We returned to the Underdark, and in our haste to get to the Illithids we forgot to call upon our Quaggoth friends. Unfortunately, we did not realise this until much deeper into the caves and resolved to move them at a later date for we were now deeper underground than we had ever been. Light itself was challenged in these dark passageways, a thick black moss, tough as a dwarf’s beard hung heavy upon the walls drawing all illumination into itself. Even the continual light provided by the priests was affected, shifting from its warm soft hue into a cold and hard blue light. I have convinced Malthus to take some samples in the hopes that he may be able to use this moss to improve my stealth. I do not however hold high hopes; Malthus’ alchemy seems limited to seeing what burns well and what doesn’t.
A cold wind blew up to us from the depths, absent scent or noise. Like so much of this accursed place it was harsh on our senses and did not feel natural. Deeper and deeper we worked into the earth until, just as the tunnel we were moving through forced us to duck and squirm to progress a massive underground gorge revealed itself to us. Once again we could see phosphorescent moss faintly glowing far above, which only cast enough light to cower us with the scale of this space. Advancing across the floor of this great cleft we marvelled at what appeared to be a road, in a state of serious neglect, cutting across our path. We turned and traced its length with our eyes and saw it ran to the gates of a fortress.
I say fortress but it was unlike anything I have ever seen before. Carved out of the very rock of the earth it still towered many hundreds of yards overhead. The road ran up to a set of mighty gates large enough to fit a full grown oak through without brushing the sides. The entrance was flanked by two massive guard towers; above ground one would have been able to survey all of Haranshire from their top. Mervin sent forth his bats to sweep the area for signs of inhabitants, but as they approached the fort they soon fell back and refused to enter.
We entered cautiously, Felix and I scouting ahead. The thick black bearded moss hung thick upon the walls in the entrance way but thinned further into the chambers. It revealed intricate carvings of spiders and webs in a frieze upon the walls. Across the archway ahead of us a massive spider stood, dropping its claws down to hang threateningly in the air. As we entered we became aware of a keening noise on the very edge of our hearing which grew in intensity as we ventured further within.
As the moss cleared from the floor we found fragments of dark stone scattered across the floor. On the edge of one Felix found the shape of a sharply lined face; they must have once been statues shattered long ago. The rest of the group assembled in the chamber and all could hear the keening. Mervin traced it to the centre of the room where it was strongest. As he stood intent upon it he managed to discern words of discontent but then reeled sharply in pain as blood began to run from his ears. We kept well away from the centre of the room after that and Felix and I went ahead through the archway to scout further ahead.
We went a short way, the moss thinning further but still present and came upon a crossroads of passageways. Felix motioned to one side sharply and we shrank into the moss. Six figures emerged from the dark, talking softly to one another but we could make out no words. They were armed and armoured in a variety of equipment, ready for battle. As they passed we fell silently in step behind them but at our surprise, as they entered the entry chamber beyond, they disappeared into thin air.
Returning to the crossroads intersection ahead we took the left turn which ran a short way before ending at a single door. The door was mostly intact but hung loosely from the sides, the thick planks held together with well rusted iron. A cautious examination revealed no traps and the room appeared to be a long disused barracks with another door set in the right wall. Bunks filled the room, their sagging frames awash in long decayed scraps of cloth. At the foot of each was a dilapidated chest, most of the lids had collapsed in on themselves or been split asunder in the distant past.
As we stepped across the threshold a deafening alarm began to ring through the air and muffled voices could be heard from beyond the door. Startled, Felix and I immediately dived under nearby bunks and made ourselves scarce. Malthus however marched briskly across the room to the door and heaved it open to reveal the room beyond. This too was another barracks room, lined with bunks and chests but in far better condition. It was also occupied; a dozen or more dark-skinned elves in various states of undress were shrugging on suits of armour, equipping themselves with a variety viciously curved and pointed swords and halberds.
Malthus immediate slammed the door close again and began to flee at full tilt. Mervin stood his ground before the door and began the familiar chant of a stone shape as he bent to touch the stone floor slabs. As he willed the stone to shift to his desire a wall began to form blocking the doorway beyond entirely. As the wall slowly rose over three feet high however the doorway was flung open and a tide of Drow surged through not only the wall but Mervin himself. Fixed in place by his castings, he reeled back as each of the apparitions ran through him, his mouth fixed in a silent scream. He later described the experience as having two dozen buckets of ice water thrown over him in quick succession, only without all the wetness and no hope of a towel to remedy the experience.
