The Fairy Ring in the Nentir Vale

Gargoyles, and Frankie, and Warped Magic -- oh my!
In the Tower of the Archmage, Valdemar
Rules Clarification

I looked this up after Fosden did his Invocation of the Sun while locked in combat with Frankie.

Casting a spell (that’s not a ‘Close-quarters’ one) incurs Attacks of Opportunity from engaged opponents. But those are reactions, not interrupts, and being hit does not prevent you casting your spell.
But I AM going to house rule that if they knock you out, you have to make a normal save (11+, i.e. 50/50) to get the spell off before you go down.

Goals:

The Deck of Many Things, book 2 p. 5

Wjizzo’s ancient ivory card named “Ruin” comes from a larger deck. There’s certainly a strange power in the card, and the magic of the Deck is surely greater than the magic of the individual cards.

Priest of the Eye, book 2 p. 6

Quoth Grundelmar in Fallcrest to Fosden: “Years ago, adventurers destroyed a cult of the Elder Elemental Eye but the leader, Vadin Cartwright, escaped. Well, the Sun Lord has spoken in my dreams to let me know that Cartwright is still a danger. He is dabbling with forces beyond mortal understanding that could be disastrous, and must be sought among the dead in old Gardmore Abbey.”
Quoth Pelor Sun-father: “The Temple is too high above you few.”

Peace with the Fey, book 2 p. 9

Lord Padraig of Winterhaven said: “Thanks for scouting the Abbey. Here’s 600 gp.
“The fey you describe living in these woods might be useful allies against the orcs and the best way to stop the raids. Find their leader and make peace with them, securing their cooperation.”
He had his scrivener draw up a document recognising Velfarren’s claim to the Feygrove, to be given to the Elf-knight if his claim is proven.

Establish a Claim, book 2 p. 13

The High Elf knight, Sir Berrian Velfarren, said: “My father had a hand in the establishment of this grove, and your Lord Padraig will recognise our rightful claim here if the proof of it can be demonstrated.”

Tower of the Archmage, book 2 p. 5

Valthrun the lorekeeper told you there is a tower in the village below the abbey, which he believes to be the location of The Winterbole Codex, a tome bound in white dragon scales, which he would very much like to get to read.

‘Icon Relationship’ Benefits pending

Cram and Fosden: Relationships to re-roll.
It would be great if we could give Cram a benefit from The Winterbole Codex
Wjizzo, Something enigmatic in the Feywild: A clear benefit
Eric Bloodhammer, Conflicted of Bahamut: A clear benefit and a benefit with complications.

Original Ringers: Cram and Wjizzo, roll immediately on your Relationship with Orcus, Demon Prince of the Undead, for what impact it might have in this encounter with Valdemar.

Into the Tower

Taking great care to target the dragonman-shaped gargoyles and not Eric, Cram or Fosden, Wjizzo essayed a new spell for the first time, extending his index and little fingers and punched the air. Twin waves of force smacked out, one striking dust from the tower wall just where the airborne gargoyle had been, and the other pounding into the one on the ground with a grate of straining stone and driving it back against Cram’s boots.
escalation_1.jpg Eric Bloodhammer put his whole weight behind a downward blow and, with the battle just starting to turn in their favour, his pickaxe-like weapon struck the grounded gargoyle in the pinion, making a fault line and shearing the whole wing off the monster. Cracks spread outwards with a loud splintering noise, and a moment later the gargoyle literally fell apart into dozen chunks of rubble.

The gargoyles’ preternatural senses having detected only a single prey, they had been alarmed to find no fewer than three opponents before them when they sprang round the corner, and now one of them had been destroyed. The survivor threw caution to the wind and span away, taking a solid blow from Eric on its trailing leg rather than give battle to them all. It folded its wings and banked to fly in through the doorway of the tower with familiar ease, Cram in hot pursuit but unable to match its winged speed. The gargoyle touched down behind a great fallen obelisk in the middle of the tower’s ground floor room, turning and poised to spring away again, but Cram drew up short.

The chill interior of the tower coursed with unfettered magic, flickers of fire and sparking power glimmering over the floor, the air alive with the reek of acid and the sense of a storm about to break. At the centre was a large fallen obelisk of stone, with a large recumbent form lying upon it, draped in a huge shroud.

