When he is
best, he is a little worse than a man;
And when he is worst, he is little better than a beast.
-William Shakespeare
32. Land of 1000 Gnolls
Jade's party was camped out on the north bank of a river, across which the
gnoll stronghold itself loomed, visible even in the darkness, a shadow blocking
out stars halfway to the zenith of the night sky. They had a small campfire
going, and most of the group sat around it. Xzar was telling ghost stories (and
summoning a few ethereal spirits to give the accounts first-hand), earning a
few chuckles from Montaron and nervous shrieks from Xan. Kagain was merely
using the firelight to count the party's money, and Branwen listened on
boredly, threatning to Turn each ghost as she grew tired of its hackneyed yarn,
causing the spectral undead themselves to be the frightened ones, and then
return to their afterlife Planes to tell their ghoulish associates frightening
'Human Stories' of the Tempest-Tempered Turning Tempusian. Only Edwin sat
outside the circle, muttering something about his simian companions, his nose
buried deep in his gold-leaf spellbook, back toward the fire both to illuminate
the pages and to shun any company, except his own conversation with himself.
Though within the circle, Jade sat quietly too. Mulling over the day's events,
since the 'high point' of the 'boy' and his 'dog', or Barghest and his
Hellhound as Edwin had later informed.
First, crossing the bridge of that other stream, there had been Neville, self-proclaimed
'fairest of all fair bandits.' He was, at least, fairer than the five hobgoblin
archers hiding in the brush behind him. Luckily, a hold spell from Branwen had
frozen four of them, the fifth had shot for the cleric, never getting a shot
through her armor before being brained with a spiritual hammer, and Neville
himself was overpowered by the two-on-one of Jade and Kagain while the others
peppered him with bolts and darts.
Then there had another annoying, incompetent bandit party, the couple Teyngan
and Jemby, and their hobgoblin 'friend' Zekar. They'd demanded money. What
they'd gotten was trapped in Xzar's inaugural Web spell, to the necromancer's
very proud delight. Zekar had been unable to charge and been beaned and
performated by Jade's arrows and Branwen's bullets, Teyngan's clerical powers
hadn't kept him healthy for long against the bolts and axes of the miserly
midgets Kagain and Montaron, and Jemby hadn't gotten a single spell of her own
off under the 'arcane firing squad', as Jade had dubbed her three wizards -
Xzar the hallucinating paranoid-delusional Necromancer in the Acid Green cape,
Xan the sickly manic-depressive Enchanter in the Shrinking Violet robe, and
Edwin the egomaniacal obsessive-compulsive Conjurer in the Royal Red cowl.
Then there had been the xvart village. Her party had been walking along, into
the lower, rocky foothills of the Cloudpeaks on their way to the stronghold,
and found themselves at the edge of a cluster of hovels, which turned out to be
populated with what must have been one hundred xvarts. You call us monster! Nexlit
the xvart screeched at her. But you attack us when we do nothing to you!
Ursus protect us. You the monster!
The battle had been easy enough, xvarts being mowed by the warriors like grass while
Xan enchanted them into napping in droves with sleep spells. Pretending he
didn't need any pointers from Xzar, Edwin had burned down the village with his
first Aganazzar's Scorcher. The necromancer and conjurer had then found mutual
amusement in taunting Xan with the prospect of the Fireballs they would
surely be casting within a tenday. 'Ursus' had been found in his cave,
hibernating, easily dispatched and netting Branwen an enchanted flail. Hacking
the pathetically weak xvarts down left and right with her golden bastard sword
had almost been...fun. The smell of their blood invogorating. Jade was moved to
fond memories of the summer kobold-scourings with her brother and their
half-orcish friend Grom among a few others, under the instructive eyes of Tethtoril.
But now Nexlit's words echoed in her head again. You the monster!
And then there had been Laurel the paladin. Smiling at Jade and explaining her
crusade. "Gibberlings are a plauge that must be wiped from the Sword
Coast." There hadn't been much time for pondering this during the
onslaught of the hostile horde, but now Jade sat and thought with a knotted
stomach. If she hadn't cut Nexlit clean in half with her bastard sword, she's
swear he was whispering in her ear then too. You the monster!
