Hob and Perella, isolated from their comrades and having just escaped the gloom and repelled the Stone Collector, delve deeper below the Beacon, hoping to find an exit.
Roll: Delve the Depths, Wits – Miss; Reveal a Danger – environmental or architectural hazard, debris
It was not long after we had left the fringes of shadow that we found the collapse. It appeared the ceiling of the tunnel had given way and the weight of the impact had, in turn, caused the floor to cave as well, some of the ceiling’s rubble still precariously resting on the edge of the pit. We had seen no holes or dips on the plateau above, so the collapse must have been beneath it. Which meant there was another cavern above us that had caved into ours as well as a hollow below for ours to have fallen into.
The gap was too far to leap and the hole in the ceiling was too steep to scale. So we looked down. The torchlight didn’t pierce far enough to see where it led but it seemed the safest path forward. Still, I wanted to make sure it didn’t drop into the sea so I risked my torch. It fell a ways and then stopped, still burning and casting shadows, having landed in a heap of collapsed rubble. Ground at least.
Roll: Check Your Gear – Weak Hit
I retrieved the rope from my pack and tied it around the largest boulder I could find among the pile of debris at the edge of the pit. It was half my size, too heavy to push, and I hoped it could hold my weight. I hoped I could hold my weight. My arm still ached and the fatigue from the previous events had begun to settle in.
Roll: Face Danger, Iron – Miss, complication
As it turned out, the boulder was plenty sturdy, it was me who couldn’t bear the burden. Perella held her torch over the pit to light the way and I began the descent, feet searching for footholds as I clambered down the rope. I should have brought gloves, I had not. My already raw hands quickly began to burn from the rope’s rough fibers. And then they numbed. I didn’t realize I had loosened my hold on the line, it wasn’t intentional, I was unaware. Then, I was falling backwards. I remember looking up to Perella, her face peering over the ledge, flickering from the light of her torch, calling out in concern. She grew farther away, and then there was more darkness.
Roll: Endure Harm – Miss, complication
I guess I hit the ground hard. When I awoke, Perella kneeled over me, a worried smile. After my fall, she had balanced her torch over the ledge for light and descended. I was banged up but once I got my breath, I was able to move my limbs with no breaks. The back of my head hurt, there would be a lump. My ankle was aggravated again. It was painful to close my elbow. My clothes were torn from rolling down rocks. My belt and scabbard were still there but my pack was gone. I limped to my torch and lifted it for light. The pile of rubble we stood atop was resting on a cliff ledge, jutting out over a large sea cavern, the dark water far below. I didn’t find my pack, the straps must have torn in the fall and gone over the edge. It was the sea’s now. Better it than I, I guess.
Roll: Delve the Depths, Wits – Strong Hit, opportunity (snake eyes); Find an Opportunity – secure area; Heal – Strong Hit, opportunity
Perella forced me to sit and began tending my numerous scrapes and soon-to-be bruises as we took in our surroundings. The ledge continued along the cliff wall into the shadows. Hopefully a path to somewhere. We were both tattered, me more-so, and between us, we had only one torch and whatever supplies still remained in Perella’s pack. Things seemed dire but at least we had a moment to collect ourselves.
Perella retrieved a folded cloth from her pack, unwrapping it to reveal a twisting dried root the length of my hand. She broke off a portion half the size of my pinky and offered it to me.
“Here. Chew on this until it breaks down and can no longer be chewed. Then swallow it. It will help the pain.”
“What is it?” She was an herbalist too? More secrets, revealed in moments of need.
“It is Kelpa root, it doesn’t grow this far south. It will hide the pain for a time and slow your injuries from worsening, it will not heal you though.”
I accepted the root and chewed. It was stringy, almost like soft wood. Chewy strands. I had expected it to be bitter, it wasn’t though. It was warm. Earthy and warm, not quite burning. First it warmed my tongue, then, as I swallowed, my throat, then my stomach, and then gradually radiated through my body until it reached my fingers and toes. The heat indeed hid the pain, it was not numbing though, I was still aware of my wounds, they just hurt less. I was less fatigued as well. I quite liked the feeling.
