Category Archives: Journal Entries

Journal entries for the Jade Regent campaign

Character: Olmas

Annals of the Order of the Dragon

as told by the cavalier Olmas Lurecia himself.

Wealday, 29 Desnus

So we traveled without incident to the kappa-uncle, but along the way we had an open and honest discussion of how best to protect Koya.  While both Ameiko and Shalelu were trained and experienced fighters, that was not at all Koya’s strong suit.  The difficult question was not resolved enroute.

The kappa, Numataro-sama, greeted us pleasantly and told us a story and history that suggests there are familial ties at play here.  Is O-Sayumi related to the pearl merchant, whose name we now know to be Shosaito?  Numataro-sam suggested strongly that it might be a father-daughter relationship.  The circumstances seem to indicate that O-Sayumi felt compelled to come, but compelled emotionally or compelled magically we cannot say at this point.  Mysteriously, he gave us a shogi piece “for luck” and said it had the power to summon the greatest shogi player in all of Minkai.

We did come to one conclusion, however.  With Numataro-sama’s permission we will leave Koya here inside a Mage’s Private Sanctum. She should be safe from most things, including scrying.  Long term, however, we will need to come up with another plan.

The island looks dim, and seemed pervaded by gloom and doom.  I judge this to be a way of discouraging visitors, and while that may prove true, I’d also not be surprised if it turned out to be an ominous side effect from somebody or something living here.

(later)

Like undead.

We used fly rather than try to take a more mundane method of reaching the island.  It has been our experience that appearing at the entrances made explicitly to greet visitors, like front doors and docks, usually are the worst way to introduce ourselves.  Geisha houses excepted.   On our way in we saw what we assumed to be pearl divers at work (and they saw us).  They stayed underwater a surprisingly long time but when they walked up on shore they were not interested in welcoming us.  They attacked us, and while I suppose in a sense we were trespassers, I think most civilized places will agree that employing undead as laborers is the greater offense.

After dispatching them (Kali said they were mastodons, I think, which I have always believed to be larger, but …) we examined their crude village.  Surprise surprise, we found a secret door in the floor which I’d be willing to bet will lead us to our next problem.   By the way, both Qatana and Kali say this place is bathed in faint magic. No, really?

(later)

aaaand spot on.  This time it was manangles (I think – Kali speaks so softly) masquerading as servants.

We seemed to be exploring, perhaps, the basement of the only house on the island.  We found one room  (before we even met the manangles) that immediately drew Dasi’s attention, since it seemed to be filled with some very fine bottles of sake.  One passage looked even more shadowy and ominous than the rest of the basement.   We decided to save that for last.

It was about then we ran into the first manangle.  We tried to convince her, and the rest eventually, that we were part of the security testing team. They almost bought it (we even had one in manacles “so it would look authentic”, but in the end one of them doubted it enough to attack us and that meant the others no longer cooperated.  Ivan called out they are undead, but they seemed especially difficult to kill.  Suishen confirmed to me, after cutting into one, that these were not oni. (I realize he only speaks telepathically but he almost sounded disappointed.)  According to Kali, these things are really nasty at night so I’m glad we came when we did.

Exploring, we found several rooms – all looked dusty like they’d not been used for a while.  We still have no firm confirmation that O-Sayumi is even here.  One room had a shogi game set up and apparently in progress, and Radella detected a trap of some sort, but Kali was sure it was an important clue.

She was wrong.   Touching the board threw all of us into a sort of grid – a shadowy shogi board? – and about the time figured out how to maneuver within it, we also found we were sharing it with extra things – shadows themselves.  I don’t know who held the lucky chess piece that Numataro-sama gave us, but they apparently activated it and a hazy figure of Hatsue, appeared and although confused by our presence in what she said was HER dream, went to work destroying shadows.