Fosden twisted in through the doorway and shot his crossbow, forcing the gargoyle to duck. And when his bolt thudded into the bookcase beyond, the shrouded creature sat up and with one huge arm literally swatted Cram to the ground. As the sheet fell away, a scroll that had lain upon its breast falling to the floor, the group beheld a monstrous creation of flesh easily a head and a half taller than Cram, clad only in a thin shift, and with the incongruously small head of a once-beautiful woman stitched onto the shoulders of its patchwork muscular body.
“That scroll could be the means of controlling it!” cried Wjizzo as he joined the others in the doorway, and a beckoning gesture brought the scroll flying into his hand. Hastily unrolling it and glancing over its contents, he frowned. No, this is something else, some rite of cancellation too long to be relevant here."
escalation_2.jpg“Never mind, then,” boomed Eric right in his ear. He shouldered through between Wjizzo and Fosden and stood over Cram. He held his great shield upraised and put his left foot back to brace for impact… and from the spot where his foot touched erupted a spout of lurid green acid that splashed over him, eliciting hissing sizzles from the steel of his armour and a grievous cry from Eric himself as several splashes burned into his skin. But here in Gardmore Abbey, he remembered the vision he had had from the goddess Ioun, of the steadfast endurance of the Paladins of Bahamut, and he resolved not to succumb.
Slinging his crossbow on its lanyard back over his shoulder, Fosden cried, “Back, foul creation!” and brandished his medallion of Pelor in his gauntleted hand. Beams of light lanced forth, but more shot past the monster than struck it, and those that did seemed to do it little harm. But those that fell upon Cram wrapped him in a glow of protection.
As the gargoyle hopped around the obelisk and up onto a desk-cum-workbench, Cram surged to his feet, giving no thought to his own defence as he hacked out in a great swinging arc. A shallow score across the chest of the woman-headed monstrosity seemed to give it — or her? — little pause, but the swing followed on to land in the ribs of the gargoyle, knocking it from its perch on the workbench to stagger against the wall.
And then, her face still slackly expressionless, the flesh golem lurched up off the obelisk and stormed right into Eric and Cram. Eric gave ground and leaned back to avoid a flailing arm, but Cram was still off-balance and took a huge knee right in the face that felled him on the spot. The thing now towered right in the midst of the three adventurers still standing.
The warped magic erupted in a burst of thunder that shuddered a number of mouldering books and papers off the shelves in the far corner, and boomed around the whole chamber. “That’ll have woken some orcs up,” said Wjizzo dourly. “But for right now, Imbre Colorem! Despite being at close quarters with the construct-monstrosity that now loomed right over him, his own magic flashed out in a dizzying burst of coloured light around its head, making the thing give out an unnatural groan of angered pain.

escalation_3.jpgTactically, Eric Bloodhammer saw the need to finish the gargoyle, lest it fall upon the unconscious Cram. He stepped past the flesh golem’s back with his warhammer raised for a swing but just as he closed there was a detonation in the air around him as a second focus-point of the warped magic brought crushing pressures in upon him from all sides. The gargoyle laughed in Eric’s face as his hammer-blow fell harmlessly past it, but as it sprang into the air again he had the last laugh, his back-swing shattering away half of its tail before it could get away. The injured thing flapped off up to drop out of sight onto the staircase up the tower.

Fosden crouched away from the flailing arms of the flesh golem, sidling over to Cram and holding his golden gauntlet over his slumped form. A ray like shining sunlight illuminated the barbarian’s face, and Cram awoke muttering something about how it couldn’t be morning yet…
And gripping his spear in both hands, Fosden pushed upwards, stabbing the golem in the side.
YOU should definitely never have woken up!” yelled Cram, springing to his feet and dealing the flesh golem a mighty blow, and taking heart to see that the monster could be hurt by good cold steel.
The monster continued to lay about her. One fist hammered down on Wjizzo, powering through his desperate Shield spell with enough force to batter him to the ground, at the same time as the other delivered Cram a great open-handed slap sending him reeling backwards.
Like a force of chaos, magical fire suddenly blossomed in the air around Eric, frazzling his great red beard. And the flesh golem cringed away from it in obvious fear.
“It’s a pentacle!” exclaimed Wjizzo. “Those three points where the elemental magic has erupted are no mere triangle, but three points of a five-pointed circle! Keep your distance!” And then, “It’s just a pity I didn’t learn any fire spells today,” he muttered under his breath, using a cantrip instead to wrap the fallen shroud around the golem’s head and face.

escalation_4.jpgThe gargoyle driven off if not destroyed, Eric returned to the fray and planted his warhammer with a sickening crunch right in the spine of the golem. No response registered on the fine features of the dead woman’s face, the head looking round to regard Eric matter-of-factly, though the sudden awkwardness of the monster’s movements was more than compensated for by the increased ferocity with which it now laid about itself.
“Pelor, I invoke thy dominion of the Sun above!” cried Fosden, and he took a stance, presenting his medallion, sunlight suddenly streaming from his whole body. “Sorcerous creation, ye are judged, and found monstrous in the sight of the Sun Lord!” The golem swept an arm around that failed to land a blow upon Fosden, whose light seared into it, raising wisps of smoke where it struck.
Cram gave vent to his Rage and wailed upon the monster with his fullblade but for the moment seemed always a step behind its spinning moves, the great blade failing to strike with any weight. As the monster came about, leaving Fosden in its wake, it punched out left at Eric who just managed to fend off most of the shock with his shield, and right at Cram who was again driven bodily off his feet.
The warped magic in the chamber erupted yet again, this time in an ice-cold blast right at Eric’s back, that made the knight groan with the chill. And Imbre Colorem! incanted Wjizzo a second time, his pulsing globes of colour further assaulting the monster’s senses.
Eric’s next blow struck only feebly, escalation_5.jpg Fosden thrust his spear into the monster’s back, and Cram rebounded from his insulting slap-down with a blood-curdling scream of fury, hewing with such force that his sword cleft diagonally right through the monster’s chest. “That’s done it!” he crowed. The top half of its torso was sheared right off, and the unnatural life animating the golem’s members was suddenly extinguished. Stitches gave out, and the womans head rolled to Cram’s feet, looking up with sightless eyes but remarkably well-preserved.