In the end, we set off to explore the rest of the ledge because of the splashing below. When it had begun we were unsure, but the longer it continued, the more it became clear that there was a creature of some sort down there, something moving. Too erratic and arrhythmic to be the sea. It was too far down for the torch to illuminate, just shadows and the occasional flame reflecting off water. It sounded big though and the ledge felt much less secure and restful than it had a few minutes prior, so Perella repacked her rucksack and we pushed on.
Roll: Delve the Depths, Wits – Strong Hit; Find an Opportunity – terrain favors you, find a hidden path; Locate Your Objective – Strong Hit, +1 to next move
The ledge skirted the edge of the sea cave, growing wider and then narrower again, but remaining stable. The splashing seemed to follow us, matching our movements in the water below. An alarming observation. As my concerns deepened that the ledge led to nowhere but the other side of the sea cave, forcing us to either climb back the way we came to face the darkness or investigate the waters below, I saw it.
Rubble piled by the ledge’s wall. Moving closer, there was an opening, a cave. It led to another passage. Holding my torch to the entrance, I saw the reflection of polished rock flash from the other side. It was not a natural collapse, the pieces of rubble had sharp and broken edges, as if they had been struck, hastily excavated.
“Was this from a pick or from some new horror?”, Perella chuckled, examining the scratch and strike marks on the walls of the crude passage. Gallows humor for grave circumstances.
“I guess we’ll find out.”, I grinned back as I stepped into the passage. It led to another polished tunnel, similar to the one I had recently fallen from. Inside the tunnel, just to the right of the passage was another ceiling collapse. Had someone decided it was easier to break down the wall to find an alternate route than to clear the collapse? To the left was light! A dull glimmer from around a bend in the tunnel but definitely light.
As we left the sea cave and the splashing behind and set off towards the light, a dull rhythmic banging arose in the distance, ahead of us. We looked to each other, shrugged, and pressed on. The reflections off the polished walls grew brighter, curving to the right until we found their source. Daylight! Bright sun reflecting off of metal. It was too much at first and we had to look away until our eyes adjusted. I kept the torch lit though, I did not trust the light nor the darkness in this place.
Adapted to the new brightness, we turned to face it again. In front of us was the Beacon, unmistakably. The tunnel opened into a wide circular chamber. In the center were large holes in the floor and ceiling, and through the holes, rose the Pillar. Our path had taken us back to the pit, just deeper in the island, below where we had first entered. A large carved and symmetrical circular chamber intersected by a lower segment of the pit and Beacon.
We used our arms to shield our eyes from the glare of the Pillar, but the light reflecting off of the chamber’s polished walls was barely less blinding. I could only just make out the shadows of another tunnel entrance on the far side of the room, opposite the one we had just left.
The distant banging seemed to emanate from the pit. We edged closer to look. Below was now brightly illuminated, the bottom of the pit opening into a large cavern, the sea brilliantly reflecting beneath. Above was even more blinding. The clouds must have burned off and the mid-day sun was shining directly down the shaft, dashing against and mirroring along the Beacon. I had never before witnessed such luminance.
The ascending pit was interspersed with cave mouths, many many more than we had been able to make out from the surface that clouded morning. The glare made it impossible to see the top of the pit, having to stare directly into the sun to do so. The rhythmic banging continued, echoing up and down the shaft. It could have been coming from any of the caverns.
Then we heard yelling above, “Are you still up there!?” And then yelling in response, too far away and reverberated to decipher. Craning our necks to look upward, we saw them. Mira and Kaivana were leaning out of a large cave mouth far above us, maybe halfway back to the surface, and shouting at our comrades up top.
“Mira!”, both Perella and I yelled.
Mira, startled, looked down and whooped in joy. “Blessed, you made it!”
“And you!”, Perella’s smile was beaming in the sun.
“Hold there! We’ll get a rope down here and then figure out how to get you out!”
“What are you banging on?”, I yelled.
Mira looked down in confusion for a moment and then yelled up, “What are you banging on?”
A response from the surface, indecipherable. Mira looked back down, a little less joyful. “That’s not us. Stay alert!”
We were definitely alert. Perella and I looked to each other, our hands already resting on our weapons. She pulled and deftly twirled her hatchet before returning it to her belt, flashing a reassuring smile as she did so. We’d already been through enough that, so long as we remained in that place, we were incapable of letting our guard down.
