A second spider sprang at Siegfried from the shadowy corners of the
web-ridden townhouse, fangs glistening with poison. Siegfried deftly
sidestepped the creature’s attack. The staggering spider in the courtyard righted itself and shook shards
of glass from its body before turning its multi-ocular gaze upon Varien. The
paladin squared his shoulders and prepared to receive the assault, which was
not long in coming. The spider scrabbled past his defences and sank its fangs
deeply, pumping venom into Varien’s body. The paladin gasped as the venom
coursed through him, sending shimmering ethereal wave patterns through his
vision that threatened to swallow his consciousness. At Ieirithymbul’s gates, Bob leapt from the waterfall’s course and landed
squarely, if wetly, on the stone surface of the walkway that surrounded the
well into which the river was loudly emptying. My children… Bob heard Andusk ask in his headspace. Why could I not see them? Bob eyed the remains of the bloody totem that lay shattered and
scattered on the stone floor. “I’d wager this had something to do with it,” he
murmured. “This totem was pumping out some sort of aura of confusion, unless I
miss my guess.” He gingerly extended a toe to kick at a charred chunk of
chopped totem, and then recoiled at the pain of contact. The totem may have
been disabled, but it was still dangerous. Erwen, still tangled in the net that formed a sort of sieve through the
waterfall, coughed a final waterlogged breath as he prepared for the inevitable,
but at the last second, powerful jaws clamped down on his bearskin cloak and
dragged him to safety. Erwen’s last wolf carried him gently as he leapt from
the net to the floor with a grunt. Erwen spat out water and coughed heavily for
a few moments as the wolf stood nearby, stoic. Erwen got to his feet and patted the wolf’s neck. “Finnegan,” he said,
pointing to the gates. “We’re going gnome.” He wildshaped into the form of a
wolf and bounded towards the darkness, followed closely by his canine
companion. There was a wet thud as Alec landed on the ground nearby. The barbarian
stood, water glistening on his exposed chest, his hair plastered to his neck. Varien shoved the arachnid attacker off him and took a step back, sizing
up the opposition. Using his sorcerous abilities, he quickened a fireball
spell, which detonated in the centre of the street and caught up all three
spiders in its expanding sphere of superheated flame. The spiders screeched in
renewed agony as the explosion seared their bodies. Varien strode forward, Talon’s blade flashing in the firelight as he
waded into the midst of the spiders, smiting them repeatedly and slicing them
limb from limb. Bob commanded his dayglobe to float nearby and illuminate his
approach as he made his way carefully down the wide stone ramp that sloped down
into the depths of Ieirithymbul. Alec marched alongside, while Furwen and
Finnegan had loped on ahead. Suddenly there was a reddish glow and a reverberating sound of an
explosion amid the first cluster of buildings that Bob could make out at the
outer edge of his dayglobe’s aura. A fireball mushroomed up over the
tiny townhouses, the smoke billowing against the cavern’s upper reaches. “A fireball?” Alec exclaimed. “But…but Erwen’s with us here, isn’t he?” Bob’s eyes narrowed. “Maybe it’s Xylon,” he muttered. Theryn ensured that the gnome woman, who appeared to be drifting into shock,
wasn’t liable to swallow an errant tangle of spiderweb before sparing a look
over the edge of the parapet to where Varien was hacking away at the three
burning spiders, and the townhouse where Siegfried had entered, but had not yet
exited. “Is everything all right there?” the monk called out. “Yes!” Varien shouted. “No!” came Siegfried’s muffled voice from within the small townhouse. “The
danger has not yet passed!” Theryn sighed. “Do you need a hand?” “If you have them!” Siegfried shouted back. Theryn turned back to the gnome woman. “Don’t move.” “That…won’t be…a problem,” the woman said, her eyes blank. Theryn hopped down into the city street, giving Varien a wide berth as
he continued to slice and dice the dying spiders. He crouched down to enter the
townhouse and saw Siegfried swinging his blades in a defensive flourish as a
giant spider attempted to batter the blades away with its multitudinous legs, fangs
dripping dangerously with saliva. Theryn sighed again. “I hate spiders,” he muttered, and taking one
careful step into the foyer of the townhouse, he lashed out with the butt end
of his quarterstaff, driving the weapon deep into the spider’s braincase. There
was a wet thwacking sound and the spider keeled over, dead. “Many thanks,” Siegfried said, working to free himself from the sticky
webbing that surrounded him. “Don’t mention it,” Theryn said as he withdrew without getting himself
stuck in the slimy snares. He returned to the gnome woman on the rooftop. “Now, who might you be?” he asked. The woman stared into the darkness and answered him with a flat tone. “My
name is Fnipper Gladdenstone Lichenscraper Candleshoe.” “Well, Miss Candleshoe,” Theryn said. “Can you tell us what happened
here?” “The spiders…” Fnipper said, her eyes welling with tears. “They…they
were in the blood.” Theryn frowned. “What does that mean?” he asked. Fnipper shook her head. “They got inside. Too quickly. Inside.” “How did they get inside?” Theryn asked. Fnipper suddenly turned and caught Theryn’s eye. “They were. In. The.
