Category Archives: Journal Entries

Journal entries for the Jade Regent campaign

Character: Olmas

Annals of the Order of the Dragon

as written by the cavalier Olmas Lurecia, himself.

Sunday, 6 Abadius

The undead armies of Katiana were truly defeated, and the legend of the Dead Man had grown. Despite the positive outcome of all that, we were in a hurry to put some distance behind us. We are close to both coming off the high ice, and to seeing daylight return as a regular and lengthy occurrence, and those possibilities have made us eager to move forward.

2 days ago, we determined we needed to magically complete the healing of Vancour. Waiting for nature to fix it was taking too long, and we needed our party, our passengers, and our staff all to be in good shape. Coming off the ice, we rather expected to find agents of the Five Storms to again try to thwart, mislead, or kill us; it was to our advantage to be as rested and healthy as possible, under the circumstances.

And today we saw the first signs of life in a while. There was a cabin, not far off the trail, with smoke curling from its chimney. I’d have as soon moved on – after all, our strategy has been to try not to call attention to ourselves – but Qatana was insistent on dropping in for a visit, and nobody argued with her.

Although he was one of the first to the door, Sparna later insisted it was my day to watch her, but I don’t think I’ve been tracking that closely enough. Seems like it’s always my day to watch her.

Anyway, the resident there surprised us a bit by responding to our knocking by emerging from the bottom half of a split, 4 hinged door. He was short in stature, not unlike Sparna but yet very unlike Sparna. Then I realized: Gods we’ve been away from civilization a long time. He was a halfling! and although it struck me as strange to find him here, upon reflection it was strange to find anybody at all living in the wilderness. Not that we were that far from town, but who would choose the solitude over …

Oh wait. Boy that felt weird. Mr I-don’t-fit-in-with-the-elves wondering why solitude is a blessing. I guess these days I’ve formed something of a camaraderie with, well, with the whole caravan. This is a group I feel comfortable with, and I would risk my life to rescue any of them. They each bring something different to the table, and yet I feel a bond with each.

Shalelu – I thought I knew her, but I guess I knew a side of her that is different from her “adventurer” side. She was something of a mentor before, but I see she is much more rounded than that. And it seems odd, but I daresay that the student is close to surpassing the teacher in a few ways. Odder still, she seems happy to have that happen.

Ameiko – the heir, of course, though nobody dare say that out loud. Thanks to Suishen I’ve come to know her much better than I did, say, a year ago. Not because it told me anything; heaven forbid it actually be that useful. But because of the role that possessing it has forced upon me – “Guardian of the Heir to the Throne” – Ameiko and I have been forced to have some serious talks about how we interact with each other and what our duties and responsibilities are. In that sense, I almost know her better than I know Shalelu now, and while I struggle to keep her out of harm’s way, I’m impressed with her battle skills, even after their being unused for a number of years.

But the halfling – right. Kobi is his name, and he is a guide like Ulf. There seems to be a friendly rivalry between them, and Kobi mentioned several times that were it up to him, he would not have recommended the ice in the winter. He said there were mostly humans/halflings/elves in town. We offered him a bit of lunch by way of friendly thanks, and being a halfling he politely accepted.

Wealday, 9 Abadius

It was the middle of the day when we reached Ul Angorn. Sandru informed us in a low voice that we should plan on staying overnight; while provisioning and minor repairs might be something we could accomplish in an afternoon, his crew badly needed a ‘shore leave’.

And so we found ourselves pulled to The Frozen Spike, the only place to obtain food and drink in the small town.

As expected, talk eventually turned to why we were here, now, at the worst time of year. The cover story we’d agreed upon was that Koya, our family matriarch, was dying, and wanted to see Tien Sha before she passed. It explained an urgency that otherwise transcended common sense. It seemed to make Koya vaguely uncomfortable as strangers offered their condolences and spoke to her in the same ginger manner one carries an heirloom teapot – and I’m sorry to say her discomfort played beautifully.

Stories flowed freely – the waitress confided that just over a week ago, a party of 12 lost half its membership in a winter storm. Last season, another local patron offered, there was a party attacked by a dragon. We had to bite our tongues to avoid saying, “yes, oh, I wonder if that was the one we killed?” Low key, little attention. Low key, little attention.