So, since the chamber was too bright to further investigate or do much else, we waited. Shielded our eyes and waited, not wanting to stray out of sight from our comrades.
Then it went dark. Well, not dark. just much darker, no longer blinding. The sun had continued along its path and was no longer directly over the pit, it’s light no longer piercing deep enough to illuminate our chamber or the sea below. As our eyes again adjusted, we saw it. The band of carvings, flowing and intersecting runes circling the Beacon. Only where the Pillar intersected the chamber, from floor to ceiling height but no higher or lower. The sun’s reflection had masked them before. I leaned forward over the ledge to study them. They were alien, I had never seen such runes, those I knew were harder, more straight, separate.
“Do you know these?”, I looked to Perella. She knew many things.
“Nay, never seen…”, she trailed off, wide-eyed and thoughtful.
“Mira! There’s something down here. Carvings!”
“What are they?” Before I could reply, we were interrupted by yelling from up top. Mira leaned further and craned her head up, “Aye. Good?” It seemed she was currently occupied with the rope situation so I turned back to the room.
“Do you hear that? The banging stopped.” Perella, still staring wide-eyed at the carvings.
It had indeed stopped. Concerning?

Then I noticed the pack on the far side of the room, near the other tunnel entrance. It was in plain sight but, like the carvings, had been shrouded by the reflecting sun. I slowly approached it. The bag was carefully placed upright as if someone had set it down to unpack something. Clothing, more like torn strips of fabric (but that was definitely the sole of a boot), was scattered nearby. I moved the torch closer to examine.
“Wait!”, Perella warned. I froze, and then I recognized it, the brief flash of torchlight on quartz. On the far side of the chamber to the left of the tunnel entrance lurked a mass. It was hugging the stone where the wall met the ceiling, tendrils outstretched and taught to pull it flat. It was more translucent than before, why I hadn’t noticed it. I could now clearly make out the stone and quartz shards under its skin, suspended and undulating, breaching the surface and then diving again. This mass was much smaller than the one we’d faced prior though. Maybe it was one of the two surviving halves from before. Or maybe it was a different, younger?, mass. I wasn’t fond of either possibility.
I lifted the blade in anticipation but the mass didn’t budge. Just continued to hug the wall. It felt as though it was watching us but it had no eyes to be seen, so I don’t actually know for sure. After a time, I cautiously stepped closer. Still no movement. I risked a look down at the pack and clothing. The clothes were shredded, torn. No, they were ground to rags. A dark stain covered the floor where they were scattered. I looked back up, still no movement. So I darted my sword arm out, grabbed the pack while still gripping the hilt, and leapt backwards, quickly retreating back across the chamber to Perella. Still no movement.
Eyes and torch still on the mass, I set the rucksack down by Perella. She quickly unpacked its contents, listing them as she did so.
“Waterskin, fur, bags, herbs?, a book!”
I heard her quickly thumbing through pages and shifted the torch to provide light.
“It’s maps! And a journal? And drawings! And the carvings!!!”
At that, I risked a glance. The open pages indeed contained sketches of the carvings on the Beacon, from different angles to capture them all.
I looked back up, no movement.
Then screaming from the pit. I inched towards it, still watching the mass. It sounded like struggle…or battle. I could hear Perella rushedly shoving the contents back into the pack. My right foot reached the ledge and I took my eye off the mass for a moment to look up.
I was briefly blinded, the sun had not yet travelled far enough that it wasn’t still reaching and reflecting off of the caverns and Pillar above us. My eyes refocused on the cave mouth. Mira and Kaivana were no longer there, only the echoes and cries of conflict. Then another scream and a body hurled out from the cave, slamming against Beacon with a wet thud. Followed by a hollow ring, almost as if a bell had been struck. The body lingered against the Pillar for a moment and then ungracefully fell, tumbling down and past me into the dark and sea below. As the corpse plunged through the chamber, almost close enough to touch, I recognized the auburn hair. It was Kaivana.
The sounds of struggle continued.
I glanced back, the mass hadn’t moved, then to Perella. She looked at me in horror, “We need to help Mira!”