Other than Hatsue, the things that helped us best was recognizing that by DISBELIEVING the grid one found oneself in, it became noncorporeal.  The second was that Dasi had this capability he called “ghost purge” which made our weapons much more effective against the shadows.  (I have to say, he continues to amaze me.)

Having put that behind us, we regrouped to return to the shadowy pathway.

Character: Ivan

Ivan’s journal

Having the extra armor is just holding onto the past. She’s gone so there is no reason to hang onto it any longer. I suppose it could be my backup armor but I think maybe it would just be best to get another set of armor. I think it is time to see if Ameiko can be the leader that I hope she can be and these two mithral shirts will help keep Ameiko and Shalelu just a bit safer.

Ameiko looked at me strangely when I asked about armor but that changed completely when I showed her the mithril armor. She seemed to have just a little bit more bounce in her step after putting on the new armor. I put her old armor in my bag so she didn’t have to carry it.

I think it is time to find out what kind of woman she is. Wow I shouldn’t say it like that out loud as she may misunderstand.  I have decided it’s time to give Ameiko another chance to show that she can be the type of leader and person that I would be proud to call a friend.

I have been so caught up in the whole Sesi thing that I haven’t really process the information about having daughters. Mom is over joyed that Samantha and Jennifer both gave birth to daughters and they have welcomed them all into the family including calling Samantha and Jennifer daughter in-laws. I tried to explain that they knocked me out and then drugged me but mom explained that they already told her the whole story. I have discovered that it is very difficult to have a back and forth conversation in 25 word chunks. In this case I don’t have all of the details but it seems that everyone has decided that all of Samantha’s and Jennifer’s children will have the same father. They are all convinced that I will never settle down so visiting Samantha, Jennifer and the children occasionally is the best thing for everyone. I think kali said we were a thousand mile or more away from Standpoint so this is not something I have to worry about any time soon.

Kali obsession with fighting underwater hasn’t really come true. Having undead dive for pearls is actually an interesting idea. Yea it’s not good for the people turned into undead but maybe skeletons wouldn’t be look down on as much. Who am I kidding Kali and the others have certain things label as so called EVIL. They really confuse me with the good against evil thing. Sometimes it seems like they are doing the very thing that they said was evil. The undead creatures coming out of the water looked a little creepy so I decided that it would be better to just move away and let Radella take her frustrations out on these creatures. It might actually be hatred more than frustration but in either case they were on the wrong end of her sword.

I could see Zosi with his skills stepping into the pearl business. I still don’t fully understand why undead creatures are so look down upon. If I had undead creatures they would be kind to people, well maybe not rich merchants. If there is this so called Evil in the world I am convinced that it was because rich merchants were trying to make a buck and cheated someone.

Today our plan is pretty straight forward. Invade the pearl merchant’s home and save the girl.

Well maybe a little more complicated than I expected as those night time undead women sound very nasty. Ripping themselves in half at night to become powerful undead seems very odd. How do you deal with half of a woman? I also wonder how they put themselves back together in the morning. It is one thing to go searching for your clothes but I can just imagine a conversation like “Hey Miki have you seen my legs this morning, I have look everywhere and I just can’t find them”

These women just don’t seem like the mindless undead that you always hear about. So how do the so called good people justify to themselves killing these women? Being undead doesn’t seem like enough reason to kill them and why isn’t being a rich pompous merchant enough justification.  I would say that these undead women have done less harm than the rich pompous merchants. Shouldn’t we be killing them both? It all comes down to rich people using their money to corrupt those that make the laws.

So undead seems to be the theme for the pearl merchant. So if he is creating all of these undead he must have either found a way to create undead without them eating him or he is himself undead. The question is how his daughter would fit into his plans. We don’t even know what his plans are! I hesitate to bring this up as Kali and Dasi would talk this to death.

The game board is amazing. As far as I can tell we were put into the shadow plane to combat the shadow creatures. I wonder who that guy was the appeared just before we were sent to the shadow plane. He said the game was already in progress. He sounded like this game somehow was related to the struggle going on in this country but how can a game effect an entire country .Is the game controlling what is happening or is this just a reflection of the current state? Was that guy just a shadowy image or is this a being of some sort. Maybe he is the Kami of the board game.