Up to the Top Chamber

“Get away from the circle!” exhorted Wjizzo, as the same thing just began to dawn on everyone, even Eric. They backed away to the walls and then began to edge up onto the staircase climbing the tower, gathering their breath and steeling themselves for the next challenge.
Eric cautiously rounded the first corner. The direly wounded dragon-man gargoyle still cowered behind the parapet a few steps above, and now launched into the air. With furious beats of its wings it angled down and shot out of the tower before anyone could bring an attack to bear upon it.
The four carried on upwards as the stair spiralled tighter into the waist of the tower, Fosden coming up behind Eric’s shield, holding a torch aloft in his glittering gauntlet and his spear in the other, to probe each stone step before Eric’s feet.
“I’m just wary that where there are no guardians or protective magics, there might be nefarious traps of a simpler, mechanical nature,” he explained.
As they advanced upwards, and the chill of the tower grew ever more intense, Eric regaled everyone with the tale of one Roger who ceased to be known as ‘the dodger’ after losing a particularly unfortunate part of his anatomy in the jaws of a mechanical trap.
At length, Wjizzo looked up from perusing the golem’s scroll by a light conjured within his wizard’s orb. “This describes a way for a wizard to apply a ritual of Counter-magic to undo some spell of Abjuratio warding magic erected by whoever wrote the scroll. It appears the spell was performed to protect some paladins and a thing of great power in their keeping, amid the chaos of the Abbey’s last stand.”

“Here, do you think?” asked Eric, gesturing up the last flight of stairs to where they ended before an impressive pair of doors.
Wjizzo essayed the first clause, and discerned immediately that this wasn’t the place where the Abjuratio warding had been set.
Eric pressed an ear to the chill timbers of one door, hearing nothing, and pulling away before his ear might freeze in place. He tried the doors, and felt a resistance to his push.
With a “Stand back!” he took two paces and threw his shoulder into the door, which burst open with a splintering of the ice that coated their reverse. A freezing gust of air billowed over them, and Wjizzo shuddered at something else. He told the others that a spell had just been triggered, communicating down the centre of the stairwell, probably to the obelisk below. Peering over the parapet he neither saw nor sensed any cause for alarm. But Eric and Fosden were already into the room.

Meeting the Archmage

The top of what Valthrun had termed ‘The Tower of the Archmage’ was one great square chamber. The light from narrow slit windows high above their heads lanced down to sparkle upon the frost that coated every surface.
“Visitors, after all this time!” came a husky exclamation from a figure at the far side of the chamber. A stooping human form straightened and turned towards them in a crackle of frost that broke and re-froze at its every movement. Its withered face and the hands that cradled a staff topped with a globe of swirling white motes were a deathly pale blue, and its beard and Bahamut-emblazoned white robe bristled with tiny icicles. “Let us remember this moment for ever,” it spake.
Seeing the emblem of the Platinum Dragon, Eric took a step forward and bowed to one knee. “Bahamut be praised,” he said reverently. “Might a humble soldier enquire as to whom he has the honour to address?”
The others filed in behind him, peering cautiously around the eery chamber. Immediately before them reared a block of ice ten feet on a side, in which a huge ape-like demon was frozen in frenzied anger — a ‘Barlgura’ like the one the Fairy Ring had narrowly bested in the Thunderspire Labyrinth. Half a dozen other blocks imprisoned diverse beings at various points about the walls and long tables in the middle of the chamber held four further bodies, shrouded in thick layers of rime spiked into fronds of delicate frost-crystal, from which billows of freezing vapour streamed silently to the floor.
“I am Vandomar, master of this tower and keeper of all within it.” Fosden didn’t like the way the creature stressed the word “keeper”.
“O Vandomar, generator of great power,” continued Eric, his breath steaming in the frigid air, “what can you tell us of Gardrin the Hammer?” Wjizzo and Fosden exchanged quizzical glances, but held their tongues.
“Gardrin, you say?” rasped the icy mage. “Gardrin was the founder of Gardmore Abbey, long before I came here to study under Archmage Dasticus. My Elaida spoke of Gardrin as a saint of Bahamut, and boasted that he was interred in pride of place in the Catacombs of her Order, beneath the Temple upon the mount they call the Dragon’s Roost. I hope his mortal remains lie there undisturbed since when his Order gave him burial.” He spoke without any wisp of steam, his breath as warmthless as the air of the chamber.
“Let me introduce you to those I have kept here, friends and foes unspoilt by time,” he went on…
“Well that seems to have broken the ice,” murmured Cram, as the ice-mage warmed to his subject. The foes in two ice cubes were an orc general from the original siege of Gardmore Village and the barlgura demon that bounded down from the Dragon’s Roost plateau when something terrible happened up there that turned the siege into a mad slaughter. The friends in the other four ice cubes were two paladins and two of Vandomar’s apprentices, Talen and Rubor, all of whom he said he had saved, never to suffer a wrong death.
Fosden whispered to Wjizzo, “Preservation, that’s what he’s obsessed with.” And louder, to the frozen undead: “Is there any service we might perform for you? Do you go to the Font of Ioun?”
“Ioun… The Lady of Lore is patron of all that is known. I cannot partake of the waters, but I go there betimes to reflect upon the past, and how things were, before.”