After finishing off a ghost story involving two human teenagers and a hobgoblin
with a hook for a hand, which left Montaron in stiches, Xan shivering with his
head buried in his cowl like an ostrich, Kagain smoking his pipe indifferently,
and Branwen grumbling something about squeamish mainlanders, Xzar peered
lucidly at Jade, who sat next to him, while Montaron next to him started up
another ghost story about a necromancer named 'Poah' with a beating heart
buried in his basement. Given the content of the story, Jade was comforted by
her own deathly-arts practioner's fixed attention to her.
"Something troubling you?" he asked her in a clinical whisper.
She looked up at her childhood friend and smiled. "It's that thing I did
with Mulahey, and the Amnish today...it just doesn't make any sense."
Xzar nodded. "The Shield spell. It would seem you have some sort of innate
ability, mommy."
Neither of them noticed as, from outside the circle, Edwin suddenly lifted his
nose out of his spellbook and peered with beady black eyes at Jade and Xzar,
his bushy eyebrows piqued with interest.
"I can't say I mind extra power," Jade twisted her mouth, "But I
don't like not knowing what's happening."
The necromancer bit his knuckles, but stayed calm. "Some people just have
these things you know. Magic in the blood. Like sorcerers. But your metal armor
didn't seem to hinder you at-all, did it? No no nno and not today! Not like the
sorcerers. Though some can, with practice. Armored arcana. Quite a feat, yes.
Curious, curious. Perhaps the Dukes of Dust and their perriwinkle seers will
understand..."
Xzar relapsed into disjointed rambling, and Jade merely looked down and sighed.
While Kagain, Montaron, and Branwen continued swapping stories, the Thayvian
furtively peered over the top of his spellbook at Jade. His eyes peeking out of
his skirt again, so did the Greycloak.
Jade shook her head, and ran her fingers through her scarlet hair. "Xzar,
what's a monster?"
She'd spoke aloud, and the others, having just finished their tale, all turned
to look at the tattooed youth with the spiky blonde hair, who nodded sagely,
and rested a chin on his fist.
"In the beginning, all was dark, and void..."
----------------
In the chaotic evil plane of Tarterus, the spirit of Boris ran in a pack with
many other deceased Malarites, all being hunted for sport by their common
patron in life, and his troupe of vicious and eternally hungry pets, the Beasts
of Malar. The Thayvian tracker was in his fourth night of this supposedly
eternal fate, but watching lazily from a high perch in a tree nearby, was a
fellow who had at the last Feast of the Beast spoken with him and recorded his
tale, after himself hopping from the Sixth Hell just this day, if there was
just a thing in the lower planes. Chewing a leftover roast leg of unicorn, the
tiefling vainly brushed back his flowing blue hair with his quill before it
returned to the parchment to continue embellishing the tale of the dark ranger,
his scribe growing fascinated with the yet-living characters and larger events
alluded to ere its abrupt ending.
BORIS
Thou art but monster, I shall be thy fall!
GNAMESH
No, O human, monsters are we all.
BORIS swings, GNAMESH disarms and drives halberd through chest of BORIS.
Exeunt.
-----------------
Dawn broke over the gnoll stronghold.
The party that had formed grown from Onyx and Imoen came to a wide bridge over
the river that surrounded the stronghold, almost like a boat. The river made a
steep canyon below the bridge, and it looked a rather unpleasant place to fall.
The swift, violent current and sharp rocks would doubtless tear a hapless
swimmer to shreds. They had ranged weapons loaded and ready as they warily set
foot upon the bridge, and sure enough, two ogres seemed to be standing menacingly
at the other end.
"That's funny," Onyx muttered, staring down his drawn arrow, "In
the stories, trolls guard the bridges."
"Stop!" one of the ogres roared, pounding his morning star against
his palm. "Me Gnarl, this Hairtooth! This our bridge, you pay to walk
it!"
"Yeah, you pay..." Haitooth slobbered as he thought, "200 for
all heads, or lose heads! Yeah!"
