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Adventurers League; DDEX1-03 - Shadows Over the Moonsea.json
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Adventurers League; DDEX1-03 - Shadows Over the Moonsea.json
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{
"_meta": {
"sources": [
{
"json": "DDEX1-03",
"abbreviation": "DDEX1-03",
"full": "DDEX1-03 - Shadows Over the Moonsea",
"authors": [
"Wizards of the Coast"
],
"convertedBy": [
"JuntaK"
],
"version": "1.0.0",
"url": "https://github.com/TheGiddyLimit/homebrew",
"targetSchema": "1.0.0"
}
],
"dateAdded": 1558867830,
"dateLastModified": 1558867830
},
"adventure": [
{
"name": "Shadows Over the Moonsea",
"id": "DDEX1-03",
"source": "DDEX1-03",
"contents": [
{
"name": "Foreword",
"headers": [
"Introduction",
"The D&D Adventurers League",
"Preparing the Adventure",
"Before Play at the Table",
"Adjusting the Adventure",
"Dungeon Mastering the Adventure",
"Adventure Background",
"Recent Events",
"Overview"
]
},
{
"name": "Part 1: At the Open",
"headers": [
"The Mind of a Madman",
"Speaking with the Black Fist",
"Staring at a Pattern",
"Fillistrom Wunderkundoodle",
"Faction Assignments"
]
},
{
"name": "Part 2: On the Road",
"headers": [
"Of Ghost Ships & Roast Duck",
"A Wary Mother",
"The Boatman"
]
},
{
"name": "Part 3: The Village",
"headers": [
"Village Vignettes",
"Elisande",
"Overview of the Island"
]
},
{
"name": "Part 4: Bump in the Night",
"headers": [
""
]
},
{
"name": "Part 5: High Seas",
"headers": [
"Taking the Fight to the Ship",
"The Return of the Audacity",
"Conclusion"
]
},
{
"name": "Rewards",
"headers": [
"Experience",
"Treasure",
"Renown",
"Downtime",
"DM Rewards"
]
}
],
"published": "2014-09-01",
"coverUrl": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/TheGiddyLimit/homebrew/master/_img/Adventurers%20League/DDEX1-03/DDEX1-03-cover.webp",
"level": {
"start": 1,
"end": 4
},
"storyline": "Tyranny of Dragons"
}
],
"adventureData": [
{
"id": "DDEX1-03",
"source": "DDEX1-03",
"data": [
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Foreword",
"entries": [
"Life on the Moonsea isn't easy. Bandits, pirates, and cruel lords dominate the land, threatening those who make an honest living there. Now, a new scourge is prowling the waters: A ghost ship has been striking small coastal villages, leaving its victims whispering about the \"eye of the dracolich.\" Join the adventure and learn the truth behind this threat! An adventure for 1st-4th level charachters.",
"{@b Adventure Code: DDEX1-03}",
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Introduction",
"entries": [
"Welcome to {@i Shadows over the Moonsea}, a D&D Expeditions™ adventure, part of the official D&D Adventurers League™ organized play system and the Tyranny of Dragons™ storyline season.",
"{@b This adventure is designed for three to seven 1st level characters, and is optimized for five 2nd level characters}. Characters outside this level range cannot participate in this adventure. Players with ineligible characters can create a new 1st-level character or use a pregenerated character.",
"This adventure is set in the Moonsea region of the Forgotten Realms, in and near the city of Phlan."
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "The D&D Adventurers League",
"entries": [
"This adventure is official for D&D Adventurers League play. The D&D Adventurers League is the official organized play system for Dungeons and Dragons®. Players can create characters and participate in any adventure allowed as a part of the D&D Adventurers League. As they adventure, players track their characters' experience, treasure, and other rewards, and can take those characters through other adventures that will continue their story.",
"D&D Adventurers League play is broken up into storyline seasons. When players create characters, they attach those characters to a storyline season, which determines what rules they're allowed to use to create and advance their characters. Players can continue to play their characters after the storyline season has finished, possibly participating in a second or third storyline with those same characters. A character's level is the only limitation for adventure play. A player cannot use a character of a level higher or lower than the level range of a D&D Adventurers League adventure.",
"If you're running this adventure as a part of a store event or at certain conventions, you'll need a DCI number. This number is your official Wizards of the Coast organized play identifier. If you don't have a number, you can obtain one at a store event. Check with your organizer for details.",
"For more information on playing, running games as a Dungeon Master, and organizing games for the D&D Adventurers League, please visit the D&D Adventurers League home page."
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Preparing the Adventure",
"entries": [
"Before you show up to Dungeon Master this adventure for a group of players, you should do the following to prepare.",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"Make sure to have a copy of the most current version of the D&D basic rules or the {@book Player's Handbook|phb}.",
"Read through the adventure, taking notes of anything you'd like to highlight or remind yourself while running the adventure, such as a way you'd like to portray an NPC or a tactic you'd like to use in a combat.",
"Get familiar with the monster statistics used in this adventure.",
"Gather together any resources you'd like to use to aid you in Dungeon Mastering, such as notecards, a DM screen, miniatures, battlemaps, etc.",
"If you know the composition of the group beforehand, you can make adjustments as noted throughout the adventure."
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Before Play at the Table",
"entries": [
"Ask the players to provide you with relevant character information. This includes:",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"Character name and level",
"Character race and class",
"Passive Wisdom (Perception)-the most common passive ability check",
"Anything notable as specified by the adventure (such as backgrounds, traits, flaws, and so on)"
]
},
"Players that have characters outside the adventure's level range {@b cannot participate in the adventure with those characters}. Players with ineligible characters can make a new 1st-level character or use a pregenerated character. Players can play an adventure they previously played or ran as a Dungeon Master, but not with the same character (if applicable).",
"Ensure that each player has an official adventure logsheet for his or her character (if not, get one from the organizer). The player will fill out the adventure name, session number, date, and your name and DCI number. In addition, the player also fills in the starting values for XP, gold, downtime, renown, and number of permanent magic items. He or she will fill in the other values and write notes at the conclusion of the session. Each player is responsible for maintaining an accurate logsheet.",
"If you have time, you can do a quick scan of a player's character sheet to ensure that nothing looks out of order. If you see magic items of very high rarities or strange arrays of ability scores, you can ask players to provide documentation for the irregularities. If they cannot, feel free to restrict item use or ask them to use a standard ability score array. Point players to the D&D Adventurers League Player's Guide for reference.",
"If players wish to spend downtime days and it's the beginning of an adventure or episode, they can declare their activity and spend the days now, or they can do so at the end of the adventure or episode.",
"Players should select their characters' spells and other daily options prior to the start of the adventure, unless the adventure specifies otherwise. Feel free to reread the adventure description to help give players hints about what they might face."
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Adjusting the Adventure",
"entries": [
"Throughout this adventure, you may see sidebars to help you make adjustments to this adventure for smaller/larger groups and characters, of higher/lower levels that the optimized group size. Most of the time, this is used for combat encounters.",
"You may adjust the adventure beyond the guidelines given in the adventure, or for other reasons. For example, if you're playing with a group of inexperienced players, you might want to make the adventure a little easier; for very experienced players, you might want to make it a little harder. Therefore, five categories of party strength have been created for you to use as a guide.",
"Use these as a guide, and feel free to use a different adjustment during the adventure if the recommended party strength feels off for the group.",
"This adventure is {@b optimized for a party of five 2nd level characters}. To figure out whether you need to adjust the adventure, do the following:",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"Add up the total levels of all the characters",
"Divide the total by the number of characters",
"Round fractions of .5 or greater up; round fractions of less than .5 down"
]
},
"You've now determined the {@b average party level (APL)} for the adventure. To figure out the {@b party strength} for the adventure, consult the following table.",
{
"type": "table",
"colLabels": [
"Party Composition",
"Party Strength"
],
"colStyles": [
"text-align-left",
"text-align-left"
],
"rows": [
[
"3-4 characters, APL less than",
"Very weak"
],
[
"3-4 characters, APL equivalent",
"Weak"
],
[
"3-4 characters, APL greater than",
"Average"
],
[
"5 characters, APL less than",
"Weak"
],
[
"5 characters, APL equivalent",
"Average"
],
[
"5 characters, APL greater than",
"Strong"
],
[
"6-7 characters, APL less than",
"Average"
],
[
"6-7 characters, APL equivalent",
"Strong"
],
[
"6-7 characters, APL greater than",
"Very strong"
]
],
"caption": "Determining Party Strength"
},
"{@b Average party strength} indicates no recommended adjustments to the adventure. Each sidebar may or may not offer suggestions for certain party strengths. If a particular recommendation is not offered for your group, you don't have to make adjustments."
