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The Annals of Glen Forkovian

"Let's take a different approach this time," Dorn decided, "instead of the secret stairway down to Level Three. Unless you have a better idea by way of long association?" he asked, glancing at Cabe Eveda, Pact-Sworn to The Whispering Beast.

"I can't say I do," Cabe answered. The surface ruins of Arden Vul near the descent into "The Basement" were a grim testament to the city’s shattered grandeur. The air here was often heavy with the scent of ancient dust and damp rot, a stark contrast to the Blood Scent or Heart Thrum which Cabe might pick up in more populated sections of the ruins.The air near the massive, cliff-side ruins carried a faint whiff of ozone.

Dorn's hand rested on the pommel of Swift, his chainmail armor gleaming under the pale sun.

Cabe stood at Dorn's side, his Heart Thrum already pulsing as he scanned for the hidden heartbeats of whatever lurked just past the threshold.

Aele stood just behind them, the metallic dust for his rituals partially consumed, though he had plenty for the next few days. These two are scrapping for a fight; I, however, hunger to uncover the secrets of the Progenitors.

"You're sure this is the right spot?" Dorn asks Cabe. Vedecab Dorn reminds himself. I am Thrangir, the wizard-priest is Zorael, and our new friend is Vedecab Eeii. The false identities were, in Dorn's mind, absolutely essential, given the price on his head put there by The Blackfists.

Cabe looks at the ancient stone of the decrepit administrative building. "It's the only structure with a chimney within view and which is near to the pyramid," He answered, indicating the nearby great pyramid of Thoth. To their left, the roar of the Long Falls was a constant, white-noise rumble.

Aele feels the hair on the back of his neck stand up when Dorn draws Swift, his magical longsword. This was the first soul-bound weapon the priest had ever encountered. His Thothian sight saw much that others missed, and Aele had quickly realized that the spirit of their slain former companion — Exodore, Dorn's lover — had invested the blade, choosing it as her eternal home; or, if not eternal, probably at least for the remainder of Dorn's life. Let's hope that isn't unfortunately brief.

Dorn had been quietly pleased to see that his blade had developed an enchantment. Here in the afternoon sunlight, it was still apparent that Swift gave off a pale blue luminance. Down below, that illumination was better than that provided by a torch. It could not be blown out by a breeze, extinguished with water, or become spent like a torch. Nevertheless, Aele carried a bullseye lantern in his off-hand, right hand gripping his (sadly) non-magical but nevertheless trusty mace.

Dorn felt a warm, comforting weight on his mind, now that Swift was in his hand. He liked to think it was Exodore, watching over him. He was more correct than he knew. He gains 1 (1d4) temporary hit point: 35/34; AC

"What do you see?" Dorn asked Cabe. The Pact-Sworn sighed. "As I've explained, I don't see what is ahead, not unless I am able to see through the eyes of some creature I have wounded. What I am doing right now is sensing the thrumming of beating hearts. Yes, there are living creatures below, but we are yet too distant for me to discern anything more specific."

The area surrounding the stairs is a jagged landscape of collapsed masonry and choked courtyards. Once-mighty obsidian and granite pillars lie toppled like the ribcage of a dead giant. Many are carved with fading bas-reliefs of the Archons, though moss and lichen have claimed most of the detail.

As Aele brushes away centuries of grime and thick, grey moss from the stone lintel above the stairs, several distinct markers become visible. These aren't just decorative; they serve as a warning and a map for those who know how to interpret them. An engraved eye is surrounded by three concentric rings. Dorn looks a question at the wizard-priest and Aele says, "A ward, but no longer active. For centuries, though, it would have permitted the priests of Thoth to survey those entering and leaving this stairwell."

Our three heroes begin their descent. Where the surface ruins are weathered and airy, the stairs downward consist of tighter, more utilitarian stonework. The transition is sharp; the wind whistles through the broken archways above, but it dies into a heavy, stagnant silence the moment Aele has passed the fourth or fifth riser. I'm not afraid. I've survived a beastman ambush. We're too close to the surface to encounter anything substantial Aele decides.

The three come out into a chamber. The smell of lichen and algae and something else registers. Cabe signals quietly toward a collapsed wall of masonry to the north. Something alive there. Dorn nods, his grip tightening on Swift. The magical blade pulses with a steady, pale light, casting long, dancing shadows against the damp masonry.

The rubble to the north consists of massive limestone blocks that once formed a grand archway, now a jagged heap of stone and dust. Dorn shifts his buckler forward, sword raised, and advances to the north. Cabe extends his senses forward. The heartbeat to the north isn't the rapid, fluttering beat of a bird or a small animal; it’s slow, heavy, and resonant. It sounds like something of significant size—or something very calm.

As they reach the edge of the rubble, the light from Swift and Aele’s lantern spills over the top of the debris, revealing the chamber beyond — the remains of an old scriptorium. Rotting wooden desks are overturned, and the floor is carpeted in a thick layer of pulpy, decomposed parchment.

Crouched in the far corner, partially obscured by a heavy stone table, is a singular, massive figure. It stands nearly seven feet tall, covered in matted, grey-white fur. It has the muscular build of a man but the elongated snout and sharp canines of a baboon. It is hunched over a pile of what looks like scavenged metal, its eyes reflecting the lantern light with a dull, silver glint.

The trio freezes at the edge of the light. Aele raises a hand, signaling for Dorn and Cabe to hold their steel. He recognizes the creature—one of the "White Ones," an ancient lineage of baboons that have inhabited these ruins since the time of the Progenitors.

Aele closes his eyes, focusing his will to bridge the gap between human intellect and the primal, sacred mind of the beast.

The creature remains hunched over its scavenged metal, its back to the party. It is preoccupied, perhaps picking through the debris for something specific. It is completely unaware of the three adventurers standing in the pool of lantern light. Still, Dorn is surprised that the combined illumination of the lantern and longsword haven't broken the massive creature out of its preoccupation.

Aele steps forward, keeping his movements fluid and non-threatening. He doesn't speak aloud; instead, he projects a sense of calm, reverence, and purpose. He invokes the "Scholar’s Peace," a mental signature recognizable to those creatures that have lived in the shadow of Thoth for millennia.

The creature’s ears twitch. It slowly stops its picking and turns its massive, silver-maned head. It sees the armored warrior and the blood-scented stalker, but its gaze settles on Aele.

It lets out a low, vibrating huff—not a bark of aggression, but a sound of deep uncertainty. It rises to its full height, knuckles resting on the stone floor, its silver eyes searching Aele’s face for the mark of the temple.

Dorn stands braced and ready. If that "huff" turns into a roar, he is positioned to take the charge.

Cabe's Blood Scent picks up the smell of old copper and ozone coming from the metal the baboon is holding. His Heart Thrum confirms this is the only oversized heartbeat in the room, though there are tiny, skittering beats (likely rats) in the walls.

Aele’s movements are agonizingly slow, designed to avoid any sudden shifts that might trigger the creature’s predatory instincts. As the holy symbol—a stylized ibis on a moon disk—swings into the dim light of the lantern, it catches the glow of Dorn’s magical blade.

The baboon’s nostrils flare. It recognizes the geometry of the symbol.

Since Aele’s hands are full, he cannot perform the complex manual mudras of the Thothian liturgy. Instead, he performs the "Scholar’s Bow": he keeps his hands exactly where they are—lantern and mace held wide and low to show he is not bracing for a strike—and slowly tilts his head at a 45-degree angle, exposing his neck slightly while keeping his gaze respectful but firm.

Reaction Roll (Modified by Aele’s Charisma 14 and Holy Symbol):

The creature’s posture shifts. The tension in its massive shoulders ripples and then subsides. It lets out a shorter, softer huff and retreats two steps toward the side, clearing the direct path to the northern door.

It crouches back down, but its eyes remain fixed on Aele. It is no longer a guard, but it is an observer. It seems to be "granting passage" to the Priest, though its gaze toward Dorn and Cabe remains suspicious.

As the creature moves, the "scavenged metal" it was huddled over is revealed. It isn't just scrap; it appears to be a broken bronze gears and a fractured lens from some ancient astronomical device.

Cabe’s Blood Scent confirms the ozone smell is coming from the lens—it still holds a faint, static charge of ancient energy.

The northern door is now accessible. It is heavy wood reinforced with iron bands, likely leading to the "Administrative Loop" of The Basement.

The huge white baboon has adopted a neutral posture. Aele offers a silent prayer for his companions: grant them the wisdom not to touch or approach the guardian's treasure...

Cabe senses that the heartbeat of the baboon has slowed to a steady, calm rhythm. However, he now hears a faint, metallic clinking sound coming from the other side of the northern door. That circular component with the crack in it: I am certain I sense some energy contained within...

Without taking his eyes off the baboon, Dorn slowly moves closer to the door to the north, then listens with his ear pressed against it. Aele silently applauds. He slowly puts his mace back through a loop on his belt, then carefully and slowly rummages within a belt pouch and produces an apple. This he sets on an overturned nearby pillar, then glances at the baboon, noting its keen attention.

As Aele places the apple on the fallen limestone pillar, the White One follows the movement with its large, silver eyes. Once Aele retreats a few steps, the baboon lopes forward with a silent, knuckle-walking gait, snatches the fruit, and retreats back to its bronze "treasure." It doesn't eat it immediately; it sniffs it deeply, then lets out a low, satisfied grunt.

Pressing his ear to the cold iron bands of the northern door, Dorn holds his breath. He hears a rhythmic, mechanical clink-clink-clink followed by a heavy, sliding sound—like stone dragging over stone. It sounds repetitive, suggesting a trap, a machine, or something pacing a very specific route.

Cabe closes his eyes and filters out the baboon’s calm pulse. Beyond the door, he detects nothing. No heartbeat. No blood pumping. No warmth. He draws a deep breath. There is no scent of sweat, musk, or decay. Instead, the air leaking through the door-frame smells of old oil, cold iron, and scorched copper. Whatever is making that noise behind the door is not alive. When Dorn looks to him in silent question, Cabe points to his own chest, then makes a negating motion with his head. Dorn nods once, understanding.