Looking Gnarl in the eye - by lining up his arrow with it - Onyx called,
"No deal!"
Hairtooth looked at Gnarl for a moment, and one could almost see his mental
gears turning. Slowly. "O.K., maybe 200 gold too much. Maybe you pay...100
gold!"
Gnarl laughed, "100 gold for all heads, or lose heads! Pretty good
deal."
Deliberately exact same intonation, Onyx called "No deal!"
Gnarl growled, and stepped forward. "Your head so dumb you not miss
it!"
"Yeah!" Hairtooth laughed. "We kill you, take stuff, and get
gold anyway! Dumb head!"
"Hooboy," Imoen sighed, her shortbow drawn, "These guys really
have a thing with heads!"
"I'd rather not think about that," Jaheira grimaced.
The two ogres charged, shaking the bridge, and the druid unleashed an
entanglement spell. Vines sprout from its very planks. The huge ogres managed
to pull their huge feet out, ripping foliage as they went, but it slowed thier
pace considerably. Onyx, Khalid, Minsc, and Imoen unleashed a hail of arrows,
bolstered by bolts and bullets from Jaheira, Viconia, and Garrick. It was only
a matter of time before each ogre collapsed, its face resembling a pincushion.
The bridge shook unnervingly as the ogre bodies crashed into it, and sound of
boards cracking and ropes straining echoed up and down. Jaheira dismissed her
vines with a flick of her wrist, and the party carefully traipsed across the
rickety, two-ogres-heavy bridge, Imoen stopping briefly to loot the bodies.
"Oh wow!" Garrick beamed as Imoen showed off her wares once they were
safely on hard ground. "Gauntlets of dexterity!"
Viconia scoffed. "Designed to achieve the pinnacle of human dexterity.
Bah! They would hinder me!" She went into a strange, darkly alluring
dance, unhindered by her anhkeg plate to effect no human woman could have
replicated, singing huskily in her native tongue.
Not regretting his find in a Nashkel field the previous morn, Onyx smiled.
"Nice shot back there by the way, Viccy. You got Hairtooth right in the
eye."
"You are wise to acknowledge my skills, barbarian," the drow stopped
with hands on hips. "I have observed the same lack in others. I think our
treehugging friend, despite her elg'caress heritage, is most in need of
these."
With a subtle nod to Garrick from Onyx, who agreed but didn't want to do more
than necessary to sting his guardian's pride, Jaheira grudging accepted the
gauntlets, slipping them on and then twirling her quarterstaff gracefully.
"Nice," she smiled, her pride momentarily forgotten for the practical
magnitude of the find.
"Viconia," Onyx pointed to the stronghold proper, which was nestled
in the rocky terrain of the island they had traversed to, "What do your drow
eyes see?"
"Little, in this light," she snarled impatiently. "You are a
fool to mistake me for an elg'caress ," she looked dismissively at
Jaheira gain.
The druid sighed, and glanced up at the stronghold, upon which the morning
light poured. "Covered in gnolls," she stated. "Must be over a
hundred. We really shouldn't just muscle through them."
"Muscle has always worked for Minsc!"
There was an echoing hamster squeak, but it sounded less eager than usual, and
this seemed to make even the headstrong berserker wary.
Jaheira sighed again, and continued, "The formation of the craggy rocks at
the base of the stronghold, somehow suggests a cave network to me. I suggest we
explore." The rest of the party nodded. They wound their way around south
of the stronghold, across narrow rock ledges that hung precipitously over the
swirling canyon river. Sure enough, there appeared to be cave entrances into
the rocks, but also a wandering patrol of halberd-toting gnolls.
"Die scum!" the growled in deep, gravely voice, and charged with
their halberds raised.
Onyx and Imoen had never seen gnolls before, although of course they'd seen
pictures in books back in Candlekeep. They were huge, ugly beasts, much taller
than a man, taller even than Minsc, with the stoop and faces of enormous dogs
standing on their hind legs.