And then Ameiko, of all people, suggests maybe she could play a little music. A little concerned, I offered to sing with her, so that I could keep close with her even on stage. Normally that would have been passable although nowhere near virtuoso, except the cold air seemed to have affected my voice and what came out was startling even by my standards. Ameiko managed to look simultaneously amused and annoyed at my effort, while she played some very nice music. The pub gradually filled over the next half hour or so and, presumably, word spread. I gave up on the singing but did sit on the edge of the stage with her, keeping time and surveying the crowd.

She ended her piece to universal applause. I noticed during her piece that I was not the only concerned one; Qatana kept close to her as she returned to the table, and I’d noticed Ivan had slipped outside, probably to pre-filter any new patrons. Kali must have gone out there too, while Radella was inside but looking inconspicuous.

A man strode over to Ameiko and complimented her on her piece. She thanked him, and he said, “I play a bit myself, and I have a new piece I’ve been working on. I’d love for you to help critique it. I’ve got it at home.”

And I did a theatrical doubletake when Ameiko said, “I’d like that.”

What? She agreed?? As protector at the very least I’d be going along to observe. Then I caught Qatana’s eyes, which had gone beyond concern. Did she know something more? Her eyes cleared for a second, she mumbled a few words, and the stranger stopped speaking in mid sentence. I realized she must have cast Hold Person on him.

Ameiko was livid. ‘I can go where I want and I do NOT require a chaperone,” she insisted. I moved to put myself between the stranger and Ameiko, saying, “We should discuss this elsewhere.” And then things went quickly from awkward to dangerous.

Ivan burst in from outside. “She’s been charmed!” he cried. I drew Suishen. Radella appeared behind the man and softly said, “you move, you die” while swiftly disarming him. The man shook his head imperceptibly as he apparently broke the Hold, and suddenly roared as he became a purple ogre. Patrons began to scatter, tripping over each other in their eagerness to avoid adventure.

Ameiko looked uncertain, and then drew her own rapier. Radella made good on her threat and cut up the oni substantially. It looked startled and tried to go to gaseous form, but Ivan dispelled it. It was, ironically, Ameiko who dealt the killing blow to the oni, and when I reminded her in a solemn low voice that she should let her protector do that sort of thing, she threw me a hard look.

A little more magic helped mend the broken chairs and clean up the blood, and one more short concert by Ameiko helped soothe the crowd. I gave the oni’s ogre-sized great sword to the proprietor as a memento (“here’s a frozen spike for ya!”). But then the night was over, and while 20 or 30 people had a story that would likely grow in the telling, it was clearly time for us to go. We took the body, because of course we were going to Speak with Dead in the morning and after all, after a bar brawl where you skewer your 8 ft competitor, and splatter blood upon all within 10 feet, it’s only good manners to take the body with you.

Oathday, 10 Abadius

We of course invoked Speak with Dead, and asked four questions. This one was less evasive then some of our previous interviewees:

Who were you working for? The Five Winds
How did you find out we were here? Was waiting to see if you’d come
How did you get here? Travelled by magic
Did you tell others we were here? Yes

There are still a few repairs to make to the wagon, so we will stay another day.

Toilday, 15 Abadius

We were attacked today by two huge (wagon-sized) spiders from either side of the trail. I put myself between Ameiko and the nearest spider and she did not complain. Their bite was extremely venomous, Sparna verified, and even I found out they had body hairs that could be thrown like little darts and cause one to be sickened and unable to defend oneself.

We did eventually defeat them, though. Sparna was gravel injured by the venom, and while the venom did not get to me directly, the hairs sickened me and hampered my efforts to protect Ameiko. I provided, at best, a physical barrier rather than a credible threat.

Character: Kali

Kali’s Journal, Abadius 2 – 15, 4713

Abadius 2nd, 4713 (night, The Path of Aganhei, The High Ice)

The Path of Aganhei lies ahead of us; the frozen remains of the undead, behind.

I spent most of the night finishing a headband for Qatana. She approached me with the request the night that we left the Storm Tower.

“Hey, do you have a minute?” she asked sheepishly.

“Of course. What’s on your mind?”

“I picked this up way back in Kalsgard, but forgot about it until I found it while rummaging through my pack this morning.” She held up a simple bronze headband studded with half a dozen gems of swirling green malachite. “I was wondering, uh, if you weren’t too busy…if you might be able to fashion this for me into a headband that can strengthen my will.”

