New Pathfinder Fan Fiction


Lost Omens Campaign Setting General Discussion

Scarab Sages

Zuxius suggested I cross post this to this section, so...

Now for your reading pleasure at PATHFINDER CHRONICLER...

You first met her in A Harvest to Remember.

Now ARYSTA is Back!

And she's younger and meaner than ever.

Visit the town of Wolf's Ear and learn what secrets this quaint village holds.

. . . Discover the mystery of THE SILVER LADY and how a single coin can unexpectedly change a girl's life.

What will it cost her? What sacrifices will she make? In order to keep THE SILVER LADY

The Silver Lady, A story told in four parts. Don't miss any of them!

The Exchange

I of course approve all my suggestions.

Liberty's Edge

When the roads are closed by suspicion and hate, retuning home might be lethal for a young cleric when she comes back to the land of her birth. She confronts old demons as she seeks the reasons behind her own personal tragedy.

NO ROAD BACK HOME

The story is a visit to Canterwall by someone who has passed a long time away from it, it has some reinterpretations on it, but I hope they are too small to hurt sensibilities.

It was born as a short story, but it has taken a life of its own, I expect to have the next part before the month ends, and continue with it with what comes of the year.

Anyways, I would love to hear your thoughts on it.

The Exchange

Heheh, you already know my thoughts.

The Exchange

The Swarm Masters

It had been a difficult winter for Cintra Bristol. Winter snow usually didnt usually come this far south yet this year it had and so late in the season. She had struggled to survive with her family dead at the hands of Marauders and now beneath the weight of urgently needed firewood, her struggle was all the greater. Her only clothes were a muddy woollen skirt, a coat stained with the blood of a recent nightmare of loss, and a simple cloth wrapped around her head. The snow crumbled beneath her feet and beneath the lighter tread of her only companion.
Jade was a white wolf befriended by her late father from a Pup and tended for in part by Cintra so he had become her companion when the others were lost.
“Tomorrow we must go to Sandpoint and sell some of fathers gold coins for that preserved sausage you so love to gobble down.” Cintra looked at the suspiciously fat wolf.
“Oh! Once I saw a Kobold,” Her voice was getting old.
“Sitting in a Tirro tree,” Jade lobed through the snow with better pace, “a Tirro tree, a Tirro tree.”
A moment of happiness flitted through her mind as a memory of her father singing the very same song surfaced. Cintra smiled with difficulty.
“Oh! Once I saw a Kobold sitting in a tr…” Something under the snow snagged her right foot and Cintra ate snow as she was pushed to the ground by the weight of the wood at her back. She screamed with the pain of the surprise and Jade instantly came to her aide with the warmth of his breathing. Cintra reached back and grappled the bound load pulling it to the left side of her body. Her real injury became instantly apparent as she put weight on her right foot.
“Damn! Wretched Kobold distracted me…cunning little bugger.” Jade looked around for the Kobold she was talking about. Cintra pulled herself on the bundled firewood and sat up. Jade instantly put his head in her lap. Cintra laughed as she stared at the beautiful green eyes that expressed their concern with such meaning.
“Kobold got away, did he sweetie? Not to mind.” The old boots were cold to touch as she investigated her ankle. A feeling of frustration curled her brow. She kissed her wolf on the warm nose and took a lick of warm slobber that quickly became cold.
“How do I get the wood home now?” She stared at the distant dwelling that was a combination of straw mud brick, logs, stones, and rye thatching. It was a bonfire waiting to burn. They were so close but now it would cost her every footfall to the door.
There was a long rope inside the door, and the block and tackle. The thought hit her. She struggled without the load now through the snow and it took minutes to reach the door of her family home. Jade entered the simple dwelling and took up residence in the open doorway as Cintra went to work looking for the tools of her need. The Rope and the Block and Tackle were still useable. She tied off the block and tackle to an anchor point her father used to strain ropes and carried both ends to the distant wood. The rope ends were short and she shook her head.
“Not quite long enough.” Cintra gave a lot of slack and ran one end of the rope out slowly to the wood bundle. Behind her the other end pulled back toward the house until there was perhaps five feet of slack. Cintra tied off the Rope on the Wood and turned back expecting Jade to be behind her. He sat in the warmth of the distant doorway.
“Done for the day are we?” Cintra smiled as she made the return trip toward shelter.
The Rope end was almost through the door.
“That was close.” Cintra struggled now to sit on the hard floor and brace her good leg against the timbers. A good grip and she began to pull at her load. The firewood now seemed ten times as heavy as when it was on her back as it pulled its way across the snow. The pain in her good leg burned like her right by the time the time the bundled wood got to where it was going. Jade looked at her as though it was her fault the warm was getting out.
“All right, Ill close it.” Cintra Bristol hefted the wood that last distance through the door and with the rope and tackle cleared, closed it.
“And now: a fire and my injured foot.” Cintra struggled with a paltry selection of wood and old straw and made a fire with flint and steel. Her foot no longer hurt. Such a prospect was most likely a bad sign. Cintra peeled off the boot and the poor cloth that had done such a botched job of keeping the cold out to reveal the bruises and a bone broken and out of place.
“Oh…Damn!” This would cost her dearly. She looked at the Wolf who stared at her foot.
“Sorry. No Sausage tomorrow.” Cintra looked about at what food she did have. Now she and her friend would live on cheese, some bread, and turnip and rabbit broth.
“Not the turnips…anything but the turnips,” Jade joining her suffering at the prospect of turnip put his head on the floor. Cintra Bristol dragged herself across the floor seeking a pot, turnip and lean rabbit. It found itself lifted with difficulty into the stone and mud fireplace as Cintra worked the metal legged tripod that supported it into place without getting burned. The suspended iron pot sat more next to the fire than in it. Cintra rolled away from the fire so as not to put too much stress on her foot and came to a halt against her friend.
“Now its a waiting game.” She relaxed now to the aroma of turnip and rabbit broth…
Cintra Bristol woke to the screams and found herself tied down.
"What?" Her body was bound up in some web cocoon. A scream came from right next to her and she struggled to turn her head to look. A large brain burrowing worm was working on the twitching corpse of her faithful companion animal Jade. Beyond Jade were a hundred locals from Sandpoint; most seemingly dead and some about to be - the screams mixed with an unfamiliar screeching. They were trapped in some terrible web-hive. Is this what a spider egg-sack looked like from the inside? Cintra Bristol struggled for freedom.
A shadow loomed over her. It was a faceless creature. It held one of those brain burrowing worms which it placed on her head. Cintra Bristol Screamed with terror at its wet touch.
Jade was on her in a furious attack as it pulled the wretched worm apart. Jade collapsed by her side as the moment of relief washed over her and fell away into the darkness.
“Jade?” her companion through so much died in the web next to her. She wept now at the loss of her friend.
“No.” Cintra grappled for the flint edge in her pocket. Its edge cut at the cocoon from within. They must have sensed her bid for freedom. Her thoughts of resistance drew them now from across the web hive.
“Come on damn you, cut!” People around her cried with despair. They pleaded for help and begged for mercy from the horror that had them. Cintra Bristol was mad with desperation now as strange and terrible hands reached out for her, unhuman hands seeking to hold her down. One of them assumed the face of the memory of her father.
“Cintra Bristol. Stop squirming. Its all right Cintra, Ive got you. You are safe.” The voice oozed a calm that would have overwhelmed her had it not been for the fact that several of them wore her fathers face and came from all of them; Closing in the distance a fiend of a Spider that would undoubtedly tighten her bonds or worse. She panicked now as it disgorged a large worm from between its sword scaled mandibles. Cintra screamed in horror at what she was now witnessing. Cintra pulled her arms free and her hands carried the flint and its steel companion past her head as she reached away from the monsters that held her firm.
“Please burn! Please just burn. Damn you!” The striking flint sparked repeatedly and drew their attention. They reached for what she had in her hands.
Horror of her failure struck her as they took the tools from her and pulled her down. The demon spider adjusted the web before cutting it away. Now it grappled her and turned her slowly as she dizzied, then attempted to empty her stomach contents. The new web began to constrict her now and she could only scream and then not even that. For a long moment she glimpsed something toward the centre of the web. Spiders were emerging through a storm of light and others carrying off the cocooned. She would be lost if they got her that far.
The nest shuddered and she was dropped through the web around her. Now nest of monsters moved to investigate the new threat. Cintra was narrowly missed by the harpoon of some siege engine that had penetrated the web. The outer wall sliced away and she was free. She fell through the hole into a darkness of smoke and fire. The web snagged above her and she unravelled in a downward direction. Free of it she fell several feet onto a building roof. Some madman with an axe was working on a web anchor the thickness of a tree trunk as spiders clamoured down it in defence.
“Are you all right? Did you see any others?” her woodsman of the moment attacked a Spider that came at him knocking Cintra Bristol through the weakened thatch roof. A scream came from above and blood and organs emptied on her through the hole in the roof.
Cintra fled the gore of it. The streets were awash with chaos as archers fired at the spiders above them, the nest; anything that moved across the top of buildings was challenged with fire. Children stood in the middle of a battlefield and screamed for their parents to rescue them from the Monsters only to be carried away by the Monsters or worse still to become the Monsters.
The nest became visible as she left its shadow. It sat over the town of Sandpoint anchored to it by many cables of terrible strength. Fire had failed to burn its almost smoke-white outer surface though it had certainly smouldered.
A harpoon flew overhead and penetrated the outer web. Cintra couldnt see where it had penetrated the envelope. Cintra looked in the direction the harpoon had come from. Was that toward the harbour or was it some place else? Then she realized something. Hadnt her ankle been broken? She looked down at her foot. Then felt it for broken bones she knew would protrude…Why heal it at all? It was strange that they would do something out of kindness only to feed on their victims later. Cintra ran toward hope.
The town was ablaze with spot fires. Where the Nest had proven inflammable, the community of Sandpoint had not. Nearer the docks, recruits worked to pull a burning building down into a heap that wouldnt ignite the buildings packed around it. The sound of heavy Ballista hurled a harpoon from the deck of a ship crowded and busy.
“Hello? Where can I find…” Cintra was pushed down the busy vessel gangway and struggled to force her way back through the crowd.
“Where is the Captain?” Cintra looked toward the crew at the Ballista as they fired another shot at the distant nest. The crewman looked about and indicated toward the forward Ballista crew. Cintra pushed through the crowded deck as they busied to load.
“Are any of you the Captain?” A rough looking fellow looked about.
“Captain? Woman wants you…” The man on the Ballista winch looked up.
“What is it Madam, we are rather busy here.” He continued on the winch.
“Captain. You need to burn that thing.” Cintra pointed at the nest.
“Unless you noticed, the web doesnt burn.” The Captain.
“Captain, I dont know if anyone has told you but your Harpoons are getting through the web. You need to wrap them in fire and burn that thing from the inside.” Cintra stared at him with a tired weariness. He nodded with some understanding at the gore covered sight before him.
“Right, you heard the lady lads, break out the pitch and cloth. Lets light this cobweb lantern up.” Cintra smiled and collapsed on the deck.