Aele slowly eases toward the door, intent on searching for any inscriptions. Even as the White One investigates the apple, its sheer muscularity is intimidating; a single swipe of those silver-furred arms could indeed end a scholar’s career. Dorn shifts his weight, his heavy chainmail clinking softly as he steps into the line of sight, a human wall of steel and muscle protecting the priest.

Aele holds the lantern high, letting its warm light wash over the door's surface. He ignores the rusted iron and focuses on the wood and the stone frame.

The Inscription: Faded but still legible in the lintel above the door is a line of Middle Thothian script. It reads: "Maintenance and Logistics – Authorized Custodians Only. Silence is the Handmaid of Precision."

Aele notices a small, circular indentation near the handle—not a keyhole, but a receptacle for a signet ring or a specific amulet. However, the wood around the latch is splintered, suggesting that over the centuries, the locking mechanism has been bypassed or forced.

While Aele reads, the sounds from within grow more distinct. Without the distraction of the baboon's breathing, the trio can identify the clink-clink-clink as the sound of metal articulating against metal. Cabe, still watchful of the baboon, draws close to his companions and says in a soft voice, "The coppery smell is getting stronger, but the noises are regular. They don't vary."

Aele nods. "Could be an ancient automaton or golem, still doing the same thing it was doing millenia ago. Look here at the latch. It's busted and the door isn't latched. See that hole?" He holds the lantern close while first Cabe, and then Dorn, take turns having a peek. "Probably made for a signet ring or amulet to act as a key," the wizard-priest surmises.

Dorn says, quietly but distinctly, "All right. This door is our only way forward, unless we want to return to the surface. Cabe, see if you can find any hinges. I have oil in my pack. Do what you can with it, then see if you and Aele can get a peek at whatever is on the other side. I'll keep our overmuscled friend here company while he contemplates his apple."

Cabe moves with the predatory grace of the Beast-kin. He takes the vial and approaches the heavy door. His Blood Scent is overwhelmed by the metallic tang from within, but his focus remains sharp.

Cabe locates the three massive iron hinges. They are caked in centuries of dust and orange rust. He carefully tips the vial, letting the oil seep into the dry joints. He waits a moment for it to penetrate, then places his hand on the wood to feel for vibrations.

The Peek: With Dorn acting as the anchor, Cabe and Aele lean in. Cabe applies pressure with a single finger, easing the door open a mere half-inch. Aele holds his lantern light up to the narrow aperture and strains to discern what lies beyond. He freezes, and his mouth goes slack...

To Be Continued...

Shadowdim 12: Cabe Aveda

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The former Set cultist pulls back the hood of his red cloak, revealing himself. "Know that I am no longer a slave to Set. My pact is with The Whispering Beast. For months I have been His. Of late, certain outward characteristics have made it impossible to continue to feign loyalty to the snake god." And indeed, Aele can see that this is no Set cultist, for they either have human or snake-heads — sometimes in bewteen if they are of intermediate rank.

"You are blood-fused with The Whispering Beast?" Aele asks with incredulity. "Things among the Set cultists must be even worse than I could imagine. Can you explain what a blood-binder is doing with a Setite and these beastmen?"

"I can and will, but first things first." He stoops down and places a clawed hand on the fallen Set cultist's chest. Cracking and popping sounds ensue, and the dead cultist's chest implodes inward. The man (beast?) with the wolf's ears casually gestures at the two beastmen and they choke. One panics and bolts for the forest, the other drops to its knees, clawing at his throat. Soon, neither moves, and Dorn thrusts Swift through each's chest just to be extra sure, before returning to face this interloper.

"Who are you?" Dorn asks.

"My name is Cabe. I was a loyal follower of the snake god for three years, and even advanced a couple of ranks within the Halls," he shares, referring of course to the Halls of Arden Vul. "I rose in the ranks of the Fangs of Set, then was promoted to work under Heker-Set, the Keeper of the Scales. He was ... abusive. A year ago, I was able to obtain a long-term assignment monitoring Surface operations for ... as you call it, the cult of Set. But I must tell you, Set is very much alive. His followers are no mere deluded cult, destined to die out in due time."

"I believe you," Aele says, "for I have learned in recent weeks that my own god, Cromm, is but an aspect of the ever-living Thoth. Something is very much amiss, for we have been grossly misinformed here on the Surface in recent decades." He glances at Dorn, who is examining some coins and trinkets that the beastmen were carrying, then turns his attention back to Cabe.

"Cabe who?" Aele asks. "What is your surname?"

"Aveda; I hail from Beretun. My father is a hops farmer there, and mother works at The Bailiff's Truncheon in Gosterwick."

"I know that place," Dorn adds. "Still doesn't explain how you kept your ... tranformation a secret from the Set cult."

"In truth, I am not certain it remains a secret, though I hope it is. I have not been back within the Halls in a little over a year, making my reports to Heker-Set through the usual channels, at the appointed times. I have no indication that he suspects anything is amiss."

Aele interjects, "Explain the cooperation between the cultists and the beastmen." He gestures at the two beastmen that Cabe has slain. "And how did you kill these two?"

Cabe nods and answers the second question first. "I sampled those two's blood and have since sung their heartsong to The Whispering Beast under a full moon. Thus I controlled their beating hearts."

Aele looks at Dorn, whose stoic expression perhaps conceals his own concern about this sort of power. The wizard-priest figures the fighter's thoughts are strolling down the same lane as his own. What sort of boon might this ... man-beast be to us in the megadungeon, if we can trust him?

As darkness falls, the three sit round a campfire laid on a knoll almost a mile west of the road, and half a mile past the defiled shrine where they fought earlier in the day. Dorn has carefully stacked stones in a wall round the fire, partially hiding its light, and they are roasting a brace of rabbits over hot coals.

"So," Cabe ventures, after polishing off rabbit meat, a thick hunk of bread, and an apple, "tell me more of yourselves." Although he has offered to pass around a wineskin, Aele and Dorn have declined. They have accepted the apples and bread, after Aele examines them with the enhanced sight granted him by Thoth.

"You must understand that we do not yet fully trust you," Aele states. "For while my knowledge of Set suggests you have probably been truthful about your history with the cult, that is no guarantee that you aren't playing both sides. Perhaps, in addition to having made pact with your master, you are still willing to play the cult."

"Your suspicion is warranted, and I can tell you that I am wily, shifty, and too clever by half. However, it so happens I'm being genuinely honest for a change. I grow tired of even deceptively serving Heker-Set. I would see him suffer and be brought low. And although the odds of that happening are low, adventurers like yourselves will likely be his downfall, if it happens at all."

"It will happen, for I have sworn to bring the Halls low," Dorn says, staring into the fire.

Cabe arches an eyebrow and seems ready to ask another question, but Aele subtly warns him against pursuing it. Instead, he asks, "Might I offer assistance in your efforts to cast down that dungeon to the north?"

Dorn throws the pit of his apple into the fire, then looks at Cabe. "You killed two beastmen. You can't be all bad..." And the three of them chuckle.

"Perhaps there is something I can do that may demonstrate my usefulness," Cabe ventures.

"So long as it doesn't involve blood binding us," Aele says, curious.

"In this particular case, it does not. You are both still a bit worse for wear after our skirmish earlier today," he observes, noting scrapes and bruises and the occasional bandage. "I can share a small portion of my ... vitality to restore you, if you will permit it."

"I enjoy being injured; makes me fight meaner," Dorn says.

Aele grins, then sobers and says, "you may do so with me, but be warned" — and here, Aele's eyes momentarily light up an eldritch blue — "I shall know by the wisdom of Thoth if you seek to be in any way duplicitous."

Cabe nods. "I believe you. Very well then. I will open myself to you. Take only what you need. The Whispering Beast provides the bridge."

And sure enough, a cut on Aele's hand heals, and a bruise on his temple disappears. After a few seconds, fully healed, Aele says, "Remarkable. I would not have thought miraculous healing possible, except through the gods."

"In truth," Cabe says, "it is not miraculous. But it is a supernatural ability and certainly one that I would not have, had I not made Pact."

"What did you promise this Whispering Beast?" Dorn asks, bluntly, but Aele raises a hand palm out to forestall this line of inqury, and Cabe says, "I may not speak of it."

"In that case, explain why you would be willing to give of your lifeforce to another," Dorn demands.

Cabe nods, appreciating the question. "I recover vitality very quickly, much quicker than normal men. It was a sacrifice for me, yes; but a short-lived one."

The next morning dawns cool and with dew on the fields and on the knoll.

"Well," Aele remarks, "I see you decided not to flee us during the night, nor robbed us or attempted murder."

Dorn shares hard tack all around. "I told you, someone who kills beastmen can't be all bad." And he shares a grin with Cabe Aveda.

"No, indeed," Cabe agrees. "And had you been attacked in the night, I would have fought for you. Listen, I have a good idea who among Set's disciples ordered yon shrine to Thoth to be defiled. What say we travel together for awhile, jointly bust some skulls, and see if shared danger won't forge a bond? Regardless of your answer, I will seek to deliver the shrine defilers into your hands."

Thus far in Arden Vul, Dorn and Aele have fought skeletons, giant rats, and beastmen. Their friend Exodore Swift was slain in the battle with the beastmen, in which the trio of heroes were overmatched and outnumbered. Before Dorn and Aele could fall to the beastmen, all of the remaining combatants were rendered unconscious by a spore cloud emitted by multiple myconid men who were drawn by the sounds of battle so near to their fungal forest.

Thoth favored the two surviving heroes, for when they awoke as 'guests' of the huge myconid fungal king styling himself The Sovereign, the Thothian priest Aele was able to leverage his knowledge of Thothian beliefs and protocols to obtain a very positive reaction from the fungal ruler. After witnessing the agonizing transformation of the captured beastmen into fungal servants, the two surviving heroes were given the valuables the beastmen had carried and were then given a myconid escort to the great stairs, which they descended into Burdock's Valley, from thence to return to the town of Gosterwick.

