giant hole into the mattress and releasing the stench of moldy straw. She reached in and felt around until she grasped something solid and pulled it free. She held a leather sack threaded closed with a drawstring. She laid it on the bed and opened it slowly, dumping out the contents.

A pile of silver and electrum pieces jangled free, and there were also a few glass bottles filled with a thick brown liquid. Falkrunn held them out to Keyzana, who approached curiously, abandoning the wardrobe she was exploring. “Healing potion,” she declared after examining the bottles, “may I?” Falkrunn nodded, and the Elf placed the bottles carefully in her satchel.

Something else wouldn’t shake loose from the leather sack. Falkrunn reached in and pulled it out. It was a thick roll of parchment.

Excited, she unrolled it and held it up into the dim light which was cast by an overturned brazier.

“That’s it,” Gundren said softly. “The map to Wave Echo Cave.”

“Rescuing that Gnome sure was a lot of trouble,” Flavio complained as he followed Lorskan through the barracks, over the corpse of the Bugbear. The human reached down and inspected the rusted crown, then tossed it aside once deciding it wasn’t valuable. Lorskan had entered the room with the splintered door, so Flavio followed him in.

They looked around the circular room, which contained an old desk and some scattered papers with lists of supplies written on them in blotched ink. Flavio searched every drawer in the desk and pocketed a few ink bottles for later use. Lorskan was searching the room as well but seemed disappointed by his findings.

“Not a very talkative fellow, are you?” Flavio asked curiously as he stepped over the door and left the room.

Lorskan grunted and followed.

The companions slept and Keyzana stood watch, her hawk left circling the skies for signs of trouble. The wolf had retreated to the forest without a trace. As she waited, the Elf flipped through her spell book, memorizing incantations she thought might be useful. She hummed softly to herself and looked up into her hawk’s eyes every once-in-a-while to see if anything was amiss.

She found a few spells that drew her interest, and began reciting the words, stopping at the final invocation and storing it away for future use.

The Dragonborn’s dragon-hawk Algernon was perched on a windowsill high up, surveying the forest alongside her hawk. The Dragonborn, meanwhile, snored loudly, the odd puff of smoke rising from his flared nostrils. She shivered and returned to her book.

Lorskan was untrustworthy. Flavio was harmless enough that it didn’t matter if she could trust him, but Lorskan… her instincts told her to be wary. Olara and Falkrunn seemed to be on her side.

For the sake of her own quest, she reserved her doubts to herself.

For now.

Falkrunn felt hands on her shoulder as they shook her awake. “ What is it now?” she moaned, climbing out of her bedroll.Blasting Bulette!

“You sure do swear a lot, Dwarf,” Keyzana told her, moving off to wake up the rest of the group. “There is a raiding party coming our way, about a mile North and moving at a quick pace,” she announced to them. “My hawk has spotted at least four Hobgoblin’s followed by a well-dressed man carrying a glowing staff and flanked by two massive wolves.”

Falkrunn quickly tied up her bedroll and clasped it onto her pack, heaving her belongings onto her shoulders.

“Glasstaff, I presume?” Flavio asked, rolling up his own bed. Keyzana nodded in affirmation. “Very well. I suppose I can save you all again in this dire hour of need.”

“Sure,” Falkrunn said, moving to her uncle and helping him up. He was still weak, and his face sported a scattering of deep purple bruises. He clutched his chest as he stood painfully and found a short sword in the corner of the bedchamber, lashing it to his side with a strip of leather. They hadn’t found the rest of his belongings anywhere.

“I know what to do,” Falkrunn said, nodding to herself. Before anyone could protest, she dashed out the door and ran through a side door into the brisk morning air. She barely looked down at the fallen corpse of the goblin they had captured and later shot, who lay prostrate with arms outstretched in the direction of the door, flies buzzing over his head.

Falkrunn rounded the corner and, heart pounding, cast a spell she had never used. It was one she had learned before leaving home and had never had use for until now. Or, perhaps she had been too afraid to use it. She prayed to Clanggedin Silverbeard for luck as she cast Invisibility over her body. She felt a cold sensation spread through her limbs and, when she looked down, she couldn’t see her own body. She felt suddenly dizzy, and leaned back against the castle wall, taking a few deep breaths with closed eyes. Then, shaking herself, she pushed off from the wall and ran.

Gundren limped after the others as they ran for the front entrance of the castle. His chest ached with every breath, and it took all his strength to push forward. Though the others outpaced him, he soon found where they stood. The towering Dragonborn took up the entrance, longbow drawn. The two Elves were on the stairs leading up to the tower room, and the human was puffing up the steps after them. Gundren followed, holding a stitch in his side.

He was nearly to the top when suddenly there was a deep, thundering boom that echoed through the castle walls, shaking the floors and causing loose stones to crash to the ground in a wave of dust. “What in the Nine Hells of Baator was that?” He shouted at no one in particular, nearly losing his footing.

Wolves howled just outside, and Gundren raced up the stairs, his wounds momentarily forgotten.

Falkrunn stood outside, invisible, near the castle entrance. Marching towards the door was the raiding party Keyzana had described. she thought desperately, surveying the group for weaknesses, Okay,to get to the wizard, I need to take down his guards.

“Targor, it’s quiet here. Too quiet. And I smell blood.” Glasstaff said, stopping the group with an upraised hand. “Search the castle!”

In a moment, the Dwarf knew what she had to do. She raised both hands and released her most powerful spell: Thunderwave. A giant wave shook the ground and grew up from where she stood, exploding in a burst of thunderous sound and knocking half of the raiding party to the ground. A few maintained their balance, and threw their heads around, confused.

Falkrunn looked down at her hands, which were still standing straight out in front of her… completely visible. She dropped her arms. The lead Hobgoblin, the one called Targor, turned to her and pointed. Falkrunn raised a finger, about to say something, then thought better of it, turned on her heel, and ran for dear life.

Flavio watched curiously through the arrow loop in the upper tower as a sudden rumble shook the air and the stone itself. He looked down and saw Falkrunn standing in the open, suddenly bared to the enemy. The Dwarf looked for a second as if she were going to say something, then turned and sprinted away. “Rip, Snarl!” The lead Hobgoblin shouted from where he now lay on the ground. “Attack!” The two massive wolves bolted after here with vicious, well, rips and snarls.

he thought, looking around to see what everyone else was doing. How fitting,

Falkrunn felt the wolves just behind her and dropped to the ground, rolling through the grass and narrowly avoiding the snap of teeth at her neck. She leaped to her feet and the two wolves broke off her escape, standing before her, grayish-brown coats ablaze with hungry ferocity.

Falkrunn reached for her longsword and touched empty air. Panicked, she spared a glance behind her, and saw that the blade had fallen from her sheath as she rolled. It was out of reach. she thought, calming her mind, Very well,a lullaby, then.

In a soft, sing-song voice, she cast a sleeping spell in all directions. It rippled through the grass, invisible to all others except for her. The wolves took on dreamy expressions in their deep brown eyes moments before swaying and collapsing, fast asleep. Falkrunn felt the spell hit a Hobgoblin not far off but didn’t look back. She quickly picked up her longsword and slipped it through the ribs of the nearest wolf, driving the blade into its heart. It whimpered before falling into the eternal slumber.

Olara shot the lead Hobgoblin in the shoulder and he pulled the shaft free as he came to his feet, shouting orders. The wizard had also been thrown feet through the air and was now regaining his footing. An arrow whizzed towards him, but he cast a blue forcefield in the nick of time, knocking it aside. Lorskan had shot the arrow, and now replaced his bow with his sword, ready for a fight.

“It’s them! It’s the group we’ve been looking for!” Glasstaff cried, backing up. “Fall back to the forest and form up!” Then, he cast a wordless spell and the air around him turned to mist. He disappeared in an instant, reappearing fifteen feet away. He bolted for the trees, robes swirling around him and staff held aloft. The lead Hobgoblin signaled those who were still standing, “Regroup! Protect the wizard!” The raiding party followed Glasstaff to the forests edge at a sprint.

“Cowards!” Lorskan shouted, returning his sword and taking out his bow once again.

Keyzana sent three magic missiles at the fleeing enemy, hitting two into the lead Hobgoblin and the third into another Hobgoblin, running toward the forest after them. Olara ran too and stopped only briefly to send another arrow. The Hobgoblin she aimed for raised his shield behind him, catching it skillfully.

Flavio and Gundren appeared at Lorskan’s side by the entrance, Gundren panting heavily and looking ill. “We must fight!” The Dwarf declared, raising his newly found short sword.

Falkrunn burst around the castle, sword bloodied but looking unharmed herself. She spared a glance at the three of them still in the castle, then watched in dismay as the Elves chased down the party. “Lorskan!” Falkrunn shouted, “stop that wizard!” Then the Dwarf took out her flute and played a few quick notes, sending her bardic inspiration to the Dragonborn. Lorskan nodded and, nocking an arrow and taking aim, he sent his arrow through the air, over the Elves heads. It planted itself into Glasstaff’s leg. The wizard tumbled and rolled, then leapt to his feet and pointed his staff across the field at Lorskan. Lorskan seemed to wobble on the spot for a second as if his legs were locked, but he broke free of it and, enraged, sprinted towards the wizard. Glasstaff pulled the arrow from his leg and began limping, his companions catching up to him. Then he dove into the trees for cover. The Hobgoblins formed up around him.

Keyzana and Olara had nearly caught up to them, and Keyzana dashed forward, ducking out of the way of a flying arrow, and cast a spell at the trees. It was impossible to see what her spell had done.

Flavio turned to look down at Gundren, “well, what are you waiting for? Let’s go!” He pulled out his warhammer and, with a war cry, leaped over the broken stairs and rolled to his feet. Then without stopping, he ran out into the open field to stand over the sleeping Hobgoblin that had been hit by Falkrunn’s sleep spell earlier. The Hobgoblin was just stirring awake, and its eyes popped open wide when it saw the human towering over it. Flavio leaned down and slipped a dagger through its armour and straight into its beating heart, making a quick end of it.

“That was surprisingly nimble for a human!” Gundren praised him, running up to where he crouched. “Good work—Flavio, was it?”

Flavio nodded, wiping off his stained dagger in the grass. “That’s right!”

“Let’s get the rest of them!” Gundren said, raising his sword above his head.

Dwarf and human raced for the trees, where their companions stood off against one lone Hobgoblin.

“You got us! We give up!” The Hobgoblin said, stepping from the trees with his arms raised in surrender.

Keyzana surged forward and tackled him to the ground, and the Hobgoblin did not resist as she pulled out a length of rope and tied him up, lashing him to the nearest tree. “We’ll deal with this one later,” she told Olara, and the Elf nodded in agreement, drawing her newly acquired longsword.

Lorskan pushed past both the Elves and tore through the air with his sword, decapitating the bound Hobgoblin in an instant.

“Why did you do that?” Keyzana demanded angrily.

“We don’t need prisoners,” Lorskan said simply, scanning the trees for the others.

“He surrendered,” Keyzana told him, ripping her ropes off the now headless body.

There was the sound of soft snoring coming from behind a bush, and Keyzana walked over to it, peering over. There was a black-haired, white-robed wizard, fast asleep from her sleeping spell. She smiled despite herself and moved to tie him with her blood-stained rope.

Lorskan quickly dispatched of the other Hobgoblins, who were also caught in a deep slumber. Keyzana took the wizard’s staff and began inspecting it as Falkrunn burst through the trees followed closely by Flavio and Gundren. “Great work,” Falkrunn smiled, gesturing to the unconscious wizard.

The Dwarf walked up to where he was tied and unceremoniously slapped him across the face. The wizard jumped awake, then narrowed his eyes when he looked at Falkrunn. He took a long breath and said “Oh, what can I do for you?”

“Hello wizard,” Falkrunn said, leaning back casually.

“That’s Iarno Albrek to you, Dwarf,” he said back.

“Yes, yes,” Falkrunn sighed, “we already know you were once friend to Sildar and betrayed him. Good for you. Now why did you do it?”

“Wait!” Flavio said, moving up to them and looking at Falkrunn pointedly. Understanding, the Dwarf moved back further and let the human cast his zone of truth over the wizard.

“Hmm, very clever,” Glasstaff said, though he did not sound impressed. He actually sounded bored. “Yes, well, it’s not as though I betrayed Sildar. I simply—found a more profitable opportunity elsewhere.”

“What master do you serve?” Keyzana asked.

“I serve no master but myself,” the wizard replied.

Olara moved into his line of sight, and the wizard looked up at her in satisfied recognition. “Ah, Olara. How are you holding up?”

“I’ve had better days,” the Elf replied, glaring at him with arms crossed.

They all turned to Olara in surprise and Lorskan stepped up and wrapped his forearm around her neck, pinning her and lashing a rope around her wrists. He pushed her onto her knees with his boot so she was facing Glasstaff. “What are you doing!” Keyzana cried.

“You heard him,” Lorskan gestured to Glasstaff and started pacing slowly. “She knows this man.”

“So if she knows him? She’s one of us. We don’t attack our own!” the Elf said furiously but did not move to untie Olara.what

“She could be working for him still,” Lorskan said.

Olara did not speak. Glasstaff started to chuckle, watching the dispute with interest.

“We shouldn’t fight amongst ourselves,” Falkrunn said desperately, turning back to the wizard. “How do you know Olara?” the wizard only laughed again.

“We should ask Olara,” Flavio said, redirecting his truth spell so it also lay upon the Elf. “Olara, how do you know this wizard?”

Olara did not take her gaze from Glasstaff. “I worked for him, once,” she said slowly, then looked up at her companions. “I’m not proud of what I’ve done, but it’s over. I seek only to redeem myself now.”

“” Glasstaff said mockingly, “how quaint.”Redeem,

“What did you do for him?” Keyzana asked her Elf-friend quietly.

Olara dropped her gaze and said nothing, looking ashamed.

“Look, we can question Olara later,” Falkrunn told them, “the wizard is our priority right now. Iarno, tell me: who is the Black Spider?”

The man merely smiled and did not answer. It compelled the speaker to tell only truths, but they could also choose to say nothing at all if strong enough. Lorskan leaned in and punched the wizard in the face, bloodying his lip. “Speak!” He barked.Blasted truth spell.

Iarno spit out a glob of blood and said, “someone you don’t want to meet.” Lorskan punched him a second time, cracking the man’s head against the tree. “Alright!” Iarno shouted, “he organized the Red Brands for me.”

“When did you last speak with him?”

“We do not to each other,” Iarno answered, looking annoyed. “We communicate through his henchmen, the Drow.”speak

“Very well,” Falkrunn stood, wiping dirt from herself. “We know where to find him. Uncle, you have the map?” Gundren nodded in response.

“” Olara spoke hardly above a whisper.Who did you send after me?

Glasstaff looked thoughtful for a second, then said “everyone I sent, you have killed.”

Olara nodded as if her suspicions had been confirmed. Glasstaff mumbled a few names, but Falkrunn had stopped listening. She was thinking about the Black Spider.

“Olara, tell us what you did for the wizard. Was it stealing? Kidnapping?” Keyzana asked.

“Yes,” Olara answered and Glasstaff smiled.

“Ha! She was his assassin,” Lorskan told them, still crouched over their captive, his bloodied knuckles resting on one knee.

“I killed when I had to,” the Elf said.

“Are you loyal to us?” Keyzana asked, kneeling next to her friend, hand on her shoulder.

Olara nodded. “I am now.”

