Age of Wonders, Issue 6b: The Offering [with game notes]

art by Roland Brown (drawhaus.com)

In the precious few moments of respite they experienced after she and Maly had killed the last of the monstrosities in Sami Suttar’s basement, a truth had wormed its way into Emah’s mind:

She had, without a doubt, been poisoned.

Her mouth was dry as a bone. Emah felt hot everywhere and couldn’t seem to stop sweating. Her hands trembled slightly, the same tremble that threatened her legs and back. For a moment, her vision blurred, as if she’d spent the night carousing in a local tavern.

She assumed it had been that creature’s quill, the one it had launched at them like crossbow bolts. The place on her shoulder where it had embedded was an angry red sore, and searingly painful to the touch. The ratfolk priest had two of the things protruding from its body, and Emah guessed that it wasn’t the impact of the quills that had killed it, but the toxin.

Unfortunately, she couldn’t dwell on it now. No sooner had she taken stock of her symptoms than Maly gasped and pointed with one dagger. The shambling, rotting, scaled creature with the fish head was stirring despite its many grievous wounds. Worse: Emah noticed the bones of the child-sized skeleton and the maggoty pulp of the quill-thrower also quivering, like ripples in a pond of something lurking beneath.

“Damn it all to the Nine Hells,” she swore, and planted her feet. “What are these things?”

“Demons, Destiny says,” Maly whispered, wide-eyed and frozen at the creatures’ movements.

“Okay,” Emah exhaled, then swayed on her feet. She shook her head to clear it. “So how do we kill them for good?”

“He… hasn’t answered me,” Maly scowled. “He’s been silent. I don’t know.”

Abruptly, Kami stepped forward and hammered a fist onto the rising demon. It went down in a heap, unmoving. They were all silent, Emah holding her breath. One heartbeat. Two. Three. And then the rotting, scaled demon began to stir.

Maly whimpered in frustration and kicked the scattered bones further apart. The other two demons felt a long way from reemerging as threats, but the fish-headed monstrosity was unrelenting.

Emah cast her blurred gaze around the room, mind working slowly. Sweat fell into her eyes and off her chin. She released one hand on her sword to wipe her face with the back of a glove. That done, a thought struck her.

“The box!”

Kami stared at her in the dim basement light. “What of it?”

“I don’t know,” Emah gritted her teeth. “The priest did something to summon them from the box, right? So can we put them back?”

Kami hammered another fist down upon the rising demon. It stilled momentarily.

“But how?” Maly asked, her voice higher in pitch and closer to hysteria than Emah had ever heard it. “What, we just put the hand back in the box and shut it?”

“I don’t know!” Emah barked, then swayed. She wiped her face again. How had it already gotten coated in sweat? “Do you have a better idea?”

I am again finding myself somewhat stuck plot-wise, so let’s go back to the handy Mythic GM Emulator and its Oracle tables. I’ll focus on the Action tables and roll twice, hoping that the words there conjure some sort of solution to the PC’s predicament. I get Succeed & Extravagance. Okay, let me contemplate the mysterious oracular words and see if inspiration strikes.

I’ve said all along that the box is bejeweled and gilded in gold, so whoever first created it clearly valued extravagance and success. It has a mummified hand in it… maybe it belonged to a ruler of some kind—ooo, or a skilled and wealthy artisan who works with his hands!—who severed his own hand to place in the box as an offering to an otherworldly entity? I like that, but then how did Tatter “activate” the box to summon these demons? Maybe she didn’t know the trick to appeasing the thing, and releasing these demons is the punishment for not providing an offering, or maybe she was stuck in the basement and didn’t have anything significant to offer. It doesn’t really matter which. The important point is that the box is a two-way sword – provide an appropriate offering, and you gain power. Fail to do so, however, and the demons come for you.

Now the question is: How do the PCs find out this information? I let Destiny provide the names of the demons, which felt a little cheesy, but I liked that solution better than them speaking their own names (I didn’t want them able to speak Oakton’s common language). I’d rather avoid that same fallback here. Oh! I’ve got it…

She felt herself rapidly succumbing to poison, so a lengthy debate was out of the question. Instead, while Kami stood over the fish-headed demon and Maly sputtered in surprise, Emah stepped forward, sheathed her blade, and scooped the mummified hand from the dirt floor of the basement. She intended to, with her next step, grab the bejeweled box and shove the macabre trophy inside.

Emah never got the chance.

The world around her blurred and, quite suddenly, she no longer felt on the verge of collapse. The trembling of her limbs and feverish burn within her abruptly vanished. Even the dull ache of her ribs was gone. Emah closed her eyes, straightened, and exhaled a long and even breath. She felt herself again, better than she had in weeks.

“Ah, another one, and so soon,” a pleased, male voice said.

Emah snapped open her eyes. The low-ceilinged basement had been replaced by what she somehow knew was a vast underground chamber even though its perimeter disappeared into darkness beyond her perception in all directions. The air was cool and wet. In front of her, perhaps ten strides away, was an ornate throne of gold, encrusted with jewels. The seat itself emanated light in a broad halo around it. Emah thought that it all reminded her of something, the throne and light, but she couldn’t place it, so distracted was she by the dizzying change of scenery and her newly revitalized health.

Upon the throne sat a man.

He was entirely ordinary, old enough to be a young grandfather, with an average build and pleasant face. His short, dark hair started high on his forehead and grayed at the temples, becoming completely white across his jaw in a close-cropped beard. Emah had trouble immediately placing his family origin, though he was probably Mescan by his olive coloring, full lips, and dark eyes. He wore a flowing, colorful shirt and well-made, stitched pants. Emah didn’t see any weapons on the man, and his posture showed interest rather than threat.

Still, she drew her mother’s sword. “Who are you? Where am I?” she demanded.

“I assure you,” the man chuckled, finding her display somehow charming. “That won’t be necessary. There is no fighting here, only negotiating. So,” he raised his full eyebrows. “What are you offering?”

Emah faltered, confused. “What am I… what?”

“Oh!” the man sat back, surprised. “You’re here by mistake! I see! Oh! Please, please: Spare no details. Where were you when you opened the box and touched my hand?”

Emah kept her sword in one fist and took a cautious step backwards. “Your hand?” she narrowed her eyes.

He followed her gaze and looked down. Confusion creased his brow for a heartbeat and then he barked out a full-throated laugh. He clapped his two hands together and rocked in his seat with glee. “Oh! My, my! You truly are here by chance! How wonderful!”

Emah had had quite enough of this madman, she realized. While he tittered, she edged further back, away from the glow of the throne and into the graying gloom of the cavern.

The man suddenly sat up straight and barked a sharp warning. “Ah! Go no further, my lady. Come back to the light, now,” He licked his lips, genuine concern on his face. “You won’t like what lurks in the darkness.”

As if in response to his words, something brushed her back. She spun, blade up defensively. Emah squinted and peered, but she could only make out the faintest of details. What she glimpsed, though, terrified her: A squirming, writhing mass of what looked like bloated tentacles, moving in a living wall just beyond the light. It was either one massive creature or an enormous pile of smaller ones, shifting and overlapping to make her mind reel. As far she could see, the darkness was filled with undulating tentacles.

She yelped in surprise and horror, stepping back towards the throne.

“There’s nothing but pain beyond the light,” the man said gravely, all humor gone from his voice. “Come closer, please. The only way out of this place is negotiation, and we can’t negotiate until you understand the terms. Come, come.”

Emah frowned. Once she had taken several steps away from the darkness, she could sense nothing but the two of them. Everything beyond the light was simply still, silent shadow.

“Please,” the man repeated. “This must all be overwhelming for you. Come closer and speak with me and all will be made clear.”

Sword gripped tightly, she moved within several strides of the man. Close enough, she reasoned, to impale him if needed but far enough away to not appear able to do so.

“Good,” he smiled, exhaling with relief. “Now, let’s start over, shall we? I am Salo Jaena. What is your name and from where do you hail, my dear?”

She frowned. “Emah. I’m from Oakton, within the Kalee Empire. Where am I now?”

“Oakton,” Salo mused. He smiled with white, straight teeth. “You know, I’ve met one other man from there! Two visitors before you, in fact.”

“Was his name Sami Suttar?” Emah asked.

“It was!” the man clapped his hands in surprised glee. “Do you know him?”

“I do not,” Emah said cautiously, her mind still stumbling frantically over this impossible situation, trying to fit the pieces together into something that made sense. But Emah Elmhill was first and foremost a scholar, not a warrior. Despite herself, she was intrigued. “We—my companions and I—found the box with your…” she cleared her throat. “Hand in it within the abandoned Suttar home.”

“Ah, I see. Yes. Poor Sami was unwilling to make a deal, I’m afraid. I thought sure it would work with him, but he was more of a collector than a giver. Shockingly stubborn, that man.” He must have seen Emah’s face scrunch in confusion, because he quickly added. “But enough of that. It’s not important. So, what then? You found the box, opened it, saw the hand, and… picked it up?”

“What? No!” Emah shook her head. “The box had been spilled open, the hand lying next to it and the body of a ratfolk priest–”

“Ratfolk?” Salo raised an eyebrow. “Ah, my last visitor, yes. They don’t call themselves that, of course, but it’s an apt description from one’s point of view.” He smiled encouragingly. “But I interrupted you, please. What next?”

She licked her lips. “There were… demons there. In the basement and standing over the box and body.”

“The First Three, yes.” The way the man said the words, it was a title rather than simple description. “Xapha, Kavac, and Vakal, if I’m not mistaken. Interesting that you identify them—quite correctly, I might add!—as demons. You must have had a force of warriors like yourself to still be alive. Ah, and I’m seeing it now!” He looked up and made a grand gesture with his hands. “The demons defeated, you stooped to retrieve the mysterious hand and box! A blink later, and here you are, Emah. What an unfortunate turn of events for you! Most who seek the box do so deliberately. Yet here you are with a monumental choice you never intended to make. Such tragedy! The stuff of poems and theater, truly.”

“I’m afraid you’ve lost me again, sir,” Emah scowled. In the brief pause that followed, her ears strained. Nothing but silence, except their echoing voices.

“Yes, yes of course. So now we reach the agonizing decision you must make. The box is called the Raft of the Nine Gates, and it is ancient. No one I’ve spoken to knows its true origin. Yet, when opened, it demands an offering.” He opened one hand, palm facing her. “Provide something of true sacrifice, that is most dear to you, and you gain power.” He opened his other hand with the same gesture. “Fail to do so, and, well…” Salo shook his head, his face mock sorrow.

“And it releases demons,” she finished the thought.

“Oh, it’s much worse than that, I’m afraid. The supplicant dies, of course, but the demons look to ruin the entire community as well, wiping it from existence. Whole cities have fallen to the Raft’s vengeance.”

“But,” Emah said doubtfully, interested in the fable despite herself. “My companions and I defeated these demons. Yes, they seemed to wish to rise, but we could… we could cut them to pieces… scatter those pieces… keep them from reforming. How could they destroy Oakton?”

“Those were merely The First Three, Emah,” he said with a tone of gentle admonishment. “Then will come nine. Then twenty-seven. Each wave will be three times as large as the next, and each demon stronger by three than the ones before. So it will go until everything the supplicant holds dear is gone. And there the Raft will sit, waiting for another to come along to offer a bargain.”

Emah’s mouth went dry, but not from poison. If what Salo Jaena said was even remotely correct, they would all die. The army of monstrosities would carve into the ratfolk warrens and Oakton alike. Maly and Kami would be gone. Her father. Her mentor. Would anyone survive? She closed her eyes and sighed.

“Ah, I see you working it out,” he said sadly. “Truly, you stand between the death of everything you know and power. There is no middle ground with the Raft.”

“I’m not here for power,” Emah said, frowning.

“I see that. And yet, it is that or endless horror for you and all you know,” Sado’s voice sighed.

Perhaps she was not a scholar, first and foremost, Emah thought. In the same moment, she opened her eyes and thrust her sword forward, into the chest of the man.

It was a well-timed attack and her aim was true. The tip of the blade pierced his breast, exactly through the heart.

Except that the sword passed through Salo Jaena as if he were a ghost. She stumbled with the lack of resistance. He merely chuckled.

“It was worth a try,” he said, smiling wistfully. “I don’t begrudge you the attempt, truly. But I’m afraid there is no avoiding the choice, and there is no killing me. I’ve already said that there is no fighting in this place, only negotiating.”

Emah regained her balance and shouted at the man. “And who are you then? Are you also a demon?!”

He blinked, surprised. “Me? No, no, no. I was a painter!” he said with a wide smile. “Merely an overlooked, poor painter who wished for his work to be recognized. I wanted fame, Emah, which is why I sought out the Raft. Unlike you, I knew exactly what I was doing when I opened the box and spoke with the person in this throne.”