I took it from her and studied it under the caravan lights, turning over and around. Qatana’s tastes tended toward minimalist. “It’s lovely,” I said, and I meant it. “I like the malachites.” The simplicity of its design had a certain elegance.

She made a small squeak, shifting on her feet is if someone had prodded her. I looked up expecting an explanation, but none came. Instead she added, “I have enough diamond dust to complete the work…at least when supplemented with some of the crystal shards we took from the tower.”

We had piles and piles and piles of purple shards. The unidentified gemstones had powered the storms above the Tower, and we destroyed them by literally bashing them to pieces. They shattered into clouds of tiny fragments as the magic infused in them was released. They almost certainly have no trade trade value, but that does not make them useless.

“Of course!” I said. “It will take me several days, but I can do it.”

The magical cubes we’d found made this process both faster and easier. Spells and furs might keep me warm, but my tools and equipment have no such protection. With the cubes it was like working in a heated cabin, only without walls or a roof. No matter how cold it was outside, once you crossed the threshold the chill was just gone. Which was weird until you got used to it.

Qatana looked excited when I presented it to her this morning. “You used the tourmalines!” she said. “And you’ve made it beautiful!”

I smiled at this. I didn’t strictly need them, but the headband itself came from Kalsgard, the ornamental wire from Unaimo, the gem fragments from the Storm Tower…I could go on. “I wanted this to tell a story,” I replied. Almost everywhere that we’d been was represented in some fashion.

I was actually worried that I had overdone it. The design was a little more ornate than pretty much anything she wore and I was more than a little relieved that she liked what she saw. One very refreshing quality about Qatana was that you always knew where things stood with her. If she said it was beautiful, then she thought it was beautiful.

And then, very abruptly she said, “Thanks” in a barely audible voice, and she reached out and gave me a hug. A big one. I didn’t know what to do because Qatana doesn’t do hugs. Not anymore. She doesn’t even like to be touched. It was so unexpected. All I could manage was a meager “You’re welcome.”

After making camp tonight, Ivan conjured some fire for the sole purpose of melting the ice and snow around us. “We’ll have a snow party!” he said, clearly excited.

It was actually pretty fun, much more than you would think. For weeks the landscape has been a trial at best, and this was a chance to see it not as an obstacle to overcome but instead something to play in and enjoy. It felt good to just be silly for a while.

I spent a couple of hours creating an ice sculpture of the Dead Man. It won’t win any awards, but that’s not really the point.

Abadius 3rd, 4713 (noon, Path of Aganhei, The Crown of the World)

We’ve dropped down into a basin on the Tian Xia side of the plateau. It is enormous: according to the map, it’s roughly 100 miles wide here, at its narrowest point, and four times as long. At the wide end, the town of Ul-Angorn sits on the shore of the Ruun Uvas, a huge saltwater lake which is fed by melt water coming off the ice sheet. It will take us nearly a week to reach it.

Vankor is still not doing well. Qatana, Ivan and I talked this over and we’re going to use the restoration spell on him again. We have plenty of diamond dust, Ul-Angorn isn’t that far away, and we really need him back. This second casting will take care of it. Qatana will prepare it in the morning.

Abadius 6th, 4713 (evening, The Path of Aganhei, The Crown of the World)

Qatana cannot always be relied on to help us maintain a low profile. That’s just something we’re going to have to accept, I guess. Part of the frustration is that you never really know which Qatana you’re going to get when we meet someone new. Will she be cordial? Suspicious? Friendly? Hostile? I’ve given up trying to predict how she’ll react to strangers. Honestly, at times it just seems to be completely random.1

She wasn’t always like this. I still remember, very vividly, the first time I saw her after she and her family had vanished and were presumed dead. It was in Korvosa of all places: she was the only one who had survived, and it was Shalelu that had found her. I have no idea how or why they were so far east; I never asked. I was eleven then and Qatana and I spent a couple of days exploring, me showing her the best parts of the city from a child’s perspective. She was distant, hesitant, guarded, and grieving, but also curious and excited. And more importantly, what she did also made sense, even to an eleven-year-old. At least, once I fully grasped what was happening. Even a decade later when we would see each other in Magnimar, she was still the Qatana I had grown up with. Yes, she may have come across as rude to people who didn’t know her—OK, and sometimes to those who did—but she was never erratic.

