The party
spent an uneasy interval of time in their tiny hut within the gnomish bunker,
resting and recuperating from their injuries. Erwen sat
cross-legged on the floor huddled in his bearskin robe, head tilted back, his
tongue flicking out now and again as though he was tasting the air. “What are
you doing?” Alec asked. “It’s
snowing outside, on the mountain,” Erwen explained. “Big, pretty flakes.” “How do you
know that?” Alec asked, skeptical. Erwen
uncovered a sphere of inclement weather that glittered like a snowglobe in his
lap. Alec was
impressed. Erwen
stared at the globe before him. “I do hate caves,” he muttered to himself. Siegfried
spent much of his time in quiet contemplation and study, leafing through the
tattered remnants of the spellbooks and other grimoires that Radegast had
gifted him. Few things are as satisfying as plundering lore from varied
disciplines , he reflected. Well, that and being the heir apparent to a
powerful kingdom . Siegfried clapped
his hands and called the party to attention. “Gentlemen, might I interest you
in a telepathic bond ?” Varien
frowned. “I’m not sure I want you inside my head, Siegfried.” Siegfried
gave a mock wounded expression. “Ah, but think of the strategic benefits to
such an arrangement. All of us together, and, say, one of these valiant gnome
defenders here, would be linked together so that we might be able to
communicate non-verbally, and more importantly, stealthily, while engaging our
foes. We could also split up more efficiently, each keeping the others informed
of what they have discovered. And the range of such communication is, well,
intraplanar, as the sages say.” Theryn stroked
his chin thoughtfully. “Unity of mind can lead to unity of spirit, and of
action.” Siegfried
beamed. “Then it’s settled.” He turned to face the gnomes. “Now, who among you
would like to join our secret, telepathic club, hmmm?” Udohorn
looked uncomfortable at the notion, and Belfalcon, huddled together with
Fnipper, wasn’t paying attention. That left Zook, who looked at Udohorn and
back to Siegfried before wordlessly shrugging. “Excellent,
excellent,” Siegfried said. “I have a few other new spells to add to my
repertoire, but I wanted to get a read of the room before boxing myself in.” “Box away,
Siegfried,” Varien muttered. Erwen used
druidcraft to create a spider yo-yo, which he let fly around the fortress’s
main chamber, much to Bob’s chagrin. “Is that…is
that a Black Spider?” Bob growled. Erwen skillfully
let the yo-yo “walk the spider” for a few moments before putting it away. Udohorn ordered
Belfalcon to retrieve an item from the storeroom, and the reluctant teen
obliged, returning with a dusty bottle and a collection of clay cups.
“Mushroom wine,” Udohorn explained. “A wee nip of courage before you sally forth.”
He poured and passed, poured and passed, until all who wished to imbibe had
done so. Erwen lit
up his pipe as a palate cleanser. Varien
caught Udohorn’s attention. “Would you be able to lower the southern drawbridge
and deactivate any traps before we head out? I would like to sweep the area for
more of these foul blood puddles.” Udohorn
indicated a complicated control console that was thick with levers, switches
and buttons. “Easy as mushroom wine, it is.” “Yes, and
we’ll need a warning before any traps within your perimeter are activated,”
Siegfried said, tapping his temple with his forefinger. Udohorn
looked at Zook, who shrugged silently. Varien’s divine
sense informed him that there was indeed the reek of desecration not too
far from the gnome’s redoubt. “Time to go,” he told his comrades. The party
fell into line behind him. All was silent
in the stale air of the cavern save for the clanking of the winch that lowered
the drawbridge. Varien homed in on the source of the bloody corruption, located
in an alleyway between two townhouses on the eastern side of the street. Spiderwebs
draped the walls and roofs of the buildings like tarps. To the south, another
island fortress rose up from the river, and there was a waterwheel spinning at
the river’s edge. “Quietly now,”
hissed Varien. The paladin moved surprisingly stealthily for someone wearing
plate armour. Siegfried
tapped his temple again. There are even quieter ways than whispering,
Varien. Varien
spied the splotch of crimson at the end of the narrow alleyway and led his
companions into the tight confines. Unlike the others, this one was still fresh
and wet, though a congealing skin had begun to form over its surface. “Nasty,”
Varien wrinkled his nose, as he began a cleansing ritual. “I’ll use evergold if
I have to.” Suddenly
the blood began to boil. “What’s this
foul business?” Varien said, perplexed. There was a
sickening sound like a back-alley drunk straining to vomit as the bloody pool
suddenly fountained upward like a crimson waterspout, spraying droplets
everywhere as its form coalesced into something vaguely humanoid at the tip of
the rotating column. Black, congealed blisters formed into eye sockets and the
column’s terminus split into a horrible mouth-like gap, which grinned maniacally
at the paladin. Fiendsbane
rattled. A blood demon! “Bloody fiend!”
