The adventurers readied themselves for another wave of attackers. From the light of his guttering torch and the glow of the paladin's sword, Theryn could see that he, Varien, Radagast, Erwen-Spider and the Owlbear were standing on a wide ledge on the west side of a great cavern. Stone steps had been expertly carved into the steep escarpment linking it to the bottom of the cavern some ten feet below. Two long, stone tables with low benches were set in the middle section, along with a pair of old braziers. Across the cavern was another steep escarpment and another set of carved stone steps leading up to another ledge, upon which was a stately stone table, smaller than the ones at the bottom of the cavern. This must have been a mead hall and common area for the miners, but there was precious little time to admire the dwarven craftsmanship. Scattered on every surface were the skeletal remains of dozens of dead warriors - dwarves, gnomes, orcs and ogres, judging by the size range of the skeletons - which attested to the fierce battle that had taken here long ago. Those old bones were now being disturbed by the rabid running feet of a number of ghouls that were bounding towards them, their clawed hands grasping at the air and their jaws snapping in anticipation. Radegast remembered a tome on tactics she had flipped through in Silverymoon long ago. "Should we lure them up the stairs and take them down one at a time?" Varien, his eyes shining with vengeful fury, began to move towards the stairs. Xylon took half a step back. "Ulp," he said. Bob and Alec emerged from the tunnel to the south. Both brothers were covered in ooze that slicked their hair and dampened their clothing. Bob’s arms were crossed and he wore an expression of anger that could have cracked stone. “Oho, so there’s another fight going on up here?” He said, his words dripping with sarcasm. “Well, I’m sure you brave folks have it all under control. I’ll just stand right here and-” Bob froze as he saw the glittering eyes of Erwen-Spider regarding him. The colour drained from Bob’s face, and reappeared in a dark bloom on the front of his pantaloons “Nope! He shouted, turning on his heel and dashing back into the south. Alec smiled a knowing smile. “Guess we’ll act as rear guard in case something sneaks up on us. My brother can’t stand spiders, you see.” He turned and followed his brother. Erwen-Spider clicked his mandibles in an attempt to share his strategy with the rest of his team and then shrugged with two of his eight limbs as he began to scale the side of the cavern wall on his barbed spider legs. Who was too busy eating the corpse of a dismembered ghoul to care about the next challenge. Theryn gripped his staff and stood his ground. Erwen-Spider, now on the roof of the cavern, aimed at one of the approaching undead, who looked more dangerous than the others, with a tongue lolling out of its mouth that whipped back and forth like a snake seeking its prey. He let loose with his spinnerets, sending a glob of sticky, white webbing lashing down towards the gibbering creature below. The creature ran heedlessly into the rain of goopy tendrils and was instantly snared. Theryn took a leap off the ledge and glided down towards the webbed creature, which thrashed about furiously. As he approached, he encountered a nearly impenetrable wall of stench emanating from the creature. He wrinkled his nose and kept his lunch from visiting. He struck the undead with his staff and followed through with an unarmed strike, rocking the creature where it stood. He then turned about and dashed up the stone steps. "I left him in a good spot for you," he said to Varien as he rushed by, giving the paladin a high-five as he did so. Varien strode over towards the snared undead and raised his sword. He faltered momentarily at the creature's rancid stench, but steeled himself and delivered a radiant strike with his sword, slicing deep into the creature's torso. "Vengeance for Lorelei!" Varien shouted triumphantly as the undead creature, which he recognized as a ghast, sagged back into his webbed snare. "I ain't afraid of no Ghast!" he laughed. Then he realized that the rest of the ghouls in the cavern were now converging on him. He stood firm and raised his shield. "Now, the dark, caves, or ghouls, on the other hand…" Then the ghouls were on him. Claws and teeth flashed as he defended himself. One of the ghouls wrenched his shield aside and raked his claws deep across Varien's chest, and a second ghoul vaulted over his companion to sink his teeth deep into the paladin's outstretched arm. Varien bit down a blasphemous curse but cast a hellish rebuke against the ghoul who had torn into him. Varien felt a wave of cold shiver its way through his body, but refused to yield. Radegast jumped off the ledge. "Varien, shields up!" she