Showing 6 blog posts matching 1 tag: Mike Capprotti

  1. In the Event of My Untimely Demise

    Ontor nodded and was gone. Moments later she saw him appear at the other window. Jordyar once more laid the poker on Gaval, this time applying it to his chest. Naphrax watched with stoic attention. Fully occupied by Gaval's shrieking and squirming, neither man noticed Ontor's acrobatic contortions as he fit himself, legs first, through the tiny window. He dropped to the floor with a muffled thud that at last turned their heads, but only in time to see him draw his knife and slash open the ropes binding Rieslan. Then he bounded up to grab the holy symbol from the rafter, tossed it to the priest, and threw his knife at Naphrax. The spellcaster only barely managed to duck out of the way, yet the blade succeeded in interrupting his gesticulations and spoiling whatever spell he meant to cast.

    Pathfinder TalesWeb FictionMike CapprottiRobin D. Laws
  2. In the Event of My Untimely Demise

    The trim, white-haired man responded with seasoned stillness to Luma's knee and sickle. His foreign-accented voice purred soothingly, with a hint of disarming irony. "Who am I and why I am I following you? I might equally ask whose blade caresses my jugular."

    Pathfinder TalesWeb FictionMike CapprottiRobin D. Laws
  3. In the Event of My Untimely Demise

    Warming to the subject, the dwarf puffed out his chest and paced the room, gesticulating with the axe. "Oh, what that cost us! We fought giants, demons, mind-eaters. Upon entering the Demonsweald's innermost crypt, the best of us all, Corin the Bright, was beheaded by a trap. Which Aruhal thereupon disarmed." Jordyar stomped into the hallway, then returned, holding aloft the strange doorknocker that had tweaked Luma's curiosity on her way in. "This! This is the flying ring that sliced through Corin's neck. I can't believe that he would take that and display it on his door, as if mocking the memory--" A frustrated groan caught in Jordyar's throat. He backhanded the ring away; it lodged, quivering, in the wooden lintel of the sitting room's doorway. A fresh flush of crimson rose through his face. "So yes, Aruhal owes me. This treasure, we had a deal to sell it for a wagonload of gold. Enough to forever conclude my grubbing and sweating, sleeping in cold crypts with the doors spiked shut, fighting for rest as ghouls and bloodsuckers scratch at the sill. To retire for good and all, on the one great score every looter dreams of. That is the life Jordyar deserved. The life that Aruhal plucked from my grasp!"

    Pathfinder TalesWeb FictionMike CapprottiRobin D. Laws
  4. The Seventh Execution—Chapter Three: The Fettered Freed

    by Amber E. Scott

    Pathfinder TalesThe Seventh ExecutionMike CapprottiAmber E. Scott
  5. The Seventh Execution—Chapter Two: The Faithful False

    by Amber E. Scott

    Pathfinder TalesThe Seventh ExecutionMike CapprottiAmber E. Scott
  6. The Seventh Execution—Chapter One: The Watcher Watched

    by Amber E. Scott

    Pathfinder TalesThe Seventh ExecutionMike CapprottiAmber E. ScottHalflings

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