here's the final installment. I will get a game post up tomorrow.
[ +- ] Transcript
📍 Rest and Tensions
"Will you make that thing shut up?" pleaded Jin, handing Tasya some hardtack and a water skin. "Tasya really needs to rest... for at least a minute. This has been a lot for her. She doesn’t look too well."
The imp, hearing Jin’s complaint, grew louder, modifying his lyrics to mock Jin's tone:
The imps sang mockingly, "The daughter prophesied to bring hell down,
Yet all she is, is a circus clown.
Flipping and tumbling, now off her feet,
But can she take the demon heat?"
Jin turned sharply toward Admiral’s bag. "!By tides and tightropes, if you don’t shut up, I’ll make you wish the hag had never captured you! Silence yourself, imp, or I’ll find a way to make that glass prison much less comfortable!"
Admiral sighed, fishing the sphere out of his pack. The imp fell silent momentarily, letting out a triumphant sigh as it was freed from the confines of the bag. Admiral frowned. "What’s the plan here, mate? Annoy us all to death? At this rate, I’ve half a mind to put you back on that desk and leave you there." His gaze shifted to Tasya, then back to the imp. "Also, what do you mean by prophesied to bring down hell?"
Revelations from the Imp
The imp grinned, savoring the attention. "Oh, I’d be delighted to explain," it said, its tone feigning sincerity. "Your precious little acrobat here is the daughter of Tiana, the Dark Prince’s prize slave who became a rebel and defies the Dark Prince."
Tasya’s face twisted in confusion and fear. "What do you know of my mother?" she demanded weakly, her exhaustion evident.
The imp scoffed. "I know she is foolish to think she can overthrow the Dark Prince. The more she resists, the more powerful he becomes. He feeds on defiance. And you..." It turned to Tasya, its grin widening maliciously. "...are supposed to be the hidden key to salvation. The rebels believe you will deliver the wielder of the dragon blade to free the Deep Dragon from the Dark Prince’s servitude. Quite the destiny for a circus performer, wouldn’t you agree?"
Admiral’s ears twitched at the mention of the dragon blade. He felt Reaver vibrating faintly at his side, its energy responding to the imp’s words. "?The dragon blade?" Admiral inquired, glancing at Tasya.
The imp’s grin grew wider. "Some call it Reaver. A weapon of immense power, forged from the essence of Sekkor, the Deep Dragon. But the greedy drake was outsmarted by the Dark Prince and now remains his prisoner. The blade desires nothing more than to return to its master."
Admiral gripped Reaver’s hilt tightly, unease settling over him.
"That is enough of that," said Admiral, discomforted and overwhelmed, as he abruptly shoved the imp back into his rucksack. The idea that Reaver was connected to all this demon stuff made his fur stand on end, and, in any case, he didn’t have time to think about any of that right then. There was a hag to kill, after all, and Jin and Tasya certainly didn’t look up to the task.
"Is she all right?" he asked Jin, referring to the unconscious Tasya. "I reckon you ought to take her back to the skiff. That way, you can check on your troupe as well and make sure the Sahuagin we saw didn’t get the better of them. Regan, Cordey, and I will take care of the hag."
"I think you are right Admiral," replied Jin. "Tasya is in no state to face the hag. It's best that you, Cordey, and Regan take care of that business. I'll take her to the skiff."
He knelt by Tasya's side and placed his hand on her forehead. He said tenderly, "Tasya...Tas...we must go...wake up my dear." When she stirred, he brought his water skin to her lips. "Drink some more. Let me help you stand." He pulled the hood of her cloak over her head; she went invisible.
Jin passed Admiral a sly look. "We circus folk have a few tricks up our sleeve should we run into any problems."
Not long after the circus members made their way out of the laboratory, Cordey, Admiral, and Regan, weapons readied, also left the Seahag's experiment chamber.
