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Neverwinter Nightcap

The impromptu levee continued well past sundown, with Dagult Neverember proposing toast after toast – to the Lord’s Alliance, to the Order of the Gauntlet, to the indefatigable Mintarn mercenaries who protected Neverwinter. Soon the collection of empty wine bottles atop the table began to resemble the Gilded Eye’s scale-model diorama of the Jewel of the North, as the torchlight reflected off their glassy surfaces.   The party members matched Neverember glass for glass, though Bob was holding onto his just for show.   Mialee Amonodel, for her part, drank entirely too much wine as she pressed an increasingly uncomfortable Varien for details about his father’s life in the Frozenfar beyond the Spine of the World.   Bob was enjoying the family drama unfolding before him, and he could feel a knot deep within himself, something he hadn’t been able to pinpoint before now, begin to relax as he surveyed his surroundings and thanked Sune that he was in a city again.   Mialee swayed on her feet with each gulp of wine, as an attendant struggled to keep her glass filled every time she drained it. She stayed welded to Neverember’s side, and it soon became apparent to all that the Lord Protector’s iron grip around her narrow waist was the only thing keeping her upright.   “Did Filean…did Filean ever speak of me?” Mialee asked weepily. Before Varien could answer, Radegast stepped in. “Mother, you should be asking Varien about the burning sword that Dad took with him to Lorelei.”   As Mialee and Varien considered this, Radegast insinuated herself in between Neverember and her mother. “We should probably get you home to bed, mother, don’t you think?” Radegast tried to peel Mialee away from the Lord Protector.   “NonsenseI’mfine,” Mialee slurred as she bent almost backwards over Neverember’s arm like a towel.   “I think you’ve had enough, mother,” Radegast put just enough steel into her voice to resonate in her mother’s wine-addled ears.   Siegfried took this opportunity to distract Neverember, intent on getting a better read on him. “So, Lord Protector, what can we, the Champions of Phandalin, do for the city of Neverwinter?”   “When were you named a Champion of Phandalin?” Varien muttered to himself.   “Ah, my boy, let’s not mix business with pleasure,” said Neverember. The Lord Protector nodded at Fitzhugh, who was nursing his wine goblet. “There will be an opportunity for a debriefing once I’ve had a chance to read Sildar’s latest dispatches, but first, another toast!”   “To House Thann and to the favourable trade winds of commerce!” hollered Neverember, tossing back another gulp of Siegfried’s family wine.   Siegfried raised his glass in salute. “And to Neverwinter’s continued financial prosperity.”   “I’ll drink to that!” Neverember roared, grabbing the last bottle of wine from a red-faced Soman Galt, who looked three sheets to the wind himself. He dashed the neck of the bottle off on the edge of the ironwood table and drank deeply. He peered at an elaborate water clock in the corner of the chamber. “Ah yes, look at the time. Now then,” he said, turning back to the party members. “I understand you’ve just come to our fair city this day, but have you arranged for lodgings?”   Siegfried smiled. “Lord Protector, I had letters of introduction sent ahead to the Nidris and Winterpole families. I would be honoured if you could suggest which of the villas we should visit.”   “Ah, Nidris and Winterpole, you say?” Neverember repeated, scratching his beard. “Lady Sala Nidris is a fine woman, a merchant who resides in the Blacklake District, and Danas Winterpole is certainly a pillar of the community, though a rather short one – she’s a Halfling like your houseboy here,” he said, pointing at Erwen.   Erwen narrowed his eyes and glared silently.   “Anyway, I would recommend you call on Lady Nidris, she’s quite fetching you know, and knows how to entertain,” Neverember said with a twinkle in his eye.   “I will take that under advisement, Lord Protector.”   Radegast tugged at her mother insistently, and Dagult frowned slightly as he looked down at the bard. “Now then, I will take good care of your mother, child.”   Mialee moaned and vomited dangerously near Neverember’s boots.   “Lord Protector,” Radegast said earnestly, “my mother and I have been separated for some time, and this is the first opportunity we’ve had to reconnect. I would love the chance to take care of her this evening.”   Dagult took half a step away from the puddle of vomit. “Er, yes, I understand completely. Far be it from me to get in between a mother and daughter.” His lip curled lecherously.   Radegast bit down on her tongue with her back molars to keep from screaming.   Neverember gracefully transferred Mialee into Radegast’s arms, and as he did so, he leaned in and spoke into Radegast’s ear. “I will need to speak with you about what you saw in Helm’s Hold,” he said, with authority in his voice. “After we’ve rested, certainly,” Radegast said placatingly.   “And you’ll be sure to bring your mother back around to my private quarters once she’s rested? I would love to entertain the both of you.”   “Of course, Lord Protector,” Radegast said through clenched teeth. She intended no such thing.   “Splendid.” Neverember straightened up. “Your mother has a suite at the Moonstone Mask in my name. The coach outside will take you straight there.”   Radegast frogmarched her mother out of the Hall of Justice. As Neverember had indicated, a very fine coach pulled by a team of very fine horses was waiting at the entrance. A thin, haggard coachman was leaning against the coach, smoking a cigarette. He straightened up and hastily stubbed it out before flicking the butt away. “To the Moonstone Mask, ma’am?” He asked Radegast.   “Yes, and quickly, too,” Radegast said as she levered her mother into the coach’s enclosed compartment.   Lying sprawled on the couch, Mialee sobbed and gagged, and then sobbed again. Radegast rubbed her mother’s back. “Too much too fast, mother, just like back home.”   The coachman gave a shout and the carriage jerked into motion. Mialee threw up again, and Radegast smiled at the thought of her mother soiling the cad Neverember’s carriage.   “Come on then, let it all out,” she said, and then whispered “What is the plan, mother? You have no idea what I’ve just been through out there in the savage North.”   “Oh Pitt, I’m sorry you have had such a hard go of it,” Mialee slurred sleepily.   The carriage wound its way through Neverwinter’s narrow streets, and skirted round the immense battlements at the river’s mouth, where the city’s walls drew close to the water’s edge. A trail led around the far side of the wall, along the edge of a steep cliff. Radegast peeked out of the carriage’s window and was nearly overcome with vertigo at the sheer drop to the jagged rocks and pounding surf hundreds of feet below.   Ahead of them loomed an earthmote, floating in the air beside the western edge of the Protector’s Enclave, high over the docks below. It hung at least a hundred feet above the crashing waves of the Sea of Swords, bound in place by thick chains strung to heavy anchors.   “Neat,” Radegast said in spite of herself.   A bridge that ran between the earthmote and the cliff allowed visitors to enter and exit the Moonstone Mask, a lavish-looking multi-storey pleasure dome.   The carriage pulled up to the bridge, and Radegast helped her mother out of the coach. The pair negotiated the steep climb up the wooden bridge, which swayed beneath their feet as did the earthmote, drifting ever so slowly in an arc bound by the massive chains, each link the size of a townhouse.   “Cool,” Radegast said, taking care not to stumble off the edge of the bridge. She did not fancy a hundred-foot plunge into a seething sea.   The two women entered the Moonstone Mask’s foyer and lounge. It was fabulously posh, at least by the standards of Neverwinter, with chandeliers strung overhead and rich wood paneling covered every surface.   Radegast took note of the large number of Mintarn mercenaries in dress uniforms, many of whom seemed ill at ease in a formal setting. Most of the mercenaries’ chests bore intricate arrays of medals and pins, as though they were veterans of many military campaigns.   A tall brunette half-elf in an evening dress approached them. “Good evening, Lady Amonodel, so nice to have you back home here at the Moonstone,” she purred. Spying Radegast, she smiled a winning smile. “Lady Amonodel, have you invited your sister to join you here? You are of course welcome, milady.”   Radegast took note of the woman’s strong cheekbones and plump lips, her lovely features marred only by a vertical scar on the right side of her forehead that sliced down to end just below her lower eyelid.   “Pitt Amonodel,” Radegast offered.   “Is there anything I can do to make your stay more comfortable?” Liset asked.   “Just a hair of the dog at daybreak for my mum here,” Radegast said.   “Of course,” purred Liset. “We will continue to ensure that the Lady’s needs are attended to. Speaking of which, we’ve laid out some choice items from her wardrobe in her suite suitable for tomorrow’s Festival of Spheres.”   Radegast blinked. The Festival of Spheres was the concluding celebration of Waukeentide, a tenday’s worth of celebrations that Waterdeep had made famous. It was a religious holiday honouring Waukeen, Lady Luck herself, and involved the intersection of faith and commerce. Spheres was a particularly ostentatious celebration involving floating glass orbs filled with money, which the nobility would break above the reveling crowds to bless them with bits of broken glass as well as coin. She figured Neverwinter must practice a simulacrum of the festival and was interested in spite of her scornful appraisal of Neverember.   Liset looked Radegast up and down a little too slowly, betraying some interest that was something more than professional. “Would you be needing an outfit as well, miss?”   “Yes, thank you,” Radegast said. “Please put it on my mother’s tab.”   Liset clapped her hands together. “Splendid! Lord Neverember is taking care of Lady Amonodel’s bill.”   Liset ushered Radegast and Mialee to Mialee’s suite, which was furnished in a style unfamiliar to Radegast but whose wide windows gave a commanding view of the Sea of Swords.   Radegast gently laid her mother on the bed, removing her shoes and tucking her in. “Now then, mother,” she said sharply. “What exactly are you doing here? What’s your plan?”   “Dearest Pitt,” her mother said drowsily. “A former Open Lord of Waterdeep? What do you think I’m doing?” She stretched suggestively.   “Oh, mother,” Radegast shook her head. “I watched my ex-boyfriend die not a tenday ago.”   “That’s nice, Pitt,” Mialee slurred, petting Radegast’s arm. She giggled. “Dagult has been just a perfect gentleman…” with that she drifted off and began to snore loudly.   Radegast sighed, undressed, and joined her mother under the covers, hoping for a good night’s rest for a change.
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Back in the Hall of Justice, Neverember, his date for the evening now on her way back to her lodgings, was drawn into a conversation with Fitzhugh Montgomery. Siegfried sensed that perhaps it was time for the party to take their leave.   “So,” he turned to his companions. “Who wants to meet some terrible people connected to my family?” “Who?” Varien said.   “Friends of the family,” Siegfried said.   “Yes, let’s go meet your terrible family,” Bob said cheerfully.   “Does your friend’s place have a backyard?” Erwen asked.   “Possibly,” Siegfried said. “I haven’t visited before.”   Neverember turned to the group. “Of course you’ll be joining us for the Challenge of the Spheres tomorrow?”   “Of course!” Siegfried said quickly.   Neverember smiled. “Excellent, excellent. Since you’ve been making your mark in the North, I think it will be fitting to see how you can make your marks in the archery competition.”   “Oh, don’t you worry,” Siegfried said, clapping a hand to Varien’s back. “This one here received quite the archery lesson just today – why, he shot the horse out from beneath its rider at more than two hundred paces.”   Erwen cried a single tear.   “Splendid, I look forward to seeing how you fare in tomorrow’s Challenge,” Neverember chortled. “Now as for your other business with us, we should speak further, and I will send for you when I’m ready for a full briefing.”   “Of course, Lord Protector, that’s why we’re here,” Siegfried said. “By the way, I’ve heard that you recently sealed the Chasm in the city’s southeastern quarter?”   At this, Soman made a choking sound. Neverember grinned. “Heard about that did you? A costly endeavour, to be sure, but can you really put a price on the safety of 20,000 Neverwintan souls?”   Soman nodded sadly.   “Truly it is a new dawn for a New Neverwinter!” Neverember said, pumping his fist.   “Magnificent,” said Siegfried.   