“Well,” Keyzana said after a moment, “that’s all I need to hear. I still trust her more than I do you, Dragonborn. I’m untying her.” Falkrunn bent to help Keyzana with the knots at Olara’s wrists.

“Hey, so… are you guys my friends?” Flavio asked, feigning casual. Falkrunn realized with a short laugh that he had extended his truth spell to all of them.

“Uh,” Glasstaff said. “No. I am not.”

“Yeah, I wasn’t asking you,” Flavio said, folding his arms.

Gundren leaned up and patted Flavio on the shoulder, “sure, friend.”

“Can we kill the wizard now?” Lorskan asked, gesturing in annoyance.

“I guess we should,” Falkrunn agreed, and Keyzana and Olara nodded.

“Wait!” Iarno cried, looking suddenly desperate, “don’t kill me! I am a high ranking official in the council of Waterdeep. You do not want the council as your enemy. Take me back to Sildar. He will know what to do with me, and I’m sure he will pay you well for your troubles.”

It was quiet for a moment and Keyzana said, “fine, but I’m keeping the staff.”

Lorskan raised his arm and, for the third time, punched the wizard in the head. Glasstaff’s head lolled to the side, unconscious. Lorskan untied him from the tree, keeping his wrists and legs bound, and swung the wizard over one shoulder. Everyone looked at him in surprise. Lorskan shrugged, “what? He convinced me too.” Then lumbered away.

Gundren unrolled the map to Wave Echo Cave. “Right, then. We go to Phandalin first, then cut through here to get to the cave,” he pointed to a pair of intersecting lines on the parchment. “My brothers should be somewhere near Phandalin. We will want to speak with them before we go.”

Keyzana whistled aloud and a few minutes later a white horse trotted up from seemingly nowhere. It snorted as it came close. “Ah, Caviar!” The Elf said in a sing-song voice, “would you mind carrying an unconscious wizard for us?” The horse snorted again, pawing the ground impatiently. “Right,” Keyzana nodded, smiling.

Cragmaw Castle, it turned out, was not a far journey from Phandalin. By evening, the group had arrived in the small town, which seemed to be bustling with activity. It looked much better since they had left less than a week ago. It seemed that being rid of the Red Brands had done wonders for their commerce.

They all went to the nearest weaponry shop in search of better armour. All except Lorskan, who took Keyzana’s horse and the still unconscious Glasstaff and led them to the town hall to, as he put it, “return Sildar’s bane.”

Falkrunn found a sturdy shield she liked and purchased it, taking it outside and polishing the wood while humming a familiar tune to herself. Olara and Keyzana came out a short time after and they all sat in silence, watching the townspeople walk by.

Falkrunn thought uncomfortably, taking out her whetstone and sharpening the edge of the sword. I don’t know who to trust anymore,Can I even trust myself?

“It is done,” Lorskan said as he approached the silent companions. “Sildar will take Iarno Albrek to the council of Waterdeep, where he will await judgement.”

“That’s that, then,” Gundren said, looking disappointed.

Falkrunn thought, then began to sing a song of the Dwarves. That’s that,


The Day of Many Arguments


The companions sat in the Stonehill Inn, a central locale in the small town of Phandalin. It was a dreary sort of night outside, but inside the inn was cozy and full of drunken voices. Falkrunn strummed lightly on her lute while servers brought her the occasional mug of beer, which she drained consistently. Her meal of stew and bread was free, bought by her playing, and she felt finally, pleasantly comfortable.

She rested on a wooden stool near the fireside, watching the inn bustle with activity and excitement. Her uncle, Gundren, sat hunched over a nearby table listening to the squabbling of Lorskan and Keyzana. It was always something with those two. Olara stayed out of it, crossing her arms and leaning back in a calm manner as if nothing could pull her from her reverie. Flavio was contentedly scribbling something into a book and nibbling at a cheese plate.

“” Falkrunn sang. Gundren looked over in recognition of the song and raised a mug to her.Though skies may darken with the night, the hearthside of Dwarves stays alight, and when the dawn breaks forth anew, our mugs are filled with another brew,

They had reached the pinnacle of their journey, and now their goal had become clear: find Wave Echo Cave. Destroy the Black Spider.

There was a sudden bang as the cold wind and rain pushed through the door. Falkrunn stopped playing immediately, and half the inn turned to look at the newcomer. A soaked and perturbed looking Druid crashed through with a look of annoyance, then slammed the door shut behind him when he spotted their group. His long white beard was dripping with rain water. It was the Druid from Thundertree, the one who had given them the map to Cragmaw Castle. What was his name again?

“I suppose I should say I’m pleased to see you all still alive,” he grumbled, looking down at the new face of Gundren and holding out a hand abruptly. “Reidoth. Druid. Keeper of Thundertree and watcher of the young green dragon who haunts that forsaken town.”

“A pleasure,” Gundren said with a nod, although he didn’t seem pleased at all, and he wiped his hand on his other sleeve when the Druid released it. Falkrunn set her lute aside and approached the table warily. The Druid smelled of his journey, which means to say he utterly stank.

“I have news,” Reidoth said, dragging an empty chair across the wooden floor noisily and slamming it unceremoniously next to the table.

“Well hello to you too,” Falkrunn said facetiously. Clearly social interaction was not a familiar concept to this one. He grinned and took a seat.

“Is it about the dragon?” Lorskan asked, leaning in closer.

Reidoth nodded solemnly, then cursed suddenly and slammed a fist on the table. “This was a hard journey for a lone old Druid!”

Flavio waved down a server and pointed to the Druid. The young woman nodded and returned shortly with a mug full to the brim. The Druid gratefully drank half of it before wiping his mouth and continuing. “The cult of the dragon, the one you encountered? Well, it has split,” he said, taking another large gulp of ale. “Half stayed behind to worship the dragon. They seek to increase its treasure horde, and suggested Phandalin as the perfect target for his rich desires.”

“Phandalin is a small town. It’s only just gotten back on its feet after the Red Brand invasion,” Falkrunn protested.

“What of the other half of the cult?” the Dragonborn cut in.

“Gone, to Neverwinter I suspect.”

“When will the dragon attack?” Olara straightened, staring intently at the Druid.

“I’m not sure if it will. I only sought to warn you that it may.”

“That’s not a lot to go off,” Lorskan grumbled, but his gaze withdrew, and he looked thoughtful.

“Are you offering your help?” Keyzana asked the Druid after a moment’s silence.

Reidoth eyed the group, which had grown to six members, then nodded. “I will do what I can,” he said, and added reluctantly, “if I must.”

“A night’s rest, then,” Falkrunn suggested. “It is late. We can discuss what to do in the morning.”

They all agreed, and one by one they ascended the stairs to their rooms, some finishing off mugs of ale or getting into discussions with other townsfolk.

“Oh,” Keyzana said, standing at the foot of the stairs and looking Reidoth up and down, “I would suggest a bath before we leave.”

The Druid grunted and lifted an armpit, taking a loud sniff. “It’s not so bad,” he said, dropping his arm again and shrugging.

Keyzana raised an eyebrow, then left.

After another quiet moment, Gundren stood and patted a hand on the Druid’s shoulder. “It’s bad,” he grimaced, then ascended the stairs.

The Druid looked over at Falkrunn and lifted his arm for another thick lungful. She wrinkled her nose and quickly departed.

Falkrunn, Flavio and the two Elf women sat at their table in the inn, breaking their fast on roasted pork cutlets and fresh strawberries. Falkrunn sipped a dark ale and checked the stairs again. “Didn’t I say morning?”

Olara shrugged and Keyzana sighed. “Morning can mean many things to humans and Dragonborn’s alike.”

“Excuse ,” Flavio said, though he was barely listening, so engrossed in his writing as he was.me

There were heavy footfalls coming down the stairs, and everyone turned to look up as, wait, who was—was that Lorskan?

The Dragonborn had shrunk somewhat, his shoulders leaner and his entire frame wirier. His scales were still black, crested by two golden horns, but his features had softened, and his build was not so intimidating. Everyone stood, staring up at him. Flavio’s mouth hung open.

“” Flavio asked.Lorskan?

“Dramatic entrance, much?” Falkrunn asked after a moment, frowning.

The Dragonborn nodded, smiling, and turned to show them two wings that now stretched and unfurled from his back. “What happened to you?” Flavio stammered as Lorskan folded back the wings.

“I have sworn an oath to Bahamat.”

“I’d say,” Falkrunn snorted. “You can fly now?”

“That’s convenient,” Olara added. “What’s your wingspan? Can you still breathe fire?”

“Did the transformation hurt?” Keyzana asked curiously. “Did you know this would happen?”

“How is your armour going to fit?” Falkrunn asked, “now that you have wings and you’re not so—big? Can you carry someone else when you fly? How many people can you carry at once?”

Lorskan raised a patient hand. “Yes, I can fly. And I will need new armour.” He strode toward the door.

“Okay, sure,” Falkrunn said, nodding to the others. “Yup, this is normal. Perfectly normal. Uh, barkeep?” She gestured across the room, waving down the human behind the counter and pointing to their table. “Yes. I’m going to need another drink here. Actually, make that two. A strong Dwarven ale, if you don’t mind.”

Lorskan left to buy new armour, and a short while later the Druid and Gundren came down to eat. The Druid had thankfully bathed, and no longer smelled of rotten goblin feet. They explained Lorskan’s sudden transformation, and Gundren shook his head, “you all asked a lot of questions, considering he probably doesn’t know the answer to any of them yet.”

“I guess we’ll find out just how big the change truly was,” Keyzana was saying when a young messenger boy ran through the back entrance and trotted up to her, bouncing on his feet.

“Message for you from the Mayor!”

“Me?” Keyzana asked, taking a scrap of rolled parchment from the boy. With a confused expression, she broke the wax seal and unfurled it. As she read, her eyebrows knitted together. Slowly, she rolled it back up and tucked it away. The boy stared up at her expectantly with an open palm, practically dancing on the balls of his feet now. She reached into her money purse and dropped two fat silvers into the boy’s hand, then patted him somewhat condescendingly on the head. She looked rather uncomfortable having the tiny human around. The boy’s eyes grew wide when he saw how much she’d paid him. “Thanks!” he gasped, then turned on a heel and sprinted away.

“What is it?” Falkrunn asked hesitantly after the boy had gone.

“It’s—my family,” Keyzana answered slowly.

“What do you need from us?” Olara asked.

“Nothing for now. Thank you, friends, but I must go. I’ll be back in a moment.” With that, she left the inn.

Olara and Falkrunn shared a glance before Falkrunn went to their other companions and said, “come, let’s gather up Lorskan and decide what must be done.” They all agreed and were soon outside the weapon’s shop. Lorskan had just been fitted for a new shirt of chainmail and a breastplate.

“I have somewhere I need to go, first,” the Dragonborn told them.

“Where’s that?” Flavio asked.

“The Nothic cave under Tresendar Manor. He has something magical, and I want it.”

Falkrunn folded her arms. “Why?”

Lorskan paused. “Because, it’s—important to our quest.”

“Fine,” Falkrunn replied. “But I’m coming this time.”

“I’m in, of course,” Flavio said.

“So am I,” Reidoth said begrudgingly.

“Yeah,” Gundren finally sighed. “I guess I’m in too.”

They all looked at Olara expectantly, and she held up her hand. “I’m alright. Go ahead. I’ll go find Keyzana.”

With that, they traipsed after Lorskan, up the hill to Tresendar Manor.

They entered a wide, naturally formed cave that was nearly pitch dark even to Falkrunn, who had darkvision. Reidoth flickered into better view when he summoned a flame to glow before him, lighting their path. There were half-eaten corpses strewn above the cavern floor, and the air was supernaturally cold. A giant green eye appeared in the dim light followed by a skittering across the rocks and a low hiss as the hunched Nothic creature appeared. They had encountered the creature before, only a week ago, when they had stormed Tresendar Manor.

Lorskan began to talk aloud. “It’s good to see you too.” Silence. “I don’t have food, but I can make a trade? Shiny for shiny?” More silence.

“What’s happening?” Gundren leaned in and whispered to Falkrunn.

“They’re communicating telepathically,” Flavio answered as though it were obvious.

Falkrunn turned and began to slowly walk along the wall of the cave, searching.

“Are you sure?” Lorskan was saying. “I can find more food for you if you want?”

Falkrunn saw more gnawed bones and lifeless bodies. A severed arm here, a broken skull there. There was an echo as Lorskan stepped towards the treasure chest the Nothic creature was protecting. There was another unpleasant hiss. Falkrunn turned to see what was happening. “I will trade you,” Lorskan was insisting, but it seemed the creature would not agree.

Falkrunn thought in annoyance, making her way back to the cave entrance as Dragonborn and Nothic continued to argue, only one side being heard. Falkrunn spotted Keyzana and Olara hanging back at the entrance of the cave, and she moved over to them as swiftly as she could.This is going to go badly,

“Olara,” she whispered, looking up at the Elf, “I need you to shoot that creature in the eye. Take it down if you can.”

She nodded and, without a word, drew the fletching of the arrow to her cheek and released in a breath. The Nothic spotted the movement at the last second and pulled up its shoulder with a hiss, the arrow burying into its hide.

“Give me that quarterstaff on your back!” Reidoth shouted at Lorskan as they jumped out of the way of the Nothic’s vicious claws. Lorskan tossed the staff to the Druid and he twisted it in his hands expertly.

The Dragonborn skirted around the swiping Nothic and went for the treasure chest. The creature spotted him and narrowed his bulbous eye. The acid green eye darkened to an angry red and Lorskan fell to his knees, crying out in pain and clutching his middle. Gundren took the momentary distraction to rush at the creature, his hammer raised in one hand. Lorskan continued to crawl towards the chest as the Nothic turned to this new onslaught of attacks.

Gundren’s hammer struck the creature in the face and thick vines twisted from the ground and wrapped around its legs at the same time. The Druid was holding up his arms and smiling at the effect of his spell. Another arrow pierced the Nothic in the chest, shot by Keyzana, and in the same moment there was a flash of white light as a spear pierced through the Nothic and into the ground. The Nothic’s body burst into white flame, and the large green eye went dim after a few shudders from the dark creature. Reidoth walked up to the dead body and wacked it with his staff for good measure.

“Congratulations, I think it’s dead,” Falkrunn said sarcastically, having not even raised her own weapon.

Lorskan was crouched over the open chest and was sifting through pieces of gold, silver, green gemstones, and a small container of glowing vials. Keyzana inspected the vials and noted them as various healing potions. “There’s nothing magical here,” he said in disappointment, leaning back on his heels.

“What exactly were you hoping to find?” Keyzana asked, entrusting the potions to the Druid with a knowing nod.

“The cold air. It must be cast from a magical item.”

“That’s what this is about?” Flavio asked in surprise. “The cold air is from a spell used for a common elite household item. It keeps meat from going rancid.”

“There is a rumour,” Gundren explained, “that such a spell could be tied to the Forge of Spells, known to be somewhere in this area.”

“So, it’s nothing special,” Falkrunn added, “and this was a waste of our time. I’m going outside to start a fire, because I, for one, am starving and bored.”

“I’ll come with you,” Keyzana told her, and Olara followed absently. The others stayed behind in the cave to search it more thoroughly.

“I don’t get it,” Falkrunn said, shaking her head, “we are wasting so much time sitting around. We need to get to Wave Echo Cave. We need to find whoever this Black Spider fellow is and kill him.”

“Or her,” Keyzana added.

“Or her! I don’t know why we’re still in Phandalin.”

