Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Beneath Ahknoor - Thu Group - The Sword of the Whojamajigs

Group 2 | Session 3: "The Sword of the Whojamajigs"

Previously: Three strangers stood at the entrance of a buried library and went in three separate directions. Eldric went up toward the gallery. Thanatos jogged until he found a scriptorium. Gohma went down. They found creatures made of ink, doors rigged with falling rocks, and a hand in a cubby whose fingers had been stained so long that the discoloration had become structural. They uncovered four clues, marked two conditions, and found a book that cannot exist: a newly bound volume with mismatched contents, featuring one page written in Eldric's own handwriting inside a satchel carried by a figure who has never met him.

The session opens in a hallway where two paper wasps, the size of small dogs and assembled from salvaged pages and binding string, block the path. Eldric's magic speaking voice is gone. There is only one thing left to try.

What Light Does to Wasps

The camera opens on Eldric's hand holding the wand. He runs the calculation. Without his voice, casting the spell is significantly harder, but the wand brings the odds back to even. He names what he fears: that the light will draw more attention, not less, and that whatever else dwells in this place will see it and come.

He casts the light past them against the far wall. It shines bright and moving, mimicking the way living things navigate a space. Close-up on the wasps: they turn toward the distraction. He runs. A piece of vellum sloughs off one of the wasps as they lurch toward the illumination, and he grabs it without slowing down, refusing to look at it until he is clear.

The camera follows him through the gap, keeping tight on his boots and the wall of the hallway. The gallery entrance grows closer and larger until he bursts through it. Cut to: the vellum in his hands.

It is a torn sheet featuring three separate handwritings. The first hand is careful and scholarly. By the bottom margin, the third writer's script is crowded and overlapping, clearly running out of room; something is deeply wrong with how fast they were writing. Three distinct authors, writing at different times under increasing pressure. The camera holds on the bottom margin, focusing on the exact spot where the handwriting changes. This is clue five.

Three Rats and a Dying Wasp

Cut to Thanatos in the scriptorium. He is not alone. Three rats emerge from the walls, each from a separate nook, moving in formation toward the center of the room. The middle rat reaches the ink splatter left behind on the floor by the animated ink. It extends its tongue to taste it. All three rodents shudder simultaneously, then immediately retreat to their nooks. The camera holds briefly on the ink splatter and their hurried retreat.

Thanatos is looking for scripture, as his partial book is spent. There is a doorway he has not yet tried, where vellum hangs on strings from wall to wall. From the other side, he can hear a distinct buzzing. Cut to: one paper wasp on the floor of the annex. It is heavily damaged and turning in tight circles, its wings unable to lift it. The camera pulls in tight as Thanatos picks up two large blotters.

The creature's sting catches him in the leg as it goes down, forcing him to mark the "Nauseous" condition. He pulls two partial sheets of vellum from the lines, writings in two different languages he cannot place, and stuffs them into his pack. He does not intend to use them; he just wants to carry them out of here. He then heads up toward the gallery, following the path Eldric took.

The Gallery Had Already Been Robbed

In the gallery, wooden panels line the walls alongside cracked icons faded past reading, a torn painting, and empty plinths. Footprints in the dust track back and forth, appearing neither careful nor recent. Someone was here before any of them; they took their time, took what they wanted, and left. The camera holds on the plinths, emphasizing what is no longer there.

Pat asks all three players: what masterwork was once displayed here, and why do you mourn its loss?

Eldric had expected showy, expensive pieces—the kind worth collecting. He went up toward this room on the first day because he assumed that was where they would be stored. Because they are missing, he realizes someone else had the exact same thought and arrived first. That is the kind of loss he understands all too well.

Gohma, across the dungeon, grew up with a book of fairy tales. The book told of a hero whose name his parents could never quite remember, so they simply called him "the Whojamajigs", the word they used whenever a name escaped them. The hero carried a jeweled, highly specific sword that became legendary in the way things your parents tell you often do. For years, Gohma did not understand that "the Whojamajigs" was not the hero's actual name. He had believed in that sword completely and came here looking for something like it. There is no such sword to be found.