Blood!” “Whose blood?” Theryn asked. “Where?” “Everywhere!” Fnipper shrieked. “The Black Spider…” “Ah, the Black Spider!” Theryn said. “We are all too familiar with his
handiwork. Are there any other survivors in your neighbourhood?” Fnipper shook her head slowly. “They’re all dead,” she said. “Where did the spiders come from?” Theryn pressed. “Everywhere!” Fnipper shrieked again. “In the blood!” “Yes, there’s lots of blood, lots of legs, and lots of dead spiders,”
Theryn said with a tone that concealed his increasing impatience. “The alarm…” Fnipper said. “It sounded too late. They were already here.” “We’ve killed all we’ve encountered, and will continue to do so,” Theryn
said. “The gates were shut,” Fnipper continued. “But they were already here.” “Yes, you’ve established that point quite conclusively,” Theryn said. “The
invaders left a totem at the city gates, which we destroyed. They might not
come back.”
“We couldn’t escape,” Fnipper said, ignoring him. “We couldn’t use the escape
tubes.”
“Tubes?” Theryn asked. Fnipper nodded in the direction of the network of narrow-gauge pipes
that Theryn had taken for a sewer system that seemed to connect the townhouses
to the fort he was standing upon, while others led off further into the depths
of the city to the south. “These pipes and tubes are for your escape?” “My…my sister,” Fnipper sniveled. “She was taken.” Siegfried used his shard of the ise rune to quell the flames of
Varien’s fireball, turning sticky tangles of spiderwebs into brittle, frozen thickets
that were easily bashed into smithereens. Quickly, he reconnoitered the
townhouses in search of survivors. To his dismay all he encountered were the cocooned
remains of several more gnomes. He returned to the rooftop where Theryn was
interrogating the gnome woman, shaking his head sadly. “So what about the Black Spider?” Theryn was saying. Fnipper sobbed. “He…he said that if we gave them what they wanted, they’d
go away.” “They?” Theryn asked. “What did they want?” “It was too horrible,” Fnipper moaned. “How could our Mayor make the decision?” “What did they want?” Theryn pressed. Fnipper shook her head. “The Black Spider said they wanted…the scions of
Ieirithymbul.” “Who?” Theryn asked, perplexed. “The firstborn sons of the nobility,” Fnipper said. “Nobles?” Theryn said. “Well, the firstborns of our central council,” Fnipper clarified. “The
Black Spider said he couldn’t hold them back for long, so we had to decide.”
Tears spilled down her cheeks. “Blood…they were in the blood…” she lapsed back
into incoherence. “Pardon me,” Siegfried said, taking a knee next to Fnipper. “You need to
be more specific. Did the blood come with the Black Spider?” “He…he was so charming,” Fnipper sniffed. “We believed him.” Theryn turned to Siegfried. “Why are we here anyway?” “Varien and Bob’s goddess sent us to save
the place before my dad’s drunken horde raped the place, but I didn’t realize
that Ieirithymbul was the hottest girl at the bar,” Siegfried said. He paused
and peered over the edge of the parapet. Something in the alley seemed out of
place. “Hmmm,” he said, hopping over the side to
investigate. He ventured into the alley between the keep and the cavern wall,
and discovered a splash of dried blood, poured out from a foul vial that had
been tossed aside – the only thing that had kept the glass vessel intact was
the fact that it had landed on a growth of mushrooms. Siegfried picked up the
vial and inspected it – there was a filmy crust inside the bottle, which
radiated a faint aura of necromantic magic. Siegfried could tell from the smell
emanating from the residue that this was orc’s blood. “Someone poured this orc blood onto the
ground,” Siegfried mused. “A potion of orc’s blood. To serve as a…portal,
perhaps?” Siegfried’s face broke into a grin in spite of himself. “Of course!
That’s so cool! I must learn this foul blood magic at once.” “Blood?” Varien called out. “I found a splash
of foul blood inside the southern fort over there!” he pointed to the southern
side of the canal. “What is orc’s blood doing down here?” Theryn
asked, poking his head over the side of the wall. “Weaponized,” Siegfried explained. “I don’t
think an orc was actually down here at all, but from this blood came the
spiders that invaded Ieirithymbul, just like the traumatized woman said.”
Siegfried waved his hand over the bloody smear and cleaned it away. “That’s why
I learned prestidigitation,” he said firmly. “To delete spider blood portals.” Across the canal, Furwen, who was
mentally referring to himself as Michael, and his companion Finnegan, jumped
into the fast-moving water and paddled towards the northern shore. Alec picked
his brother up in a fireman’s carry, and, taking a running start, leapt across
the canal to land atop the parapet where Theryn and the gnome woman were
positioned. “Hello there,” Theryn said. He indicated Fnipper
next to him. “You’re probably going to want to speak with this woman. Her name
is Fnipper, uh, Candleshoe.” Siegfried moved back out into the small quadrangle
formed by the cluster of gnome-scale rowhouses and pondered the fortified
structure at the eastern side. The iron-banded doors were locked with a complicated
mechanism. Siegfried pulled out his thieves’ tools and went to work, delicately
manipulating the tumblers and avoiding several imagined booby traps. There was
a final series of clicks from within the lock’s housing, and the doors swung
open. Inside, he could see spiderwebs hanging
from the walls and ceiling. He sighed, then cleared his throat. “Unseen Protector’s Protection Service!
We’ve killed all the spiders out here. If you’re a spider and you’re hearing
this, you are legally required to surrender and form an orderly queue to await
immediate extermination. This message will repeat in…in Arachnonese.” He made a
few clicking and popping noises with his mouth in what he hoped was a
serviceable imitation of spider speech. There was a tapping sound and a single
giant spider slowly peered around the corner, and then shuffled out fully into
view, pedipalps waving. Siegfried smiled and pumped three eldritch
blasts into the stupid creature.