Neverember turned to Fitzhugh and then turned back to the group. “Oh, where are my manners? My closest advisors have been here all evening and I haven’t introduced you.” He raised a hand and ushered the severe-looking woman in Mintarn livery forward. “May I present to you General Sabine Wade, who commands my bravest men charged with protecting the Jewel of the North from enemies both without and within.”   “General Sabine,” Siegfried said. “Lord Tarmikos had some scandalous things to say to you in his secret files, and I hope you find the accusations as spurious as I did,” Siegfried said.   Sabine raised a perfectly shaped eyebrow, but said nothing.   “And this is one of my top advisors, Kavatos Stormeye,” Neverember indicated the wizard standing close by. Dressed in intricate leathers, the man’s white beard and pale skin was contrasted with the glowing third eye on his forehead, which regarded the party with an unblinking scan. “Stormeye here is late of the Arcane Brotherhood and has been absolutely indispensable here in Neverwinter.”   Siegfried cast  detect magic  and was struck by the number of wards and enchantments blanketing the room. Kavatos looked at him sharply, and inside Siegfried’s head he heard a stern voice say, “It’s rude to stare.”   Siegfried smiled and winked at Kavatos in an effort to smooth over his faux pas.   “Who’s the armored statue over there?” Varien asked.   “Ah yes, that would be the Lord Enforcer, Zephyris Brightmantle,” Neverember said.   The armored paladin silently nodded at the group, his armor glittering.   Erwen was busy walking around to each of the flower arrangements in the room, using  druidcraft  to spruce up the flowers. Suddenly he could feel the eye of Kavatos on him.   “Lord Protector, might we be able to send a message on ahead to Lady Nidris informing her of our arrival later this evening?” Siegfried said. “I know that in Waterdeep we can conjure paper planes of a sort, but here in Neverwinter…”   “Ah yes,” Dagult said. “Where’s Teliann?” He asked Soman Galt. “Fetch her and she’ll sort out the details. Now then, I shall retire for the evening. I look forward to seeing you at the Challenge of the Spheres tomorrow.” With that, he collected his advisors and strode out of the meeting hall.  Only Zephyris Brightmantle remained.   A smartly-dressed woman in a pageboy haircut walked up to the group. “I am Teliann. I understand you wish to send a message?”   “Yes,” Siegfried said.   “Well, a runner will cost you 2 gold.” Teliann said. “Got anything faster?” Siegfried asked.   “Certainly,” Teliann said. “For five gold, we’ll put a little magic into the message.”   “Splendid,” Siegfried said. “Take this down.” He dictated a message to the aide and passed her the gold.   Teliann finished writing on the slip of parchment, then folded it and tossed it into the air. There was a flash of black feathers as the paper turned into a raven and flew out of the room.   “Nice,” Siegfried said. “Carrier Ravens, I love it.”   Teliann bowed. “Now then, you don’t have to go home but you can’t stay here. Our ecclesiastical hosts are about to come through here to consecrate the chambers to Torm and Tyr, as is their custom.”   “Of course, we were just leaving,” Siegfried said. He and the rest of the party left the Hall of Justice and went back to their wagon.   As they climbed aboard, Siegfried spoke. “Now then, we’re going to visit House Nidris this evening, so I should warn you. Lady Sala Nidris is a merchant from Calimshan, tied up in the textile trade. She has a reputation for her fashionable dress and grace of form, but she is also known to be unflappable and appraises all with a critical eye. She is often seen in the company of her firesoul Genasi bodyguard named Vees, so watch yourselves.”   “Why should we watch ourselves?” Varien asked. “I thought they were friends?”   “They’re the type of friends who will smile while they knife you,” Siegfried said. “Friends of the family, you see?”   “I do not,” Varien said.   Siegfried rolled his eyes. “Lady Nidris has a son named Zan of whom she is very fond and overprotective, so no messing with the boy, do you understand?”   “Again, why would we mess with these people?” Varien said.   “Life in the big city can be complicated, Varien.” Siegfried said. “We may be guests, but we are far from safe.” Siegfried gave Erwen the directions he’d received from Neverember and soon the wagon was in the Blacklake District, where occupied and unoccupied manses stood side by side, and the moon’s light was not at all reflected on the surface of the ash-fouled lake in the centre of the district.   