Thanatos had hoped for a simple cloth, the kind worn by the wandering sage of Lesser Whojamajig. He sought something plain, worn, and meaningful, but it is also absent.

Cut to: Thanatos shouting for Eldric. The sound goes out, but commotion answers from a different doorway, and he follows the noise.
The camera pulls back to reveal a four-way intersection and a central pedestal. A book strains against its chain, snapping at the air as if it knows he is there. Thanatos addresses it, asking after its teachings, but the book does not answer in words. Evaluating its movements, he can see exactly how far the chain reaches. Though he is thoroughly nauseated, the restraint of the chain is real.
He moves past it as quickly as possible, pressing flat against the wall and watching the radius. The book snaps at him but fails to reach.

The Book That Will Not Come Back

Cut to Gohma, still in the armorium. The camera opens on the exit from which the book wight emerged. He sees a hallway lined with statuary shelves showing signs of regular use: the center of the floor is completely clear. Something moves through here often, but he decides not to follow it. He has a plan to return to the entrance, so he turns back. The camera catches a set of footprints before he does.

There is fresh ink on the stone, heading in the exact direction he is going. Close-up on Gohma, who chooses not to overthink it. He quickly catches up to a loose shape ahead of him: ink in motion, held together by sheer pressure and something older than physics. He names what he fears if he misses, getting lost in the dark. His pickaxe comes down through the middle of the entity, and its surface tension shatters instantly.

Ink splatters up the walls and across the ceiling. What is left of the creature gathers into small, snail-like shapes that move along the wall, leaving dark trails behind them as they head toward an unknown destination. Gohma keeps his eyes strictly on his work, failing to watch where he is going. The camera cuts wide to reveal a dead end. Behind him, he hears steps.

One of the ashen, ink-stained figures emerges from the passage. Gohma has an ability that will not help him later if he uses it now, but "later" is entirely theoretical, whereas the book wight is an immediate threat. He invokes the spirit's whisper, though the price is something he deeply values. He carries a book of fairy tales from his childhood, the one containing the story of the Sword of the Whojamajigs, the jeweled blade carried by a legendary hero whose name his parents could never recall. He sets the book down and leaves it behind. His pickaxe comes down again, and the creature completely comes apart.

In the ensuing quiet, the way back becomes clear. He knows exactly where he went wrong and precisely how to correct it. Pull back slowly on Gohma standing alone in the corridor, then on the book resting on the floor. The library has now taken something from him that he will never get back. He does not look at the book again.

Where Things Stand

Cut to: the entrance. Above ground, in the open air. The three companions emerge at roughly the same time. Thanatos and Eldric retraced their route, while Gohma found his own way out. They now have five clues and three conditions, alongside an empty gallery that was cleared out long before they arrived and a book left behind in a dark corridor far below their feet. The camera holds on Gohma's hands, focusing heavily on what is no longer in them.

Meanwhile, in the ruins of Ahknoor above them, something is already moving. Someone out there knows Eldric's name, knows what he is looking for, or understands something about the library that none of them have discovered yet. They have left something behind for him, though he does not know it yet. Below, the library continues to wait—and it will wait for as long as it has to.

Fade to black.

The next session will open above ground, where there is urgent business to complete before anyone ventures back inside.

Monday, June 8, 2026

Arden Vul - Dungeon World - Session 10 - Plumthorn's Going to Know

Arden Vul Session 10

Plumthorn's Going to Know

Date: June 8, 2026

Party: Florian (bard), Lorez (wizard), Cedric (Fighter), Johannes (cleric), Runner (Ranger)

See the whole thing on my Arden Vul campaign page. 

Beneath Ahknoor - The Saga Isn't Backstory

I built the Saga procedure such that two groups given identical prompts should build different dungeons.