Liberty's Edge

Yellow Dingo, any interest in joining efforts with us in Pathfinder Chronicler?

The Exchange

Interesting...

Shadow Lodge

Is this thread intended to be open for any and all to submit Fan Fiction, or is this restricted to Pathfinder Chronicler posts/authors/pieces?

Liberty's Edge

ValmarTheMad wrote:
Is this thread intended to be open for any and all to submit Fan Fiction, or is this restricted to Pathfinder Chronicler posts/authors/pieces?

its about PF Fiction, so i would say its open... I myself like posting in my own thread, but to each its own :D

talking about that... I added the 2nd chapter of White Shadows

The Exchange

Hmm, back to square one I guess. Pathfinder General Discussion, here we are again.

Sovereign Court

Shattered Dreams: A horror story set in Augustina.

as originally featured on Pathfinderchronicler.net

Sovereign Court

Shattered Dreams

Martin Theron had been out of work for nearly a year. A simple construction laborer, he was injured during the building of the new glassworks near Augustina’s Market Bridge, when a large windowpane broke free and crashed to the ground. The exploding glass sent shards all over the work site and many of the workers suffered minor injures. Martin however, had been severely hurt. Most of the toes on both feet were severed along with some important tendons in his left foot.

Healing had been difficult and had taken longer than expected. The loss of work couldn’t have come at a worse time. Martin and his wife had celebrated the birth of their first child, Jan, only ten months before and had spent most of their savings preparing for his arrival; the clerics at the temple of Abadar took the rest. Unfortunately, the enormous cost did not cover the severe infection Martin had developed in his left foot and it took several months for it to finally clear up.

For the rest of the year Martin struggled to find work, but the Builders guild blocked him at every turn because of unpaid dues. The situation forced Martin and his family into near poverty. His wife, Ingrid, helped out the best she could by selling black cherry pies and mending clothes. Still it was not enough to get by. They were forced to sell off many of their possessions, including a hand carved basinet purchased for Jan. There were times they went for days without eating.

Finally after nearly a year of saving and scrimping, Martin had enough gold to pay off his guild dues and was swiftly put to work.
The morning of his first day he was so eager to work he arrived at the site just before dawn, tools in hand. The guild had sent him to help with the renovation of Rollo Tincture’s Tavern, The New Andoran Rose.

The dwarven owner was adding a room to his wine cellar and needed additional hands to complete the task quickly.

The tavern was a one-story affair with an open dining area, a long oak and stone bar, behind which were several oak barrels filled with various dark and darker dwarven beers. Besides the dwarf Rollo and his wife, there was Agna, the serving girl, and a lanky young man named Barney, who played violin during the dinner meals. Martin had spent many nights before his accident drinking away his sorrows at Tincture’s tavern.

As Martin arrived he saw Rollo outside, sweeping the walkway in front of the tavern with a straw broom. The dwarf watched Martin as he approached, nodding in approval as he saw the man’s tools.

“Aye, good. Another worker,” Rollo said in his thick dwarven accent, “I needed ye. A bit surprised to see a human awake this early, ready to work before the cockcrows. Eh, I suppose it’s because yer new. Still, I approve, I do. Good dwarven principle is to stay busy with hard work.”

“Sir, to be honest I’ve been out of work for a while now and my family has suffered greatly for it. I’m eager to work and put good food on our table once more.” Martin said.
The dwarf put a heavy, thick-fingered hand on Martin’s forearm.

“Tis a good man who works to feed his family. Call me Rollo. ‘Sir’ is reserved for knights and lords, not simple folk such as we.” The dwarf smiled warmly.