"Gnolls!!!" Minsc cried, holding aloft an enchanted two-handed sword
donating by a half-ogre bandit outside Nashkel, "GNOLLS STOLE OUR WITCH!
THESE DOG-MEN HAVE THE STENCH OF EEEEEVIL!! GO FOR THE EYES, BOO, GO FOR THE
EYES!!!"
The ranger went into the berserk fury with which he'd defended the dryad,
felling two with one roundhouse cleave. Onyx and Khalid were, more rationally,
using bows to pick off the gnolls at range, but Minsc even in his furious might
would be overwhelmed alone in melee, so they drew their longswords and charged.
Varscona cleft clean through the wooden halberd halves, as did Minsc's blade
which he swung with great strength and rage, and Khalid's attacks were more
modest, but he feigned or blocked halberd blows while returning fruitful stabs.
Viconia managed to peg a gnoll right in the eye again, and Jaheira's bullets
flew with noticably improved accuracy at the monsters, and with sharp missiles
unloaded by Imoen and Garrick, the gnoll patrol was soon dogmeat. Looting a few
coins and gems off the gnolls, the party continued past them, into the caves.
----------------
"Someone's been here recently," Jade shouted as her party dashed
across the bridge, upon which two fresh ogre bodies lay, their faces full of
arrows. "Could it be...."
"Of course it is!" Edwin snapped from behind her. Despite his long
robes and the stereotpyes of his profession, he was a decent runner, breathing
healthily, and soon at her side. "The witch's mad berserker must have come
here, perhaps with friends. (And I regret inferring that I have little doubt
over who they might be, my scarlet-haired simian). We must hurry!"
Kagain wasn't a fast runner, but he was steady; Branwen so too. Xzar seemed
capable of extremely quick bursts, accompanied by spastic arm flailings and
wild ravings. Montaron was going as fast as a halfling can, and Xan, though
anything but athletic, did stride with the stereotypical swift, lightfooted
nature of his people.
"Alas, there are so many gnolls up there!" the enchanter whimpered,
looking up at the fortress with his elf-eyes, "A direct assault will
surely be suicide, but at least end the misery more swiftly than an approach of
inevitably-inadequate circumspection."
Kagain pointed a stubby finger to the left, to the craggy rocks at the base of
the stronghold. "I'd bet my beard there'll be caves that'll lead up
through the rock."
"A possibility," Jade nodded midstride, "But even if they lead
up into the fortress, we'd still be surrounded by gnolls."
"Don't go below, go above!" Xzar pointed in the opposite direction,
to the right. A path led steeply uphill. The gnoll stronghold, rather than a
freestanding fortress, wast actually built against a small mountain. Indeed it
looked almost as if its foundations had been carved right out of its south
face; and the bricks matched the rock. This path seemed to wind upward, leading
to ledges and even tufts of grass on the mountain that overlooked the top
levels of the stronghold.
"Ooo," the necromancer broke into sing-song, "On top of ole'
Smooookey, all covered with gnolls, we shoot down spells and arrows, pierce
them full of holes!"
"He may be crazy," Montaron hissed, "But he's got an idea,
there."
"Let's go," Jade said.
The party climbed up the steep path. One four-strong gnoll patrol bore down on
them at length, but even shooting uphill, the party felled thembefore they got
reached halberd range. They continued climbing, and at last, as they passed the
top towers of the stronghold in elevation, the natural mountain flattered out,
and there was even grass growing along a modest plateau overlooking it.
"Be quiet," Jade whispered to her companions as they crept along the
ridge, gnolls noisly doing gnoll-business below. "No one fire or cast
until I do." Jade signaled to the others to take various sniping
positions. She at last took one of her own, and lay on her stomach on the
grass, her longbow in one hand and an arrow in the other, looking down into the
stronghold. There were indeed at least a hundred gnolls, some with different
colorings on their armor probably denoting ranks, which were also evident in
the way they barked at each other. They really are like big dogs , Jade
thought, An obvious pack structure. Perhaps I can use it against
them...where's the proverbial leader of the pack? They were moving about,
some guarding, leaving or returning to the fortress on patrols. Others were
carrying, cooking, flaying, or eating human and demihuman carcasses.