Siegfried stared up at the towering ruin of Castle Never and estimated the distance to one of its open balconies in its tallest spire. Someone has a date with a dimension door spell , he thought to himself.   House Nidris was one of the larger villas, featuring a protective wall that enclosed its grounds from the street.   The party noticed a team of servants armed with buckets and brushes attempting to scrub away some graffiti that had been scrawled on the outer wall near the gate.   Siegfried hopped off the coach and approached. “What seems to be the trouble?”   The servants cringed. “No trouble, no trouble, just a little mess we’re cleaning up,” one of them said.   Siegfried took a closer look at the graffiti. It had been painted in red, and took the form of three inverted triangles arranged in a long triangle at least six feet in height. The red paint, red as blood, was resisting the frantic efforts of the servants to clean it off.   Siegfried used prestidigitation to help clean off the mark, which he recognized as the symbol of Asmodeus.   On Varien’s hip, Fiendsbane began to vibrate.   Siegfried rejoined the group and the wagon drew up to the gates. The guard said. “Business?”   “We’re expected,” Siegfried said with cold authority. “Guests of the Lady Nidris.”   “Right then,” the guard said, waving them through the gate, which opened obligingly.   They were met by a rail-thin man wearing posh robes. He minced forward, extending his arms in welcome. “Welcome to House Nidris,” he lisped. “You must be young Master Thann, we’ve been expecting you.”   “Thank you for being so accommodating,” Siegfried said. “You must be Talzu, the Lady’s seneschal?”   “You are perceptive and accurate, Young Master,” Talzu purred. “Of course we are honoured to open our doors to a member of House Thann, of course, yes, indeed. I would be happy to see both you and your servants taken care of tonight.”   “Servants?” Erwen chirped.   Siegfried paused a moment before correcting Talzu. “These men are my entourage, not my servants.”   Talzu bowed and smiled a little too widely. “Oh, the Young Master is quite progressive and egalitarian, that is just such a delight to see in the younger generation, oh yes, yes indeed. Please, do come in.”   The wide doors opened into what looked like a textile museum. Where other wealthy merchants might have hanged trophies or decorated with the spoils of war, House Nidris was a temple to fabrics of dizzying variety, with wall hangings, tapestries, and layers upon layers of rugs and carpeting.   Siegfried made sure to wipe his feet before entering.   Erwen tracked mud into the villa, much to Talzu’s displeasure.   “Oh, you know druids,” Siegfried said. “They love the earth a little too much sometimes.”   “Yes, indeed,” Talzu said. “Well then, my diminutive druid, would you be interested in spending the night in the villa’s greenhouse?”   “Would I!?” Erwen said, a grin on his face. “Sounds great!”   “Excellent,” Talzu said, and then harrumphed. “I would have Arris escort you there, if he bothered to show up for work.”   “And what would you know about work?” A voice called from the shadow. Out flounced a well-built half-elf in butler’s apparel. “Without me this household would collapse thanks to your ineptitude.”   “Ah, Arris, you insubordinate clod, there’s no time for you to bitch and moan, not when we have guests to attend to!” Talzu said dramatically.   “Bitching and moaning is all I hear from you, Talzu,” Arris snarked back. “Why don’t you tell them about the level of service I provide?”   Siegfried realized these two were most definitely an item, and it was the butler, not the seneschal, that was wearing the pants in the relationship.   “I’ve told them they can expect to have to call you twice when they should only have to call you once,” Talzu was saying. “Why must you shame me in front of new people?” Arris shot back. “Just do your job, Arris!” Talzu said. Arris cringed at that, which Talzu seemed to enjoy.   Arris sashayed his way to the back entrance and ushered Erwen into the villa’s backyard. “Just follow the path, sweetie,” he said, patting Erwen on the head. Then he returned to show the rest of the party to their chambers.   