Not different aesthetics. Not different lore textures. Different fundamental assumptions about what the dungeon is and what it does to people who enter it.

The design risk was always that Sagas would stay external, lore about the dungeon's past rather than something that changes how players see their characters in relation to it. The playtest is telling me whether I got the balance right.


The setup: before a new level of Ahknoor is entered, the Keeper introduces a structured prompt sequence. Players answer as mythmakers, narrating the "past" of a dungeon they haven't touched yet. The prompts ask about the burial or founding, the protection of the place, the violation of those protections, the re-entry of those who cared, and the fates of everyone involved.

I wrote in the rules that the Saga is not history. It's the story people tell to feel safe, and the dungeon will spend the campaign answering it.

I thought that was a framing note. It turns out it's a design claim.


Both playtest groups worked through the Saga of Beornhelm, a hero buried in the Plundered Catacombs of Ahknoor with heavy stone and magical wards, whose tomb was eventually broken. Same prompts. Here is what they built.

The Tuesday Group's Saga treats the dungeon as a process of transformation. A person becomes infrastructure. The threshold opens once, something patient walks through behind the person who opened it, and from that point on the dungeon is not a location with a dangerous occupant. It's a condition. The best line in their text: He had risen into the walls themselves, into the stone and the dark and the layout of the corridors. He had become the dungeon. The logic here is instability under pressure. What you are doesn't survive contact unchanged.

The Thursday Group's Saga treats the dungeon as a wound that never closed. Something sacred was violated, it was never repaired, and everything that follows is aftermath. The three companions who sealed the tomb and came back to find it desecrated are each destroyed by their own attempt to make it right: Sael by a gift of foresight turned into a torture, Dreven by a loyalty that outlasted its object, Mother Arla by a faith that the dungeon simply consumed. Beornhelm speaks once and the text doesn't linger on him. The dungeon's logic is obligation and grief. You don't explore it. You enter a debt still being collected.

Those are not variations on a theme. They are different predictions about what contact with this place means.


What I find interesting is where each version anchors its meaning.

Not in the dungeon's rooms. Not in its factions or encounters or treasures. In the post-contact outcomes: what happens to the people who leave. In both Sagas, the dungeon becomes legible through its survivors, or through the specific way it refuses to let people survive cleanly. (You can find the sagas on the Beneath Ahknoor page.)

Tuesday’s Group gives you atmosphere and transformation and a question the storyteller admits he can't answer: whether there's anything left of the man inside what the dungeon became. Thursday’s Group gives you three named tragic models. You walk into the market square at the end of that story knowing exactly what the dungeon collects: it collects the people who try to repair what it broke. Both approaches are loading the dungeon with consequence before a single room has been entered.

That's the Saga working as a pre-play constraint mechanism. Each group is, without being asked to, selecting a harm profile. A theory of what this dungeon does to people. And those theories are not interchangeable: they'll shape what questions players ask, what risks feel worth taking, what counts as a meaningful cost.


The question I'm sitting with now is whether the Sagas are staying external lore or starting to function as mirrors: not stories about Beornhelm and his companions, but stories the players recognize themselves inside. Both Beornhelm Sagas are still pretty lore-facing. But the Thursday group recently answered the first level question for the Buried Library and I saw a clean connection back to the Saga they told for it. Something is starting to bend in the right direction. I'll be writing about it when I'm sure. 

If you're running something with a Saga procedure, or thinking about how pre-play myth-making shapes what happens at the table, I'd genuinely like to hear what you're seeing. And if you want to follow where this goes, the newsletter is the best place


Thursday, June 4, 2026

Beneath Ahknoor - Thu Group - The Saga of Beornhelm

Three strangers entered a buried library beneath the ruins of Ahknoor and found a place that remembered too much.

These are lightly polished recaps from an ongoing Beneath Ahknoor playtest campaign: emergent dungeon fantasy built collaboratively at the table through exploration, folklore, scavenging, grief, and bad decisions made underground.