During their Downtime in the boom-town, each hero leveled up to Level 3. Aele's mastery of Thothian spirit-magic has led to his healing surges and holy blasts of wrath going from 2d6 to 2d10. He also has learned a second ritual, 'Thoth's Balm'.

Dorn rolled maximum additional hit points for achieving Level 3. His new maximum hit points are 34, and Aele's are 27. Invested with the passionate spirit of his deceased lover Exodore, Dorn's sword, now a named magic item - "Swift" - becomes a soul-bound weapon that will reveal increasing abilities as Dorn continues to gain levels.

The pair of adventurers have spent quite a bit of gold in their second (and most recent) Downtime in Gosterwick. They've purchased fine clothes that enabled them to pass muster at the posh Inn of the Stunned Acolyte. They've also acquired very high quality, gleaming chainmail from Torunn the Smith.

They now return to the mega-dungeon, Arden Vul. Dorn has sworn death to all beastmen therein, but this will require overcoming their leader and creator, the witch Deino; our heroes may not yet be a match for her.

Two miles outside of Gosterwick as the pair make their way back toward the twin colossi at the falls of Arden Vul, Aele calls a short break. "I have not yet enacted my rituals today. It would be a shame to need them and not have them prepared."

Now that he's Level 03, Aele can prepare two rituals daily. He does so now, preparing Thoth's Comfort and Thoth's Balm.

"Thoth's most freely given gift, valued not nearly enough, is wisdom. Thoth's eyes are upon his faithful. His words chime in their minds like the tinkling of silver bells. May Thoth bequeath the hidden knowledge to his servants. O Logos En-Amenti, Thoth-Hermes, Psuche-Stratos—Vibrate the Hidden Key. O Silver Tongue of the Night, who restored the Eye of Horus when it was shattered—hear me. As my blood meets the earth, let thy wisdom meet our wounds. From the void of the New Moon, bring forth the fullness of life." Aele finishes praying and pricks his left thumb with his belt knife.

Dorn has looked on and listened. "You have to cut yourself every time you invoke these rituals?"

"For Thoth's Balm, yes; though not for Thoth's Comfort, no."

"It's good that you're not queasy, then."

"All good things require sacrifice," Aele quips, and then the two proceed along the road. "It's curious. As I was invoking the rituals and hanging their potential energy in the arcanic effluvium, I noticed a cold-spot off to the west there," he says, gesturing off the road. "That's abnormal. Parts of other planes of existence are leaking into our prime."

"I'm going to pretend I completely understand what you just said," Dorn replies drily. "Come on, let's investigate this cold-spot of yours," and with that the warrior-rogue leads them off the road to the west. In the next dozen minutes, the two men cover half a mile.

"Do you smell that?" Dorn asks.

"Hmm, yes: sulfur."

They continue and soon top a rise and see an old abandoned shrine to Thoth-Cromm. It is overgrown with weeds, and surrounding it for several yards is muddy ground where gas bubbles occasionally bloat out and then pop. "Whew, there's the source of the stench," says Dorn.

"What a travesty!" Aele says, with feeling. "Someone has let this shrine grow dilapidated, but there's more. It has been defiled."

"And soon, your corpses will add their own stench to this paltry monument to your weak god," says a scratchy baritone voice, and then a man in a red robe steps from within the shrine and to the side of the entryway. Immediately another red-robed figure follows him out and pulls back his hood to reveal a swarthy-faced red-headed and red-bearded fellow. He pulls the morningstar from his belt and whistles, and this signal is answered by animalistic cries from the nearby trees, where four porcine beastmen have emerged and are now running to close the distance.

"I do believe we have been lured into an ambush," says Dorn, drawing Swift. "But this time, the outcome will be different!"

"Eulogeson tou Doulous-sou, O Thoth-Amon," Aele intones stridently, followed by tracing a crescent shape in the air between himself and Dorn, and adding, "Lah!"

Please note: some of the places where I post this serial installment do not permit links or image attachments. If you would prefer to skip over the blow-by-blow, round-by-round account of this confrontation, then you can scroll down to 'A Summary of Battle' below.

Let's set up some tracking for this combat:

Dorn gains 1d4 temp hit points upon drawing Swift. I rolled 3, so his HP at the start of battle are 37. His AC while wielding Swift is 21 — pretty decent for a low-level character. Aele's Thoth's Comfort ritual adds +1 to our heroes HP, for 38 (Dorn) and 28 (Aele). It also bonuses their armor class by +1, for AC 22 (Dorn) and AC 18 (Aele). A +1 bonus also applies to their saving throws for the next three minutes.

The wizard-priest's Thoth's Balm still hangs, on a hair trigger that Aele can pull if he and/or Dorn need healing during this combat.

Combatant AC Hp Surges
Dorn 22 38 0
Aele 18 28 3
Set Cultist #1 13 13 3
Set Cultist #2 14 12 0 (hurls flame for 2d6)
Beastman #1 14 20 0 (deals 2d4 dmg; atk bonus +4)
Beastman #2 14 23 0 (deals 2d4 dmg; atk bonus +4)
Beastman #3 15 19 0 (deals 2d4 dmg; atk bonus +4)
Beastman #4 13 21 0 (deals 2d4 dmg; atk bonus +4)

Round 1: Dorn takes a 5' step and attacks Cultist #1, rolling a 16 (he hits) and 12 damage, which converts to 4-HD, killing the cultist. He then moves into melee range of Cultist #2, but unfortunately Dorn gets a 1 on Fray Die, so doesn't deal any hit-die damage to Cultist #2.

Beastman #1 charges Aele, adding +2 to the attack roll. He hits, and inflicts 6 damage on the wizard-priest! Aele retaliates with fiery radiant energy for 9 damage, which converts to 2-HD of injury. Aele's Fray die cannot be of use against the beastman since it is 4 HD, so Aele uses it against Cultist #2, reducing it to 2 of 3 HD.

Beastman #4 moves to engage Dorn and, surprisingly, hits Dorn successfully for 4 damage.

Beastman #3 moves into melee with Dorn, gets a good hit roll, but not good enough to overcome his current AC. Beastman #2 move northwest to line up a crossbow shot on Dorn. Dorn loses Dex and shield benefit since he's facing other foes (effective AC 19). But the beastman's shot doesn't penetrate Dorn's chainmail.

End of round #1 (Cultist #1 slain and 3 of the remaining 5 foes are injured):

I can see, after this first round of combat, that the Fray die usage needs to be tweaked. So, I will do so in round #2.

Round #2: Dorn attacks Beastman #4, rolling a modified 11, a miss. He then uses his 1d6 Fray die against the 3-HD Cultist #2, rolling 4. Cultist #2 drops to 8/12 hp. That's it, for Dorn.

Next, Beastman #1 attacks Aele, rolling a modified 14. That's not good enough, and Aele takes no damage. Aele retaliates with a glob of fiery radiant energy that inflicts 15 unless the beastman saves for half damage (he doesn't). Beastman #1, already injured, drops dead. Aele then uses his Fray die on Cultist #2 but unfortunately it is ineffectual.

Beastman 4, 3, and 2 then attack Dorn. Dorn parries #3's attack, blocks #4's with his shield, and his chainmail stops the crossbow bolt from Beastman #2. Cultist #2 hits Dorn with glowing blue bolts of force for 10 damage, no saving throw, and Dorn drops to 24 of 38 hp.

Round #3: Dorn skewers Beastman #4 for 10 damage, dropping it to 6 remaining hit points. He then uses his Fray die against the remaining cultist, dropping him by 1 hp to 7 of 12 hit points.

Aele moves so that he is directly opposite Dorn and they flank Beastman #4 — giving them each +1 on their next melee attacks. He then reconsiders and uses his final daily Surge to deal 9 more damage to Beastman #4, kill it. Aele is now out of daily Surges, although he could sacrifice Fortune Points for more.

Beastman #3's attack is absorbed by Dorn's chain and mail armor. #2 charges him and hits for 3 damage, dropping Dorn to 21/38. The magic of Dorn's sword, Swift arcs out and injures Beastman #2 in retaliation, inflicting 3 points and dropping it to 20/23 hp.

The remaining cultist again peppers Dorn with glowing magic missiles, inflicting 7 more damage, and Dorn is down to 14/38. He grunts and stumbles then rights himself. "The Balm of Thoth restore thee, friend!" Aele shouts, and Dorn regains 17 hit points, putting him back up to 35/38 hit points.

Here is the heroes' situation at the end of round 3:

A Summary of Battle Injuries occur all around, but Dorn and Aele give better than they get. Finally, Dorn intimidates the remaining cultist into surrendering. Sure enough, the two surviving beastmen obey. Interesting...

Round #4: Dorn yells, "Call off your dogs and surrender, red-robe, and we will spare your life!" Dorn is skilled in intimidation and half of the Cultist's forces have been slain. Morale 8 and I'm going to rule Dorn's threat and the cultist's assessment of the odds drop that to a 6. If he rolls less than a 6, he'll continue the fight: result of 2d6 is 8.

"Back off!" the red-robed cultist screeches. "Back away! Now!!" And the two remaining beastmen take a few steps back and lower their weapons. "I will surrender if you will agree not to press charges or haul me off to a cell in Gosterwick."

"Not good enough," Dorn says, taking a step forward and staring down at the man. "You're going to help us with a little project in Arden Vul, and then we'll give you the choice of jail or death."

"Or ... " Aele interjects, greatly daring, "there might be a way for you to avoid both, if you convert to the worship of Thoth and tell us everything — and I do mean everything — that you know about the Cult of Set in the mega-dungeon."

***

On the eighteenth day since Dorn entered Arden's Mouth, so naively hopeful about the future, the fighter-rogue and his wizard-priest comrade return to Gosterwick. Dorn is grieving and furious at the loss of Exie simultaneously. What he doesn't yet realize is that, in a very real sense, she is still with him.

A farmer on the outskirts of the town sees their weariness and the body that they bear, and provides his mule and wagon so that Exie rolls into the town that she entered on her own two legs on her previous visit.