Yea the ghostly things were not fun but then again Irori did decide to bring a shadowy version of Hatsue into the game board. Hatsue seemed kind of confused by the board and it looked like she was just going to let Kali die. Why does Irori keep doing this? While Hatsue was helpful in getting rid of the shadow creatures I can help but feel she didn’t fully embrace the situation. As Hatsue passed through me on the way to a shadow creature I couldn’t help but wonder if she was trying to get me to stop barking orders at her or if she even noticed someone was there. I am starting to understand why Irori is so concerned about Hatsue but at the same time it is not really clear how Irori expects me to help her.

Abby and mom keep telling me that I should surround myself with smart people but they certainly couldn’t have been talking about Hatsue. I am pretty sure Abby and mom expect these smart women to tell me when I am doing something stupid and not to remind me that I am not very smart. Speaking of smart people during the trial of the board game I was about to use a touch spell on Kali without any thought to the consequences of actually touching Kali.

I created a passages to allow others to get out of the game after I realized Ameiko had pushed her way to the outside wall and left the game board. Some took the opportunity to leave while others stayed behind. I was glad to see Radella grab the drained Zosi and take him out of the maze. He had an odd grin on his face as they passed by me. Clearly he is up to something.

It all comes back to what to do about the Ameiko situation? Maybe we should just send her back to stay with Koya.

Character: Qatana

Qatana’s Journal for Desnus 29, 4713

Wealday, Desnus 29, 4713 morning
Yugureda Shosaito’s Island

“I told all of you, ‘Oh, look, there’s an island shrouded in unnatural shadows and so you know there’s going to be undead.’ But did anyone listen?”

Pookie was a bit miffed and was letting us all know it. It wasn’t that we hadn’t listened to her: we had come prepared with some spells that focused on undead (and besides, I can chanel energy to harm them). It’s just that there were so many other things that could explain the island’s odd appearance — things which might still hold true — and we wanted to cover all of the likely bases.

“Well I still think Shosaito could be a shadow-mancer or a dimensional sorcerer,” Huffy pouted.

“You’re not just making those things up, are you Huffy?” Timber asked.

Star interrupted, “I’m still pissed about that whole board game thing. It looked like a trap. It smelled like a trap. It felt like a trap. And still we walked right into it. And guess what? It was a trap!”

My friends were in a bit of an uproar. While the morning had not gone poorly, it had certainly revealed its share of surprises… or not, depending on which mouse you listened to. To put it simply, we had done better. The fact that we had also done a lot worse was not likely to end the debate and so I kept that to myself, occasionally saying, “Uh hum, uh hum” so they’d all know I was paying attention.

I was beginning to feel the headache coming on that usually arrived whenever they bickered incessantly like this.

The day had started innocuous enough.

We had slept overnight at the kappa’s river house and got up before dawn. Just as the sun rose I protected everyone with Life Bubble (because the island where we were heading was thick with misty shadows — it made sense, right?) and then used the wand to cast Fly on each of us.

The island was close enough that as long as we took no detours we’d be able to reach it before the low level spell wore off. This allowed me to prepare two high level spells I’d normally need for Wind Walk for some other purpose.

We flew across the lagoon and as we neared the island we saw pearl divers bobbing in the early morning sunlit waves. They saw us as well and dived out of sight. By the time we had landed on the shore the bright sunlight had been replaced by a shadowy haze.

A primitive village of clay huts huddled by the shingle above the water, and a path led up a hill to a walled manor, which was vague and indistinct in the distance.

Detect Magic showed a faint aura of magic all around us, but it was impossible to pinpoint either the source or the effect.

As my companions began to look about the huts the divers walked out of the water and approached us. Their shambling gate and cadaverous pallor suggested that they were some sort of ghoul.