📍 Toward the Hag's Chamber
Passing dried lifeless kelp that they had just a short time ago battled fiercely, the three soon came again to a fork in the tunnel, the one they had previously taken toward the laboratory.
"Let’s see if my new friend knows his way around this place," said Admiral, pulling the imp out of his bag again. "It’s the least he can do after annoying us half to death. Right, imp?" He turned the sphere so that the imp was looking down the tunnel Regan was talking about. "Do you know what’s down that way? Keep in mind that the sooner we kill the hag, the sooner you get out of this ball, so it’s in your best interests to be helpful."
The imp let out a bothered sigh, clearly less interested than before.
"The fork to the right leads to the hag's sleeping chamber," replied the imp disinterestedly. "But she's not there. She's in her 'grand' hall, making the Fossergrim play for her and gloating in his praise of her 'beauty'." The imp said this last part with clear disgust, finishing with a dismissive "blah."
The small demon continued, "If you want to disarm her of guards and the fey's devotion, you'll have to get the mirror. She keeps it in her chamber."
The imp almost reluctantly provided this information; the party could see it processing its thoughts and trying to give away the least amount of useful details, perhaps to protect its own worth to the party.
Still, it assured with a forced smile, "Now, remember, I'm being helpful here. Don't forget that."
Taking the right fork, Cordey, Regan, and Admiral proceeded down another tunnel lined with sea plants. The smell of low tide grew stronger as they moved. The walls were lined with algae, but at least these didn’t seem actively aggressive in any noticeable way. 📍 Soon, they came to the hag's bedchamber, just as the imp had revealed.
In 📍 the chamber, oddly, there was a large octopus—out of water—that lifted its eyes when the party entered, as if the creature had been in a sound sleep and they had startled it. It lay in front of a bed covered in messy sheets made of seaweed, with a seaweed curtain serving as its headboard. A small rock pool near the octopus and an ugly small statue, possibly of a hag, added to the strange decor.
A large mirror balanced in an ornate stand stood near the bed. From it, a ray of white light shone across the room.
Behind the mirror, it looked like there was another area around a bend of rocks.
Cordey's Resolve
Cordey, observing the room, felt Lelay’s amulet warm against his chest. Her words echoed softly in his mind: "Love. da charm knows da call of da sea and da old words of Makai. Read, love. Me heart is yours. Our bond will help you know dem words."
📍 Drawing the Makai tome from his bag, Cordey flipped through the brittle pages, his focus unwavering. He found the section on Hellglass enchantments. Reading aloud, he translated:
"By the strength of the ocean and the guidance of night skies,
Expose the darkness, reveal the lies.
Hellglass reflects the truth,
Unmasks devils, dispels their sleuth."
He looked up, his expression resolute. "The mirror’s enchantment can be reversed with this incantation. We’ll need to purify it first and use a Sea Shaman’s Charm—Lelay’s amulet fits the description."
Preparing the Mirror Ritual
"But we have to perform a ritual to use it, right? That's what the book says?" Regan clarified, his tone cautious. "So we need to take the mirror to the hag, cast the spell... or maybe we can cast the spell then take the mirror to the hag... but we need to keep the mirror and the caster safe?"
Cordey frowned, looking at the ancient text. "I can read much here and understand less. I'm just unsure of everything, but I will translate all that I read." He flipped through the brittle pages, his gaze resolute.
Admiral interjected. "It sounds to me like we only need to keep the caster and the mirror undisturbed while the spell is being cast, so it would be better to cast the spell first and then take it to the hag." He turned to Cordey. "I think you would need to be the one to cast it."
"I agree with your thoughts there, Admiral," Cordey replied, nodding. "I shall start now while we are good here." With that, he began preparing the ritual.
Peering over the pages that looked like gibberish to Regan and 📍 Admiral but made sense to Cordey, the three discuss further. While they did, the octopus pulled itself over to the stone pool. Slimming its body it sliped into the water. Disappearing into its dark depths...apparently it was not a shallow pool.