Mark Progress: Expedition Vow – Discover carvings and journal
Roll: Swear an Iron Vow, Save Mira, troublesome – Weak Hit
I tried to reassure her, solemnly lifting the blade to my face. “We will save her! But first we need to find a way up there.” Perella gave a determined smile, reclaimed her confidence, and nodded towards the tunnel entrance we had yet to explore. I returned the smile and offered the torch to her. She took it, trading it for the repacked rucksack we had found (her already carrying one and me having lost mine). I shouldered the pack and we set off, safely circumventing the unmoving mass. Perella leading, both hoping that luck was with us and this new tunnel connected to the cavern above.
Roll: Face Danger, Wits – Weak Hit, delay
We moved swiftly, the tunnel seemed to climb, a good sign, lazily but steadily bending to the right. We increased our pace as it began to level off and then we reached the branch. The polished tunnel continued on but a large scattered pile of rubble revealed a crudely excavated passage through the wall to our right. It was the same as the one we had found in the sea cavern, broken stones and scratch marks.
Roll: Gather Information – Weak Hit
Mark Progress: Rescue Vow – Find path to Mira
“Which way, left or right?”
Perella thought for a moment and then her eyes widened. “We’ve been travelling away from the pit while veering right, right?” I nodded. “Then we need to go further right still to get back to the pit. We go right!” Without pause, she stepped into the rough passage.
It took me a moment to connect the threads but she was right. She was so sharp, almost like she had naturally just known where we were on a map.
Then my own chilling realization. “What if this was the banging we heard? If this way leads to Mira, what if whatever was attacking them came from this way? What if it tore through this wall to get to them?”
“Shit. It would have to have been so strong to do so.” Both of us wondered to ourselves how large of a creature could squeeze or crawl through a passage this size, a passage wide and tall enough that we only needed to bow our heads to enter. Yet we continued.
The passage led to a wide cave, uncarved or polished, running almost parallel to the tunnel we had just left. Meaning if we followed the path to the right, it would likely lead us near to where we had started, just closer to the surface. We did so and had not traveled far when we heard a resounding bang from ahead of us. Perella looked back. Her eyes were resolute. She gave a brash smirk. I found my resolve. We continued.
Roll: Secure an Advantage, Edge – Miss
Almost at a sprint, the cave abruptly widened into a cavern, an exit to the pit and Beacon on the far side. We skidded to a stop, equally abruptly, at the sight of the beast, the bones. A skeletal giant on all fours, it’s back to us, unmoving. Maybe not a giant, I had seen paintings of them, they looked like us. This looked as if a giant was stretched and pulled. The limbs were too long, the arching spine and ribs were extended.
Then we saw Mira hugging the right wall, her back to the stone, also unmoving. She looked at us in surprise and fear. Hugging the opposite wall was the fifth sailor that had entered the pit, the one I had not known the name of (after this, I learned he was Mohkel), also unmoving. All silent.
The only sound was that of our boots scraping stones as we slid to a halt. And then, the skeletal giant moved. Faster than something that size should have been able to, it spun around, sweeping its massive clawed hand, barely missing us. Swinging past our faces and colliding against the cavern wall to our left, showering us in pebbles
Mark Progress: Rescue Vow – Find Mira
Roll: Endure stress – Weak Hit; Enter the Fray, Elder Bonewalker, Wits, ambush – Strong Hit
Roll: Strike – Miss => Burn Momentum – Strong hit, Swordmaster, +1 next move
I was awestruck, its arm was as long as I was tall. I hesitated. The creature crawled forward. Its clawed hand left the rubble and began to sweep back, this time it would cleave us…Perella first! I lunged past her to intercept, lifting the blade high with both hands. As the hand and arm accelerated towards us, I swung down and roared, the blade slammed into its elbow. It didn’t sever it or pass through the gaps in the bone though. The joint stopped the blade like an anvil halting hammer, but the force passed through to the forearm and hand and fingers. They loosened, they disconnected, falling with a heavy rattle and limply dragging across the rocky ground as if connected by long strings. The blade gave another disappointed sigh.
“It can’t see!” warned Mira.