-----------------
"Carrion crawlers!"
The massive centipede-like beasts crawled towards the other party the moment
they entered the cave. The dank, damp tunnel reeked of refuse, and the beasts
themselves were worse. They were coated with it. Quarters were too close
for bows, and Onyx, Khalid, and Minsc could barely stand abreast in the narrow
cavern, hacking away at the disgusting creatres, chopping off legs, antenna,
and insectlike eating apparati. The creatures smelled worse when they were
hacked open, their blood like sewage, a foul greenish-brown slime.
"Cover your nose, Boo!" Minsc screamed as his greatsword chopped a
carrion crawler clean in half. "The Stench of Garbage accompanies the
Stench of Evil, but we will clean your fur of both once our witch is safe and
sound!" The squeak had a distinct 'pee-uuu' whistle to it.
No sooner had the warriors dispatched the carrion crawlers, and the party
stepped over their bodies, avoiding as much of the disgusting gore and other
offal in the cave as possible, than a familiar "Eeeeeeee!!!!" echoed
from ahead.
"Xvarts," Jaheira groaned. The tiny blue monsters charged the party,
but Onyx, Minsc, and Khalid all shoulder-to-shoudler swung low and across like
machete-wielding gardeners, their swords chopping xvarts in half or sending
them flying into the walls with little SPLATS, their own tiny, rusty
shortswords barely able to knick the men's boots. Behind them, Jaheira,
Viconia, and Imoen shot the occasional well-aimed bullet or arrow between two
warriors into a hapless xvart. One skittered right between Minsc's legs with
room to spare, but Imoen got it point-blank. Another went under Onyx with a
flyby stab upward, but Viconia hammered its face in before it turned him into a
paladin of unsurpassable celibacy. Another copy-cat tried with Khalid, but
knocked its forehead on the half-elf's codpiece and passed out before it could
insure he and Jaheira remained a childless couple. Garrick, unable to aim his
crossbow with two rows of companions in front, strummed his harp and sang a
dizzyingly energetic and dischordant tune that had the xvarts whimpering,
covering their ears, spinning around like little blue tops, or crashing into
walls. One even crossed its eyes, drooled, and started poking at an ally's
posterior with its little blade.
"Play on, Bard!" Minsc laughed while mowing down xvarts, "'Tis
sweet music to my furry friend!"
The tunnel opened into a wide chamber, about which refuse and old boxes were
strewn. Imoen, Viconia, and Garrick rummaged about, producing a few scrolls and
even a strange, enormous red-and-brown tome.
The bard opened the front cover and peered at it. "Hmmm....'How to Win
Friends and Influence People'. Pretty heavy reading, too heavy for me!" He
grunted as hefted the tome into Minsc's backpack.
Mercifully, the cave grew drier but only marginally cleaner as they proceeded
further back and it wound its way upward. Viconia inhaled, and spat with
disgust. "I smell gnoll ahead."
Onyx smiled. "Then it does lead up into the stronghold."
Khalid avoided a large pile of gnoll-droppings and muttered, "This
m-m-must be their sewer!"
"Ewwww," Imoen wrinkled her nose adorably, "Did we have to
come this way? I love sneaking, but not through sewage."
"Get used to it, rivvel child," Viconia snorted.
"It's all natural," Jaheira looked down at the refuse, and repeated
the mantra, "Remember, Jaheira, it's all natur- ooooh, by Silvanus, what's
that horrible smell?"
The tunnel grew steeper and steeper, and at last the 'natural' cavern opened
into a rectangular room of dull yellow-brown brick, matching those of the
exterior of the stronghold. They filtered through the room and into a dark
underground hallway. It was musty but mercifully deserted, and Viconia's elven
ears perked up as she heard the heavy footsteps and canine growls of gnolls
above them.
"Dynaheir! Dynaheir!" Minsc cried through the eerily quiet gloom.
"Where are yoooouuuu......Boo says he misses youuuu...."
"Silence, imbecil!" Viconia hissed.