The events below were not scripted in advance. My role as Keeper was to ask questions, follow consequences, and let the dungeon become what play demanded.

The recaps are generated by AI from my session notes and edited for accuracy and voice. The facts, factions, and consequences are mine; the prose is collaborative. See all the recaps here.

The Thursday group includes:

  • Torrens as Eldric
  • Michael as Thanatos
  • Cameron as Gohma

The library is waiting.


Previously: Three adventurers came up out of the Buried Library with ink on their hands and five clues they did not yet know how to read. Gohma left a book on the floor of a dark corridor and did not look back. Eldric walked out still carrying a page written in his own handwriting that he has never written. Thanatos walked out nauseated and carrying scripture in a language he cannot place. They had five clues, three conditions, and a gallery full of empty plinths where something valuable used to be. The session closed above ground. There was unfinished business waiting for them there.


The Cost of Coming Back Up

The camera opens on the market square in Limbros, mid-morning. Gohma and Thanatos are walking back from wherever they slept. The city does not treat them warmly. Cities rarely do, with people who come back from underneath.

They stop at a produce stall they have stopped at before. The vendor places the goods on the counter rather than handing them across. He waits for their coins to land on the wood before his hand moves toward them. His eyes keep finding the ink stains on their skin, then looking deliberately away. Close-up on his hands and theirs, the gap of air between them that neither party closes.

Gohma reads this without offense. He is from the mines. In the mines, ration tokens sat on counters while the person on the other side looked away. You did not touch the person giving you what you had earned. That was never the arrangement. This vendor is not afraid of them. He simply understands how certain exchanges have to work.

The camera holds on the coins on the counter. Then on the vendor's face.

The vendor won't take their money directly. It has to be exchanged first. Somewhere in this city there is a place where darkness-touched coin gets converted into something a market will accept. That is a problem they now own.


Cut to a different part of the market: the back stalls, the kind that exist slightly behind the ones you can easily find. Eldric knows which stall he is looking for.

Kaden has carried odd items and useful items and items with no clear category for as long as Eldric has known him. The arrangement has been simple: Eldric moves between Kaden and the other merchants, vouches for the goods, smooths the exchange. A go-between. A known quantity.

The camera holds on Kaden's expression as Eldric approaches.

The problem with being known as an adventurer is that known quantities become unreliable. The other merchants are less willing to deal with someone who goes underground and comes back changed. Kaden has already found someone else to play the middle role. He did not wait to see if Eldric would return to find out.

Eldric picks up the package Kaden is holding out. Plain brown paper. Twine. He opens it.

Inside: a manifest, written in four different colored inks. The same teamster who gave him a partial map in Three Bridges has been busy. The manifest lists a delivery to the cave opening. Among the items listed is something from one of their three packs: a starting item, something they were carrying before they ever went down. Close-up on the manifest, on the ink colors, on the line that names the item.

Someone has been paying attention to them for longer than they have been paying attention to that someone. The camera holds on Eldric's face as he folds the manifest carefully and puts it away.


What the Clues Were Saying

The three of them sit down with what they have.

Thanatos reads the clues aloud, one at a time. The camera cuts to each object as he names it. The mummified hand with ink-stained fingers. The newly bound book with mismatched contents and a page in Eldric's handwriting. The sheet of vellum covered in disturbing inkblots. The piece of wax fruit with the marks of too many rat teeth. The torn sheet written in three different hands, careful at the top and frantic at the bottom.

Five objects. One question. Which faction controls the Buried Library, and what has controlling it done to them?

Gohma has the answer.

The camera stays on him as he builds it. The book wights were Bibliarchs once. Scholars. Curators. They shared knowledge the way some people share bread: freely, assuming there would always be more. Something got in. Rats first, then wasps, then the accumulated weight of things going wrong without anyone left to fix them. The Bibliarchs could not leave. The library was their life's work and their life's meaning and there was no version of themselves that existed apart from it. So they stayed. And they became what they are now: not scholars exactly, not anymore, but something that still remembers what scholarship felt like and will not forgive the world for the distance between then and now.