Emah scowled. “You… offered your hand. Your artist’s hand. For power,” she said slowly while he nodded encouragingly. Her cheeks burned with the embarrassment of her failed attack, and for the growing fear at the situation Salo was describing. She still refused to sheath her sword, though. There may yet be a way to fight her way free, she thought, though not with much conviction.

“I did, I did. My most precious possession, and the Raft delivered. I had great fame and wealth until my death, despite my missing hand. And I hid the box so no one else could find it. You see, I worried that if someone else made the bargain while I lived, that the gains it gave me would disappear. Instead,” he shook his head ruefully. “I trapped myself here for hundreds of years, waiting for someone to find my clever hiding place. Truth be told, I’m grateful that the Raft is being passed around now, in this Oakton of yours. Whether it’s you or someone else, I suppose my time on this chair is finally nearing its end.”

“You’re saying that if I make a successful offering… I take your place there?” Emah realized now that the throne looked like the Raft itself, reconfigured into a seat instead of a box. The jewels and gold were the same, however. It’s what she had recognized upon first seeing the throne.

The painter Salo smiled a pleasant, unassuming smile. “Not right away. Only upon your death would you take my place, and then… yes, you would sit here, having this same conversation with anyone else who opened the Raft and touched whatever you’d offered to it. You would provide them the same bargain: Death for them and all they hold dear, or the power to change their life.”

They were silent for a long while then. Salo was a patient audience, studying her face and grinning warmly. Emah glanced at him every now and then, yet she mostly fixed her eyes on the throne. Thoughts crowded and careened off one another, working over what she’d heard.

“And once you’re free?” Emah finally growled. “What then? You’re off to the Nine Hells?”

“Well,” he cleared his throat, gesturing wide. “That’s the unknowable question, isn’t it? If you know what happens to this shade of me, I would truly love to hear it. But alas, I suppose that neither of us are priests, Emah. I’ll find out when it happens.” Salo sighed, shook his head, and then sat straighter. “So! Enough of me. You’ve heard the terms. What do you offer, and what do you seek?”  

For a moment, she wondered what was happening within the basement while this conversation occurred. Was she standing transfixed, with Maly and Kami attempting to shake her out of it? Had she disappeared from the room? Or was all of this happening in the instant she touched Salo Jaina’s hand? Truly, in the last several days she had witnessed so many things she would have deemed impossible. An age of wonders had swept into Oakton.

“Emah?” he asked.

“I have a few more questions,” she said numbly, looking down at her mother’s sword, held firmly in one calloused hand.

In her heart, however, she already knew her offer.

Next: Emah’s choice

Age of Wonders, Issue 6a: Filth Demons

art by Roland Brown (drawhaus.com)

For several heartbeats, Maly stood stunned upon the stairs, unsure of what she was seeing. The only light illuminating the space was from the open door above, making everything here gray gloom. Yet the shadows did little to protect her from the horrors within the room below.

On some primitive level, she recognized that much of the basement was the same: a low-ceilinged square with unpainted stone walls, dirt floor, and a few bare wooden shelves. Pale mushrooms sprouted in one corner and, near those mushrooms where there had once been a ragged hole in one wall, there was now a section of new stones and mortar that did not match the rest.

Yet her eyes were fixed on the three figures regarding her, each an impossibility. The most human was a naked, pale figure, yet his skin was rotting and missing chunks, like a corpse that had been picked over by scavengers. Where his almost bone-white skin was intact, the light glinted off what appeared to be fish scales, which only made sense because, instead of a human head, the figure had the gaping-mouth, wide-eyed head of a large fish.

Standing at the fish-man’s hip was an intact, upright skeleton of what appeared to be a child. It turned its skull to look up at the fish-man, then back at Maly, staring at her with empty, black sockets. The dirt around the skeleton’s feet swirled and moved like mist, giving the stunted figure’s lower half an almost dream-like appearance.

Two strides away from the pair was the most disturbing of the trio. Its back half was that of an enormous worm, or perhaps—Maly realized with disgust—a maggot, undulating as it shifted its weight. The top half of the creature was that of an enormous cat, though not a great majestic animal like Destiny the panther. Instead, an emaciated body with scrawny arms and patchwork fur pulled the worm-thing forward. And the entire monstrosity, from notched alley-cat ears to maggot stump, was covered in long, thin, protruding spines.

Between the cat-maggot and skeleton lay a robed ratfolk body, which Maly recognized as the priest from the underground temple. Twin spines protruded from her chest. Maly couldn’t be sure, but she looked dead, hands curled up defensively and eyes wide. The bejeweled box, the only thing of any beauty in the basement, lay toppled on its side, lid open and mummified hand discarded upon the dirt floor.

A voice echoed in Maly’s mind. It was Destiny, but far quieter and more distant than she’d heard him before. He spoke as if doing so was a great effort. Demons… the panther hissed. Minor, but… even lesser… demons are… deadly. Beware, child.

As if on cue, the child-like figure raised its bony arms, skeletal fingers outstretched towards Maly. The dirt at its feet, which had been moving lazily, suddenly rushed out like an ocean wave. The choking cloud blasted Maly, dirt scouring her exposed skin, and she coughed and stumbled half blind down the remaining stairs.

Kavac… Destiny wheezed in her ear. Demon of dirt… and grime.

“No kidding!”Maly sputtered aloud, then reached out with her mind. Any tips for defeating these things? Or sending them back where they came from? But the panther was ominously silent. It was a terrible time to get timid, she thought. Maly did not want to be fighting demons in a basement when there was a member of the East Bay Dragons upstairs who might be the key to getting her inheritance back. Well, to be fair: She never really wanted to fight demons.

And yet, demon-fighting was upon her. Spitting sand from her mouth, Maly pulled her twin daggers from their sheaths and struck at the small skeleton. It surprised her with its dexterity, leaping up and over her blades with jaw-dropping ease.

As it landed, however, Emah was there, yelling and slashing down with her sword. There was a crunch of bone. The skeleton cried out, shrill and terrifying, for its voice was also that of a young child.

The rotting hulk stood over Emah, raising its arms overhead and looking to smash fists down upon her friend. Before Maly could shout a warning, however, twin fists the size of dinner plates bashed into the fish-headed thing. It flew sideways into a stone wall with a crunching impact.

The third creature yowled like a drowning cat as it launched spines from its body. Kami’s misshapen torso flowed like a ribbon, avoiding the arrow-like quills. But one thunked into Emah’s shoulder, which she acknowledged with a grunt.

Xapha… the panther’s voice whispered. Demon of… infected rot. Its… touch is… ruin.

“Not helpful, Destiny!” Maly shouted into the melee.

The small skeleton wailed like a distraught child and launched itself at Emah. She cursed and slashed with her ancestral sword, however, and cleaved the creature midair. A clatter of bones hit the floor, and the dirt swirling all around them abruptly ceased.

Maly didn’t relish getting close to the spiny cat-maggot that Destiny said could kill her, so instead turned her attention to the rotting fish-headed man. It was staggering to its feet after the impact, the stone cracked all around it like a spiderweb. The scaled hulk was slow, halting, and unsteady, so she was shocked when it caught her arm as she stabbed down with a dagger. It lifted her, struggling and feet kicking air, in its grip so that Maly’s face hung near its lidless fisheyes. It reeked of spoiled meat and dead fish, making her gag.

Vakal… Destiny’s voice breathed weakly. Demon… of slow… decay. Unstoppable…

Maly opened her mouth to comment on that little nugget when the thing swung her hard against the cracked wall. Her teeth clattered together, and all the air left her chest. She collapsed to the dirt floor, gasping.

Stars danced in front of her eyes, but she looked up to track her opponent’s movements. Thankfully, it had turned away from her, towards Kami, whose oversized fists pounded down again and again on the spiny maggot body of the third demon. The sounds were grotesque, like boots squelching in mud. Kami didn’t see the fish-thing lumbering towards her, and Maly had no breath to shout a warning.

Instead, Maly hurled a dagger at the thing’s back. It sunk into the demon’s rotting flesh with a satisfying thunk but didn’t slow its advance on Kami. She willed strength into her legs and worked to unsteadily regain her feet, still gasping for air.

Thankfully, Emah shouted a wordless challenge and stepped to the demon Vakal’s side. She sliced her blade horizontally across its ribs and a great slab of scaled flesh tore free, falling to the dirt with a wet slap.

Though it showed no sign that the strike had hurt it, Vakal turned ponderously to regard Emah. She raised her blade to parry but it simply backhanded her, much as the animated bronze armor had done upstairs days before. The demon was not nearly as strong as the armor, however. Rather than fly across the room, she simply staggered to one knee. Emah spit a glob of blood onto the floor and stood, fury in her eyes.

Before she could attack again, Emah winced and looked down on her shoulder. The demon Xaphal’s spine still protruded from her skin. She pulled it free and tossed it aside, regripping her sword with two hands.

Back on her feet, Maly hurled herself upon the demon’s back, stabbing again and again with her second dagger. The blade squelched into scaled, stinking meat. She couldn’t think about that, though. A panic had begun to rise within her, born out of Destiny’s silence and Emah’s wince. The panther had said that Xaphal’s touch was ruin… what did that mean for her friend? The only way to know for sure was to kill this last monstrosity and get her to a medic.

Vakal slumped forward and Maly yelped as the tip of a sword thrust from the thing’s back, near her arm. The metal was coated in a gray sludge instead of blood. As the body toppled, she kept stabbing and stabbing, riding it down to the dirt floor. Maly found herself yelling incoherently, now with both daggers back in hand. She attacked like an Oakton drummer hammering on her instrument, and continued long after the demon ceased moving. It took Emah’s sweat-slicked arms pulling her off to regain her senses.

The two women stood together, panting. Maly stank of corpse and fish and was sure she would be plagued by nightmares for the rest of her life.

“Shh, shh,” Emah said desperately. “It’s over, Maly.”

Destiny’s voice, weaker than she’d ever heard it, whispered a single word.

Unstoppable…

To her horror, the demon Vakal began to rise, even as the remains of the two other demons quivered.

Next: How do they stop it?!

Age of Wonders, Issue 6a: Filth Demons [with game notes]

art by Roland Brown (drawhaus.com)

For several heartbeats, Maly stood stunned upon the stairs, unsure of what she was seeing. The only light illuminating the space was from the open door above, making everything here gray gloom. Yet the shadows did little to protect her from the horrors within the room below.

On some primitive level, she recognized that much of the basement was the same: a low-ceilinged square with unpainted stone walls, dirt floor, and a few bare wooden shelves. Pale mushrooms sprouted in one corner and, near those mushrooms where there had once been a ragged hole in one wall, there was now a section of new stones and mortar that did not match the rest.

Yet her eyes were fixed on the three figures regarding her, each an impossibility. The most human was a naked, pale figure, yet his skin was rotting and missing chunks, like a corpse that had been picked over by scavengers. Where his almost bone-white skin was intact, the light glinted off what appeared to be fish scales, which only made sense because, instead of a human head, the figure had the gaping-mouth, wide-eyed head of a large fish.

Standing at the fish-man’s hip was an intact, upright skeleton of what appeared to be a child. It turned its skull to look up at the fish-man, then back at Maly, staring at her with empty, black sockets. The dirt around the skeleton’s feet swirled and moved like mist, giving the stunted figure’s lower half an almost dream-like appearance.

Two strides away from the pair was the most disturbing of the trio. Its back half was that of an enormous worm, or perhaps—Maly realized with disgust—a maggot, undulating as it shifted its weight. The top half of the creature was that of an enormous cat, though not a great majestic animal like Destiny the panther. Instead, an emaciated body with scrawny arms and patchwork fur pulled the worm-thing forward. And the entire monstrosity, from notched alley-cat ears to maggot stump, was covered in long, thin, protruding spines.

Between the cat-maggot and skeleton lay a robed ratfolk body, which Maly recognized as the priest from the underground temple. Twin spines protruded from her chest. Maly couldn’t be sure, but she looked dead, hands curled up defensively and eyes wide. The bejeweled box, the only thing of any beauty in the basement, lay toppled on its side, lid open and mummified hand discarded upon the dirt floor.

A voice echoed in Maly’s mind. It was Destiny, but far quieter and more distant than she’d heard him before. He spoke as if doing so was a great effort. Demons… the panther hissed. Minor, but… even lesser… demons are… deadly. Beware, child.

Here we go… it’s the protagonists versus the filth demons! First, a few notes about recovery in Crusaders. That bad news is that Destiny is out of this fight because he was put into a “critical state” (below zero Vitality) and will be hospitalized for weeks—or however long I think makes sense—according to the rules. Same goes for Kura, Kami’s brother. The good news is that “injured heroes always recover their full Vitality total between scenes, unless they are in a critical state. This does not mean that the hero’s injuries have miraculously healed or vanished, but that [s/he] has recovered from the pain and punishment, pulled [her/himself] together, and may act again at full efficiency if needed, despite [her/his] injuries.” So at least both Emah and Maly are ready.