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Dungeon Mastering the Adventure",
"entries": [
"As the DM of the session, you have the most important role in facilitating the enjoyment of the game for the players. You help guide the narrative and bring the words on these pages to life. The outcome of a fun game session often creates stories that live well beyond the play at the table. Always follow this golden rule when you DM for a group:",
"{@b Make decisions and adjudications that enhance the fun of the adventure when possible.}",
"To reinforce this golden rule, keep in mind the following:",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"You are empowered to make adjustments to the adventure and make decisions about how the group interacts with the world of this adventure. This is especially important and applicable outside of combat, but feel free to adjust the adventure for groups that are having too easy or too hard of a time.",
"Don't make the adventure too easy or too difficult for a group. Never being challenged makes for a boring game, and being overwhelmed makes for a frustrating game. Gauge the experience of the players (not the characters) with the game, try to feel out (or ask) what they like in a game, and attempt to give each of them the experience they're after when they play D&D. Give everyone a chance to shine.",
"Be mindful of pacing, and keep the game session moving along appropriately. Watch for stalling, since play loses momentum when this happens. At the same time, make sure that the players don't finish too early; provide them with a full play experience. Try to be aware of running long or short. Adjust the pacing accordingly.",
"Read-aloud text is just a suggestion; feel free to modify the text as you see fit, especially when dialogue is present.",
"Give the players appropriate hints so they can make informed choices about how to proceed. Players should be given clues and hints when appropriate so they can tackle puzzles, combat, and interactions without getting frustrated over lack of information. This helps to encourage immersion in the adventure and gives players \"little victories\" for figuring out good choices from clues."
]
},
"In short, being the DM isn't about following the adventure's text word-for-word; it's about facilitating a fun, challenging game environment for the players. The {@book Dungeon Master's Guide™|dmg} has more information on the art of running a D&D game.",
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Downtime and Lifestyle",
"entries": [
"At the beginning of each play session, players must declare whether or not they are spending any days of downtime. The player records the downtime spent on the adventure logsheet. The following options are available to players during downtime (see the D&D basic rules or the D&D Adventurers League Player's Guide for more information):",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"Catching up",
"Crafting (exception: multiple characters cannot commit to crafting a single item)",
"Practicing a profession",
"Recuperating",
"Spellcasting services (end of the adventure only)",
"Training"
]
},
"Other downtime options might be available during adventures or unlocked through play, including faction-specific activities.",
"In addition, whenever a character spends downtime days, that character also spends the requisite expense for his or her lifestyle. Costs are per day, so a character that spends ten days of downtime also spends ten days of expenses maintaining his or her lifestyle. Some downtime activities help with lifestyle expenses or add lifestyle expenses."
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Spellcasting Services",
"entries": [
"Any settlement the size of a town or larger can provide some spellcasting services. Characters need to be able to travel to the settlement to obtain these services. Alternatively, if the party finishes an adventure, they can be assumed to return to the settlement closest to the adventure location.",
"Spell services generally available include healing and recovery spells, as well as information-gathering spells. Other spell services might be available as specified in the adventure. The number of spells available to be cast as a service is limited to a {@b maximum of three per day total}, unless otherwise noted.",
{
"type": "table",
"colLabels": [
"Spell",
"Cost"
],
"colStyles": [
"text-align-left",
"text-align-left"
],
"rows": [
[
"{@spell Cure wounds} (1st level)",
"10 gp"
],
[
"{@spell Identify}",
"20 gp"
],
[
"{@spell Lesser restoration}",
"40 gp"
],
[
"{@spell Prayer of healing} (2nd level)",
"40 gp"
],
[
"{@spell Remove curse}",
"90 gp"
],
[
"{@spell Speak with dead}",
"90 gp"
],
[
"{@spell Divination}",
"210 gp"
],
[
"{@spell Greater restoration}",
"450 gp"
],
[
"{@spell Raise dead}",
"1,250 gp"
]
],
"caption": "Spellcasting Services"
},
{
"type": "inset",
"name": "Acolyte Background",
"entries": [
"A character possessing the {@background acolyte} background requesting spellcasting services at a temple of his or her faith may request {@b one spell per day} from the Spellcasting Services table for free. The only cost paid for the spell is the base price for the consumed material component, if any."
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Character Disease, Death, and Recovery",
"entries": [
"Sometimes bad things happen, and characters get poisoned, diseased, or die. Since you might not have the same characters return from session to session, here are the rules when bad things happen to characters.",
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Disease, Poison, and Other Debilitating Effects",
"entries": [
"A character still affected by diseases, poisons, and other similar effects at the conclusion of an adventure can spend downtime days recuperating until such time as he or she resolves the effect to its conclusion (see the recuperating activity in the D&D basic rules). If a character doesn't resolve the effect between sessions, that character begins the next session still affected by the debilitating effect."
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Death",
"entries": [
"A character who dies during the course of the adventure has a few options at the end of the session (or whenever arriving back in civilization) if no one in the adventuring party has immediate access to a {@spell raise dead} or {@spell revivify} spell, or similar magic. A character subject to a raise dead spell is affected negatively until all long rests have been completed during an adventure. Alternatively, each downtime day spent after raise dead reduces the penalty to attack rolls, saving throws, and ability checks by 1, in addition to any other benefits the downtime activity might provide.",
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Create a New 1st-Level Character",
"entries": [
"If the dead character is unwilling or unable to exercise any of the other options, the player creates a new character. The new character does not have any items or rewards possessed by the dead character."
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Dead Character Pays for Raise Dead",
"entries": [
"If the character's body is recoverable (it's not missing any vital organs and is mostly whole) and the player would like the character to be returned to life, the party can take the body back to civilization and use the dead character's funds to pay for a {@spell raise dead} spell. A {@spell raise dead} spell cast in this manner costs the character 1,250 gp."
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Character's Party Pays for Raise Dead",
"entries": [
"As above, except that some or all of the 1,250 gp for the {@spell raise dead} spell is paid for by the party at the end of the session. Other characters are under no obligation to spend their funds to bring back a dead party member."
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Faction Charity",
"entries": [
"If the character is of level 1 to 4 and a member of a faction, the dead character's body can be returned to civilization and a patron from the faction ensures that he or she receives a {@spell raise dead} spell. However, any character invoking this charity forfeits all XP and rewards from that session (even those earned prior to death during that session), and cannot replay that episode or adventure with that character again. Once a character reaches 5th level, this option is no longer available."
]
}
]
}
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Adventure Background",
"entries": [
"About 60 years ago, before the completion of the Sundering, the crew of the {@i Audacity} plied the waters of the Moonsea for fortune and glory, taking the occasional prize and raiding the coast. Never especially fortunate, the {@i Audacity} and its captain, Reeve Sar Testain, happened across a fat merchant vessel loaded with booty. After a brief and bloody conflict, the {@i Audacity} sought a refuge where they might hide from the authorities while counting their loot. Amazed at their good luck, the crew tallied a fortune in gold, gems, works of art and books of lore.",
"In the Stormy Bay, a place known for its foul weather, is a small forested isle that has been home to generations of fisher folk. A strange sort that seldom mixed with the outside world, its people had grown more and more degenerate. Too small to be of interest to the neighboring city states, and at the center of too much brutal weather to be of use to other ships, the unnamed island was the perfect place to hide from any authorities that might seek out the {@i Audacity} and her crew. Anchoring off the shore of the island, and coming ashore, the buccaneers made quick work, subduing the town and making it their own, turning the inhabitants into their slaves.",
"Little did the pirates know that the fisher folk were not as powerless as they first appeared, for they had truck with infernal powers, having worshiped them in secret for decades. After days of abuse, the citizens of the unnamed village on that unnamed island enacted foul rituals to call upon devils subservient to Tiamat. They traded their worship and souls, along with the gold and gems on the ship, to the devils. In exchange, the devils carried the pirates into infernal slavery, just as pirates have made slaves of the fisher folk. And so it was that the {@i Audacity} and its crew left this world for bondage in the Hells."