They entered the tavern where Rollo instructed Martin to sit at the bar and wait for the other workers to arrive. A stocky dwarven woman with auburn hair gave Martin a small basket of freshly baked biscuits to eat while he waited.

Other workers began to arrive after an hour. Martin relaxed as soon as he saw Edmund enter the tavern carrying a hammer and a large pick.

“Eddie!” Martin shouted, embracing his friend. “Boy am I glad to see a friendly face on this job!”

“Glad to see you as well Martin. I’d heard those thieves at the guild had finally let you back in. Good to see you, good to see you.”

Rollo came into the tavern as the last worker arrived. The dwarf looked displeased as he scanned the group.

“That’s a sorry lot. Half as much as yesterday. We’ll have to make do I suppose.” The dwarf grumbled.

Rollo led the workers past the bar and through a service door that went to the cellar. It was clear the cellar was both a recent addition and designed for someone of dwarven stature. The room was small, no more than ten-foot square, with one wall dominated by a large wine rack, flanked by a wall with a two-foot deep hole gouged out of it. A lantern hung in the center of the room providing a dim illumination.

“Sorry bout the ceiling laddies.” Rollo said as he reached the floor, “I know it’s made it more difficult for ye, and I do apologize, though ye must admit the hard work is rewarding. We’ve a new face today despite losing some o’ the rest, so let him know the task and get to it.” Rollo grabbed a low hanging lantern and moved it to the steps so the workers wouldn’t strike their heads.

The dwarf returned upstairs as the men began working. Eddie explained that the cellar was to be widened to twice its current size. Feeling the walls, Martin discovered they were solid stone. There were seven total workers including Eddie and Martin. Carol, Jax, and Nesbit worked at one end of the wall with heavy picks, while Karon, the Taldoran, hauled out the loose stone in a wooden pail. Martin and Eddie worked the other end of the wall with their picks, and the last man, Herod monitored the water buckets that cooled both the workers and their tools. The men had to crouch slightly as they worked adding to the difficulty of the task.

By the end of the shift they had managed to carve out nearly another foot of rock, widening the room slightly. Their progress was accelerated when they discovered a loose section of stone that was easy to mine out. Martin swung his pick one last time into the loose section and a chunk the size of a house cat fell away revealing a small hole in the wall, about a foot across.

The other workers were gathering up their gear as he revealed the hole, but it did not excite them as it did Martin.

“Look Eddie! Everyone, look a hole! Maybe this rock wall is thin and our work won’t be as hard as we thought.”

The men all laughed.

“Probably just another air pocket. We’ve run into a few already. Let’s pack up; you’ve done good work today.” Eddie said.

As the workers left Tincture’s tavern, Rollo paid each of them two gold coins. Martin had expected to be paid at the end of the week like he had at previous jobs and he suspected that was why there were half as many workers. Some men with gold in their pockets went straight to the brothels and bars to carouse and drink too much to be up in time for work.

Martin took his gold straight to grocer Calbot’s fruit and vegetable stall near Market Bridge. He spent a quarter of his earnings on a heavy bag of potatoes and carrots, a rack of lamb, and three rabbits. Sore from his first day of work in months and from swinging the pick at such an awkward angle all day, he spent three more silver for a wagon ride back to his cabin.

Arriving home, Martin brought the groceries inside and put the remaining gold coin into Ingrid’s hands and kissed her warmly on the cheek. He’d save the remaining silver for some pints down at Tincture’s tavern.

“Da-da!” Jan exclaimed. Upon seeing him, the boy rushed to his father, embracing him. “Da-da home? Da-da home?”

“Yes my boy,” Martin said, picking Jan up and spinning him in the air, “Da-da is home. Have you been a wonderful child for mommy?” Martin looked his son in the eye with a mock stern expression.

The boy nodded and smiled, revealing two rows of healthy white teeth. Martin put him down and began preparing the rack of lamb to barbeque. The scent of the seasoned meat made Martin’s mouth water. That evening’s meal was the best Martin had had since his accident. While Ingrid washed and put away the dishes Martin put Jan down for sleep and then sat on the front porch of the cabin smoking flayleaf and feeling like a good husband again for the first time in a year.

In the morning Ingrid packed Martin a couple of chunks of bread and left over lamb for his lunch. Moving about the cabin in the pre dawn hours, Martin felt sluggish. Walking to work took longer than usual. His back was sore and cramped in places, as were his arms from swinging the pick. Martin yawned as he walked, visualizing turning around and returning to his bed. He shook off the urge and continued walking until he arrived at Tincture’s tavern.

The dwarf was sweeping the front walk way as he had been the morning before, watching Martin straggle in. He shook his head disapprovingly.

“Just like the others. Give a human some gold and he gets lazy.” Rollo admonished. “At least you showed up. Well then, get inside, the others are already here.”

Martin nodded and entered the tavern.

“You look terrible.” Eddie said as Martin walked up to the bar.

“I feel terrible.” Martin replied. “Its like I haven’t slept at all.” Martin yawned, accentuating his point.

“You’re just not used to being back swinging a pick is all.” Eddie said reassuringly. “After a few more days you’ll be used to it. Come on, lets see if we can’t make that hole of yours bigger.”

“Lead on.”

The workers attacked the walls much as they had the day before. As they worked, Martin could see he wasn’t the only one who was still tired. He imagined the men without families had enjoyed themselves late into the night and that was the cause of their sluggishness. Karon even dozed off at one point, leaning against the wine rack as he was waiting for enough loose rocks to fill the pail. By the end of the workday the room was only one foot wider. Martin spent most of the shift expanding the hole and the area around it.

“By tomorrow I’d wager you could fit the lantern in there and look around, see how deep it is.” Eddie said to Martin as they enjoyed a pint after work. “Get some more sleep tonight. I know I need it. We didn’t really get much done today.”

“I wasn’t the one falling asleep during the shift.” Martin joked.

“True, very true. Its not like that snot Karon has a tough job in the first place, carrying out loads we have to free from the earth with the strength of our backs and the sweat of our brows.” Eddie winked.

Martin laughed.

They left Tincture’s tavern and went their separate ways. At home Ingrid had made a stew from the left over lamb and baked a fresh black cherry pie.

“Da-da story! Da-da story!” Jan said as Ingrid prepared him for bed. Martin thought it over for a second but when he went to answer the boy, he yawned instead.

“Not tonight Bug.” Martin said, yawning again and rubbing his eyes. “Dad is tired my little champion. He has to sleep now just like you. I’ll tell you a tale another night. I promise.”

“Da-da story!” Jan insisted.

“Your father is tired Jan, don’t pester.” Ingrid said, tucking in the boys bed covers.

The boy, defeated, turned over and buried his face in his pillow. He was sleeping in moments. Martin went to his own bed, falling asleep just as quickly, and was snoring loudly before Ingrid could finish putting away the dishes. She walked into the room and saw her husband sprawled out on top of the blankets still in his work boots. She smiled warmly, full of love, as she removed the heavy leather boots, thinking just how lucky she was.

* * * *

Martin could hear a low buzzing noise, causing him to open his eyes. Lying on his back, he felt cold stone pressing sharply against his body. He tried to turn his head, to move, but he couldn’t. Dim blue light emanated from somewhere below him allowing his immobile eyes to see. He could only stare forward, his eyes locked on the moist rock ceiling. Martin smelled something simultaneously sweet and sickly, reminding him of fetid water and rotten vegetation. He called out for help, but his lips stayed tightly shut and the shout died in his throat.