“What about the dragon?” The Druid demanded as the rest of the group strode up to their burning campfire.

“You said yourself you don’t know if the dragon is going to attack.”

“But what if it does?” Lorskan demanded, “you would allow the people of Phandalin to die?”

“Since when do you care?” Keyzana frowned.

“I care,” he said in annoyance.

“Good for you,” Falkrunn said. “Uncle, what do you think we should do?”

“I need to find my brothers,” Gundren told them. “I asked around at the inn, and anyone who has heard of them thinks that they went to the mines.”

“Then that’s where we need to go,” Falkrunn smiled.

“We need to kill the dragon,” Lorskan said. “And to do that, we first must go to Neverwinter and destroy the cult.”

“Why do we care about them?” Olara asked.

“They seek to destroy what is good in this world,” the Dragonborn said, seating himself at the opposite end of the fire. “We must take them down. Then, we can steal their cloaks and go to the others in Thundertree under a guise. We will kill the others in the cult, and then we will take on the dragon.”

“The disguises will work for two seconds,” Gundren shook his head. “The moment we attack the dragon, it will incinerate us. And besides, we could get black cloaks from just about anywhere.”

“I’m not travelling another four days ,” Falkrunn growled in frustration.in the wrong direction

“I can’t leave my brothers for that long,” Gundren added.

“Your plan doesn’t add up,” Flavio said quietly.

“There is a lot that doesn’t add up here,” Keyzana stood. “Let’s take a vote.”

“I must go to Neverwinter,” Lorskan said solemnly.

“Then you’ll go alone,” Falkrunn said. Everyone went quiet.

“I have an idea,” Olara said finally, uncertainly.

“What’s that?”

“Well,” she paused thoughtfully, “why don’t we leave someone to guard the town of Phandalin, in case the dragon attacks. Then, we go to the mines and find Gundren’s brothers, and perhaps even take down the Black Spider. If anything goes amiss, we return here.”

“I can do you one better!” Reidoth smiled, finger in the air, white hair sticking up in a wiry mess, “I will speak with a raven—yes, I can do that,” he said to the group’s doubtful gazes, “and tell it to watch the town.”

“So, you’re willing to go with us to Wave Echo Cave?” Keyzana asked, and the Druid gave a tight-lipped nod.

“So long as I still have your promise to help me defeat the dragon.”

“Of course,” Keyzana promised again.

“You are all idiots,” Lorskan grumbled, standing and kicking a log inside the fire. “I hope the dragon swallows the town of Phandalin and the mines cave in on top of your stupid, stubborn heads.” With that, he turned on his heel and stomped into the darkness.

“What a pleasant fellow,” Reidoth said seriously, sitting cross-legged next to the flickering flames.

“He hasn’t changed as much as I thought,” Falkrunn noted to her two Elven companions, and they nodded in agreement. The sky had grown darker. They had wasted nearly the entire day arguing. “There’s no point in continuing on anywhere today. Let’s sleep here and strike out at dawn.”

“Here? Instead of at the inn?” Flavio groaned.

“Less distractions out here,” Falkrunn said, looking around nervously. “I think.”

Gundren led as seven of the strangest, most unlikely companions hiked through the hills: two Elves, one Dragonborn, two Dwarves and two Humans. They travelled east of Phandalin with full packs and sharpened blades. Reidoth sent his crow to watch over the town of Pandalin and warn him of any dragon attacks. Falkrunn prayed there would be none.

Eventually they came about an excavated hill that Gundren recognized as the one he and his brothers had dug. “We’re close,” he told them, stowing away his map. The ground around the excavation site had been trampled by two-legged creatures of varying sizes, but the dirt had been kicked up too much to distinguish which creatures in particular.

The entrance to the cave was somewhat hidden, but Gundren pushed through the hanging grass and scattered stones and they followed him through. This side entrance opened into a natural cavern. Around the walls were scattered various barrels and crates containing mining equipment and food supplies. The stony ground was wet, and the cave was filled with stalactites and stalagmites that dripped and sweated into the rocks.

Ahead was the facedown body of a Dwarf.

Gundren ran forward, splashing through the puddles to get to the body. Fear shot through Falkrunn as she ran after him. With effort, Gundren rolled the body over and stared down at the open-eyed face of his middle brother. Falkrunn recognized her uncle immediately and gasped as she went to his side. The body was covered in stab wounds and dried blood. “Noooo!” Gundren cried out, shaking his fists skyward. His cry echoed through the cave.

“This body has been dead for at least a week,” Olara said quietly. They all stepped back and gave Gundren a few moments to collect himself. Falkrunn cursed and began pacing.

After a minute or two, Gundren pulled the boots from his brother’s feet and replaced his own. “What are you doing?” Falkrunn demanded.

“They were from my mother,” he explained, wiggling his toes in. “These boots have magical properties. They make the wearer faster, and allow him to jump farther, though that does not seem to have helped my brother…” he sniffed, trying to keep the emotion from his growly voice. “We should bury him in the stone.”

“We don’t have time for that,” Keyzana said gently, “but we will return. I’m sorry for your loss.”

After a pause, Gundren nodded and stood, taking a few light steps in his newly acquired footwear.

Falkrunn shook her head, feeling sick, and went to the opposite end of the cave where a rope was tied and thrown down the cliff’s edge. She leaned over and looked down. There was a platform, and then another twenty-foot drop after that to the cave floor. “We should go down,” she called back, her voice echoing across the stone walls. Without waiting for a response, she grabbed on to the thick rope and crawled over the edge. Keyzana came up and put a hand on the rope in case it slipped. Falkrunn gritted her teeth and began her descent.

When she reached the bottom, Falkrunn sent up sparks of gold and blue light to her companions, indicating it was safe. Keyzana came down the rope last, and the knot slipped. She fell the final fifteen feet, landing on Flavio and causing him to drop onto his back. He winced in pain and grabbed his arm. Reidoth helped him to his feet. “Sorry,” Keyzana breathed, rubbing her neck and standing.

They moved on, listening for any unusual sounds. The group followed a twisting passageway and encountered a split. “Left, or right?” Falkrunn asked.

“Right.” Keyzana told them, indicating for them to listen. They all strained their ears and, sure enough, Falkrunn could hear the of waves crashing on a shoreline. “Wave Echo Cave,” Keyzana smiled, and they headed down the righthand passageway.whooshing

They came upon a large cavern with a pool of still black water. Falkrunn reached down and picked up a sizable rock, hurling it into the water. It splashed, and the water rippled out from its touchpoint. Nothing happened.

“What was that about?” Reidoth hissed, grabbing her by the arm.

Falkrunn shrugged, “thought I’d try something.”

Below, they could hear the dull roar of an underground river. Keyzana sent her hawk to investigate. Meanwhile, the Druid bent down and appeared to be talking to a rock. “Um, what are you doing?” Falkrunn asked awkwardly.

“I’m asking this beetle if he knows where we need to go,” He answered matter-of-factly.

“Ah, right,” Falkrunn nodded, raising both eyebrows to the rest of the group.

“Hmm, just as I suspected,” the Druid said a short while after.

“What’s that?” Flavio asked.

“Beetles are exceptionally dumb.”

“Huh, go figure.”

“Not much from the other side,” Keyzana told them, returning to her own eyes as her hawk disappeared in a flash of light. “It’s definitely an underground river. Besides that, there is a group of tunnels up ahead that are rather short and twisted, and on the other end there is a passage that looks to be hewn naturally from the rock.”

They agreed to try the smallest tunnels first. The Dwarves were able to walk through the mineshafts comfortably, while the humans were of a height to the ceiling and the Dragonborn and Elves were bent down.

“What was that?” Flavio whispered, turning abruptly.

“What?” Reidoth asked, looking back.

“I thought I heard—”

There it was again. A distant noise.slurping

“That can’t be good,” the Druid groaned. “Can’t we move any faster?”

They couldn’t. In fact, the mineshafts had grown tighter, and they had yet to find anything of value, informational or otherwise. “We need to turn back,” Gundren said, “there’s nothing down here for us.”

They turned a corner and hit a dead end. There were abandoned pickaxes and lanterns, and golden vines spread across the walls, waiting to be excavated. They all groaned in unison. “Now we really need—”

The sucking sound came again, followed by a yelp as Flavio was suddenly grabbed by the ankle and pulled back down the passageway. They all pushed forward to see what had grabbed him. Flavio fell heavily to the ground and scrambled to his feet, wiping at his arm where an acidic slime clung to his armour and was seeping through. He cried out and shook it free, pulling out his weapon defensively and waving it in front of himself. A massive, gelatinous creature loomed in their only exit. The goop shifted and reformed as it its new prey.eyed

The tunnel was too small, too cramped. How were they going to fight in this? There were too many of them.

“Everyone ” Olara shouted, drawing out her short bow and raising it. She was the farthest from the creature, and there was no room for her companions to move out of the way. She swore in frustration and lowered her bow a few inches, watching as disaster struck.DUCK!

Keyzana, who stood just in front of Olara, raised her hands and managed to direct a powerful blast of missiles toward the blob. The bolts struck her target and submerged into its transparent mass, the magical energy surging through it. It dripped and oozed in fury. But, before it could strike, Flavio raised his hammer and slashed. The creature slid out of his way just in time, and Falkrunn took the distraction to cast a protection spell over herself. She then pushed under the legs of her companions and jumped past Flavio to get to the monster. Gundren followed her through but tripped over Lorskan’s leg and went sprawling into a pool of acid, burning his hand and shouting in distress. He pulled away, took out his hammer with his other hand, and swung down ferociously. The hammer dropped heavily into the slime and it split apart. He cried out in victory, but his joy was cut short. The creature snapped up, now two instead of one.

“Watch out!” Reidoth called, releasing a shimmering white light at the two globs. The goo seemed to convulse for a second, and then the first half of it slid up the wall, vibrating with anger. Lorskan jumped and ran past the two blobs, rolling behind it and getting some splatters of acid on his new armour.

The first blob, which was now high up on the wall, shot out and punched at Flavio, knocking him off his feet. The other blob shot up at the Druid and hit the man heavily in the torso, causing the cast of moonbeam to cease from his hands. Falkrunn turned as Olara shot past her, somehow managing to dive through the crowded mineshaft to the very forefront of the conflict. She leaped over the blob and landed next to Lorskan, who had yet to raise a weapon.

Just as Olara got to her feet, Keyzana released a ray of frost, but the creature jumped further up on the wall and the frost hit the stone wall, crackling. Next to the frost rose a hot flame cast by Flavio, who was still on his back. It shot out like a spear and hit the blob on the wall, piercing it through the middle and causing it to shrink and convulse. The goo bubbled and hissed, and a horrible smell filled the room. It convulsed again and the flame inside it dissipated. The blob reached out to attack again, quivering frantically. Gundren raised his hammer and cried menacingly. The Druid also reached up with his newly acquired quarterstaff and smacked the blob. The thing flew across the tunnel and hit the opposite wall, exploding into a thousand droplets of acid.

The blob on the ground shot up to attack Falkrunn, and she turned just in time to throw her hammer into it. It absorbed the hammer, falling back and eating at the metal inside it. “That was my favourite hammer,” Falkrunn cursed. The blob shot at Gundren suddenly, and he raised his shield in defense. As the blob clung to his shield, Olara made her shot and hit it with an arrow. The creature rippled in agony, then slid off the shield and dropped to the ground, dead.

Falkrunn leaned down and picked up her hammer, inspecting the damage. Noting that it wasn’t too badly pockmarked, she replaced it at her belt with a shrug.

“So,” Keyzana said accusingly, trying to push through everyone to where Lorskan stood hunched. “you don’t fight anymore. You used to be a fighter, and now you’re a—a—what are you exactly?”

“A paladin,” Lorskan said calmly.

“Oh, a ,” Keyzana said mockingly. “How nice for you, not having to get your hands dirty anymore. Now we have two useless people in this group instead of just one.”paladin

“Hey,” Flavio said defensively, and Falkrunn held back a snicker.

“I swore an oath,” Lorskan explained slowly, “to Bahamat, when he changed me. I swore that I would not kill anyone but Tiamat and her followers.”

“” Keyzana cursed, throwing her arms up, “so you could fly?”Why?

The Dragonborn shook his head. “I made my choice.”

Falkrunn didn’t know how to perceive this change in the Dragonborn. She narrowed her eyes and stared at him for a moment, then sighed. “C’mon, let’s get out of these hellish mineshafts. I’m sick of smelling the Druid.”

They went again through the cavern with the unmoving black water and took the secondary entrance that Keyzana had described from the eyes of her hawk. Once through, they saw that this path was much roomier than the last. They came upon a stairway cut into the rock and leading up into a tower. Flavio, who was walking in front, turned to the group and gestured to the stairs. “Should we go up?”

They all murmured their agreement and ascended the stairs. The tower was small but finely carved and shut by a decorated wooden door. Flavio touched the edges of the doorway, feeling for traps. Seemingly satisfied, he jiggled the knob and pushed it open with a creak. Inside, there was a stone counter with alcoves carved into the wall behind it. The alcoves were all empty, and there were scattered, unreadable pieces of paper everywhere. On the floor were the skeletal remains of small humanoid bodies. Gundren strode over to the counter and looked behind it. He reached down and picked up a lockbox, which he placed on the stone and examined. Olara walked to him and pulled out a lockpick from her cloak, but after fiddling with it for a few minutes, she sighed and declared the lock too rusted to properly open. Gundren stowed the box with his other belongings.

There were small, vertical arrow slits in the wall, and Reidoth raised his torch to get a better look at them. Lorskan reached for another door on the opposite side of the tiny, circular room and pulled it open. There was a stone pathway that led from their tower to another. Falkrunn crossed carefully behind him, and they entered another, similar tower with the same arrow slits. This appeared to be a guard’s tower. Looking across the cavern, Falkrunn could see from this angle that the tower in which they had just been was carved to look like a regal wizard. It was incredible Dwarvish craftmanship, and she gazed out at it in awe for a full minute.

“Amazing work, isn’t it?” Gundren said with a satisfied smile. She nodded, speechless. It reminded her of a home long forgotten.

There were bones in this room too. “Dwarves. And Orcs,” Olara declared, examining the remains closely. Remnants from a battle fought long ago.

“This must be where the main entrance to the cave used to be,” Reidoth said, pointing his torch out into the expansive cavern. He was right, of course. The entrance had been caved in from the battle fought centuries ago. Falkrunn still remembered the stories of the magical battle in Wave Echo Cave. The Dwarves, Gnomes and human spellcasters against the Orcs of Uruth Ukrypt.

There was shifting on the ceiling as Reidoth’s torch cast light into the vast cavern. “What is that?” The Druid whispered, and they all looked up.

The ceiling was alive.

“Stirges,” Olara whispered, gazing back at her companions, “hundreds of them.”

Missed Shots and Broken Arrows


The group huddled in the guard’s tower, looking out across the vast, dark cavern. Those without darkvision were completely lost but for their companion’s descriptions of their surroundings. Stirges hung from the rocky ceiling in thick clumps, rustling wings and scratching beaks against thick hides.

“Let’s not fight these things again,” Keyzana suggested, rubbing her shoulder in memory of their last attack.

“Agreed,” said Olara.

“What’s the plan, then?” Gundren asked in a growly voice, hoisting his hammer onto his shoulder.

“We distract them,” Lorskan told them, pulling an unlit torch from a sconce on the wall and shaking a good amount of dust free. Flavio coughed pointedly.