They built the ink golems to fight the rats. The mummified hand belongs to the first Bibliarch who did not survive the building process. The wax fruit was a deterrent. The inkblot vellum was the incantation.

The torn sheet in three hands stops the room. Who wrote in three different hands? Pat asks the question without providing the answer. Thanatos suggests a man writing his own death, the script growing frantic as the wasp venom moved through him, documenting symptoms because documentation was the only thing left he knew how to do. Gohma has a different answer: one of them lost their hand. Switched to the other. When that hand stopped, someone else picked up the pen.

Pat lets it land.

The Bibliarchs are the faction. The book wights are what the library made of the people who loved it too much to leave. The roll is a success. There is a complication somewhere in the library waiting to arrive at the worst possible moment, and they do not yet know what shape it will take.


The History of a Place They Have Not Entered

Before anyone can go down, there is a story to tell.

The sun hasn't burned off the cool of the stones yet, and the market square is still in that soft hour when the bakers are louder than the merchants. A half-circle of children has formed around the old storyteller's stool — some sitting cross-legged, some perched on crates, one standing on tiptoe because she refuses to sit when heroes are involved.

Behind them, three adventurers — not Gohma, not Thanatos, not Eldric — have drifted in with the same guilty eagerness as everyone else who pretends they're too grown to listen to tales. A sellsword with a dented pauldron. A scholar with ink on every knuckle. A pilgrim whose boots have seen too many roads.

The storyteller taps his staff once on the cobbles. The square hushes.

"Gather close, little ones. Today's tale is an old one — older than the stones beneath your feet. It is the Saga of Beornhelm, the hero who was laid to rest with honor… and rose again with wrath."

A ripple of excitement moves through the crowd. The adventurers lean in despite themselves. The children inch forward, eyes wide. The baker's boy forgets the tray in his hands.

The storyteller smiles the way only someone who knows the whole tragedy can smile.

"It begins with a funeral procession through Old Ahknoor… and ends with three companions who learned that even the bravest tomb can be broken."

He lifts his hand, ready to begin the first verse.

"They carried him through Old Ahknoor with hired criers and professional mourners, because that is what you do for a hero, whether the grief is real or performed. Red petals on the cobblestones from the first street to the last. And at the entrance to the catacombs, every mourner reached into their coat and placed something of their own into the casket. A ring. A folded letter. A coin kept for years for reasons no longer remembered. Small things, sent forward into whatever comes next.

"He was set behind heavy stone and magical wards, and the three companions — Mother Arla, Dreven the Warden of Hollowhearth, and Sael the Morrowkin — believed the work was finished.

"It was not finished.

"They came in the dark, the ones who broke the tomb. Not simple thieves. A society of specialists, the kind who treat magical wards the way a locksmith treats a lock: a problem with a solution, no matter the cost. They wanted the amulet. A wizard had placed it among the burial goods, and the society knew its worth, and they wanted it badly enough to send people in knowing some would not return. Two of them dissolved against the wards before the seals gave way. The amulet was taken. The tomb stood open.

"When the companions learned what had happened, they went back down.

"It went slowly at first. The horror of it arrives in stages. You see the outer damage and think: this is bad but recoverable. Then you see the next thing. And the next. And then you understand what was taken, and you stop moving carefully and start moving fast.

"They were not the only ones moving.

"The sound came from everywhere at once: armaments clanking, deliberate, unhurried, approaching from every passage. Not a warning — an arrangement. Something was herding them inward, pushing them toward the center, making sure there was no direction left but forward. And in the central chamber, all the figures came out of the dark at the same moment.

"Beornhelm was at the front.

"He had the eyes of someone who has left everything behind except the one obligation that wouldn't let go. He looked at them the way the dead look at the living: without malice, without grief, without anything you could appeal to.