Martin could hear someone approaching.

The footsteps were small and quick, like the steps Jan made as he ran through the cottage. Martin’s heart raced hard in his chest. He was terrified of the approaching figure but he could not remember why. The buzzing sound grew louder, rising from somewhere below. Sweat formed at his temples and on his forehead. An annoying itch grew slowly on the bridge of his nose as his heart thundered ever louder in his ears. His vision pulsed in and out in tune with his heartbeat and a dull ache pounded between his eyes.

The footsteps became faster and louder. Martin knew that his tormentor was almost upon him. He could hear it laughing and giggling in its high-pitched, child-like voice.

Martin was suddenly aware of being able to swallow. With immense effort he forced his tongue to the roof of his mouth, nearly gagging, as he tasted a thick, revolting paste. He slowly and painfully turned his head, seeing that he was underground and that the blue light originated from patches of wet and moldy fungus growing out of the earthen floor. He was on a stone slab stained nearly black with dried fluid, one foot off the floor.

Martin turned his head to the other side of the slab and stared straight into the face of a grotesque looking child thing. Martin screamed through a mouth filled with viscous paste, the sound echoing in the little chamber. The child creature smiled a large grin full of broken, bluish-black teeth, and laughed.

* * * *

Martin woke with a start, covered in sweat, a scream erupting from his lungs. The sound woke Ingrid and Jan who began to cry. Martin sat up in bed, clutching his chest, trying to soothe his pounding heart. He was out of breath as if he’d just run a mile.

“Martin my love, what’s wrong?” Ingrid asked touching his arm, a concerned look on her face.

“I don’t know. Just a dream.” Martin said. “Just a dream.”

“It must have been horrible. I’ve never heard you scream before.”

“I don’t know. I can’t remember it.” Martin said, giving her a weak smile. As he tried to recall the dream, all he got was a snippet of being underground and hearing Jan laughing. The rest was just too hazy.

Martin climbed out of bed and went outside to pour a fresh pitcher of water from the well. He returned holding two glasses and handed one to Ingrid. He rinsed his mouth out, washing away a nasty film that had coated it. Can’t afford to get sick now, he told himself. Martin was terribly tired but slightly dreaded the idea of returning to sleep.

That morning he arrived last to work again and again received an admonishing shake of the head from the dwarf. The assembled group of workers was minus one that morning. Jax had not shown up. Martin could plainly see he wasn’t the only one that was tired. As they descended the steps into the cellar, Martin felt his heart start to speed up and sweat form on his forehead and throat. A sudden pain in his left side felt as if he were being stabbed, but there was no one behind him on the stairs. Martin took deep breaths and when he reached the landing he had calmed his nerves somewhat. He grabbed his pick and joined Eddie at the wall.

Karon was holding the lantern.

“Should I put it in the hole, see how deep it goes?” He said.
Herod snickered.

“Why not?” Eddie said.

Karon smiled large and clambered up to the hole. It was nearly four foot wide and two feet deep. Karon reached in with his lantern hand, peering through the gap.

“What do you see?” Carol said, standing behind both Eddie and Martin.

“Anything?” Martin echoed.

“I think…” Karon trailed off, “not sure…it looks like…”

He was quiet for a moment as he peered closer into the hole, staring intensely.

“What is it?” Eddie said.

Karon did not answer, staring harder into the hole. Suddenly he jerked, his lantern arm thrusting deeper into the hole. Martin and the others watched in terror as Karon flailed about, trying to remove his arm from the hole. He started to scream.

The screaming made Eddie and Carol scream.

Karon suddenly relaxed and pulled the lantern free, laughing hysterically, tears running down his face.

“By the Gods!” Martin yelled clutching his chest.

“Ha-ha-ha. You should see your faces. Those looks are priceless! I got you all good!” Karon was holding his sides he was laughing so hard.

“You jerk!” Eddie yelled clearly un-amused. “What if you’d really been hurt? You don’t go jesting about things like that.”

Karon wiped tears from his eyes and cheeks.

“Relax man, you were all acting like someone died. I had to lighten up the mood before I choked on the tension.”

“You pull a stunt like that again and I’ll lighten your shoulders personally.” Eddie said throwing a small rock in Karon’s direction. “Now get back to work!”

The men returned to work, though Karon’s antics had done little for their tired and sour moods. Fatigue set in around the half-shift point for Martin, who could not stop yawning or nursing the sharp pain in his back. The second half of the shift was like torture for him and, as a result. he barely got any additional work completed. By the end of the day, the six workers had only carved out a half-foot of wall.
When Rollo came to pay them he was clearly upset.

“I’ll not pay good gold for this half-assed work.” He said to them as they gathered their tools and left. “Tomorrow you’d better get to task or I’ll carve the wage in half!” he threatened.

That evening Martin did not eat supper. He was in a foul mood from working tired and sore all day and was short with both Ingrid and Jan. The sound of the boy running through the cottage made Martin jumpy, causing his heart to race and his to head throb. He retired early, though he didn’t fall asleep until long after Ingrid had joined him, and it was restless sleep at that. Each slight creak of the cottage settling jolted him awake and by dawn he was yawning uncontrollably and moving about as if drunk.

Martin arrived on time just as dawn broke. Approaching Tincture’s he saw Rollo and the other workers, plus a half dozen blue-coated city guards. The men stood in a semi-circle in front of the stables, near the broad side of the tavern. They remained eerily silent as Martin approached, their attention in front of them, on what, he couldn’t see. Eddie must have heard him, for he looked back and, spotting Martin, stepped aside to allow him to see what the commotion was about.

“What’s going on?” Martin asked.

“Its Rollo’s horses,” Eddie said, a grim tone to his voice and face, “something got em in the night-hobgoblins or sea critters probably.”

“Got 'em? How so?”

“See for yourself.”

Eddie gestured with his chin towards the pen and Martin stood on his toes to see. Inside, four horses lay still on the ground. They had been disemboweled and long strips of flesh had been torn from their hides. All of the horse’s eyes were missing, as were their tails.

“By the Gods.” Martin said, putting a hand over his mouth
.
“T’wasn’t no wolf done this.” Rollo said in his deep, commanding voice.
The captain of the guard did not look impressed.

“Count yourself lucky sir dwarf, your horses seem intact enough to still sell for glue. There is no evidence I see that shows who committed this act. Bandit’s sir, this was done by bandits. I shall make a report but, for now, the military simply cannot afford to thin itself by providing your tavern with additional protection.” The captain said, smugly surveying the crowd. “If I were you, I’d hire out.”

Rollo shook his head, defeated by the captain’s words. Slowly the guardsmen departed and left the dwarf and his workers alone with the mutilated livestock.

“Damned city watch.” Rollo spat. “Free country my arse. They only patrol Admiralty Hill and protect humans. No offense. Sometimes I feel if I was a freed Cheliaxian slave, I’d get better treatment.”

Martin nodded, sharing his sentiment. Sometimes he felt that Andoran government policies favored freed slaves over freeborn, impoverished citizens-that they were acting out of misplaced guilt for the actions of their Taldoran and Chelish predecessors.

“What are we to do?” Karon called out. “Start in the cellar or move these horses?”