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Recent Events",
"entries": [
"There is a schism in the Cult of the Dragon. While those following Severin seek a new way involving the {@i Dragon Masks}, some of the old guard remain. Ixas, a young wizard, whose master remains true to the original dracolich worshiping ideals of the Cult, has been dispatched to locate the {@item Green Dragon Mask|RoTOS} and recover it. Given a ship, a few men, and tribe of kobolds as minions, he has come to the Moonsea on 60-year old rumors of a lost merchant ship that once carried a library of lore filled books. The stories say that among its cargo was book that may have spoken of the final resting place of the artifact.",
"Ixas hopes to allay suspicion on his search by playing on the stories of ghost ships in the area, hoping that it will deter others from asking why small coastal communities are being attacked and raided. Someone might come after a ship of men, but who would come after a ship of the undead? Who indeed?",
{
"type": "inset",
"name": "Timeline of Events",
"entries": [
"To aid you, below is an abbreviated timeline of the events that take place immediately before and during the adventure. Each attack occurs four days apart, but yet the sites are only one day's travel apart. While not known at the beginning, the four day pause between the attacks corresponds roughly to changes in the phases of the moon.",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"{@i Day 1:} The first attack occurs on the small town of Aleston, consisting of a small mill, a brewery and the houses of the workers.",
"{@i Day 5:} The second attack takes place on a collection of farm houses.",
"{@i Day 9:} The third attack destroys Vig's Dock, a seaside traveler's inn.",
"{@i Day 13:} The fourth attack on the unnamed village where the madman, Yip, lived. Now the authorities of Phlan are beginning to notice the occurrences.",
"{@i Day 15 (morning):} The adventure begins as the adventurers meet with Doomguide Yovir at Valhingen Graveyard. The adventurers take the day to investigate in the city.",
"{@i Day 16:} The adventurers travel to the site of the next attack and meet the Gilfron Milon on their way.",
"{@i Day 17 (morning):} The adventurers arrive on the island and begin their investigation into the strange island folk.",
"{@i Day 17 (night):} Ixas and the Cult of the Dragon attack."
]
}
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Overview",
"entries": [
"{@i Shadows over the Moonsea} is divided into five parts. In Part 1, the adventurers are asked by Doomguide Yovir to investigate a series of attacks occurring along the northern coast of the Moonsea. In doing so, they explore the city of Phlan and discover a number of clues that suggest the location of the next attack will be a small island fishing village.",
"In Part 2, the party travels to the village and along the way have the opportunity to gather additional information from a passing merchant, Gilfron Milon and his son Gilmont. They also cross paths with some of the local wildlife.",
"In Part 3, the adventurers arrive in the fishing village and quickly discover that the poor and degenerate folk may have a secret to hide. The adventurers may choose to investigate deeper, possibly coming to blows with the villagers, or spend their time preparing for the attack they believe will soon occur.",
"Part 4 details the penultimate portion of the adventure. The Cult of the Dragon attacks the village and the adventurers either succeed in disrupting that attack, or they are captured and taken to Ixas' ship by his kobold minions.",
"The adventure culminates with Part 5. A battle aboard Ixas' ship ensues at the same time as the crew of the {@i Audacity} return from their enslavement in the Hells, seeking their revenge on living souls."
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Part 1: At the Open",
"entries": [
"The adventurers have answered a call to come to Valhingen Graveyard and speak with Doomguide Yovir Glandon, the high priest of {@deity Kelemvor|forgotten realms|PHB} (the lawful neutral god of death). Yovir has heard the rumors of the \"ghost ship\" attacking coastal communities and is worried that it will eventually come to Phlan. Between his Order's hatred for undead, and his civic concern, Yovir is looking for a group of able-bodied adventurers to tackle this challenge. The Order of Silent Shroud is neutral in city politics, and thus he has decided to sidestep any normal city bureaucracy and act directly before the threat finds its way to the city's doorstep.",
{
"type": "inset",
"name": "Roleplaying Doomguide Yovir",
"entries": [
"Yovir Glandon has toiled in the gardens of Valhingen for nearly 40 years. But despite his dirty, calloused hands and his grass-stained robes, he is a learned man. Yovir is a reserved man, who lets others steer the course of a conversation; interjecting only where necessary. He has little interest in the politics of Phlan, but does wish the best for its people."
]
},
{
"type": "insetReadaloud",
"entries": [
"The sun shines brightly in the graveyard as you approach the grey robed man, working in the dirt. He turns the dirt with a small hand trowel; several pots of flowers next to him. Without looking up, he speaks with an even voice, \"I am so glad you answered my call for aid. If all is as I fear, time may be short. Let us talk quickly.\""
]
},
"Doomguide Yovir introduces himself, thanks the adventurers for coming and then quickly gets the reason for his call for help. There are rumors of a \"ghost ship\" attacking small villages and lone farms or inns on the northern coast of the Moonsea, moving up the Iron Route toward Phlan from Zhentil Keep. No one seems moved to act and the danger draws ever nearer to Phlan.",
"Use the following bullet points to impart the details of what Yovir knows and what he wants from the adventurers:",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"Yesterday, a man from a small unnamed hamlet two days southwest of Phlan was picked up just outside of the city. Raving about a dracolich, and seemingly insane, the man was delivered into the care of the Kelemvorites. The man's mind is gone and it will take some time for him to recover if he ever does at all. The clerics have the man at their temple if they wish to examine him or attempt a conversation.",
"There have been reports that a ghost ship has been haunting the Stormy Bay coast, destroying small villages and homesteads.",
"Yovir knows that the Knights of the Black Fist are also concerned about the situation, given that the attacks appear to be moving in the direction of Phlan and it is possible that eventually it will attack the city.",
"While keeping a nominal eye on the approaching danger, they are not preparing as much as Yovir believes they should. The Knights did task one of their number (Aleyd Burral) with gathering information about the attacks.",
"Since the Kelemvorites are specifically neutral in the intricate web of city politics, Doomguide Yovir was motivated to act; fearing the arguing disparare groups will not be able to agree and acr in time to prevent the danger from coming to Phlan. In addition, rumors of ghosts and liches have disturbed Yovir. These sorts of powerful undead are extremely rare, but unfortunately have not been all that uncommon in the Moonsea. The followers of Kelemvor are staunch enemies of the undead and if they do exist, Yovir, wants them stamped out.",
"Doomguide Yovir suggests that the party begin by gathering information in Phlan about the attacks, specifically speaking with the recovering madman at the temple of Kelemvor or seeking out Aleyd Burral of the Knights of the Black Fist. From there they can follow up other leads, possibly taking them outside of the city. If the adventurers have any contacts in the cities (their factions), Yovir also encourages the adventurers to consult with them to determine if they knwo anything helpful. He also suggests they return to him if they have any further questions.",
"If the adventurers inquire about payment, Yovir suggest that altough he has no coin to give as payment, adventurers often lead to wealth and glory that the adventurers might acquire through their own deeds. He will, however, give them two {@item potion of healing||potions of healing} that they might use in their efforts. They are welcome to keep the potions if they are not used during the adventure. Yovir has also arranged riding horses and rooms for the adventurers at the Laughing Goblin Inn where they may stay tonight. The horses are a loan and are not theirs to keep. If lost or stolen, they will have to repay their cost.",
"If there are any acolytes or clerics of Kelemvor in the party, the group receives one additional {@item potion of healing} to take on their journey. (Not one per member of the faith.)"
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "",
"entries": [
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Developments",
"entries": [
"During their investigation, it is possible that some parties will want to leave Phlan as soon as possible or might refuse to leave at all, thinking it better to wait and defend the city should the attacks come. Use visits from Doomguide Yovir Glandon to keep them on track or help guide them as necessary."
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Treasure",
"entries": [
"Doomguide Yovir gives the adventurers two {@item potion of healing||potions of healing} (one additional if any acoyltes or clerics of Kelemvor are present) for agreeing to help out."
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "The Mind of a Madman",
"entries": [
"Following the directions given to them by Yovir, the adventurers can easily find themselves at the Temple of Kelemvor.",
{
"type": "insetReadaloud",
"entries": [
"A disheveled man with wild hair is tied to a chair in front of an open window. Deep, scabbed scratches cover his face and his hands are wrapped with bloody bandages. His eyes dart around the room almost without seeing, mumbling to himself.",
"A young acolyte in grey robes changes linens on a nearby bed with restraints dangling from its sides.",
"The boy nods at your entrance, \"You may call me Elden, gentle masters. If you have any questions, I have seen to the man's care for since last night.\""
]
},
{
"type": "inset",
"name": "Roleplaying Acolyte Elden",
"entries": [
"Acolyte Elden Mymn is a young human male with a passive, patient demeanor. He is quiet and easily overlooked in the background. He is fervent in his beliefs, but as he is only just beginning his training, he thinks it better to defer to his elders."