It’s Round 1 and here will be our initiative order for the full battle:

  • Alertness 17: The child skeleton (I’ll provide names shortly in the narrative)
  • 15: Maly
  • 13: Emah and Kami
  • 10: The other two demons

The skeletal demon controls dirt and will send a wave attack up the staircase at all three PCs. The resistance to this attack is Physique, which is bad for the normal humans. I even won’t roll for Kami because she has 10 damage resistance thanks to her Elasticity and the attack does 10 damage. She’s fine. Similarly, Maly only has a Physique of 10 so the attack automatically hits and does the full 10 damage with no rolling necessary. She’s at 20 Vitality and can only withstand 2 more rounds of the sandblasting.

Emah has a Physique of 13. Against an attack value of 20, that gives her only a 15% chance to resist. But she rolls 08! Perhaps she’s further up the staircase and so is shielded from the brunt.

If the PCs stay on the stairs and try ranged attacks, they will be at a disadvantage because of the swirling dirt. So Maly moves into melee and realizes she needs to deal with this skeleton first. Unfortunately, with her 13 Prowess and the little thing’s Acrobatics, she only has a 5% chance to hit. She rolls 80.

Emah sees Maly’s futility and moves in to help. With her sword, she has a much more respectable 40% to hit and rolls 26! She does 20 damage with the sword and drops the little skeleton to 10 Vitality. Good round for Emah!

Kami sees that she won’t be able to hit the agile little thing, so instead tries punching the gross fish-headed thing. She only has a Prowess of 10, but it only has an Alertness of 10, so that’s a 50% chance of success. She rolls an impressive 01 (!) and slams the thing for 30 damage, one third of its Vitality. Even better, the thing doesn’t have Super Strength so gets knocked back into the wall and is stunned, losing its turn. It stands slowly, and, because of Regeneration, regains 10 Vitality (putting it still at a whopping 70).

That leaves only the maggot-thing, and it fires off two spines. It’s Prowess versus Alertness for (rolling randomly) Emah and Kami, which makes some sense because they were the ones effective in their attacks. With her Elasticity, that gives Kami a 90% chance to dodge and she rolls 71. Emah, meanwhile, is more vulnerable to missile attacks and only has a 30% to evade. She rolls a 57, and so takes 10 damage, putting her Vitality at 29. More importantly, next turn she will be subject to the thing’s venom, which could absolutely kill her.

All in all, I’d say that was an even first round. Two members of each group were hurt, and neither has a clear advantage from my perspective. Fingers crossed for Round 2!

As if on cue, the child-like figure raised its bony arms, skeletal fingers outstretched towards Maly. The dirt at its feet, which had been moving lazily, suddenly rushed out like an ocean wave. The choking cloud blasted Maly, dirt scouring her exposed skin, and she coughed and stumbled half blind down the remaining stairs.

Kavac… Destiny wheezed in her ear. Demon of dirt… and grime.

“No kidding!”Maly sputtered aloud, then reached out with her mind. Any tips for defeating these things? Or sending them back where they came from? But the panther was ominously silent. It was a terrible time to get timid, she thought. Maly did not want to be fighting demons in a basement when there was a member of the East Bay Dragons upstairs who might be the key to getting her inheritance back. Well, to be fair: She never really wanted to fight demons.

And yet, demon-fighting was upon her. Spitting sand from her mouth, Maly pulled her twin daggers from their sheaths and struck at the small skeleton. It surprised her with its dexterity, leaping up and over her blades with jaw-dropping ease.

As it landed, however, Emah was there, yelling and slashing down with her sword. There was a crunch of bone. The skeleton cried out, shrill and terrifying, for its voice was also that of a young child.

The rotting hulk stood over Emah, raising its arms overhead and looking to smash fists down upon her friend. Before Maly could shout a warning, however, twin fists the size of dinner plates bashed into the fish-headed thing. It flew sideways into a stone wall with a crunching impact.

The third creature yowled like a drowning cat as it launched spines from its body. Kami’s misshapen torso flowed like a ribbon, avoiding the arrow-like quills. But one thunked into Emah’s shoulder, which she acknowledged with a grunt.

Xapha… the panther’s voice whispered. Demon of… infected rot. Its… touch is… ruin.

“Not helpful, Destiny!” Maly shouted into the melee.

Round 2, and the wounded demon Kavac has limited options in these tight quarters. It can try its wave attack, making everyone—including its allies—less effective, or it can try a more direct attack. It decides for the latter and claws at Emah. With her mastery of the sword, she has an 85% chance to parry. She rolls 34 and does so easily.

Maly doesn’t want to engage the thing that Destiny just said could kill her, so she’ll attack the fish-zombie demon. She has a 65% chance to hit but rolls 100, which is a critical miss. Oh boy. I’ll say the thing catches her arm and she will be a “passive target” for the next round, meaning her Alertness will drop to 5.

Emah doesn’t see the predicament Maly is in and instead tries to finish Kavac. She still has a 40% and rolls 04! Emah’s apparently been itching for a fight. One demon down!

Seeing the threat of the spine-thrower, Kami attempts to bash it. I’ll say that on a critical miss she’ll hit one of the spines and subject herself to the toxin. She has a straight 50% to do so and rolls 25! Her Super Strength does its work, and the demon Xapha is down!

That leaves Mr. Fishhead, who will attempt to bash Maly into the wall. She is a passive target, so has no chance to avoid the damage. The demon does 18 damage, dropping her to 2 Vitality. Unfortunately, it’s also back up to 80 Vitality itself thanks to Regeneration.

This is going much better for the PCs than I expected! It turns out that if Kami can actually hit, she can do a ton of damage.

The small skeleton wailed like a distraught child and launched itself at Emah. She cursed and slashed with her ancestral sword, however, and cleaved the creature midair. A clatter of bones hit the floor, and the dirt swirling all around them abruptly ceased.

Maly didn’t relish getting close to the spiny cat-maggot that Destiny said could kill her, so instead turned her attention to the rotting fish-headed man. It was staggering to its feet after the impact, the stone cracked all around it like a spiderweb. The scaled hulk was slow, halting, and unsteady, so she was shocked when it caught her arm as she stabbed down with a dagger. It lifted her, struggling and feet kicking air, in its grip so that Maly’s face hung near its lidless fisheyes. It reeked of spoiled meat and dead fish, making her gag.

Vakal… Destiny’s voice breathed weakly. Demon… of slow… decay. Unstoppable…

Maly opened her mouth to comment on that little nugget when the thing swung her hard against the cracked wall. Her teeth clattered together, and all the air left her chest. She collapsed to the dirt floor, gasping.

Stars danced in front of her eyes, but she looked up to track her opponent’s movements. Thankfully, it had turned away from her, towards Kami, whose oversized fists pounded down again and again on the spiny maggot body of the third demon. The sounds were grotesque, like boots squelching in mud. Kami didn’t see the fish-thing lumbering towards her, and Maly had no breath to shout a warning.

Round 3! Maly will hurl a dagger at the back of Vakal. She has a 65% chance of success and rolls 27, doing 15 damage. Emah, meanwhile, will easily slash out with her sword, automatically hitting and doing another 20 damage and bringing its Vitality to 45. Can Kami’s fist make it a trifecta? She rolls 93 and cannot.

Now it’s Vakal’s turn and will strike at Emah since she engaged it so closely. She has a 75% chance to parry the blow and rolls 81! Ouch. 18 more damage and she’s down to 11 Vitality. Meanwhile, Vakal regenerates back up to 55.

Even though the demon Xaphal is gone (banished back to whence it came), let’s see how Emah does against its toxic quill. She has a 20% of resisting its effects and rolls 84. That’s very bad. I’ll tick off 10 damage now, bringing her to a single point of Vitality. In an hour of game time, she will be in a critical state and dying.

Instead, Maly hurled a dagger at the thing’s back. It sunk into the demon’s rotting flesh with a satisfying thunk but didn’t slow its advance on Kami. She willed strength into her legs and worked to unsteadily regain her feet, still gasping for air.

Thankfully, Emah shouted a wordless challenge and stepped to the demon Vakal’s side. She sliced her blade horizontally across its ribs and a great slab of scaled flesh tore free, falling to the dirt with a wet slap.

Though it showed no sign that the strike had hurt it, Vakal turned ponderously to regard Emah. She raised her blade to parry but it simply backhanded her, much as the animated bronze armor had done upstairs days before. The demon was not nearly as strong as the armor, however. Rather than fly across the room, she simply staggered to one knee. Emah spit a glob of blood onto the floor and stood, fury in her eyes.

Before she could attack again, Emah winced and looked down on her shoulder. The demon Xaphal’s spine still protruded from her skin. She pulled it free and tossed it aside, regripping her sword with two hands.

It’s Round 4, and the only way the PCs are going to take down this regenerating hulk is to keep bashing on it and not let up. Maly once again has a 65% chance to hit and rolls 51. That’s 15 damage.

Emah thrusts with her sword, automatically hitting. That’s another 20 damage. Vakal is at 20 Vitality.

It’s all up to Kami. Can her 50% chance save the day? She rolls 81 for the second round in a row and misses.

Vakal still sees Emah as the primary threat. It tries to finish her off and Emah rolls 42, parrying the blow. Its Vitality climbs to 30.

Let’s do Round 5, which should finish it off. Maly rolls 33… critical hit! I’ll double her damage and that’s it.

…or is it?

Back on her feet, Maly hurled herself upon the demon’s back, stabbing again and again with her second dagger. The blade squelched into scaled, stinking meat. She couldn’t think about that, though. A panic had begun to rise within her, born out of Destiny’s silence and Emah’s wince. The panther had said that Xaphal’s touch was ruin… what did that mean for her friend? The only way to know for sure was to kill this last monstrosity and get her to a medic.

Vakal slumped forward and Maly yelped as the tip of a sword thrust from the thing’s back, near her arm. The metal was coated in a gray sludge instead of blood. As the body toppled, she kept stabbing and stabbing, riding it down to the dirt floor. Maly found herself yelling incoherently, now with both daggers back in hand. She attacked like an Oakton drummer hammering on her instrument, and continued long after the demon ceased moving. It took Emah’s sweat-slicked arms pulling her off to regain her senses.

The two women stood together, panting. Maly stank of corpse and fish and was sure she would be plagued by nightmares for the rest of her life.

“Shh, shh,” Emah said desperately. “It’s over, Maly.”

Destiny’s voice, weaker than she’d ever heard it, whispered a single word.

Unstoppable…

To her horror, the demon Vakal began to rise, even as the remains of the two other demons quivered.

Next: How do they stop it?!

Age of Wonders, Issue 5 Reflections

art by Roland Brown (drawhaus.com)

We’re heading into the climactic Issue 6! Let’s avoid the preamble and just jump right in, shall we?

Deconstructing Prepared Adventures

Issue 5 really opened my eyes to the glory of solo roleplaying. Recall that I’d recently started falling back on published material to give me some structure for my storytelling. No sooner had I done so, however, than the plot sort of led from one thing to another… Maly made a heroic theft of the bejeweled box (which, at the time, I had no idea what it was or why the ratfolk wanted it), giving rise to an underground chase, then a showdown with new villains, one of them Kami’s brother, and then the re-theft of box by the ratfolk ringleader. None of that was in my head when I started looking at Rats of Ilthmar for inspiration.

But then I hit a wall; there was no “next logical step” for where to take the story, and I’d strayed so far from the published material that I didn’t see how to find my way back there. Enter Mythic GM Emulator to the rescue last installment, and in a few quick rolls I not only had my answer (summoned filth demons, baby!) but felt reinvigorated for Issue 6. Maybe it’s silly to type this sentence after so much time solo roleplaying, but I felt like Mythic’s unlock of the next part of the story made me finally “get” why solo-play is fun. I still don’t like having absolutely no material as a foundation for my games, but it was easy to see how I could continue this story for months, if not years, and never run out of exciting twists and turns.

Indeed, I’ve been expanding my consumption of media on solo roleplaying and recently listened to an interview with Tana Pigeon, author of Mythic, on the Solo RolePlayers Podcast. The topic of the interview was playing published adventures solo, and it’s a great listen. Though neither Tana nor the podcaster PJ really understand the glory of published material (or, in PJ’s case, an appreciation for the magic of group games), Tana has a few super interesting tactics for how solo play can use published material as a source of emergent storytelling, some of which are detailed in the Mythic second edition book. A new and intriguing approach, however, comes from Tana’s article in Issue 50 her own self-published Mythic Magazine called “Deconstructing Prepared Adventures.” Buy the issue if you can, but, in summary, the idea is to completely abandon the structure or plot of published adventures and instead roll dice to randomly select sections of the adventure as tables to answer Fate questions and generate random events. This approach keeps the adventure feel and themes but creates something entirely new.