In the dimly lit chamber, Cordey knelt before the mirror, the Tome of Old Makai secrets open in front of him. He carefully lit a candle made from seaweed and beeswax, holding Lelay's amulet tightly in his hand. The flickering candlelight cast shadows across his face as he recited the incantation:
"Nā kola wela ka huna, zali lilo i kāna,
Hulu zaha dula, melo hā nala.
Tiranoke vetahi, lilo hā fala,
Vena zaha makora, duna vele nala."
The mirror began to glow, its white beam morphing into a soft blue. The air grew heavy with magical energy, and the hum of power filled the chamber. Cordey repeated the incantation, the mirror’s surface rippling as the hag's enchantments were stripped away and replaced by the true magic of the Old Makai.
With a final burst of light, the ritual concluded. Cordey looked up, confident the mirror was ready. "Now to the hag," he declared, hefting the heavy artifact.
The Grand Hall of the Hag
📍
Following the imp’s grudging directions, the party made their way through winding tunnels, the mirror's weight slowing their progress. Smoke and flickering firelight signaled their approach to the hag’s domain. As they peered into the vast cavern, the scene unfolded: 📍
In the center, a chained fossergrim played a melancholic tune on a violin, his eyes locked adoringly on the sea hag.
📍 The hag, seated on a throne of twisted seaweed, appeared as a mesmerizingly beautiful queen. Her ethereal facade concealed her true monstrous form.
Sahuagin guards stood vigilant, their weapons gleaming in the firelight.
Bones piled ominously near the throne, a grim reminder of the hag’s past victims.
📍 Regan, stepping boldly into the cavern, addressed the fossergrim. "Do you take requests? How about 'The Day the Hag Died'? I love that one."
The fossergrim hesitated, his devotion faltering for a moment. "Stranger, you do not understand the beauty and majesty of my queen. She is the light in the darkness, the beacon of my existence," he replied, his voice trembling with uncertainty.
Turning to the hag, Regan grinned. "So, there’s a small problem. Seems like this place was a popular play area for some kids before some hideous old bag scared them off. I’m here to ask you to give it back to them." He spun his hammer, his grin widening. "Please say no."
The hag's eyes narrowed, her laughter echoing through the chamber. "You insolent wretch! Do you not think I was expecting you? My guards will tear you apart, and your bones will join the others after I’ve savored your flesh!"
The Battle Unfolds
At the hag’s command, the sahuagin surged forward. Regan stood his ground, casting blur to distort his form and confuse his attackers. Cordey charged with the mirror, his massive frame knocking aside guards like pins in a game. Despite his careful movements, the mirror cracked faintly upon impact, drawing a triumphant laugh from the hag.
📍 Admiral, taking advantage of the chaos, darted across the cavern, his feline agility allowing him to reach the hag’s dais. As he struck with Reaver, the hag’s seaweed throne animated, shielding her from the blade’s impact.
Regan’s hammer swung with force, connecting with a sahuagin guard and sending it reeling. Meanwhile, 📍 Cordey, undeterred by the crack in the mirror, hoisted it high and shouted, "Let truth show!"
The Hag's Fury
Seeing the mirror so close, the hag’s laughter turned to a shriek of rage. Animated seaweed tendrils lashed out, attempting to entangle Admiral and Cordey. "Fools! You think a mere mirror can defeat me? I am the queen of these waters!" she bellowed.
Admiral stepped back, his eyes narrowing as he cast lightning lure. The spell surged forward, crackling as it attempted to pull the hag from her throne. The seaweed shield held firm, but the hag’s anger was palpable.
The fossergrim’s music faltered, his expression shifting as he watched the battle unfold. A flicker of doubt crossed his face, and his next note was sharp, dissonant.
"Good luck, boys," Regan quipped at nearby sahuagin, as he dodge their strikes in his blurred state. He then steadily moved closer to the hag. "Let’s see how she handles her own reflection."