Just moments before Zos and Kali had joked how undead would make perfect pearl divers. Zos’ brand of animated flesh holds none of the stigma of actual zombies, and I still wonder if using the Animate Dead spell actually creates true undead because, as with Zos’ constructs, no negative energy is involved, and no souls are pulled back from the afterlife to inhabit the corpses. It’s a pity that the priests at the Temple of Pharasma in Magnimar were never willing to have a frank discussion on the topic.

Beorn’s ears pricked up at this and he suggested, “Well it’s not too late to experiment.”

“Well now is not the time, ” I quickly replied.

The problem with most undead is that they have a habit attacking anything that was truly living. Speaking of which, we quickly destroyed the sea-ghouls (technically speaking they were lacedons, but I prefer Badger’s name for them).

It turned out that there was a hidden door in the floor of one of the huts that opened onto a shaft that led down to a tunnel that headed straight toward the house on the hill.

Following this we soon we came to a room that served as a wine cellar and junction with another plane. I said it made good use of what would otherwise be dead space, but nobody got my joke.

To the right was a glowing portal we suspected led to another plan. Someone suggested the Shadow Plane, and given what we’ve learned about the sorcerer Shosaito, this seemed likely.

To the left was another passageway, but its walls were clad in wood panelling and various household goods and supplies were stored here.

We had reached the house proper.

We decided to leave the portal for later and explore the house, but before we had gone very far we ran across a servant woman who was carrying a broom and other cleaning supplies, which she dropped in surprise.

She looked human and mortal, and to prevent her from running off and alerting the house I explained that her master had hired us to test the security of his houshouse, and could she please sit here quietly? She seemed confused, but compliant enough to have her hands tied with no protest.

Unfortunately another servant came down the hall, and after Olmas unsuccessfully tried to sell her the same “testing the master’s security” story, she called out and tried to run away.

Kali then called out, “Kill them. They’re undead.”

“Oh bother, ” McLovin said at the same moment Pookie scoffed, “Well, duh!”

They were a good bit tougher than you’d expect from house staff, and after they were dead Kali explained that they were a creature unique to Tien. They appeared as young women during the day, but at night their upper bodies tore away from their lower halves and they flew around consuming mortals.

They were called manananggals, which sounded a lot like the single word lyric to a song I had learned as a child. I started humming it, and quite a few of my companions picked up the tune. All of my little mouse friends collectively rolled their eyes.

We searched the house and grounds, slaying quite a few of these creatures, which I assume was significantly easier now than it would have been at night. Both Shalelu and Ameiko made good showings of themselves during the fights, which made me feel better about having them along.

The manor had seen better days, but at its height it must have been magnificent, with intricately carved rafters scrolling up beneath the tiled roof, richly painted panels, artfully arranged bamboo, and delicate wood frames supporting paper thin walls.

No, really, the walls were actually made from paper! The complete lack of privacy in such an arrangement seemed uncomfortable to me, but we had already seen that this was a common practice in Minkai.

Who knows, maybe it’s a culture of exhibitionists and voyeurs.

For having so many house keepers the manor was run down. Many of the rooms look unused and untidy. Even the master bedroom had a layer of dust upon all the furnishing within. I guess the master was living full time on the other side of the portal.

There was a very interesting shogi board in a large room in the center of the house. And by interesting I mean a) it had moderate auras of conjuration and illusion, and b) the pieces showed that a game was already in progress.

We had seen it earlier on our first pass through the house, and I had mentioned the magic auras and suggested it might be trapped. My companions agreed. “Yes, it looks like a trap.” “Oh, definitely trapped.” “Don’t touch it and set off the trap.”

All good advice, and so we let it be and went out into the courtyard to kill more manananggals.

But then when we came back in Kali and Zos decided they would try to play at the shogi table afterall. Just as I was trying to figure out how this came to pass, a loud voice proclaimed, “Clearly the game has started, but is the king winning or the jade general?”