This…what I see now is something new.

Sometimes I feel like there was more I could have done, or something I could have done differently, once she was back in Sandpoint. Those first years were hard—how could they not be?—and they were the years that would have made the difference. Without a family of her own she needed support wherever it could be found, but the thing is, neither of us were particularly rich in friends before. Logically, I know this doesn’t make sense, that this isn’t about me, that there’s more to it than that. But logic has nothing to do with it. It’s how it feels.

I bring this up now because we’re only a couple of days out of Ul-Angorn and we’re starting to see signs of human and humanoid settlement. The most significant of them came about mid-day today, when we passed a cabin fairly close to the Path of Aganhei. Even in the faded twilight we could see the smoke coming from its chimney so we decided to stop. I mean, why not? Not counting Katiyana (why would you?), this was the first sign of civilization…gods, in nearly two months.

The owner was a halfling gentleman named Kobi, and for reasons known only to Qatana she decided she liked him. After an awkward little greeting where he thought we were headed onto the High Ice—we were clearly headed south, but people see what they are expecting to see, I guess—and tried to talk us out of it, he invited us inside just to visit. There was no hiding that we had just crossed, of course, but Qatana just could not help herself. She gave him the highlights of our exploits across the Boreal Expanse: the storms, Katiyana, the Storm Tower, Iqaliat, the white dragon, and even the Dead Man. What do you do at that point?

It’s not the events so much as it is the attention. Realistically, one halfling living 100 miles from the nearest settlement does not seem like a huge problem, but eventually he will talk to someone, who will talk to someone else, and so on. Word spreads. We were supposed to come to the Crown and disappear, not develop a reputation that calls us out.

Abadius 9th, 4713 (night, Ul-Angorn)

I give up. Honestly, I do. It is impossible to keep a group of thirteen adults, including the ones who should know better, from drawing attention to themselves. So I am done trying. I can’t be everyone’s nanny, and I wouldn’t want the job even if I could. I don’t want to be my grandmother. I love my grandparents, but that is not the same as loving everything about them. That is no way to live my life.

People will either learn or they won’t. Ameiko obviously hasn’t—at this point, whenever she says, “No one here knows who I am,” it is reasonable to assume that we are in imminent danger—and even Suishen has stopped offering advice on what to do about it. The sword and I finally share a common bond.

We are a danger not just to ourselves, but also to those around us. If we’re going to continue to tempt fate like this, then I’ll just have to be prepared for when someone takes advantage, especially in environments that put others at risk, as happened tonight. I have to pick spells that I can use in close quarters, without harming people and structures, even incidentally.

Speaking of tonight, that ogre mage was foolish to try and take us all on like that, but hauteur seems to be a running theme there. I mean, he had to know we were not going to roll over and die given what had happened in Kalsgard, right? But I guess he thought he was different.

In all honesty, his gambit was a good one. While we were all wary, we weren’t really on guard for an oni disguised as a human (though I suppose we should have been, yes?), and even if we were could we reasonably have kept it up for hours on end? Which is how long he was willing to wait. That part was smart, as was the attempt to lure Ameiko away through an enchantment. He just didn’t have a contingency plan that was better than “hack-and-slash with sword”, which is what surprises me. But if our enemies want to make it easy on us, I guess I shouldn’t complain.

The worst part of that was having it all happen in the middle of The Frozen Spike. One second we have Mr. “Why Don’t You Come See My Music?” surrounded and magically held, and the next there’s an ogre mage standing in his place, chairs and tables pushed aside and bar staff and patrons scrambling to get the hell out of the way or cowering in terror.

Ten seconds later we had cut him down on the spot. Ameiko landed the killing blow. That may end up being important.

The owner or proprietor, I think her name was Gerta, was pretty distraught. I guess I would be too if something like this happened in my bar. Ivan and I used our spells to fix the chairs and tables, and of course expunge the blood. There was a lot of blood. In less than 15 minutes, though, there was not a trace of it left, and I think the bar was even cleaner than it was before we got there. A little music, a little dancing, and a round of drinks for everyone, and things were more or less on the road back to normal.

Maybe I am being hard on Ameiko and the others. Yes, a Tian woman playing a samisen is an obvious giveaway, but so is a five-wagon caravan rolling in at this time of year, looking battered and battle-scarred. There is a reality here that there’s just no way for us to hide or be discreet. Drawing attention to ourselves was just pouring water in the ocean.