“We came here in search of the ‘Winterbole Codex’,” said Fosden of the Cliffs,
“Well here it lies, indeed,” the figure replied,
He gestured with his left hand at an enormous book, cased in the scales of a white dragon, that lay beside the head of one of the bodies on the tables. “The Winterbole Codex of Dasticus.”*
“Do you have need of it? Might we be able to take it to Valthrun the sage in Winterhaven?”
“It is mine, and I will not part with it,” he replied matter-of-factly. “But you may read here what is written within. You have all the time in the world after all. But it may not leave this chamber. Nothing may leave this chamber, for all must be preserved exactly as it is, to capture the exquisite ephemerality. The first visitors to my chamber in a century and a half. Stay awhile… Stay for ever!”
At that there was a shifting of the light in the corner of the room. Dark shadows lay upon the floor in sharp contrast to the chamber’s white glitter, forming a grid shape, though there was nothing there to cast any such shadow. Wjizzo experienced a flicker of familiarity. But when he saw it, Vandomar recoiled. “No!” he shrieked. “That’s different! Nothing is allowed to become different, I say!”

View
Valdomar, Trumped
In the Tower of the Archmage

Goals:

The Deck of Many Things, book 2 p. 5

Wjizzo’s ancient ivory card named “Ruin” comes from a larger deck. There’s certainly a strange power in the card, and the magic of the Deck is surely greater than the magic of the individual cards.

Priest of the Eye, book 2 p. 6

Quoth Grundelmar in Fallcrest to Fosden: “Years ago, adventurers destroyed a cult of the Elder Elemental Eye but the leader, Vadin Cartwright, escaped. Well, the Sun Lord has spoken in my dreams to let me know that Cartwright is still a danger. He is dabbling with forces beyond mortal understanding that could be disastrous, and must be sought among the dead in old Gardmore Abbey.”
Quoth Pelor Sun-father: “The Temple is too high above you few.”

Peace with the Fey, book 2 p. 9

Lord Padraig of Winterhaven said: “Thanks for scouting the Abbey. Here’s 600 gp.
“The fey you describe living in these woods might be useful allies against the orcs and the best way to stop the raids. Find their leader and make peace with them, securing their cooperation.”

He had his scrivener draw up a document recognising Velfarren’s claim to the Feygrove, to be given to the Elf-knight if his claim is proven.

Establish a Claim, book 2 p. 13

The High Elf knight, Sir Berrian Velfarren, said: “My father had a hand in the establishment of this grove, and your Lord Padraig will recognise our rightful claim here if the proof of it can be demonstrated.”

Tower of the Archmage, book 2 p. 5

Valthrun the lorekeeper told you there is a tower in the village below the abbey, which he believes to be the location of The Winterbole Codex, a tome bound in white dragon scales, which he would very much like to get to read.

‘Icon Relationship’ Benefits pending

Cram: Re-roll Relationship dice again!
It would be great if we could tie a Cram benefit to The Winterbole Codex
Wjizzo, Something enigmatic in the Feywild: A clear benefit
Eric Bloodhammer, Conflicted of Bahamut: A clear benefit and a benefit with complications.
Fosden, chosen of Pelor: A benefit with complications.

Something on the Cards

Wjizzo heard a sound uncannily like the shuffling of playing cards. “Did you hear that?” he asked, receiving only curious looks from his companions, and then realised recognised it for an arcane manifestation. Card_the_02nd_-_DONJON_tilted_and_perspectivised.png
And then he saw a strange formation of sourceless shadows in a corner of the chamber between two of Vandomar’s great blocks of ice, which he recognised for the projection of a card of the Deck of Many Things just as Vandomar saw it too and glared accusingly at his visitors.
“No!” shrieked the frozen archmage. “That’s different! Nothing is allowed to become different, I say!”

“We’re on,” Wjizzo muttered to the others, beginning to edge forward.
“What wizardry is this?” puzzled Eric, sizing up the situation.
Cram stepped forward to occupy the frozen archmage-creature’s attention, allowing Wjizzo to advance behind him. “Vandomar, Vandomar, we mean you no harm. But we are people of the living world, and we do mean to rejoin it.”
Vandomar peered at him. “You have the mark of Orcus upon you,” he croaked wonderingly, ignoring all else to focused his arcane senses on the barbarian before him. ”You must not die at any other hand—”
Cram talked on. “We have all had experiences with the Demon Prince of the Undead. We all care deeply about the people of the Abbey and would like to see them returned.”
“Yes! Oh yes,” agreed Vandomar, suddenly wistful. “But you must be preserved, that Orcus himself may gather you unto him!”
“Bahamut preserve us all,” said Fosden from behind the others.
And then Eric seemed to have figured it out. “Do it now!” he hollered to Wjizzo. “(The boy’s a genius.) CHARGE!”

Wjizzo disappeared from sight.
“Take them, my friends,” cried Vandomar, stretching out his arms and the globe-topped staff in his right hand. “Stop them!”
A moment later Wjizzo reappeared in the far corner of the chamber, standing upon the manifestation of the Donjon card, his gaze fixed upon the frozen Archmage.
“Fuck you, Vandomar,” spat Cram, raising his fullblade.
20__50px_.pngAnd Wjizzo wielded the power of the Donjon card. In a sharp percussion Vandomar disappeared and Wjizzo was hurled bodily forward, colliding with Cram and tumbling to the floor. Where he had been standing, the area around the manifestation of the Donjon card was filled with an ominous low-howling wind.
“What the fuck? Where’s he gone?”
“I’ve sent him back where he deserves to be,” gasped Wjizzo.