The skeleton swung its skull back toward the sound. Realizing why they had been hugging the wall in silence in the first place, I froze. I watched the horror. It froze. I was afraid to look behind me, to Perella, afraid that the rustle of my hair or clothes might be loud enough to draw its claws. I could tell she was holding her breath (I guess I had grown so familiar with the sound that it’s absence was noticeable).
Silence except for the dragging and rattling. I glanced down to see the bones of the forearm and hand gradually pulling across the floor and back into place at the elbow, like something was shortening the strings. Damage was not permanent, this was unwelcome news. I needed to figure out a way to actually stop it.
Roll: Secure an Advantage, Wits – Strong Hit
I continued to watch. It did not move. The whole cavern was still and silent but for the dragging and scraping of reassembling bones. I could find no obvious weakness. It just looked like a giant skeleton, an inhuman stretched skeleton. But beyond the unnerving familiar unfamiliarity, nothing stood out as distinctly vulnerable. The spine stretched and arched more, I thought I could maybe see wider gaps between the vertebrae than the other joints. Perhaps the invisible threads would be weaker there. I wasn’t confident but I had a fleeting advantage, it was momentarily weakened and unaware of my position. I needed to act before it recovered.
Roll: Strike – Strong Hit, opportunity
So I twisted and leapt, swinging the blade back overhead and slamming it down into the middle of the spine, just below the ribs. It turned out to be a wise move (maybe Perella’s quick thinking had been rubbing off on me). The blade smashed into vertebrae as if it were stone, shock recoiling through my arms. But the force also traveled up and down the spine, knocking loose the ribs and shoulders, as well as the hips. It fell to the ground in a rattling clatter. The limbs futilely bending and rolling among the scattered limp hips, and vertebrae, and ribs, and shoulders, and skull. The jaw slowly opened and half closed.
“Quickly!”, ordered Mira. “Before it reassembles, we must climb!”
Mohkel, the good sailor, responded first. He rushed to the ledge and looked out to the side, then up, screaming. “It needs to be moved closer, I can’t reach it! Hurry!”
Excited responses from up top and then Mohkel, gripping the cave mouth with one hand, leaned out of the entrance, extending his other hand out of sight, and returned holding a rope. It must have been lowered while Perella and I had raced through the tunnels.
“It’s fixing itself!”, I warned as I stood over the dragging and pulling vertebrae and raised the blade.
Roll: End the Fight – Strong Hit; Escape the Depths, Iron – Strong Hit
Mark Progress: Rescue Vow – Defeat Elder Bonewalker
Mira ran to Mohkel and, grabbing the rope from him to steady it, ordered, “Climb!”
He climbed. The good sailor, he climbed quickly.. Then she ushered Perella over.
The vertebrae I had struck had reconnected with its neighbors, reconstructing from the point of break and pulling outward.
Mira, still steadying the rope, ordered, “Climb!”
Perella shook her head and took the rope. “No, you!”
Mira glared but, realizing we could not afford the time to argue, began climbing.
The spine had reassembled and now the shoulders and ribs and hips and neck were pulling back into place. Once finished, the limbs would be supported again and it would be able to strike.
“Hob! Now!”, Perella screamed. I looked to her, looked back down at the relocating shoulders and hips, and swung the blade down again, roaring, all of my strength, all of the Kelpa root’s remaining warmth. The spine shattered again and I ran, sheathing the blade as I did so.
By the time I reached the rope, I was facing Perella’s legs. She had leaped and began climbing the moment I swung the blade. I steadied the rope until she had passed above the cavern mouth and was able to steady her legs on one of the pit’s jutting stones. To Gods that the pit had footholds, not perfectly polished and smooth like the tunnel walls or the Beacon were.
To Gods that Kelpa root was a thing. My hands were raw but they did not pain me. I could make this climb. I leapt and began inching myself up with my legs. I glanced at the bones. The spine was reassembled and arching. I climbed faster.
Roll: Face Danger, Iron – Miss (this was for dramatic purposes since had already rolled a strong hit to end the fight and escape the depths but that seemed too easy. Still, I wasn’t going have myself fall because I had already rolled that I would escape, so I just took full damage instead); Endure Harm – Weak Hit
I reached the ceiling of the mouth and planted my foot against the same stone Perella had used, the rope swung. I looked up, they were all above me, still climbing. Four people on the same rope explained why it was swaying so much near the bottom. I hoped the line could hold our weight. I pulled on the rope and pushed off of the jutting stone, finding a small ledge for my other foot. I looked up again, attempting to follow Perella’s path.
