Pathfinder Tales: The Shroud of Four Silences

Wednesday, November 04, 2020

A small settlement of mostly wooden structures takes up most of a small clearing along a rocky coastline. Mountains and woodlands occupy the surrounding areas. A tall tower rises from the woods nearby. Other prominent features are an opulent temple of blue and white, the town’s tallest structure, and a long log flume jutting out over the sea..

The town of Otari, as seen from the Inner Sea, by Will O’Brien

Hey, Pathfinder fans! It’s Mark Moreland, your friendly neighborhood Director of Brand Strategy, with a bit of exciting news about web fiction over the next few months. Today, to celebrate the release of the second-edition Pathfinder Beginner Box next week, we’re launching the first chapter of a serialized novella by fan-favorite author, Liane Merciel (Nightglass, Nightblade, Hellknight).

The Shroud of Four Silences takes place in the town of Otari, pictured here, which serves as the setting for not only the Beginner Box, but also the Troubles in Otari adventure and the Abomination Vaults Adventure Path. Like new players taking their first steps into the game and world of Pathfinder with the Beginner Box and our other Otari content, the heroes of this tale are new to adventuring, but quickly find themselves embroiled in a plot that could threaten the entire town.

This return to long-form Pathfinder fiction also gave us another opportunity to try something new, so after this week, you won’t see the remaining chapters of The Shroud of Four Silences here on the Paizo Blog. Instead, you can get each week’s chapter emailed directly to you by ensuring you have opted in to receive “Products, Offers, News, and Events” emails in your account privacy settings. We’ll still have Otari-related blogs coming out on Wednesdays for the duration of The Shroud of Four Silences’s release, but they’ll be encounters, No-Prep Characters, and other content you can use at your table. If they happen to also be relevant to the current chapter of Eleukas, Wendlyn, and their companions’ story, I’m sure that will be entirely accidental.

So without further ado, I present to you: The Shroud of Four Silences.

Text Based logo for the Pathfinder Tale: The Shroud of Four Silences. Grey text over a dark blue background with the 'O' in shroud shaped like a blue spiral


Chapter 1

WORK DETAIL

Come on,” Eleukas coaxed. “Just one more load and you’re done.”

“’One more load,’ he says,” Wendlyn muttered, flexing her scratched and sawdust-smeared shoulders. “’One more.’ My arms are about to fall off, and he wants me to cheer up because there’s ‘just one more load.’”

“You were the one who opted for a work detail over a night in the cells.” Otari’s lumber companies gave away their split, hollowed, and beetle-weakened discards for firewood, provided people used their own carts to haul the loads away. Wood splitting was one of Captain Longsaddle’s favorite punishment details, since the Otari Garrison was in perpetual need of firewood, and whatever they didn’t use could be given to townspeople too ill or infirm to chop their own. The need never ended, which meant the work never ended.

“Well, obviously A night in the cells is a night in the cells. Rats, damp, terrible food. Whereas with this, I’m out in the fresh air and sunshine, plus you end up doing all the work.” Wendlyn dragged another hollow log over to Eleukas’s stump and dropped it.

“You could always stop stealing things,” Eleukas pointed out, heaving the log into position and hefting his hatchet. A maul would have been more efficient, but efficiency wasn’t the point of punishment details. “What’d you get this time? A handful of coins from some drunk sailor? Was it really worth it?”

It was the closest he’d ever come to openly chastising his friend for her unending larceny, and Eleukas held his breath for a beat, afraid he’d pushed their friendship too far. To fill the silence, he began hacking at the log, splitting it neatly with a few sharp blows.

But Wendlyn just shrugged and went back to the reject heap for another log. “When else do I get to see my oldest friend? Seems like these work details are our only chance to catch up.”