The Cold of the Grave

Icy vapours began to billow massively from the inert snow-shrouded forms upon Vandomar’s four tables in the centre of the chamber, plunging to the floor and wreathing Wjizzo, and everyone else’s feet and legs, in intense cold. The four things began to lurch upright.
“NYEARGHHH!” yelled Cram, giving vent to his fury as he hacked into the snowy figure rising before him. Heedless of the injury to itself, the thing lurched on into him with hands grabbing and grasping, leaching the living warmth from the barbarian and holding him within the floor-hugging vapour that sapped the power of movement from his legs.
20__50px_.pngEric took aim and sank the point of his warhammer into the skull of another rising figure, right between its eyes. But the thing continued to rise and its pooling vapours struck his legs numb, and the horrified Eric recoiled into a back-stance, shield presented at full guard.
20__50px_.png“By the power of the Sun vested in me,” Fosden intoned behind him, with rising intensity, “Abominations, I give ye back to death!” Holy golden sunlight burst blindingly from his medallion and utterly destroyed two of the four ice-mummified things, frost flashing away to wisps of steam, unliving flesh searing to smoke, and blackened bones tumbling to the floor.

escalation_1.jpgWjizzo leapt to his feet out of the freezing vapours hugging the floor and drew his longsword to join against Cram’s assailant, but failed to wound it as the chill still bit into his feet and legs. Cram himself paid no heed to the rising cold, eschewing the use of his feet and legs to concentrate on hewing strokes of his sword-arms. The mummified thing fell upon Wjizzo, bearing down through his guard and grasping him close to pour its eldritch chillth into his living flesh, even as Cram’s sword came down and crunched through several ribs.

Eric fared no better, finding no opening to add more than a graze to his already skull-punctured adversary. With a thrust of his shield he bought a moment in which to fall back and stand shoulder to shoulder with Fosden.
20__50px_.pngBut the frozen corpse-thing used the moment to answer Fosden’s holy energy with a curse of its own, all but rooting the cleric to the spot before lurching in to clutch icily at Eric more viciously than ever. The cold conducted right through the steel plates of his armour, but Eric quick-thinkingly shrugged the creature’s grasp from his arm and neck to his chest where the padded arming-coat beneath his breastplate blocked half the chill.

escalation_2.jpgWjizzo thrust his casting orb right into the face of the mummy upon him, the bursting colours of his “_Imbre colorem!_” leaving it weakened and reeling. Cram seized the advantage to smite down on the undead thing, cleaving it from shoulder to waist, and was revitalised by his victory.
“Well done, over there!” cheered Eric, showing a war-leader’s encouragement of his troops. “Now get over here to our aid. Fosdick’s suffering – it’s a right saga.” He followed his words with a trenchant blow staggering the mummy before him.
Fosden sought to finish the thing, but his spear was ill-suited to such close quarters and tangled between his own ankles, causing him to pitch to the floor beneath the mummy’s billows of icy vapour.
“Man down! Man down! On me!” cried Eric.
20__50px_.pngBut it was the mummy that fell upon him, inflicting its freezing power through both hands locked about his helm. Only the warmth of the quilted arming cap beneath it spared Eric from sinking into frigid unconsciousness.
escalation_3.jpgWith Cram still hollering his victory, Wjizzo span away across the chamber, grabbing up the Winterbole Codex with a magical thought and floating it along behind him as he stabbed at the mummy locked upon Eric.
Eric seized the moment of its distraction and felled it with a hammer-blow that broke its pierced skull into bony fragments. The headless corpse collapsed at his feet.
“By the power of Bloodhammer!” he crowed.

The chamber was theirs. Eric moved to one of the great blocks of ice encasing a Paladin. “For Bahamut!” he cried, and dealt the block a mighty blow of his warhammer that sent cracks crazing though the ice.
“Vandomar may yet make a way back into this world,” cautioned Wjizzo. “Cram, stand ready for him. Hold your sword right there in the space where he was when I banished him.”
Cram moved as Wjizzo directed. “Come on back, you bastard,” he snarled, keeping the rage pulsing through him.
Eric continued to lay into the block of ice as the others awaited Vandomar’s return, and in short order he shattered the Paladin free. Fosden came up as Eric hastened onward to the next block, but within moments pronounced the Paladin preserved in death, rather than preserved in life.
Wjizzo moved to search the Paladin’s body.
“He’s a Paladin!” Eric protested to him. And then:“Fosden, you’re the padre. Do the rite thing!”
“Take the tithe!” urged Wjizzo in reply.

escalation_3.jpgTime dragged on with Vandomar failing to reappear. Wjizzo even began to think his sense of the Donjon card’s power must have been wrong, and that Vandomar might be banished to the extraplanar pocket-dimension forever. But then, with a second percussive report, Vandomar was back in the chamber, just alongside Cram’s waiting fullblade.
Wjizzo threw his full force into a massively-empowered Acid Arrow. Cram recoiled from the path of the very attack that had slain Varris, and Vandomar reacted just as fast, raising his staff to punch up a desperate shield of force. To Wjizzo’s shocked surprise it deflected the spell just wide, and Vandomar suffered no more than a few sizzling spatters of eldritch acid, whilst the main force of the spell burst a hole clear through the stone wall of the tower.
Cram had a new object for his unsubsided rage. “Welcome back,” he leered as he drew back his sword. “And give Orcus my love.” And with a ferocious howl he struck Vandomar’s upper chest, spraying up shattered icicles and sending him crashing back against the great block of ice behind him.
With a last glance at the Paladin killed by Vandomar’s twisted attempt at preservation, Eric turned to charge down the mage. “You bastard! he spat plummily, with uncustomary profanity, battering his Vandomar’s staff aside with his shield and landing his warhammer in the creature’s side.
Staggered and harried by the intensity of the assaults upon him, the frozen mage raised a shimmering white halo of cold magic about his staff, thrusting it at Cram, but the barbarian did not give an inch.
escalation_4.jpgAnd then before their eyes the air around Vandomar burst with a riot of dystopic colour as Wjizzo focused a perfect Colour Spray to bludgeon the senses of the undead thing and drop it lifeless to the floor.
20__50px_.png