Then a crashing below me and a large long arm swung out and up from the cavern mouth. I kicked off, swinging with the rope, away and to the side. I could almost touch the Beacon for a moment. I did not do so. I heard a startled yelp from above as my momentum pulled Perella into the swing as well. The hand smashed into the wall I had just pushed off, spraying me with dust and shards of rock. The impact spun me off balance and I slammed back into the wall, shoulder first, almost losing my wind and my grip. But I held. To Gods for Kelpa!
Bracing my feet I looked up. Perella was staring down at me in fear and anger but had also kept ahold.
“Climb!”, I yelled.
She climbed.

Another impact, just below me. The giant skeletal skull and arms were leaning out of the cavern, furiously smashing the pit wall and straining to reach the desperate sounds of my boot scraping stone. I continued climbing. Eventually the arms stopped flailing, The skeletal giant froze. Leaning out of the cavern, skull almost touching the Beacon, silent and still except for the slowly opening and half closing jaw.
And so we ascended. My hands kept their strength. The swaying lessened and the climb eased when Mohkel reached the top. Then lessened again when Mira climbed out of the pit. And then the swaying ceased altogether as Perella was pulled out. My body had reached its limits though. I was forced to loop the rope around my body and arms and be hauled up the final stretches. And then, I was out of the pit. We were out. All but Kaivana, left in the sea beneath the island, abandoned and irretrievable.
Laying on my back, panting and spent, surrounded by activity. Mira talking excitedly, the crew atop asking questions, others hurriedly pulling up the rope. I continued to lie for a bit. I turned my head to see Perella doing the same. This time, I smiled first. And then she smiled in return, eyes tired and emotional. And that is my one positive memory of the Desolate Beacon.
After that, we soon left. The skeleton still had not moved. Was still leaning out of the cavern, staring up, it’s jaw opening and half closing. We didn’t know if it could climb, if there was another exit from the tunnel network besides the pit. It was no longer safe there.
The story of the carvings and the sketches and journal appeared to satisfy Mira’s search. It would have to. I don’t think a soul aboard the Swan was willing to risk those caves again just to explore. We returned to the camp, moved the ship back into the cove, and boarded. I drifted to sleep almost immediately, the waning heat of the Kelpa root giving way to exhaustion. I would likely hurt later, my body felt battered and shattered, but that was for later. First I had to sleep.
Mark Progress: Rescue Vow – Mira escapes bonewalker; Expedition Vow – Escape the Beacon
Roll: Heal – Strong Hit
When I woke, the sun was lower in the sky. The sail was down and the Swan lazily bobbed with each wave. I was curled up on a bench, my head resting on Perella’s lap. She was half slumped over to her side, having nodded off while sitting upright. The ship had stopped and we were fishing. The Desolate Beacon and its island were still visible behind us. Far away but still an unpleasant sight.
It was nearing evening and the crew, having spent the last night packed tightly aboard the ship, had been excited for the chance to sleep on dry land with fire and a cooked meal, before our hurried return from the pit and our flight from the isle had dashed those hopes. So Mira had ordered the nets cast, some fresh catch. Then we would shore at the small island to our north, one we had sailed past the day prior, just large enough to scrounge some fuel for a fire and shelter from the winds.
Roll: Resupply – Miss, complication, raiders have seen us, they are not striking and so far unnoticed
Roll: Fulfill Your Vow, Save Mira – Weak Hit (I couldn’t think of a good vow to make this right and honestly don’t like that a weak hit on completing a troublesome vow with ten progress means zero XP. So I held that XP and added +1 xp to the larger formidable expedition quest if/when it was fulfilled)
While waiting to retrieve the nets, words were committed for Kaivana, though her body already resided in the sea. I again participated and witnessed. Kaivana and I had never truly spoken but one time we had shared a laugh at one of Perella’s incredible boasts, a cocksure smirk while confidently declaring she had hunted and slain a cave lion during her youth. I’d only heard stories. I guess Kaivana probably had never seen a cave lion either, they were never seen this far south. They sounded terrifying and not the type of beast one hunted, not alone at least. The more we giggled, the more passionate and earnest Perella’s assertions had become, until she could mask her amusement no longer and had joined in the laughter.