You know who else is well known here? Ulf. I guess that shouldn’t be a surprise. I imagine every caravan stops in Ul-Angorn on the way to Tian Xia so they probably get to know all the Crown guides fairly well. Gerta’s professional assessment? He can hold his liquor. That, and he can be “surly”. That’s it. That’s what came to mind. Obviously, she bases this opinion on how he spends his time between jobs, or on overnight stops. Which is a little unfair. The drinking he’s done on the road with us has hardly been excessive, and you can be surly and gruff if you have the skills to back it up.

We more or less knew the “surly” bit already, anyway. It was pretty clear from talking with Uksahkka that Ulf had his way of doing things, and you either did them his way or he wouldn’t do business with you. But like I said, his reputation spoke volumes. Even Greta eventually, albeit grudgingly, admitted the same: “He obviously must be good at what he does because gets people across.”

We’ll be here another night.

Abadius 10th, 4713 (evening, Ul-Angorn)

Sparna has made arrangements to have some maintenance and repairs done on the wagons. Strictly speaking, this isn’t even remotely necessary, but given last night’s events a little added good will can’t hurt. I spent the morning getting us re-provisioned and learned the locals were divided on whether we were saving the day or the source of the trouble. Of course, we know the answer to that but we’ll be keeping it to ourselves.

Qatana interrogated our corpse because that’s just a thing we do now. Like that sort of thing is somehow normal. For once, we got direct answers.

“Who were you working for?” she asked.

“I am an agent of the Five Winds.”

The Five Winds? We have no idea who that is, though it’s certainly a good guess that they are related to the Five Storms and bad with names.

“How did you find out we were here?”

“I was waiting to see if you would come.”

“How did you get here?”

“Traveled by magic.”

Her last question was the one we most needed to know: “Did you communicate our presence to others?”

“Yes,” he said. And that was that.

Obviously, this is not good. They know we’re right here, right now, and will soon learn that we survived. If it was up to me we’d have left on the spot, but no one asked me for my opinion.

Ivan took care of the body. He conjured a ring of fire around it and just let it burn until there was nothing left but ash and blackened, brittle bones.

Sparna found a set of jeweler’s tools for me while I was running my errands. I’ll need them for our talismans, which I want to set with some semi-precious stones just to give them a little flair. We still have weeks of travel ahead of us, and this is a good way to use the time.

There are a handful of dwarves here and they and Sparna have more or less gravitated to one another. A couple of them were in the Frozen Spike last night and I overheard them talking to Sparna, but I played dumb. For one, I’ve learned not to tip my hand just to show off, and two, I didn’t want to butt in on their conversation. And, I suppose there’s a three, as well: people talk pretty candidly when they don’t think you can understand them. You never know what you might hear.

Ameiko, Qatana, and I spent the afternoon together and, predictably, it descended into mischief. I like a little mischief now and then, and the three of us were pretty good at it when we were kids. There was this one time, back before Qatana…well, back before, so I must have been 9 or 10 years old. The Flinch brothers had this horse and they were obviously not taking care of it and she was very upset. We came up with this crazy scheme to liberate it without it being obvious that it had been taken. Qatana spent days making an enormous, fake cocoon, and one night—anyway, it was so brazen and ridiculous that it made sense only to a kid, but amazingly, it worked. Well, it worked long enough for the horse to find a new home far away from Sandpoint, which was good enough.

Today, we visited a little shrine to Desna that was tended by a druid. I was a good girl, and did not burst out laughing when Qatana asked, “Would you mind if we erected a small tribute to Groetus behind the temple?” If you want to really catch someone off guard, that’s a pretty good opening line. From that moment on, I was on board with her idea.

Qatana’s formal religious education may have stopped a few years ago, but mine has not. Some random druid was not going to win a theological debate with me, and they relented in short order. “Just make sure it’s far behind. Maybe on the other side of that pond over there?” That was a little extreme, of course, but I didn’t want to upset Desna, either, so I chose a respectful distance for my task: making an ice sculpture of a grinning skull.

Side note: it’s really hard to do that when you’re fighting fits of hysterics.

Abadius 14th, 4713 (evening, Ovorikheer Pass)

We started the climb to the Ovorikheer pass today. This whole area is geothermally active and it just smells terrible. We had to navigate the fumarole fields of Baruun’s Breath carefully to avoid being overcome by the fumes.