The two heroes turn their departed friend's body over to the local church clergy, who will prepare it for burial in the large cemetery northeast of the town proper, and who will arrange the eulogy ceremony (altogether, 53 gp).

An hour later, the two men are steaming in a lapiz-lazuli-tiled hot tub in their townhouse, and sipping Arcturian orojiam, a dark, smooth liquor with overtones of cinnamon, honey, and nutmeg.

They talk about various things — what to do with the wealth they've brought with them (about 845 imperials after the bilking they took at the local collector's shop upon selling off trinkets and art items acquired from the beastmen whom The Sovereign transformed into living beings of mycelium and compost). They also have sold Exie's belongings, including a statuette found in her pack that fetched 100 golden imperials.

"What in the world got into you with the Mushroom King? You played him like an Old Prelm bard plays a lute!" Dorn chuckles. Clearly, the liquor is effecting Dorn. And that's not a bad thing right now the wizard-priest thinks.

"Well, I've been talking to a lot of the Thothian priests, and reading whenever I get the chance. And Thalas had been bringing me up to speed on the Mad Wizard — that's Thalas' appellation for, as you called him, the 'Mushroom King'. Thalas holds that the myconid potentate is indeed in some sense a reincarnation of an ancient Thothian priest named Lycandrus. However, why and how did this reincarnation occur in the body of a myconid?"

"Go on," Dorn says.

"Well, this is a name you must never speak, or even think, if we are ever back in the Sovereign's territory. Psilofyr is an ancient god whose portfolio included all mycelial life. Thalas holds that the body is ultimately under Psilofyr's control, not the Sovereign's. Because I was well-versed and just recently well-read in this lore, I was able to leverage that knowledge and manipulate the Sovereign."

"And you did so masterfully," Dorn compliments, chuckling again. "So, it sounds like the [Sovereign][11] is one complicated customer."

"An understatement," Aele rejoins. "In some parts of Arden Vul, he is called The Mad Wizard. His connection to and mastery over the entire fungal forest and all its species does indeed give him what may appear to be wizardly powers. It goes without saying that he is exceedingly dangerous."

"I hadn't noticed," Dorn says sarcastically.

"We may be able to use him, play him, but doing so is dangerous. But if you are intent upon eradicating the beastmen, he could indeed be a very powerful ally."

Dorn sips more liquor. Then, "I am intent, fully resolved. But I won't stop with the beastmen. Arden Vul killed Exie. So now I intend to kill it."

Aele grins. "It's good to have goals."

That first evening back in Gosterwick, the heroes are simply too tired to do anything but bathe, salve their weary minds with liquor, and then enjoy the incredible luxury of a clean bed. On the second evening, they elect to dine at the most affluent establishment in Gosterwick, the Inn of the Stunned Acolyte.

Although Dorn thinks it is coin ill-spent, Aele insists that they first patronize [Creon's Curiosities & Fine Wares][8] on the Street of Silks. Creon, the proprietor, proves every bit as unctuous as the rumors make him out to be. They drop 123 imperials and leave with two sets of expensive finery wrapped in a tough, supposedly waterproof film. Dorn is sure he is developing an ulcer due to such profligacy, but Aele assures him this is necessary.

Next is a visit to The Silver Scale located not far from Creon's shop. There, Torunn the Smith fits both Aele and Dorn for quality chainmail armor. Because Gosterwick is a boom-town catering to adventurers bound for Arden Vul, Torunn has an unusually large supply and variety, and the two heroes leave the shop three hours later each sporting chainmail.

"We should've tried to sell our leathers," Dorn grumps, as they begin the walk back to Warden's Row and their townhouse.

"Yes, but not to Torunn. He would have been insulted. We can sell them at the weekly market. We'll leave them with Manfred at the temple, tell him he can keep 50% of whatever he gets for it as a temple offering."

"I have a better idea," Dorn says. "We donate the old armor to the town watch. Sure it's scuffed, but basically it's still decent armor, and we can make some friends among the local constabulary."

Aele regards his friend. "I do believe I'm starting to rub off on you. That's a smart notion!"

They drop off the donation armor and then head home, but not before selling off the potion of hill giant strength for 90 imperials. Once again, Dorn agonizes but Aele says, "We don't need it. We need gold. We have places to go, people to influence, Thrangir."

Their final stop is the offices of the local thesmothete, Theodora Komnene, where they pay taxes on their recent townhouse purchase, a ridiculous — to Dorn's mind, at least — 270 imperials! They sign the document Thrangir of Belaphas and Zorael of Archontos.

That evening, dressed in their new finery from Creon's shop, they dine at the upscale Inn of the Stunned Acolyte, where it turns out Aele has arranged for them to share a glass of wine with Aedelwine the Fair, Logothete of the Private House, who comes to understand just how 'terribly pleased' the two adventurers are with their new townhouse and how indebted to such figures as Aedelwine who 'selflessly pursue the common good and the economic fortitude of (get this: Aele uses the imperial name for Gosterwick) Vetucaster.' Successfully Groomed a Relationship. Tracker moves from strangers to acquaintances.

The heroes stay three days in Gosterwick. They have a small, quiet eulogy for burial for Surret of Arcturus. The priest of the local temple of Cromm-Thoth shakes Aele's hand afterward. "Well, Zorael, I am sorry for your loss. I hope that you and Thrangir are successful in your merchant ventures," he says, for the benefit of two acolytes who are listening.

Also during the three days, Aele/Zorael finds time to pray and meditate. With the Heart-Seed Scarab in his possession, he is able to learn a second ritual. This one is known as Thoth's Balm.

On day 3, Dorn says, "Finally! We need to get back to death and mayhem in the dungeon before you completely reduce me to poverty..."

In Shadowdim, heroes roll with Advantage when rolling for additional hit points upon level-ups. In going from level 2 to 3, Dorn rolled a 7 and a 10. Nice! Multiple perks for attaining level 3. He boosts STR to 18, saving throws improve, BAB improves, Dorn takes Defensive Knack, and see the result of Exie's passing.

Here's a snapshot of Dorn upon attaining Level 03:

PC Level Gestalt Hp Ac Surges Primary
[Dorn][1] 3 Fgt-Thf 34 20[21 wield] 0 +1 Longsword +8 hit (1d8+7)
Dorn Saves Poi 12(10) Bre 15(14) Poly 11 Spe 12 MagIt 13
Dorn Equip Chainmail Shortbow Longsword +1 knife lantern
Dorn Knacks Fleet Great Strike Defensive (none) (none)
Dorn Skills Stealth x 2 Intimidate x 2 Fence x 2 (none) (none)
Dorn Init 3(4 via Fleet) - - - - -

Aele in advancing from level 02 to 03 raises Con to 18, immediately granting 2 more hp (17 -> 19). Rolled additional hit points with Advantage, getting 3 & 5 (takes the 5 and adds 3 for 8 (19 -> 27)). No changes in BAB or Saving Throws. Aele takes Savant as 3rd level Knack. His heals and holy fires now do 2d10 (yes, I should have been using 2d8 instead of 2d6). Respect! The additional hitpoints help.

Here is his level 03 snapshot:

PC Level Gestalt Hp Ac Surges Primary
Aele 3 Wiz-Prst 27 17 3 Mace +1 hit/dmg
Aele Saves Poi 14(12) Bre 15 Poly 13(11) Spe 12 MagIt 11(9)
Aele Equip Chainmail mace torches flasks of oil buckler
Aele Knacks Tough Adept Savant (none) (none)
Aele Skills Cooking Forgotten Lore Social (none) (none)
Aele Init 1 - - - - -
Aele Known Rituals: 1 Thoth's Comfort Thoth's Balm - - -

This level-up and Downtime are brought to you by The Annals of the Simple Solo Roleplayer.

Shadowdim 23: A Ghastly End

- Posted in The Shadowdim by - Comments

The heroes have just successfully figured out the puzzle and have triggered the jade elephant statue, which now slides slowly but smoothly aside to reveal a vault beneath.

The three heroes stand within the Vault of the Elephant, the stale air of the chamber shifting as the massive stone effigy grinds across the floor to reveal the sub-vault's entrance. The two rescued goblin captives hover near the heroes’ heels, their wide eyes darting between the newfound treasure and their "Ambassador" saviors.

The mechanism has functioned perfectly. As the elephant statue completes its rotation, a set of narrow, dust-choked stairs descends into a smaller, more secure chamber below the main vault.

Aele's heart-seed scarab pulses with a faint amber light, reacting to the ancient Thothian resonance in the secure sub-structure.

The captives whisper to one another in their guttural tongue, clearly hesitant to enter a place even their King, Weskenim, has not seen inside for generations.

Dorn commands the goblins to stand guard at the entrance to the Vault of the Elephant, and to raise a hue and cry in alarm if anyone approaches while the heroes are below in the sub-vault. Before descending, Dorn will use an iron spike to ensure that the elephant statue cannot move back into place, sealing the heroes below.

With the spike firmly set and the goblins keeping watch, the heroes turn their attention to the narrow stairs. The Heart-Seed Scarab around Aele's neck pulses with a warm, amber light as he approaches the threshold, its Thothian magic sensing the ancient secrets buried below.

With the spike firmly set and the goblins keeping watch, the heroes turn their attention to the narrow stairs. The Heart-Seed Scarab around Aele's neck pulses with a warm, amber light as he approaches the threshold, its Thothian magic sensing the ancient secrets buried below.

The heroes descend into the cool, stagnant air of the sub-vault in a tight tactical formation. Dorn leads with his shield, the Aegis of the Firmament, held high to intercept any physical threats , while Aele remains a half-step behind, shielded by the fighter’s obsidian-clad bulk.

Maintaining the Blood-Bond, Cabe ensures that any sudden trap damage is distributed across the party's combined health pool.

The Heart-Seed Scarab pulses with amber light. Aele is mentally prepared to trigger Thoth's Champion at the first sign of a guardian.

The stairs end in a small, circular chamber. The floor is covered in a layer of fine, white dust. In the center of the room stands a waist-high stone plinth holding a heavy, leather-bound volume and a small, ivory box.