Now, as I said, what was missing for me in the interview was a true appreciation of published material. I like the structure of an adventure with story beats, plot milestones, and overarching quests or themes. I enjoy the prep of GMing a group game or a solo one equally. Just look at my playthrough of two full Dungeon Crawl Classics adventures – that experience was great fun for me. I’m excited about having the dice determine the protagonists’ fates without me worrying about what comes next. As a forever-GM in my group games, it’s an opportunity to dive deep into an adventure that either I’ll never get to play with a group or as preparation for doing so. Moreover, that experience feels like it mimics the vibe of a group game (with the obvious differences that I’m piloting both the PCs and NPCs and I’m not with friends). I don’t get bothered by knowing what’s behind the next door, because I get the same thrill out of the anticipatory “Ooo! How will they handle the next challenge?!” excitement as I do GMing group games, plus I find it a narrative challenge to follow the dice and still navigate the published material. On the other side of the coin, I never really wanted to play truly emergent games. Somehow not having any structure destroyed my motivation. If anything could happen and I was making it all up, why did the events matter at all? The idea of playing solo like Tana or PJ seem to enjoy felt, I don’t know… lonely.

Maybe it’s having invested more time in solo play, or perhaps it’s just all the new media I’m consuming on the topic. Whatever the case, I’m becoming more open to what I’m now realizing is the norm for solo roleplaying and am increasingly ready to embrace wherever the heck my mind will lead me. Will this dawning revelation lead to more interesting stories? I guess we’ll find out. File it away for the next adventure, though… I want to try that “Deconstructing” method at some point.

Speaking of the next adventure…

We’ve Made It: Issue 6!

I don’t know how explicit I’ve been throughout this experiment, but once I settled on the “six Issues form a Trade Paperback (TPB)” idea, the commitment I made to myself was to see one six-Issue arc all the way through. It’s been an experiment on so many different dimensions: Homebrewing a world, mashing up superheroes and fantasy, playing a new game system, more emergent play, different POV narratives, six-Issue arcs… the list goes on and on. Given the pace of my writing, I was essentially giving myself six months to settle into this story and then assess. All along, I’ve meant to decide after Issue 6 whether to keep going as-is, make a significant change (for example, swapping Crusaders for another game system), or pause the story and start a new project. Right now, I’m not at all sure which path I’ll take in a month’s time.

Whatever I decide, I’m hoping to end this TPB with a bang. We’re entering a battle where the odds are stacked against our protagonists: Without Destiny, there are three Rank 1 PCs against three Rank 2 villains. Moreover, it feels to me like the demons’ powers are more wide-ranging and complementary to each other than Kami, Emah, and Maly’s are. They will need some luck and good tactics to survive, much less to defeat the demons. As I said at the end of the last installment, I’m officially worried about the party.

So, either the PCs will get wiped out, the heroes will triumph against all odds, or somewhere in between. Either way, I’m excited to see what happens. I feel a little bad about killing Tatter “off screen,” but my choices were to do that, have her be part of the battle, or escape again. My sense is that she would have tipped the scales for either side if she’d joined them, and her escape just leaves me in the same “how do I resolve the ratfolk plot?” predicament I was feeling before. I’m glad the dice decided to take her off the game board, despite the ignominious end.

Finally, let’s also pour one out for Anos Wosu, the cat-man sidekick of Kami’s brother who never even got a name in the narrative, much less a chance for backstory. Peace out, karate cat-man.

art by Roland Brown (drawhaus.com)

I like that Issues 3, 4, and 5 all feature the main antagonist(s) of that Issue, and of course all credit goes to Roland Brown for his creative eye and drawing prowess. That said, wait until you get a look at Issue 6’s cover! I gave Roland some really weird beasties to manifest, and he delivered in spades. Get ready for some gross demons next week.

As always, if you’re enjoying the story or have suggestions, drop me a comment below or feel free to email me at jaycms@yahoo.com.

Next: Heroes versus demons! [with game notes]

Age of Wonders, Issue 5c: What Happened Here, Part 2

art by Roland Brown (drawhaus.com)

Kami crossed her arms over her chest and looked down upon the still face of her brother. He was now where Emah had convalesced, in Sami Suttar’s bed on the second floor of the man’s one-time shop and home. Kura’s bandages were dark with blood, his breathing weak and inconsistent. She did not know if he would survive, but if he did, she thought that Kura still faced a long road of recovery ahead of him.

The roil of emotions within her was difficult to separate into individual strands; there was grief, loss, and anger, surely, at their vastly diminished sibling relationship and so many times they weren’t there for one another. The hurt and disappointment were the reason why she had so rarely reached out to connect with her brother these past years. Yet, looking down on his still form, there was also fondness for several shared memories, mostly when their parents had lived. Laughter and comfort. She could see the young boy in his face still, the strong older brother that she had waited to rescue her from the Heron so often as a young girl. Of course, on the heels of those fond emotions, concern and anxiety filled her, too, not sure whether Kura would awaken from his injuries and, if so, what state of mind he would be in. Would the ratfolk priest still be controlling him? If not, how would he react to his strange companion’s death and her presence? Would her brother stop breathing and die, right here as she watched, with so many things unsaid between them? The emotions stewed and churned within her chest and belly. She felt faintly sick at them all.

Through it all, Kami kept her face still and impassive. No tears fell. No nostalgic, wistful smile twisted her lips. She spoke no words, of either comfort or rebuke. Indeed, she regarded Kura so stoically that twice she reminded herself to breathe so as not to unnerve the others in the room.

“I’ve done what I can,” Emah said beside her after a long silence. “I’m not a true healer, you understand. We can find a medic. Inspector Calenta will…”

“…Arrest him and throw him in a dungeon for the rest of his days, never letting the medic’s hands touch him,” Kami said without feeling. “You know this as well as I do.”

Emah blew out a noisy sigh. “Okay, fair. But he and his friend did kill her men. And he’s part of the Dragons…” her voice trailed off, clearly unsure how to complete that thought. “Anyway, Calenta is going to have to see the mess downstairs sooner than later. When the Watchmen don’t check in, she’ll either come over herself or send someone, and she’ll wonder why we didn’t contact her immediately.”

“Well, life is full of disappointment,” Kami said, and turned to regard Emah. The warrior was now fully dressed, kitted for battle, with her signature blade hanging from one hip. Behind her knelt Maly Wywich, looking surly and worried. The young woman’s eyes glanced over at Kami, but never strayed far from the blank panther’s form, laid across a pile of blankets on the floor of the bedroom. Emah had made a fuss about moving Destiny, but Maly had insisted that they get him out of the entryway and somewhere he could rest. Kami had carried the great cat as easily as she did anything requiring strength these days and had tried to be gentle while doing so.

“What is that supposed to mean?” Emah’s face was hard and dour.

“It means that I don’t care what Calenta thinks right now. If Kura can wake before she comes, he can tell us something. I would rather not speed her arrival if I can help it.”

“But–” Emah started stubbornly, but Kami raised a hand.

“Please, Ms. Elmhill. I am not trying to shirk our contract or do anything illegal. I only wish to buy time for my brother to speak with me before he is locked away.” She tried to summon some of the playacting innocence she drew on as a prostitute but couldn’t find it within her. Instead, she looked flatly back at Emah through her wooden half-mask, waiting.

After a heartbeat, the warrior nodded once. “Fine. I just want to do something. How do we get the box back?”

“We are not going back into those tunnels,” Maly protested from the floor. “Besides, Destiny is the only one that could track the ratfolk priest. We’d be lost down there.”

“Agreed,” Kami said. “Our only recourse, it seems, is to hope that Kura can provide useful information.”

“It’s just so frustrating,” Emah huffed, her gloved fists balling. “The priest was right here and we didn’t know it! We could have ended it and–”

The sentence went unfinished.

Something went BOOM! from a lower floor, rocking the entire house as if it were a ship striking a rocky shore. Kami and Emah stumbled, and Maly jumped to her feet, eyes wide.

“What was–” she started to ask, and then a wave of… awfulness swept over them. Nausea, sickness, and despair combined into something that felt like a physical wave that rippled through the room. The three of them stumbled again, and even Kura groaned with unease from his bed.

“Something’s happened…” Maly whispered. “Something bad.”

“The ritual?” Kami stammered, her stomach heaving. “Could the priest…?”

“It was still right here the whole time!” Emah gasped. “Come on!”

The three of them pounded down the stairs to the first floor, looking around wildly. In the entryway, blood was everywhere, along with three now-neatly-arranged corpses, but nothing was obviously amiss. With a quick scan, Emah shouted for them to follow and pushed her way down the inner staircase, to the basement.

The basement, Kami realized with wide eyes. Why hadn’t they checked it after the battle? The basement was where the ratfolk had first infiltrated into this house, and where the ratfolk priest in tattered robes had looked to flee. But the City Watch members, with Kami’s aid, had blocked that hole into the underground warrens. The priest must have, box in hand, snuck down to the basement to return to her warrens. Thwarted, had she decided to pursue the ritual there? Or perhaps she’d touched the mummified hand, somehow activating it?

They reached the bottom of the stairs. Kami realized with finality that she would never truly know the answers to her questions.

Whatever had happened before, the basement was now filled with horror.

Next: Issue 5 reflections!

Age of Wonders, Issue 5c: What Happened Here, Part 2 [with game notes]

art by Roland Brown (drawhaus.com)

I spent several days after the last installment befuddled as to what happens next. If Tatter had been in the attic, there would have been a final showdown, and then Issue 6 could have been the aftermath. Instead, Tatter got away with the box to do her ritual. Now what? I don’t want to do a repeat of the “into the ratfolk warrens” plot as the PCs take chase, nor do I want to have a full planning installment without any action. Should I set the ratfolk plot aside and have something new happen? As I’ve said several times, Crusaders is a game of comic book fights, full stop. Spending so much time focusing on characters and backstory has felt great, but there’s always a clock ticking in my head wanting to roll dice.

And then it finally occurred to me: This is what the Mythic GM Emulator is made for! Many rolls in Mythic are driven by questions like “is this thing true?” or “does this thing happen?” called Fate questions. In this case, when I don’t feel like I have a good idea of what to ask, I am instead going to rely on Mythic’s “Generating Random Events” tables. My hope is that, by exploring a set of random meaning tables, inspiration will strike.

By the book, the first table is a Random Event Focus Table. I roll d00 and get: Current Context. In other words, whatever is happening in the story right now is the context for the event. Cool, and this means that I won’t be setting the ratfolk plot aside. Next, I choose the Event Focus, which I’d like to be somehow related to the box, ritual, Tatter, etc.

Now we get to the meat: the Event Meaning tables. Because I’m stumped, I’m going to start with the Action tables and then fill in blanks as I go. What’s Tatter doing next? I get Agree & Burden. These are obviously broad terms that settle differently in different brains. For me, I think it means that Tatter will finally do the ritual, making a pact with the whatever-it-is inside the box to do… something. Where will this happen? I grab the Locations table and roll twice: Peaceful & Entrance. In the quiet of the basement of Sami Suttar’s home! She doesn’t want to make a big production out of it this time… just get it done.

Finally, what does the ritual do? For this one I’ll use the Curses table: Dominate & Misfortune. I take that to mean that Tatter thinks that she is going to summon something to conquer humanity for ratfolk, but instead something terrible is unleashed that threatens everyone and everything.

Okay, that’s enough to jumpstart me. Wheee!

Kami crossed her arms over her chest and looked down upon the still face of her brother. He was now where Emah had convalesced, in Sami Suttar’s bed on the second floor of the man’s one-time shop and home. Kura’s bandages were dark with blood, his breathing weak and inconsistent. She did not know if he would survive, but if he did, she thought that Kura still faced a long road of recovery ahead of him.

The roil of emotions within her was difficult to separate into individual strands; there was grief, loss, and anger, surely, at their vastly diminished sibling relationship and so many times they weren’t there for one another. The hurt and disappointment were the reason why she had so rarely reached out to connect with her brother these past years. Yet, looking down on his still form, there was also fondness for several shared memories, mostly when their parents had lived. Laughter and comfort. She could see the young boy in his face still, the strong older brother that she had waited to rescue her from the Heron so often as a young girl. Of course, on the heels of those fond emotions, concern and anxiety filled her, too, not sure whether Kura would awaken from his injuries and, if so, what state of mind he would be in. Would the ratfolk priest still be controlling him? If not, how would he react to his strange companion’s death and her presence? Would her brother stop breathing and die, right here as she watched, with so many things unsaid between them? The emotions stewed and churned within her chest and belly. She felt faintly sick at them all.

Through it all, Kami kept her face still and impassive. No tears fell. No nostalgic, wistful smile twisted her lips. She spoke no words, of either comfort or rebuke. Indeed, she regarded Kura so stoically that twice she reminded herself to breathe so as not to unnerve the others in the room.