Radella unpacked what looked like a portable alchemy lab and spent much of the evening extracting chemicals from the hot springs near our camp. It’s the sort of thing Etayne would have done.

When she was finished, she had four vials of what looked like three different substances.

“What did you end up with?”

“Sulfuric acid, arsenic, and cyanide.”

I am sorry I asked.

Abadius 15th, 4713 (midday, Domagalki Forest)

Everyone’s pretty shaken up, including me. Gods! Two enormous spiders, the biggest I’ve ever seen, hit our caravan. We didn’t even see them until they were practically on top of us. How do you miss something that big? How do you miss two of them?

I didn’t even think. One of them was bearing down on Ameiko’s wagon and I just started dumping everything I had on it. When it backed off, I turned to the other and didn’t stop until it was engulfed in flames.

The others had to intervene to keep me from incinerating the first one, too. Why? Because they wanted to harvest its venom. Again, sorry I asked.

Olmas went down during the skirmish, barely clinging to life. Sparna, too. We were mere seconds from disaster.

People are giving me that look. Especially Sparna. What do you want me to say? What did you expect me to do? They were gods-be-damned spiders the size of a whale. What part of this don’t you understand?


  1. This is an inside joke. It is random: there are circumstances where her player literally rolls dice to determine her reaction. 
Character: Qatana

Qatana’s Journal for Abadius 2 – 15, 4713

Oathday, Abadius 3, 4713 evening
Caravan

We dropped down from the high ice this morning, which was a harrowing experience in and of itself. The day started as usual with us tediously moving along the flat plane of ice when we came upon a dip in the ice, which led down into a deep wide crevasse that snaked away to our right.

“Not this one,” Ulf called from ahead, and we passed it by. An hour later we came to another dip to our left, which we followed down. Gradually we descended as walls of ice on either side rose steadily higher. The wagons had bunched together when the walls closed in and I heard Ulf explain that the previous ice canyon ended in the Khumba Icefall, a cascade of ice that was impassible by wagon, and effectively suicide to try even on foot.

By noon we had passed out from the ice and onto solid ground. A few stunted trees sprouted from the glacial till surrounded by clumps of bunch grass and a low succulent ground cover peeped through where the wind had blown clear the snow. The caravan route passed by frozen interconnected ponds and large boulders covered by lichens of bright orange and vivid yellow-green.

In the summer this place must seem like paradise after coming down from the frozen wastes, but even in the winter it seemed to us like a garden of unsurpassed beauty. We made camp here, much to my delight.

Looking back I saw a massive wall of white and turquoise, split with with many fissures and adorned with towering pinnacles of splintered ice. It was an imposing sight, and I knew at that point that I would not be taking this way back if I ever returned.

At least there is now something that can be called daylight. Sort of. It’s more like dawn followed immediately by dusk, but the brightness and duration frows with each day we move south.

Fireday, Abadius 4, 4713 evening
Caravan

This morning I cast another restoration spell on Vancour, our sick driver, after which he announced he was ready to drive a wagon again. I suspect coming down from the ice shelf helped about as much as my spell.

Speaking of spells for assisting others, I had known for some time that every morning Ivan cast a spell with Koya and Ameiko standing nearby. A few days ago I watched more closely and realized he was using Status. Why hadn’t I thought to do this with Shalelu? I am doing so now along with Ameiko.

In addition to monitoring their well being, Status also gives an indication of distance and direction to the target, which could prove useful if Ameiko were taken again.

I then realized that the Enter Image spell would be useful in the event that either Ameiko or Shalelu went missing. I gave each of them a small statuette of myself, which I had crafted in Kalsgard, and asked them to keep in some outside pocket for easy access.

Sunday, Abadius 6, 4713 afternoon
Caravan

At noon we came upon a small cabin not far from the trail. The area around the house had a lived in look, and smoke was rising from the chimney. Several of us approached and Sparna called out a greeting. The bottom half of a dutch door opened and a sturdy looking halfling walked out.

“Oh, visitors. I wasn’t expecting to see anyone come from Ul-Angorn until later on in the year. I don’t recommend you try the ice this early, and it seems to me you could use a better guide. My name is Kobi, may I offer my services?”

