From the notes of
Alric Brethencourt of Veluna
Godsday turning
Waterday, 19th day of the Readying, inside the ruined moathouse east
of Hommlet
Our last night in
this evil place. All the preparations have been met; all that remains is one
more night. The source of corruption that permeates this place remains unknown,
but it will have to wait. Our charges, the Ross brothers, cannot hope to live
another day without proper medical aid, and our company too is tired and in
need of rest in safe and hospitable surroundings. We made one last round, down
in the cellars of the moathouse, as we feared the evil influence might awaken
the dead from their eternal slumber. My companions deemed it prudent to
decapitate the ogre Lubash, and Weebrian suggested the idea of impaling the
head on a spike and displaying it as a warning sign in the courtyard. Let us
hope it will be to some avail. We investigated the cells but found them
strangely clean and empty, and no sign was found of a hidden passageway which
could explain the secretive perambulations of the Blackhand leader Hal.
We took turns keeping
the last watch. Not long after midnight strange cries were
heard coming from down below, confirming that our enemies still dwelled there
unmolested. One more night, and we can depart.
Dawn came, and with
it two familiar faces. The elf woman Ellaria returned from Hommlet, accompanied
by none other than the ranger Elmo. Ellaria had relayed our findings to lord
Burne and sir Rufus during a town meeting, and had hastened back afterwards.
Elmo was his usual thick self, but made himself useful by taking the fate of
the Ross brothers out of our hands. I fear for their safety in the hands of
that oaf, but they need to be returned to Hommlet forthwith, and my companions
have made it clear that they wish to investigate the source of the sounds in
the cellar, before we set off. With a heavy heart and a sense of foreboding I
put on my armor, and make ready to descend one final time.
We found the cellar
devoid of bodies. The mystery of their disappearance was soon solved, however.
Our intrepid companion Chryseis led us back to the ogre’s room, where she
discovered, in the nick of time, a tripwire in the doorway, leading to the
larder. The halfling rascal Basil immediately set to work in neutralizing the
trap, but the chosen method of doing so - namely pulling the wire - proved more
hazardous than at first surmised. The sound of shattering glass could be heard,
and a billowing cloud of gas started filling the room. Most of us withdrew at
once, but Chryseis and Kazireh succumbed to the expanding cloud. Bravely - and
foolishly - Madrak charged in to haul them out, but his attempt proved no more
successful. Once we had reached a safe distance, we heard a scraping sound
coming from the ogre’s chamber, and I suspected our companions were in peril. I
charged in and withstood the ill effects of the gas long enough to discover the
source of it in the larder, attempted to douse the flame and look for my
companions. Only discovered two of them, before the gas became too overpowering
and all I could do was to leave the room before I too collapsed.
Awoke later in the
courtyard. Philius Tilm had apparently managed to drag out Kazireh and Madrak
on his own - quite the feat for one of such a diminutive stature - but Chryseis
had vanished without a trace. Without wasting more time we returned below once
again to find our missing comrade. By now the smoke had all but dissipated, and
thanks to the keen eye of Ellaria we soon found a secret passageway leading
from the ogre’s room. It proved to be the very same passage Hal had used to
escape the strong room above, but it also led even further down through yet
another secret door. We descended a flight of stairs, evading an obvious trap,
as Kazireh followed a trail of yellowish gas residue, to find ourselves in a
set of narrow tunnels leading off in two separate directions. It was not long
before we were beset from either side by a band of bugbears, but they proved no
match for our prowess and the keen edge of the song spear. Soon after we heard the
sound of approaching dogmen; they too will fall before us.
[Here the notes end abruptly; in a different handwriting the
following is scrawled in the margins of the page]
[In a third handwriting, slightly different from the first, the notes continue]