(G279 17/06/2016 via Roll20 - AP(GM), JF, Mira)
DAY 249 (15 Uktar)(November) cont ...
The fight with the flaming skulls was a long one, not just because there were lots of them but also because of their spell resistance.
So many of mine, Irritator's, Sybil's and even Basil's spells were failing to do anything that it was extremely vexing.
Then there was the effects of the dragon making all Conjuration spells hard to cast, which meant that all the spellcasters were just about spent by the end of it.
Still, we did manage to finish them in the end. Irritator kept throwing magic missiles at them and a enough landed to take a few of them out. I cast an ice storm which caused a lot of chaos, but didn't actually harm them. Yli was very effective with his bow, as was Drashnag.
Between the two of them they probably took out most of the skulls.
The summoned creatures did their part, but they were in more danger from Shump than the skulls I think as he killed a dire bat by accident with a misplaced arrow!
I summoned some water elementals and Basil summoned two hippogriffs, which certainly made the library even more crowded, if such a thing was possible. The elementals were not much use as the flaming skulls were magical, but one of the hippogriffs really got stuck in and killed one of the skulls.
Shump wasn't the only one that was being incompetent with a bow. Sylvia, out of spells, started shooting with her crossbow... and took out a water elemental. Archery practise definitely needed for certain members of the party then.
We'd just finished off a bunch of the skulls when the Wind Wall came down and we had the other half of the room to deal with. Just as things were looking up Shump shot Sylvia. What was it with those two? I seriously considered just taking the bows off them as they were doing more harm than good.
We whittled them down one by one. Irritator did some damage with a Shout spell and by some fluke I managed to summon a Unicorn, which can use its horn to cast healing spells - a handy way to get around that pesky dragons interference.
Well, anyway, by the time the unicorn had turned up the skulls were all dealt with and all the other animals had gone back to their home planes of existence. By a brute force and throwing everything at them we had won the battle against the flame skulls.
Saturday, 25 June 2016
Wednesday, 22 June 2016
(G278 10/06/2016 via Roll20 - JF(GM), AP) 53
(G278 10/06/2016 via Roll20 - JF(GM), AP) 53
DAY 131 (fri) cont ...
It was now 1930 and it occurred to Ensign Kirk that they might try and talk to the 'Blue Skin' they had captured earlier.
With the jammer-jammer now in the locality they could talk to the blue skin and eventually the coaxed some information out of it.
'We are people accepted by the Preservers. They do not attack us,' it said in response to why the skuttlers or automatons did not attack the blue skins.
Murphy tried to heal the creature a little with his medical resources but then reported to Kirk, 'There is something very odd about that creature. It's not alive! I can't tell you exactly what is going on without a working Medical Tricorder though.'
Murphy examined the creature further, even going so far as to taste the creatures blood.
'It's tasteless! And have a sniff, this being has no odour at all. It smells of nothing.'
Kirk groaned, he hated all this weird alien 'shit'.
'Listen to it's heart,' he said, but the creature would not hold still so they used the med kit to knock it out. In the end they detected a heartbeat.
'There is something strange about this whole place,' declared Kirk, then went back to the ice room, hacked some of it up and boiled it up in the cauldron. Nothing much happened so he shrugged and abandoned the enterprise.
So, they continued exploring the corridors and rooms. In the next room the found a metal bin full of ancient copper coins, in the next an old loom.
They turned a corner in the corridor and were attacked by more blue skins armed with bows and arrows. They killed them off and determined to get the bottom the mysterious beings Kirk dragged one of the corpses up the steps to the room where Yuyu was.
'Where are you going with that?' she asked icily.
'Just running a test.'
'Have you found a katric arc yet?'
'No.'
About half way up to the surface the Medical Tricorder started working again, no longer being jammed by the Preserver Tech.