The Hag's Wrath Unleashed
📍 As Cordey rotated the enchanted mirror, the hag’s grotesque reflection came into view. Admiral’s lash of lightning tore through her protective seaweed barrier and yanked her from her throne, dragging her into the open, between Cordey and Admiral. The hag gasped in shock, her composure faltering.
The fossergrim, pulling on his chains, wailed, "What foul play do you intend for my beautiful queen!?" But his words trailed off as the hag’s disguise began to unravel. The sight of her true form left everyone shaken, her facade of beauty replaced by a hideous visage: her skin bubbled and blistered, her hair writhed as seaweed tendrils, and her jagged maw twisted with rage.
"You! You changed the mirror back! You did this to me!" she screamed, her voice a guttural wail. Her claws extended menacingly as she lashed out in fury.
The Battle in the Flooded Cavern
The hag raised her hands, screeching a mind-rending cry. The cavern began to flood as the lake surged in response to her commands. Seaweed tendrils animated further, lashing out at the adventurers. Cordey, holding the mirror, was struck by a tendril and pulled into its grasp. Admiral, despite deflecting another attack, yelped in pain as the deafening thunder of the hag’s power filled the chamber.
The adventurers struggled to hold their ground. Regan, battling his fear, lashed out with an eldritch blast, striking a sahuagin frozen in terror. Cordey, shrugging off the seaweed’s grasp, set the mirror down and charged the hag with his cutlass. Though his first strike missed, his second found its mark, drawing black ichor from the hag’s side.
Admiral, determined and fierce, broke free of the seaweed and lunged at the hag. His twin blades cut deep, Reaver’s necrotic magic causing her wounds to fester. With a final stroke, the Defender Shortsword landed a devastating blow, leaving the hag staggered and shrieking in agony.
The Hag’s Desperation
The hag reeled, black blood spilling from her wounds. "You will ALL pay for this!" she screeched, her voice resonating through the cavern. Lightning crackled above the flooding lake as she vanished in a thunderous boom, reappearing next to Cordey. Her claws lashed out, their ichor dripping with venom.
Cordey braced himself, his cutlass ready. "You won't win here, witch," he growled, stepping forward to engage her once more.
Admiral, recovering from the thunderclap, steadied himself and glanced at the hag's distorted reflection in the mirror. "The truth stings, doesn’t it?" he quipped, readying himself for another strike.
The hag placed both of her hands behind her waist, grabed somethings from within tangled seaweed hanging there, 📍 and then quickly flung two spiky sea urchins, one at Admiral, one at Cordey. The spiky creatures ark with electricity in the air as they fly. Both hit their mark. The shock overcomes Admiral and he falls unconcious.
A Rising Tide of Peril
📍 The water in the cavern surged higher, threatening to drown all within. Regan, with Admiral’s unconscious body slung over his shoulder, fought to keep his balance. The hag, now flanked by Regan and Cordey, unleashed a bone-chilling scream. A burst of icy magic radiated outward, freezing the water around her into jagged, crystalline formations.
Cordey braced himself as the wave of cold washed over him. Though he avoided being frozen, the icy blast tore through his defenses, leaving him staggering. Regan, holding Admiral tightly, managed to avoid the worst of the freezing magic but found the encroaching ice restricting his movement.
Sahuagin guards, caught in the blast, were not as fortunate. One froze solid, its body encased in ice, while another managed to resist the spell, its movements frantic 📍 as it tried to recover.
The Hag’s Assault
The hag lashed out with her seaweed tendrils, their sharp edges slicing through the frigid air. She grabbed Cordey’s cutlass mid-strike, twisting it aside with monstrous strength. With her free hand, she retrieved a spiked sea urchin from her tangled seaweed hair and hurled it at Cordey. The spiny projectile missed, splashing into the icy water beside him.
Regan, his warhammer glowing faintly with booming energy, took advantage of the hag’s distraction. Swinging with all his might, he struck her side, the force of the impact resonating through the cavern. A sharp cry escaped her lips as necrotic energy pulsed through her wounds.