That stung. Eleukas contented himself with splintering the new log as he tried to think of a response. It was true that since he’d joined the Otari Guard, he hadn’t had much time to sit around in taverns with his friends, even though—or maybe because—he was only a raw recruit and felt so far behind in his training. There was always some new technique to learn, or another bit of wisdom to pry from some grizzled veteran, and he was so full of questions about his new life that sometimes he forgot to keep up with the old one.

It really was only on these work details, when Eleukas contrived to get himself assigned to guard duty after Wendlyn’s latest arrest, that he saw her anymore. And it was true that he volunteered to do most of the work, partly because he felt so guilty about letting their friendship lapse, even though she was the one who was supposed to be improving her character through labor.

“Maybe I could—” he began, but Wendlyn cut him off with a sudden, intent look at the tree line beyond the lumber yard.

“Did you hear that?” She rose up on her toes, leaning toward the forest like a hound casting for scent.

Eleukas mopped his brow, pushing sweat-soaked black curls aside. He hadn’t heard anything over the thunk and thud of splitting wood, but her half-elven ears had always been better than his.

“No,” he started to say, cautiously, when a scream split the sap-scented air.

It was a howl of raw rage, and although Eleukas couldn’t have said whether it was made by person or beast, he knew it was a battle cry.

“Come on.” Wendlyn was already running toward the trees. “Bring your axe.”

Eleukas didn’t waste any more time with questions. Otari was a close-knit town, where you helped your neighbors if they needed it, and the forest could be dangerous. Kobolds, wild animals, worse. There were even rumors of saboteurs targeting the log flume that was Otari’s economic lifeblood, and though Eleukas didn’t like to credit such tales, that cry had come from the direction of the flume.

Gripping the sweaty hatchet, he ran after her.

Branches whipped Eleukas’s face and undergrowth snarled at his feet as he charged through the wood, trying to keep Wendlyn in view. The half-elf darted through the trees as easily as a shuttle through thread, and if it hadn’t been for the bright blaze of her red ponytail waving through the greenery, he’d have lost her. Wendlyn never remembered to wait for anyone slower than she was.

Ahead, the clattering bulk of Giant’s Wheel loomed over the treetops, creaking and grinding and throwing a rhythmic rain up to the sky as it harnessed the Osprey River’s power to carry logs down to the sea. Its immense clacking rush drowned out anything as small as a human voice, but Eleukas didn’t need to listen for screams anymore. He could see the person who’d made them.

No, not person. Corpse.

Even as he crashed through the forest’s edge and heaved for breath in the clearing beyond, Eleukas registered the unnatural angle of the neck, the blood that drenched the clothes, the terrible gaping wounds in throat and torso. He’d never actually seen a person murdered before, but he knew immediately that it was too late to save this man. And he knew it would be scorched onto his memory forever: a thing he had trained for, a thing he had expected, and a thing for which he could never have been prepared.

The fight wasn’t over, even if its first victim was dead. Two patchy-furred rats, each the size of a large dog, were menacing Wendlyn with loud hisses and bared fangs. The bright afternoon sun didn’t cow them, and neither did the darting thrusts of her short sword. The rodents worked with uncanny coordination, one feinting at Wendlyn to draw her attention while the other lunged in to bite.

Eleukas had never seen Wendlyn fight before, and was surprised by how deftly she handled her blade. He’d always assumed she just carried it as an affectation, but it was clear she’d had some real training. She was holding her own against the rats. One was bleeding from its jaw, and the other bore a deep cut along its ribs, although they’d torn their share of ugly scratches across Wendlyn in return.

“I’m here!” Eleukas shouted, hoping to distract them. One of the rats turned on him, snarling. He swung at it but missed. The rat snapped at him, sharp teeth grazing the hair on his forearm. Its spittle flecked him like warm rain.

Adjusting his footing, Eleukas tried again. This time he read the animal’s momentum and chopped low in the other direction, misjudging the aim a little—the hatchet was designed for splitting firewood, and was considerably shorter and smaller than the battle axe he normally used—but catching the rat hard in the forequarters all the same.