"This place is for the dead, he said. Leave now, or you never will.

"They left.

"And that is where the story of Beornhelm ends. But the stories of the three companions go on a little longer, the way stories do when they have nowhere good to go.

"Sael the Morrowkin was named for his gift of seeing the next day. He had always known what was coming. He walked out of the catacombs and the gift turned on him. Every morning he woke with a vision of his death: clear, specific, arriving tomorrow. Tomorrow came. It brought no death. The next day brought the vision again. For months he lived inside the certainty of an end that refused to arrive. He chose it himself, in the end, from a high precipice, in the most unglorious way possible. They say he is still waiting, somewhere on the other side, for the tomorrow that will finally be different.

"Dreven the Warden posted himself at the entrance and did not leave.

"People brought him food. He accepted it. He was not guarding against further desecration, not exactly: he was waiting for Mother Arla to walk out. She had gone back in after the companions left. She brought her sect with her. She had her faith and her purpose and the certainty that prayer could reach even the restless dead. She was wrong, or she was right in a way that cost her everything: she is part of what is in there now, one more soul added to what she came to release. Dreven stayed at the door because she was the last person he might have walked away with, and she never walked out.

"His armor and his bones are still there. In the dust, at the entrance, where he kept his watch.

"The catacombs remember all three of them.

"And the doors are still open, little ones, because no one has ever closed them for good."

The storyteller lowers his hand.

The square is quiet.

The baker's boy realizes the tray is still in his hands.

The three adventurers — the sellsword, the scholar, the pilgrim with the road-worn boots — don't look at each other. They are each doing the private mathematics of people who have heard a warning dressed as a story and are deciding whether to heed it.

None of them leave.


The Entrance

They choose the catacombs.

The Buried Library is still there, still locked around a question they do not yet have enough clues to answer. The catacombs are new territory, and the Saga has made them real in a specific way, and that specificity is enough reason to go.

The camera walks them down to the entrance. The exterior walls carry inscriptions that were once sacred and are now something else: words scratched out, words altered, words replaced with mockery. Someone took the time to change the scripture into a joke at the expense of the people buried inside. The camera holds on a particular phrase where the original text is still half-legible beneath the defacement, the two versions running over each other.

Inside: the remnants of honor in the debris. Rats scurrying from the torchlight. Noises in the distance with possible natural explanations.

Probably not.

A large painting has been cut from its frame. The frame was plain, so they went for the painting itself, and they were not careful about it: jagged corners of canvas still hang from the wood where the cuts went wrong. Close-up on the jagged edges, the missing center, the shape of what is no longer there.

A coffin has been pulled from a hidden room and stripped of everything. Gold handles pried away, the marks of the tools still legible in the wood. Jewels gouged out. The casket empty, lying open, abandoned in the middle of the floor once there was nothing left worth taking.

The camera pulls back to show all three of them standing at the threshold of a place built to honor the ordinary dead of Ahknoor and used instead to demonstrate what happens to things when the people who cared about them are gone.

They have not gone deeper yet.


Where Things Stand

Cut to: the entrance. They are standing at the threshold of the Plundered Catacombs. The above-ground phase is behind them. The Buried Library has a question they cannot yet answer and a complication they do not yet know about. The catacombs have two questions neither of them have begun. Somewhere in the city, Kaden's replacement go-between is already doing the work Eldric used to do. Somewhere in the dark, a manifest written in four different colored inks says an item from one of their packs was delivered here before they arrived.

The camera holds on the entrance, on the dark beyond it.

Somewhere in that dark, Beornhelm awaits with the Children of Senkrit.

Fade to black.

The next session opens with what they brought with them, what the library owes them, and the first step into a place that has been waiting a long time for someone to come and ask it what it wants.


Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Beneath Ahknoor - The Dungeon Follows You Home

 

This post is part of the ongoing development of Beneath Ahknoor, a Carved from Brindlewood megadungeon where understanding is survival. Session chronicles, design context, and playtest notes live on the campaign page.