The Dragonborn raised the torch to Reidoth and said, “light this when it hits the ground?” The Druid nodded his assent and without another word, he cast the stick into the darkness. They heard it clatter against stone and waited for a reaction, wincing. There was none.

The Druid raised his hands and muttered under his breath. The torch burst into flames. Loud screeches filled the cavern and a group of Stirges dove towards the light, swooping over it in low dips. One got so close as to singe its fur and rolled away midair with renewed screeches.

“Blast it, I thought it would attract a few more,” Reidoth said. “Any other ideas?”

Lorskan took the stairs across the tower and descended.

“Right,” the Druid said to himself, and with a loud pop he transformed into a rabbit.

Falkrunn ran down the stairs after the Dragonborn, the rabbit bounding around her short legs. They rounded the corner and stepped into the main cavern. The floor was littered with bones, and Lorskan was up ahead, blindly seeking his way with one hand skimming the cave wall. Crunch. His massive foot landed on the ribcage of a gnome, crushing it. The sound echoed and Falkrunn stopped short, holding her breath. The rabbit sat back on its haunches and sniffed the air cautiously, tiny nose quivering in anticipation.

A few Stirges broke off from the ceiling and began circling the air but made no move to attack. Falkrunn let out her breath slowly, giving the rabbit a somewhat sheepish grin. Luck, it seemed, was with them finally.

The Dwarf came up behind Lorskan and put a hand on his shoulder as he bent down, “let me guide you, before we all die.” He nodded in agreement, and she lead the way. The others, she saw, had joined them without disagreement.

Across the cavern was a wide door, and Falkrunn eyed the scattered bones to find a safe route across for those who could not see. Behind her, she heard a loud curse. She spun and saw Gundren hopping on one foot, holding the end of his boot where he had just kicked a foot into a large orc skull. Olara held a firm hand over his mouth, quieting him. “For the love of Gorm, can we not all be a little more silent?” Falkrunn demanded in a whisper, arms out in annoyance at her following companions. Gundren set his foot down gingerly, his face displaying guilt, and Olara released him.

Falkrunn had spoke too soon, for as she turned to cross the cavern, she tripped over something unseen and crashed down into a littering of bones and heavy armour before Lorskan could grab and steady her. The crash was enough to wake anything within a mile.

The Stirges swarmed.

Falkrunn struggled against the massive flapping wings of a Stirge as its beak found flesh and began to drink through the crack in her armour. She cried out in rage and grabbed wildly at the creature, just barely crawling to her feet as she fought it off.

She could hear arrows flying from her Elven companions but had yet to notice a single Stirge fall to the ground. She dug into her belt and reached for a hand axe. It slipped from her grasp and fell to the ground.

The weight of the Stirge made her lose her balance, and she fell back on top of it. It made a noise of pain, but continued its furious feasting.

Lorskan raised two massive hands and reached out blindly towards the ceiling, casting a sleeping spell and praying for true aim. He heard the distinctive drop of several of the flying creatures, but it was impossible to determine how many.

These creatures could not be redeemed. They were born in darkness and could never be brought to the light. There were certain creatures, certain monstrosities, that could not be saved. Those were who Lorskan could kill. Those, and the followers of Tiamat.

He moved cautiously, seeking out the Druid. They needed light if they were to fight these flying beasts. “Reidoth!” he called out amidst the confusion.

Gundren ran up to Falkrunn and ripped the Stirge free from her shoulder, spraying out droplets of blood across the ground. It began to flap wildly in his grasp and yanked free as he ducked out of the way of two other Stirge’s attacks.

Falkrunn dove as two more came after her, screeching, and managed to raise her shield in defense. Their beaks smashed wood and they retreated angrily. She looked over and saw Flavio had fallen to an attack. The Druid was back to his human form and was crouching over the man and casting a spell of healing. A second later an arrow zoomed by, narrowly missing Flavio. It had been shot from Olara’s bow.

Something was off with the Elves. Their aim was terrible.

Falkrunn growled. This needs to end, she thought angrily, holding her bleeding shoulder and looking around the cavern. She turned and was hit with another Stirge as it beat its wings at her and dug into flesh with its large beak. Gundren tried to pull this one out as well, and was hit by three others.

There were three stones rotating magically in midair next to Flavio. He stood and released two of them. The first hit a Stirge square in the chest and left a gaping hole where its insides had been. The second careened off wildly into the darkness, leaving him open for an attack. The Stirge caught him in the collarbone and Lorskan ran up to free him.

“Reidoth!” Lorskan was shouting again. “Light a torch before we start killing each other!”

The Druid nodded, and the cavern was suddenly bathed in orange light. The instantaneous change in light forced Olara to raise her bow at the last seconds, and her arrow whizzed past another flying beast.

The Stirge attacking Flavio nearly pushed him over as it avoided Lorskan’s grasp, and Flavio’s final magic stone whipped out of its circular motion and hit Lorskan in the temple, knocking him clean off his feet.

We are all a bunch of floundering idiots, Falkrunn realized, not for the first time.

The chaos didn’t end there. Falkrunn was free of Stirges for the moment, so she withdrew her longsword and cut at the Stirges circling Gundren. Her uncle was frantically waving his hammer through the air, but the creatures were faster.

Lorskan roared in annoyance and, from where he lay on the ground, he released a bout of fire from his open maw. Gundren fell back out of the way just in time, but Falkrunn was too slow. The surging flames filled the cavern, turning the Stirges to ash and scorching Falkrunn in her armour.

The heat was immense as she crouched down, and when the flames ceased, she felt overwhelming pain. Looking down, her sleeve had caught on fire and she quickly batted at the flames, ignoring the pain and the smell of burnt flesh. She held her uninjured hand over the wound as soon as the flames were out and released the white light of a healing spell.

Gundren got to his feet and tiredly smashed down a creature with his hammer. He was soaked in his own blood and looked exhausted, but called out to Olara, “shoot it!”, pointing up at the Stirge that was just out of his reach. She nodded and, with a look of nervousness, released another arrow.

The arrow hit Reidoth from behind as he was turning away from Flavio. It struck his shoulder, and he cursed, spinning around to face the Elf, “what the—” then smacked a Stirge out of the air with his quarterstaff as it came diving towards him.

Keyzana and Olara released another bout of arrows, and they all missed. Seriously, what was wrong with these Elves today? Had they been cursed, unbeknownst by them or their companions?

Despite having two Stirges sticking from himself, Flavio raised both hands, one directed to Gundren and the other held over his own chest and cast healing. Falkrunn ran towards Flavio with her sword in the air, jumping to reach the flying creatures.

Gundren took down enemies left and right with his ferocious hammer swings. Reidoth’s magically-imbued quarterstaff danced through the air. Finally, they were down to one final Stirge, which circled cautiously when seeing its defeated allies. It screeched.

With a huge sigh, Olara set her feet, took aim slowly, and released her arrow. Finally, she hit her target. The last Stirge landed on the ground with an echoing screech of death.

After drinking some healing potions and otherwise bandaging up wounds, the ragged companions stumbled over the rest of the skeletons and fresh corpses of Stirges and moved towards the sound of running water. There was a narrow stone bridge that reached over a chasm, and beneath that flowed a dark river. Falkrunn strained her ears and could hear low grunting echoing from a distance.

“I hear a noise,” Flavio whispered to them. “Creatures of some kind, speaking in a goblin tongue.”

Soon the sound of heavy footfalls and low voices conversing was evident to all. There was a door to their right, and Falkrunn gestured to it with a tilt of her neck. Everyone nodded, looking exhausted, and she opened the door a crack. She stuck her nose through, listening.

She heard crunching and gnawing, followed by sickening moans. Ghouls, she cursed to herself. She looked back at everyone, who waited expectantly, and with a shrug she pushed the door open all the way and stepped through, unsheathing her longsword. This fight, she promised to herself, will be better than the last.

Three hunched, grey-skinned creatures turned at the noise, dropping cracked bones from their salivating, sharp-teethed mouths. As they stood, Falkrunn raised her free hand and cast a blinding spell over all three of the creatures, then hopped away from the doorway and moved to flank.

Olara redeemed herself immediately. She took out her short bow and shot the nearest Ghoul directly between the eyes. It fell back, definitely dead. She kicked it in the head for good measure, smiling to herself as the other two Ghouls blindly sniffed the air, unsure of which direction to move and afraid of attacking each other.

Reidoth cast a spell over his staff so it glowed blue. He lightly twisted it in his hands and almost playfully smacked a Ghoul over the head, then danced back. It hissed and raised its jagged claws in his direction. Lorskan took the opening to move around the Druid and slash his sword across the Ghoul’s abdomen, leaving a thick, bleeding gash.

Keyzana came out of the doorway, hands alight with flames, and incinerated the nearest Ghoul in a matter of seconds, but not before its screeches echoed loud enough to draw any nearby enemies. The second Ghoul slashed in the direction of Keyzana, but she blocked it with the staff she had taken from Glasstaff himself. It created a glowing shield around her person, and the Ghoul continued to claw ineffectually at it, gnawing and biting, drool escaping its cracked lips. Keyzana laughed in its face.

“Look out!” Gundren shouted at three hulking shapes that were approaching from the bridge. He still stood in the doorway, with Flavio at his side. The creatures might have spotted them, but they definitely heard them.

There were gruff shouts and a massive, spiked club suddenly appeared, baring down on the Dwarf. Gundren blocked the attack and came back with a blow of his own, which landed on the swelled chest of a towering Bugbear.

Flavio drew up his hand and three stones began to circle around him, held up by a magical force. He shot one, but it clanked off the Bugbear’s armour. The human backed up into the room, avoiding the retaliating swing. Gundren used the distraction to slam another hammer swing into the Bugbear.

The remaining Ghoul, still blind from Falkrunn’s spell, began to thrash violently, confused by all the noise. As Falkrunn ran past, Olara put an arrow between its eyes.

Falkrunn brought her sword up against the Bugbear assaulting Gundren as the Druid transformed into an auburn-furred, yellow-eyed direwolf. He hunched down, then pounced on one of the Bugbears and ripped out his throat in one vicious tear. He stood in the doorway and growled.

Keyzana stepped behind the wolf and released magical missiles at one of the remaining Bugbears, and all three found their target, one sticking through the end of his long nose. He howled in fury and Lorskan reached up and pulled Gundren out of the way, then struck the Bugbear. The creature didn’t fall back but swung his club and hit Lorskan square in the chest with incredible force.

Lorskan crumpled, unconscious. Flavio dove to him immediately and began tending to his wounds. The Bugbear’s hit had crushed the front of his armour and the spikes had driven through his scales. He was losing blood quickly.

Flavio picked up his head and dropped it back on the stone with a sickening thump. “Oops! Sorry,” he muttered, assessing the damage.

Gundren had stumbled back from the fight holding his arm and bleeding a fair amount. “I’m not sure,” he said between breaths, “I’ll be much help in this fight.” He threw one of his handaxes, but it sailed over both Bugbear’s heads.

“Get back, uncle,” Falkrunn said, slashing the nearest Bugbear’s arm with her longsword.

The direwolf had somehow managed to take out a healing potion—from where, Falkrunn was glad she didn’t know—and Flavio administered it to the Dragonborn. Lorskan shook himself and, with a booming voice, said “STOP!”

The Bugbears stopped fighting, and everyone lowered their weapons slightly. “Give it to me,” he said, gesturing to the Bugbear’s spiked club. Confused, the beast handed his weapon to the prostrate Dragonborn.

With effort, Lorskan stood and blocked a punch once Bugbear regained his wits. As the Bugbear went in for another punch, Keyzana attacked the one behind him. Flavio sent another magic stone whistling through the air, but it pinged off plated armour.

Gundren ignored his niece’s warnings and stepped in to swing his large hammer with a two-handed grip at the unarmed Bugbear currently engaged with Lorskan.

The still-armed Bugbear dodged attacks from the Elves and Falkrunn, and the Dwarf tried her best to get closer, but the beast’s reach was incredibly long. Finally, an arrow shot by Olara finished the Bugbear, catching him through his armour on his ribcage. He peered down at the bolt in his side in shock, then collapsed, unmoving.

The direwolf roared and everyone jumped out of his way as he pounced a second time and ripped the final, unarmed Bugbear to bloody, furry shreds.

“I’m curious,” Falkrunn said casually to the Druid as they scanned the room the Ghouls had been occupying. It was an abandoned smithy filled with barrels, unfinished tools and empty shelves. She found a rusted fire poker and picked it up to examine. “When you, say, tear apart a foe with your fangs while you’re a direwolf, and then turn back into a human… can you still taste blood?”

“Interesting question,” Reidoth said as way of answer, then walked away.

Once everyone had been given the proper amount of healing, Lorskan and Gundren stacked barrels in front of the door, barricading it from intruders.

There was a trapdoor in the far corner of the room in the ceiling. Keyzana helped Olara up and she pushed open the rusted hinges and crawled through to investigate.

“We don’t have time for this,” Gundren said in frustration, pacing the stone floor.

“Uncle, we’re all exhausted, including you. We need rest,” Falkrunn told him quietly.

“I must find my brother. I must know that he’s alive.”

“He will be fine,” she said, placing a hand on his broad shoulder. “He can handle himself.”

He shook his head and looked down at his feet, and she knew he was thinking about his middle brother.

Olara returned a short time later and said the trapdoor took a tunnel back to the guard’s tower. Gundren tried again to pry open the lockbox he had found earlier, but even with Olara’s help, it still wouldn’t budge. Annoyed, he threw it back into his pack and looked around helplessly.

“We must sleep and regain our strength,” Reidoth advised, and they (mostly) all agreed.

Lorskan curled up in a cocoon made of his own wings. Olara took up watch, seating herself primly on a barrel as though it were a fine chair, and Falkrunn lay back on the hard floor and draped an arm over her face. They all fell asleep to the sound of waves crashing in the deep.

Screams. Horrible, terrible screams. A child crying out. Someone cutting, slashing into flesh, leaving a trail of bodies. No discrimination. All, dead. They killed my family. Now, I destroy their kingdom.

Falkrunn raised her sword again and put an end to the weeping. A slight wind blew, and suddenly the scent of death was fresh in her nose. She looked around in horror at the bodies left in her wake. She bent over and wretched.

“Wake up,” Keyzana said gently, and Falkrunn’s eyes popped open immediately. “It’s time to go, everyone.”

They all packed up quietly and removed the barricade from the doors, listening for enemies.

Just before the bridge was a tunnel to their right, twisting out of sight. The air shimmered with green light, and they moved past it. Falkrunn led the way across the stone bridge, admiring, once again, the stonework of the Dwarves. Across the bridge was a raised plateau with abandoned square buildings scattered on three separate levels. To the right was a portion of sunken stone tempted to collapse into the river below.

“We should split up,” Keyzana said, gesturing to all the buildings.

Falkrunn followed Gundren up the raised terrace. Keyzana and Olara took to searching the nearest buildings. Lorskan, Reidoth and Flavio went to investigate the sunken area, using a lit torch to guide their way. The Elves and Dwarves had no need of such a thing.

Gundren and Falkrunn came across a wide set of stairs leading down, and a short distance from there was a rougher path also leading downhill. They took the stairs and found two huge sets of doors inlaid with silver designs. The walls were carved with thick, geometric designs.

“Let’s go back and tell the others,” said Gundren, turning to the abandoned buildings.

Falkrunn nodded, then stopped short. They could hear the distinct growling, gnawing sound of—“Ghouls,” her uncle said it as a curse.

They ran to find their friends.