Sweet Victory

”Did you feel it?” Wjizzo asked the others excitedly. “Two cards of The Deck brought into close proximity, and when Vandomar became hostile there was a ‘shuffling’ and one of them manifested its power! And the elements of chance were heightened all through the battle, and fell out in our favour!”
Cram’s rage subsided into jubilation at having battled through unnatural minions, climbed the tower of an evil wizard and slain him in the topmost chamber. It was a barbarian’s dream come true, blunted only slightly by the fact that a High Elf’s magic had struck the final knell.
“Well we had better luck here than before,” he growled, “when that Card of Ruin was more like a curse upon us that cost Varris his life. I still will not trust in these fickle magicks!”
“He’s right,” exclaimed Eric. “In case you missed it, your elements of chance fell steeply in favour of that cold-preserved thing attacking me as well and it damn’ well nearly did for me twice over!”
“Let’s grab anything that’s valuable, and get the hell out of this cold,” Cram said.
“Not yet,” said Eric. “We must extricate these worthy knights so that we can give them a decent burial.”
And the card,” added Wjizzo. Inches from where its manifestation has appeared upon the floor of the chamber, the Donjon card of the Deck of Many Things lay encased in the block of ice containing the apprentice whom Valdomar had named Rubor.

After hacking the ice away from the dead Paladins and wizard’s apprentices, they departed the icy chamber with bodies to bury, a second card of the Deck of Many Things, a Staff of Winter, a locket from about Vandomar’s neck, the Winterbole Codex, and a bundle of books and scrolls.

In the room at the foot of the stairwell, the elemental magics had dissipated upon Vandomar’s death. “Warped magic,” spat Cram. “The spirits will be glad that this place is back to being a normal part of the world.” And he went to guard the door.
The others sank onto the chairs and benches about the room, all except Eric who climbed back up the stairs to bring more bodies back down.
Fosden opened Vandomar’s locket and found within it a miniature painting of one “Elaida”, a raven-haired beauty in plate armour with the features of the incongruous female head that had been ‘preserved’ upon the torso of the flesh golem. “He sought to preserve his dead love,” Fosden mused, “but oh so misguided. And everything else here came of that. Vandomar fell because of love.”
“The past is passed,” snorted Eric. “The man was a fool, and paid the price more than a century ago.”
Wjizzo perused the Winterbole Codex. “This discusses magical lines of power running between this world and the Feywild, which relate in various ways to ‘the World Tree’ and something called ‘Whisperer’. And it discusses how the shamans of the Tigerclaw barbarians, followers of ‘Hunter of Winter’, have some way of channelling that power.”

The ‘Southern Artefact’ and the Watchtower

Amongst the scrolled papers of abstract notes on arcane formulae and magical rituals, one unbound manuscript stood out, containing Vandomar’s reflections on the events at fall of Gardmore Abbey. He recorded his conclusion, if not his reasons for reaching it, that a “Southern Artefact” in the Paladins’ possession was responsible for the Chaos unleashed on that fateful day.

Having survived the downfall of the Abbey, Vandomar was driven by duty to focus his attentions on one particular phenomenon, despite bemoaning the fact that he had all but lost his reason through an overwhelming loss that to him outweighed all the destruction of so many lives. Amongst his duties to the community of Gardmore had been the operation of various magical scrying devices in the lofty watchtower at the southern end of the site. He found himself no longer able to access the tower, which he reported to have been sequestered from the world in which it stood. He conjectured that, in marked contrast to its effects anywhere else in the Abbey, the Artefact had caused energies and paradigms of the ‘Far Realm’ to project into the tower through the arcane channels that lay open in the scrying devices located there.

His further researches concluded that the tower stood abstracted from the normal world by a ‘dimensional rift’, and locked in a bizarre condition of stasis. His notes continued beyond this point, but in a series of fevered tangents obsessed with attempting to create a retrospective stasis “in which she never died.”

Mission Accomplished. All take an Incremental Advance.

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Swords Against Death and Demonry
The Haunted Garrison in Gardmore Village

Goals:

The Deck of Many Things, book 2 p. 5

Wjizzo’s ancient ivory cards, “Ruin” and “Donjon” come from a larger deck. There is a strange power in each card, and the magic of the Deck is surely greater than the sum of the individual powers.

Priest of the Eye, book 2 p. 6

Quoth High-priest Grundelmar in Fallcrest to Fosden: “Years ago, adventurers destroyed a cult of the Elder Elemental Eye but the leader, Vadin Cartwright, escaped. The Sun Lord has spoken in my dreams to warn that Cartwright is still a danger. He dabbles with forces beyond mortal understanding that could be disastrous, and must be sought among the dead in old Gardmore Abbey.”
Quoth Pelor Sun-father: “The Temple is too high above you few.”