Cordey’s Gamble
Cordey, undeterred by his injuries, reached for Reaver, still gripped loosely in Admiral’s limp hand. As his fingers wrapped around the blade, a sudden surge of power flooded his mind. Visions of an obsidian fortress, a bound dragon, and a nightmarish demon realm assaulted his senses. The psychic onslaught left him gasping, but he managed to focus, gripping Reaver tightly.
With a roar, he swung Reaver at the hag. The blade, imbued with its own malevolent magic, sliced through her defenses, leaving a deep wound in her side. Black ichor spilled into the water, mingling with the rising tide.
The hag’s voice dripped with venom as she hissed, "You think a borrowed blade can defeat me? Foolish mortal!"
A Desperate Defense
Regan, still burdened by Admiral’s unconscious form, maneuvered to flank the hag, his movements slowed by the rising water. Swinging his warhammer again, he landed another solid blow, the booming energy resonating through her form. The hag screamed in rage, her icy barrier cracking under the assault.
Admiral, still unconscious, floated precariously as the water reached Regan’s shoulders. Despite his dire state, the bond with Reaver flared briefly, channeling a faint warmth through the blade in Cordey’s hands. This flicker of energy seemed to bolster Cordey, giving him the strength to press forward. And Admiral experienced a vision in his unconcscious state:
Admiral’s eyes snapped open, but instead of seeing the cavern, he found himself floating in an ethereal void. The void began to take shape, forming into a dark, desolate but fiery landscape—the Demon Realm. The sky was ablaze with sickly green and crimson hues, and the ground was littered with the remains of forgotten battles. In the distance, through an open portal, Admiral saw the Obsidian Fortress, a massive, foreboding structure of black.
The vision shifted, pulling Admiral inside the fortress. He found himself in a vast chamber, the depths of the fortress, where a great forge dominated the room. The air was thick with heat and the acrid scent of molten metal. Standing before the forge was Sekkor, the Deep Dragon. His scales were a deep, shimmering black, but his eyes burned with a fierce blue-red light—the same light that now pulsed in Reaver’s gem.
Sekkor commanded a servant, a blacksmith, as he, with meticulous precision, hammered at a piece of metal—a metal unlike any Admiral had seen before. Sekkor reveled at the sight and called the metal Abyssium, the magical ore gifted to him by the Dark Prince. The metal seemed to shift and change, its surface swirling like liquid darkness, reflecting the deceptive nature of demons.
The work continued tirelessly. Sekkor focused his essence on the gem, and the smith fused the gem to the blade, which channeled the dragon's life force through the gem that sat at the hilt of Reaver. With each strike of the hammer, the gem glowed brighter, absorbing Sekkor’s power, his very soul, until finally, the blade was complete—Reaver was born.
The scene shifted again, and Admiral saw a new figure—Ezber, the dragonborn, but a cultist, not a captain. Ezber stood at a similar portal to the first Admiral had seen in his vision. It opened to a shadowy corner of the Demon Realm. Ezber faced a demon general who wielded Reaver with a terrifying ferocity. The demon general, drunk on the power of the blade, led an assault on a group of cultists who seemed to be protecting a group of human slaves, brought to the Demon Realm portal. The general seemed to be taken by surprise by the revolt that appeared to be led by Ezber.
In a cunning and brutal battle, Ezber outwitted the demon general, seizing Reaver from his grasp. The blade seemed to willingly recognize Ezber’s strength and cunning and bound to him as its new wielder. At that moment in the vision, Admiral felt Reaver's sense of freedom from demon servitude and drive to free Sekkor. As Ezber gripped the hilt, he felt the essence of Sekkor pulsing through the gem. The pact was sealed—Ezber became a warlock, bound to Reaver and the sentient power within it.