A Sticky Spiderweb Situation


Falkrunn and Gundren ran through the abandoned shells of squat homes in the dank cavern, the distant sound of crashing waves still audible beneath them. They rounded a corner and took the carved steps upwards to a second level of houses, actively searching for the two Elves.

Suddenly, a giant hawk swooped down from the darkness and circled over Falkrunn’s head. “Look! A message from Keyzana,” she said in a hushed voice. “Let’s follow him.”

Falkrunn spotted Keyzana a few minutes later and came up to her, panting. “We thought we heard Ghouls,” she whispered

Keyzana nodded her head in the direction of a house and Olara whispered back. “We found some Ghouls holed up in that house.”

“What should we do?”

“They haven’t seen us yet, so perhaps we should leave them.”

“Agreed,” Gundren said. “Let’s not start any fights we don’t need. Where are the others?”

“There, see the torch?” She pointed down below. The torch was bobbing along through the darkness back across the stone bridge. “Not sure what they were doing back over the bridge.”

“HELLO!” The deep, booming voice of Flavio echoed through the cavern with magical enhancement. “COMPANIONS. WHERE ARE YOU? WE ARE STANDING NEAR THE BRIDGE. PLEASE JOIN US.”

“Idiots,” Falkrunn swore, and they all spun and pushed their bodies up against the outer walls of the house containing the Ghouls, flanking the door in case they came out. The gnawing sounds of the Ghoul’s feasting stopped for a moment and they heard sniffing and grunting. Then, after what seemed like a lifetime of collectively held breaths, the gnawing continued.

They all looked at each other in exasperation, then ran down the steps to find the other three.

Gundren came up to Flavio first. “Lad, could you bend down for just a moment?” Flavio did, and Gundren backhanded him across the head.

“What do you think you’re doing? We’re in an unmapped cave, likely surrounded by enemies, and we are trying to find my brother—.”alive

“Ow,” Flavio said pointedly, rubbing the back of his head and blinking. “Jeez, why is everyone always hitting me? We weren’t sure where you all were.”

“We checked the tunnel we had passed previously,” Lorskan told them. “The one that glowed green. It was full of some strange glowing plants. Nothing of value.”

“Well great,” Falkrunn sighed, eyeing the Druid, who held up the torch and looked around in disinterest. “My uncle and I found a tunnel that looks promising. Shall we move on, before we’re eaten by Ghouls?”

“Let’s,” said Olara, and without another argument, they moved on.

They descended the black stone steps into a finely carved hallway lined with thick, geometric columns. Before each column stood stone sculptures of regal looking Dwarves and Gnomes. Ahead of them lay two large doors, clearly designed by Dwarvish artisans.

Gundren stepped up to the first door and tugged, but it wouldn’t budge. He immediately stepped over to the other and pulled it open, entering the room to investigate. Falkrunn followed him in.

In the dim light, she could make out large barrels lining the walls. “Think there’s ale in those barrels?” She asked.

“Whisky, I hope,” Gundren said, and kicked a toe against the nearest barrel. It echoed hollowly. With a disappointed frown, he tested a few other barrels, but they all appeared to be empty.

There was crashing out in the hallway, and the two Dwarves rushed back into the hallway. Lorskan was actively trying to break down the door with his hammer, cracks and splinters slowly starting to show in the thick wood.

“Let me give it a go,” Gundren said with a grunt, raising his own hammer and beating at the door.

“I can do it,” Flavio finally said, and with a few well-placed strikes later, he had created a sizable hole in the wood. One by one, the companions stepped through, Reidoth holding the torchlight out to fill the room.

“At least it makes them feel important,” Falkrunn overheard Keyzana whispering to Olara.

An oval table made of thick gray stone stood central in the room. Broken bits of decaying wooden chairs lay as scattered remnants of a society long lost. A few skeletons sat hunched in a corner. Starved or stabbed, one could not tell by a glance.

Along the walls were stone shelves housing smashed pottery and a few centuries worth of accumulated dust. Flavio at a stone chest in the corner of the room as he worked his hands over the top of it, examining the edges. Lorskan came up next to him and eyed the chest greedily. “You, Elf.” He grunted, waving an arm at Olara, “open this.”hmphed

“You could say please,” she said, but her curiosity had her attention and she bent down and began picking at the lock. After a moment, there was the faint sound of a mechanism working, following by a . The mechanism tripped, and a dart shot straight out and caught the Elf in the hand. She pulled away, cursing as the skin around the dart immediately turned purple and began to swell. “Poison,” she yelped, dropping her lockpick.click

Falkrunn reached out and pulled the dart, casting it aside. “Let me look,” Flavio said, pushing through. “Reidoth, bring that light a little closer.” The Druid leaned in with the torch, illuminating the wound. “I can heal it,” the human told Olara, taking her hand gingerly and turning it from side to side. Then he reached into his cloak and pulled out a small vial, handing it to the Elf with a flourish. “A healing potion will do the trick.”

Olara took the vial gratefully and uncorked it, downing the potion with a grimace. Looking down, the swelling in her hand deflated and her skin returned to its pale, milky white complexion. “Well, I’m not trying that again,” she said, bending down and picking up her lockpick and stowing it away.

Falkrunn eyed the stone chest warily, but it looked as though the only trap in it had sprung. Flavio raised his hammer in the air and cracked it down on the chest with a two-handed blow. It broke in one solid, jagged piece and Lorskan pried it the rest of the way open with his long nails. Gold coins spilled out onto the floor along with a few broken glass vials, their contents dripping out. A single vial remained unscathed.

Lorskan took out a ring crested with a large sapphire gem and gave it over to Flavio, who eyed it cautiously. He also held two bracers, which he immediately took for himself.

“I can sense magic in them,” Keyzana said with interest as the men stowed the items out of sight. “I have a lot of experience with magic. Perhaps you should allow me, , to inspect them?” They shrugged and ignored her suggestion. She tossed her hands in the air in frustration. “Glad we could share.”the wizard

They divvied up the gold quickly amongst themselves, Gundren impatiently tapping his foot. Falkrunn feared what they would find if they continued to search for her other uncle. Her thoughts were dark as they left the strange room and continued through the hallway.

Ahead, the ground was oddly uneven. A thick plate of stone sat too high above the ground. “Stop,” Olara said, pointing down. “It could be a trap.”

Lorskan bent and tossed a stone. A loud followed by a sounded as two darts flew through the air in front of them. Immediately after being released, the trap clicked as it reset. “Good eye,” Falkrunn breathed, and they kept to the walls, stepping around the uneven stone. click click clickwoosh

They encountered two more doors a short way ahead. One was small and seemingly insignificant, and upon trying to open it, they found it was stuck.

The second was at least eight feet tall and had a carving depicting a mountain crested with a faceted gemstone. It was the sign of the Dwarf god Dumathoin, the Keeper of Secrets under the Mountain. Falkrunn moved forward immediately and opened the door with a low. The others worked at the smaller door, but Falkrunn was much more interested in what lay here. creak

Ahead of her was a long stone room flanked by six marble columns. At the far wall stood a large statue of Dumathoin, and inside his eyes gleamed two massive, cut emeralds. Falkrunn stared up at them greedily, as only a Dwarf could, and strode forward.

She made it halfway across the room before she stopped dead in her tracks. The voice of a woman and say, “well, well, . Look who finally decided to show up.”tskedwell

Falkrunn spun, and against one of the marble columns leaned the tall, lithe figure of the Drow they had fought in Cragmaw castle. The one who had nearly killed Gundren and escaped. Though she appeared to be a Drow, she was truly a doppelgänger under a guise. She had once pretended to be her uncle.

“Vhalak, we’ve got company,” she hissed, a smile playing on her dark lips. Falkrunn twitched a hand up to cast a spell, but before she could move the Drow leapt forward with a kick. Falkrunn instead ducked back out of the way, narrowly avoiding her flying leg.

A male Drow was suddenly there and raised a fist, which grew into a massive, vibrating shape that flew towards Falkrunn and landed in her stomach with a rippling effect that dented her armour. She fell back, winded and clutching a cracked rib.

Gasping, she saw Keyzana cast a spell from the doorway. Giant webs flew from her fingertips and attached to the pillars, creating a giant boxed-in wall of webs. Falkrunn rolled to the side to avoid them. “The webs attract fire!” The Elf called out to her companions, who were presumably still out in the hallway.

Both Drows dove out of the way before they could be entangled by the webs, and stood at a crouch over Falkrunn, their heads now turned away from her. She winced and fell again as she tried to stand.

Olara spun around the doorway and released an arrow, which struck the female Drow through her thin armour. She pulled the arrow out of her side and cast it to the ground as Olara ducked back for cover. She was bleeding slightly but seeming unbothered by the wound.

While they were distracted, Falkrunn managed to reach up and take out her longsword. She bounded at the male Drow who had punched her. He caught her from his periphery and tried to move out of the way, but her blade caught his arm, leaving a long gash. Gundren had also appeared at the doorway and was throwing hand axes at the female, who was desperately trying to duck out of the way but was limited by the webs surrounding them.

Falkrunn looked up abruptly as the sound of skittering filled the room. The ceiling was moving with the sight of four massive black spiders, and she stepped back. One dropped down right in front of her, between herself and the Drow called Vhalak. “Bloody h—”

The spider opened its giant maw and spat out a thick white gob at Falkrunn, who was immediately enveloped in its sticky web. Her sword clattered to the ground and she fell back, banging her head on stone. Her vision went white for a moment and she clenched her fists, waiting for the pain to fade. Vhalak stood over her and kicked a boot into her side, drawing a gasp of pain as he connected with her cracked rib.

Towering, thick-legged spiders advanced on the company, pincers clacking in the stale air.

Flavio leaned over the unconscious Dwarf with the thick auburn beard streaked with silver. The Dwarf’s head was shaved, his eyebrows unruly, and he was dressed in dark clothing thick with grime. A large cut on his forehead explained his heavy slumber, and Flavio examined his body for further wounds. “This must be Gundren’s brother,” Lorskan said in a low voice from the doorway. Flavio nodded in response.

There was a loud shout, something about fire and a web? Was that Falkrunn swearing? Then, something like an explosion of air from the next room. Lorskan looked out with a worried glance. “Watch the Dwarf! I’ll see what’s happened.”

Flavio found evidence of broken ribs and a bruised spine. “Reidoth, could you bring that torch a tad closer?”

“Spiders! Huge ones!” Reidoth stammered from the hallway. “You’d better come!” Then he ran off, leaving Flavio to stumble out of the tiny broom closet in the darkness, through the small shattered door, and out into the hallway.

Keyzana slammed her shimmering staff into the ground, creating a glowing shield around herself as the female Drow attacked her. Her first punch connected with Keyzana’s shoulder, and she stumbled back and reinforced her spell. She raised her other hand and a spark of flames lit her palm. She threw the flame and it hit the webs and spread rapidly.

Olara came around the corner again and shot a spider with one of her arrows, but the bolt stuck in its hide and broke off as it moved, seemingly unharmed. She jumped back and drew out another arrow, taking a few long breaths.

Struggling against the constricting web, Falkrunn wiggled on the floor, hoping to move closer to her sword. Vhalak was standing over her, grinning at her despair and taking no mind to her other companions. She focused her gaze on the doppelgänger, and with a lungful cast her spell of . “You coward,” she spat, “beating an unarmed, unmoving opponent. You sicken me.”vicious mockery

The spell hit, and he stepped back as though slapped and put a hand to his head.

Falkrunn smiled and continued her wriggling, desperately trying to reach something to cut the webs.

With a bellow, Gundren swung his hammer into the female Drow’s gut, and though she was shocked by the ferocity of the Dwarf, she recovered and stood tall, wincing only slightly.

“If you want something done,” a deep, echoing voice came from somewhere across the room, “then I suppose you ought to do it yourself.”

Gundren looked up as the tall, dark figure of a Drow shimmered and appeared seemingly from thin air. He wore a black cloak, behind which flowed long white hair and striking blue eyes. In his hand he held a long black staff, and he waved his other hand in front of himself, causing mage armour to appear over his body.

It was the Black Spider.

The one they had been searching for ever since that fateful day in Phandalin, in the Tresendar Manor, when they found the note inside Glasstaff’s mahogany desk.

“Bastard,” Gundren snarled, gripping his hammer tighter.

The webs had nearly all been engulfed in flames, causing the spiders to pull back and shriek as they were singed. Just as Keyzana barked her triumph, a spider pounced, pincers flailing, and bit her in the shoulder.

The Elf’s smooth face went blank with pain as black veins crawled with alarming speed up her neck and across her skin. Her voice cracked as she tried to formulate words, her hands partially raised. She first dropped her staff, then she herself collapsed onto the floor, unconscious and paralyzed.

Gundren heard her fall and spun just in time to see another giant spider coming towards him, pincers clacking. He ducked out of its reach.

All of this had happened in a matter of seconds. Suddenly, Lorskan was at the door. “What the blazes?” he said, looking around at the recumbent Elf, bound Dwarf, four massive spiders, and three Drows.

He breathed fire into the room, causing the spiders to shriek and recoil from the flames. Falkrunn barely managed to wriggle out of the flames, and once again felt the wonderful sensation of being singed by Lorskan’s fiery breath.

Flavio came into the room a few seconds after Lorskan, taking in the scene. He raised a hand and cast a bolt into the air at the female Drow, but she easily ducked from the missile and strode in their direction. Flavio prepared his three magical stones with some quick words as she approached, and Lorskan defended a blow from the woman’s striking fist.

Falkrunn felt the web give way as the flames ate around it, and she pulled free from the rest of the chords. She got to her feet and looked around for her sword, which lay a few feet away. She bent to retrieve it and felt excruciating pain as she felt her body turn to led. Turning, the last thing she saw was the huge black pincers of an eight-legged creature.

Then, her vision went dark.

Olara replaced her bow with a longsword and twisted it expertly in her hands. With a cry, she leapt again from behind the doorway and struck out at the nearest spider, which had just curled away from a bout of the Dragonborn’s flames. She slid beneath the belly of the beast and, with a two-handed grip, drove the blade up into the spider’s abdomen and tore through it, spilling its insides onto the floor and sliding out the other side with a grin.

Gundren came at the female Drow as she dodged Lorskan’s flames. He smashed into her with his hammer, a scream of rage on his lips, and she spun on her heel to face her attacker. She tried to catch the next strike, but he hit her to her knees. Before the woman could catch her breath, Gundren slammed his foot into her chest and knocked her to the ground, then laid his hammer into her skull and drew out a final, clear note of terror as her head exploded under the force of it.

He wiped a bit of brains and gore from his face where they had splattered.

“Vyerith! Sister!” Vhalak cried. “Nooooo!”

Falkrunn awoke hazily, her head swimming with pain. She had been bit by a spider, but—. She crawled to her blade and sheathed it in the scabbard at her back, then got to her feet unsteadily with the aid of the nearest marble column. The dizziness overcame her, and she vomited on the floor. She rested a shaking hand over her chest and cast a healing spell, which immediately cleared her head.no, not paralyzed

She looked up and saw two massive spiders noticing her recovery. With a yelp, she turned to run. She felt the leg of one of the spiders zip past her through the air, but the second one bounded further than she would believe and took her to the ground. She held her hands out as two pincers began to ferociously open and close over her face.

Her shoulder burned fiercely, the wounds not yet fully healed, and her strength gave way. The spider tore into her and, for the second time in five minutes, Falkrunn was unconscious again. And this time, she couldn’t feel her body.

“I’ll kill you!” Vhalak snarled, running at Gundren.