“Neither.” Rollo said, his voice still heavy and solemn. “There’ll be no work today. Come back tomorrow and we’ll see what’s needed.” The dwarf was clearly distracted. Deep worry lines marred his weathered face.

“Yes, tomorrow.” Rollo muttered, walking up the front steps of the tavern, leaving the men alone with the corpses.

“Well this is crap.” Eddie said. “I was counting on that coin today. I bloody need it.”

Once home, Martin took advantage of his surprise day off and headed straight for bed to catch up on some of the sleep he’d missed the night before. Ingrid was surprised to see him home, but she knew better than to ask questions of her husband when he went straight for his bed. Young Jan lay in his small cot, his canary colored blanket clutched tightly in his hands and resting against his face.

Martin had barely napped an hour when the sound of Ingrid shouting woke him.

“Martin! Martin, wake up, something is wrong with Jan!”

Hearing something was wrong with his son made Martin bolt upright in bed, fully alert. He threw off the blankets and rushed to his son. Jan sat on the edge of his cot, a vacant stare to his eyes, with bluish drool running down his chin.

“Jan! Jan, my boy, what is it? Tell Da-da what’s wrong.” Martin took a hold of the boy with both hands.

Jan did not respond. Martin gave him a light shake. When that had no effect, he shook harder.

“Stop!” Ingrid shouted. “You’re going to hurt him!”

But Jan showed no signs of being hurt and Martin shook him a few more times before relenting. The boy continued staring and drooling. Martin waved his fingers in front of Jan’s eyes and clapped his hands together with a loud crack. Still there was no recognition.

“Something’s wrong!” Ingrid continued shouting. “We have to take him to the temple! The priests will know what to do!”

Martin shook his head.

“The clerics of Abadar would charge us twenty gold to simply look at Jan. We’ve barely three to our name! No, we can’t afford their services. It won’t work.”

“There are other temples!” She said, knowing that Martin’s upbringing forbade him from entering a temple other than the Master of the First Vault's.

Martin looked wounded.

“I cannot. My father would have never…Jan is destined to one day join Abadar’s shining church…that’s why we’ve kept my fathers crossbow all these years.” Martin shook his head but the pleading eyes of his wife quickly melted his resolve. He turned to his son and his heart relented.

“I’m unsure about the idea, but if it’s the only way, take him. Though, the services of the other temples won’t be cheap either.” Martin said, giving Jan another shake, but there was no change to the boy. Martin remained silent for a nearly a minute before speaking again.

“I’ll do what I can for some extra gold. Sell a few more things. I…I have to go. Take him wherever you must. I need air.” Martin said, standing and pacing the cottage distractedly.

“You need air? Your son needs serious attention!”

Martin grabbed his boots, jacket, and the silver tablet inscribed with the holy symbol of Abadar that had rested above the front door since he’d moved Ingrid into the cottage.

“I’ll try and get us more gold,” Martin said and stormed out of the cottage, slamming the door behind him.

Ingrid stared after her husband, the look of confused bewilderment on her face mirroring Jan’s. She dressed Jan and herself and then left the cottage, looking for the first temple she could find.

Martin felt terrible and he couldn’t think straight. As he walked away from the cottage his mind was on Jan but also on how tired he was. Though he worried for his son, he felt restless and oddly anxious at being around him. Martin walked aimlessly through the streets of Augustana and somehow ended up outside of Tincture’s tavern. He didn’t even remember walking in that direction. The place was still closed so Martin walked towards the stables. The carcasses were gone, but there were long dark spots of blood in the earth crawling and buzzing with swarms of flies.

Martin started shaking and sweating. He backed away from Tincture’s and ran towards Copperdown to find a stiff drink. Several times he found himself down roads he didn’t recognize and in front of buildings he couldn’t recall seeing before. He’d grown up in Augustana and knew the city like the back of his hand. It angered him to be this lost.
The day became night as Martin finally found his way. The approaching darkness renewed his irrational anxiety and he began to shake and sweat profusely. He quickly abandoned his plan to have a drink and made for home.

Inside the cottage, Ingrid was holding an unchanged Jan, trying to feed him from a plate of mashed potatoes. He would not eat. She looked up at Martin with eyes red from crying as he entered the cottage.

“Where have you been? I thought you were off to sell that plaque but that was hours ago! I went to the temple with Jan and have been waiting all day for you to return!”

“I…” Martin began but trailed off, unable to answer.

Ingrid shook her head. She felt ashamed of her husband for the first time in their marriage.

“Do you know what Mikal, the cleric from Iomedae’s temple said? He said that Jan was beyond his help, that he’d already been healed and that it would do no good to heal him again! He said Jan suffered a trauma that magic couldn’t fix! What does he mean by that?”
Martin stared at her confused.

“What did you do to our son?” Ingrid screamed.

“Me? I don’t understand what you’re talking about!”

“The cleric said Jan had already been healed! I didn’t do it! That’s how you knew how much the Abadar priests would charge isn’t it? You already had him healed didn’t you? You hurt our Jan and tried to hide it by having him healed behind my back!”

Martin lunged for his wife and struck her hard against the face. The force of the blow sent Ingrid reeling for the floor.

“I will not be spoken to that way woman! Accused of…such atrocity! I know the cost because my father was a priest! You know that!”

Martin hovered over his trembling wife, his face full of rage, spit flying from his mouth as he spoke. Martin had never, in all his life, struck a woman, and the realization made him even angrier. He turned away and stormed off to his bed. He lay there letting his anger subside for nearly an hour; not at all surprised Ingrid did not join him.

* * * *

Martin was running. His heart thundered in his ears. Ahead of him was a bright blue light almost white at its center. He didn’t remember starting to run or what he was running from but he knew he had to get away or they would hurt him again.

They. Martin remembered there was more than one of them.

Martin’s shaky legs felt heavy and mired in sticky mud as he struggled to move. He couldn’t focus his blurry vision and things appeared unreal. He saw nothing ahead of him except the bluish-white light.
The quick patter of tiny feet echoed behind Martin. He wanted to turn and face his pursuer but his body wouldn’t let him. To slow down or stop is to die, Martin’s mind screamed, you have to keep moving! His watery legs wobbled with each step. The sudden rush of a sickening, flowery smell overpowered his nostrils and burned his throat. Martin’s eyes began to sting and swell and he felt his throat tightening shut.
The sound of pattering feet grew louder and closer. Martin desperately tried to surge forward but he tumbled to the uneven earthy floor. The blue light vanished but somehow Martin could see the rocky ceiling above him. I’m underground, Martin realized.

Suddenly a pale blue, child-like face pressed itself against Martin’s.
Martin stared into bleached-white eyes. A wide grinning mouth revealed two rows of sharply chiseled teeth below flared nostrils. The thing’s cherub face was twisted into a grimace of pure hatred. Oily white hair sprang from its head like overgrown grass. Martin opened his mouth to scream, just as something sharp entered his left side below the ribs. The scream died in his throat. His vision grew dark. As the blackness overtook him, Martin saw a long handled hook descend towards his open mouth.

* * * *

Martin bolted upright in bed, slick with sweat, a scream erupting from his mouth. Ingrid was startled awake beside him, and Martin saw she had Jan with her.

“Dear, what is it?” Ingrid asked, half asleep.

Martin rubbed his eyes and glanced over at his son. The boy stared silently back at him, wide-awake with fresh drool blanketing his chin. Jan’s eyes did not seem so vacant to Martin this time, they seemed to stare right through him. He swore he saw the boy’s mouth curl into a cruel smile.