called to the paladin. Varien obliged, lifting his shield overhead. Radegast landed atop the shield and struck her fist down upon it, ringing it like a gong as she cast thunder wave . The blast of energy echoed throughout the cavern and into the corridors beyond. There was a crack of thunder and four of the ghouls were suddenly airborne, spinning their limbs wildly as they crashed back to earth ten feet away. The fifth ghoul was blasted back against the stone bench before him with force that would have liquefied his innards, had they not already been turned to jellied goop in death. Dazed by the thunder attack, Varien was unsteady on his feet as blood leaked out of him. "Nice move," he said weakly to the bard, who hopped down and brandished her rapier as she nimbly backpedalled up the stairs. In the debris of the cavern floor, the four ghouls began to pick themselves up. Erwen scuttled overhead until he was directly over the ghoul in front of Varien. Then he dropped out of wildshape, diving to the cavern floor. "Look out below!" he shouted joyously as he wildshaped into bear form at the last second. The ball of brown fur landed square atop the ghoul, crushing it in an instant. Theryn stepped to the nearest ghoul and swung his staff. Though he missed, he followed through with a kick that knocked the ghoul to the floor. Varien half-stumbled back up the stairs, casting cure wounds on himself. Two ghouls attacked Theryn, who dodged their claws easily. Varien parried a slam from a ghoul with his shield, who began gnawing on it. Radegast stabbed at a ghoul with her rapier. Xylon stepped to the edge of the escarpment and cast chromatic orb at the nearest ghoul. He turned the ghoul into an unliving torch that thrashed about for a moment before dropping. “Oh, fireworks!” Radegast shouted. Erwen-Bear turned and bit into one of the ghouls, killing it. Theryn struck a ghoul with his staff, striking it on the top of its head and splitting it like a ripe coconut. Brain fluid leaked from the cracks as the ghoul's head came apart. He then pivoted to the last ghoul, sliding forward with an open palm attack that hit with such force that the back of the undead's head actually touched its back. There was the sound of rending flesh as tendons, empty blood vessels, and the creature's windpipe split open at the strain of its hyperextended neck, and the ghoul's head dropped to the stone floor between its already falling legs. From somewhere to the northeast, the booming of waves provided a coda to the melee as the last ghoul's corpse slumped to the ground. "That. Was. So. Cool!" Radegast gushed, clapping her hands. "That thing with the spider, and then that fire orb? Wow!" Varien offered her a pained palm, which she eagerly slapped. "That was my first real battle!" she said proudly. "So happy for you," the paladin said through clenched teeth, favouring his injured arm. “And would you just look at this place?” Radegast spread her arms out and spun around, taking it all in. “A dwarven stronghold, perfectly preserved just as it was 500 years ago before the Orcfastings War.” She inadvertently stepped into a skeleton’s ribcage and winced as bones splintered beneath her foot. “Well, maybe not perfectly preserved.” Theryn and Varien exchanged a look. “This is a historic find,” Radegast said as she wandered about the cavern. “Why, someone could write a thesis about-” Erwen stood up atop the head table, holding two stylized silver beer steins in each hand by their pearl handles. “Hey, I found some loot.” Radegast was aghast. “Loot? Those belong in a museum!” She snatched one of the steins, which still had a working topper attached via a machined hinge and displayed fine silver filigree around its surface that depicted happy dwarves cheerily marching off to work. “These are artefacts of a forgotten age!” Erwen shoved the steins into a sack, grabbing a few more where they lay discarded beneath the stone benches. The rest of the party fanned out in search of treasure. Most of the corpses in the cavern were warriors who had carried little in the way of coin in their ditty bags. However, they did recover ten of the silver beer steins. “So I’ve fallen in with grave robbers,” Radegast said to herself as she admired the ruins. She looked down at the stone floor and saw something shiny half hidden beneath a cracked shield. It was a nugget of platinum. Radegast looked about to see if anyone was watching, and picked the shard up, pocketing it. She had student debt to think about, after all. Theryn was walking near the northern side of the cavern and spied an exit. He saw a body on the ground that looked a bit fresher than the others. “Uh oh,” Theryn said. “Found something!” he called to the rest of the group. It was a corpse of a bugbear that had been savagely mauled by the pack of