]
},
"Elden explains that the man is given to bouts of violence, though mostly towards himself and thus the restraints. He has clawed his face, and later began to chew off his own fingers when Elden tried to stop the man from hurting himself. Elden strongly discourages removing the restraints saying that it took several of the brothers to hold him down last time.",
"Elden has overheard the man speak of the \"eyes of the dracolich\" and his village being destroyed, but little beyond that. No one knows who the man is, or exactly what happened, only that his mind seems gone.",
"The man simply arrived in the graveyard yesterday, having wandered in on the road from the west, bearing wounds that already appeared to be at least one day old.",
"Shortly after the man arrived, a female Black Fist knight with closely cropped blonde hair streaked with gray came and attempted to interview the man. It did not go very well. The man began raving loudly shortly after the knight attempted to question him. Eventually he began barking like a dog and tried to bite the knight before she gave up and left.",
"The clerics have taken to calling the man Yip, due to the yipping, barking noise he frequently makes.",
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Yip, the Madman",
"entries": [
"The madman, Yip, is quiet and uninterested when the adventurers first arrive, but speaking with him is a trying process. He punctuates most of what he says with a barking, yip noise and other nervous ticks while struggling against his bonds. He never answers a straight question, and becomes more and more frustrated and agitated the more he is interacted with.",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"Yip does not respond to questions asking his name or who he is, but rather just repeats, \"The eyes, the eyes of the dracolich, it sees me... It is coming...\"",
"If examined, it is clear that he is deeply tanned and has rough hands with dirt under his nails. He is likely a farmer or other outdoor laborer. He has several wounds that have been dressed as well. A successful DC 15 Wisdom (Medicine) or Intelligence (Investigation) check can determine that one is a cut by a small bladed weapon, and two others are badly bruised contusions from some blunt object.",
"If asked how he came to be here Yip says \"the smalls shambled wet before the eyes, clack, clack, yip, the ghost ship, fog, yip. Blood, and flame, yip, village no more, yip, yip.\"",
"Yip speaks only Common."
]
},
"After being asked three questions, Yip devolves into yipping and struggling; biting anyone who comes too close to his mouth. This does no actual damage, but is a painful reminder that the man is not right in the head."
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Speaking with the Black Fist",
"entries": [
"Should the adventurers go looking for the Knight of the Black Fist investigating the attacks, they are quickly directed to a guard station where Knight Aleyd Burral awaits them.",
{
"type": "insetReadaloud",
"entries": [
"With only the slightest of effort, you are directed to a harried looking human woman wearing the uniform of a Black Fist Knight. Streaks of grey in her blonde hair frame a face with the hard-won lines of advancing age and a violent life. Turning a stern gaze upon you, she offers, \"I understand that you have been looking for me. How may I assist you, citizens?\""
]
},
{
"type": "inset",
"name": "Roleplaying Knight Aleyd Burral",
"entries": [
"Knight Aleyd Burral is a formidable warrior with a keen mind, but the soft heart she hides under a stern frown has kept from advancing further in the Knights of the Black Fist. In her late 40s with grey-streaked blonde hair, she has decided that doing her job well and protecting Phlan is perhaps more important than advancement. She does not suffer fools and counts adventurers among the most foolish of all."
]
},
"When adventurers first arrive, Aleyd is a little concerned about conversing with random adventurers and directly questions the adventurers about their motivations until they give a plausible story or simply tell her they work for Doomguide Yovir, at which point she relaxes. Aleyd respects the Kelemvorite for his civic concern while avoiding city politics.",
"Aleyd explains that she has been looking into the attacks and can list each occurrence (the madman's village two days ago, Vig's Dock six days ago, a collection of farm houses ten days ago, and the Aleston brewery fourteen days previous). She is worried that eventually the attacks will come to Phlan, but while she was able to convince her superiors to allow her to investigate, they are not concerned. Phlan is large, and all the attacks have occurred in small villages or lone homes. She has noticed a pattern in the attacks (every four nights), but hasn't put together any reason for that sequence. The travel time between each attack is approximately one or two days, so it must be something beyond just the time it takes to travel from one spot to the next.",
"She has the following specific details she can offer in response to the adventurer's questions:",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"There are no witnesses beyond the madman, but it seems likely by when the ruined villages were found that all of the attacks occurred at night. If pressed, she admits this is purely supposition.",
"She has investigated the last site personally, but only interviewed travelers in Phlan that passed through the first, second and third locations. In all cases, the village appears to have been ransacked and burned. Not much appeared to have been taken, if anything, but it was impossible to tell for certain due to the fire and lack of survivors.",
"For the nearby village that she visited personally, she found several old bones that she took to a local healer by the name of Fillistrom Wunderkundoodle. The aging gnome said they appeared to be human \"filla-something.\" Oddly, most of the tracks she found (both skeletal and booted) seemed to be small sized, like that of a human child.",
"If the pattern holds, the next attack should occur in less than two days, and in six days whatever the threat is, it might reach Phlan.",
"She has no idea where the next raid will occur, but it should be a day's ride from Phlan somewhere along the coast. There are no villages there, but maybe there is some cottage or farm she is unaware of. (This is enough information to search along the coast for the ferry landing, though the adventurers may not know it.)",
"She asks to be kept informed of the party's progress, and sternly encourages them to be mindful of Phlan's laws while they continue their investigation. While she likes Yovir, there is nothing he can do to protect them should they break the law."
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Staring at a Pattern",
"entries": [
"At some point it is likely that the players will want to research the regular timing of the attacks. A successful DC 20 Intelligence (Nature) notes that the attacks correspond roughly to changes in the phase of the moon. Worshippers of Selune, goddess of the moon, receive advantage on this roll.",
"If the adventurers are unable to discern a pattern, they can employ a sage to look into it. For 2 sp, the sage Delacrae Gentleblossom (female half-elf) of the store All Questions Answered, will spend five hours looking into the pattern of the raids. After that time, she determines that all of the attacks are between the coast and the Iron Route, the old major trading road from Zhentil Keep to Phlan and beyond. The travel time on the road between the location of each attack is approximately one day and even the slowest traveler going only under cover of darkness would make it two days; even with the inclement weather of Stormy Bay lashing at them and muddying the roads. The only settlement between Phlan and the last attack that is also near the coast is a small fishing village on a tiny island just a short ferry ride into Stormy Bay.",
"As for the pattern of the attacks, the phase of the moon does change in a little less than every four days, and so far the strikes match the nights when there was a change in the phase of the moon.",
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "",
"entries": [
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Developments",
"entries": [
"Should the adventurers have more questions they wish answered, perhaps because they are having trouble putting the disparate pieces together, Delacrae can do further research for another 2 sp and five hours. The price becomes 1 gp if they wish her to work through the night hours because the party is in a rush.",
"Delacrae becomes another useful tool for the Dungeon Master to help the adventurers, particularly if the players are having trouble with their investigation."
]
}
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Fillistrom Wunderkundoodle",
"entries": [
"If the adventurers wish to follow-up with the healer that Knight Aleyd Burral spoke with, they are directed to his shop.",
{
"type": "insetReadaloud",
"entries": [
"A wooden board displaying a bandaged hand hangs in over a small storefront with window boxes full of flowers. A balding gnomish man with a crown of limp white hair is carefully pulling herbs from between the flowers and placing them into a small basket at his feet."
]
},
"Seeing the party's approach, Fillistrom sizes them up quickly as adventurers and offers to answer their questions for a consulting fee of 5 sp (though he is willing to negotiate down to 1 sp if the adventurers try). Once a fee is agreed upon, he invites them into his cramped shop. Books line the walls and various healing herbs hang from the ceiling as they dry.",
{
"type": "inset",
"name": "Roleplaying Fillistrom",
"entries": [
"Fillistrom Wunderkundoodle is cranky male gnome with a penchant for taking his time. Fillistrom is a trained healer who studies the mysteries of the body and is a competent mundane healer for those without the means to afford magical remedies or with a distrust of the magic."
]
},
"Fillistrom readily admits that the bones that the knight brought him appeared to be phalanges (toe bones) from an adult human. They are quite old, and are stained from where muscle and skin rotted atop them. If the adventurers wish to see them he can produce them. Digging in a nearby trunk, he pulls out a jar with a few small bones.",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"The bones do not radiate magic.",
"Looking closely at them and success in a DC 10 Wisdom (Perception) check, a character notices a sticky residue on several of the bones. It appears to be some kind of natural adhesive, possibly a tree sap (This is left over from when the kobolds stuck the bones to their costumes.)",
"The bones were ones that the kobolds gathered from random corpses they dug up. If magic is used to determine the owners of the bones or cause of death, they are three different corpses who died of natural causes."