Despite some grumbling from Ulf to the contrary, Kobi seemed friendly enough, and he was the first fresh face we had seen in months that didn’t belong to someone trying to kill us. Takoda and Huffy liked him right away and I agreed with them.

It took a while for him to understand that we already had a guide and that we had in fact come from across the high ice. “What, you came across in the winter! Who was foolish enough to guide you during the worst time of the year?”

We told him.

“Ulf, oh yes, I’ve heard of him. Still, you might find my services more to your liking. I for one would have recommended you wait. The winter storms have been worse this year than ever before, and I am surprised you made it without suffering losses. Or maybe you didn’t,” he said looking curiously at us.

“Oh, we encountered quite a few trials on our way here,” I replied, “there was the white dragon at the beginning, then the sylph in the storm tower, and an army of undead. But we defeated them all and made it through no worse for the wear.”

“Uh, huh, sure you did,” Kobi said skeptically.

His eyes nearly bulged out of their sockets when we pulled Katiyana’s severed head from a bag of holding.

We shared a congenially lunch with him, and then moved on. As Kobi reminded us (with a “Yes, yes, I already know that!” from Ulf) we had to climb back up onto the high ice after leaving Ul-Angorn, and did not want to lose our hard-earned acclimation to the altitude.

Wealday, Abadius 9, 4713 evening
Ul-Angorn

We made it to Ul-Angorn by mid day. The town is a small trading outpost that mostly serves the passing caravans in the warmer months. In the winter it acts as home base for the rugged group of area trappers. While small it provided a welcome taste of civilization after so much time in the wilderness.

Earlier we had decided on a public explanation for our unusual winter time trek across the frozen wastes: Koya was old and dying and wanted to visit Tien Sha while she still could. It seemed a reasonable enough story, and safer than revealing our true purpose.

After seeing to the needs of the caravan, we wandered into town along with Ameiko, Koya and Shalelu. Mostly we wanted a place to relax and get a hot meal and a drink or two, and maybe socialize with the townfolk. There was only one option: a pub called The Frozen Spike.

Inside the inn was warm and cosy, with a large hearth in the corner and several lamps hanging from heavy wood beams. The barkeep, a friendly lass named Gerta, bade us to sit where we liked and soon brought us food and drink.

There were a handful of other patrons, including a pair of dwarves, toward whom Sparna quite naturally gravitated.

But even when seduced by the comforts of the pub we were on guard. We knew we had been tracked by the Five Storms all of the way to the high ice, and were certain they would be looking for us to appear on the far side.

After finishing our meal Ameiko offered to play and sing, to which Gerta happily accepted. This seemed like a bad idea, and all of my friends squeaked out warnings, “She’s going to draw attention to herself!” But there was nothing I could do to stop her that wouldn’t have drawn even more attention to us.

By this time Sparna had returned to the caravan, and Ivan was outside keeping an eye on the pub’s door. Radella had blended in with the crowd, which had steadily grown during Ameiko’s performance.

Nothing happened, and as Ameiko returned to the table amidst enthusiastic applause, I began to think that perhaps we’d have a quiet stay afterall.

Some time later a man came up behind Ameiko and asked if she’d like to see some music he had written. He too was a performer and would appreciate her opinion of his work, and maybe she would want to play some of his songs. “Just come back to my home with me.”

Beorn

Much to my shock and horror, Ameiko stood and said, “Sure, I’d really like that.”

Several things then happened at once. First, Beorn began to scream, “He’s done something to her. You need to do something. Now! Do it now!” Second, I realized that the Status spell showed that Ameiko had been charmed. Finally, without thinking I put my hand on Ameiko’s shoulder and pulled her back down into her chair and tried to distract her.

But she was having none of it. “What? No, I want to go see his music. I am free to do as I like.”

The stranger eagerly repeated, “Yes, you should come with me.”

Beorn was yelling, “Do something! Do something now! Now! Do it now!” I looked around for Kali, but she was no longer there, and so I did the first thing that came into my mind and cast Hold Person on the stranger.

He froze, and Ameiko looked puzzled. My companions looked alarmed, but Beorn hissed, “Yes!” Olmas was trying to move Ameiko away, but she too had noticed my spell and was sputtering angrily, “What do you think you’re doing?” as she reached for her rapier.