And with that all of us in the room, which is to say all of us, were transported to a large game board, with shadowy walls isolating each of us in our own square.

We could hear one another through the walls, and from the shouts from the others it was obvious we had company. Shadows that drained strength with their touch were skulking about, and apparently not hindered by the walls.

I created a Spiritual Ally to provide some cover from these incorporeal attacks (with a “Good thinking!” from Star thrown in for moral support), which gave me time to think.

I had earlier detected a fairly strong illusion aura on the board, and that convinced me that at least part of the trap was fake. And sure enough, as soon as I realized that the walls became transparent.

I called out, “It’s an illusion! Disbelieve in the walls.”

A subtle dance then began where we moved toward the edge of the board while avoiding the shadows as best we could. Soon we all had exited the board and found ourselves back in the room with the shogi board trap.

“Burn it!” Star squeaked.

I was inclined to act upon her suggestion, but then we still have work to do here, and the walls are made of wood and paper. Perhaps when we are ready to leave.

Judicious use of our wands of Lesser Restoration cured the strength loss from various members of the party, after which we began to discuss our next actions.

But it seems our choice is limited to passing through the portal down below, defeating Shosaito, and rescuing O-sayum.

Character: Kali

Kali’s Journal – Desnus 29, 4713

Desnus 29, 4713 (morning, Namikadame Lagoon)

A grand magnolia tree sits on the shore of the Jikko River just upstream from where it empties into the Namikadame Lagoon. It’s nearly in full bloom, with flowers large enough to cover my hand and a creamy, sweet fragrance that would be the envy of bath houses in Magnimar. We never stop to enjoy wonders like this. Not anymore. Nature’s grandeur has become a backdrop, a measure of our progress as we travel from here to there. How sad is that?

Yugureda Shosaito’s home lies on a small, private island in the middle of the lagoon. The surrounding landscape is unnaturally muted, drained of color, bathed in gloom and breathing stagnant air. Leaving Numataro-sama’s home for Shosaito’s is not a fair trade by any stretch. We’re told his pearl divers have a small village over there. How anyone at all manages to live within that umbra and maintain their sanity is anyone’s guess.

Qatana and I can see there’s magic pretty much everywhere. Not anything overt, but a sort of faint aura that permeates everything. Why do people do this sort of thing to themselves? By all accounts Shosaito’s pearl business is quite lucrative, and he’s clearly a wealthy man: you don’t spend your money on geisha and private islands unless gold flows like water. Yet his home is draped in malaise. What’s the point of opulence if that’s how you live?

One possibility is that it’s a function of the means he used to achieve his success. Some actions leave scars on the world. That thought is certainly disturbing, especially because it’s far from wild speculation. If Numataro-sama is correct, this is a man that killed O-Sayumi’s mother, knowing that she had an infant child. We’re also reasonably certain that he is O-Sayumi’s father, which would mean that he intentionally murdered his wife or lover. What kind of person would do these things? (Uncomfortable answer? Lonjiku Kaijitsu. Which may in part explain why Ameiko has taken a personal interest in the matter.)

We’re leaving Koya here. With someone spying on us that was not an easy decision, but we can, at least, mitigate the risks and it’s arguably less dangerous than her tagging along. Numataro-sama has agreed to let me cover his home with my spell that will keep it, and them, hidden. That way if they try to come for us, it won’t be so easy to do it through her. At least for the immediate future. Long term, we need a better solution.

(late morning, Yugureda Shosaito home)

Sometimes, a coincidence that is far too unlikely to be more than just a coincidence really is just a coincidence. And sometimes that magical trap that you see, which is quite obviously a magical trap, and that you’re told outright is a magical trap, is, in fact, a magical trap. These are the valuable lessons I have learned today.