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Faction Assignments",
"entries": [
"Those adventurers who are members of the Order of the Gauntlet, the Emerald Enclave, or the Lords' Alliance can take advantage of their organization's network of informants to gain additional information and assignments.",
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Order of the Gauntlet",
"entries": [
"Members of the Order of the Gauntlet are able to contact the brash Zern Xerkstil, the Hammer of Impiltur (male half-orc) who asks to meet at the Dawn Fane, an abandoned temple. The Order of the Gauntlet is concerned about the rise of fell cults in the Moonsea region. He believes that there is something more infernal to these rumors of undead than others might believe. {@b Zern offers the adventurer the loan of a silver hand axe}; useful for decapitating vampires and fiends from the lower Hells!",
"{@b Assignment.} Take the silver axe and see if you can find proof of infernal cults. The adventurers are ordered to destroy any undead or fiends encountered in the course of their duties. Proof of undead and/or infernal corruption should then be returned to Zern.",
"{@b Success Condition.} Bringing back the corpse of the lemure, or the tainted pirates, or arresting any of the Folk who are devil worshippers (Warsh, Ulburto, or the crones) fulfills the requirements for success in the Order of the Gauntlet faction assignment."
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Emerald Enclave",
"entries": [
"Members of the Emerald Enclave are able to contact the reclusive Seranolla the Whisperer (female forest gnome) who asks to meet outside the city in the woods. The Emerald Enclave have determined that something unnatural is going on with the weather and storms seem to spring up every four days, corresponding directly with changes in the phase of the moon. Whatever is doing it is disrupting both ships and some of the sea life.",
"{@b Assignment.} End the cause of the inclement weather.",
"{@b Success Condition.} Destroying the dracolich statue or giving it to the Kelemvorites to use and eventually destroy fulfills the requirements for success in the Emerald Enclave faction assignment."
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Lord's Alliance",
"entries": [
"Members of the Lord's Alliance are able to contact the gregarious Dornal Whitebeard (male hill dwarf), who asks to meet at the Velvet Doublet, a well-known feasthall. The Lord's Alliance believes a merchant, Gilfron Milon, is missing. He is overdue and may be in trouble. He should be somewhere on the Iron Route to the southwest. Once you find him, help him as needed to ensure that he continues on his way to Phlan from Hillsfar.",
"{@b Assignment.} Travel on the Iron Route and find Gilfron Milon. Assist as needed.",
"{@b Success Condition.} Finding Gilfron and helping him get back on the road fulfills the requirements for success in the Lord's Alliance faction assignment."
]
}
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Part 2: On the Road",
"entries": [
"Once the adventurers have enough information to proceed out of Phlan towards the suspected site of the next raid, they have three brief encounters on the road before making it yo the fishing village. This part assumes the adventurers spent the night in Phlan and left the morning of the sixteenth day. If that is not the case, the Dungeon Master may need to alter the descriptions of light and the gathering storm as appropriate.",
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Of Ghost Ships & Roast Duck",
"entries": [
{
"type": "insetReadaloud",
"entries": [
"The Iron Route, the main road along the north side of the Moonsea runs all the way from Zhentil Keep to Phlan and beyond. Travel along it is swift and generally safe, at least as far as can be expected to be in the violent and unpredictable Moonsea region. With the sun high above gathering storm clouds you find yourself out of Phlan and well on your way West, when you should chance to come across a wagon pulled to the side of the road with a broken axel. A young human boy tends a campfire while a man in merchant clothing digs in the back of the wagon."
]
},
{
"type": "inset",
"name": "Roleplaying Gilfron Milon",
"entries": [
"Gilfron Milon is a friendly male human merchant who deals in lumber from the Quivering Forest and tools. While he is pleasant, he is no fool and knows the roads are dangerous, leaving him cautious at the outset of any meeting. Since his wife died of a fever three years ago, he trals in the company of his son Gilmont. He speaks with a false educated air, pretending to be of higer class than he is."
]
},
"Gilfron makes his living leading caravans of goods to and from Phlan with the help of his son Gilmont. They are currently headed to Phlan from Hillsfar, and have a wagon filled with axes, saws, pulleys, and other metal tools useful in working lumber, along with a smattering of southern goods unavailable on the northern bank of the Moonsea.",
"Gilfron is friendly, but both father and son are wary when a large group of armed travelers approach them. As soon as it becomes clear the adventurers are no threat, they happily invite them to share a midday meal. Should the adventurers instead choose to threaten him, Gilfron tells his son to run while he does his best to distract the brutes, though he is no threat.",
"Over a roast duck or while tied up, Gilfron can relate the following:",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"Gilfron owns a handful of wagons, and leading caravans laden with goods for sale and trade all along the coast of the Moonsea. Sometimes he carries back orders for particularly large shipments which can also be sent by boat, but usually he uses the Iron Route.",
"Recently he has seen a lot of raided villages and homes. At the village just two days away he saw the ruins still smoldering like all the others. He avoided going into the ruined villages, not knowing if there are raiders about. All of the homes and villagers were there and occupied when he passed the other way three months ago, but he saw no living souls this time",
"The only sign of civilization the pair saw was the island ferry abbout a day back. The fisher folk have always been a strange and isolated kin who don't much mix with others, but he spoke with the boatman and loosened his tongue with a new hammer and some nails that the man needed to use to repair his ferry. The boatman said he was more worried about the storm coming in the next day or so, than he was about any rumors of a dracolich haunting they area. Gilfron notes that in Stormy Bay, storms coming in off the sea are all too common. Unded dragons are not.",
"Worried for his boy, Gilfron further enquired as to why the boatmen had mentioned a dracolich, the strange man gave him a long stare and said that there has been plague of those with fragile minds of late, spouting such tales. In fact his island village sheltered one such soul now who had wandered to the ferry stop two days ago. The man had seen something that has made him lose his mind and spout on about the 'eyes of the Dracolich' watching him wear ever he goes. The boatman felt that the vagrant was clearly weak and confused."
]
},
"At the age of 10, Gilmont is used to his father doing most of the talking and instead tends to watch from the background. Should an adventurer approach him for his side of a story, he confirms much of what his father says, but notes one additional detail. As they drove away, he noted that the boatman made a strange digging-lake gesture with his left hand, sort of like pointing towards the ground with his pinkies and forefinger. A successful DC 15 Intelligence (Arcana) check allows the adventurer to recognize the gesture as typically used in spells that protect against creatures from other planes. By itself, the gesture does nothing and possesses no magic",
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "",
"entries": [
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Fixing the Axel",
"entries": [
"If any of the adventurers are willing to help Gilfron repair his wagon, he is greatly appreciative. He does not have a spare, but there are ample trees and he does have woodworking tools. A successful DC 15 Strength check can rig a temporary repair that should see him to Phlan.",
"If helped in this way, he is only too happy to accept any business offers from members of the Lords'Alliance."
]
}
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "A Wary Mother",
"entries": [
"Before night falls, a stiff wind that smells of rain whips up and the adventurers cross paths with a mother wolf and her cubs.",
{
"type": "insetReadaloud",
"entries": [
"A high pitch yipping accompanied by a rustling in a roadside bushes is the only warning you get before a wolf pup runs into the road ahead of you. It is followed a heartbeat later by a second pup that tackles the first in the road.",
"The heartwarming roughhousing is broken by the sound of a deep and much louder growling from behind you."
]
},
"The wolf pups were playing, and one has chased the other out of the bushes where it finally caught its sibling. Wrestling in the road, they are unaware of the adventurers who stand only 15 feet away. Unfortunately for the adventurers, the mother {@creature dire wolf} has caught scent of the adventurers and moved quietly in their direction in the hedges 10 feet behind the party.",
"Any adventurer riding a mount that is not trained for war (such as the riding horses provided by Yovir) must succeed on a DC 10 Wisdom (Animal Handling) check as the animal catches the scent of the mother wolf. Failure on this check means that that adventurer's horse rears up in panic and throws its rider unless that adventurer also succeeds at a DC 10 Dexterity saving throw. An adventurer who is thrown from their horse suffers 4 ({@dice 1d8}) bludgeoning damage.",
"The mother dire wolf has let out a warning growl, but given that the adventurers out number her and they are in between her pups and her, she has not yet attacked. Any attempt to move toward her or the pups causes the wolf to attack. Otherwise the adventurers can attempt to move away in a calm manner to avoid the combat. A successful DC 15 Wisdom (Animal Handling) is needed to move away from the wolves without angering the wary mother further. If multiple adventurers try to calm her, she attacks if any of the adventurers fail.",
"If a combat begins, the pups flee and the mother dire wolf attacks the nearest adventurer. One full round after the pups are clear, she also breaks and runs into the brush. If at any point someone attacks one of the pups or gives chase to them, the mother focuses solely on that individual to the detriment of her own safety and life.",
"The pups (AC 11) are noncombatants and are slain if they take 5 points or more of damage. They count as allies for the purpose of the mother dire wolf's pack tactics ability.",
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "General Features",
"entries": [
"The road is a five foot wide dirt track with a hedgerow along one side and scattered trees to the other.",
"{@b Light:} The sun is about an hour from setting, while the sky is overcast. Treat the area as bright light.",
"{@b Bushes:} The thick hedges are ten feet thick and run forty feet both ahead and behind the starting position of the adventurers. They are difficult terrain and heavily obscure anyone on side from the other.",
"{@b Trees:} The trees are narrow, less than one foot thick. Keeping a tree between yourself and an enemy provides half cover."