Talzu bowed again. “Regretfully, Lady Nidris is currently attending to some business at the docks this night, but she will call for you when she returns home so that she can properly welcome you to House Nidris.”   The party was taken up a sweeping staircase to a set of guest quarters on the second floor. Siegfried’s chambers were the largest, naturally, but Varien, Bob, and Alec each got their own room.   “I trust these will be to your liking, sir,” Arris said.   “Quite,” Siegfried said. “By the by, are there any newspapers I could read? A city this size must publish at least one broadsheet, I’d wager.”   Arris nodded. “Yes, of course, if you’re interested in reading the Lord Protector’s latest pronouncements, then Neverwinter Nights is your best bet, but if you’d prefer to hear the current clack about town, then you’re going to want to read the Waterclock. It’s got a bit of an edgy reputation, but it’s the second most-read newspaper in town. “I see,” Siegfried said. “One paper toes the New Neverwinter party line, while the other leans in a different direction editorially speaking?” “You’ve got it, sir,” Arris said. “I can have the evening editions of both brought up to your room post-haste.”   “Please do,” Siegfried said, taking a seat on the couch facing a roaring fireplace.   Alec entered his chamber and hit the bed, snoring in moments.   Bob took the opportunity to pray to Sune and change into more comfortable clothes.   Varien stared out the window at the streets of the Blacklake District, and the towering darkness of Castle Never, which seemed blacker than the black of night overhead. He remembered looking at the skyline of Lorelei on dark, arctic nights, and missed his home. Having to answer questions about his father brought back a lot of memories, both positive and painful. Varien bowed his head.   A noise like a rolling mass of armored plate pulled him out of his reverie. An armored carriage, quite unlike anything he’d seen before, was rolling up towards the villa’s gate from outside, pulled by a team of show horses adorned with smart coats and feathered headdresses. The carriage had reinforced turrets, almost like a castle’s, that protected crossbow-hefting sharpshooters, and the drivers sat within an armored enclosure from which the reins were threaded out to the horses’ harnesses.   The guards at the gate couldn’t scramble fast enough to open the barred entrance to allow the procession through.   “Huh,” Varien said.   Arris returned to Siegfried’s suite with the folded newspapers. Siegfried left the Neverwinter Nights on the table and opened up the Waterclock, giving it a quick skim. The newspaper’s tagline was “Knowledge is Power” and its edges were illuminated with ornate scrollwork containing Oghmanite symbology, which gave Siegfried a clue as to what the newspaper was all about and why it might be frowned upon by the Lord Protector’s faction.   He took note of the masthead which proclaimed Seipora Gend as the newspaper’s editor.   There was a whooshing sound of sparks from the fireplace as embers suddenly popped and crackled, the firelight casting eerie shadows that played across the rich tapestries adorning the wall. Siegfried coughed as a cloud of smoke rolled in around him.   He heard a familiar voice breathing hot ash into his ear. “Great-Uncle Gend, there’s a name for you. This must be the spawn of one of his harlots, more like. Gend always had a wandering eye.”   Siegfried looked at the newspaper. Its edges were already starting to curl and blacken as an invisible fire fueled by hatred licked at it.   “Well, that’s going to have to be dealt with, now isn’t it?” Siegfried murmured to himself.     Erwen padded out into the villa’s backyard, which was landscaped and well-kept. A path threaded its way between manicured rose bushes, and here and there loomed large topiaries, with animalistic forms pruned into threatening shapes.   Erwen recognized a lion, a hyena, a hulking rothé, a giant boar, and a giant badger, but his eyes widened as he walked past the final two topiaries on the way to the greenhouse – a great dimetrodon, with a sail-shaped fringe poking from its back, and opposite that an impressive Triceratops – a terrible thunderlizard with a horned snout and beak.   “Well, if you’re going to prune a bush, I guess you should make it look fancy,” Erwen said. “Let’s find out what the bush thinks about his makeover.” He cast speak with plants.   