“I’ve done what I can,” Emah said beside her after a long silence. “I’m not a true healer, you understand. We can find a medic. Inspector Calenta will…”

“…Arrest him and throw him in a dungeon for the rest of his days, never letting the medic’s hands touch him,” Kami said without feeling. “You know this as well as I do.”

Emah blew out a noisy sigh. “Okay, fair. But he and his friend did kill her men. And he’s part of the Dragons…” her voice trailed off, clearly unsure how to complete that thought. “Anyway, Calenta is going to have to see the mess downstairs sooner than later. When the Watchmen don’t check in, she’ll either come over herself or send someone, and she’ll wonder why we didn’t contact her immediately.”

“Well, life is full of disappointment,” Kami said, and turned to regard Emah. The warrior was now fully dressed, kitted for battle, with her signature blade hanging from one hip. Behind her knelt Maly Wywich, looking surly and worried. The young woman’s eyes glanced over at Kami, but never strayed far from the blank panther’s form, laid across a pile of blankets on the floor of the bedroom. Emah had made a fuss about moving Destiny, but Maly had insisted that they get him out of the entryway and somewhere he could rest. Kami had carried the great cat as easily as she did anything requiring strength these days and had tried to be gentle while doing so.

“What is that supposed to mean?” Emah’s face was hard and dour.

“It means that I don’t care what Calenta thinks right now. If Kura can wake before she comes, he can tell us something. I would rather not speed her arrival if I can help it.”

“But–” Emah started stubbornly, but Kami raised a hand.

“Please, Ms. Elmhill. I am not trying to shirk our contract or do anything illegal. I only wish to buy time for my brother to speak with me before he is locked away.” She tried to summon some of the playacting innocence she drew on as a prostitute but couldn’t find it within her. Instead, she looked flatly back at Emah through her wooden half-mask, waiting.

After a heartbeat, the warrior nodded once. “Fine. I just want to do something. How do we get the box back?”

“We are not going back into those tunnels,” Maly protested from the floor. “Besides, Destiny is the only one that could track the ratfolk priest. We’d be lost down there.”

“Agreed,” Kami said. “Our only recourse, it seems, is to hope that Kura can provide useful information.”

“It’s just so frustrating,” Emah huffed, her gloved fists balling. “The priest was right here and we didn’t know it! We could have ended it and–”

The sentence went unfinished.

It’s time to find out what Tatter’s ritual in the basement unleashed! I have a vague idea that this 6-issue arc has a tie to disease and pestilence, so I’m going to say that something along those lines is the evil the PCs must address. But rather than just releasing a plague, I’d like it to be “plague spirits” or “plague demons” or something.

First question: How many? I’ll roll a d4: 3. OOF. Welp, that’s going be the rest of this post, then: Fleshing out these “Lords of Pestilence” that Tatter unleashed upon Oakton.

To do so, I won’t worry about my usual background/origin rolls. Instead, I want some guidance on what sort of creatures/people these are. I’ll arbitrarily stick with the demons idea and fall back on one of my all-time favorite games: Dungeon Crawl Classics. On p.404 of the DCC core rulebook are a couple of random tables for anchoring our gross “filth demons.” Just because it’s fun, I’ll roll a different description for each demon.

Demon 1 on these tables gets: Lion-snake body, with barbs and spines as its unique feature. Since I’m making these tied to disease and filth, I’ll say it’s more of an alley cat-maggot hybrid. Yum.

These are minor demons and so will each be Rank 2 creatures. That’s 3 power rolls each and 1 improvement, with 12 attribute points. For the powers, I roll:

Roll 1: 75 or 25, which is Super Strength, Energy Blast, Telekinesis, Psychic Blast, Mass Alteration, Energy Manipulation, Ninja, and Commando.

Roll 2: 64 or 46, which is Special Attack, Growth/Shrink, Psychic Shield, Psychic Sense, Ice Mastery, Fire Mastery, Martial Artist, and Doctor.

Roll 3: 92 or 29, which is Vigor, Energy Immunity, Telepathy, Psychic Blast, Weather Control, Energy Manipulation, Weapon Master, and Commando.

What a mess of variety there! I don’t see any real pattern. Because of the spines, I’ll take Special Attack from the second roll, giving the thing a Toxic Attack (Slow Death) per the Crusaders Companion. This will be a very deadly attack against the party, so I’ll say that it first needs to hit with an attack and then second turn can attempt injecting the toxin. I’ll also give the demon Energy Blast, which is it firing off its spines. I’ll use my Improvement here too, to let it fire two spines per turn, but reduce the damage to 10 each spine. Finally, since I rolled it twice, I’ll make it a Commando of sorts, unable to be surprised (much like Kura). For attributes, I’ll use my 12 points entirely on two stats: Physique 10, Prowess 17, Alertness 10, Psychic 15.

What an awful, gross beastie!

Let’s do it again for Demon 2! For my DCC tables I get a Dirt + Skeleton body, which is fun. Meanwhile, its special feature is that it’s Tiny. Ha! Amazing.

Power roll 1: 50 or 05, which is Leaping, Adaptation, Psychic Sense, Astral Projection, Fire Mastery, Darkness Control, Marksman, and Acrobat.

Roll 2: 82 or 28, which is Super Strength, Energy Blast, Telekinesis, Psychic Blast, Probability Warp, Energy Manipulation, Thief, and Commando.

Roll 3: 80 or 08, which is Super Strength, Armor, Telekinesis, Clairvoyance, Probability Warp, Energy Blast, Thief, and Acrobat.

Oh my goodness, I think this little thing will be hyper-annoying. It’s small, so I’ll give it Leaping and Acrobat, but for attacks it will rely on Energy Manipulation, allowing it to use a cloud of dirt and grime as an attack. I’ll also use the Improvement on that last power, creating a weak form of darkness around it. For attributes: Physique 10, Prowess 13, Alertness 17, Psychic 12.

Finally, it’s Demon 3’s turn… My last rolls on the DCC Demon tables result in a zombie body that is covered in rot and scales. Just for fun, I’ll say it has the head of a dead fish to justify those scales.

Roll 1: 45 or 54, which is Growth/Shrink, Regeneration, Psychic Sense, Fire Mastery, Force Field, Doctor, and Marksman.

Roll 2: 23 or 32, which is Energy Blast, Energy Immunity, Psychic Blast, Energy Manipulation, and Commando.

Roll 3: 88, which means I can make something up or choose! Great for a last roll to round them out.

I want this last demon to be a bit more of a bruiser, so I’ll give it Regeneration, which is cool for a zombie and means it’s going to be a tough opponent to bring down. For my power-of-choice, I’ll give this thing Vigor, making it even more of a pain in the ass and nigh-unstoppable. Finally, I’ll drop the second roll altogether for Intensive Training, giving it 4 additional attribute points. Those extra points will make it: Physique 18, Prowess 15, Alertness 10, Psychic 19. That gives the thing a Vitality score of a whopping 90, plus Regeneration! Yeesh.

I am officially worried… those are three tough opponents, and they’ll be without Destiny (more on that next Issue). Well, I wanted a final showdown and a final showdown I shall have!

Final question of the day: Was Tatter killed, either by the ritual or arrival of the demons? This is an excellent example of a Fate Question for Mythic GM Emulator. I’ll set the chances that she was killed as Very Likely, or 75%. The roll: 40. She’s dead, alas.

Something went BOOM! from a lower floor, rocking the entire house as if it were a ship striking a rocky shore. Kami and Emah stumbled, and Maly jumped to her feet, eyes wide.

“What was–” she started to ask, and then a wave of… awfulness swept over them. Nausea, sickness, and despair combined into something that felt like a physical wave that rippled through the room. The three of them stumbled again, and even Kura groaned with unease from his bed.

“Something’s happened…” Maly whispered. “Something bad.”

“The ritual?” Kami stammered, her stomach heaving. “Could the priest…?”

“It was still right here the whole time!” Emah gasped. “Come on!”

The three of them pounded down the stairs to the first floor, looking around wildly. In the entryway, blood was everywhere, along with three now-neatly-arranged corpses, but nothing was obviously amiss. With a quick scan, Emah shouted for them to follow and pushed her way down the inner staircase, to the basement.

The basement, Kami realized with wide eyes. Why hadn’t they checked it after the battle? The basement was where the ratfolk had first infiltrated into this house, and where the ratfolk priest in tattered robes had looked to flee. But the City Watch members, with Kami’s aid, had blocked that hole into the underground warrens. The priest must have, box in hand, snuck down to the basement to return to her warrens. Thwarted, had she decided to pursue the ritual there? Or perhaps she’d touched the mummified hand, somehow activating it?

They reached the bottom of the stairs. Kami realized with finality that she would never truly know the answers to her questions.

Whatever had happened before, the basement was now filled with horror.

Next: Issue 5 reflections!

Age of Wonders, Issue 5b: What Happened Here

art by Roland Brown (drawhaus.com)

Emah wiped the blade of her sword on a yellow City Watch tunic before sheathing it. She took another glance around the massacre in the entryway of Sami Suttar’s home: Two dead Watchmen, a beheaded cat-man, and Destiny unconscious and possibly dying. Dark blood pooled beneath the corpses and spattered the dusty walls. She grimaced and gently closed the front door. The last thing any of them needed was random, ogling passerbys, and she would prefer to fully assess what had happened and why before Inspector Calenta and the rest of the Watch descended upon them.

What had happened here? She’d been lying in bed upstairs when the screaming began. Maly and Destiny had disappeared at the first sound, with Kami close behind. For some stupid reason Emah had decided she needed her boots on to rush downstairs and so had fumbled with them and her sword belt before joining her companions. It was a ridiculous instinct, and one her mother would have cuffed out of her. By the time she’d finally arrived, the melee was already in full swing. Kami had been screaming at the knife-wielder, who she said was her brother, showing more emotion than she’d seen from the woman. The brother was ignoring Kami while he tried to kill Maly. Everything after that had been a blur, only half-remembered except in blazing, still images like paintings in her mind.

She ran through the details she knew. The two dead Watchmen had been guards, posted at the front door. Emah hadn’t met either of them, but Maly had. The two intruders, the cat-man and Kami’s brother, wore the red sashes and emblem of the East Bay Dragons, a notorious Oakton gang. It was the same gang that had kidnapped Maly, stolen her inheritance, and the reason Maly had ended up in prison and then disowned by her family. Indeed, the Dragons were the solitary topic that sent the otherwise-pleasant Maly into a rage. It was difficult to imagine that Kami’s brother might be part of that same gang, though Emah realized she knew little of the brothel-worker’s history.

So. Why did a pair of Dragons, one of them Kami’s brother, break into the house and brazenly kill two Watchmen? Was it to visit Kami, and a disagreement or misunderstanding had led to violence? Were they targeting Maly, here to assassinate her? As she’d been descending the stairs, Emah had heard Maly’s voice call out something about them being controlled, but that didn’t make any sense. Controlled by who? Emah frowned. The pieces weren’t fitting together for her. She didn’t like knowing so little.

The great black cat lay on its side, breathing slowly but otherwise unmoving. Maly lay draped across the creature’s flank, her head against Destiny’s ribs. Emah stepped around them and, as she passed, she heard her friend whispering to the panther. Perhaps it was a prayer, or perhaps the animal was communicating to Maly in her mind. Whatever the case, it felt like private time, one of those dreamlike moments of peace that follows battle. She would leave them to it, and not question Maly about what she knew just yet.

Instead, she moved into another part of the first floor, what had been Suttar’s shop. The whole floor was essentially one large, square room wrapping around a central staircase, yet each section was a maze of shelves, cabinets, and display tables, making the space seem cramped outside of the entryway. Most of the shelves were empty and dust-covered, but sporadic books and unsettling curios still littered the one-time occult shop. A burnished brass frog with four eyes, for example, stared at her from a high shelf, squatting next to a long purple feather that Emah couldn’t fathom belonged to a real animal. She shook her head.

“Kami?” Emah called out.

“Here,” the woman’s voice echoed nearby, around a corner and a towering dresser. Emah moved to find her. It wasn’t difficult to follow the trail of fresh blood.

In the narrow space between two shelves, Emah discovered Kami on the dusty floor. She had her feet tucked beneath her, with her brother’s body half-propped into her lap. One of her hands pressed against a wide bloody patch on his torso, while the other stroked the man’s black hair. Tears ran to her chin from one cheek and beneath her wooden half-mask. Emah noted that the brother’s chest fluttered up and down, his breathing a low rasp. Good. She hadn’t killed him, then.

“Are you hurt?” Emah asked.

Kami shook her head, her long hair moving like a black waterfall.

“How is he?”

The woman snuffled and let out a shuddering sigh. “I—I don’t know. You may have killed him.” Her voice sounded brittle and empty.