]
},
{
"type": "inset",
"name": "Adjusting the Adventure",
"entries": [
"Here are recommendations for adjusting this combat encounter. These are not cumulative.",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"{@b Very weak or weak party:} the {@creature dire wolf} has 19 hit points",
"{@b Strong or very strong party:} the {@creature dire wolf} has 60 hit points"
]
}
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "The Boatman",
"entries": [
"The party is able to camp without incident, but the weather has continued to worsen. Shortly after setting out that morning they arrive at the ferry landing.",
{
"type": "insetReadaloud",
"entries": [
"The first morning since you left Phlan dawns very windy and drizzling. The sea churns with Umberlee's wrath and an elderly man with a wild beard, salt encrusted coat, and floppy hat struggles to bring a large flat bottomed raft to shore. He pulls arm-over-arm along a rope, which is strung between the shore and a small island an arrowshot into the bay."
]
},
{
"type": "inset",
"name": "Roleplaying Warsh the Boatman",
"entries": [
"Warsh is a foul-tempered old man with one squinting eye and the other unnaturally bulging. He clenches a battered pipe between his teeth at all times, making it even harder to understand his already angry, mumbled speech. His family has lived on the island for five generations before him and he was there when the town made its pact with Tiamat. He is superstitious of outsiders, mean, and very greedy. It is also his job to deal with non-islanders. "
]
},
"Having seen the party approach, Warsh has brought the ferry from the island to see what they want. While he strongly recommends against anyone going to the island, he can always be bought for 1 gp a head and 1 sp for each mount, pet or livestock the adventurers may have with them.",
"{@b Warsh viciously insults characters that claim to be pirates} or have the look of a pirate about them (possibly the pirate background), and charges them triple fare.",
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Talking with Warsh",
"entries": [
"Warsh isn't especially interested in conversation, but if pressed he can offer a few dire words or mumbled insults before demanding the adventurers either pay him for passage or leave him to pull his way back to the island.",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"An angry storm is coming. Someday the sea will claim its due and wash all of the ignorant shore folk into its depths.",
"There is nothing to see on the island and no reason to visit the village. The adventurers should look elsewhere for their entertainment.",
"If they insist on coming to the island, they will have to stay until after the storm passes to leave, as Warsh will not risk another trip until the seas calm.",
"Warsh is suspicious of everyone including the madman they currently shelter, so if the adventurers ask about him, Warsh readily admits to having him on the island hoping the party means to take him away. Warsh describes the man as having the look of sailor about him, but raving about the \"eyes of the dracolich\" or other such nonsense. The man is otherwise healthy, so Warsh believes the man witnessed something his mind couldn't handle and snapped as opposed to someone who haswandered the wilderness in his insanity for a long time."
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Developments",
"entries": [
"Should the adventurers be unwilling or unable to pay Warsh, he leaves them stranded on the shore. He is willing to barter however, and he will take a good blade or some food or spirits in trade. If the adventurers still refuse his help, they can try to swim the distance, though it is clearly a fool's errand. It is 600 feet through stormy seas, requiring many successful DC 15 Strength (Athletics) checks to make it there."
]
}
]
}
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Part 3: The Village",
"entries": [
"The village has existed on the small island for generations, since before the times of the Spellplague, and all that time, the same families have lived there, intermingling such that it is hard to tell one line from another. The ever malignant degeneracy spread through the populace, making them more and more debased until they could barely be called civilized. The villagers turned away from the worship of the gods, and instead offered their prayers to fiends from the Hells; fiends who would trade worship for very real power in the mortal realm. It was just unlucky that the pirate crew of the {@i Audacity} should choose this overlooked backwater for their redoubt, and they have paid for it for sixty years.",
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Village Vignettes",
"entries": [
"As the characters investigate or fortify the island, you do not need to refer to a map, or take too much time keeping track of how much time is spent at one location or another. After meeting with Elisande, who can serve as a guide and tool for you to assist the players, each adventurer or group of adventurers can investigate approximately one place in the late morning, one at midday and one in the afternoon. If an adventurer or group does something particularly brief and there is ample time, you may consider allowing them an additional encounter on the island. Once night falls, they may have plans, but Ixas' attack will preempt that. The characters may move as a group or split up to cover more ground, though danger may come more swiftly to those who are by themselves.",
"As the adventurers go to each area, they may choose to investigate the NPCs there, search the location, or even look for ways to prepare for the coming attack. Simply run each adventurer or group of adventurers once through a location-centered vignette and determine if the adventurers are meeting up, reapportioning groups, or proceeding on to the next round of investigations. This continues until each adventurer or group of adventurers have investigated three places. If the adventurers stay together, they are able to investigate a total of four places. If a player is concerned about being able to do enough with his or her adventurer, feel free to explain the time abstraction. It is very important to be aware of the amount of time spent in this part of the adventure; allowing the adventurers to investigate too much can cause the adventure to longer than neccessary.",
"The villagers rarely interact with outsiders, and all of them speak an archaic dialect of Common, making them sometimes difficult to understand. All of them, even married couples, share a familial resemblance. They refer to themselves as Folk and non-islanders as Outsides."
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Elisande",
"entries": [
"When the characters first arrive on the island, read the following:",
{
"type": "insetReadaloud",
"entries": [
"Trees block the view of the village from the landing, so your first sight of the village comes as you climb the wooded hill. It is underwhelming. It is little more than a collection of hovels, a barn, and a large centrally located fire pit. Dirty faces and wide eyes stare at you as you exit the rain soaked three line, before turning away. A grinning girl with wild dirty hair and a pock marked face runs up to you with obvious excitement. \"Who might ye be, Outsides?\""
]
},
"Elisande has been waiting for a chance to escape the island for three years since her parents died in a sickness that tormented the village. At first she has hoped the madman would help her, but it was quickly clear that he would be no help-though he is fun to feed or throw stones at. Now that the adventurers have followed him here, there is another chance and she is not about to waste it.",
"Use the {@creature commoner} statistics at the end of this Part if you should need stats for Elisande. She avoids combat, but will drag unconscious adventurers out of fights and attempt to stabilize them and makes Wisdom (Medicine) checks with a +2 bonus.",
{
"type": "inset",
"name": "Roleplaying Elisande",
"entries": [
"Elisande is a 12-year old orphan human girl, and village troublemaker. She is fascinated with outsiders, having heard tales that there is a land beyond the island that she yearns to visit now that she has no family left alive. She has no knowledge of the village's past beyond folklore, but is happy to show the adventurers around and answer questions hoping they will take her with them when they leave. She has few morals and due to her upbringing, no true concept of right or wrong."