ghouls. Fish-sized chunks of its flesh had been chewed out of the creature’s limbs, and its ribcage had been forced open by clawed hands, its innards scooped out and devoured. The bugbear hadn’t gone down without a fight – its bloodied axe looked like it had felled two or three ghouls, whose twisted corpses had been flung aside into the shadows. They judged that the bugbear had been dead about a week. “Didn’t expect to see bugbears down here,” Varien said. Theryn was rifling the creature’s pockets. He spied a satchel, sticky with dried blood, and opened it. Inside was a pair of boots, stained with fresh blood, but otherwise in fine condition. Theryn pulled them out to show the rest of the group. Varien took a close look at them. “They’re very well-made,” he said. Xylon nodded. “I’ll bet those are magic boots,” he said. “Possibly boots of striding and springing .” “Hey,” Theryn said. “Wasn’t Gundren’s brother barefoot when we found him?” Varien was already lacing the boots onto his feet. “Poor Tharden,” he said. Straightening up, Varien took a tentative step and felt renewed vitality seeping into his legs. He hopped an experimental hop, and jumped so high that one of his companions could have walked underneath him. “Nice,” he said, eyeing his new boots. Bob and Alec returned from the mine tunnel. “We need to find a place to hole up and rest,” Bob said. “I’m all out of spells.” “I agree,” Erwen said, climbing the stairs to see if Who was doing all right.” Varien looked around. “Why not here?” Theryn frowned. “Looks like four entrances we need to guard, and no doors to barricade,” He turned to Radegast. “You seem to know a thing or two about dwarven architecture. Where should we go?” Radegast frowned. “Well, dwarves tend to build these things to suit the type of rock they’re tunnelled into, so it’s hard to say where a redoubt might be located.” Varien pointed at the corridor beyond the dead bugbear. “Why don’t we go where he was going?” “And run into his friends, in our condition?” Theryn said. “No way. We can come back and check it out later.” “I need to sleep,” Erwen said. “Fine,” Varien said. “Let’s try the southeast entrance.” They moved south into a corridor of worked stone. Varien lit the way with his glowing sword, finding a side corridor that branched eastward. The eastern wall of the chamber had collapsed into a mass of rubble. To the north, a door stood ajar, leading to a good-sized storeroom. Dusty kegs were tucked neatly against the walls, all of them cracked and split open from age. “This is the place,” Varien said. “We can have Xylon cast alarm on the corridor entrance, post the owlbear as a guard, and barricade ourselves inside this room until we’re back to full fighting strength. The party saw no reason to disagree. Xylon cast alarm, Erwen made sure the Owlbear was still charmed , and they entered the storeroom, barricading the door shut. “So,” Radegast said to Varien. “Where do you hail from?” “A small town in the north called Lorelei,” Varien said. “It was overrun by undead two years ago, which is why I have sort of a raging hatred of zombies, ghouls and the like.” His face took on a faraway look. “Everyone there is dead, and I won’t rest until they are avenged.” “I’m so sorry,” Radegast said, and began strumming a song of rest based on a Loreleian lullaby on her lute. Varien blinked back sudden tears at the tune, and put on a stoic expression. “I haven’t heard a song like that in years.” Bob put a final box atop the barricade and turned around, a fierce expression in his eyes. “Don’t go looking for sympathy, paladin,” he spat. “Not after the stunt you just pulled. What the hell is wrong with all of you?” Radegast’s song ended with a confused twanging sound. “You abandoned my brother and me in the heat of battle!” He rounded on Varien. “Who does that?” Varien shook his head “I do, Bob. There was evil in that cavern that needed to be cleansed.” Bob threw up his hands in disgust. “There was evil right in front of your face!” Varien clapped a hand on Bob’s shoulder. “Bob, I know there’s great power in you. I knew you were capable of handling it.” “Oh, we handled it, didn’t we?” Bob said, nodding in Alec’s direction. Erwen snored atop a sack of desiccated grain. Theryn squatted next to Bob. “I wasn’t going to do you any good in that fight, Bob. You don’t use oil to clean water.” “What does that even mean?” Bob asked, kicking a loose stone in frustration. Xylon chuckled. Bob turned to Xylon, stabbing a finger at him. “And you!” Xylon’s laughter died. “Mister I’m-Going-to-Barbecue-My-Friends, I told you not to do it, and you did it anyway!” Xylon waved a dismissive hand. “If you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen, then!” Radegast looked sheepish. “I’m sorry, I wasn’t sure what I was supposed to do in a situation like that, and