I said, “He’s charmed you.” just as Ivan burst through the door shouting, She’s been charmed! Kali followed in right behind, and after glancing at the man said, “He has a transmutation aura.”

Radella appeared behind the stranger with her blade set against his back and said, “If you move you die”. Olmas moved closer in and Shalelu jumped to her feet, sword drawn.

I then lost hold of the stranger, who vanished, and in his place stood a purple ogre. Another oni!

The townfolk panicked and fell over one another, toppling chairs in their haste to get away. But Ameiko was angry at having been charmed and rushed the oni with Shalelu at her side. The ogre had no chance of surviving our onslaught, and realized its error too late. It tried to evade us by turning to mist, but Ivan immediately dispelled it, allowing Ameiko to fell it with a well placed stab. I finished it off by clubbing it to death.

Both surprisingly and disappointingly the oni had only two pieces of mediocre gear.

[432] chain shirt
[433] great sword (given to Gerta at The Frozen Spike)

Olmas and Kali tried to calm the bar patrons down, and discovered that none of the townfolk had seen the stranger before that night.

Ameiko performed a second set while Kali danced to the music. This had the desired effect and the crowd settled down. I glanced over at Olmas, who was mercifully sitting quietly by. During her earlier performance Olmas had tried to sing along, but it sounded more like cows bellowing in labor than singing, and I was glad he did not join in this time.

At the end of the evening Olmas gave Gerta the ogre’s great sword to display as a memento of the event, which greatly changed her outlook on the proceedings.

Oathday, Abadius 10, 4713 late morning
Ul-Angorn

We did our usual Speak with Dead routine soon after waking.

Who were you working for?

I am an agent of the Five Winds.

How did you find out we were here?

Waiting to see if you would come.

How did you get here?

Traveled by magic.

Did you communicate our presence to others?

Yes.

The Five Winds? Was that just another name for The Five Storms?

The most significant of the oni’s answers was that our presence was now known to others, and we could expect more encounters like this as we made our way south.

The wagons were still undergoing repairs, and so we had another day to spend in town.

Several of us visited the village’s shrine to Desna, which was a simple but elegant structure. I asked if we could add a small addition to Groetus, and after some initial hesitation, the townsfolk agreed (I think they realized what a comfort Groetus’ promise of the end of times would be during the long dark hours of winter). On the back side of the temple Kali and I shaped stone into the form of Groetus’ benevolent grinning skull and inscribed simple words of comfort for the village faithful.

Moonday, Abadius 14, 4713 evening
Caravan (back on the high ice)

We climbed back up onto the high ice today. We are crossing a narrow band of the ice cap, and will only be on it for a relatively short time.

Rather than climbing up through a chasm like the one through which we came down off the ice, the ground here rose up in a mounting series of cinder cones and ridges around which the ice flowed. The trail simply led up into the highlands and onto the ice.

The smell of noxious fumes filled the air, and we stopped so I could collect samples of liquids from the steaming, bubbling noisesome pools. After we stopped for the day Radella set up our alchemical lab and was able to isolate several vials of useful chemicals:

  • 1 vial sulfuric acid
  • 2 vials arsenic
  • 2 vials cyanide

I wondered where Etayne was and what she was up to.

Toilday, Abadius 15, 4713 mid-day
Caravan, Domagolki Forest

The caravan climbed over a pass between two peaks. The wind picked up, but the trail entered a forest which provided some protection. Unlike the trees we had passed below these were coated in a thick layer of ice, giving them an other worldly look.

We had not gone far into the forest when we spotted a pair of giant white spiders emerge from the trees, one on either side of us. Unfortunately our scouts were far out in front and to the rear, leaving a smaller crew to defend the wagons than usual.

These spiders were able to fling poisoned barbs from their limbs, and bit with a potent venom. As usual Olmas was the first to experience the venom’s effects. The battle was fierce and we were able to slay both creatures, but Sparna had been bitten multiple times and was lying unconscious by one of the wagons by the time the fight had ended.

We’ve managed to restore Olmas to normal, and to bring Sparna back from imminent danger, but he still needs additional restoration.

Radella and I worked carefully to harvest spider venom.

I think tonight Ameiko and I should cook something special for dinner using some of the fresh supplies we purchased in Ul-Angorn. Despite our victory the encounter with the spiders was unexpected, and seeing Sparna lay helpless in the snow next to a wagon wheel was demoralizing.