Bones crunched, and the rat fell squealing. Yet the other one, to Eleukas’s astonishment, didn’t run. Its greasy brown fur puffed up higher, its spine arched stiffer, and its hisses grew louder. Despite the posturing, it seemed oddly reluctant to commit, hopping back and forth just out of reach instead of coming at either of them.

A second later, Eleukas realized why. It wasn’t alone. Something stirred in the underbrush, creeping toward them as the rat spat and snarled in distraction.

“You take the rodent,” Eleukas said, standing back-to-back with Wendlyn so he could focus on the new threat.

It was hard to pick out from the leaves. He glimpsed a gaunt, clawed black hand, its skin hard and glossy as polished leather, its nails curved into sharp talons. The body was a shapeless mass of damp fur or filthy rags, blending into the brush so that Eleukas couldn’t guess its size. And the face—

When he saw its face, he froze. There was no face. From the stump of its neck rose a vortex of shadow, sucking inward to an infinitude of nothing.

The emptiness at the core of that non-face dragged Eleukas’s consciousness into its chilling depths. He felt, in some place beyond rational thought, that if he let it pull him in, he would be torn apart and devoured so completely that nothing of his mind or soul or awareness could remain.

Terror closed cold around his heart. Fear swallowed every shred of reason in his mind. And then, just as Eleukas braced himself to try, somehow, to pull away from the deadly grip of the whirlpooling dark, a plume of soft black powder blew up from the depths of that devouring emptiness into his face.

Blindness seized him. He couldn’t see, couldn’t breathe. A thick warm wall choked the air away from his gasping mouth. Eleukas tried to scream, but that heavy, blanketing warmth buried the cry in his throat.

He fell, suffocating, into oblivion

About the Author

Liane Merciel is the author of the Pathfinder Tales novels Nightglass, Nightblade, and Hellknight, and a contributor to other books including Nidal: Land of Shadows, Faiths of Golarion, and the Lost Omens World Guide. She has also written for Dungeons & Dragons, Warhammer: Age of Sigmar, and Bioware’s Dragon Age franchise. She lives in Philadelphia with her husband, two dogs, and an adventure toddler who is extremely into Spider-Man.

About The Shroud of Four Silences

The Shroud of Four Silences is the first long-form Pathfinder fiction in more than 3 years. The serialized novella follows a band of fledgling adventurers as they rise from simple origins to uncover and (hopefully) stop a terrible threat to the town of Otari—the setting of the Pathfinder Beginner Box, Pathfinder Adventure: Troubles in Otari, and the Abomination Vaults Adventure Path. To receive each weekly installment of the novella, please join the paizo.com mailing list and/or ensure that you have opted in to receive emails regarding products, offers, news, and events in your account privacy settings. (We’ll send you the next chapter once a week after signing up, regardless of where we are in the series, so you can always catch up!)

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Grand Archive

3 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Pathfinder Accessories Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber
Ramanujan wrote:

I have chapters 1 through 10, and as of today, chapter 12. But unfortunately no chapter 11.

I've checked my junk and deleted folders, but haven't been able to find it.

Also, today I wasn't able to sign into the website using Safari - both on my phone and on my mac, despite numerous attempts and reseting my password. I was however able to sign in using Chrome on my mac (hence being able to post this).

Last week there was a server shortage that broke the login system. Try clearing your cookies/cache on the browsers that doesn’t work, they might still have references to old sessions from before the crash, and those are broken.


Pathfinder LO Special Edition, Maps, Pathfinder Accessories, PF Special Edition Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber; Starfinder Superscriber

It appears that to clear cookies etc. on my iPad I need to get rid of *everything* on all websites on all devices connected to iCloud, which is all my devices. I'm not going to do that. OTOH, maybe I missed something. I'll take another look probably tomorrow. In the meantime, I won't be visiting this website on my iPad.

I haven't taken a look on my phone, since I rarely visit this site on my phone, but I imagine it has similar problems to the iPad.