Suddenly, the vision took a darker turn. The scene shifted to the deepest pits of the Demon Realm, where Sekkor, betrayed and bound by the Dark Prince, was imprisoned. The once-mighty dragon was now a shadow of his former self, shackled in chains forged from Abyssium, the very metal he once used to create Reaver. The Dark Prince loomed over him, a figure of unimaginable evil, relishing in Sekkor’s torment. The dragon’s roars of pain echoed through the infernal landscape, each cry reverberating through the gem in Reaver, through Ezber, and now, through Admiral. Admiral felt the pain, the despair, the longing for freedom that Sekkor endured.
The vision faded...
The Turning Tide
The hag, now severely wounded, unleashed another wave of cold energy, attempting to freeze her attackers in place. Cordey and Regan braced themselves, their determination unwavering. As the icy tendrils formed around them, both adventurers broke free with sheer force of will.
The sahuagin guards hesitated, their morale breaking as the hag’s power began to wane. One guard, still frozen in fear, fled toward the cavern exit, leaving its comrades to fend for themselves.
📍 The Hag's Defeat and Its Aftermath
The climactic battle against the hag reached its breaking point as Cordey, now wielding Reaver, delivered a decisive blow. The blade pulsed with an ominous energy as it drew life force from the hag, transferring it directly to the unconscious Admiral. The hag shrieked, her power visibly drained, leaving behind only a withered shell. Reaver hummed with satisfaction, its sinister glow dimming momentarily as it completed its task.
Admiral awoke gasping, his vision blurred as fragments of a foreboding realm and the oppressive presence of Sekkor filled his mind. Regan held him steady, driven by survival and shared purpose. Meanwhile, the cavern began to change—the rising waters ceased, and the frost coating the surfaces melted away.
The Sahuagin's Retreat
The remaining sahuagin scattered, but not without resistance from the party. Regan’s eldritch blast struck down one fleeing creature, while another succumbed to the effects of the freezing water. Admiral, still regaining his strength, but also secretly uncomfortable dealing death to a foe that has no fighting chance, hesitated before sending a half-hearted blast after another sahuagin, feigning frustration as the energy missed. "Nice shot," he muttered to Regan, a flicker of genuine admiration in his voice.
The Fossergrim's Revival
Cordey turned his attention to the chained fossergrim, its form fragile and lifeless. Acting swiftly, he performed chest compressions and administered breaths, his determination unwavering. After a tense moment, the fossergrim gasped, coughing up water as life returned to him. Cordey helped him to his feet, noting the deep wounds left by the enchanted chains.
The fossergrim spoke haltingly, his voice hoarse but grateful. "The hag’s spell no longer binds me," he murmured. "But I am weakened. I must bathe in the falls to restore my strength."
Treasures and Decisions
Admiral searched the hag’s remains, uncovering a pouch of cursed items: a dark vial, a necklace of petrified fish bones, and a rusted key imbued with Abyssium. The imp, still trapped in its glass sphere, offered insights into the treasures. "That key can unlock much more than chains, if you’re not careful," it warned, before slyly adding, "But I can show you where the hag stashed her victims' treasures."
Admiral, intrigued by the imp’s knowledge, raised the sphere to eye level. "I promised to free you, and I will. But what will you do once you’re out?" The imp hesitated, calculating its response. "I’ll head to Glantri to find another magic wielder to...," it paused in thought before concluding somewhat sarcastically, "...um, serve. I mean, what else can an imp do in this cursed realm?" Admiral smirked, unconvinced but willing to honor his word.
Cordey, however, had other ideas. With a mischievous grin, he slammed the sphere onto the cavern floor. The glass shattered, releasing the imp in a puff of smoke and sparks. It stretched its wings, glaring at Cordey. "Was that really necessary?" it hissed.
A Moment of Rest
The fossergrim described to the the group the way toward a hidden garden where they could recuperate. "The water will restore me," he said, his voice regaining a measure of its former strength. "And you will find peace among the little ones’ sanctuary."