Murphy did a long scan then reported, 'This thing isn't a living being. The closest thing I can think of is a hard light hologram. I don't know how it is projected but I think it uses nano technology, possibly interdimensional or sub-atomic nano-tech at that. This is more advanced that Starfleet, that's all I can tell you. Some advance alien race made this creature.'
Kirk contacted Dell back at the Cacophony.
'Dell,' he asked, 'We've got an advance alien sub-atomic nano tech hard light hologram thing here. Can you contain it in a force field?'
'Eh?' replied Dell. When things were explained to him further he replied rather tartly,
'This thing, if its using multidimensional technology then I haven't the slightest idea if a forcefield will work or not!'
'Just see what you can do,' sighed Kirk.
Kirk and Murphy returned to the others and continued the exploration of the lower temple levels. They discovered a room with a pentagram in it and then beyond that a room with a krovok sleeping next to a fire place. Kirk left it alone.
The next door lead to a room of chests and broken pots and six skuttlers that attacked them as soon as the door was opened. These were the kind that exploded once they were badly damaged and they charged forward, blasting holes in the walls and injuring all of the crew.
Once the combat was over, Kirk and the rest of the stunned and bedraggled crew entered the room and searched the chests, their ears still ringing from the blasts and their uniforms in virtual tatters.
Tuesday, 21 June 2016
(G277 03/06/2016 via Roll20 - AP(GM), JF, Mira)
(G277 03/06/2016 via Roll20 - AP(GM), JF, Mira)
DAY 248 (14 Uktar)(November) continued...
We spend the rest of the day in our 'Dragon Proof Cave'.
I spent some time today talking over old adventures with Shump, back when we were on the Sea Wyvern. For lack of anything better to do, the others listened.
The funniest part of the story was when we were on the island that had Fort Greenock on it. We'd split the party and Shump and the people he were with had get back to the ship really quickly. Back then half the crew were gnomes though, with very short legs! So to get them to where they needed to be Shump had to pick two of them up. So he arrived at the battle with a gnome under each arm!
I had thought it was Eriss and Meree, but Shump corrected me, it had been Eriss and Nobby. Meree was already up in the rigging, fighting pirates with the rest of us.
I tell you what, dear reader, I think I would be back fighting pirates, just to get out of the Plane of Shadows.
DAY 249 (15 Uktar)(November)
In the morning I remembered to check on the dragon again. He was in his lair twiddling with the weave as he so frequently did.
So, we returned to the floating steps and using a sort if Giant Owl shuttle service we got everyone across to the other side of the pit. We startled and were attacked by two Vargouilles (sort of flying skull creatures), but Yli and Drashnag shot them out of the sky pretty promptly.
For some reason, perhaps my current pre-occupation with dragons, and despite all logic and sense being against it I became irrationally convinced there was a red dragon at the bottom of the pit. When the others looked there was nothing though and I realised my foolishness.
Well, anyway, we all made it across and taking the western most bridge we headed for the next craggy tower in the rift.
We entered a room that looked like a library, and certainly a magic one. Books floated about from shelf to shelf and green skull lamps illuminated the area.
I returned to human form and went to look at a book lying on one of the reading tables. I remember thinking to myself, 'I would wager a hundred gold that as soon as I touch this book those skulls will come to life' and I wish I had said that, because as soon as I touched the book the skulls came to life. Needless to say, they attacked us.
Drashnag charged right in, but found they were too high off the ground for him to swat down with his axe so he had to get his bow out.
Basil (who seemed to have become a lot more useful these days!) cast a Wind Wall spell that held back half of the skulls and let is tackle them in two parts.
The skulls were wizards or something though and attacked us with fireballs and magic missiles. Badly singed we retreated back to the entrance and cast our spells from there.
The skulls were quite resistant to magic though, which was a dashed nuisance and add to that the interference of the dragon, magic was becoming rapidly useless to us. Still, I could cast Avoid Planar Effects to help us a bit and I did so.
Basil, who is much more versed in Spell Craft than I, managed to Earthbind one of the skulls and Mr B mauled it while it lay on the ground.