Onyx kindly patted Minsc on the back. "We'll search down here. And if that
doesn't turn up anything....we spring up onto the decks, a hundred gnolls or
no. She must be found."
------------------------
Jade had found him . The leader. He was the largest gnoll of all, and
barked orders at the rest in a voice that must have echoed into the Cloudpeaks
themselves. He carried a truly finely crafted halberd, and his armor was
ornate. Such nice armor, made to fit a gnoll..? The young woman
wondered. Could they really make it themselves. Or do these gnolls serve
another....?
Edwin stared down intently, looking in vain for the Wychalarn, or for the
magically-equipped gnoll chieftain who had made off with her two nights ago.
This leader was some other. "These fleabags have ruined everything!"
he hissed. "My career could be irrevocably hobbled! Could I even return to
the Motherland...?"
Jade had also noticed that the top deck of the stronghold had several circular
pits in it, which the gnolls peered down into, licking their snouts and
slobbering. She could see severed, gnawed boy parts strewn around them. Food.
People. That witch is in one of those. Pity I don't have a line of sight down
into one, or I could probably pick her off and satisfy Edwin without ever
having to set foot on the stronghold or bother with the gnolls.
She looked to her left. Kagain, who barely had to squat to hide from the gnolls
below, had a throwing axe in hand and several more laid out. Montaron, who
simply stood up near him, had his crossbow rested on a rock like some pint-size
sharpshooter. Further to the left, Edwin sat cross-legged as he seethed, his
manicured fingers splayed and ready to cast. To Jade's immediate right, Branwen
was also prostrate, her hands folded almost in prayer, and further off was
Xzar, whose fingers twitched wildly, and Xan, who gloomily peered down at the
endless mass of monsters, and muttered forecasts of their inevitable
dismemberment with gory details that would rival Xzar's most macabre ramblings.
The sun was with them - it was at their backs, not in their eyes, and discouraging
gnolls from looking up in their direction as it shined over the mountaintop.
Jade got to her knees, and pulled her arrow taut, staring down the shaft at the
gnoll leader. Luckily, he wore no helm and was the tallest gnoll, so even
though others swarmed about him, she could make out his head. If he'd just
quit moving!
Then at last, as he stopped moving for a moment to lift a leg of roast (human)
to his fangs and gnaw upon the meat hungrily, his jaw crunching but his head
largely still, she had her chance. Her right thumb and forefinger lifted from
the butt of the shaft, and the arrow slid gracefully forward with the
bowstring, sliding over her thumb and alongside the yew-wood, and left her bow.
It sailed true through the air, and just as the gnoll leader had his maw open
wide for a chomp, the arrowhead flew into his throat, piercing the roof of his
mouth, cutting through the base of his brain, and appeared out the back of his
furry head. He dropped, dead, bowling over two gnolls near him. The others growled,
looking this way and that with their halberds rasied, and none seemed to figure
the direction of the sniper until a hailstorm was upon them. Edwin fired a
greenish orb down which exploded into a sickly sticking cloud, Xzar on Jade's
other flank cast a small whitish-grey ball which hit the deck of the stronghold
and burst into a large ring of sticky spiderwebs. Xan's yellowish-white orb
landed among the gnolls with a silent tingle, and the five nearest gnolls
immediately shut their eyes and dropped, dog-napping with their tongues
lollygagging before they'd hit the ground. Branwen's spell caused another bunch
to freeze in place. All those immoblized made easy potshots for Jade and
Montaron.
The amassed gnolls were swarming with panicked chaos, now aware of the
direction of their assailants, but unable to do much about it. A few did grab
loose stones or bricks and fling them upwards at the plateau, and some of them
smashed close enough to drive Xan into a new panic, but none met any marks. The
chain of command broken, the swarmed aimlessly and without formation, some
simply trying to escape, others to hurl more projectiles, even their halberds,
or try in vain to scale the rock face the stronghold nestled against.