]
},
"Initially none of the villagers are especially interested in speaking with the adventurers, regardless of what they have to say. They simply stare at them with a mixture of fear and anger. Only Elisande is friendly and eager to speak with them. A successful DC 10 Wisdom (Insight) check confirms that her interest and friendhip is genuine, but she clearly wants something from them. She can relate the following about the island, at least as she knows them:",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"The island has no name. The folk have lived here since the beginning of time. Outsiders sometimes come, but rarely stay, and the folk do not like them to.",
"The island survives primarily by fishing, growing beets, beans, cabbage and onions, husbanding a few goats and for a treat gathering wild raspberries and bitter walnuts. Sometimes, the sea provides thingsthat wash up on the shores of the island.",
"The fisher folk do not have an organized religion as the adventurers might understand it. Instead Elisande describes a collection of folk tales and superstitions, often concerning reptilian monsters from below the sea that both provide for the island folk when they are appeased and prey upon themwhen they are not. She does not believe that there is anything on the island beyond the landing, the village, and the woods. She has been told and believes the woods to be filled with monsters and does not venture far into it.",
"She would like to be friends with the adventurers, playing up her lack of family on the island if the Outsiders seem softhearted. She can show them around or introduce them to others. As the day goes on, she asks more and more questions about the outside world and when the adventurers will be leaving, hinting that she might like to go with them when they leave.",
"If the adventurers rebuff Elisande, she begins shadowing them, following them from a few yards away. The villagers do not approve of the girl mixing with outsiders to begin with, so any threats or violence towards the girl will bring their wrath down upon them"
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "section",
"name": "Overview of the Island",
"entries": [
"The island is composed of a number of different locations to explore. With the exception of the Infernal Altar (which can only be found by exploring the woods), all of the locations are immediately obvious upon theadventurers arrival. Elisande points them out to the party as soon as they speak with her.",
"After the general deception of each location, there is a subsection detailing what Elisande has to say about the location, what NPCs live there, and what might be found by searching the location.",
"There are thirty seven total villagers on the island, twelve of which are children. None of the fishermen are at sea today due to the fierce weather.",
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Landing",
"entries": [
"It is in this slightly sheltered portion on the northwestern side of the island that the villagers land their boats, maintain their nets, and dock the ferry raft. The raft and several oar-powered or small single-masted fishing boats have been dragged several feet up shore and tied down. There is a shed here filled with mended nets, rope, and other gear for their trade.",
"{@b Elisande:} \"Das the landing. It's where the Folk reaped da sea's ripe bounty. Course is also weal for swimmin' when da dayfire rises high.\"",
"{@b Searching.} While there is nothing especially incriminating to be found at the landing, there is a wealth of supplies that might be useful in creating traps to defend the village: barrels of fish oil for lanterns, fish hooks, line, rope, and nets might be put to nefarious purposes if the players are so inclined.",
"{@b NPCs.} Until midday passes, Warsh is here with four other men, tying down the boats and preparing for the approaching storm. Warsh has nothing left to say to the adventurers unless directly approached, but the others point to the rising waves and say the monsters beneath the sea are angry.",
"To convince Warsh to aid the adventurers, see \"Rallying the Villagers\" below."
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Homes",
"entries": [
"There are fourteen hovels that are or were home to small families of island fishermen scattered in a rough circle around the fire pit. The doors all face the fire pit and none have windows that face the sea. Four of the homes are no longer inhabited. Their roofs havecollapsed and they no longer have doors or shutters.",
"{@b Elisande:} \"Dases be homes to the folk. Outsides mussin' haven homes! Ye not be sleepin' in the rains do ye? Iffen so, ye not want to be botherin' the Folk.\"",
"{@b Searching.} The inhabited homes will be hard to search with the residents inside, huddled away from the rain. Attempts to speak with the general populace are met with cold stares and unanswered doors. Impertinent adventures will quickly find the villagers reaching for knives.",
"However, it is easy enough to pick through the three uninhabited hovels. Without any check it is clear that the hovels are made of logs and stone from the island along with a piecemeal of flotsam recovered from the sea: barrel staves, sail cloth, and broken oars. A successful DC 10 Intelligence (Investigation) locates an odd fetish necklace in the remains of a rotted dresser. Five human teeth are braided into a long lock of brown human hair. Each tooth has symbol of five radial lines emanating from a central point. The fetish radiates both evil and fading magic from the conjuration school. A successful DC 15 Intelligence (Arcana) check suggests the fetish may have once protected the wearer from summoned creatures. A successful DC 20 Intelligence (Religion) check reveals the markings on the fetish are related to the infernals of the Banehold, the Hells associated with a number of evil deities. Its power faded, the fetish no longer functions.",
"{@b NPCs.} Each hovel has 1d4 adults within it and 1d6-1 children. They villagers do their best to ignore the adventurers unless specifically confronted or called forth by Warsh, Ulburto or one of the crones. In general none of them know of the villages past, but they keep the infernal faith alive, believing themselves to be worshiping the ancient creatures of the sea. The fisher folk will follow the will of their leaders, either siding with the adventurers or against them as appropriate.",
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Ruined Hovel",
"entries": [
"This hovel has collapsed in upon itself, leaving only a small area where one wall leans against another that is protected from the rain. The villagers house the \"madman\" here. Empty food bowls and fish bones are scattered about, making it difficult to approach unheard. Any Dexterity (Stealth) check made to sneak up on Verik is made with disadvantage.",
"{@b Elisande:} \"Das me house before me mudder and vater were taken by the chill fever. Now wees kept the lunaman there.\"",
"{@b Searching.} A successful DC 15 Intelligence (Investigation) locates a loose stone behind which Verik has been hiding his supplies and notes. Under the stone is a sack in which is a small notebook written in Draconic. It details the number of people and their professions along with a sketch of the village, the woods, and the cave housing the infernal altar in the wooded ravine. In addition there is a vial of green dust that smells foul. A successful DC 15 Intelligence (Nature) check determines that it is ground {@b greensleep mushroom}, a poisonous fungus that causes lethargy in any who ingest it.",
"{@b NPCs.} If it is morning or midday, Verik the \"madman\" is present. If it is afternoon or later, he wanders off to sneak some greensleep powder into the evening water supply the crones are boiling at the fire pit before hiding in the woods in preparation for the attack.",
"If the adventurers wish to interrogate Verik, he offers the following:",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"He twitches a lot and looks around frantically like he hears voices no one else hears.",
"He claims to have seen the ghost ship come and his village attacked by undead spirits that walked out of the waves on the back of dracolich that breathed fire and laid waste to his village.",
"If asked about the ship, he describes it as a great spectral galleon with the name \"Audacity\" painted on the bow. He added that last detail after seeing the name painted on flotsam in the barn, hoping it will bring the horror closer to home.",
"Verik is a very good liar and spy, sent by Ixas to map out the village, search for likely stores of knowledge, spread fear, and disrupt the defense. A successful DC 20 Wisdom (Insight) check is needed to determine that he is playacting his insanity. Even if confronted, he claims that he thought no one would believe what he saw; he thought it might strengthen his story or at least convince others to take him in. He maintains that his story is real. A second successful DC 20 Wisdom (Insight) check reveals this to be a lie.",
"If found out, Verik tries to stall for time, giving away as little as possible. He knows Ixas and the rest of the cult is coming. It's only a matter of time before they rescue him.",
"If forced to talk by magic or a successful DC 20 Charisma (Intimidate) check, he admits that he was sent by the Cult of the Dragon to locate tomes of lore or other valuables that might lead his master Ixas, a young mage of some power, to locate some long lost artifact. His does not know the exact plan as he has been in the village for a few days, but usually his allies attack in two groups\u2014one at the main entrance to a village and a second smaller group by stealth from the rear."
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Barn",
"entries": [
"The barn is largely empty but for four goats (three female, one male). The goats are as sickly and degenerate as the other residents of the island. One female has an oddly short, stumpy leg while another has the milky eyes of blindness. The male has only one horn. If the adventurers enquire about a place to stay on the island, they are directed to the barn.",
"{@b Elisande:} \"Da is the barn. House for yan goats.\"",
"{@b Searching.} The barn is made from various flotsam washed up from the sea, including the wood from the Audacity's longboat that they used to come ashore. One of the beams inside the barn (found on a successful DC 10 Wisdom (Perception) check) has Audacity painted on it in badly faded gold paint. In addition, there are a number of items that may be useful for the defense of the village: heavy sacks of grain, a barrel from of tools, and several bales of hay.",
"{@b NPCs.} There are no NPCs in the barn, the goats follow and watch the adventurers whenever they are in or near the barn. The milky-eyed doe in particular seems to stay close to one adventurer and follows that adventurer's every move."