The skulls though, had some sort of defence whereby they projected copies of themselves, so for each skull we saw four or five in total. It was hard to say, basically the library was now full of flaming skulls. We just let rip with everything we had, magic missiles, summoned critters, more Earth Bind spells, arrows, just everything!
The skulls returned more fireballs, which did us a lot of damage. Another one landed on the floor from an Earthbind spell so I swallowed it into the floor with stone shape. Sylvia got one with a Searing Light spell.
Basil summoned some dire bats and Irritator summoned some Giant Fiendish Wasps. They all piled into the battle. With the magic missiles, arrows, fireballs and magical rays flying back and forth as well part of me was thinking, 'This would make a really good fireworks display!'
Sunday, 19 June 2016
(G276 27/05/2016 via Roll20 - JF(GM), AP) 52
(G276 27/05/2016 via Roll20 - JF(GM), AP) 52
DAY 131 (fri) cont ...
Kirk and the crew of the Cacophony continued to explore the dangerous corridors and rooms beneath the Preserver temple on the vulcan planet of Huroc.
They encountered and had a fire fight with another group of skuttlers, that all used an electrical ranged attack. The crew began calling the weapons 'dischargers' as the first charge always seemed
to be the biggest and most painful when it hit.
Once these had been dealt with the continued exploring the rooms. At the next door they found a pit trap, which Kirk narrowly avoided falling into, then another door that sent a shiver down his spine, but which seemed to have no further effect on him.
Behind the door was a giant bronze automaton, a mechanical being easily ten feet tall and it lumbered towards them, attacking with a colossal long sword. They retreated down the corridor and into a sort of ancient store room, shooting solid metal slugs into it with their shotguns. Kirk dodged the sword again and again, blasting away and despite its size and strength it eventually fell, another heap of scrap metal.
After the automaton the shot up another two 'rollers'. Injured and tired they returned to the first room they had entered and got some rest.
While the others rested, Kirk went back up to the ship to get some dilithium to re-power their personal shields, some rations and the 'jammer-jammer'. He took Murphy with him and they were gone about two and a half hours.
They all rested a further five hours.
By 1900 they were ready for another delve into the temple dungeons. In a room at the end of a long corridor they found three 'blue skins', humanoid type beings that attacked them on first sight with bows and arrows.
Kirk used his grenade launcher on them and two were killed. The third was badly injured but alive. This proved, if proof were needed, that generally a grenade launcher wins against bows and arrows!
Murphy healed the blue-skin enough to keep it alive, tied it up, then they continued their exploration.
They were attacked by four more skuttlers and another automaton. By now Kirk and his crew were really wishing they had invested in ear-defenders and shooter's glasses as they were now deafened from the shotgun blasts echoing off the corridor walls and half blinded by the smoke from the spent cartridges. The corridors of the temple lower levels were now full of scrap metal and splashes of blood.
DAY 131 (fri) cont ...
Kirk and the crew of the Cacophony continued to explore the dangerous corridors and rooms beneath the Preserver temple on the vulcan planet of Huroc.
They encountered and had a fire fight with another group of skuttlers, that all used an electrical ranged attack. The crew began calling the weapons 'dischargers' as the first charge always seemed
to be the biggest and most painful when it hit.
Once these had been dealt with the continued exploring the rooms. At the next door they found a pit trap, which Kirk narrowly avoided falling into, then another door that sent a shiver down his spine, but which seemed to have no further effect on him.
Behind the door was a giant bronze automaton, a mechanical being easily ten feet tall and it lumbered towards them, attacking with a colossal long sword. They retreated down the corridor and into a sort of ancient store room, shooting solid metal slugs into it with their shotguns. Kirk dodged the sword again and again, blasting away and despite its size and strength it eventually fell, another heap of scrap metal.
After the automaton the shot up another two 'rollers'. Injured and tired they returned to the first room they had entered and got some rest.