Martin took a few calming breaths realizing that something about Jan was different. He lit the lantern on his bedside nightstand and heard an audible gasp from Ingrid. He turned back and saw that his son’s hair had gone completely white and stood straight on end! Something about the change gave Martin an uneasy feeling in his stomach and quickened his already storming heart.

“Jan!” Ingrid exclaimed. “By Abadar’s grace what is happening to our son?” She clutched Jan to her chest and began sobbing. The boy didn’t acknowledge the movement, his eyes regaining their glassy, corpse-like gaze.

Martin’s heart beat fast and painfully now. His back was sore and his entire left side was cramping on him. Ingrid began rocking back and forth as she clutched Jan, her sobs increasing in volume. Martin could feel a sudden mix of rage and anxiety building in his stomach. He couldn’t think. His instinct was to dress and rush off to Tincture’s tavern in hopes the dwarf had reopened and needed him. He just had to get away from Ingrid’s sobs and his sons blank, sinister gaze.

Dawn was still approaching as Martin left the cottage. His rising anxiety caused him to tremble and sweat, though the morning was anything but warm. His legs shook with each step giving him an ominous feeling that this had happened to him before. The cramps in his back and side increased as he walked and by the time he arrived at Tincture’s tavern he was a wreck. Martin suddenly realized that in his haste to flee his home that morning he’d forgotten his tools. He walked into the tavern with his head hanging shamefully.

There were only four other workers sitting at the bar as Martin walked in: Eddie, Carol, Herod, and Nisbet. They all had somber looks about their tired, haggard faces. Eddie didn’t appear to have slept at all. He must feel like I do, Martin thought. I wonder if his son has been struck dumb as well. Eddie looked up and smiled as Martin sat down but it felt forced and disingenuous. He wanted to tell Eddie about Jan and fearing sleep but couldn’t bring himself to mention it.

“Martin, did you hear? Karon went and hung himself last night.” Carol said.

“What?” Martin replied in shock, his thoughts finally leaving his stricken son. “By the Gods!”

“I know,” Eddie said, joining the conversation, “Gave no reason for it whatsoever. His wife Mary was beside herself with grief when I went by there to pick him up for shift.”

Martin’s head started to throb. His squeezed his eyes tightly shut, trying to ward off the oncoming ache.

“Are you okay?” Nesbit asked. “I didn’t know you two were that close.”
“That’s not it. My head just hurts. My whole body is sore in fact. On top of that I haven’t been sleeping well.”

Eddie paled and gave Martin a sympathetic look.

Herod spoke up, startling the others. The swarthy Kelishite rarely uttered two syllables.

“Has anyone seen Rollo?” he asked.

Looking around the men all realized they hadn’t seen the dwarf at his usual predawn post, sweeping the walkway in front of the tavern.

“No.” Carol said.

“Someone had to light the lanterns, unlock the doors…” Nesbit stood up looking around the tavern as if expecting an ambush by a shadowy attacker.

Indeed all of the men seemed jumpy that morning. The smell of freshly baked bread suddenly rushed through the room followed by the heavy footsteps of someone walking from the back kitchen. Rollo’s wife appeared carrying a basket of steaming biscuits.

“Hello men,” she said, her voice cracking, “me husband’s off this morn on some foolish adventure and left me here to see to ye. Wouldn’t speak of where he’s off to so I won’t know when he gets back until you do. Now I’m left to do the work of three since that good for nothing Agna up and quit on us yesterday, following the cow killings. Human women,” she spat shaking her head, “no stomachs.”

The dwarf placed the biscuits on the bar, along with a tray of goat cheese and butter, and then poured each of the men a pint of her lightest beer on tap-a red cloudy ale too thick to see through.
“I heard about yer friend as ye were speaking.” She said. “Tis a real shame. I’ll see to it his widow, Mary ye said it was? I’ll see to it she gets the rest of his wage for this job. It’s the least me husband and I can do.”

The men raised their glasses to her and drank deeply.

After their light meal, Rollo’s wife led the workers downstairs to the wine cellar. Martin borrowed Carol’s pick and the other man took over Karon’s duties hauling out the loose stone in the wooden pail. The men worked most of the day in silence; Karon’s suicide weighed heavily on them. An hour before quitting time Nesbit let out an enthusiastic yell followed by the sound of tumbling rocks. Martin and Eddie turned in time to see a large portion of the stone wall crumble away, revealing a nearly four foot deep chamber. It appeared to be a natural pocket in the rock, but something about its shape made Martin uneasy and he did not share Nesbit’s enthusiasm. Eddie and Carol looked nervous as well.

They began clearing the rubble out of the way to get a better look at the chamber’s walls. The jagged stone surface was moist and lined with cracks and fissures wide enough for a small child to squeeze through.

Nesbit entered the new space and set to work on one of the larger fissures, trying to widen it with his pick. The others made no move to help, standing and watching Nesbit stoop in the chamber. Carol dropped his tools to the floor and walked past Martin, who could smell fresh urine as the man wordlessly climbed the stairs. No one said anything and Martin fought the urge to follow him.

On the way home after the shift, Martin tried not to dwell on Carol’s abrupt departure but found it was all he could think about. The closer he got to the cottage the more nervous Martin felt. He dreaded walking inside and seeing his son’s unsettling glare. When he arrived home, Martin did not go inside; instead he stood out front and stared at the cottage. He could not bring himself to go closer. After a quarter hour Martin walked away. He was determined to buy a strong bottle and drown in it. Something about going to sleep worried him and he needed the courage to face it, though he knew of no reason to fear his dreams.

Martin purchased his bottle and drank most of it while wandering the streets of Augustana, singing loud hymns to Abadar that his father had recited to him hundreds of times as a child. Night descended on the city and Martin had the drunken nerves to face the oncoming darkness and continued his wanderings for several more hours before finally returning home.

Inside the cottage Ingrid and Jan were already asleep. Martin stumbled through the kitchen, knocking aside a chair and noticing that a plate of stewed rabbit and potatoes lay cold and untouched on the table. He walked to the bedroom, kicked off his boots and fell heavily into bed, causing Ingrid to shift away, groaning in annoyance. He fell asleep quickly.

* * * *

Martin could feel the cold stone beneath him even before he opened his eyes. His left side was wet and sticky. When he looked around he saw he was in a stone chamber, illuminated by patches of glowing blue mushrooms. Across from him on another stone slab was Jan. He sat upright looking quizzically at Martin, drooling. His white hair stood on end, reaching greasily toward the sky.

Martin tried to move but found he could only turn his head slightly and dart his eyes back and forth. Then he heard footsteps quickly patter into the chamber. High-pitched voices chattered and giggled to each other in the blue glow of the room, causing Martin’s spine to tingle and frost over.

A childlike face came suddenly into his view, hovering inches above him. The skin was deathly blue and had tiny pockmarks lining the lips. It glistened with an oily sheen. The creature’s fetid breath was sour as rotten milk. Moist, milky white orbs filled its sockets and its hair stood straight on end, like Jan’s.
Leaning close, the child-thing pressed its mouth against Martins ear, whispering hotly.

