[27 Rova 4707 continued]
The
adventurers set off towards the basement of the Glassworks, planning to explore
the recently-discovered tunnels branching off of it. On the way, Xeveg shares what he knows about
quasits, a type of creature mentioned in Tsuto’s journal: that they are tiny winged
demons from another plane of existence and are resistant to fire. In the basement, the adventurers see the
sentries posted by Mayor Deverin. The
sentries say they are stretched thin guarding the multiple approaches to Sandpoint,
as there’s only a dozen guards in the Town Watch. One of them, Jodar Provolost, says that if
things get worse and Sheriff Hemlock hasn’t returned from Magnimar yet, Mayor
Deverin may have to call out the citizen militia.
A sinspawn! |
The
adventurers face a choice of three directions when they enter the tunnels:
northeast, east, and west. Xeveg
suggests the group choose the west route, and they do. A rough-cut passageway, it meanders for about
fifty feet west before turning north for another hundred feet and continuing
down through a torn-down brick wall.
From a side-chamber barely visible in the light of Oliver’s everburning
torch, a monstrous form suddenly appears!
The creature, a hairless humanoid with back-bent dog-like legs, tiny
arms with three-fingered hands, and a mouth full of sharp teeth immediately
leaps to attack Felix. The Shoanti
warrior is scratched by one of its claws but he fends it off and then pummels it
to the ground as Oliver’s greatsword and Bey’s bardiche slash it to
pieces. The terrifying incident is over
almost as soon as it has begun. A search
of the rough-hewn chamber reveals nothing of interest.
The tunnels continue north but also
branch off to the east. Choosing east,
the adventurers discover a solid, worked stone wall that has been torn down to
reveal a finished underground complex.
Still filled partially with debris, a heavy stone door is pushed open to
reveal corridors winding north and east.
The adventurers again choose east, and as their footsteps echo heavily
through the ancient darkness, they come across a small shrine to an unknown
entity. Steps lead up to a platform of
gray stone, and sitting atop the platform is an altar, little more than a
jagged block of black marble with a shallow concavity on top of it. The basin is filled with what appears to be
filthy water, but Xeveg insists it is, in fact, holy water. Oliver decides to drink some and immediately
becomes queasy and ill. After he
recovers enough to continue, the adventurers examine a locked set of stone
double-doors leading off of the shrine room.
Oliver spends several minutes loudly picking the locks, but finally a
rusty tumbler turns and the doors open.
A
large underground cathedral reveals itself.
With small stone doors hanging just ajar on either side of the main
entrance, the walls of the cathedral are carved with strange, spiky runes. In the center of the room is a large pool
with a ring of polished human skulls balanced on stone spikes around it. At the far end of the room, a pair of stone
stairways lead up to a dais on which sits a second pool, this one filled with
churning, glowing orange liquid. But
what demands the adventurers’ attention is the sudden appearance of a quasit
hovering above the pool. “How dare you
intrude in the Mother’s sanctum!” she shouts before slashing the palm of her
hand with a dagger. Blood drips into the
churning pool, and the quasit becomes alarmed as the orange glow diminishes
noticeably. But from out of the pool,
another monstrosity like the one that guarded the approach to these catacombs
emerges. It sniffs the air and moves to
attack the intruders.
Erylium is far more trouble than her size would indicate. |
An epic battle begins! The monstrosity is soon felled before the
adventurers’ might, but the wily winged quasit flies out of reach and turns
invisible at crucial moments. It hurls
spells and charms to vex the adventurers, such as magically compelling Felix to
flee twice! The quasit, whose name is
revealed to be Erylium, shouts that the adventurers are committing blasphemy
merely by setting foot in her “empire” and that she will punish them on behalf
of the Demon Mother. Xeveg is the
subject of several magical attacks but manages to fight them off, and then,
through either desperation or mistaken strategy, decides to cut his own hand and
drip blood into the cauldron of bubbling orange liquid! Another abomination emerges and attacks the
young wizard, rending at him with claws and teeth! The adventurer falls to the ground,
unconscious. As the battle rages on, a
stalemate begins to show: Erylium has exhausted most of her magic and has only
a tiny dagger to harm the adventurers, but her ability to fly out of their
reach combined with demonically-strong skin and the ability to slowly heal
wounds means neither side can gain an advantage.
Bey, realizing that Erylium is
paranoid about protecting the pool, conjures a rush of water into it to force
it to overflow. Erylium screams in rage
that if the adventurers do not flee, she’ll slit the throat of their downed
companion. But the remaining adventurers
keep fighting and Erylium follows through on her threat! In seconds, Xeveg’s lifeblood splatters the
floor and walls of the cathedral and he dies.
Recognizing that Erylium is both visible and near the ground, Felix
leaps and grabs the demon before she can escape! He squeezes to crush her frail bones and
punches her repeatedly in the face, and it looks like she’s about to succumb
until somehow she squirms free of his grasp and flies away!
Poor Xeveg, the first to go. |
The adventurers give chase as she
hurtles out of sight into the darkness.
They hear her shouting at someone to “gather everyone to repel the
invasion!” and, after a few moments’ equivocation, they decide that a retreat
is in order. The adventurers make their
way back to the Glassworks, with Oliver dragging Xeveg’s body with a loop of
fishing line around the corpse’s neck.
Jodar Provolost is sent to get reinforcements as the adventurers spend
tense moments wondering whether an attack is imminent. He returns with the skeleton crew that had
been manning the garrison, and says that Mayor Deverin is calling out the
militia. Meanwhile, Oliver starts
stripping Xeveg’s body of wealth and possessions. A couple of hours later, Mayor Deverin
arrives with several townspeople serving as volunteer soldiers. Felix notes that an attack hasn’t come yet,
and suggests another expedition into the catacombs. Mayor Deverin, worried that an attack could
come from anywhere, says she can spare two members of the militia for the
scouting mission. The group select
Vachedi and Sabyl Sorn, and prepare to set forth again.
--------------------------------------------------
Director's Commentary (26/02/2017)
The big event in this session, unfortunately, was the first PC death of the campaign. Although Erylium is extremely hard to kill (fast healing, flying, invisibility, DR), she does an incredibly small amount of damage with a Tiny-sized dagger. The reason Xeveg died was that the players at the table, other than the one running Xeveg, either didn't know about or forgot about the coup de grace action, and thus didn't take Erylium's threat to slit Xeveg's throat seriously. The dagger did 1 point of damage, doubled to 2 with the automatic critical hit, resulting in a DC 12 Fortitude save for the wizard to live or die. Alas, the check failed. It was sad at the time, and still a bummer, as I thought Xeveg was a really interesting character with a lot of potential, and having a full arcane spellcaster is something that would have made subsequent encounters later in the campaign *much* easier.
I had to improv, of course, Mayor Deverin's response when the PCs retreated, but I thought it worked out pretty well.
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1 comment:
Always tough to lose a player early on, especially one newer to the game, but it's a better policy to let the dice fall where they may. I'm hoping in my game that the players begin to get attached to their characters and the rest of the group so while the threat of dying is real they truly want to avoid it and not just see each character as a collection of stats on paper but something meaningful.
Doesn't always happen that way ... but I can hope...
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