Just download another browser for your iPad. I use both chrome and safari


Ramanujan wrote:

I have chapters 1 through 10, and as of today, chapter 12. But unfortunately no chapter 11.

...

My offer to send missing chapters to others still stands, just send me a PM with your email and the number of the chapter you don't have.


2 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber; Pathfinder Starfinder Adventure Path, Starfinder Roleplaying Game, Starfinder Society Subscriber

Just finisheded chapter 10 and I want to say I am really enjoying the story. I hope there are other Tales to come.


1 person marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder LO Special Edition, Maps, Pathfinder Accessories, PF Special Edition Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber; Starfinder Superscriber
AnimatedPaper wrote:
Just download another browser for your iPad. I use both chrome and safari

No.


1 person marked this as a favorite.
Ed Reppert wrote:
AnimatedPaper wrote:
Just download another browser for your iPad. I use both chrome and safari
No.

I just got it to work on my iPhone by going to Settings > Safari > Advanced > Website Data > Search for Paizo, and delete the Paizo.com data.


Franz Lunzer wrote:
Ramanujan wrote:

I have chapters 1 through 10, and as of today, chapter 12. But unfortunately no chapter 11.

...

My offer to send missing chapters to others still stands, just send me a PM with your email and the number of the chapter you don't have.

Thank you - sending a PM now!

Contributor

11 people marked this as a favorite.

Now that this is almost totally done (one chapter to go!), I wanted to drop by and say that I'm really honored and flattered that Paizo asked me to write this project, and I'm also really happy that people liked the story. I'm sorry that the implementation was a little bumpy, but I am incredibly grateful that people were willing to stick with it and jump some extra hurdles just for the sake of reading another chapter. That is quite a compliment. Thanks, you guys. :)

This was a new experience for me, writing-wise, because we did it like an old-fashioned newspaper serial: new installments went live even before I'd finished writing the entire story. I'd send in a few chapters at a time, they'd get edited and queued up, and some of them would start going out to readers even before the rest of the novella was finished. This, uh, creates a certain non-negotiable deadline pressure and also means you're locked into whatever you've already put out there (no more revisions once a thing gets published!), so that was fun. (At this point, I can honestly say that. Ten years ago, "fun" would have been a euphemism for "completely absolutely sleep-destroyingly terrifying.")

Anyway it was a good time and I did, genuinely, have a lot of fun writing it, and I am so glad to hear that people have enjoyed reading it as well. Again, thanks: it means a lot, especially when I know you had to endure a few extra hassles that could easily lead people to go "AND IT WAS SO NOT WORTH IT."

Finally I want to thank Ron Lundeen for doing such awesome work with the statted accompaniments to the story. That is a great idea -- I had no idea the Paizo team was going to do it, and I didn't think to write the story with those concepts in mind at all -- and he's done a killer job with it. It is really cool to see that stuff made concrete and game-playable, and pretty impressive to see how many great ideas he's spun off from each chapter.

So, again, thanks to everyone. It has been a lot of fun. :)

Dark Archive

Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber

Read up to chapter 12, waiting on my seat excitedly to see final chapter :3

Grand Lodge

CorvusMask wrote:
Read up to chapter 12, waiting on my seat excitedly to see final chapter :3

Same here. I definitely appreciated the daily emails to help us "catch up" with the latest chapter! All in all, I enjoyed the weekly updates (it helped me enjoy Fridays a bit more) and appreciate all of the Otari-based resources for us to use. I certainly hope fiction like this continues!


Pathfinder LO Special Edition, Maps, Pathfinder Accessories, PF Special Edition Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber; Starfinder Superscriber

So far, I've read chapter one. Trying to be patient but I keep remembering what the vulture said.


Is chapter 12 the conclusion, or will there be one more?

Silver Crusade

1 person marked this as a favorite.