“You’re welcome to try!” he chuckled.

“STOP!” The Black Spider ordered, and Vhalak halted. The body of his dead sister had transformed back into its original form: a sickly grey creature with a bulbous head, tiny eyes and slimy flesh. A doppelgänger.

“I’m willing to make a deal,” the Black Spider said with a wicked grin, spreading his free hand out at the companions. “You don’t stand a chance against me and my compatriots, so why not work with us? We can find the forge of spells together.”

“If you really want to make a deal,” Gundren said, still gripping his hammer tightly, “then let us heal our friends.”

The Black Spider looked at him thoughtfully, his gaze drifting over the two unconscious bodies. “Drop your weapons, and I’ll call off my spiders.”

A pause.

“Never,” Gundren snarled, raising his hammer and charging with a scream.

The Black Spider flicked a finger lazily, and half of the room was enveloped in an all-consuming darkness. All those in the doorway were completely blinded. Unfortunately, the darkness didn’t seem to bother the spiders.

A spider shot a huge web at Lorskan, wrapping him in its web. Still standing, he stepped back in the darkness and tried to rip free. He was reminded again of the physical changes he underwent with his transformation. He was no longer as strong as he once was.

Gundren felt a piercing sting in his back and swung around blindly, searching for the source. Flavio cast magic stones into the air but did not hear them hit anything solid. Olara aimed into the darkness and listened for the sound of spider legs skittering. She released and heard her arrow pierce something. There was a heavy thud as a creature fell to the ground. She grinned to herself and blinked, which changed nothing.

Gundren managed to move out of the darkness around one of the pillars, and saw the Black Spider frantically gathering up loose papers from a table against the wall and stuffing them into a bag. He turned to see Gundren and, continuing to gather up his notes, said “this is your last chance to work with me, or I’ll be forced to kill you and your friends.” He straightened, meeting Gundren’s gaze with an oddly sincere gleam in his greedy eyes. “We could be rich together, Gundren.”

Gundren’s thoughts wavered for a moment as he thought of the insurmountable wealth in the forge. But, then he thought of his brother, lost to him. His other brother, missing. His niece, unconscious and dying. His torture in Cragmaw castle. He shook his head. “You think I’m trapped in here with you, but you’re the one who’s trapped in here with .”me

“So be it,” the Black Spider sighed, closing his satchel. “Good luck finding the forge.”

With a flash, he shot three magic missiles at the Dwarf and pierced him thrice. Gundren stumbled back and narrowly avoided a spider as it leaped in his direction. Momentarily distracted from the pain, he swung his hammer around at the spider as it came in for another attack, and smashed it to the ground, turning its solid head to ruin. He stepped over the body and pulled the three darts from his breast, casting them aside as he gazed back at the Black Spider.

The Drow hesitated at the fury in those Dwarven eyes. Gundren raised his hammer and struck before the taller opponent could jump out of the way. The Black Spider took the hit and dropped to his knees, his face frozen in a look of fear. He muttered an incantation and disappeared from sight.

Gundren cursed and spun to see the darkness had vanished.

Lorskan, still entangled in the web, took a fair beating from Vhalak, who seemed in the mood to beat unarmed opponents into the ground. The Drow had taken an arrow in his side from Olara’s shot in the dark, and just as their world turned from utter blackness to bleak dimness, Flavio cast a magical bolt. It struck Vhalak in the chest and his eyes filled with white flames, burning out his life.

As his body struck the floor, it transformed into the ghastly figure of a doppelgänger.

All those who were conscious and unbound rushed to the doorway. “He’s gone invisible,” Gundren told them, holding his chest and taking laboured breaths. “Does anyone know how to make him visible again? A spell perhaps? .”We can’t let him get away

They all shook their heads. Olara narrowed her Elven eyes and scanned the room, catching her eyes on a movement in the hallway. A shadow cast by the flickering flames in Reidoth’s hands.

She slowly drew out an arrow, nocked it, took aim, and released. The arrow hit solid flesh but seemed to hang in the air of its own accord. Then, with a groan, the Black Spider fell face first to the ground and shimmered into sight. The arrow had buried itself in his spine.

The Black Spider was dead.

The celebration was short-lived.

At that moment, the last living spider struck from behind the wall and came at Lorskan, who was still wrapped in webs. The Dragonborn cast a wordless spell, his eyes glowing, and the spider flew back. Lorskan finally ripped out of the webs with a roar and Flavio cast a sacred flame as the spider skittered out of the way, hunched down and surveying its prey.

Gundren threw down his shield and, with two hands clutching his hammer, slammed into the spider’s torso. It shuddered for a moment, legs twitching, and fell as a corpse.

With a final, triumphant sigh and a pat on Olara’s back, Gundren clambered up the large statue of the Dwarf god Dumathoin and began to pry at one of the sparkling emerald eyes. His niece would appreciate the effort.

Lorskan placed a hand on Falkrunn’s cold forehead and revived her with his healing. She came to, gasping and flailing and looking around for a fight that had already been won. With some disappointment, she sat back on the heels of her hands and harrumphed. “Looks like I missed all the fun.” She looked over at Gundren across the room, struggling to get an emerald, and called out. “Hey uncle, get one for me!” The Dwarf chuckled and pulled out a dagger to cut the jewel free.

Flavio healed Keyzana, and the Elf was extremely displeased at missing the entire fight. “Aren’t you supposed to be a healer?” She accused of Flavio.

“I did heal you,” he said, gesturing to her ability to now stand and walk around.

“Yeah, the fight. Couldn’t you have healed me sooner?” she waggled her fingers in the air, “I’m a wizard, after all. Probably would have been helpful.”after

“Well, obviously it wasn’t,” Flavio said, and walked away.

In the hallway, Olara skimmed through the papers the Black Spider had stuffed away.

Gundren pulled the first jewel free and there was a loud rumble as the ceiling began to shake. “Oh,” he said, thrusting the emerald under one arm and dashing for the door. As rocks and debris fell down around them, he scooped up his dropped shield and slid into the hallway, Falkrunn right behind him, bleeding but alive.

“Genius,” Lorskan said with rolled eyes as the Dwarves emerged, panting.

Gundren held up the large stone to his niece with a pleased grin.

Lorskan and Flavio took the others to the Dwarf they had found in the room next door. They had smashed the door to splinters, and inside, Falkrunn’s uncle lay supine. Gundren rushed to him and lay a hand on his brother’s forehead. When Flavio confirmed that his injuries were not life threatening, Gundren insisted that they bring him to consciousness. Flavio handed him a healing potion, and Nundro was soon awake but hazy.

“What? Where—the Black Spider—who’s this, now?”

“I’ve gotch’a, brother,” Gundren said with a smile. “It’s alright now. The Black Spider’s dead.”

“”Dead?

“That’s right, just relax. Hey Nundro, look at this gem,” Gundren said proudly, holding up the emerald for his brother to see.

Olara showed them a map of the caves that had been hastily drawn. The Black Spider had scrawled notes across the map, and their eyes caught on the section that said, ‘’Forge of Spells, this way?

A new ring glimmered on Olara’s finger. “Where’d you get that?” Falkrunn asked curiously, pointing at the pink gemstone.

“I took it off the Black Spider,” she said, stowing away the map. “Keyzana said it should cast some form of protection over me.”

“If you give me that ring, I’ll give you these bracers I found,” Lorksan offered, showing her what he had dug from the stone chest that had poisoned Olara. “They’re archery bracers.” The Elf shrugged and made the trade, and they went off to discuss their new treasures.

Keyzana had taken his black staff, and she now held two staffs, one in each hand. “Can I see that?” Falkrunn asked, and the Elf handed the staff over. She examined its smooth black lines and tiny inscriptions. The staff didn’t glow or emit any sort of radiance. Falkrunn sniffed it, then put a tongue on the wood. It tasted bitter and sickly.

“I wouldn’t do that,” Keyzana advised. “I believe it has poisonous qualities.”

“Good thing I didn’t lick more of it,” Falkrunn chuckled, handing it back.

Gundren hoisted Nundro onto his back and gestured for them to leave. Olara took the lead. They went back down the hallway, skirting the traps in the floor, ascended the carved stairs, and turned left to go down the natural cavern tunnel. The tunnel opened into a wide room with a small channel cut into the stone. The channel had gone dry, and an unmoving, rotten waterwheel sat stagnant next to an empty furnace. Near that stood a twenty-foot tall door inscribed in gold with Dwarvish runes, scorched and smeared with ash from long forgotten flames.

Gundren set his brother down slowly, and the Dwarves looked up to read the inscription.

“Forge of Spells,” Falkrunn read aloud reverently, “Pandelver’s Pact, Established 872 DR.”

“We made it.” Gundren whispered, squeezing his brother’s shoulder. “Finally.”

Final Goodbyes


Reidoth helped Nundro out of the entrance of the forge towards the squat, abandoned homes. “He’s not well,” the elderly Druid explained, checking the Dwarf’s pulse. He was barely conscious, and his brow was coated in sweat.

“Take care of him,” Gundren told him solemnly, watching the two as they limped away.

Falkrunn said a quiet prayer of strength for her uncle, and for the Druid in whose charge he was laid, then turned her attention back to the door.

“The Forge of Spells,” Keyzana said in a satisfied sigh. “We finally found it, eh Dwarves?”

Gundren and Falkrunn both nodded, their attentions on the Dwarvish script inlaid in gold.

“I guess we check for traps?” Olara asked and Keyzana moved up to the door and scanned it with her fingertips.

When her skin touched the door, the writing in the wood began to glow in bright blue lettering. It pulsed with a hidden energy, and they watched as there descended from the ceiling a floating humanoid skull bathed in green, fiery light. It opened its bony jaw and, with a clack of teeth, recited a few lines in the common tongue. “”Long ago four races set aside their differences and came together to create order from chaos. Those with the rights to enter the Forge of Spells will answer this: in what order was the Phandelver’s pact signed?

“What does that mean? How should we know?” Keyzana hissed as Lorskan stepped around the floating skull towards the door. On the left side of the door were written the words Human, Dwarf, Elf, Gnome. On the righthand side glowed similarly a set of four names: Sudeiman, Malcer, Sefris and Tommeth. Lorskan whispered the names aloud.

“I think we need to match the names to the races,” Falkrunn said, eyeing the words for a pattern. “Is anyone familiar with these names? Are they clan names, perhaps?”

Gundren shook his head and Flavio shrugged. “Sefris is definitely not a Dwarf name,” Gundren added, but that was all he could ascertain.

“Can we get a hint?” Keyzana turned and asked the skull hopefully. It floated there without a sound. Keyzana raised a hand and pressed it to the glowing word of ‘Elf’ before anyone could stop her.

“Intruders. Intruders,” the rhythmic words echoed from the skull as the green fire around it flared up. “Intruders, intruders.”

Behind them, Falkrunn could hear the snap and crack of bones, and she turned to see the dry, stray bones of long lost victims begin to construct and fuse together. Some bent and picked up impossibly rotted crossbows and bolts, while others raised extremely rusted, pockmarked short swords. “Oh shi—” a bolt whizzed past Falkrunn’s head and she ducked just in time.

“You two, focus on the riddle,” Gundren yelled at Keyzana and Falkrunn, raising his hammer, “we’ll take care of the dead ones.” With that, he charged the rising skeletons.

Falkrunn and Keyzana looked at one another for a second, then quickly began reading the markings on the door over and over. Falkrunn read the names out in Dwarvish, and turned as she heard a shout from Flavio, who was drawing out his own warhammer. She removed her lute from her side and began to strum it, directing her bardic magic in the human’s direction. A second later, Flavio took down the first skeleton while Lorskan engaged another with sword drawn. Gundren smashed another to pieces and Olara drew her longsword and stepped into a duel.

“There!” Keyzana shouted, pointing upwards to a spot at least fifteen feet high on the door. It was a carved piece of crystal, and from this angle you could just barely see a roll of parchment resting inside. “That be a clue.”must

“Can you reach it?” Falkrunn asked, tilting her head as far back as she could.

Keyzana looked at her hands and began to pace, thinking.

More skeletons appeared from the floor and joined the fight. Flavio barely dodged from the slice of a rusty sword before the skull emitted a massive green fireball and shot it straight towards the human. He dove, and the flame consumed one of the skeletons, which shrieked and turned to ash.

Falkrunn stood behind the skull near the door, and it was caught up in watching the fight. She tested its magical strength by pushing a spell against the force around it. The spell vibrated, then dissipated. Cursing, she strummed a few more notes on the lute and directed them again to Flavio.

Lorskan breathed a wave of flames on three of the skeletons, causing two of them to vaporize immediately. The other continued forward, scorched but unimpeded. Another two skeletons grew up from the rubble and shot their crossbows. A bolt skimmed Gundren’s armour and another pierced Olara’s thigh. She plucked it out and cast it aside, ignoring the wound. Gundren ran up and smashed down the undead creatures with a ferocious bellow.

Another skeleton raised a sword to attack Lorskan while his back was turned, but Olara took it out with a slash of her longsword before diving away and somehow disappearing into the dark edges of the room.

“I know!” Keyzana said, and with a flurry of hand gestures she summoned a massive spectral hand, which floated in front of her with a deep red glow. She pushed the hand higher into the air with coaxing, glowing hands and the fingers curled into a giant fist and pounded into the crystal above them. A tiny crack appeared.

“It’s not enough force,” Falkrunn said, desperately searching the pictorial carvings around the top part of the door for any clues. There was a relief showing four figures standing over a table, a shorter one holding a writing utensil, but it was too faded to determine the exact races of each figure.

Keyzana revoked her mage hand with a flick of her wrist.

The green skull shot another fireball, this time at Lorskan, who heard the incoming projectile and stepped, almost casually, out of the way. His sleeve caught fire and he gently patted it out, then raised his sword as another Skeleton hobbled toward him.

Flavio took down a skeleton as it climbed from the ashes of its fallen comrades, but his victory was short-lived as another two rose from the grave.

Falkrunn took out her pockmarked throwing hammer, the one that had been nearly consumed by a monstrous creature of goo, and hurled it at the crystal encasing. The crack widened, but only slightly. “This isn’t working,” she told the Elf and looked back at her companions frantically. Gundren was bleeding from a wound on his shoulder.

Falkrunn again strummed a few notes on her lute and watched as Gundren began to glow with an energy only she could see. He picked up his hammer with renewed vigor and charged at another dusty skeleton.

Lorskan released platinum-coloured flames from his hands and they consumed the foe nearest him. Using the distraction, two of the newly formed creatures attacked him from behind, one stabbing through his armour with a short sword, the other jumping at him unarmed. Lorskan roared and shook them off, and as Flavio turned to help him a sword thrust up into his back from behind, drawing blood to his lips.

The human drew a rattled breath and fell to one knee as a skeleton slid its dripping blade from his back, broken teeth clacking with pleasure. Then, with a burst of strength, Flavio drew up his warhammer and spun around, smashing the skeleton to bits.

“I’m such an idiot!” Keyana cried, slapping a hand to her forehead, then drawing out the Black Spider’s staff from where it was slung at her back.

“Spider climb?” Falkrunn asked.

“Spider climb.” Keyzana confirmed, casting the spell over herself and stepping onto the door as if it were now the floor.

An arrow shot from the darkness of the cavern and speared a skeleton through its gaping eye-hole, casting it to the ground in a littering of bones. The skull, noticing the silent attack, turned to the darkness and shot another fireball in the direction of Olara, who just barely managed to dive from the flames as the darkness was cast in a sickly green light.