Aele steps forward, his Silver Signet (Magistrate's Ring) catching the amber light of the Heart-Seed Scarab as he raises his Staff of the Silver Tongue. Utilizing his Thothian insight, he begins a methodical scan of the chamber. His senses are heightened by his specialized gear. He carefully parses the magical weave for any "Weight of Ma'at" seals or similar ritualistic traps.

Aele detects a faint, shimmering aura surrounding the stone plinth. It is not a trap designed to harm, but rather a Vocal Lock or an Identity Seal.

The Ivory Box: The box is protected by a thin veil of abjuration magic that will likely trigger a "Guardianship" spell if opened by anyone not recognized as a Thothian Magistrate or priest.

The Leather Volume: This book is saturated with ancient Thothian energy. Aele senses that the Heart-Seed Scarab is the physical key required to safely lift the "Seal of Silence" from its pages.

The Floor: The white dust on the floor is not mere age; it is finely ground limestone, a common Thothian deterrent for tracking invisible entities—or perhaps revealing the footprints of those who shouldn't be here.

Aele steps closer to the plinth, the Heart-Seed Scarab around his neck glowing with an intense, rhythmic amber light as it recognizes the ancient Thothian wards. He places his hand near the Leather Volume, the translucent green agate of the scarab acting as a conduit between the Scholar and the ancient seal.

As Aele brings the scarab into proximity with the book, the shimmering blue aura begins to harmonize with the amber pulse of the agate. Aele recognizes the specific magical signature as a variation of the seal he was told the scarab could bypass.

The Silver Signet (Magistrate's Ring) on his finger hums in resonance, signaling to the sub-vault's dormant logic that a recognized official of the Empire is present. With a soft click that echoes through the circular chamber, the leather straps on the volume unlatch themselves, and the veil over the ivory box thins into nothingness.

With the magical wards neutralized by the scarab, the contents of the plinth are now accessible:

Item Description Aele's assessment
The Leather Volume An ancient Thothian tome titled "The Resonances of the Deep Pipes." Grants Advantage on checks to navigate or manipulate the machinery of Arden Vul.
The Ivory Box A small, cold box carved with the likeness of a lotus. Contains three vials of shimmering liquid and a silver key.

Dorn remains at the ready with Swift and the Aegis of the Firmament, his eyes scanning the shadows of the room for any physical guardians that the magical silent alarm might have summoned despite Aele's bypass. Cabe maintains the Blood-Bond, his senses heightened by the primal energy of the vault. The sub-vault remains quiet for now.

Aele carefully reaches for the ivory box, his Silver Signet glinting in the amber light as he lifts the lid. Inside, the silver key and the three vials of shimmering liquid are revealed in the glow of the Heart-Seed Scarab.

Aele performs a quick scholar’s appraisal of the items:

The silver key is cold to the touch and engraved with a stylized elephant’s head; Aele suspects this is the "Master Key" to the deeper mechanisms of the Vault of the Elephant.

Aele recognizes the three shimmering vials as Thothian Elixirs.

Vial 1 (Pale Blue): An Elixir of Clarity, likely granting a temporary boost to Intelligence checks or mental saving throws.

Vial 2 (Deep Crimson): A potent healing draught, possibly equivalent to a high-tier potion of vitality.

Vial 3 (Swirling Amber): This elixir resonates with the Heart-Seed Scarab, perhaps used to temporarily empower Thothian rituals or surges.

While Cabe keeps watch and Dorn remains braced behind the Aegis of the Firmament, Aele turns his attention to the ancient tome. As a Savant and Adept with the Heart-Seed Scarab, he decodes the Thothian script with remarkable speed.

Engineering Map: The volume contains a schematic of the Pipe Tunnels on Sublevel 4, marking the flow of the "Great Breath" and identifying hidden maintenance bypasses.

The Elephant’s Purpose: The book reveals that the Vault of the Elephant was originally designed as a pressure-stabilization chamber for the entire mega-dungeon's hydraulic system.

Ritual Instruction: Aele finds a passage that describes how to use the Silver Key to manually override the Cistern of Skulls floodgates, which could be a decisive tactical advantage in future encounters.

Aele carefully stows the ancient tome and the delicate ivory box into his gear, his Silver Signet glinting as he secures the new assets. With the Heart-Seed Scarab continuing to pulse with a steady amber light, the heroes turn their back on the circular chamber to follow the "Maintenance Bypass" path described in the text.

Following the schematics from the tome, the heroes ascend the stairs, retrieve the Iron Spike to free the elephant mechanism, and signal the goblin sentries to follow. According to the book, a concealed lever behind a loose stone in the main vault's northern wall reveals the Maintenance Bypass.

Dorn finds the concealed lever fairly easily. A narrow, vertical shaft with a rusted iron ladder descends deep into the mechanical "guts" of the Pipe Tunnels. This bypass allows the party to circumvent the main corridors, potentially emerging behind any remaining Beastman patrols near the Cistern of Skulls.

The ladder down into the Maintenance Bypass is slick with condensation and the smell of ancient oil is thick.

As the heroes exit the sub-vault and return to the Vault of the Elephant, something in the magical programming of this site is triggered, perhaps because the Sun-Pendant was removed from the jade elephant statue. Ghasts and the chamber's husks now attack.

Aele stands tall, his Silver Signet Ring catching the amber light of the Heart-Seed Scarab. As the wooden feline constructs tense their springs to leap, Aele strikes the floor with the butt of his staff, projecting a voice of magisterial authority that resonates with the ancient harmonics of the vault.

Aele uses his Advantage (Scarab/Lore) and his +2 bonus (Leather Volume/Thothian Mystery).

Roll 1: 18 | Roll 2: 14
Result: 18 + 4 (Int) + 3 (Proficiency) + 2 (Volume) = 27.

Success: The command is absolute. The feline husks, mid-pounce, twist in the air with impossible agility. Instead of landing on Dorn, they use the warrior's pauldrons as springboards, their wooden claws extending like jagged obsidian as they pivot toward the pale horrors climbing out of the shaft.

Aele has used his Action to dominate the constructs. Now, he utilizes the Scribe's Linothorax to trigger a ritual as a Bonus Action.

Ritual Triggered: Thoth's Comfort.

Effect: Aele, Cabe, and Dorn each gain +1 HP (instantaneous), and +1 to AC and Saving Throws for the next 30 rounds.

Scarab Synergy: Because this ritual restores hit points, the Heart-Seed Scarab triggers.

Aele feels the Heart-Seed Scarab pulse with a rhythmic, golden warmth as the Thoth's Comfort ritual takes hold. The amber light flows from the agate scarab into his chest, weaving a shimmering lattice of protective energy around his soul. Aele gains 5 (1d6) Temporary Hit Points.

Party Status

Hero HP Temp HP AC Status
Aele 41/41 5 16 Linothorax Active; Rituals are Bonus Actions.
Dorn 35/34 0 27 Swift is drawn (+1 AC); Aegis active.
Cabe 32/31 0 16 Bow drawn; Blood-Bond active.

Dorn draws Swift with a ring of cold steel, and stands as a bastion of iron and jade. With an AAC of 27, the Ghast's filthy claws (which usually require a 13 or 14 to hit a standard knight) now need a natural 19 or 20 to find a gap in his defenses.

Dorn steps into the Ghast's reach, using the weight of his +1 Plate to shoulder-charge the creature while swinging Swift in a brutal horizontal arc.

Attack Roll: 17 + 8 (Base/Knack/Str) + 1 (Thoth's Comfort) = 26 to hit.
Damage: 1d8 + 8(Str/Knack) = 15 Damage.
The Result: The blow is devastating. Dorn cleaves through the 
Ghast’s ribs, the magical edge of Swift cauterizing the necrotic flesh. 

Dorn follows through with a shield bash (Great Strike), forcing the creature to make a Strength save.

Ghast Strength Save: 8 (Failure).
Effect: The Ghast is sent reeling backward, 
tumbling over the lip of the shaft and falling 
30 feet into the dark. CRUNCH.

Current Tactical Standing Ghast #1: Being shredded by the 3 Feline Husks at the edge of the shaft.

Ghast #2: Fallen 30 feet down the shaft (Taking 3d6 falling damage).

Husks: Occupying the front line.

The Rear Door: The door behind the party has creaked open further. A third Ghast, wearing the tattered remains of a Thothian Priest's robe, is standing in the threshold. It is not attacking yet; it is staring at Aele’s Heart-Seed Scarab with a look of starving recognition.

The battle rhythm tightens as the party faces a pincer attack. Dorn stands as an iron wall at the central shaft, while Cabe and Aele pivot to address the robed horror at the rear door.

Cabe sees the Ghast-Priest staring at Aele’s scarab. Knowing that undead focus is often the prelude to a powerful curse or a lethal pounce, he draws his bowstring to his ear. The Blood-Bond allows him to feel Aele’s intent to channel, so Cabe times his release to disrupt the creature first.

Action: Ranged Attack with Longbow.
Attack Roll: 19 + 6 = 25 to hit.
Damage: $1d8 + 1d6$ (Fire) + 2 (Red Frenzy/if active) = 13 Damage.
Result: The arrow thuds into the Ghast-Priest’s chest, the fire igniting 
the ancient, dry silk of its Thothian robes. The creature screeches, its 
focus on the scarab momentarily broken by the searing pain.

As the Ghast-Priest reels from Cabe’s arrow, Aele steps forward. He raises the Heart-Seed Scarab high, its amber light flaring into a blinding, solar brilliance that fills the vault. He speaks a word of Final Rest in the Old Thothian tongue.

Action: Turn Undead.
The Check: Aele rolls 1d20 + 7 (Wis/Prof) 
with Advantage (Scarab/Lore synergy).
Rolls: 15, 19. Result: 26.
Effect: The Ghast-Priest’s milky eyes widen 
in terror as the holy light of Thoth washes 
over it. It isn't just turned; it is physically 
repulsed. 

The ghast scrambles backward into the dark hallway beyond the door, clawing at the walls to escape the Magistrate’s light.