Yay, Liane! It’s so wonderful to read your writing again ^w^


3 people marked this as a favorite.
Franz Lunzer wrote:
My offer to send missing chapters to others still stands, just send me a PM with your email and the number of the chapter you don't have.
Ramanujan wrote:
Thank you - sending a PM now!

No Problem.

It seems Chapter 11 was not showing up for some people.
I received it with the wrong subject-text "... - Chapter 1".

Maybe if your email-app or programm sorts it by subject and not by date, it might seem like it's missing, but really isn't.

--------------------------

Liane Merciel wrote:

Now that this is almost totally done (one chapter to go!), ...

So, again, thanks to everyone. It has been a lot of fun. :)

Thank YOU! It's been a blast, and to know it's ending soon is saddening.

I hope to read more Pathfinder fiction from you and other authors in the future.

Grand Archive

2 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Pathfinder Accessories Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber
Liane Merciel wrote:

Now that this is almost totally done (one chapter to go!), I wanted to drop by and say that I'm really honored and flattered that Paizo asked me to write this project, and I'm also really happy that people liked the story. I'm sorry that the implementation was a little bumpy, but I am incredibly grateful that people were willing to stick with it and jump some extra hurdles just for the sake of reading another chapter. That is quite a compliment. Thanks, you guys. :)

This was a new experience for me, writing-wise, because we did it like an old-fashioned newspaper serial: new installments went live even before I'd finished writing the entire story. I'd send in a few chapters at a time, they'd get edited and queued up, and some of them would start going out to readers even before the rest of the novella was finished. This, uh, creates a certain non-negotiable deadline pressure and also means you're locked into whatever you've already put out there (no more revisions once a thing gets published!), so that was fun. (At this point, I can honestly say that. Ten years ago, "fun" would have been a euphemism for "completely absolutely sleep-destroyingly terrifying.")

Anyway it was a good time and I did, genuinely, have a lot of fun writing it, and I am so glad to hear that people have enjoyed reading it as well. Again, thanks: it means a lot, especially when I know you had to endure a few extra hassles that could easily lead people to go "AND IT WAS SO NOT WORTH IT."

Finally I want to thank Ron Lundeen for doing such awesome work with the statted accompaniments to the story. That is a great idea -- I had no idea the Paizo team was going to do it, and I didn't think to write the story with those concepts in mind at all -- and he's done a killer job with it. It is really cool to see that stuff made concrete and game-playable, and pretty impressive to see how many great ideas he's spun off from each chapter.

So, again, thanks to everyone. It has been a lot of fun. :)

Having studied Literature in college, and reading about many old authors publishing their famous novels like that, in newspapers and other magazines... It was a blast to have the chance to experience this same kind of "weekly" trepidation as readers from that time. Very interesting experience. And I love that it was the same on your side!

And yes, that particular story was awesome. I'm GMing a game for some friends, started with the Beginner Box, then followed it with Troubles in Otari.

Four Shroud Spoiler:
One of the players is a kobold, so I incorporated this in his backstory, he fled just before the events preceding that story, and he wants to try to go back to his tribe to help them... I'm planning to make the players arrives just after the heroes in Four Shroud ran away from the cavern! And help the kobolds in the aftermath.

Marketing & Media Manager

1 person marked this as a favorite.

Update: We are still working on fixing the email subscription bug. I will post when it it is corrected.


2 people marked this as a favorite.

And Chapter 13 is here to conclude The Shroud of Four Silences.

I hope we get something similar as soon again.

Dark Archive

Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber

Nice ending :3 Mostly sweet than bitter, but with small regret for one of characters and nice open question of "what if that had happened" :D


1 person marked this as a favorite.

This is a wonderful story. Not was. Is, and always shall be.


I haven't received the final chapter. Been waiting all day.


Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber; Pathfinder Starfinder Adventure Path, Starfinder Roleplaying Game, Starfinder Society Subscriber
wrmusall wrote:
I haven't received the final chapter. Been waiting all day.