Peace with the Fey, book 2 p. 9

Lord Padraig of Winterhaven said: “Thanks for scouting the Abbey. Here’s 600 gp.
“The fey you describe living in these woods might be useful allies against the orcs and the best way to stop the raids. Find their leader and make peace with them, securing their cooperation.”
He had his scrivener draw up a document recognising Velfarren’s claim to the Feygrove, to be given to the Elf-knight if his claim is proven.

Establish a Claim, book 2 p. 13

The High Elf knight, Sir Berrian Velfarren, said: “My father had a hand in the establishment of this grove, and your Lord Padraig will recognise our rightful claim here if the proof of it can be demonstrated.”

‘Icon Relationship’ Benefits pending

Cram, Thwarter of Orcus, Bearer of the Mark of Orcus: A benefit with complications.
Cram, Chosen of the Spirits, restorer of nature to the Tower: A benefit with complications.
*It would be great if we could tie a Cram benefit to The Winterbole Codex *
Wjizzo, Something enigmatic in the Feywild: A clear benefit
Eric Bloodhammer, Conflicted of Bahamut: A clear benefit and a benefit with complications.
Fosden, chosen of Pelor: A benefit with complications.

The Tale of Hrom

Wjizzo sifted through Valdomar’s notes and papers, looking for anything dealing with magical theory, practical magic, or the nature of the Far Realm. He discarded reams of self-pitying cant about the tragic loss of Elaida and his misguided ritual to preserve her against death, which crazed motive they now knew to have led only to Valdomar himself falling into undeath, whilst achieving no more than imposing a travesty upon the mortal remains of his dead love. He discarded also some sentimental scribblings about the two other Paladins whom Valdomar had subsequently locked in ice.
Though separated from them by a century and more, Eric Bloodhammer nevertheless identified with these Paladins of Bahamut as though they were his shield-brother and -sister, and was offended at their treatment. Seeking to stand witness to their memory through the only obituary that remained, however inadequate, he reverently read through every word from Valdomar’s pen.

One of the Paladins, who had come to the Order as one Hrom of Winterbole, had risen to stand as a hero among their ranks and had been one of four knights tasked with a sacred duty in the height of the Siege of Gardmore Abbey. They were to be the four Swordsmen, and bear an arc containing a holy brazier into the midst of the foe, there to unleash its mighty power. But at the appointed time Hrom could not come to his brothers’ side. Vandomar directed the three to defend themselves in the Garrison until Hrom might come, and cast a protection of Abjuratio magic over the portal. When Vandomar, already driven to distraction by the death of Elaida, finally found Hrom’s body slain by spiders he incoherently locked it in ice to stay the venomous corruption within it.
Eric read this out to his companions. “And now I have cut this knight’s body free to show him the respect of a decent burial.” He drew the dead man’s sword from its scabbard, a heavy single-edged falchion, and its balance felt perfect in his hand. “Best way to honour the chap would be to discover the end of his unfulfilled mission. Find an end to his tale, what?”
Cram was unconvinced. “He was killed by spiders, was the end of his tale, a hundred years ago! And you’re not even a Paladin”
Eric glowered, one hand knotting absently in his great beard. “I was an innocent party in the whole business. You have to trust me on that. All I can say is that there was a reason for it. And the consequence was that I am currently classed as a deserter.”
Wjizzo looked up. “Nothing. Not a single mention of the Deck of Many Things in any of this dross! It looks as though only having a single dormant card, he had no idea what it was. But…” He flourished the scroll that had lain upon the shroud over the flesh golem. “If you want to go where your Hrom was supposed to be, I think we’ll need this ritual.”
“It’ll be dead easy!” exclaimed Eric. “Simple as pie. Get in there, jiggle the sword about and get the dish.”

The Haunted Garrison

“Follow me, boys. This way!”
Eric, Wjizzo, Cram and Fosden filed purposefully out of the door and around the back of the tower. Fosden stole a glance about, that he hoped wouldn’t look too furtive. There were only a few orcs in sight and none of them paying them any attention.
The orc Ramposh still waited dejectedly in the wagon. He half rose, scrabbling for his warflail, but subsided when he saw his friend Wjizzo, and visibly brightened when the elf tossed him an exotic-looking heavy bronze paperweight.
“I’m not doing this in full sight of any orcs that might happen round a corner,” Wjizzo said, holding up the scroll. “We need to back the wagon towards the doors on that garrison building over there, and I’ll read the incantation out from under the canopy.” And mostly through the main force of Cram and Eric, with Fosden soothing the backing nags, they rolled it to within a few yards. Wjizzo began enunciating the arcane syllables of the formulised ritual.
“We don’t have to do this, you know,” Cram commented sourly. “This is not why we came. The orcs don’t come anywhere near this miserable-looking building, the ravens even avoid the sky above it. There’s probably a damned good reason to have nothing to do with it.”
Ice-blue light began to glimmer across the great doors of the garrison as Wjizzo recited on, spreading until a fine tracery stood out all across their surfaces. And a couple of minutes later when he reached the end it was abruptly extinguished.
“A Glyph of Warding,” explained Wjizzo. “Could have been nasty.”

Eric Bloodhammer drew the sword of Hrom that he had slung on a baldric at his shoulder and stepped up to the massive wooden portals with twin reliefs of rampant dragons each bearing two swords, one held aloft and the other pointing downward. “Over the door,” he said, pointing his sword at a carved inscription. “It says, ‘Ever vigilant the dragon’.”