Dorn maintains his position at the lip of the shaft. Below, he can hear the second Ghast groaning as it tries to find purchase on the mechanical rails to climb back up. Above him, the three Feline Husks have finished shredding the first Ghast into necrotic confetti and are now crouched at the edge, their wooden heads tilting in unison as they look down the shaft, awaiting Dorn’s lead. He plants his +2 Shield and readies Swift. If any creature reaches the lip of the shaft, he will use his Great Strike to send them back down.

  • Ghast #1: Destroyed.
  • Ghast #2: 30 feet down the shaft, injured (15 HP remaining), attempting to climb.
  • Ghast-Priest: Fleeing into the rear hallway (Turned for 1 minute).
  • Goblins: Pips is cheering from the scroll racks. "Big-light! The Magistrate brings the big-light!"

Dorn points a gauntleted finger toward the dark opening. "Down! Finish it!"

The Feline Husks don't hesitate. Their wooden frames snap with the tension of released springs as they launch themselves into the circular shaft. The sound from below is a chaotic mixture of splintering wood, the wet tearing of necrotic flesh, and a final, gurgling screech that echoes up the stone walls before abruptly falling silent.

The Shaft is Secured A few moments later, the only sound coming from the sub-vault is the rhythmic click-clack of wooden claws on stone as the constructs begin to prowl the lower chamber, awaiting further orders. The immediate threat from below has been neutralized.

The Rear Hallway Aele’s holy light continues to pulse from the Heart-Seed Scarab, creating a zone of sanctuary. The Ghast-Priest is gone, fled deep into the darkness of the marbled halls, its cowardly shrieks fading into the distance.

Pips hops down from the scroll rack, his eyes wide. "The Big-Man commands the wooden cats! This is a good omen, yes! Very good!" He scurries over to the edge of the shaft and peers down. "The way is clear to the guts of the world now."

Dorn grips the Copper Trunk and the Sun-Pendant, giving them a sharp, practiced twist and lift. As the keys clear the floor-slot, the vault responds with a heavy, grinding groan. The Jade Elephant begins to slide back toward its original position with a slow, hydraulic inevitability, and the circular shaft in the floor starts to iris shut.

"The cats are on their own down there for a moment," Dorn grunts, stowing the heavy keys and tightening the grip on his shield. "But that priest is too dangerous to leave at our backs."

Aele and Cabe nod, the Blood-Bond thrumming with the adrenaline of the hunt. The party turns away from the treasures of the vault and sprints toward the rear door, stepping over the necrotic remains of the first Ghast.

The marbled hall beyond the door is cold and opulent, lined with white stone pillars that have been stained by centuries of damp. Aele’s Heart-Seed Scarab continues to pulse with the fading energy of the Turn Undead, illuminating the hallway in rhythmic bursts of amber light.

The Trail: The Ghast-Priest’s retreat was anything but subtle. Pale, putrid ichor from its arrow wound streaks the floor, and the sound of its frantic, wet clawing against the marble walls echoes from around a corner roughly sixty feet ahead.

The Environment: The hallway opens up into a larger gallery with separate doors leading to the left and right. The air here smells of stale incense and dry rot. Finally, the corner the ghast in a hall with rooms along its sides. Aele makes a mental note to investigate the 'Chamber of Transition' and the 'Vestry of the Unspoken'. These are liturgical terms, suggesting this area served as a preparation wing for high-ranking Thothian priests before they entered the presence of the "Elephant."

The Ghast-Priest, its back turned as it frantically claws at the bronze door, is a sitting duck for a warrior of Dorn's caliber. Dorn doesn't just run; he uses the momentum of his heavy plate, launching himself into the air ten feet from the target.

Attack Roll: 18 + 8  (Base/Str/Knack) + 1 (Comfort) = 27 to hit.
Damage: 1d8 + 8 (Str/Knack) = 16 Damage.

Dorn descends like an iron comet. Swift bites deep into the Ghast-Priest’s shoulder, cleaving through the desiccated muscle and bone down to the sternum. The force of the impact slams the creature against the bronze door with a metallic GONG.

The Ghast-Priest let out a final, rattling hiss as the magical edge of Swift—imbued with the light of the vault—severs its connection to the negative plane. The creature collapses into a heap of tattered silk and grey, crumbling flesh. It is truly destroyed.

Cabe skids to a halt, bow still half-drawn, checking the shadows of the "Vestry" and "Chamber" doors. "Cleanly done, Dorn. But look at the door..."

The Bronze Door & The Mystery

The door the Ghast-Priest was trying to open is slightly ajar now, forced by the impact of Dorn’s strike. Beyond it lies not a room, but a steep spiral staircase winding upward. Aele notices a distinct lack of dust on these stairs; something has been using this passage recently.

Dorn says, "All right. Let's go back and investigate those jars and scrolls, then we'll return here, investigate a couple of rooms that seem to have attracted Aele's interest. Finally, we'll investigate this spiral stairwell, which shows signs of recent use."

Ritual: Thoth's Champion

- Posted in The Shadowdim by - Comments

This Thothian Ritual can only be learned by a Thothian wizard-priest of at least Level 4. The Ritual can be prepared by reciting a brief prayer to Thoth while touching a melee weapon or armor. When the wizard-priest triggers the effect of this ritual, either the wizard-priest or an ally he can see within thirty feet gains +2 to attack bonus and saving throws for the remainder of the current round, and for the next four rounds. These bonuses stack with any other bonuses that already apply to attacks or saving throws.

The brain is a marvelous, ineffable entity that is greater than the sum of its parts. And it is fallible. And it knows when to shut down, when to check out. Some indeterminate period of time after the battle with the beastmen, Dorn and Aele's brains began to take tentative sips of the that complex brew, Reality.

"Ughhh..." Dorn groans. "Exie? Exie, are you o— Recollection smashes into Dorn's brain and it gags and reflexively jerks away, and Dorn gratefully embraces blackness again. Aele looks over at his unconscious friend with remorse, with compassion, and yes — with somewhat of a fatherly affection for the younger man. "Old friend, I am so very sorry. Sorry for your loss, and sorrier still for the battle ahead of you. Exie was my newfound acquaintance, but very clearly she was your everything."

Beyond the depths of Arden Vul, dawn is breaking upon the Surface world; but in the subterranean environs of the dungeon, cycles of day and night become distant concepts. Here, it is sameness: cold, damp, uncomfortable, dangerous. Violence and death live here. Nine hours have passed since a force of myconid men ambushed not only Dorn and Aele, but also their beastmen foes.

Dorn has a headache, but he is sitting up, drinking water from his own waterskin, digging a biscuit from his own pack. He looks over at Aele. "They didn't take our stuff?" he asks, stupidly.

"No, and we seem to be in an old abandoned storage room." He indicates the closed door with a gesture. The door is of wood, banded in rusty but still very strong iron.

"Are we prisoners?" Dorn asks. He can faintly perceive the door. Luminous lichen provides some illumination.

"There are six myconid men beyond the door. Ask me how I know that..."

"How do you know?" Dorn asks.

"Because they very roughly insisted I stay put when I tried to open the door and take a stroll. It seems we are being held for some reason."

"I lost consciousness," Dorn says. "Near the end of the fight, when we were about to be killed. I seem to recall seeing you unconscious too, before I collapsed."

"You did. Somehow they rendered us unconscious. Us, and the remaining beastmen too."

"They killed them, I suppose?"

"No actually. They are being kept somewhere close by. I very clearly heard their howling and bleating an hour ago."

"These ... myconids. What are they? They're obviously intelligent."

The priest considers. "Indeed. That they have left us our weapons and other supplies seems to suggest that they perceive us to be of little threat, and that perhaps we'll be released soon. We can hope, anyway."

"All my hopes for the future have fled."

Aele squats down next to the fighter. "Dorn, listen to me. There are no words adequate for your loss, and I will remain your staunch friend, whether you rage or weep. But you must not give in to despair or apathy. Guard yourself against these, my friend."

Silence for ten heartbeats. "It is sage advice, old friend, and I take it to heart. I will rage and weep, perhaps both at once, but despair? Never. I will see Exie avenged. If we escape this present situation with our lives, I will make it my purpose to absolutely eradicate these beastmen. I will carve such a swathe of destruction through Arden Vul that they will sing about it when our bones have long since turned to powder."

A deep, resonant voice booms thunderously. "Bring me the Interlopers!" Aele and Dorn get to their feet as the door to their impromptu holding cell is opened. A man stands there — except, this is no man. This may once have been a man, but what stands silhouetted in the door frame is now something ... other. A bloated, grey-skinned corpse, covered in shelf mushrooms and pulsing white mycelium, beckons the two adventurers to leave their pen. They smell of damp earth and rot is strong. Worms wriggle through the wet, glistening compacted compost innards of this Fungal Servant.

It beckons, but it does not speak — probably cannot.

"Don't have to tell me twice," Aele says, and he adjusts the mace looped through his belt as Dorn follows him. They find themselves in the incomprehensibly vast cavern that is home to an entire fungal forest. Everywhere, there are luminous lichens growing on stone walls, while black, rich loam compresses under each footfall.

"Follow!" a bass, commanding voice says. Dorn cuts his eyes to Aele and they share a look. They've both realized it at the same time: the voice is in their minds. This vegetative abomination hasn't spoken.

"Lead the way, Cabbage Patch," Dorn says, and as they fall in behind Sir Slime the priest comments, "You do a disservice to cabbages everywhere." They are led for a couple minutes down a path that parallels a stone wall, part of the massive cavern itself. The ambient light from mosses and other biolumenescent organisms is considerable, perhaps comparable to a full moon on the Surface. They pass toadstools tiny, man-sized, and huge. The thing that leads them turns, taking a path through a forest of mushrooms a dozen feet high. Vines growing along the ground visibly move and slither. Here and there are groups of brightly glowing shrooms in clumps, sucking nutrients from the loam.

They pass phalanxes of mushroom men, seven feet tall, marching in the opposite direction. "How did they knock us out, I wonder?" Dorn says. "Poison? I don't recall any darts or —"

"— spores, most likely," Aele answers. "I imagine that—"

"Be silent!" commands the deep, resonant Voice.