The Triceratops shuddered and its armored head swung down to regard Erwen.   “Whoa!” Erwen said, jumping back.   There was a rustling of leaves as the creature spoke. Step softly, small one.   Erwen recovered and pulled out his pipe, lighting it. “Relax, bro!” he said.   The topiary sniffed the air and glared at the Halfling. I smell…burning vegetation.   “Yeah,” Erwen said, blowing a smoke ring. “I appreciate that, but someone has to get their fix, you feel me?”   The topiary growled.   “So, what do you do around here?”   We serve the Nidris family , the Triceratops said.   “Serve them? Aren’t you just, you know, bushes?” Erwen gestured at the garden around him.   The Triceratops moved half a step from his place in the rose bushes towards Erwen, who shrank bank. Do I seem like a bush to you?   “Er, to common folk, maybe,” Erwen stuttered. “I mean, you’re much more than just a bush!”   To common folk we are but decorations , the topiary growled. But to intruders, we are… the creature thrashed its tail, which was as thick as a tree trunk and looked just as heavy.   “Well,” Erwen said, pointing at the darkened greenhouse at the end of the path. “We’re going to be neighbours and should be friendly to one another. My name is Erwen.”   I am called Trike , the topiary guardian said.   “Frank?” Erwen asked.   TRIKE , the Triceratops thundered.   “How long have you been here?” Erwen said.   Many growing seasons , Trike rumbled. Long enough to recognize friend from foe.   “Well, you don’t seem too chatty, so I’m going to go take a nap in the greenhouse,” Erwen said. “If you need anything, give me a shout.”   Trike snorted and resumed his place in the garden.   Erwen entered the greenhouse and breathed in a lungful of earthen fecundity.   “Daddy’s home,” he said to the tangle of vines, plants and flowers that grew in neat rows inside the glass-paned greenhouse. He crawled up into the branches of a gnarled fruit tree and curled up, falling asleep in seconds.
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A tiny silver bell mounted above a speaking tube on the wall tinkled merrily but insistently in Siegfried’s chamber. Siegfried walked over and placed an ear to the tube. “The Lady Nidris has arrived and will provide you with an audience in the parlour,” Talzu’s voice echoed. Siegfried rolled his eyes but affected a cheery tone. “Thank you, Talzu, we shall be right down.” Siegfried knocked on Varien and Bob’s doors, but left Alec alone. The trio ventured back downstairs, as Arris met them and led them to the parlour.   The parlour, like the rest of the house, was adorned with lavish tapestries and wall hangings, weaved with the kind of complexity that suggested either an army of child labourers or a loom programmed with arcane gnomish tinkering.   A grand fireplace was positioned in the centre of the chamber, open on both sides, and before it was a pile of stuffed pillows. Perched upon it was a shapely woman of dusky complexion who wore purple robes of sheer fabric unlike anything Siegfried had seen in Waterdeep this season.  Must be the latest styles from the fashion houses of Velen , he thought to himself.  How gauche.   “I present to you the Lady Sala Nidris,” Talzu said in a formal tone. “Milady, may I present Young Master Siegfried Thann and members of his,” at this Talzu paused. “entourage.”   Lady Nidris slipped off the pillows and held out a hand to Siegfried, who took it with the required amount of host deference that the social situation demanded, but not a sliver more.   “You have a lovely, welcoming home,” Siegfried said.   Nidris smiled at the flattery. “We are of course honoured to host a member of House Thann in our finest accommodations.”   “Quite,” Siegfried said.   “I trust your journey was fair and uneventful?” Nidris inquired.   “Oh, it was bloody, violent, and entirely eventful, I’m afraid,” Siegfried said.   Nidris put a hand to her ample bosom. “Oh, dear!” she said.   “This is of course why we are grateful for…some of the comforts of home and hearth,” Siegfried said, wary of a shadow within the fireplace that had not escaped his attention. “Only this morning were these two fine warriors fleeing for their very lives after being wrongfully accused.”   “Oh, my!” Nidris said.   “I wouldn’t call it fleeing,” Bob said.   “And it did involve flight!” Siegfried said, indicating Varien.   “This is all so terribly interesting,” Nidris said. She snapped her fingers and a parade of servers offered the party a nightcap.   Varien noisily blew steam from his goblet.   “So, what brings you from fair Waterdeep to the City of Skilled Hands?” Nidris asked.   “Only the calling of the Jewel of the North,” Siegfried said.   “Yes, the siren song of stability is luring the wayward back to this city, which is being reborn under the aegis of our Lord Protector.” Nidris said.   “But not without complaints,” Siegfried said, brandishing the folded Waterclock newspaper.   Nidris waved a hand dismissively. “Those without the means to improve their station resort to braying like the donkeys of the field,” she said.   Siegfried smiled. “Those without the proper means may prove themselves asses, yes.”   “Mere, uncultured scrawlings,” Nidris said.   “If one can’t better themselves through the proper means, perhaps they would resort to painting slurs against the walls of their betters,” Siegfried said.   Nidris pursed her full lips. “Pay no attention to the bothersome rabble,” she said.   “I’m sure it was the innocent act of a childish prankster,” Siegfried said, sure of no such thing.   “Yes, of course, there’s no shortage of those in town,” Nidris said.   “We’ve taken the precaution of leaving our own prankster in the care of your greenhouse.” Siegfried said.   “Quite,” Nidris said, shooting a sidelong glance at Talzu. “So what is new in Waterdeep? How is your grandmother?”   “Grandmother Cassandra?” Siegfried said. “Shrewd and unknowable as ever.”   “We would expect nothing less from the matriarch of your fine House,” Nidris said.   “No,” Siegfried agreed. “We wouldn’t.”   Nidris downed the rest of her hot toddy and dropped the glass, which a servant caught with a desperate, silent lunge.   “I will now bid you good evening and pleasant dreams,” she said with a sweet smile.   “Lady Nidris,” Siegfried said. “We are grateful for your hospitality and may have to extend our stay for a few days as we have business with the Lord Protector. Is that acceptable to you?”   “As the Lord Protector calls, we answer the call,” Nidris said. “We are happy to host you until your situation changes.”   She shooed them out of the parlour.   The party members returned to their rooms.   Siegfried looked at the four-poster bed, wardrobe, dresser, and other furniture, shook his head, shoved his bags into the bed until a vaguely humanoid shape was beneath the high thread-count sheets, and left the room. He knocked on Varien’s door.   “Huh?” Varien said as he answered the door. “What’s wrong with your room?”   “Nothing, but I’m planning on sleeping under your bed all the same.”   “What are you talking about?” Varien said. “Did you see what was painted on the wall outside?” Siegfried said. “Fiendsbane pointed it out.” Varien said. “I’m still alive, aren’t I?” Siegfried said. Siegfried sighed. “The ones who will kill you are the ones that will smile to your face before the lights are turned down,” he said. Varien looked at the bed, looked at the door to his chambers, and then opened up the wardrobe and climbed inside, Fiendsbane at the ready.   “Just to be safe, then, I’m not going to expose my neck to be slit on my first night in town,” Siegfried said.   “You’re a little paranoid for a big city boy, but okay,” Varien said.   “Yeah, and?” Varien said. “You don’t think Lady Nidris is plotting our executions, do you?”   “Wise words, I guess,” Varien said.   “Or didn’t you notice?” Siegfried asked.   “Notice what?” Varien said.   “Didn’t think so,” Siegfried said, wedging himself under Varien’s bed.     The party members dreamed terrible dreams that first night in Neverwinter. All of them dreamed of a black-winged undead dragon, wreaking havoc on the city of Neverwinter, toppling towers and breathing destructive acid that broke in waves over the city streets.   Bob awoke in a feverish sweat to discover that his forearms were dotted with fresh black scales.   Siegfried’s nightmare was compounded with the fact that in his dream, Neverwinter was in flames as the Neverwinter River flowed with lava instead of water. The horrifying black dragon flapped its haggard, torn wings and perched atop the crumbling spires of Castle Never, screaming at the ash-filled sky above.   In his sleep, Siegfried smiled.