“I hope not, for your sake and so we can have answers. Here, let me take a look. I have some experience with sword wounds.” Emah knelt and pulled Kami’s arms away, which she did not resist. “Alright,” she said, eyes assessing. “It’s bad, but not the worst I’ve seen. Can you… tear away his pant leg here? So I have something to bandage his side?”

For the next half-bell, Emah worked on staunching the wound from her sword. He had another one on his thigh, which she guessed was from one of Maly’s daggers. That one didn’t look life-threatening, though, and the man wore frustratingly little cloth for her makeshift treatments. Kami, for her part, followed Emah’s instructions silently and competently, seeing clearly that Emah was her brother’s best path to stabilizing.

When they were done, the brother—who Kami told her was named Kura—lay on his back, two moldering books beneath his head to provide some support. Emah’s hands and forearms were slicked in blood, and her night shift was practically ruined. She excused herself to go upstairs to wash herself off and change clothes. On the way up, she checked with Maly, who mumbled something noncommittedly about Destiny needing sleep. The panther hadn’t taken any blade wounds… the damage was entirely from blows to its skull. For such wounds, the only remedy that Emah knew was rest.

By the time she returned, fully dressed, the cost of the battle had fully caught up to her. The ribs that had cracked from the bronze armor’s blow still ached terribly, and now her left shoulder where the cat-man had kicked her joined in. Though she’d begun to regain her strength from the past days of inactivity, the sudden battle had utterly exhausted her. She wished that she could crawl back into the bed upstairs and sleep for a week.

Instead, she found Kami at Kura’s side. “How is he?” she asked. “Any change?”

At first the masked woman said nothing and did not move. Then she blinked and exhaled. Only then did Emah realize that the woman had been utterly still, like a statue. “He… seems to be breathing more easily. Thank you. How did you learn your medicinal skills, Ms. Elmhill?”

Emah frowned at the formality but shrugged in answer. “Partly it comes from so much swordplay. You can’t learn a weapon without some mishaps needing attention. But mostly from my mother. She was… a remarkable person.”

“Mm. One of the Castellan’s own personal guards, yes? Before she unexpectedly left her post more than twenty years ago? I’m guessing it was because she was pregnant with you.”

Now it was Emah’s turn to blink. “How did you–?”

Kami turned to look at her, her full lips cocked in a sad, half-grin. “I did my research on who I hired, remember? Just as I know Ms. Wywich’s history with the East Bay Dragons. I know how much she hates them, and why. I don’t blame either of you for fighting Kura. But I do appreciate the care you’ve shown him.”

Fighting him?” Emah scowled. “Maly and I were defending ourselves. Why was he here, Kami? And who was the one Kura brought with him? What was he?”

“I… don’t know the answer to any of those questions, particularly who or what his companion was. My brother and I do not speak regularly, and haven’t since we were children. Since I entered the Golden Heron, and he the Dragons.”

“You began at the Heron as… a child?” Emah swallowed, bile rising.

Kami looked at her, the wooden mask concealing much of her expression. The unmasked side of her face looked wistful. Sad. “Yes. Neither Kura nor I were ready for the life given to us when our parents were murdered.” For a moment she stopped breathing again, her eyes unfocused. Then she shook her head. “But enough of that. Maly believes Kura and his companion were being controlled. By the rat priest, or at least in the same way.”

Emah straightened, considering that piece of information. But why… ?

“Sent to get the box!” Emah concluded. Her tactical mind worked out the problem aloud. “She knew that sending more of her ratfolk horde likely wouldn’t work now that the bronze guardian was gone, and she probably didn’t know the box’s exact whereabouts. She’s finding agents to hit likely hiding spots in order to get it back. She’s desperate, but smart.”

“I wish we knew the limits of her power,” Kami pursed her lips. “Will Kuro awaken back to his own senses, or still controlled?”

“It’s a good question,” Emah agreed. “And what’s the range of the priest’s powers? Does she have to be close to maintain contr–” She gasped and unsheathed her sword. “Dammit!” Emah cursed as she suddenly turned away from Kami.

“What is it?”

“The priest! What if she’s here?” Emah growled, berating herself and calling out over her shoulder. “What if this was all a distraction?”

She ran through the maze of shelves to the stairs.

“Em?” Maly’s voice called out to her. “What’s going on?”

In her concentration and frustration, she didn’t answer. Emah’s boots pounded up the stairs, from the shop level to the living quarters where she’d spent the past few days. She almost continued on to the third floor, where Sami Suttar had once done research and kept his prize treasures, but then remembered: Kami had brought the bejeweled box down to her bedside, tucked beneath an arm. When they’d heard the screaming and Maly had dashed away, Kami set the box aside and followed. Emah could picture it there, on the floor, as she had quickly donned her boots and sword belt. Was it there when she’d gone back to change clothes and wash up? She honestly couldn’t remember either seeing it or not seeing it. She’d been too lost in her own troubled thoughts and had dropped her vigilance.

When she skidded into the now-familiar bedroom, the floor was empty. The gold and gem-encrusted box, a mummified human hand encased within, was nowhere to be seen. Emah’s eyes scanned the room furtively. A window was open, curtains fluttering in a slight breeze, which had once been closed. No other signs remained.

She screamed, then… wordless sounds of pure frustration and rage.

Next: The chase is on!

Age of Wonders, Issue 5b: What Happened Here [with game notes]

art by Roland Brown (drawhaus.com)

Emah wiped the blade of her sword on a yellow City Watch tunic before sheathing it. She took another glance around the massacre in the entryway of Sami Suttar’s home: Two dead Watchmen, a beheaded cat-man, and Destiny unconscious and possibly dying. Dark blood pooled beneath the corpses and spattered the dusty walls. She grimaced and gently closed the front door. The last thing any of them needed was random, ogling passerbys, and she would prefer to fully assess what had happened and why before Inspector Calenta and the rest of the Watch descended upon them.

What had happened here? She’d been lying in bed upstairs when the screaming began. Maly and Destiny had disappeared at the first sound, with Kami close behind. For some stupid reason Emah had decided she needed her boots on to rush downstairs and so had fumbled with them and her sword belt before joining her companions. It was a ridiculous instinct, and one her mother would have cuffed out of her. By the time she’d finally arrived, the melee was already in full swing. Kami had been screaming at the knife-wielder, who she said was her brother, showing more emotion than she’d seen from the woman. The brother was ignoring Kami while he tried to kill Maly. Everything after that had been a blur, only half-remembered except in blazing, still images like paintings in her mind.

She ran through the details she knew. The two dead Watchmen had been guards, posted at the front door. Emah hadn’t met either of them, but Maly had. The two intruders, the cat-man and Kami’s brother, wore the red sashes and emblem of the East Bay Dragons, a notorious Oakton gang. It was the same gang that had kidnapped Maly, stolen her inheritance, and the reason Maly had ended up in prison and then disowned by her family. Indeed, the Dragons were the solitary topic that sent the otherwise-pleasant Maly into a rage. It was difficult to imagine that Kami’s brother might be part of that same gang, though Emah realized she knew little of the brothel-worker’s history.

So. Why did a pair of Dragons, one of them Kami’s brother, break into the house and brazenly kill two Watchmen? Was it to visit Kami, and a disagreement or misunderstanding had led to violence? Were they targeting Maly, here to assassinate her? As she’d been descending the stairs, Emah had heard Maly’s voice call out something about them being controlled, but that didn’t make any sense. Controlled by who? Emah frowned. The pieces weren’t fitting together for her. She didn’t like knowing so little.

The great black cat lay on its side, breathing slowly but otherwise unmoving. Maly lay draped across the creature’s flank, her head against Destiny’s ribs. Emah stepped around them and, as she passed, she heard her friend whispering to the panther. Perhaps it was a prayer, or perhaps the animal was communicating to Maly in her mind. Whatever the case, it felt like private time, one of those dreamlike moments of peace that follows battle. She would leave them to it, and not question Maly about what she knew just yet.

Instead, she moved into another part of the first floor, what had been Suttar’s shop. The whole floor was essentially one large, square room wrapping around a central staircase, yet each section was a maze of shelves, cabinets, and display tables, making the space seem cramped outside of the entryway. Most of the shelves were empty and dust-covered, but sporadic books and unsettling curios still littered the one-time occult shop. A burnished brass frog with four eyes, for example, stared at her from a high shelf, squatting next to a long purple feather that Emah couldn’t fathom belonged to a real animal. She shook her head.

“Kami?” Emah called out.

“Here,” the woman’s voice echoed nearby, around a corner and a towering dresser. Emah moved to find her. It wasn’t difficult to follow the trail of fresh blood.

In the narrow space between two shelves, Emah discovered Kami on the dusty floor. She had her feet tucked beneath her, with her brother’s body half-propped into her lap. One of her hands pressed against a wide bloody patch on his torso, while the other stroked the man’s black hair. Tears ran to her chin from one cheek and beneath her wooden half-mask. Emah noted that the brother’s chest fluttered up and down, his breathing a low rasp. Good. She hadn’t killed him, then.

“Are you hurt?” Emah asked.

Kami shook her head, her long hair moving like a black waterfall.

“How is he?”

The woman snuffled and let out a shuddering sigh. “I—I don’t know. You may have killed him.” Her voice sounded brittle and empty.

“I hope not, for your sake and so we can have answers. Here, let me take a look. I have some experience with sword wounds.” Emah knelt and pulled Kami’s arms away, which she did not resist. “Alright,” she said, eyes assessing. “It’s bad, but not the worst I’ve seen. Can you… tear away his pant leg here? So I have something to bandage his side?”

For the next half-bell, Emah worked on staunching the wound from her sword. He had another one on his thigh, which she guessed was from one of Maly’s daggers. That one didn’t look life-threatening, though, and the man wore frustratingly little cloth for her makeshift treatments. Kami, for her part, followed Emah’s instructions silently and competently, seeing clearly that Emah was her brother’s best path to stabilizing.

When they were done, the brother—who Kami told her was named Kura—lay on his back, two moldering books beneath his head to provide some support. Emah’s hands and forearms were slicked in blood, and her night shift was practically ruined. She excused herself to go upstairs to wash herself off and change clothes. On the way up, she checked with Maly, who mumbled something noncommittedly about Destiny needing sleep. The panther hadn’t taken any blade wounds… the damage was entirely from blows to its skull. For such wounds, the only remedy that Emah knew was rest.

By the time she returned, fully dressed, the cost of the battle had fully caught up to her. The ribs that had cracked from the bronze armor’s blow still ached terribly, and now her left shoulder where the cat-man had kicked her joined in. Though she’d begun to regain her strength from the past days of inactivity, the sudden battle had utterly exhausted her. She wished that she could crawl back into the bed upstairs and sleep for a week.

Instead, she found Kami at Kura’s side. “How is he?” she asked. “Any change?”

At first the masked woman said nothing and did not move. Then she blinked and exhaled. Only then did Emah realize that the woman had been utterly still, like a statue. “He… seems to be breathing more easily. Thank you. How did you learn your medicinal skills, Ms. Elmhill?”

Emah frowned at the formality but shrugged in answer. “Partly it comes from so much swordplay. You can’t learn a weapon without some mishaps needing attention. But mostly from my mother. She was… a remarkable person.”

“Mm. One of the Castellan’s own personal guards, yes? Before she unexpectedly left her post more than twenty years ago? I’m guessing it was because she was pregnant with you.”

Now it was Emah’s turn to blink. “How did you–?”

Kami turned to look at her, her full lips cocked in a sad, half-grin. “I did my research on who I hired, remember? Just as I know Ms. Wywich’s history with the East Bay Dragons. I know how much she hates them, and why. I don’t blame either of you for fighting Kura. But I do appreciate the care you’ve shown him.”

Fighting him?” Emah scowled. “Maly and I were defending ourselves. Why was he here, Kami? And who was the one Kura brought with him? What was he?”

“I… don’t know the answer to any of those questions, particularly who or what his companion was. My brother and I do not speak regularly, and haven’t since we were children. Since I entered the Golden Heron, and he the Dragons.”

“You began at the Heron as… a child?” Emah swallowed, bile rising.

Kami looked at her, the wooden mask concealing much of her expression. The unmasked side of her face looked wistful. Sad. “Yes. Neither Kura nor I were ready for the life given to us when our parents were murdered.” For a moment she stopped breathing again, her eyes unfocused. Then she shook her head. “But enough of that. Maly believes Kura and his companion were being controlled. By the rat priest, or at least in the same way.”

Emah straightened, considering that piece of information. But why… ?

“Sent to get the box!” Emah concluded. Her tactical mind worked out the problem aloud. “She knew that sending more of her ratfolk horde likely wouldn’t work now that the bronze guardian was gone, and she probably didn’t know the box’s exact whereabouts. She’s finding agents to hit likely hiding spots in order to get it back. She’s desperate, but smart.”