just followed along. That was shameful of me.” “Fine,” Bob said. “I’ve said all I’m going to say. But how am I supposed to have your backs, if I’m not sure you have mine?” Alec laid a hand on his brother’s shoulder. “Okay, brother. It’s time to sleep on this. You’ll wake up feeling better, I promise.” “Whatever,” Bob said, and curled up in the corner beneath his robe. With Erwen and the human members of the party asleep, Xylon and Radegast found themselves alone, needing only to meditate for a short while. They struck up a conversation, and Xylon put his lecherousness in check for the moment to fill Radegast in on how he had met the other members of the party, and the chain of events that had led to the discovery of Wave Echo Cave. Radegast was surprised to find out that the party had included a Dragonborn, and Xylon warmed to the subject, telling stories about Ragnar’s less than savoury activities. “I highly doubt he was as stupid as you’re describing,” Radegast said. “Dragonborn are a noble, thoughtful people.” Xylon shrugged. “Guess you had to be there.” Hours passed, and the party members roused themselves, eating some of their rations and making sure their weapons and armor were in good repair. “All right,” Varien said after a time. “Let’s go cleanse the dead.” “Just as long as we’re not giving those ghouls sponge baths,” Radegast said. “We’re killing them, right?” “Even better,” Varien said, removing the barricade. Erwen checked on Who, who had curled up and rested during the night. “We’re going north,” Varien said. “I want to take a closer look at that cavern and its exits.” Theryn nodded at the corridor, which continued south. “I’ll take Xylon and the Treveylan brothers and scope out this section of the stronghold in case there’s anything waiting to sneak up on us.” “Sounds good,” Varien said, giving the monk a fist bump before he, Erwen, and Radegast headed back to the great cavern. Theryn lit a torch and began exploring the southern section of the mine. Varien, Erwen, and Radegast re-entered the cavern and immediately halted. Something was moving in the cavern’s interior, and Varien could almost smell the taint of evil in the vicinity. Radegast’s sharp half-elven eyes picked out the forms of at least four skeletons, still clad in rusted bits of armor and carrying the weapons they must have wielded in life, walking listlessly about the cavern, dragging their feet through the broken bones that littered the floor. What foul magic had animated these corpses in the hours since they had first cleared the cavern, she couldn't say. One of the skeletons, tiny pinpricks of light glowing in its eye sockets, turned and began lurching towards them. Erwen kicked his heels into Who’s flanks and the Owlbear leaped into the cavern, climbing the stone steps of the escarpment to the east and snapping and clawing at the first skeletons it could reach. Varien was about to let loose a battle cry when an arrow thudded into his midsection. From across the cavern, two skeletons raised battered shortbows and pulled on their bowstrings. “Varien, you should watch out for-” Radegast said before she felt a sudden, sharp pain pierce her studded leather breastplate. Stunned, she stared down at the ancient arrow that protruded from her chest. “I’m – I guess I’m hit?” She said, the cavern suddenly spinning around her. Theryn led Xylon and the Trevelyan brothers deeper into the mine, scouting out dead ends and new tunnels before happening upon a chamber with a half-open stone door. Theryn crept to the door and peeked in. He took in the sight of old stone bunks lining the walls of the chamber in orderly rows, with a corroded iron brazier full of old coals standing near the middle of the room. The bones of half a dozen dwarves and orcs lay strewn about, clad in scraps of brittle armor. Theryn’s attention was drawn to the three gray-skinned, hunched figures that squatted among the remains, pawing at the scraps and gnawing on the bones. Theryn turned to his companions and held up three fingers. “Let’s do this,” Theryn hissed and forced the door open, leaping into the room. He swung his staff at the head of the nearest ghoul, who hadn’t heard his approach, following through with an unarmed strike that knocked the ghoul down into the mess of bones and rotted bedclothes on the floor. Alec was next, swinging his morning star and caving in the chest of the second ghoul. Bob let loose with a scorching ray , firing three bolts that found three targets. Not to be outdone, Xylon cast fire bolt. The flaming bullet went astray and impacted directly on Theryn’s back. “Dammit, Xylon!” Theryn shouted in pain as cinders rained to the floor. “Whoops,” Xylon said. Back in the cavern, Varien rushed headlong into battle, swinging his sword overhead. Instead of running up the stairs, he jumped