“P’nuglu iä iä. N’ga sethie e’nath”

The sounds made no sense to Martin but he surmised they foretold the fate awaiting him. The creature displayed a long handled hook for Martin to see, cackling in its high-pitched voice. Sharp pain tore through Martins left side and he felt warm blood flowing from the fresh wound. The child-thing jerked savagely at Martin, pulling furiously on its hook, tearing deeper into his side. The pain was overwhelming, drowning his vision in a flare of white.

Martin’s vision returned slowly and he tore his eyes away from his tormentor, frantically searching for his son. The boy still sat across from him, a wicked smile on his drool soaked lips. Two more pale blue child-things were on either side of him, one bearing a rusty razor, the other, who bore a bushy white, handlebar mustache, held a ghastly looking, hooked-legged grub in a set of tongs. With a fluid, practiced motion, the creature holding the scalpel ran the blade across Jan’s forehead at the hairline. Blood trickled down the boys face in a thin stream.

Jan giggled.

The mustached child-thing brought the grub to Jan’s forehead. The ghastly creature leapt onto Jan, crawling into the fresh wound. The boy’s head bubbled as the grub crawled under his skin, heading for the crown of the skull. As it moved the mustached figure applied a foul smelling, blue paste to Jan’s forehead, while the other chanted strange words.

“Iä, iä, p’nuglu iä! W’gna gna sethie iä! Yoag’ so-to, Yoag, so-to!”

Jan continued giggling as the grub crawled in his head. The lump settled as it reached the crown, relaxing flat, becoming almost imperceptible.

Martin wanted to scream but his voice wouldn’t come. The white-eyed creature with the hook in him continued to yank and jerk, each action sending excruciating pain through Martin’s body. He could feel the heat of the child-thing’s breath on his face. The creature clamped a slimy hand down hard on Martin’s nose and mouth. Martin could taste a salty, viscous paste.

* * * *

Martin awoke with a start, his hands reflexively wiping at his mouth. He was sitting in his rocking chair on the porch, fully dressed, work boots laced. He shook his head trying to remember how he’d gotten there. Seeing the empty liquor bottle at his feet he deduced he must have blacked out. He looked about, trying to get his bearings, and saw that it was already dawn. He’d be lucky if he still had a job! Without entering the cottage, Martin ran at full exertion towards Tincture’s tavern.

He arrived, out of breath. There was no sign of Rollo outside, and Martin saw that the walkway had not been swept as he climbed the stairs and went inside. Martin burst through the doors and found Rollo’s wife behind the bar filling a glass for Duncan, one of Tincture’s elderly regulars.

“Ah, there you are. The others have gone down. Dinna think ye’d show.”

“I’m terribly sorry.” Martin pleaded. As he spoke Rollo’s wife closed her eyes and crinkled her nose.

“Well it smells like you swam in spirits. Humans can’t drink like dwarves. They become unreliable and idle wastes.” The dwarf threw a look to Duncan.

“Er, yer a waste!” Duncan slurred, slamming his mug onto the bar counter. The motion nearly threw him off his barstool.

“Shut it Duncan, you damned fool!” she exclaimed, taking up his mug and filling it with a nearly obsidian colored stout. “Put this in yer mouth and keep yer words to yerself.”

The drunk smiled and chuckled and the dwarf returned the sentiment. Martin could see it was a game the two played together.

“Come on, I’ll show you downstairs.” Rollo’s wife said. “In fact, I haven’t heard much racket from down there this morning so I wanna check on ‘em anyway. My husband’s still gone, but don’t believe I’ll be taken by lazy, drunken humans for a full wage just because I’m a woman.”

Martin walked around the bar and followed the dwarf through the service door and down the stairs to the cellar. He was struck by the silence. As they descended, Martin saw that Eddie, Nesbit, and Harod stood with their backs to the landing, staring at something on the ground.

Rollo’s wife strode forward but Martin held back on the stairs, his heart pounding. He wanted desperately to turn and get above ground. The memory of his nightmare still haunted him and although he remembered no previous instance of the dream, it felt queerly familiar.

“What’s this?” Rollo’s wife demanded. “Why are those picks not chiseling away?” She pushed by the men with her stocky, muscular arms.
On the floor of the wine cellar was a long handled hook attached to a twenty-foot length of strange looking cord. More cord was wrapped around the handle. Man-sized boot prints made in blood lined the floor and seemed to disappear into the stonewall near the largest fissure.

The dwarf picked up the hooked weapon, holding it in front of the men. Martin could swear he saw them flinch in recognition of the thing.
Just as he had.

“Who’s is this?” she asked waving the wicked tool around.

“What is it?” Eddie asked, his tone dark.

“It’s an akyls.” she said. “You use it when you’re hunting in tunnels. You throw it, hook it in and…”

She gave a quick jerk of the hook, causing the men to jump.

“Yank.” she went on obliviously. “You got ‘em.”

The men stood staring at the weapon while Martin slowly approached.
Rollo’s wife dropped the akyls disgustedly to the ground.
“I don’t hear any picks chipping stone. My husband didn’t marry an idiot. If you don’t earn your gold today, I won’t pay.” She turned and stormed up the stairs.

The hook from my dream was used to hunt in tunnels, Martin thought. He wanted to say something to the others, but kept his tongue silent out of embarrassment. Surely he’d seen them recognize the akyls too. Instead, Martin grabbed up Carol’s abandoned tools and set to work in the small chamber. The hook remained on the floor and the men took pains to avoid it.

The wall in the newly uncovered pocket was soft and the stone chiseled away easily. After three short hours the men had made more progress than they had during the previous week. Nesbit gathered up loose stones and filled the basket with them.

“Ouch.” Nesbit said suddenly, jerking his hand away from the basket and balling it into a fist.

“What’s the matter?” Eddie asked concerned. He walked over to check what was wrong.

“I don’t know.” Nesbit said, examining his hand. “It feels like something just stung me.” His last few words were slurred and Eddie watched in horror as the left side of Nesbit’s face relaxed and drooped down his jaw before he slumped motionless to the ground.

“Nesbit!” Eddie screamed and let out a terrible gurgling noise. Blood poured from Eddie’s nose and mouth as he backed away from Nesbit.

Standing just behind the basket of stones was the blue-faced monster from Martin’s nightmares. The creature’s eyes were wet, featureless pearls. It was barely three feet tall and held in its hands a cord that was attached to an akyls hooked into Eddie’s throat. The creature’s horrible cherub face was twisted in fury and it sneered at the other workers through jagged blue-black teeth. Stained leather garments covered the monster’s more sensitive areas and its stark white hair was flecked red with Eddie’s blood.

Martin and Herod raised their picks and swung them sideways at the creature just as the room was engulfed in darkness.

Martin brought his pick down biting deep into stone. He was totally blind. Terror gripped him and he began to panic.

Herod had been luckier. His pick struck the creature and it began screeching. In the darkness Martin could hear Eddie choking on his own blood. Suddenly the sound of the creature was in Martin’s ear, directly behind him. He swung his pick and struck solid stone, the awkward strike sending a numbing pain shooting up both arms.

“By the light of the Dawnflower!” Herod screamed.

Suddenly the cellar was awash in cleansing, morning light, emanating from a stone held in Herod’s outstretched fist. The creature was on the far side of the room, bleeding a thick black ichor, trying to retrieve its akyls from Eddie’s still form. Martin rushed toward it, his pick raised. The creature shrieked at the top of its lungs and threw a handful of wool on the ground. Martin suddenly stopped in his tracks, feeling dazed, and struggling to keep his balance.