Same


Pathfinder Battles Case Subscriber; Pathfinder Maps, Pathfinder Accessories Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber; Starfinder Charter Superscriber

I signed up for this a couple weeks ago and then received Chapter 3. Then yesterday I received Chapter 7. And those are the only 2 chapters I've received. Will the system eventually send them all to me?

Grand Archive

Pathfinder Pathfinder Accessories Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber
CorvusMask wrote:
Nice ending :3 Mostly sweet than bitter, but with small regret for one of characters and nice open question of "what if that had happened" :D

I get the feeling one character would think it was quite bitter in fact. At least, a couple of seconds after the end.

Aaaaah! I want more stories with those!
It was too short! :O


ugggg. still waiting on the conclusion. nothing.


wrmusall wrote:
ugggg. still waiting on the conclusion. nothing.

The next chapter is sent out on Thursdays. I don't expect mine until then.


I STILL have not received Chapter 13. Was it released?


wrmusall wrote:
I STILL have not received Chapter 13. Was it released?

Mine was in my mailbox this afternoon.

Grand Archive

1 person marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Pathfinder Accessories Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber

I received mine last week at the time of release.


Pathfinder Lost Omens, Rulebook Subscriber

I've not received anything either this week :/


What do I need to do the get the final chapter? Is there a better place to post than this thread?


If you are just missing chapter 13, send me a PM with your email-adress.


Franz Lunzer wrote:
If you are just missing chapter 13, send me a PM with your email-adress.

Direct messaging is not enabled on your profile. Perhaps you have opted out?

Liberty's Edge

wrmusall wrote:
Franz Lunzer wrote:
If you are just missing chapter 13, send me a PM with your email-adress.
Direct messaging is not enabled on your profile. Perhaps you have opted out?

Strange. I can see the Send a PM button when I check their profile and it opens the PM text box just fine.


I received PM's just fine until Jan 28th and I'm sure I did not change any settings.

Edit: did you opt out of private messages?


No, I haven't. When I look at your profile, I don't see the Private Message or the Add Friend button.


I don't see those buttons on your profile, too.
I do see them on the Raven Black's profile, and a lot of others.


Franz Lunzer wrote:

I don't see those buttons on your profile, too.

I do see them on the Raven Black's profile, and a lot of others.

I'll double check. Perhaps I'm missing something. Thanks.


wrmusall wrote:
Franz Lunzer wrote:

I don't see those buttons on your profile, too.

I do see them on the Raven Black's profile, and a lot of others.
I'll double check. Perhaps I'm missing something. Thanks.

It should be fixed now.


4 people marked this as a favorite.

Whatever bugged the mail system seems to be fixed now.
I subscribed when this blog entry came out and a few days ago I got emailed the first chapter and today the second one. XD

As they say: Good marketing emails with story episodes come to those who wait.


I have also unexpectedly (but welcomly) gotten the first 2 sendings from Goblins in my mailbox.


Pathfinder LO Special Edition, Maps, Pathfinder Accessories, PF Special Edition Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber; Starfinder Superscriber

So did I. :-)


Just got chapter 3 and I hope they keep coming. Great story.

Grand Lodge

I somehow missed a number of emails so now I have to wait for whatever compilation Paizo offers. Its a little disappointing the complete text wasn't ready to drop as a product when all the serials finished.


So far up to 5 chapters, and eagerly awaiting more.


Now up to 11 chapters! Although the message containing chapter 11 is labeled as chapter 1 (but once you open the message, the actual title is correct).

Marketing & Media Manager

1 person marked this as a favorite.

Indeed, the bug is largely corrected. Still looking into it.


Awesome love Pathfinder Tales, especially in audio form!


Aaron Shanks wrote:
Indeed, the bug is largely corrected. Still looking into it.

Is there anything we have to do after the bug is corrected or will be get the missing chapters automatically?

I'm still missing 8 and anything after 10.


Got the full baker's dozen! Now looking forward to seeing this party in action some more . . . .

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