I had been the one to watch Kaivana die. I had only just escaped the giant that had taken her and so understood the courage she must have had to face that foe. Many others spoke and witnessed and heard. She had been someone worth knowing. I honored the loss and, gripping the blade’s scabbarded hilt, silently vowed to myself that her sacrifice would not be in vain and Mira would return to their faith with the knowledge they sought. I was pretty sure I was not a Sustainer, still wasn’t really sure what Sustainers even believed, but I did respect Kaivana’s conviction and her choice to volunteer for the expedition and the descent into the caves. I would not devalue that choice.
Roll: Forge a Bond, The Piercing Swan, Storyweaver – Strong Hit, opportunity
After the committal, there were questions. Mira, with Mohkel’s occasional assistance, told of the gloom. In addition to the darkness, Mira had had the sound stolen from her as well. She could neither hear her own voice nor footfalls. Mohkel gave few details of what had happened to him in the shadows. A swift glare across the crew from Mira made it clear that this was fine and no one would be badgering him to speak on it further. They had escaped the gloom and found each other, Kaivana as well, in another cavern, still rocky and unpolished, unlike the one Perella and I had ended up in. There must have been a fork or passage in the darkness that had split us. The three of them followed the cavern back to the pit, where we had found them. The banging had started before they reached it. It had been so deafening and reverberating that they had thought it came from the pit itself, or those above. Then the stretched giant had attacked and Kaivana’s sacrifice was made, and they had no option but to try and wait it out, try and stay silent. Until Perella and I arrived. I blushed as Mira spoke of my scattering of the creature and harrowing escape.
The crew looked at me differently after that, more so than after Perella and I had slain the brood mother. This time we had also saved Mira, their captain. They asked questions of us, they wanted to know about our time in the darkness, the mass, the carvings, and the final moments in the cavern and desperate climb. I continued to blush but attempted to respond. Perella, seeing me redden, tried to buffer me and answered as many questions as she could. She looked exhausted though. I hadn’t noticed until that moment. She was cradling her shoulder (probably without even knowing she was doing so) and realized later that she had managed to strain both her strong shoulder and her knee during the trials we’d faced below the plateau.
Roll: Resupply – Miss, uh oh; Resupply – Weak Hit (I did additional resupply rolls because it narratively wouldn’t make sense for my supply, which was down to 1 after losing my pack, to extrapolate to the entire crew and rations and water that we had just filled the day prior in Brokefall. Supply would likely have ran out on the first undertake a journey roll so I made additional rolls and compounded the repercussions of the misses.)
Clouds had begun to roll back in, announcing themselves low in the sky as one passed in front of the setting sun. It grew a little chillier. It was getting late, time to pull the nets, reach the small island to our north, and build camp before we lost the light.
It was as the nets were retrieved that the sail was spotted, a longship coming around the western cliffs of the same northern island we were planning to shore on. It was still at a distance but close enough that the sighting startled us, the island having been between us and the ship during most of its approach. The sail was plain cloth, undyed, odd for a ship that large but it could have been a replacement sail or maybe just the sign of a thrifty captain. More concerning was the fact that the longship was even out there. There were no circles that far out that anyone knew of. No reason for traders or fishers to venture to the far edge of the Barrier, almost to the open sea. So we retrieved the nets with more urgency, just in case we needed to move.
It was after the nets had been pulled aboard and were being examined and stowed that the cloud cleared from the sun and the bright fading light revealed that the sail was not an undyed off-white at all, but more of a faded yellow. Mira and I, the two who had heard Nazmi’s story in Brokefall, of the raiders who “struck swiftly” in “a large ship” with “yellow sail”, exchanged concerned glances.
“Stow it and raise the sail!” Mira ordered. The crew of the Piercing Swan exploded into action.
And so we ran, the findings of the expedition too valuable to risk waiting for the ship to approach close enough to ascertain whether friend or foe.