When she stood, the right side of her face had been partially melted by the flame, and she raised a hand to the burn in shock, not yet feeling the pain.

Keyzana punched the crystal and the crack grew slightly, her knuckles now bloodied.

“Look out!” Falkrunn yelled and threw her fallen hammer a second time. The hammer struck the crystal and was wedged into a newly created crack. Keyzana yanked it out and jimmied the scroll out of the hole that was just created. She tossed the hammer back down to Falkrunn with a smile, then leaped towards the ground.

When she landed she looked up and pointed at Olara, who had just been hit by a massive fireball. Without hesitating, Falkrunn raised her hands and cast healing over the Elf, whose face immediately smoothed over as flesh knit back together.

Olara looked over gratefully as Flavio shot radiant light at another skeleton, and her gaze drew the attention of two skeletons, who leveled their crossbows at Falkrunn.

A bolt tinged off her armour and the second merely grazed her hand, leaving a bloody mark. Falkrunn growled, but before she could take the fight to them, Flavio and Gundren took them down. Flavio stumbled but stood, a streak of blood running down his chin and into his beard. He needed healing desperately.

Hands shaking with anticipation, Keyzana unrolled the parchment and began to scan the page silently. “Well?” Falkrunn asked impatiently, too short to see the scroll herself.

Another giant green fireball roared towards Lorskan and Flavio. Lorskan managed to duck out of the way again, but Flavio was hit and fell back, unconscious and smoking from the force of the flames.Boom.

Falkrunn raised her hands a second time and cast healing on the human from where she stood. She saw him sputter for a moment and move his head and felt content that he was still alive. “We need to get rid of this skull!” she said to Keyzana, and drew out her longsword, approaching the floating skull from behind. So long as the skull remained, the skeletons would continue to rise.

A sizeable hole appeared in the back of the skull where her blade connected with bone, but it did not turn to her, and nor did the flames around it cease to glow. Seeing what she had done, Lorskan charged up to the skull and smashed into it with his own longsword, causing the flames to flare up in anger.

Again from the darkness came an arrow shot by Olara, and it hit the skull in the jaw, which unhinged on one side and began to swing uselessly in the air. “Intruders, intruders,” the skull managed to say, jaw no longer functional.

“Here!” Keyzana yelled, and Falkrunn ran back to her, leaving the skull to Lorskan, who she knew to be at least resistant to fire seeing as he was a Dragonborn. “At the bottom of this letter are the names signed in order.” Keyzana raised the parchment and read aloud: “Sudeiman, Malcer, Sefris, Tommeth.”

The names in the door began to fade until the blue glow surrounding them was gone. The four races remained.

She scanned the parchment again, then read: “Human, Dwarf, Elf, Gnome.”

The floating skull flared up before the flames seemed to be sucked inwards. The skull shook for a second, then dropped to the ground, lifeless. The remaining skeletons broke apart immediately and clattered to the floor.

The rest of the words on the door faded, and there was the distinct sound of grinding gears and clicking locks. With a faint, underwhelming sound, the massive door creaked open.

Gundren kicked a fallen skeleton with a triumphant nod, then marched in with the rest of them.

“Thanks for healing me,” Olara said quietly to Falkrunn, touching a hand to her cheek.

Falkrunn smiled and said, “next time, let’s pick someone else to work on the puzzles, because that was just sad.”

Gundren chuckled as he passed.

The companions entered a long chamber lined with alcoves, containing scattered, broken furniture and empty stone shelves. The ceiling glowed with thousands of embedded white stones which cast a soft light over the entire hallway. Falkrunn took a deep breath, admiring the starry ceiling with wonder.

There were odd skeletons along the passageway and the walls were marked with black scorches, more evidence of the battle fought long ago. , Falkrunn thought in admiration. The battle spanned even this deepThey truly defended this place until their last.

“Over here,” Keyzana whispered, waving to her comrades. They all stepped over to where she stood inside an alcove. There was rubble obscuring half the room, but pounded into the wall were thick chains wrapped around a large, metal chest. “Olara,” she looked over, “do you think you could pick the—”

“,” a deep, raspy voice issued from behind the wall.Mine

Keyzana jumped and shrieked “ghost!”

As the tall, blue-haired Elf leapt out of the alcove, a shimmering form appeared in a haze. It was a tall, dreary-looking man with long, decorated robes and sallow, pale skin. His dead eyes danced with animosity. “My treasures, not yours,” it hissed.

“Uh, hey mister ghost person,” Falkrunn said softly, stepping in front of the spectral figure. “What sort of treasures do you have in there?”

He glared at her. “Not for you.”

“Of course not, of course not!” she said, feigning a smile. “I merely want to help you, great spirit. What can I do for you? Are you trapped in this cavern?”

The ghost tilted his head appraisingly at the Dwarf while the other companions peeked around the corner, watching the exchange. “I want—I want the abomination—.” He spoke slowly, as though each word was a labour to pass from phantom lungs to ethereal lips.dead

“Which abomination is that?”

“The creature guards the Forge of Spells,” the ghost told her. “It keeps me from more treasures.”

Falkrunn hesitated. “If we do kill this abomination, what can you give us in return?”

The ghost raised a pale hand to stroke his beard. “I am—willing to part with one thing, I suppose.”

“What can you tell us about the creature we are to kill?” Lorskan chimed in, stepping up to the entrance.

The form appraised the Dragonborn for a moment. “It has—five eyes. I suggest you don’t—look into them.”

“Very well,” Falkrunn raised her hands peacefully and bowed slightly as she stepped back from the room. “Thank you, great spirit. We will destroy this abomination for you, and I will return for my reward.”

“We will see,” the ghost sighed, fading from sight, “if you survive.”

Flavio removed his breastplate and touched a hand to his back, where the stab wound was not yet fully healed. “I could use a rest,” he told them, his hand beginning to glow over the wound.

Olara nodded and they all agreed. They found an alcove a few rooms down and sat down for a rest. Feeling energized, Falkrunn began to strum her lute softly, humming her Song of Rest.

The approached a door at the far end of the chamber, the white light of the stones overhead guiding their path. Lorskan placed a hand over the door and cast an enchantment, eyes closed in concentration. “I don’t sense anything undead in here,” he told them as he moved away. “So, it’s clearly not an ‘abomination’ in the sense that we know.”

Falkrunn turned the large doorknob and peeked inside, scanning the room within.

The large chamber was also lit by white gemstones, so it was easy to see across it. In the centre of the room stood a solid stone platform with a large anvil placed on top. The anvil glowed with a soft green light, and Falkrunn felt drawn to it. Around its pedestal were runes written in faded gold and silver, but what drew her attention next was the huge, floating figure in the corner looking over a table.

It was a massive, spherical shape floating above the ground, and it had four long tentacles surrounding it, each tipped with a bulbous yellow eye. All the eyes were currently focused on the table.

Quietly, Falkrunn closed the door and relayed the information to her companions. “It’s a creature known as a Spectator. I’m sure of it. Should I try blinding it?” She asked.

“We should try speaking to it first,” Keyzana advised.

“We don’t know if we can trust that ghost,” Olara agreed. “I say we speak to it.”

“What if it tries to eat us?” Flavio whined.

“I’m inclined to agree with the human,” Gundren grumbled.

Falkrunn opened the door and stepped through, cautiously approaching the giant creature, hand ready to cast blindness. The massive body turned as she entered, and she immediately dropped her gaze to avoid eye contact.

“Hel-lo!” A deep, friendly voice said. “How can I be of service to you today?” The Spectator spoke with a smooth, electric quality.

“Hello,” Falkrunn greeted, keeping her eyes down. “I am here to see the Forge of Spells.” She held her breath expectantly.

“Ah, yes. The Forge of Spells. You have arrived! Welcome to the Forge. How may I be of service to you today?”

“Well,” the Dwarf shifted her feet uncomfortably, “can we use the forge?”

“I am sorry,” the Spectator said, “do you have the proper authorization to access this room?”

“Hello great Spectator!” Keyzana’s voice came from behind Falkrunn. “What is your name?”

“Hel-lo!” the Spectator said happily. “My name is Henry. I am the guardian of the Forge of Spells. How may I be of service to you today?”

“Henry,” the Elf woman said appreciatively, “my friends and I would like to use the Forge of Spells.”

“Do you have the proper authorization?” Henry asked kindly.

“Henry, would you mind if we looked at you? We were told we could not look into your eyes.”

“You may look at me!” Henry answered. “My eyes are only for protection against intruders. Do you have the proper authorization?”

“Here it is,” Keyzana said, and Falkrunn turned to the Elf and watched her unroll the parchment they had found in the door. “Will this do?” The Elf was looking straight at the Spectator and seemed unharmed.

Falkrunn gazed up, and he tilted his floating head at the scroll. He gave a huge, sharp-toothed grin. “You have the proper authorization! Welcome to the Forge of Spells.” He seemed to bounce where he hovered. “Are there any other services you require of me?”

“Not right now, Henry, thank you,” Keyzana smiled, stowing away the scroll. “Do you mind if we look around?”

“Certainly!” The Spectator said, then turned and hovered back to his corner to watch the table. Falkrunn could now see that there were pieces of armour on the table, but it was the Forge that drew her attention. She stepped toward the green glow, enchanted, and after about ten steps, her lute began to vibrate and hum.

She continued to walk as if in a trance and unlatched the lute from her side and began to strum it. Without thinking, she played the Song of Home. As she drew nearer to the magical aura, the lute vibrated more. Keyzana glided up beside her, seemingly unaware of the trance that held her, and leapt easily onto the platform holding the anvil. The green glow came from cool, flickering flames. The Elf gently held her sword over the flames and turned it, pulling it out a moment later and gazing at it as it glowed.

Falkrunn was transfixed by the flames. Slowly, she climbed the dais and stood over the anvil, strumming her song softly. When the song ended, the vibrations grew to a loud hum, and Falkrunn plunged her lute into the cold flames.

Her vision went white.

The image of a dark room was blurry, but came into focus as she heard a soft, familiar voice speaking to her. “Falkrunn, my dear.”

Falkrunn felt tears on her cheeks as she gazed up at the auburn-haired woman who was lightly strumming her lute. Falkrunn was younger here, her short legs dangling over the stool on which she sat. “We are so proud of you,” the woman smiled, playing the Song of Home.

“Mum,” Falkrunn said sadly, letting the song fill her heart. “Mum, I miss you. I’m so sorry.”

“It’s not your fault, love,” her mother smiled again, and stopped playing. She handed the lute to Falkrunn. “It was never your fault, dear.” She touched a soft hand to her cheek.

With a white flash, Falkrunn was standing over the anvil once again, looking down at her lute. The lute her mother gave her, just before she died. She pulled her hands from the cool flames and glowing golden runes appeared in the wood along the instrument. She read them with a smile and hugged the lute to her chest.

Then, she raised a hand and wiped a single tear from her cheek before descending the dais to join her friends.

Lorskan approached the guarded table warily, eyeing the giant Spectator. It stared at the items with dogged fascination. “Excuse me, Henry?” The Dragonborn said.

Henry turned, his many eyes alight. “Yes! How may I be of service to you?”

“This armour here, can I have it?”

“I am sorry, but you cannot have this armour. It has other buyers who will return shortly to receive their purchase.”

“Other buyers?” He muttered, then louder said, “very well, do you mind if I look at it?”

“You may certainly look at it,” the floating creature smiled and hovered back to make room for the Dragonborn.

Lorskan stepped over to the table and examined the pieces. On the left lay a giant brass mace. On the right was a thick golden breastplate inlaid with the design of a dragon. . Lorskan reached into his pack and pulled out his crest, pressing it to his forehead. “Henry,” Lorskan said, looking up again. “Are you sure I can’t have this piece?”Bahamat

Keyzana approached the Spectator as he explained, in detail, his purpose for being in the Forge of Spells. “I have been employed to guard these items for their buyers.”

“Yes, but,” Lorskan was saying, his patience clearly growing thin, “these buyers of yours will not be coming back. They clearly bought these items years ago and are long dead.”

“Henry,” Keyzana interrupted, and the creature turned to smile at the Elven wizard. “Can I ask you, who made these things?”

“Wizards created these pieces. Wizards such as yourself! I was employed by Master Lorenz.”

Keyzana nodded, her suspicions confirmed. “And when is it, exactly, that these items were purchased? Do you remember the year?”

“Why yes, of course! The year was 894 DR. Just last year.”

“Oh, Henry,” the Elf said sadly, moving closer to the giant floating head. “The year is 1487. These buyers are long gone, I promise you.”

The Spectator’s eyes seemed to quiver, and he looked around at the room, then up to the starry gemstones in the ceiling. His mouth sank. “What do you mean?”

“I don’t think you are employed by the wizards anymore, Henry. You are free to leave this place if you want to!”

“L-leave? And go where?”

“See the world,” Gundren suggested, coming into the conversation. “Or stay here and be employed by the Dwarves. My brother and I will have this Forge up and running soon enough!”

“One last thing, Henry,” Keyzana smiled as he turned again to her. “Do you know the ghost in the room just beyond here?”

“Ghost?” The giant face looked confused again.

“Never mind that,” Gundren said with an encouraging grin.

“So,” Lorskan said finally, still eyeing the golden armour, “since the buyers are most certainly not coming back, ”can I purchase this?

Across the expansive room, beyond the anvil, rested a stone archway. As Keyzana, Olara and Falkrunn approached it, the sounds of rushing waves came even louder than before. Olara stepped through first and they saw a huge black pool with surging water that echoed through the chamber.

It looked as though the lake had once been much fuller but had lost some depths and could no longer pass through a grate in the wall up above. Falkrunn surmised the grate would carry water through to the outer waterwheel at the entrance of the forge.

Falkrunn cast a tiny, flickering flame to pass over the surface of the lake but saw nothing. She tore off her boots, dropped her bags and weapons, and dove into the water.

It was ice cold and shot through her body in needles. She surfaced, spluttering and gasping, and waded in the water. She could feel the pulsing of the water, the current passing through and pushing, then pulling.

She came back up out of the water a few minutes later, shaking her head at the Elves. “If there’s something magical in there, I’m not the one to tell.”

“Need a quick dry off?” Keyzana asked, and Falkrunn nodded gratefully as the Elf cast a warmth spell over her entire body, drying her clothes.

She picked up her belongings and they returned to the entrance where Flavio, Gundren and Lorskan now stood. “I can sense magic here,” Lorskan said quietly, eyes glazed over.

Without any word of explanation, Lorskan unfurled his wings and, for the first time, they all saw him take flight. He glided over the surface of the lake until he was near the middle, then rose up high in the air, twisted his wings against his body, and dove headfirst into the surface of the water.

They waited with bated breaths as the waves crashed against the rocky shore.

Lorskan found a wand at the bottom of the lake in the skeleton hand of a wizard long deceased. The skeleton broke apart as he tried to bring it to the surface, but the wand remained intact. He examined it as they left the lake, then gave it to Olara as he again approached the Spectator alongside Gundren and Flavio.

“Come with me,” Falkrunn whispered to Keyzana and Olara, allowing her uncle to go with the others. “I want to get that chest.”

They nodded and followed her through the door across the chamber and into the hallway.

They once again approached the alcove where the ghost haunted the chained chest.

“Hello, great and noble spirit,” Falkrunn said as the wraith rose up from nothing.

“You—again,” it said, lacking all enthusiasm.

“I have achieved the feat. I have killed the beast, the Spectator, within the Forge.”