Now they turn a bit more rightward, perhaps moving closer to the center of the great forest. A shambling mound of vegetation blocks the path ahead, but moves aside — with a sound like a felled tree being dragged through a cornfield — after a few seconds of non-verbal communication with the heroes' fungal tour guide.

The air in the Fungal Court is heavy, tasting of damp earth and an overwhelming, bittersweet musk of ripening spores. As Aele and Dorn are ushered into the central cavern, the bioluminescence shifts from the faint green of the tunnels to a throbbing, rhythmic violet.

Massive, shelf-like fungi protrude from the walls like the balconies of an opera house, packed with silent observers. Myconid guards clutch spears of sharpened obsidian, their caps scarred and weathered. Slumbering in the shadows are bloated, beetle-like monstrosities and shambling mounds of sentient lichen that pulse in time with the chamber’s light.

At the center of the hall, rising from a throne of calcified puffballs, is The Sovereign. It is a titan of decay, standing twelve feet tall with a cap that spans the width of a small cottage. Its "skin" is a mosaic of peeling ivory and deep indigo veins, and long, translucent filaments drift from its gills like a ghostly beard.

The violet pulse of the chamber intensifies as Dorn and Aele are brought to the center of the court.

The Sovereign does not move, yet as the heroes approach, a pressurized hum vibrates behind their eyes—not a sound, but a psychic weight.

"Soft-fleshed walkers... you bring the heat of the sun-lit world into the cool silence of my garden. I am the Root, the Rot, and the Rebirth. You stand in the heart of the Mycelium. Speak your intent, before your breath becomes the very air my children drink."

Aele catches Dorn's eyes and the priest very deliberately draws forth the silvered ankh of Thoth, laying a finger aside his nose with a wink that communicates 'follow suit...

The rhythmic thrum in their skulls grows sharper as the heroes are forced to a halt by their myconid escort. To the left and right, the beastmen they were battling only hours ago are no longer the frenzied predators Dorn remembers. They are lashed to pillars of giant stalk-wood by thick, emerald-green vines that pulse with a sickening, peristaltic rhythm. The beastmen strain, their muscles bulging, but the flora holds with the strength of iron.

Above them, small, pale myconids drift like nursing ghosts, dusting the captives with a fine, shimmering powder. The Sovereign looks down at the struggling creatures with a cold, detached paternalism.

The Sovereign’s psychic projection shifts from a hum to a resonant, echoing baritone that smells of ancient papyrus and desert dust.

"Do not envy them, little strays. They are the fortunate ones. Their chaos will be pruned; their discordant screams will soon join the harmonious silence of the Great Compost. They go to a higher purpose—to serve the Root as they never could serve themselves."

The massive entity leans forward, its translucent filaments brushing the floor.

"You woke only because I willed it. You breathe only because I allow it. I am the end of all things, yet I remember the beginning. I remember the gilded halls of the Great River and the secrets of the Ibis. I am Lycandrus, returned from the soil of ages."

The psychic weight becomes a crushing pressure, and the heroes are forced to their knees.

"Give me your names, your purpose, and your absolute fealty. Tell me why I should not plant you alongside these beasts and watch you bloom in the dark."

Aele catches Dorn's eye once more before turning his attention to The Sovereign. The priest holds forth the silver ankh, cutting his eyes briefly to ensure Dorn is doing the same. "Great Lycandrus, we are humble acolytes of Thoth, assaulted without provocation as we sought to make pilgrimage to this hallowed forest, to offer our obeisance to you."

Ask the Dice: How well do the heroes sell this? Each burns a Fortune Point to gain advantage as they make checks against their Charisma. Answer: They sell it more than adequately. Dorn rolled his Charisma score, but Aele got a 4. Very convincing.

The crushing pressure of the telepathy immediately lifts. The Sovereign’s "voice" loses its abrasive edge, replaced by a haunting, scholarly curiosity. "We are pleased that you sought to make this pilgrimage. As Thoth's chief servant, I foreknew your peril as I saw you journeying from afar. Long have the servants of Thoth been menaced by the bestial once-men. Not to worry. They are being processed and will soon join my numerous Spore Servants. Long have these vermin troubled us."

Aele lets his head hang forward, eyes downcast in obeissance. Then, he slowly draws forth the necklace from beneath his hauberk, displaying the holy symbol of Thoth. "I have served Thoth for twenty seasons of the sunlit world. But this youngling by my side is a recent convert. He is overcome by your august presence, which accounts for his lack of speech. Great Lycandrus, your servant humbly requests your leave to briefly depart this hallowed place in order to take our fallen comerade to the Surface. We wish to resupply and then return to this realm, to fight your enemies."

The Sovereign’s massive, fungal bulk tremors, its cap tilting back as if gasping for air it does not need. The numerous myconid guards lower their obsidian spears in a synchronized, swaying motion.

The voice of The Sovereign is no longer a command; it is a trembling, ancient resonance, heavy with the weight of centuries.

"The Ibis... the Quill... the Infinite Librarian. That sigil... it is a spark of the Great Sun in this tomb of rot. Aele, is it? You carry the mark of the Master of Words. I see the ink of the Thothian scrolls in the marrow of your soul. Forgive the coldness of my welcome; the soil has made me forget the warmth of the temple fires."

The Sovereign—the spirit of Lycandrus—lowers its head in a slow, creaking bow.

"We are kin in the Great Work, Priest. You serve the Knowledge that creates; I serve the Knowledge that decomposes. Both are written in the Ledger of Thoth. Your request is granted. But first, while my servants collect valuables of the beastmen for your use, join me in the Ceremony of Decay."

As the Sovereign addresses Aele with newfound warmth, he gestures dismissively toward the bound beastmen. The "grace" he has shown the heroes is not extended to them.

The transformation is a slow, agonizing symphony of biological horror. The emerald vines aren't just binding the beastmen; they are feeding. The heroes watch as hair-thin tendrils, white as bone, begin to burrow into the beastmen's tear ducts, nostrils, and ears.

One beastman tries to scream, but only a thick, grey cloud of spores escapes his throat. His jaw distends as a shelf of orange bracket fungi bursts through the skin of his neck, hardening into a natural collar.

Their muscles don't just weaken; they begin to slough beneath the skin. The outline of their ribcages shift as the internal organs are slowly digested and replaced by a dense, fibrous mycelium.

The frantic terror in their eyes begins to glaze over, replaced by a dull, rhythmic violet glow. Their twitching limbs settle into a terrifying, mechanical stillness. They are no longer creatures of flesh and blood; they are becoming living compost, their nervous systems hijacked by the Sovereign’s hive-mind.

"Do not look away, Priest," Lycandrus whispers. "Observe the ultimate library. Their memories, their strengths, their very essence... it is all being indexed into the Forest. Nothing is lost. It is merely... archived."

Lycandrus leans his massive, shelf-like cap toward Aele and Dorn, the movement sounding like the rustle of ancient parchment. The violet light in the chamber dims, focusing into a tight, conspiratorial amber glow around the heroes.

The Sovereign’s psychic voice drops to a dry, raspy whisper, the mental equivalent of a scroll being unrolled for the first time in millennia.

"Because you carry the Ibis, I will give you a truth that the mindless crawlers of these halls have forgotten. You seek the deeper descents, do you not? You seek the heart of Arden Vul, where the stone remembers the stars."

He extends a long, spindly finger—more a cluster of rootlets than a hand—pointing toward the damp, crumbling floor of the court.

"Below us, where the Great Pipe heaves the breath of the mountain, there lies the Hall of Records. The beastmen and the scavengers think it a tomb, but it is a vault. There is a stone door there, marked with the Feather of Truth. It will not open for blood, nor for iron."

The Sovereign reaches into a cavity in his own chest—a hollow filled with a glowing, bioluminescent nectar—and withdraws a small, calcified object. It is a fossilized scarab, turned to translucent green agate by the fungal enzymes. He offers it to Aele.

"Take this. It is a fragment of my own calcified heart from the life before. When you reach the door of the Hall, place this within the eye of the Ibis carved upon the lintel. It will recognize the resonance of a true Priest of Thoth. But heed me, Aele: the secrets within are guarded by those who died refusing to forget. They may not recognize your face, even if they recognize your god.

He places the scarab gently in to Aele's quivering, outstretched palm. "Here, guard it well, loyal priest. My servants will escort you to a place where you can leave these Depths. Come to me upon your return, that I may learn of recent happenings in the Surface world and my task you with a special mission for Thoth."

Only a few hours later, Dorn and Aele stand in Burdock's Vale. They have fashioned a travois to bear Exie's corpse. They set out for Newmarket, each heeding the worries and broodings of a sorrow-laden heart.

P.S. this info not kept online, just locally: it's likely that the heroes at some point will use the Heart-Seed Scarab to access the Hall of Cylinders (i.e., the Hall of Records). The Sovereign will certainly attempt to manipulate them into doing so, for he cannot breach that location himself.

The Hall of Records

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Located on the lower periphery of Level 3, the Hall of Records is a pocket of Thothian architecture preserved from the encroaching rot. Unlike the chaotic, organic tunnels of the Mushroom Forest, this area is defined by sharp angles, polished basalt, and silent, dust-choked air.

The Entrance: The Gate of Feathers The stone door is a massive slab of black diorite. In its center is a deep indentation in the shape of a scarab, set within the chest of a carved Ibis. Without the Heart-Seed Scarab, any attempt to force the door triggers a Symbol of Hopelessness (DC 16), as the weight of all forgotten history crushes the intruder's spirit.

Danger Description
The Ink-Bound Wraiths The spirits of scribes who died clutching their scrolls. They appear as shadows dripping with black, caustic ink. Their touch doesn't just drain life; it erases the victim's prepared spells or recent memories (1d4 hours of memory lost on a hit).
The Dust of Ages A thick layer of grey powder covers the floor. If disturbed, it rises as a suffocating cloud. Characters must pass a DC 14 Constitution Save or be Blinded and Silenced for 1 minute as the dust cakes their throat and eyes.
The Cinnabar Golem Standing guard over the central codex is a small, heavy construct made of toxic cinnabar (mercury ore). It emits a poisonous aura, and its strikes deal additional psychic damage as it "writes" the pain of the blow into the target's mind.