Herod grabbed up a melon-sized stone and brought it down onto the creature’s shoulder with a sickening crunch. The child-thing crumpled to the ground, a gout of bluish-black blood spurting over its pale blue lips. The weight of the rock pinned the creature, which began thrashing about wildly.

Martin shook his head, clearing away the daze, and then tightened up on the pick. He took two solid steps toward the creature and swung the pick, burying it deep into the thing’s chest. The pale blue child thing let out a shockingly loud scream; the sound burst smashing into Martin and Herod like a charging warhorse. Both men were knocked backwards, off their feet. Martin felt hot blood pouring from his ears. He struggled to sit up. Gazing over at the monster from his nightmares, Martin felt something inside his mind break, like a branch snapping in two. The child-thing was still, its mouth agape and pooled with dark fluid.

The pain in his ears proved too much and Martin collapsed. He vaguely saw Herod, through his haze, crawling over to him, mouthing words he could not hear. A whistling noise washed through Martin’s ears. Herod took a hold of Martin’s leg and instantly Martin felt a comforting warmth flow over and through him. Slowly the pain faded and the normal noises of the cellar returned to him. Martin could hear Rollo’s wife shouting as she came running down the stairs.

“What in the blazes was that noise?” she shrieked but fell silent, stunned as she saw the carnage before her. Eddie was dead, bled out from his throat. Nesbit was also still, long black veins spider webbed up his arm and into his neck, originating from a swollen blue-black cyst on his hand. Blood ran down his head from his ears.

“Are you okay?” Martin heard Herod asking. Martin stared past him, looking at the corpse of the child-thing.

“They’re real.” Martin managed to say.

“Will someone explain to me what’s happened?” The dwarf repeated. Martin stood with Herod’s help. Once on his feet, Martin ran up the stairs, fleeing the cellar. He could hear Herod and Rollo’s wife calling after him but he didn’t stop to listen to what they said. He ran from Tincture’s tavern, making for his cottage as fast as his legs would carry him.

He threw open the door as he arrived home, wordlessly moving toward Jan.

“Da-da” the boy said, his first words in days. Martin snatched Jan up and searched the boy’s hairline with trembling fingers. As he probed, Martin found what he feared: a thin waxy scar ran the length of Jan’s forehead. He searched further up his son’s skull, coming to the soft spot on top of Jan’s head. Lightly Martin caressed the tender tissue.
The soft spot bubbled and twitched.

Martin knew then what he had to do.

He turned Jan around in his hands and held the boy in outstretched arms before him. Martin walked out of the cottage this way just as Ingrid spotted him from the kitchen. Startled to see her husband after nearly two days of absence and confused by the way he was holding their son, Ingrid followed after him.

Martin walked straight towards the back yard well and raised Jan high above his head.

“No!” Ingrid screamed, running towards them.

“I have to do it Ingrid!” Martin screamed back. “They did something to us, the little blue devils! They did something to our son! Can’t you see? This isn’t him! It’s a monster in a Jan suit! They stole us Ingrid! They stole us both!”

“Please don’t, you don’t know what you’re saying! Please Martin, put our son down!”

“This isn’t our son.” Martin replied flatly, turning away from Ingrid closing his eyes.

When he opened them, it was with steely resolve. Martin stared deep into the black abyss of the well, seeing only bleakness there. Above him Jan was crying in his hands. No, not Jan, Martin reminded himself, they made Jan into something else. Martin kept staring into the well as he whispered a prayer.

“Abadar the Gold-fisted, Master of the First Vault and Judge of the Gods,” Martin recited from childhood memory, “please deposit this soul into your eternal vault and protect his undying spirit forever from harm. Please accept my son, my innocent Jan, who did not deserve what has been done unto him. Though he has become a threat to the city, this can help us all. Forgive me my son. So it is judged.”

Martin opened his eyes and looked up at his son one final time. He knew in his heart that Abadar would forgive him for this deed. By ridding the city of this future menace Martin would earn his place in Abadar’s eternal vault. He could hear Ingrid yelling at him from behind, but he tuned her out, resolute in his decision.

Suddenly a gold tipped crossbow bolt pierced through Martin’s chest, impaling his heart and killing him instantly. Martin fell to the ground, Jan tumbling after, dropping gently onto his father’s crumpled form unharmed. Jan began to cry.

Ingrid stood a few feet away, holding Martin’s father’s gold inlaid crossbow, tears streaming down her face. She fell to her knees, her cries joining Jan’s.

* * * *

A week later on the fourth of Rova, Ingrid buried her husband in the Oldtown cemetery in a quiet ceremony. Banker Clovis Hett, head of the temple of Abadar in Augustana, attended the services along with his wife and four daughters. Rollo and his wife attended as well. Ingrid wondered about her husband’s relationship with the dwarves but the dour pair made no effort to enlighten her. As the gravediggers piled earth onto the casket, Rollo began singing a deep-voiced dwarven dirge, full of sorrow and grief. This caused fresh tears to well in Ingrid’s eyes.
Jan had returned to his old playful self, although his stark white hair remained. Try as she could, Ingrid could not comb the stubborn cowlicks down, so Jan’s oily hair always stood on end. During the funeral the boy seemed distracted and full of energy, trying to escape his mother several times to frolic among the headstones. As they walked home from the cemetery Jan continually tore away from her giggling and grasping for shiny objects.

They walked past Tincture’s tavern on the way home. Jan ran ahead again, turning down an alley between two buildings, disappearing from view.

“Jan stop!” Ingrid yelled running after him. She turned into the alley and spotted her son standing near the center, staring down into a sewer entrance.

“Da-da!” Jan said motioning toward the sewer.

Ingrid felt a knot in her throat and fought back the urge to cry. When she spoke, it was with choked words.

“No sweetie, Da-da’s gone.” She couldn’t hold back the tears any longer and they flowed down her cheeks. “He’s gone Sugar-bug.”
Ingrid took her son into her arms and sadly pondered how she was ever going to explain to him how she’d had to kill his father to save his life. She silently hoped she would never have to.

* * * *

A buzzing sound caused Ingrid to open her eyes. She didn’t remember leaving the alley let alone returning home and going to sleep. Her arms and legs felt restless but when she tried to move them she found she was frozen in place. A blue light emanated from somewhere below her as Ingrid realized she was lying on moist, rough stone. Her back hurt and felt wet and sticky.

She could hear Jan crying near her on her left side but Ingrid could not turn her head to look at him. The sudden smell of rotten vegetation assailed her nostrils and she felt bile rising in her throat. There were other sounds, like the pitter-patter of tiny feet, all around Ingrid. The footsteps grew louder as what ever was causing them moved closer. She could hear metal scraping against stone.
Jan began to scream.

The shriek gave Ingrid new determination to turn her head toward her son. With renewed vigor she exerted herself and painfully turned her head slightly to the left.

Staring straight into the blue, cherub face of a monster.
The child-thing raised a long-handled, barbed hook, and began giggling in a high-pitched voice. Its laughter grew louder as it brought the hook down on Ingrid, the impact causing everything to go black.

-THE END-


One word.

Awesome.

Paizo Employee Organized Play Line Developer

I'm working on a novelization of the Legacy of Fire adventure path (or a novelization of my players version of LOF, I suppose is more appropriate).
Check out the first book: Howl of the Carrion King .
Feedback is appreciated.

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