While the others rested, Kirk went back up to the ship to get some dilithium to re-power their personal shields, some rations and the 'jammer-jammer'. He took Murphy with him and they were gone about two and a half hours.
They all rested a further five hours.
By 1900 they were ready for another delve into the temple dungeons. In a room at the end of a long corridor they found three 'blue skins', humanoid type beings that attacked them on first sight with bows and arrows.
Kirk used his grenade launcher on them and two were killed. The third was badly injured but alive. This proved, if proof were needed, that generally a grenade launcher wins against bows and arrows!
Murphy healed the blue-skin enough to keep it alive, tied it up, then they continued their exploration.
They were attacked by four more skuttlers and another automaton. By now Kirk and his crew were really wishing they had invested in ear-defenders and shooter's glasses as they were now deafened from the shotgun blasts echoing off the corridor walls and half blinded by the smoke from the spent cartridges. The corridors of the temple lower levels were now full of scrap metal and splashes of blood.
Friday, 17 June 2016
Pictures vaguely like the current party
Yli Taruin Samarach the Xeth
Basil the Druid
Drashnag the Eye of Grummsh
Falo-han the Ranger
Irritator the 'Lizard Wizard'
Lavinia the Swashbuckler
Rollo the Druid
Shump the Barbarian/Fighter
Sylvia the Cleric
Friday, 10 June 2016
Wednesday, 8 June 2016
The Portal of Returning
Now on Kindle!
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01GQWY8HG
Read the first chapter free for here:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01GQWY8HG
Read the first chapter free for here:
Chapter One - The Beach
It began with a light. No. It began with a smell, a thought
of a smell. A sleepy reminder of childish memories of the sea. A smell of salt,
and sand, warmth and light. I was lying on warm sand, on a beach. My eyes were
shut and I could remember nothing.
Who I was, and what I was, it had seemed to slip my mind. I
must have been someone, I realised that, I wasn't born here, lying on the sand,
but the memory was too dim, a life lived by another, as distant as a star
reflected in a well. Maybe there had been a woman, a house, a job, all the
things you would expect in a man. It felt of very little consequence.
My eyes opened, and then dazzled shut, I rose, and slowly
focused on a gently moving blue horizon. I looked around, and found myself,
apparently lying on a beach on some bright tropical shore.
The sand was a brilliant white, the sea was a light azure
blue. Looking up I saw an almost unbelievably blue sky, without a single cloud
in it to mar its perfection. A large ripe sun threw down its warmth onto my
shoulders. Behind me was a green wall of vegetation, its dark depths speaking
of ancient vine covered temples. I looked down in bemusement at the warm sand
that sifted through the toes of my bare feet.
I tried to recollect what I could have been doing to have
arrived at such a place. Had I been at sea, and been shipwrecked? For all I
knew, I had been plucked from my bed and deposited here by some unknown hand. As
a wave of panic hit me, I considered the possibility that I was dreaming. I
looked around, the sea, the sand, the dark green leaves of god knew what sort
of plants, seemed to me almost too real in the warmth of the sunlight. The
smell of the seaweed, the sensation of the breeze on my face, and the sound of
the waves gently breaking on some distant unseen rocks, could not be confused
with illusion. It was all too sharp and in focus, there was not any doubt in my
mind at all. A dream can be mistaken for reality, but reality can never be
mistaken for a dream.
It dawned on me, that whatever had happened, I at least had
no recollection of it. It embarrasses me now to think of the confused self-pity
I felt for myself then, before I had any inkling of what fate had in store for
me. I had no more idea of what to do than a new-born baby, but I do remember my
first few actions involved running up and down as stark terror began to grip
me, and an awful lot of screaming and yelling for help. It started with pacing
up and down, putting my hands to my mouth or eyes, and muttering half
incoherent sentences, trying to spring a memory from my foggy mind. Like many
people, when left all alone I will start talking to myself, and I found my
mutterings getting louder and louder until all sense was drowned out by my fast
developing fear.