up, hoping his boots would carry him the distance. They did, and then some. He jumped, and the boots sent him careening skyward. The cavern roof got in the way, however, and Varien struck his head on the ceiling before falling down to land in front of his target. Varien smiled through bloody teeth – he had bitten his tongue – and swung his sword. As Talon’s blade flashed down, it neatly bisected the first skeleton’s head, driving its spinal column in twain. The skeleton split apart in front of him, its limbs clattering to the floor. Radegast pulled out her own bow and let fly with an arrow that sizzled through the air, plonking neatly into the eye socket of one of the skeletal archers and knocking its rusted helmet clear off. “Bull’s eye!” Radegast shouted. Still smouldering from Xylon’s fire bolt, Theryn cracked a ghoul’s skull with his bo staff and launched a kick at another ghoul, sending it stumbling back into Alec’s line of fire. The fighter swung his morning star and took the ghoul’s head clean off. Xylon cast another fire bolt . This one also drifted off course, ploughing directly into the coal-stuffed brazier and igniting it. “That’s gotta count for something!” the wizard shouted. Bob facepalmed. Theryn was distracted by the sudden burst of light and heat and a ghoul managed to plunge its claws deep into his body. Again, the monk felt a deep cold that seemed to course through his body towards his heart, but he shook it off. He gave the ghoul the butt end of his staff and as the creature doubled over, he drove his knee into the ghoul’s face and sent it falling into the fiery brazier. Theryn smiled as the creature screamed in pain. As Who and Erwen ground two skeletons into dust beneath the Owlbear’s paws, Varien ran, screaming epithets the whole way, his boots helping his stride increase with each bound, and sliced through the last skeletal archer. Silence once again descended on the cavern, broken only by the far-off sound of crashing waves. Radegast pulled the arrow out of her chest, appraised it, and shrugged, adding it to her quiver. She cast cure wounds on herself, closing the injury to her breast. ‘Where to next?” She asked the paladin. Varien walked over. “I think it might be prudent if we stuck together. Let’s go find the others.” They marched south and met up with Theryn, Bob, Xylon and Alec, who were exiting the barracks. Varien eyed the scorched wound on Theryn’s back and then gave Xylon a knowing look. Xylon shook his head, shamefaced. Radegast reached out and touched Theryn’s injury, casting cure wounds . The party followed the corridor to the south, and entered a large chamber. Many tunnels intersected at this natural, thirty-foot-high cavern. The walls were carved with simple reliefs showing dwarf and gnome miners hard at work. The floor was covered in tiled mosaics depicting dwarves and gnomes of noble bearing, which Radegast declared was an artistic interpretation of the parties to the historic Phandelver’s Pact. It was clear by the attention to detail given the dwarves in the mosaic that the mine was firmly under their control, despite whatever deal they had made with other races. Many mosaic tiles had been shattered by fallen stalactites and by the brutal battle that was evidenced by the nearly two-dozen skeletons in rusted armor scraps scattered across the floor. Some were dwarf skeletons, and some were orc remains, many of them locked in mortal combat even in death. Around the cavern, half a dozen large brass lanterns stood in niches or on ledges, but none were lit. “I’ll take care of that,” Varien said, walking around and reverently lighting each lantern in turn. Theryn looked up at the inverted forest of stalactites that looked ready to give way at any moment. Radegast looked about. “This could have been the mine’s main entrance. Look at the reliefs about the walls – they were meant as a welcome to the miners.” “Well, where should we-Ow!” Alec shouted in pain and the party members spun about to look in his direction. He was bent over, trying futilely to dislodge a creature that had landed on its back. Radegast covered her mouth in horror. “Stirges!” she shouted. The party members looked up, but it was too late – tiny stirges, four-winged abominations with long proboscises were dropping from the ceiling like guided magic missiles, attaching themselves to any exposed flesh they could find. Who howled as two of them drove their stiletto-like suckers into his body and began feasting like overmuscled mosquitoes. Varien swung his sword and cried out as two of them flapped their wings and draped them over his torso, seeking a point of entry. Erwen danced about, a stirge attached to his rear end. Theryn gripped his bo staff, ready for action, as Xylon and Bob moved behind him. The sound of leathery, flapping wings filled the cavern.