“I wish we knew the limits of her power,” Kami pursed her lips. “Will Kuro awaken back to his own senses, or still controlled?”

“It’s a good question,” Emah agreed. “And what’s the range of the priest’s powers? Does she have to be close to maintain contr–” She gasped and unsheathed her sword. “Dammit!” Emah cursed as she suddenly turned away from Kami.

“What is it?”

“The priest! What if she’s here?” Emah growled, berating herself and calling out over her shoulder. “What if this was all a distraction?”

Yes indeed… Tatter was lurking in the shadows outside the house. With the PCs distracted, she would have snuck inside to try, once again, to retrieve the box she needs for her ritual. On one hand, I could have rolled to see if she was able to sneak in, but I’m using GM fiat to hand-wave that part of the action. The question is: Will Tatter be there, leading to a showdown? Or will the box already be gone? Those are the two options I’m giving myself, and let’s roll to see which it is.

I don’t need to get overly fancy here… a simple 50-50 roll will do it. Low roll means they fight Tatter, wounded and without Destiny. High roll means that the box is gone, and they’ll have to organize a hunt. I grab my two d10s and… 62!

She ran through the maze of shelves to the stairs.

“Em?” Maly’s voice called out to her. “What’s going on?”

In her concentration and frustration, she didn’t answer. Emah’s boots pounded up the stairs, from the shop level to the living quarters where she’d spent the past few days. She almost continued on to the third floor, where Sami Suttar had once done research and kept his prize treasures, but then remembered: Kami had brought the bejeweled box down to her bedside, tucked beneath an arm. When they’d heard the screaming and Maly had dashed away, Kami set the box aside and followed. Emah could picture it there, on the floor, as she had quickly donned her boots and sword belt. Was it there when she’d gone back to change clothes and wash up? She honestly couldn’t remember either seeing it or not seeing it. She’d been too lost in her own troubled thoughts and had dropped her vigilance.

When she skidded into the now-familiar bedroom, the floor was empty. The gold and gem-encrusted box, a mummified human hand encased within, was nowhere to be seen. Emah’s eyes scanned the room furtively. A window was open, curtains fluttering in a slight breeze, which had once been closed. No other signs remained.

She screamed, then… wordless sounds of pure frustration and rage.

Next: The chase is on!

Age of Wonders, Issue 5a: Tangled Ties

art by Roland Brown (drawhaus.com)

Emah threw off the blankets covering her, reaching for her boots and sword, but Maly didn’t linger to help her friend. Instead, she dashed out of the bedroom, running past a startled Kami, with Destiny loping at her heels.

Inside the house, the panther intoned the warning in her mind. But they don’t smell like rats. In fact… hm.

As suddenly as the screams had risen, they now fell silent. Maly held the railing of the stairs and vaulted down several at a time, landing lightly. There, on the first floor of Sami Suttar’s shop, two figures stood over the City Watch members still accompanying them, the front door still open wide. Maly hadn’t really gotten to know either of the Watchmen assigned to them. In their favor, they were both Stone Islanders like herself, and around her age. Unfortunately, when she’d met them she had been exhausted from her time in the ratfolk warrens and unwilling to make small talk. Also, both had subtly leered at her when she said she’d needed a bath, which was gross and made her instantly avoid them. Now both were dead, laying in pools of blood. Maly had never even learned their names.

One of the murderers was a handsome Kaizukan man in baggy pants with hair pulled back in a long, black braid. He was shirtless, with a bandolier of some kind crisscrossing his chest, and red ribbons of cloth tied around each bicep. He wielded a long knife in each hand, each stained scarlet with City Watch blood.

His companion made Maly pause and gasp. He also wore loose-fitting pants, yet only to his knees. There the similarities between the two intruders ended. The second man wore a sleeveless shirt with a stylized symbol on it and carried no weapons or obvious gear. His head was like Destiny’s, that of a large black cat, and his arms and legs appeared human but covered in fine black fur. A long cat’s tail whipped side to side as he looked up at Maly, and he settled into a fighting stance, fists raised.

Maly wasn’t sure what was more shocking: The impossible cat-man standing nearby or the symbol on the cat-man’s chest, a symbol she had come to both recognize and loathe. These two men were members of…

“The East Bay Dragons!” Maly sputtered.

There was something unsettling about the eyes of both Dragons, a pulsing light of dull green. Maly saw it briefly, and then it was gone.

The knife-wielding assailant moved in a wide circle around her while the cat-man coiled and leapt, leg outstretched to kick her. She dodged to one side, but then pain lanced through her in a burning line of fire. She stumbled, grasping at her ribs where one of the Kaizukan man’s knives had cut her. He flicked blood off the blade and advanced, even as Maly fumbled to grab a dagger from her belt. She would be too late, she realized in a rush. There was another flash of green in the man’s eyes as he raised a knife for the killing blow.

From the bottom of the staircase, Destiny roared. The cat-man’s head whipped around to face the black panther, but it was the knife-wielding Dragon who winced and shut his eyes in pain. It gave Maly the opening she needed, and she danced away from the man before he could finish her. Fury replaced shock as she moved. She would not be killed by the East Bay Dragons, damn them all to the Nine Hells!

Footsteps pounded down the stairs as Kami descended. She gasped.

“Kura?” she said, her voice was heavier with emotion than Maly had ever heard it. “What are you doing here, brother?”

Brother?! Maly and Destiny thought at the same time.

The cat-man used the momentary hesitation to knee Destiny in the head. The panther yowled in surprise and pain, jaws clacking shut. Its yellow eyes focused on the acrobatic Dragon and growled. Despite his light feet and easy fighting grace, the cat-man stepped back, wary of the panther.

Maly wanted to help Destiny, but the knives of Kami’s brother prevented her from doing anything but staying alive. She feinted to one side, then stabbed out with her dagger. Neither opponent could make contact, however, and she and the Kaizukan man circled one another. Now that Maly considered him, he did bear a striking resemblance to Kami. Could it truly be her brother?

“Kura, please!” Kami pleaded. “Stop! Why are you here?”

Another momentary green flash filled the man’s eyes, and he shook his head, like a bee was pestering him. “Give us… the… box!” he mumbled, the words seeming forced.

Realization struck Maly. “He’s being controlled!” she yelped, dodging another long knife. “By the ratfolk priest!”

Maly hoped that Kami had heard her words, but just then the cat-man yelled a battle cry, spinning another kick to the side of Destiny’s head. This time the panther went down, sliding several steps across the wooden floor. The great cat moved weakly to stand, and his assailant kicked him again. Destiny went limp.

“No!” Maly cried, then ducked below the wide arc from a knife. She wildly stabbed at Kami’s brother, but it was meant to move him back more than do damage. It worked, and Maly leapt protectively towards Destiny’s fallen body.

With a roar, Emah took Maly’s place. Her friend stomped down the stairs, boots unlaced and still in Sami Suttar’s overlarge night shift. Emah had her ancestral sword in one hand, however, and that was more than enough to tilt the battle. Murder in her eyes, her blade flashed. Kura, the brother, had been unprepared for Emah’s skill. He blocked one strike, but the second thrust caught his thigh. The man grunted in pain, blood blossoming from the wound.

“Emah! It’s my brother! Don’t kill him! Kura, listen to me!” Kami implored, but her words were lost, it seemed in the din of battle.

The cat-man was a whirlwind of feet and hands. His black-furred limbs spun and struck from all angles, and it took every bit of concentration Maly possessed to avoid the blows. She couldn’t focus on the inert body of Destiny at her feet, Kami’s desperate shouts, or the clashing steel of Emah’s sword and Kura’s long knives. Instead, she ducked and dodged and bent as a series of precise strikes whistled past her. The man’s fighting was beautiful, in a way, using a dancer’s grace and skill.

That grace stopped abruptly. The cat-man’s yellow eyes went wide, looking past Maly. Eyes flashed green for a moment as he yelled, “Kura, no!”

Maly jumped back, which gave her to room to peer at the others. Emah’s sword was half-buried in Kura’s stomach. His knives clattered to the floor from limp hands. Kami was shrieking, her voice more frayed and high-pitched than Maly had ever heard it.

“Emah, no! He’s my brother!! Stop!”

Kami’s arms elongated, reaching out like grasping vines. Before Kura had fully fallen, she had scooped him up, arms coiling round and round for support. In that moment Maly could only watch, fascinated. Tears streaked down the unmasked side of her face as she effortlessly lifted the man into the air. It was such an odd thing to see her arms wrapped so impossibly around a man larger than her, his feet dangling over the floor. Kami ran into the next room with her brother’s body, leaving the cat-man and Emah to clash.

Maly’s attention focused on this new battle. The acrobatic Dragon attacked more carefully against a sword-wielder, but no less efficiently. One furious punch slipped past, slamming Emah in one shoulder and knocking her sideways. Emah showed little care. She growled, her sword spinning in her fist, and she pressed her opponent backwards with brutal slashes, bloodlust contorting her face.

Maly pulled her second dagger from its sheath and, with a curse, leapt to help her friend before someone else got killed.

Two daggers helped Maly not at all, unfortunately. The cat-man from the East Bay Dragons was impossible to hit, at least for Maly. She felt like a small child in the midst of two adults, with the Dragon and Emah trading blows and matching each other’s attacks with parries and deft footwork while she stabbed ineffectually. Maly could hardly fathom how an unarmed combatant could match skill with Emah, but the cat-man was doing it. She’d never seen someone so skilled, and at least twice Maly was sure that one of Emah’s blows would strike only to be deflected away at the last instant.

Eventually, Emah’s mastery of the blade won out. She kicked the cat-man unexpectedly, catching him in the chest and sending him stumbling. He looked up, yellow eyes wide, and Emah swept her blade horizontally. The cat’s head and furred body parted in a fountain of blood across the entryway.

Maly didn’t hesitate. She scurried over to Destiny’s still form, eyes searching for how to help. His side, she realized with relief, was slowly rising and falling. He wasn’t dead, then, despite the pummeling he’d taken. She lay her head across his flank and smoothed a hand over his head gently, stroking. Though she’d complained constantly about the panther’s growled voice in her head, its absence now felt like an empty hole. She still had so many questions about Destiny’s presence, why he had chosen her… and she had almost lost any hope of answers.

Unlaced boots stepped close.

“Will he be okay?” Emah’s voice asked from above.

Maly shrugged awkwardly. “I don’t know, and I don’t know what to do for him,” she answered helplessly.

Emah grunted. “Stay with him. I’m going to go check on Kami and… the other one.”

Maly continued to stroke the great cat’s black fur. “Come back to me,” she whispered quietly.

The panther did not answer.

Next: Brother and Sister!

Age of Wonders, Issue 5a: Tangled Ties [with game notes]

art by Roland Brown (drawhaus.com)

Emah threw off the blankets covering her, reaching for her boots and sword, but Maly didn’t linger to help her friend. Instead, she dashed out of the bedroom, running past a startled Kami, with Destiny loping at her heels.

Inside the house, the panther intoned the warning in her mind. But they don’t smell like rats. In fact… hm.

As suddenly as the screams had risen, they now fell silent. Maly held the railing of the stairs and vaulted down several at a time, landing lightly. There, on the first floor of Sami Suttar’s shop, two figures stood over the City Watch members still accompanying them, the front door still open wide. Maly hadn’t really gotten to know either of the Watchmen assigned to them. In their favor, they were both Stone Islanders like herself, and around her age. Unfortunately, when she’d met them she had been exhausted from her time in the ratfolk warrens and unwilling to make small talk. Also, both had subtly leered at her when she said she’d needed a bath, which was gross and made her instantly avoid them. Now both were dead, laying in pools of blood. Maly had never even learned their names.

One of the murderers was a handsome Kaizukan man in baggy pants with hair pulled back in a long, black braid. He was shirtless, with a bandolier of some kind crisscrossing his chest, and red ribbons of cloth tied around each bicep. He wielded a long knife in each hand, each stained scarlet with City Watch blood.

His companion made Maly pause and gasp. He also wore loose-fitting pants, yet only to his knees. There the similarities between the two intruders ended. The second man wore a sleeveless shirt with a stylized symbol on it and carried no weapons or obvious gear. His head was like Destiny’s, that of a large black cat, and his arms and legs appeared human but covered in fine black fur. A long cat’s tail whipped side to side as he looked up at Maly, and he settled into a fighting stance, fists raised.

Maly wasn’t sure what was more shocking: The impossible cat-man standing nearby or the symbol on the cat-man’s chest, a symbol she had come to both recognize and loathe. These two men were members of…

“The East Bay Dragons!” Maly sputtered.