There was only so much shouting I could sustain, however, a
fact, which had nothing to do with my lack of desire to do so. As it began to
grow dark, the fear I had been feeling began to grow, and as the sky grew
redder, I still had no idea who I was or how I had got here.
The stars began to come out, and a large moon illuminated
the beach, almost as if it were day. The magnificence of the sky drew my
attention and at last I began to return to myself. The stars were incredible, a
great heavenly display of light and wonder. I was sure I had never seen
anything like it my life, these strange constellations, alien to me, and yet
speaking to me, a peaceful whisper.
My next thoughts were that surely I must have died, and that
I was experiencing the afterlife. Contemplating this I drifted off to sleep.
I awoke, in the cool morning and as my mind reconstructed
and remembered, I leant towards more rational explanations. A shipwreck, of
course. I noticed for the first time, that I was only wearing shorts and a
white T-shirt. This added weight to the argument. Perhaps I had been on a
holiday cruise ship, or on a private yacht? I must have amnesia, which
prevented my recollecting anything about how I had come to be a castaway, I
reasoned.
I paced out a stretch of the beach, as I tried to recall any
memories of what had happened to me. I found that while my mind wandered, my
feet decided their own direction, and when I had once again come to my senses,
I guessed that I had walked along several miles of the brilliantly white sandy
beach. I turned to look at the prints that I had left, as the gentle tide began
to wash them away. I was lost in a deep revere, I could have been anywhere, and
I felt that these prints were those of another man. Surely it wasn't me,
walking here and leaving temporary marks on this strange foreign shore? It was
an overwhelming experience, not exactly panic, but almost as if I was adrift
from my own body, I certainly didn't feel part of it any longer. I felt, for a
moment, that I was drifting away completely, but suddenly my attention was
grabbed by an object appearing around the jut of a rocky promontory. It was
nothing so much as an ancient sailing vessel, like a galley or trireme, in full
sail, and with oars rising up and down in the surf. In a moment I was shouting
out as loudly as my raw throat would allow, and waving my hands to attract the
attention of the craft. I saw dark figures move around the deck, and they
seemed to study me, they did not appear to be in any great hurry to attempt a
rescue. Presently a boat was lowered and two of the dark figures clambered into
it, and began to row towards the shore.
As they grew closer, I saw that one of them was rowing, and
that the other was sat in the stern of the boat. They surely must be very tall
men, I thought, at least seven feet each. They got closer still, and doubts
began to enter my head. I could not see the rower’s face, as he had his back to
me, but the passenger seemed to be wearing a Halloween mask of some kind. A
sort of boar’s face mask, with tusks, and red malevolent eyes, with coarse
brown hair tufting out from underneath his hat.
I took a few steps back.
Suddenly I realized I had no more time for speculation,
these two beast men were on the beach and advancing purposefully towards me.
They were wearing leather breeches and long blue coats, one of them had a three
cornered hat on, and the other wore a simple bandanna. They were huge
creatures, broad shouldered and powerful in appearance, but the most striking
feature was their animal like faces, which marked them out so obviously as
something other than human. Without speculating further, I fled for the tree
line, driven on by panic.
Not looking behind me, I could hear that the two creatures
were pursuing, and I could make out their grunts and cackles, as they called
out to each other. I fled between the roots of the tall trees, headlong, with
little care as to what I was blundering into. I fell several times, but
scrambled up instantly, and accelerated back to as fast as I could go. I could
still hear them crashing through the undergrowth, and glancing back, caught a
glimpse of one of them, a huge dark figure silhouetted in the light of the sun
filtering through the trees. It was then I received a stunning blow to the
head, and I had enough sense in me only to perceive I had run right into a
branch. I looked down at my feet, they appeared to be a long way off, and
wondered why I couldn't get them to move. As I began to lose consciousness, I
felt the beasts lay their hands on me, with no more concern than a man might
pick up a rabbit.
