346. Vonda’s Quest IV
Adam stared at Vonda’s face in confusion, wondering why they were falling together. Jurot had managed to save him previously, but Vonda had thrown herself towards him when he had fallen.
‘Right,’ he thought, remembering that he was falling.
Mana: 16 -> 15
Spell: Feather Fall
Wizard’s Axe was currently in the form of a ring, but Adam was certain it would have still worked as a focus to channel his spell through. “Stop!” Adam chanted.
The pair still fell down, but as they approached the ground, they gently swayed before they landed on their feet, the spell righting them.
Vonda and Adam remained joined together by hand, and Vonda blinked, trying to see ahead of her.
“Mother’s dawn,” Vonda said, the words for the mace, and the glow filled the area, allowing them both to see more clearly, though Adam’s Half Elf eyes were able to see even in complete darkness.
Vonda realised they were still holding hands, and though she made to let go, Adam quickly pulled her closer to him. Vonda stared up at him in utter shock, her heart pounding even quicker, before she noted that he had his axe in hand, and she quickly turned, raising her mace high to see the giant skull of a serpent.
Adam had already defeated a giant bone snake, but the skull of this creature was at least twice or thrice the size of the previous giant bone snake’s.
Adam kept his axe pointed towards the giant skull, but as the moments passed, and the serpent’s skull remained still, they noticed that the skull, though facing them, was unmoving, and behind it was the rest of the creature’s bones, laying where they had fallen when it had died.
Constitution Save
D20 + 5 = 12 (7)
“Vonda, pardon my Aswadian, but this place smells like shit,” Adam said, coughing.
Vonda pulled up her scarf, managing to stave away most of the smell. “That isn’t Aswadian.”
“It’s a phrase,” Adam said, his eyes scanning around the area.
They were within a chamber, accompanied by a large serpentine creature, which had died long ago. Adam reached out with his axe, stepping towards it, pressing his axe against it.
“Adam!” Jurot shouted.
The shout had caused Adam to leap back, axe in hand still, but he quickly calmed as he looked up, seeing Jurot’s small head from at least a hundred metres above.
“Jurot!”
“I will come!”
“No you won’t!” Adam shouted back. “We’re safe, I think!”
Jurot couldn’t see much around them, Vonda’s Dawn giving little light for even his Iyrmen eyes. “Okay.”
Adam sighed, wondering what they should do. “Jurot, stay there for a bit in case we need you.”
“What about me?” Jaygak asked.
“I’m still not sure if you have anything to do with this.”
“Hey!” Jaygak shouted down at them. “Should I take that as a compliment?”
“Sure.”
“Can you joke even now?” Vonda asked, glancing around. Her mace gave off some decent light, but she chanted to cast her trick, Light, on her mace instead, which glowed slightly brighter.
“If you can’t joke even in times like this, what can you do?” Adam asked.
As they trekked around the pile of bones, they found that they had been in the corner of a much larger chamber which had been cut off by the snake, which had lain on a slightly raised platform.
Ahead of them was an altar with an egg, and nearby was a pool of water. As they continued to look around, they found that there was very little around.
“Help me out here,” Adam called, patting his chest.
“Yes?” Vonda asked.
“Sorry, just casting Guidance,” Adam said.
Guidance
1D3 = 3
Perception Check
D20 + 6 = 19 (13)
He wasn’t any good at it, though he was trained in Perception, Guidance managed to assist him well enough that Adam was certain there was nothing else around here.
They walked up to the egg cautiously, noting that it was made of stone.
“To whom which has appeared, thief or hero, please look after this child well, for they are blessed by Mahtu,” Vonda said, reading the inscription on the altar, which had just looked like symbols to Adam.
Adam looked to Vonda, and slowly nodded his head towards her. She stepped towards the altar freely, picking the egg up. They both waited for a moment to see what would happen, before she pulled away from the altar, with the heavy egg in her arms.
“Do you know what this is about?” Adam asked, looking to the egg, before looking at the long serpent beside them.
Vonda was looking at the long serpent, which was easily one hundred paces long, perhaps more. The skull of the creature showed it could have swallowed Jurot, Adam, and her entirely in a single snap of its jaws.
“No,” Vonda admitted. “I can vaguely recall something, but it is not coming to mind.”
“Probably Elder Story, right?” Adam assumed. “They should know about that sort of thing.”
“Who is Elder Story?”
Adam shrugged his shoulders. “I met them, but they were behind a bunch of vines. Not really the most sociable Great Elder, but you didn’t hear that from me.”
“Have you met all the Great Elders?”
“Yes. They don’t seem to like me much. The Chief’s okay, though.”
“What did you do?”
“I didn’t do anything,” Adam said, crossing his arms. “I’m a sweet, innocent Half Elf. Just ask Lanarot, she’ll tell you I’m good.”
Vonda raised her brows at Adam, but she smiled. She pulled down her scarf as she ate. It was only Adam and her, and she didn’t care if Adam saw the burn marks across her lower face and neck.
Adam stared at the egg, wondering what connection it had to the Iyr. ‘Child blessed by Mahtu. Child blessed by Mahtu. Child blessed by...’
“Are you going to take your egg to your Order? Order of... White Rose?”
“Order of Life’s Rose,” Vonda corrected.
Adam shook his head. “Priest of Life, Life’s Rose.” Adam tried to get the name to stick in his head.
“I may.”
“I think, maybe, you should take it to the Iyr first.”
“It is an egg that...” Vonda was going to say she found it, but that wasn’t entirely true. “I will think on the matter.”
“Regardless, since it’s a child of Mahtu, and you’re a Priest of Mahtu, then they can’t take it away from you.”
“What if they do?”
“I’ll complain their ears off,” Adam assured. “The Iyr has its rules, and I’m sure that they can’t take it away from you.”
“You seem to have a lot of trust in the Iyr,” Vonda said.
“If I can’t trust the Iyr, then what can I trust?”
“Jurot?”
“Well, yes, but you know what I mean.”
“Do I?” Vonda smiled.
“Oh, now you’re joking with me?” Adam asked. “Vonda, you can’t take funny from me, it’s the only thing I have going for me.”
“You are not as funny as you think you are,” Vonda dared to say, raising her brows at him.
“Yes,” Adam said. “That’s the point.”
“You truly are queer, Adam.”
“And don’t you forget it.”
Vonda continued to smile. The pair continued to speak with one another in the bedroom, with Hades keeping an eye out. When it was finally time to sleep, Adam wrapped his blanket around himself, and settled himself on the floor.
“It is your spell,” Vonda said, trying to get him to sleep on the bed.
“That’s right, and you’re my guest, so sleep on the bed, Vonda,” Adam said. “What’ll they say about me if they found out that I let a Priest of Life, a young lady, sleep on the floor while I took the bed? They’ll call me a no good knife ear.”
Vonda paused in shock with the fact he let slip a racial slur so freely. “Adam!”
“What?” Adam replied. “I can say it, I’m half Elf.”
Vonda turned a deeper red, and sat on the bed. She wondered how far she should go, but Adam was already nestled like a little egg in his blanket, which was cream with the symbol of the Rot family across it, the blue diamonds and the blue circle in the centre.
It was half way through the night Adam was jolted awake.
He had realised that he and Vonda were both sleeping in the same room.
That wasn’t a huge issue, Adam may be a virgin, but it was because it was voluntary.
However, they were in a dangerous place, with only a bird on lookout.
Though that was a huge issue, it wasn’t what had awoken Adam.
‘I’m a fucking idiot.’
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Adam's Int is 16 but actually it's 8.