Fight time! For a reminder on who these two are, check out Issue 4c. For our initiative order, we have:

  • Kura Misaki, Anos Wosu, and Maly all at Alertness 15. I’m going to allow the bad guys to go first because of Kura’s “Tactician” super skill. All three are in the Center of the battle, on the first floor of the house.
  • Kami and Emah at 13. Both are on the Perimeter of the battle upstairs. Emah will have to spend the first turn getting her gear.
  • Destiny at 12. He is also in the Center.

Kura will let Anos fly into action while he assesses these new foes. With his Martial Arts Anos’ Prowess becomes 20, but with Acrobatics Maly’s Alertness is also 20. So it’s a straight 50-50 roll, and Maly rolls 41. Dodge!

Kura moves in to flank Maly while she’s distracted. With his knives he also has a 20 Prowess, which gives Maly another 50% chance to avoid the attack. She rolls a 70 and elects not to use her sole Hero Point this Issue. That’s 20 damage, and she’s suddenly one hit away from dying at 10 Vitality. Hm… maybe should have used that Hero Point?

Maly grabs her own dagger and tries to return the strike. Her Prowess is only 13 compared to Kura’s 20, giving her only a 15% chance to hit. She rolls 74.

I’ll stick with the Center scene and let Destiny see if he can strike back at Kura, scaring the would-be box thief. His Psyche is 14 vs. Kura’s 11, giving him a 65% chance of success. He rolls 60, and Kura takes 14 damage, down to 31 Vitality.

Kami, meanwhile, will rush down the stairs to join the fray. Emah will curse and pull on her boots and grab her sword.

There was something unsettling about the eyes of both Dragons, a pulsing light of dull green. Maly saw it briefly, and then it was gone.

The knife-wielding assailant moved in a wide circle around her while the cat-man coiled and leapt, leg outstretched to kick her. She dodged to one side, but then pain lanced through her in a burning line of fire. She stumbled, grasping at her ribs where one of the Kaizukan man’s knives had cut her. He flicked blood off the blade and advanced, even as Maly fumbled to grab a dagger from her belt. She would be too late, she realized in a rush. There was another flash of green in the man’s eyes as he raised a knife for the killing blow.

From the bottom of the staircase, Destiny roared. The cat-man’s head whipped around to face the black panther, but it was the knife-wielding Dragon who winced and shut his eyes in pain. It gave Maly the opening she needed, and she danced away from the man before he could finish her. Fury replaced shock as she moved. She would not be killed by the East Bay Dragons, damn them all to the Nine Hells!

Footsteps pounded down the stairs as Kami descended. She gasped.

“Kura?” she said, her voice was heavier with emotion than Maly had ever heard it. “What are you doing here, brother?”

Brother?! Maly and Destiny thought at the same time.

Round 2! It’s cat-on-cat crime as Anos moves to protect his mentor and kick Destiny. A 20 vs. 12 score means that our panther only has a 10% chance of dodging. He rolls a 73 and takes a kick to the head. 20 damage later, and Destiny is also at 10 Vitality.

Kura shakes off the panther’s roar and moves in to finish Maly. She again has a 50% chance to dodge and rolls a 44! Critical success. I’ll say she not only dodges but feints, gaining a +20% to her strike back. That gives her a 35% chance to hit, and she rolls 45. Dang.

Destiny now roars at Anos with a 70% chance of success. He rolls an impressive 01, which isn’t a crit but feels like it should be. Still, 14 damage and Anos drops to 22 Vitality.

Kami doesn’t want to kill her brother, or even fight him. She also knows that she has no chance to hit him in melee, even if she wanted to grapple. The same is true for Anos, unfortunately (Kami really needs some points in Prowess!). For now, she’ll try and snap her brother out of his control, doing a Psychic Attack (a stretch of the rules, but I like it, and it keeps Kami from being useless this fight). Her Psyche is 13 vs. Tatter’s 16, giving her a 35% chance of success. She rolls 76, but that’s a good strategy for next time.

Poor Emah finally is ready for combat and now can make her way into the battle. Will she be too late to save Maly or Destiny?

The cat-man used the momentary hesitation to knee Destiny in the head. The panther yowled in surprise and pain, jaws clacking shut. Its yellow eyes focused on the acrobatic Dragon and growled. Despite his light feet and easy fighting grace, the cat-man stepped back, wary of the panther.

Maly wanted to help Destiny, but the knives of Kami’s brother prevented her from doing anything but staying alive. She feinted to one side, then stabbed out with her dagger. Neither opponent could make contact, however, and she and the Kaizukan man circled one another. Now that Maly considered him, he did bear a striking resemblance to Kami. Could it truly be her brother?

“Kura, please!” Kami pleaded. “Stop! Why are you here?”

Another momentary green flash filled the man’s eyes, and he shook his head, like a bee was pestering him. “Give us… the… box!” he mumbled, the words seeming forced.

Realization struck Maly. “He’s being controlled!” she yelped, dodging another long knife. “By the ratfolk priest!”

Round 3. Anos will try another strike against Destiny to down the panther. Once again, Destiny has only a 10% chance to dodge the cat-man’s martial arts strike. He rolls a 42 and fails. Our first PC down! Destiny is now in a “critical state” and will remain out of the action for the entire scene, and possibly beyond. Also worth noting that if he had taken 3 more damage, he would have gone to negative Vitality greater than his Physique score and would have been dead. Yikes!

Kura, still controlled, will try and do the same to Maly. Another 50-50 roll, and she gets a 06 so dodges easily. Can she return the strike? With only a 15% chance she rolls 89. Nope.

Perhaps, however, Kami can snap her brother out of his mind control. She still has a 35% chance and rolls 66, a critical failure. Oof. Not only is her brother still mind-controlled, but it will now take two successes (or one critical success) to free him.

Emah, thankfully, has joined the battle. It’s Weapon Master vs. Weapon Master as she moves to help Maly. Her 20 Prowess against Kura’s 20 means Emah has a 50% to hit. She rolls 05! That’s 20 damage with her sword, dropping Kami’s brother to 11 Vitality.

Maly hoped that Kami had heard her words, but just then the cat-man yelled a battle cry, spinning another kick to the side of Destiny’s head. This time the panther went down, sliding several steps across the wooden floor. The great cat moved weakly to stand, and his assailant kicked him again. Destiny went limp.

“No!” Maly cried, then ducked below the wide arc from a knife. She wildly stabbed at Kami’s brother, but it was meant to move him back more than do damage. It worked, and Maly leapt protectively towards Destiny’s fallen body.

With a roar, Emah took Maly’s place. Her friend stomped down the stairs, boots unlaced and still in Sami Suttar’s overlarge night shift. Emah had her ancestral sword in one hand, however, and that was more than enough to tilt the battle. Murder in her eyes, her blade flashed. Kura, the brother, had been unprepared for Emah’s skill. He blocked one strike, but the second thrust caught his thigh. The man grunted in pain, blood blossoming from the wound.

“Emah! It’s my brother! Don’t kill him! Kura, listen to me!” Kami implored, but her words were lost, it seemed in the din of battle.

Round 4, and it’s still two-on-two, with Kami only able to plead with her brother. Anos will try and do to Destiny’s companion what he did to the panther and will strike out. Maly, however, is more acrobatic than Destiny, which gives her a 50% to dodge. She rolls an 06 and does so.

But lo! Anos has Probability Warp, and will flip-flop the roll into a 60. Doing so incurs a d10 of “Karma,” and I roll 6. Now any roll 06 or below will negate this power for the rest of the combat. Maly, who will go down if struck, burns her solitary Hero Point in the first battle of the Issue and flip-flops it back to 06 (this doesn’t trigger the Karma since it’s a flip-flop). Complicated stuff, but the upshot is that Maly is still in the fight.

Maly will try and strike back. She has the same measly 15% chance and rolls… a 16. What a bummer.

Kura, meanwhile, will face off against this new opponent Emah. In fact, he’ll try a Disarm attempt, which Emah has a 50% to parry. She rolls 19. Clang!

Before Emah tries to kill Kami’s brother, Kami will attempt again to snap him out of his mind control. She rolls 58 and fails. That means it’s Emah’s turn, and she rolls 25. Kura is down, but not dead (6 away from death).

The cat-man was a whirlwind of feet and hands. His black-furred limbs spun and struck from all angles, and it took every bit of concentration Maly possessed to avoid the blows. She couldn’t focus on the inert body of Destiny at her feet, Kami’s desperate shouts, or the clashing steel of Emah’s sword and Kura’s long knives. Instead, she ducked and dodged and bent as a series of precise strikes whistled past her. The man’s fighting was beautiful, in a way, using a dancer’s grace and skill.

That grace stopped abruptly. The cat-man’s yellow eyes went wide, looking past Maly. Eyes flashed green for a moment as he yelled, “Kura, no!”

Maly jumped back, which gave her to room to peer at the others. Emah’s sword was half-buried in Kura’s stomach. His knives clattered to the floor from limp hands. Kami was shrieking, her voice more frayed and high-pitched than Maly had ever heard it.

“Emah, no! He’s my brother!! Stop!”

Round 5. There is no question that Anos will abandon Maly and focus on Emah. She has a 50% to parry an attack from the martial artist and rolls 82. That takes her to 19 Vitality, one blow from going down.

Maly will strike at the cat-man’s back, 26. No dice.

Emah will lash out with her sword, rolling 26. That would be a strike, but Anos flip-flops the roll to make it miss. He rolls 8 more Karma, bringing the threshold up to 14.

Kami isn’t certain what to do, so will scoop up her brother’s body and move to the Perimeter of the battle.

Kami’s arms elongated, reaching out like grasping vines. Before Kura had fully fallen, she had scooped him up, arms coiling round and round for support. In that moment Maly could only watch, fascinated. Tears streaked down the unmasked side of her face as she effortlessly lifted the man into the air. It was such an odd thing to see her arms wrapped so impossibly around a man larger than her, his feet dangling over the floor. Kami ran into the next room with her brother’s body, leaving the cat-man and Emah to clash.

Maly’s attention focused on this new battle. The acrobatic Dragon attacked more carefully against a sword-wielder, but no less efficiently. One furious punch slipped past, slamming Emah in one shoulder and knocking her sideways. Emah showed little care. She growled, her sword spinning in her fist, and she pressed her opponent backwards with brutal slashes, bloodlust contorting her face.

Maly pulled her second dagger from its sheath and, with a curse, leapt to help her friend before someone else got killed.

Round 6 and the battle marches on. Anos lashes out, giving Emah a 50% chance again to parry. She rolls exactly 50, which is not something Anos can flip-flop. He takes 20 damage, dropping him to 2 Vitality.

Can Maly finish it? A 76 says no. Kami’s taken herself out of the fight, so that leaves it to Emah. She has a 50-50 shot again and rolls… 36. Anos once again flip-flops it, though, add 4 to her Karma (total is now 18). What an annoying but cool power!

Might as well keep going on Round 7. Anos attacks back, and Emah gets a 12, another Parry that Anos can’t flip-flop. Maly wishes that had been her roll, but instead gets a 35.

Emah can end it, and rolls an 06, which not only can Anos not flip-flop, is officially below her Karma score. Emah succeeds, and Anos’ Probability Warp is short-circuited. More importantly, Anos’ Vitality falls to -18, greater than his Physique, so he’s dead-dead. That… likely won’t help in any goodwill negotiations with Kura!

Two daggers helped Maly not at all, unfortunately. The cat-man from the East Bay Dragons was impossible to hit, at least for Maly. She felt like a small child in the midst of two adults, with the Dragon and Emah trading blows and matching each other’s attacks with parries and deft footwork while she stabbed ineffectually. Maly could hardly fathom how an unarmed combatant could match skill with Emah, but the cat-man was doing it. She’d never seen someone so skilled, and at least twice Maly was sure that one of Emah’s blows would strike only to be deflected away at the last instant.

Eventually, Emah’s mastery of the blade won out. She kicked the cat-man unexpectedly, catching him in the chest and sending him stumbling. He looked up, yellow eyes wide, and Emah swept her blade horizontally. The cat’s head and furred body parted in a fountain of blood across the entryway.

Maly didn’t hesitate. She scurried over to Destiny’s still form, eyes searching for how to help. His side, she realized with relief, was slowly rising and falling. He wasn’t dead, then, despite the pummeling he’d taken. She lay her head across his flank and smoothed a hand over his head gently, stroking. Though she’d complained constantly about the panther’s growled voice in her head, its absence now felt like an empty hole. She still had so many questions about Destiny’s presence, why he had chosen her… and she had almost lost any hope of answers.

Unlaced boots stepped close.

“Will he be okay?” Emah’s voice asked from above.

Maly shrugged awkwardly. “I don’t know, and I don’t know what to do for him,” she answered helplessly.

Emah grunted. “Stay with him. I’m going to go check on Kami and… the other one.”

Maly continued to stroke the great cat’s black fur. “Come back to me,” she whispered quietly.

The panther did not answer.

Next: Brother and Sister!