I tumbled along in the wake of the immaterial guards, taking care to avoid touching them where possible, but as they approached the junction ahead they disappeared leaving nothing but a cool mist in their wake. I retrieved Malthus from near the entrance and, after ensuring him we were not under attack by a small army, brought him back to the group.
As the way forward was blocked by Mervin’s now completed wall we turned back and explored the passageway on the other side of the crossroads. It too led a short distance before a doorway opened into another long abandoned barracks. Though we entered cautiously there were no other apparitions, but as I entered the adjoining room I caught a glimpse of the chamber as it once was with cruel elves lounging carelessly on silken sheets. The vision was gone in less than a second and a quick search of the area revealed nothing of value. Any items we did find had long decayed beyond use.
Beyond an archway in the opposite wall we found a chamber in which a spiral stair wound up the centre and followed it intent on exploring the tower above. As we ventured higher up the stair we noticed that not only had the black Beard-moss died out here, but it had been replaced with a growing number of cobwebs. These increased in number and thickness as we ascended until we reached the room at the summit where barely anything could be seen beneath their thick carpet.
As we poked and prodded with sword tips we found a mat of webbing which fitted flush with the archway of a door. My sword slid unhindered into space beyond it so I began to cut free an opening through which to continue. Suddenly the ‘door’ and my sword were yanked away as long spindly legs shot forth from the darkness beyond to pull me within. I attempted to hold my ground but was pulled from my feet effortlessly and drawn face to face with a monstrously huge spider. I felt its fangs sink deep into my shoulder and struggled to stay awake as its venom coursed through my veins.
I was dimly aware of shouts and realised I was hurtling through a tunnel of webbing held fast in the monster’s grip. Mervin was shouting in a soft rasping tongue, words that I could not understand as the party gave chase behind me. On through the dark we sped and as I came to my senses I was able to make out Mervin’s true words beneath his hissing. “Halt Mother Spider, we wish you no harm! Release our friend for I bring with me brave allies. One is devoted to Kossuth, Lord of Fire and he shall unleash an inferno that will devour your home entirely! Leave our friend be and you shall not be harmed, you have my word!” Malthus’ roar of anticipation drowned out all else.
His plea went unheard by my captor as she continued her retreat and I was held fixed in place, unable to free myself. The tunnel suddenly widened to fill a larger chamber, no less covered in thick webbing for its size. As she repositioned herself and leapt backwards to hang on the wall I was finally able to twist free from her grasp. As I fell to the floor I noticed a huge pulsating sack in one corner and stared at it horrified at what may be within. My friends burst into the chamber and Tivian immediately stood over me in a protective stance. As he began speaking anew Mervin’s face began to lose some of its fright, but before he could finish a full word Malthus burst forth into the chamber.
Holding aloft an orb of fire, his eyes held a maniacal gleam as he pitched it overhead to strike at the webbing by the spider. The dry filaments burst swiftly into flame that hungrily swept up the wall and across the chamber throwing a broad wave of heat that I felt even upon the floor. The sack in the corner burst into flames with an eerie popping sound as a swarm of tiny baby spider fled across the floor, many of them already alight and spread the flames even faster. The spider spat a ball of web over Malthus, fixing the frail cultist firmly on the spot. I shook the grogginess from my head and leapt off the floor to avoid the tide of spiderlings, aiming myself squarely at the entrapped Malthus. I struck him cleanly in the stomach and ripped him from the floor, webs and all and fled from the flames for my life.
We ran at great speed back the way I had been taken with Malthus cackling with glee upon my shoulder all the way. Mervin held hands to cover his ears as he ran, a green hue to his face he was visibly sickened. As we made haste Malthus made no attempt to free himself of the webbing and instead began hurling more fire behind as the spider pursued us. The heat was thick in air around us as we fled, the roaring of the fire behind us creeping closer and closer to our heels as we ran.
The spider began hissing in our wake as its spinnerets cracked in the heat. Malthus bellowed Kossuth’s name and the flames burst forth even louder and hotter than before. A Dazzling light shone forth from behind us as we continued to make for the stairs. Finally reaching the doorway to the staircase Malthus cackled breathlessly as he called upon Kossuth once more. A familiar ghostly green wyvern appeared in the spider’s path behind us halting it in its tracks. Mervin cried out wordlessly as we threw him down the stairs ahead of us and the top of the stairs was consumed in flame.
We took a few moments at the foot of the stairs to collect ourselves; Malthus invoked Kossuth’s blessing by burning a small amount of my blood and drew the remains of the poison from my system with the ashes. Mervin shakily explained how he had been ‘speaking arachnid’ with his arts and had heard the screams of a hundred spiderlings as they were devoured in the flames. Malthus chuckled and received a murderous glance in return.