The ghost eyed her casually, passing a hand into his out stomach and scratching a phantom itch. “Dead, you say?”

“That’s right,” Falkrunn told him proudly. “It’s dead and gone, so if I could just get what you offered me—as recompense?”

The wraith’s eyes finally gleamed. “It is truly dead? The treasures are ” He hissed wickedly, rubbing his hands together. “Take a handful from the chest. It’s yours to keep for this great deed.” He waved a hand over the chest and it opened to reveal piles of platinum pieces. An insane wealth.mine?

Falkrunn reached a hand into the chest and scooped out a healthy amount of coins into her jerkin before backing away, bowing her head. She quickly stuffed the platinum into her coin-purse, which was now bursting to the point of tearing the leather lining.

“Now I shall go claim my treasures,” the ghost said, and suddenly disappeared into the wall.

Falkrunn looked back at the Elves and said, “let’s empty this chest, quickly. Take everything you can.”

The Elves and Dwarf soon had their pockets and bags stuffed with their rich find. Across the chamber, they heard the screeching wail of the wraith. “You’re supposed TO BE DEAD!”

“All part of the plan,” Falkrunn smiled at them.

Keyzana slammed the empty chest closed and they charged back towards the forge to defend Henry.

Lorskan rebuked the wraith as it charged him, and it pulled back, hissing. Keyzana leapt through the doorway and shot an acid arrow at the phantom, which flew threw its insubstantial form and hit the wall behind it, spraying acid everywhere and causing the wraith to shrink back further.

As Falkrunn’s short Dwarven legs took her into the large room, she cast blindness onto the wraith and it grabbed its face, screeching and clawing. Falkrunn then pulled out her lute and, still moving so the wraith could not pinpoint her, send her bardic inspiration to her uncle as he pulled out his hammer, ready for a fight. Flavio swung his own hammer and the wraith barely managed to avoid it as it sailed through the air.

Henry, floating high above the rest, locked his four smaller tentacled eyes onto the wraith and shook as a bolt of black energy shot from them and hit it straight through the chest. The energy seemed to pass right through the wraith, who was unaffected and still swinging around blindly.

Lorskan stabbed his longsword into the wraith with a burst of divine smite and it electrified the phantom’s writhing body with light. At the same moment, Olara’s arrow passed through the wraith and pulled off a chunk of its insubstantial form, and Gundren and Flavio’s hammers sliced off another piece. The wraith wailed again and grasped blindly at Flavio, but the human jumped out of its reach.

Henry dipped down and tore the phantom’s robes in his sharp teeth and Keyzana shot out a ray of frost that narrowly avoided it. Finally, Falkrunn leapt up to the floating wraith and stabbed into the form with her longsword. The blade somehow caught the middle of the wraith’s abdomen and, with a final cry of fury, it spread out its arms and exploded in a flash of darkness. Falkrunn landed across that, sheathed her blade, and turned to Henry. “Thanks for the help.”

Henry smiled a huge smile, looking like he’d had the most fun he’d had in centuries, which was probably true.

“Oh, and we checked the chest,” Falkrunn said, looking at the others, “and there was nothing in it.” She shrugged and walked away, grinning as she passed the Elves.

“Henry, I, Keyzana the wizard, hereby release you of your contract of employment.”

The Spectator tilted, looking at the small troupe before him, then smiled his last and disappeared from the chamber with a final dip of his head.

Lorskan picked up the golden armour and exchanged it for his own with reverence. Gundren picked up the mace and tried a few practice swings, then placed it at his back next to his hammer. “Anyone else ready to get out of here?” He asked, and they all nodded gratefully and left the Forge of Spells behind them. Falkrunn turned at the door for a final look at the flickering green flames surrounding the anvil before stepping away.

On their way out of the vastness of Wave Echo Cave, they found Reidoth and Nundro resting in one of the stone buildings and helped Falkrunn’s uncle to his feet. They filled them in on their adventures as they made their way across the stone bridge. They took a moment to again glance in at the room with the glowing plants, and also found a barricaded door that held nothing of interest, before moving on.

Finally, they reached the opening they had used to enter the cave and returned to the body of Falkrunn’s other uncle. Nundro and Gundren picked up the body and began their Dwarven chant of mourning, digging into the stone to put him to rest in the proper way. With that, they swore to make the Forge of Spells alive again with the sound of Dwarven pickaxes, Gnomish tinkering’s and the spell-songs of the wizards.

They slept deeply that night by the firelight, thankful to be back under the stars. In the morning, the companions began their march back to Phandalin.

As they neared the town of Phandalin they spotted plume of smoke rising into the clouds and growing thicker as they approached. “Is it the dragon?” Reidoth asked frantically, quickening his pace. “I should have left the town. I must find the villages and see if anyone escaped.”never

They crested a hill that overlooked the town and took in the scene. Keyzana cast her hawk into the air to survey the area, and relayed back what she saw. “On the farthest road there are six wagons at least, loaded with supplies stolen from the villages. Near the centre are ransackers going through the buildings and taking whatever they can carry, and in the town’s square are many of the townspeople surrounded by swarms of black cloaks, same as the cultists we saw in Thundertree. And—wait—yes, there is the green dragon. It is in the town’s centre as well, and it looks as though they may be feeding it with the civilians.”

Falkrunn held a hand over her self and cast a disguising spell. The illusion was of a person a foot taller than herself, standing nearly six feet off the ground and wearing a draping black cloak. With a nod to her companions she said, “I’m going in. How do I look?”

When no one answered, she made her way to the wagons at the edge of the city.

“Sure wish we got paid more for this,” Falkrunn grunted in a voice that was her approximation of a young man with an urban accent.

The mercenary beside her was helping her stack expensive cutlery out of the inn’s kitchen and throwing it into bags. He turned to her at that comment. “Wha, ya don’ think ten gol’ pieces is enough?”

Falkrunn shrugged. “It’s a lot of work, getting all these screaming civilians out of the way. Say, where’d they put all the townspeople, anyways? You know, our leader…” she trailed off and waved a hand.

The man glared at her for a second, his scruffy mustache quivering as he took in her long black cloak. “Yuh, Favrick that’d be, righ? Townsqurae, o’ course.” He hesitated, giving her a long look. “Why’s you helpin’ us empty houses anyways?”

“Because,” Falkrunn said, leaning over the man with her taller illusion, “I don’t trust mercenaries, and I don’t trust you won’t pocket this for yourselves. You can finish this up, I presume?”

The man nodded, looking befuddled as he hoisted the heavy-laden bag onto his shoulder and trundled out of the doorway. Falkrunn followed, rushing towards the town’s centre, her illusionary black cloak flying at her ankles.

“Oi, Favrick!” Falkrunn shouted at the man pacing the town’s square. He had just finished his speech to the townspeople, thanking them for their donations to the Dragon Queen. The townspeople, who were surprisingly few in number, looked at each other in fear and huddled close.

The man named Favrick turned to her. “I found something really good in one of the houses over here. You’ve got to see it!”

Favrick folded his arms and eyed her. “Who are you, then?”

“Ah, new recruit,” she said, standing straighter. “Hail the dragon.”

“Hail the dragon,” he echoed somewhat suspiciously. “I don’t think I recognize you. What’s your name?”

“Favrick! Good to see you again!” Lorskan shouted, trotting up behind Falkrunn, golden breastplate covered.

“Lorskan,” the man tilted his head to the Dragonborn, a slight smile on his lips, “well met.”

“This one’s with me,” Lorskan nodded over the where Falkrunn stood, and she did her best awkward smile and shuffled closer to the Dragonborn.

“Very well,” Favrick said, then turned to address the townspeople again. “You have been blessed by the Dragon Queen! You will be further blessed by feeding the great green dragon, Venomfang. Do we have any volunteers?” He paused, scanning the frightened crowd. “No? No one wants to go first? Very well.” He raised a hand and gestured to the crowd, and two cultists grabbed the arms of a young Elf woman whom Falkrunn recognized as a cleric from the town’s shrine and began to drag her toward the dragon. Venomfang raised his long neck and surveyed the crowd, steam rising from his nostrils. Favrick grabbed the woman’s arm and led her through the crowd himself.

“Thanks,” Falkrunn breathed to Lorskan, and he nodded. “I’m going to try something else,” and she ran off around one of the buildings.

Falkrunn cast a small spell that gave the illusion of sizzling, mouth-watering meat cooking on a brazier. She pushed the smell towards the dragon. Venomfang turned his head and sniffed, then returned his gaze to the crowd. Falkrunn cursed to herself. she thought, desperately imagining her options. I need something stronger,Where is everyone else? Why aren’t they helping?

“Noble dragon, I present this meal offering to you.” Favrick said, holding the Elf woman by the elbow and bowing low. As he stood straight again, Falkrunn whipped a throwing hammer at the man’s head. It connected with his shoulder and, with a sickening crunch, broke his arm. Falkrunn dove back behind the house, hoping no one had seen her. She heard Favrick yell out, “FIND OUT WHO DID THAT!”

Then, the dragon took flight.

Venomfang circled Phandalin, puffing out small plumes of green gas from his open maw as he scanned for enemies. Favrick still screamed below, ordering his followers to round up the fleeing villagers.

Keyzana, Flavio and Gundren had snuck into town and stood behind a building near the town’s square. Keyzana cast musical notes, drawing two cultists in their direction. They dispatched the cultists quickly before the dragon approached in their direction.

The flying dragon dropped fifteen feet out of the air, awkwardly hitting the top of a building before taking flight again. An arrow shot by the hidden Olara had pierced the beast’s underbelly.

Protect the dragon!” Favrick was screaming. “FIND THEM!”

Lorskan stood near a building’s entrance and gestured to Favrick frantically. “Come here, man! You’re hurt!”

Favrick held a hand to his dislocated shoulder. “Lorskan, get out here! We need your help to protect the dragon!”

Lorskan rushed into the open arena and pointed to where he saw two cultist’s disappear. “Look, they’re over there!” he yelled. As Favrick turned to yell at another of his followers, Lorskan unsheathed his longsword and brought it down in an arch towards the cultist. Favrick turned just in time and caught the blade with his own.

“,” Favrick hissed, pushing back against Lorskan with all his strength.Traitor

Flavio took down a cultist with his hammer as Gundren, wielding his newfound brass mace, charged at another and took him down. Falkrunn stabbed a robed figure through the gut as he came to intercept her, her disguise now fooling no one. The dragon flew overhead and spotted its enemies. It opened its massive mouth and belched out a huge, roiling green cloud of gas. The gas filled the air where Gundren, Keyzana and Flavio fought.

When the gas cleared, Keyzana lay unconscious on the ground and both Gundren and Flavio were hunched over and coughing wretchedly. Olara took her shot and another arrow struck the hide of the dragon as it swooped low. Flavio managed to stand and cast a magical bolt towards the dragon, which struck the side of its neck and flickered in white light. Falkrunn cast a spell of blindness, but the dragon was moving too quickly, and she missed.

With a roar of pain and anger, Venomfang flew swiftly away from Phandalin and out of range. Falkrunn watched in dismay as the dragon glided over the treetops and disappeared in the distance.

Lorskan caught Favrick’s blade as he rushed him and held a leg out, tripping the cultist into the dirt. As the man turned to defend himself, Lorskan drove the blade through his gut. With a gurgle of blood, Favrick died.

Lorskan sheathed his blade, pulled Favrick’s black cloak over himself, conjured Algernon into a white horse apparition, and galloped out of town towards the wagons, which had now left Phandalin in their wake.

As he approached, there was only one wagon left behind, the others having disappeared far into the trees. He slowed his horse and dismounted. “Halt! Men. We are being attacked in Phandalin! Come back and assist us, and we will reward you handsomely!” He cast a charming spell over the group and they all looked at him with hazy eyes. They all agreed, somewhat befuddled, and as a group ran back into town. Lorskan turned the wagon around and lead it back into Phandalin.

Ten mercenaries ran down the road towards Phandalin, much to Falkrunn’s surprise. As they approached, weapons drawn, she conjured a huge cloud of smoke to encompass them. The stinking cloud would fill their lungs with a horrible, poisonous scent, and would incapacitate those who breathed it.

The yellowish-green cloud burst out from her hands and eight of the ten mercenaries fell to their knees, retching and heaving. Olara ran up next to the Dwarf and sent an arrow through the chest of one of the still-standing men, and he fell to one knee. Keyzana approached as well and cast a shattering spell that rang loudly in the midst of the retching humans and caused six to keel over, dead and bleeding from the ears. Flavio rushed up and swung a hammer into the second standing mercenary and the blow took him off his feet, barely breathing. Gundren swept in and finished them off with his mace.

Only two mercenaries remained, vomiting profusely and trying to crawl away from the dissipating cloud of odorous smoke. Falkrunn quickly dispersed the rest of the cloud and tied the men up in their weakened state, leaving them for the town’s authorities to deal with.

Keyzana was able to ascertain that the wagons were being taken to Neverwinter, to the rest of the Dragon Cult.

The people of Phandalin began to filter out of the surrounding hills. Many of them had escaped and hidden thanks to Reidoth’s warnings only a few days before. They clutched the heroes’ arms and thanked them profusely. Lorskan returned with one wagon full of their possessions, and they picked through family heirlooms and stolen tools, passing them through the crowd. The Elf woman who had nearly been fed to the dragon approached Falkrunn, who quickly removed her disguising spell, and gave her a hug. “Thank you, Dwarf-friend. I don’t know how I can repay you.”

Falkrunn smiled up at the Elf and patted her arm. “I can’t resist throwing hammers at people’s heads. No thanks necessary.”

The Elf smiled and turned to the Mayor, who was instructing the townsfolk on how they were going to rebuild the town anew. With a wide grin, Gundren watched the town try and piece itself back together. He didn’t tell them about the Forge of Spells. Not yet. But he knew that once the Dwarves were back where they belonged in the mines of Phandelver, all would be well.

Keyzana pulled the Mayor aside and handed him a leather coin purse stuffed to the brim with platinum pieces. “Here is the down payment for the manor, plus extra.”

The Mayor’s eyes widened at the riches. “This will help us rebuild Phandalin. Thank you,” he smiled, tears forming.

Keyzana smiled back and looked across the town towards Tresendar Manor. “I should thank you. This manor belonged to my family long ago. It’s time we take residence in there once more.”

The companions gathered their belongings and went to the end of town to say their goodbyes. Lorskan, Gundren and Nundro decided to travel together to Neverwinter. Lorskan, to intercept the cult of the dragon. Gundren and Nundro, to gather their resources and allies to rebuild the Forge of Spells. With a subtle wave of his hand, the Druid Reidoth disappeared in the forest, returning to Thundertree to keep an eye on the dragon, if it had returned there. Keyzana bid them all farewell and headed to the town’s hall to hire workers to begin construction on Tresendar Manor. Olara slipped away into the trees with a simple nod of her head to her companions, searching for a quiet meadow to meditate, she told them, and to find direction. Flavio shook hands with Gundren and agreed to run the priesthood in the mines of Phandelver once they returned from Neverwinter.

With a sigh, Falkrunn hugged her uncles goodbye and headed Northeast down the road. She wasn’t done her wanderings. She had much left to do.

The Dwarf pulled out her lute and strummed the Song of Travels as she left the town of Phandalin, and her companions, behind. As she played, she felt a new and strange magic fill her lungs.

“,” she sang.All were at peace going their separate ways, to sing new songs til’ their end of days

All were at peace going their separate ways…

For now, at least.

THE END

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