Varien roared, needing no prompting from his sword. He drew his blade and readied
his shield, standing his ground as the blood demon formed a shape like a spear,
launching it at the paladin. Varien staggered as his shield took the brunt of the
blow. The party backpedaled away from the demon, eager to find more room to
swing their weapons. It was then
that the spiders seized the opportunity to strike. Three of them jumped from
the rooftops on either side of the alley, leaping down to street level to
engage the adventurers in close quarters. Bob’s eyes
widened as he tried to defend himself against one of the skittering, grasping
creatures and winced as the spider managed to bite his arm, pumping venom into
his veins. A second spider tried to seize the sorcerer in its jaws, but missed. There were screeches
from the nearby island as three more spiders poured out from their hidden
nests. One attempted to jump across the gap between the island fort and the
street, but misjudged the angle, leaping directly into the spinning waterwheel.
Black blood sprayed everywhere as the corpse was dragged beneath the water. A second
and third spider made the jump, and one charged at Varien, biting him with its mandibles. Erwen cast animal
friendship . “Everybody relax!” he shouted, his arms outstretched. Five of the
six spiders immediately shuddered to a halt. The two flanking Bob began to groom
him with their pedipalps, almost apologetically. “Eww, stop it!”
Bob said, his voice pitched an octave higher than normal. He squirmed to get
away. “Gentlemen,”
Erwen said in a placating tone to the spiders. “We’re going to need all the help
we can get down here.” The five
charmed spiders eyed one another uncertainly, but made no aggressive moves
towards Erwen. Alec stood
firm next to Siegfried, who cast a hex on the blood demon, weakening it
before stabbing it with Talon, cutting back and forth in a dazzling flourish.
He spun on one foot and stabbed at the lone aggressive spider, slicing a wound
in its thorax. Theryn cast
hunter’s mark on the spider as he readied his bo staff, feinting with an
intentional miss and then spun the weapon with extra force to land squarely on
the spider’s braincase. He stepped back as the spider staggered sideways, senseless. Varien
charged Fiendsbane with divine energy, sending rippling waves of fire down the
weapon’s blade. He glared fiercely at the blood demon that still swirled before
him. “You’ve
made a grave mistake coming here,” he hissed at the demon. “You will
bleed forever,” the demon hissed back. “You first!”
Varien said as he cast spirit guardians . Pinpricks of firelight began to
form in an orbiting aura around him, each blazing bolt taking on the shape of a
flaming phoenix. The spectral flame forms flitted out in a 15-foot radius
around the paladin, passing harmlessly through the bodies of his companions,
but becoming painfully manifest as far as the blood demon and spider were
concerned. “The blood coursing
through my veins will stay there!” Varien shouted triumphantly as the burning
barrier blasted the blood demon, which withered and struggled to retain its
shape beneath the onslaught. Bob twinned
a guiding bolt and fired them from his other index fingers, one at the blood
demon and one at the spider. Both bolts slammed home, destroying both creatures
in a spray of red and black blood, which comingled into a sickening sludge on the
alley’s cobblestones. “Take out
the blood puddle!” Siegfried urged, and Varien completed the cleansing ritual. An uneasy
silence descended. Erwen gathered
his spider friends close and cast speak with animals . To the rest of the
party, it sounded like Erwen was cracking his own teeth and jawbone with the number
of loud clicks and clacks coming from his mouth. “So, who
are you guys?” Erwen asked. The spiders
introduced themselves as Ocho, Otto, Hachi, Acht, and Opt. “You are a friend of
the Gossamer Lattice?” Ocho asked inquisitively. “Naturally,”
Erwen said, his face full of boastful pride. “Well, we
do enjoy networking,” Otto said. “Great,”
Erwen said, his telepathic bond doing the translation work for the rest of the party.
“Now, gather round, and thanks again for your help today. I’m sure you’re wondering
why I’ve gathered you here in my little web of friendship today.” The spiders
reacted positively to his metaphor. “Are you a web designer?” Acht, the dimmest
star in the spider constellation, asked.” “Yes, of
course, I spin with the best of them,” Erwen said. “But step into my parlour
for a moment. You all came here under your own free will, I take it? Where did
you come from?” Hachi made
a throat-clearing noise of uncertain provenance and said, “The Black Spider called,
and we listened.” “Through
our network,” Ocho explained. “Long distance communications, you understand.” “Lord
Nezznar is quite a web designer!” Acht chirped unhelpfully. “Interesting,”
Erwen said. “Now, some people—he turned to give a significant look to his party
members—“think that I don’t pay attention to current events, but I know that
Nezznar’s friends, like the Redbrands, and like Glasstaff, usually know what’s
what.” He gave the spiders a hopeful look. “Can you take us to the Black Spider?” “Yes, we
can take you to the Black Spider,” Hachi replied. “It is but a short web walk
away.” The spiders worked together to spin a bridge of webbing across the river
to the island fort. “It’s this way,” Hachi said, pointing with two of his legs
in a westerly direction. The party
walked gingerly on the bridge of spiderwebs, Bob looking pointedly anywhere
except down. Strangely, it seemed like the spiders were able to keep their
natural adhesive in check, as the webbing was not nearly as sticky as usual. Okay,
the first thing we are going to do is slap Nezznar senseless , Siegfried said telepathically. Bob,
you get ready to cast counterspells and interrupt his casting, and Varien, when
it’s fireball time, it’s fireball time.
Siegfried,
Varien said with a
silent glare in the half-orc’s direction. You don’t need to tell me how to
kill the Black Spider.