Even as he spoke, a black shadow emerged from the stone of the wall beside the left-hand portal, and a blast of cold knifed right through the adventurers, though no blade of grass stirred. They could make out no detail of its blackness but it had the outline of an armoured man in a silently fluttering cloak, with shadow-stuff streaming off it and vanishing into the air.
Area_04_Mad_Wraith_Cloaked_black-iron-armor-set-large.jpgRamposh uttered an orcish curse and dove into the back of the wagon, tugging at Wjizzo to follow suit.
“What the fuck is that?” shuddered Cram.
“Silas, I am,” came the breathy reply, “Sir Silas. Or so I was,” it added, almost to itself.
“Looks like there’s a lot of blackguarding going on around here, Eric.” Cram unsheathed his great fullblade.
“Except this one should have died of old age a century ago,” warned Fosden.
“Only the bearer of the lonely sword passes this way unharmed,” it said.
“You mean this?” asked Eric.
“Vandomar must open the seal.”
“He’s stuck in the past,” whispered Wjizzo, shrugging the orc off. “I just used Vandomar’s scroll to open it.”
“Gather round, chaps! Everyone take a hold of this sword so we’re all the bearers of it.” Everyone took hold rather than face whatever the alternative might be.
The wraith-knight continued in the same whispering tone. “Must reach the garrison,
“The garrison, Vandomar? Why there?
“Defensible. Until we are all assembled and can bring it forth to carry the battle unto the Undead.”
“Is he actually talking to us, or just reliving something? Reliving it – you know – as a dead person.”
“Seal us in till Hrom can come?
“There are demons already in here with us!”
“Whoa, what demons?”
“Vile, unspeakable demon of the nether orange waste.”
“Looks like he’s talking to us all right.”
“Yes,” agreed Cram. “But he’s not telling us anything good. He means Barlgura, like that one Vandomar has on ice, and the one that the gnoll cultists had in Thunderspire. They’re fast, they can run straight up walls faster than a man can run, they’re incredibly strong, and they go completely ape when they get seriously wounded. And they’re a wizard’s worst nightmare.”
“Eh?” asked Wjizzo in alarm.
“Well I was once telling the tale in the Blue Moon Alehouse, how we smacked down that one in Thunderspire, and a Tiefling lightning mage told me they hail from the nether orange waste in whatever level of the Abyss it was. And he told me that after he lightning-bolted one of them, it earthed his attacks away for the rest of the battle so they hardly touched it.
“I make that six clear warnings that it’s a bad idea to have anything to do with this pla—”
Eric Bloodhammer did not need to hear any more. He took one last step and pushed open the great portals.

Madness Falls

Wjizzo sensed the Shuffling, but before he could give a warning the whispers of the black shade of Sir Silas suddenly rose to an insane shriek and he hurled himself at Eric. He bore no weapon but grasped out before Eric could raise his guard and assailed his senses with a shaking horror.
Next to Wjizzo, the shadow of the Donjon card appeared in the very spot the shade had just left.
Through the doors Eric could see another two wraith-knight figures, and through an archway beyond came a furious demonic howl.

Eric tried to strike the wraith away with his falchion, but the thing was inside his guard and seemingly insubstantial. His blows were all but useless against it, but he felt something of strength through the sword-hilt in his hand and regained somewhat of his composure.
Wjizzo stepped over to claim the zone of the Donjon’s power, but for the moment simply shot a Ray of Frost from Vandomar’s Staff of Winter. The wraith-knight spasmed as it was struck, for all that the Ray continued through it, past Eric, and into the right-hand door.
A great blur of orange rounded a corner within the building by bouncing off a wall with a massive thump and hurtled into the fray, swinging left and right at Eric and Cram.
Cram span right around, following the weight of his mighty blade, and striking the Barlgura and the wraith.
Fosden placed a hand on Eric’s shoulder. “Pelor aid this righteous warrior,” he said, and Eric felt much-needed strength flow back into him, as Fosden half turned, and continued, “And smite the abominable with thy light!” A shaft of light sprang from the gauntlet gripping his spear and lanced into the wraith, breaking it into tatters of darkness that melted away into the air.
The other two wraiths swept up behind the Barlgura and into the attack, the first one shaking Eric yet further with the insane horror of its whispers whilst the other made for Wjizzo. “We must gain the garrison,” it hissed uncertainly, with no effect upon the wizard.

escalation_1.jpgEric, beset by demon and wraith, struck out at the latter. His falchion passed through it, but the wraith bucked and shreds of shadow-stuff were ripped away in the wake of his blade.
Wjizzo used the power offered by the shadow of the Donjon card beneath his feet, and with an eldritch churning of the air, the Barlgura demon was simply gone. Wjizzo himself was thrown clear of the shadowed spot, reeling across several yards to come up ungently against a corner of ruined wall.
A scant moment later the demon was back in the room, but too disoriented to attack.
Cram span his fullblade on and on, striking perfect shadow-ripping blows through the two remaining wraiths, and ending by burying his edge in the Barlgura ape-demon. The monster gave vent to a massive howl of fury, which must have spoiled Fosden’s aim as his Javelin of Faith shot high of its mark. And unaffected by it, one wraith seized the advantage and forced itself upon the off-balance Cram, incoherent whispers filling him with nightmare dread. Wjizzo having hurtled away, the second wraith fell upon Fosden and inflicted similar horrors upon him.

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