Another wave of spells rendered more gnolls helpless, and they were cut to
pieces by the continued hail of missiles. More and more began simply fleeing
down the stairs leading to lower levels of the fortress and out the front
gates. Some ran towards the doors in the fortress's upper walls, to escape the
new outdoor forecast of magic and missiles. It was then that Jade noticed a
gnoll, disappearing into a door one moment, flew back out of it with a massive
slash across its face, and landed face-up and dead, as if showing this off to
her.
Are they attacking each other? she wondered in between arrow shots, But
that...looks more like the slash of a sword than a halberd. And the wound even
looks slightly...frosted.
More gnolls poured into the doors leading within the stronghold, but many also
scampered out again, yipping like scared puppies, and headed for the stairways
leading down the front of the stronghold, though most never made it before
arrows and bolts bit their back.
At last, the upper decks were clear of live gnolls. The body was littered with
bodies, and living ones were yipping as they careened down the staircases to
the base of the stronghold, disappeared down the rocky trails at its base.
"That's that!" Jade called, and her companions stood tall on the
plateau.
"I can't see the witch anywhere from up here!" Edwin snarled, dusting
off his red robes. "Let us hope that was her thigh the chieftain was
gnawing upon. (On the other hand, if he's deprived me the joy of slaying her
myself, I shall be rather put out). Quick!" he called to his companions.
"We must go back down the trail, and march up the stronghold itself!"
"I give the orders, Thayvian," Jade yelled, but signaled to her
companions to follow.
----------------
The search within the stronghold had proved fruitless, and the quiet had been
disrupted when gnolls suddenly began pouring through the doors leading to the
roof of the stronghold, yipping with inexplicable terror. Onyx and his
companions had found themselves embroiled in random cramped quarter melee, but
these gnolls were terrified, many already woundeds, as if engaging the
adventurers was preferable to some other fate upon them on the outdoor decks.
In their injured & bewilded state they were no match for the party,
especially Minsc who chopped with down left and right with a witch-yearning
rage, fearless and upstoppable like some living legend - which, if the verses
Garrick spun on the fly caught on, he might be in days to come.
They pressed down a hallway with Onyx and Minsc in the lead, Khalid a step
behind and between, and Jaheira and Viconia behind the triagle of swordsmen
healing their occasional halberd-wounds. At last they pushed to the end of the
hallway, and blinding sunlight filtered through the doorway before them. Onyx
struck one gnoll so hard with Varscona that he flew out the doorway with a
frosted wound. As Khalid's half-elven eyes adjusted, he could make out a number
of other mangled gnoll bodies littering the deck. Once they burst through the
doorway and found themselves under the bright blue sky again, they all saw that
the deck was now deserted of live gnolls. It looked as if they had just torn
each other to shreds. Or been torn up by some other force.
"Jade is here," Onyx stated flatly.
Jaheira, ever skeptical, peered at her charge. "How do you know?"
The paladin touching the tip of Varscona to the feathers of the arrow sticking
out of the fallen gnoll chief's mouth, recognizing those crafted and sold at
Winthrop's store. He then pointed to those in his own quiver.
"In the circular pit ahead," Viconia called, her elven ears perked,
"I can hear a woman's voice echoing out."
"Dyyynaheeeirr!!!" Minsc cried, bounding forward in the direction the
drow pointed. "Minsc and Booooo are coommiiing for yooou!!!!"
Onyx dashed forward alongside the ranger, across the deck. But as they neared
the circular pit, noises could be heard from further ahead, in the direction of
a stairway leading up from a lower deck. Just before they reached the pit, Onyx
looked up, as Jade ascended the stairway and strode purposefully toward him.
Neither brother nor sister bore any surprise in their visage. And this, too,
each noticed of the other.
They reached the edge of the pit at the same moment. After almost no appraisal
of each other, as if they'd never parted company, they both looked down into
the hole A red-cloaked figure ascended the stairway behind Jade, and glided to
the edge of the pit just as Minsc reached it too. The wizard and the ranger
glared at one another for a moment, then all four looked down.
In the bottom of the pit, surrounded by human body parts and even a fresh gnoll
corpse, she stood regally, a chocolate-skinned woman in tattered indigo robes.