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Fire Pit",
"entries": [
"The pit is the center of daily life with a fire usually lit, even if only with a few flames. A large metal bucket full of fresh water taken from the shore and strained through cheesecloth can usually be found boiling over the fire. A small wooden pavilion with a number of stump stools under it provides a place to rest with minimal protection from the storm.",
"{@b Elisande:} \"Da pit es the local for speeching wit the crones. Day always clean the drink. All need the drink.\"",
"{@b Searching.} The adventurers can acquire clean water and a dozen heavy blocks of wood that might be used for trap or wall building. Knives, needles, and other sharp objects of daily life are prevalent around the flames.",
"{@b NPCs.} Exirsa, Lolmetta, and Rentida, three elderly crones spend their time around the fire boiling water, cleaning fish and gossiping. All are reeking of fish and have long stringy grey hair and speak in voices that pierce even the muted atmosphere of the pouring rain. Along with Warsh, they are the only surviving villagers that were part of the original pact.",
"The crones are not forthcoming with useful information, but they are willing to converse:",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"The crones rarely sleep or leave the fire. They can be found there at all hours of the day. They will not allow the flames to die under any circumstances, claiming a long as the fire burns, so will the village thrive.",
"Sometimes they claim to be sisters or other times mother, daughter and grandmother.",
"The crones enjoy toying with others, playing mental games by telling half-truths or outlandish tales that just might be true. Believe the lie, doubt the truth.",
"They encourage the adventurers to sample their fresh water and cooked food. All of it is perfectly fine, but they enjoy hinting that it might not be. Unknown to them, if it is afternoon or later and Verik has not been exposed, the water is {@b poisoned with greensleep mushroom powder} (onset: 2 hours; effect: level 1 {@condition exhaustion} until a long rest; DC 10 Constitution negates).",
"They also tell fantastical tales of the creature of the woods, carrying away unbelievers, and otherwise being a bogeyman of myth.",
"Having been there, they are well aware of the tale of the Audacity and while they do not speak of it directly, they hint that they might know more than they are saying if offered the right gifts. Nothing they are offered is ever enough to placate them.",
"To convince the crones to aid the adventurers, see \"Rallying the Villagers\" below."
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Smokehouse",
"entries": [
"The smokehouse is attached to Ulburto's home. Here the fish are smoked and divided up amongst the villagers or taken by Warsh to the mainland to trade for goods the islanders cannot fabricate.",
"{@b Elisande:} \"Das ye smokenhouse. Not weal aire, but good eat!\"",
"{@b Searching.} The smokehouse is separated into two rooms. The main room is filled with metal hooks covering the walls and ceiling with low burning coals spread in brick troughs throughout the room. Unidentified red meat and fish hang from the hooks. Entering the smokehouse while it is in use is difficult as there is little air to breathe. A successful DC 10 Constitution saving throw is needed after the first minute to avoid gaining 1 level of {@condition exhaustion}. The adventurer must attempt an additional saving throw every minute thereafter with the same result. Creatures that do not breathe or hold their breath do not need to make these saving throws.",
"In a separated area inside the smokehouse is a storeroom filled with salt, charcoal, and lumber. A hidden cache is located under a paving stone covered by the lumber and is found with a successful DC 15 Intelligence (Investigation) check. Inside, wrapped in oiled cloth, are a number of old weapons taken from the pirates who invaded the island sixty years ago. Inside there are also the captains' logs of the {@i Audacity} and the merchant vessel {@i Abundant Serendipity} that was its prey. Together, these logs tell the story of the merchant ship loaded with gold, gems, and works of art and books of lore out of Melvaunt and headed for Mulmaster when it was taken by Captain Reeve Sar Testain and the {@i Audacity}. It further describes how the pirate crew took refuge on the island and enslaved the villagers. The pirate captain's log ends with over two dozen blank pages left in it.",
"{@b NPCs.} Ulburto is a large, bearded man whose arms are not the same length. His right arm is much longer and stronger than his left, which is half the size of the other. He was a child when the pact was made and while he did not participate in the ceremony, he knows the truth of the village. He is a strong and stern man, who speaks little. His quiet strength has made him the default leader of the villager, but it is only a veneer stretched thin over a boundless rage.",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"Ulburto stares much and speaks and little, using as few words as possible. He is frequently butchering meat or gutting fish in front of the smokehouse except at midday, when he goes to the fire pit to sit and listen to the stories of the crones.",
"He is concerned about all the outsiders coming to his village and he knows that they will only bring trouble, and trouble needs to killed... and then possibly butchered and smoked for leaner times. Ulburto is not above a little cannibalism between friends.",
"If approached about the coming raid, there is the faintest twitch of a smile at the corner of his mouth and he can be easily won over to any plans to defend the village that involve violence.",
"If he catches anyone in his smokehouse, he orders them out. Those who refuse, or are caught in the storage area digging up the floor are immediately attacked.",
"A successful DC 15 Wisdom (Insight) check reveals that Ulburto is a violently dangerous man.",
"To convince Ulburto to aid the adventurers, see \"Rallying the Villagers\" below."
]
}
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "The Dark Wood",
"entries": [
"For a small island with generations of inhabitants, the woods are oddly thick and dark. Filled with pines, walnuts, hawthorns, and dense underbrush of thorny plants, it is not a pleasant place to walk. A few squirrels and rodents manage to survive in it.",
"{@b Elisande:} \"No, mustin walk the dark wood. The creatures gobble you!\"",
"{@b Searching.} Searching the Dark Wood will take significant time compared to other locations and should be considered two of the adventurers' three actions for the day. Those that search the woods automatically find the cave with the infernal altar described below. Should an adventurer or group of adventurers want to do a quick exploration of the woods, they must succeed in a DC 20 Wisdom (Perception) check to find it.",
"{@b NPCs.} The creature in the woods is a horrible puddle of flowing flesh with vaguely humanoid features called a lemure. It is bound to serve Warsh and the crones and responds to their mental call anywhere on the island. It avoids the adventurers at all cost hiding in the woods unless they find the infernal altar (see below), or the village is attacked and it is needed in the defense.",
"The fetish from the ruined hovel grows hot when the lemure approaches.",
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Infernal Altar",
"entries": [
"On the other side of the island, a fifteen minute walk through the thickest part of the dark wood, filled with briars and nettles, there is a cave at the bottom of a water filled ravine. Climbing down to the cave is dangerous. Those that fail a DC 10 Strength (Athletics) check fall, taking 3 ({@dice 1d6}) bludgeoning damage on the rocks below.",
"The fetish from the ruined hovel grows hot when approaching the ravine.",
"{@b Elisande:} \"Was is da? Mussin' be ya creature of the woods lair!\" {@i (Her eyes go wide, filled with fear.)}",
"{@b Searching:} The five-foot-wide rough cave continues toward the center of the island for sixty feet, so that the floor is dry, before opening into a roughly thirty by forty foot wide room with an altar in the center.",
{
"type": "insetReadaloud",
"entries": [
"In the center of a large room is a roughly rectangular block of stone, with blotches of rust-colored stains dripped on its center. Several darkened candles are melted to the stone and a collection of ritual objects are on the center of the block. The walls are painted in crude artwork depicting a five-headed sea serpent rising from the waves, feasting upon stick figures on the shore. Another stick figure standing on the water is pouring a sack of what could be coins into the waves. Something about the place raises the hairs on the back of your neck. There is a wrongness here."
]
},
"The room is under the effects of a {@b lingering magic} (school of illusion) that causes unease in anyone approaching. Anyone who does not worship infernals or Tiamat and attempts to enter the room must succeed in a DC 10 Wisdom saving throw or gain the {@condition frightened} condition and be unable to do so. Overcome with a growing horror that they cannot name, the victim has the urge to flee the cave as soon as possible.",
"Examining the room, there are several things of interest.",
{
"type": "list",
"items": [
"A successful DC 15 Intelligence (Religion) check made while examining the artwork on walls implies that the creature may actually be a variant of Tiamat, the deity of evil dragons and greed. It is rare for humanoids to worship her, but sometimes involves a sacrifice of wealth.",
"A successful DC 15 Wisdom (Survival) check notes that no one has been in this room for many years.",
"Amid several gold bars on the altar is a silver plated ritual knife. It will serve as a dagger, but is poorly made and the silver begins to flake off when used in combat. It is does not survive past this adventure.",
"The gold bars all bear a trade stamp dating back 60 years, but look to be in good condition, as if they have seen little to no use.",
"Also on the altar is a scroll sealed with a splotch of red wax. If opened, all the candles of the room flare to life. The scroll appears to be a contract between \"Servants of the Queene\" and the \"Folk.\" It details the deal struck sixty years ago in which the islanders traded their souls and a fortune in gold and gems in exchange for personal power and casting away the \"Outsides\"\u2014unless the deal is broken. How the deal is broken is not specified, but it matters not, the adventurers have already broken it.",
"A pile of books lie in the corner. Most are rotted with moisture and useless, but a successful DC 15 Intelligence (Investigation) finds a tome that is particularly old and appears to be written on some sort of leather. The Draconic writing is faded badly, but with a few hours, it can be deciphered. It details the final resting place of one of the Dragon Masks, although, unbeknownst to the adventurers, the mask has since been located and claimed by the Cult of the Dragon."
]
}
]
},
{
"type": "entries",
"name": "Developments",
"entries": [
"If the adventurers enter the cave, the lemure from the dark wood begins moving towards the cave. It attacks as soon as adventurers climb out of the ravine."