The hall does not contain paper books. Instead, it houses thousands of clay cylinders etched with micro-cuneiform. If Aele uses the Scarab here, he can "hear" the cylinders whispering. One cylinder specifically contains the true name of a demon currently imprisoned on Level 4, which could be used as a powerful bargaining chip later.


As Aele steps into the Hall of Records, the silence is absolute—a dry, heavy vacuum that seems to swallow the sound of your footsteps. Rows upon rows of basalt shelves stretch into the darkness, lined with thousands of terracotta cylinders.

When Aele holds the Heart-Seed Scarab aloft, the agate stone begins to vibrate. The vibration isn't physical; it’s a psychic hum that resonates with the clay. Suddenly, the silence is shattered not by sound, but by a thousand overlapping mental voices—the Whisper of the Cylinders.

The Collective Echo At first, it is a chaotic cacophony—the accounting of grain harvests, the lineage of minor nobles, and the architectural measurements of forgotten tombs. But as Aele focuses his will, the Scarab acts as a tuning fork, silencing the mundane and pulling one specific, jagged thread of information to the forefront.

A single voice, cold and rhythmic as a falling chisel, drowns out the others:

"Record 774-Theta: The Bound Betrayer. Let it be known that the Flesh-Stitcher, Vhal-Gorgoth, remains interred within the Obsidian Font on the floor below. His physical form is sundered, yet his shadow hunger persists. He cannot be slain by blades, for his life is tethered to the three Bronze Canopic Jars hidden in the alcoves of the Wailing Stair."

The voice turns into a wet, rasping cough before continuing:

"Should the seals fail, speak the word 'Khem-Ur-Shatter' to bind his limbs for the space of twelve heartbeats. Do not speak it twice, for the name is a toxin to the living tongue."

The Aftermath The psychic resonance ends abruptly. Aele, you feel a sharp, metallic tang in the back of your throat, and your hand holding the scarab goes momentarily numb.

The Knowledge Gained:

The Name: You now know the True Name and command word for a powerful entity below (Vhal-Gorgoth).

The Weakness: You know his life is tied to three Bronze Canopic Jars on the "Wailing Stair."

The Cost: Aele must make a DC 12 Constitution Save. On a failure, he cannot speak for the next 10 minutes as his tongue feels like it has been turned to dry clay.


Kicking aside a pile of shattered terracotta, Dorn finds a rotted leather satchel—the remains of a thief or scribe who perished centuries ago. Inside, tucked away from the fungal rot, is a small, heavy pouch containing six heavy coins made of "Sun-Gold" (Electrum).

The Mark: Each coin is stamped with the Scales of Ma’at on one side and a stylized desert sun on the other.

The Property: These are not mere currency. They are Soul-Obols. In the depths of Arden Vul, certain ancient spirits or mechanical guardians may accept these as "payment" to bypass a room or gain information, sparing the party a deadly fight.

Value: To a collector, they are worth 50gp each; to the denizens of the deep, they are priceless.

The Guardian Awakens: The Cinnabar Golem The moment Dorn’s fingers close around the coins, the stillness of the room is broken by a sound like thick liquid being poured onto stone.

In the center of the hall, a statue you assumed was merely a decorative pillar begins to lose its shape. It is a humanoid figure, roughly seven feet tall, but its surface is a swirling, hypnotic metallic red. It does not have a face—only a smooth, rounded head that reflects your torchlight in distorted, crimson streaks.

The Toxic Sentry As it steps forward, the air around it begins to shimmer with a heavy heat haze. This is a Cinnabar Golem, a construct forged from solidified mercury and alchemical sulfur.

The Mercury Stride: It doesn't walk so much as flow; its limbs elongate and contract with terrifying fluidity. One moment its arm is a fist, the next a jagged, heavy blade of shimmering red metal.

The Poisonous Aura: As it approaches, both Dorn and Aele feel a sudden, pounding headache. The golem emits mercurial vapors. (Anyone within 10 feet must succeed on a DC 13 Constitution Save at the start of their turn or be Poisoned).

The Crimson Strike: It strikes with a heavy, wet thud. Its attacks deal 2d8+4 bludgeoning damage, and the impact leaves behind a smear of toxic red dust that seeps into armor and skin.

The Golem raises a heavy, shapeless hand toward Dorn, its entire body vibrating with a low, metallic hum that mimics the sound of a tolling bell. It is not here to talk; it is here to "sanitize" the archive of those who do not belong.

The Heart-Seed Scarab

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Item: The Heart-Seed Scarab

Wondrous Item (Holy Symbol), Rare (Requires Attunement by a Cleric or Paladin of Thoth)

This thumb-sized scarab is carved from translucent green agate, pulsing with a faint, internal amber light. It feels strangely warm to the touch, unlike the cold dampness of the Fungal Court.

Resonance of the Ibis: While holding the scarab, you have Advantage on Intelligence (History) and Intelligence (Religion) checks related to the Thothian Empire and the ruins of Arden Vul.

Echo of Lycandrus: You can use the scarab as a spellcasting focus. When you cast a spell that restores hit points, the target gains 1d6 temporary hit points as a thin, protective film of translucent spores coats their skin for 1 minute.

The Vault Key: The scarab is the only physical key capable of bypassing the "Weight of Ma'at" seal on the Hall of Records.

Given to Aele by The Sovereign of the Mushroom Forest on Level 3 of Arden Vul (2.6.2026)

This magic item grants access to the Hall of Cylinders. It is likely that Aele and Dorn will go there at some point.

The Thothian Enclave

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Key Figures of the Thothian Enclave

Thalas: The High Priest of Thoth. He is the supreme authority within the enclave and is primarily focused on the restoration of ancient knowledge and the maintenance of the Great Library.

Setmose: A senior priest who often handles the more practical (and sometimes martial) defense of the temple’s interests.

Nanefer: A prominent priestess and scholar known for her deep understanding of the arcane and the history of the Arch-Mage Arden Vul himself.

Khamet: Usually encountered as a secondary official, often involved in the administration of the lower-ranking scribes and the preservation of scrolls.


Understanding Their Role

The Thothians aren't your typical "evil cult." They see themselves as the rightful inheritors of the mountain’s secrets. When dealing with them, keep these three things in mind:

Neutrality: They generally don't care about the surface world's politics unless it threatens their library.

The Thothian Scribes: Below the named priests are dozens of scribes. While mostly non-combatants, they are the "eyes and ears" of the enclave.

The Thothian Guard: They employ specialized warriors (and occasionally constructs) to ensure the Priests can study in peace.

Note for Adventurers: Bringing them lost scrolls or ancient artifacts is the fastest way to gain their favor, but be warned—they rarely let a "borrowed" book leave their sight.


Since Arden Vul is one of the most massive "mega-dungeons" ever published, the stats for these priests are quite beefy, reflecting their status as high-level masters of the Old Vothian ways.

Here is a breakdown of the key stats and the types of missions they usually hand out to "expendable" adventurers.

Common Quest Hooks If your party approaches the Enclave peacefully, they won't just give you gold; they’ll trade in Information or Magic.

The Translation Fee: The priests have the only known key to certain ancient dialects. To get a map translated, they may demand you find a fresh source of "alchemical ink" found only in the lower levels.

The Arch-Mage’s Legacy: Because they study Arden Vul (the man), they are obsessed with his personal belongings. They may hire you to recover a mundane item—like a comb or a quill—simply because it belonged to him.

The Rivalry: They have a deep-seated hatred for the Priests of Set. Any quest involving sabotaging the Setians will immediately earn you "Library Credits."

  1. The Primary Entrance: The Pyramid of Thoth (UP) The most direct way to reach the priests is via the Great Pyramid of Thoth (AV-15) on the surface.

The Trap Door: A hidden trap door inside the pyramid leads directly down into the northern section of Level 3.

The Statue Puzzle: Room 3-1 (the landing area) contains the first of many Thothian statues. Meticulous players who manipulate these statues in specific sequences can unlock hidden caches and shortcuts.

  1. The Northern Sector: The Temple Complex The northern half of Level 3 is the traditional domain of the Thothian Priests, though it is currently a "contested zone."

The Great Hall: This serves as the central artery for the Thothian ruins. To reach the actual enclave of the priests, you typically head North through the hall and West through the tombs.

The Library/Enclave: This is the most "civilized" part of the level, where the priests like Thoththas and Nanefer reside. It is heavily guarded by Thothian Guardians and stone constructs.

The Haematite Doors (177): Massive black doors inscribed with Thothian symbols. They are magically sealed and require a password (one of the "Seven Names of Thoth," such as "Light of Comprehension") to enter.

  1. Key Tactical Locations The Ziggurat/Halfling Checkpoint: Nearby, a gang of halflings (led by Roskelly) often extorts travelers coming from the surface. The Thothians tolerate them as a "buffer" against casual intruders.

The Secret Library: A highly sought-after location hidden behind illusory walls and magical wards. This is where the highest-level lore and the most powerful priests are found.

The Pillar Room (3-123): Contains a blue pillar used for teleportation to other levels of the dungeon, including the Forum of Set (Level 4) and the Obsidian Gates (Level 5).

Geographic Dangers While the Priests "own" the temple, the map is heavily encroached upon by rivals:

South: The Great Cavern of Mushrooms, ruled by a wizard claiming to be a reincarnated Thothian priest.

East: Beastmen patrols who inhabit the "H-shaped" barracks and guard the Long Stair connections.

In-Between: Small pockets of Set Cultists who hide in secret shrines, looking for any chance to assassinate a Thothian priest.

DM Tip: On this map, Graffiti is a mechanical feature. Rooms like 189 contain inscriptions that act as a "player's guide" to the level, giving directions to the Temple or warnings about the mushroom creatures.