Honestly, I thought the shogi board was important because shogi just kept coming up: meeting Hatsue and her passion for the game, the large set in Numataro-sama’s home, the piece he gave us that could summon a great shogi player when broken, and even Shosaito himself. So there had to be more to what we were seeing, right? Wrong. It was just a trap for the unwary (or, I suppose, for people with a penchant to out-think themselves); retaliation against anyone motivated and clever enough to come looking for O-Sayumi, but careless enough to casually touch things as they explored.

The shadow realm we were trapped in may not have been entirely real, but the undead shadows that stalked us were no illusions. One of them touched me, and I felt my strength draining away as a horrible chill pierced my heart. It was an unwelcome reminder of my own fragility and mortality.

One odd thing did happen while we were in there. OK, fine, the whole thing was odd, but I mean relatively speaking. Zosimus broke the shogi piece Numataro-sama had given us as soon as we realized we were trapped in giant shogi board made of shadowstuff, and Hatsue appeared. Not her, but a spectral image of her, as though it were some sort of projection. She looked at me and asked, “What are you doing in my dream?” I didn’t really have a good answer.

She may have saved our lives. Her image or projection, or whatever it was, was real enough to the shadows. She tore two of them apart with relative ease.

Curious. I’ll have to ask her about this later.

The shadows were not our only encounter with undead. I recognized his housekeepers as being manananggal, though only after we found them curiously difficult to restrain, both physically and magically. From what I remember of the Tian legends, they are far more formidable (and significantly more hideous) by night, when they tear away from their lower torsos and fly around to feed on the living. This is something we didn’t get to see, though I am not really broken up over it.

Normally, I’d say that invading someone’s home is best done after dark. That makes this the exception that proves the rule. At the same time, our original intent was not to break in, but rather just go see the man and ask a few pointed questions, but things got pretty weird from the moment we landed on his island and they entered a downward spiral soon after.

Yesterday, I asked who would choose to live in this faded landscape, and the answer to that turned out to be “no one”. The pearl divers were lacedons, which implies rather strongly that there was an outbreak of ghoul fever in their village at some point in the past.

I would not be surprised to learn that this was also Shosaito’s doing, because just look at his cleaning staff. It’s not like he could not know, which makes him either complicit or responsible. Ironically, Zosi and I were making offhand remarks (perhaps in poor taste) about using undead, or at least animated dead, for pearl diving. We had no idea how right we were. It seems Shosaito figured out long ago that his pearl business could benefit significantly from employees with no overhead, no upkeep, and no need to breathe air.

All of this went a long way towards answering my other question from yesterday: we more or less know what kind of person we are dealing with, and that’s someone who cares little for human life, or for anything beyond his own self-interests. It’s still not clear how his daughter fits into the picture, but it’s a fair bet that he needs her for something. For what, exactly, is still not clear, but…the fact that they are related by blood must be the key.

Earlier, we came across a set of cards from the Minkai game uta-garuta. I was thumbing through them idly as we explored, and noticed that several of the cards had arcane writings mixed in with the poetry verses. It took me a little time to decipher it all, but the writings were similar to a spell I am vaguely familiar with, though I don’t know myself because it is abhorrent. This spell transfers a person’s consciousness from their own body to a receptacle of some sort, typically a rare gemstone of modest value, which can then be used to forcibly possess any nearby, living body. What I was reading, however, seemed both different from this spell and incomplete in some fashion.

It occurs to me now that we never asked anyone if Shosaito is married, or has a lover, or even any children (other than O-Sayumi). His home looks lived in and neat but…neglected. Hay is molding in the stables, there’s very little food to be found, and the bedrooms are unoccupied with only one showing any sign of use. It’s like he just stopped living here a few weeks ago.

This all occurs to me now because he has taken his own daughter, who he is related to by blood, and who has been missing for a few weeks. Because he was researching a variant of a spell that can transfer a person’s soul. A spell whose material component requires an object of value; a requirement that could quite possibly be satisfied by a pearl, of which I am sure he has plenty.

My gods. What has this man done?