There were three beds in this room, but there were only two
people currently within. The door was shut, so they had been talking in
privacy. None of the beds were occupied, the starched sheets had been left
undisturbed. It was a hospital ward, a familiar place. Pale green walls, with
nothing to decorate them, but medical paraphernalia and a strong smell of
disinfectant and simple efficient furniture.
A man sat on a chair in one corner of the room, and a woman
wearing a doctor’s coat stood beside the window. The man was dressed in ill
fitting jeans; two sizes too big, and held up with a leather belt. On his body
he wore a T-shirt with a print on it of Daffy Duck. He was tall and thin,
possibly in his late twenties, although his face was aged by two or three
week’s growth of stubble. He had a very distant look on his haggard features.
The woman was obviously a doctor, from her white coat, with a stethoscope
thrust into one of the pockets, and the large round glasses that somewhat
spoiled her pretty face. Her whole demeanour spoke of a medical profession,
from the way she stood, and the look of concerned interest she affected. This
one was probably in her early thirties, although she was dressed to look older,
in a plain white blouse and grey skirt.
The sun had come out briefly, in between the clouds, and
sifting through the blinds, it cut the room into neat little slices.
Dr. Lock looked down at the pen she had been clutching,
unaware that she had been holding it. She put it down on the windowsill.
'That's quiet a ... yes'
The speaker’s eyes glanced nervously away from the doctor.
'What a way to break a three week silence.'
Dr. Lock appeared lost in thought for a moment or two, then
casting off the spell of the speakers words, she remembered that she was a
neuro-oncologist, and had a duty to perform.
'Do you remember who you are?'
No answer.
'Do you remember how you got here?'
Again the speaker didn't respond.
'What should I call you?'
The speaker shrugged, and then after a pause said, 'The
nurses have been calling me Yarn.'
'Ah yes, they do have a taste for irony,' Lock replied.
'Still you'll surprise them all, now that you've found your tongue.'
Yarn didn't answer.
'OK,' said Lock, looking at some papers, which she had
pulled from a pink folder.
'I'll run over some things for you. You were admitted to the
Royal, in a state of severe confusion. Amnesia, delusions, hallucinations. You
were able to verbalise, but mostly incoherently. X-ray showed no trauma of any
kind, and the consultant at the Royal.. ah.. Dr. Heart referred you here, to
the Weston for an MRI. You’re due for your scan tomorrow.'
Yarn, who had been looking intently at the doctor, shifted
his gaze to the floor.
Dr. Lock took this moment to review the things that had just
happened. Yarn had been sat in the chair when she had arrived, and had started
speaking as soon as she had approached the window. His voice was captivating.
Strong, dynamic, and fascinating, a sombre baritone, the voice of a natural
storyteller, it almost talked straight to the ancestral part of her that had
listened to spoken tales for thousands of years before the invention of
television. She had been lured right into the story from the first sentence,
and had totally forgotten who she was, or where she was from the very first
second. For all she knew or cared, she was eight again, being read ‘Lord of the
Rings’ by her father, prior to bedtime.
She had been there with him on the beach, and it had taken her a second
or two to return to this room.
Yarn broke the silence and said, 'Scanning for what?'
Dr. Lock ahemed, telling herself, I am the doctor, he is the
patient, try and remember that Heather, your not a little girl anymore, and
said, 'A brain tumour, but I should stress that this is just to rule out the
possibility.'
'And if there was one, will you cut it out?'
'That would depend on the type of tumour.'
'Would you do it?'
'I'm a consultant, not a surgeon. Mr. Hood is our resident
neuro surgeon.'
'Ah,' Yarn sighed.
'But I'll pop in to see you tomorrow, after the scan.'
Yarn remained silent.
Dr. Lock talked for a bit longer, but she gradually realized
that her patient wasn't paying any attention, and that she was wasting her breath.
It looked like he had drifted away to whatever world it was he had just come
from.
Wordlessly Dr. Lock left the room.
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