Monday, June 1, 2026

Arden Vul - Dungeon World - Session 9

Arden Vul Session 09

What the Ambassador Files

Date: June 1, 2026

Party: Florian (bard), Lorez (wizard), Cedric (Fighter), Johannes (cleric), Runner (Ranger)

See the whole thing on my Arden Vul campaign page.

A dispatch from Ambassador Clug

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Beneath Ahknoor - Tue Group - It Took Up Residency

 

Group 1 | Session 2: "It Took Up Residency"

Four strangers entered a story before they entered a dungeon. They spoke the dead into history. They gave names to the grief that built these halls. They learned, in the manner of folklore, what happened here, which means they learned several things that contradict each other, and all of them are true.

These are lightly polished recaps from an ongoing Beneath Ahknoor playtest campaign: emergent dungeon fantasy built collaboratively at the table through exploration, folklore, scavenging, grief, and bad decisions made underground.

The events below were not scripted in advance. My role as Keeper was to ask questions, follow consequences, and let the dungeon become what play demanded.

The recaps are generated by AI from my session notes and edited for accuracy and voice. The facts, factions, and consequences are mine; the prose is collaborative. See all the recaps here.

The Tuesday group includes:

  • Chris as Gueller
  • Danny as Caspian
  • Matt as Swalthazar
  • Torrens as Tengi

The catacombs are waiting.


Previously:Three strangers entered a story before they entered a dungeon. They spoke the dead into history. They gave names to the grief that built these halls. They learned, in the manner of folklore, what happened here, which means they learned several things that contradict each other, and all of them are true.

The procession was enormous. People came from everywhere, from cultures that had no other reason to stand in the same place, all drawn by a man whose influence reached further than anyone admitted while he was alive. There was an assassination attempt. One of the three mourners disappeared. Beornhelm was laid to rest behind magical wards in the plundered catacombs of Ahknoor, under heavy stone, watched over by his companions and by whoever had tried to kill someone in the middle of a funeral.

And then Malric Vane came down.

The apprentice believed the death was a murder dressed as something else. He believed an artifact was about to pass into the wrong hands. He had been inside the wards when they were made, so he knew their shape from the other side, and he walked through them.

He did not understand what he was walking into.

When Beornhelm's friends learned what had happened, two of them now, the third still missing, they went back in to find the one responsible and bring them to justice. Instead, they found that breaching the wards had let in something older and darker, something that had been waiting at the threshold and had simply walked through the opening Vane made.

It took up residency.

And Beornhelm himself rose, not into a body but into the walls around him. He became the dungeon. Enraged beyond reasoning, he began to curse everyone who followed Vane down: turning them into animated armor, animated objects, things that moved with fury and no face. The ones who crawled back out spoke of passages that changed, of the dungeon itself coming alive to attack them, of their companions turning and not stopping.

Those turned things are called the Children of Senkrit.

That is the story as it is told.

That is what waits at the bottom of the stairs.



The camera holds on the entrance. Two guardian statues flank the doors above. One has no eyes. The other has no hands.

Nobody has crossed yet.

Pull back to reveal three figures at the threshold. A cat, somewhere among them, has already made her assessment.


What Caspian Sees at the Entrance

The camera pulls in on Caspian's face.

He has a sensitivity that other people don't have, a way of reading what a place is trying to say before it says it. He uses it here.

Close on the two statues. The eyes were not broken out. Not chipped, not worn down by time. They were removed with purpose, the sockets cleaned and smooth, the damage careful in the way that only intentional damage is careful. The hands are the same: gone at the wrist, the break too clean for accident.

The camera holds on the sockets. On the place where the hands were.

Caspian knows what it means to walk into a place that has had something taken from it. He knows that kind of removal. He knows what it leaves behind.

He walks in.


What Tengi Notices in the Entry Hall

The camera cuts to the niches.

They line the passage, dozens of them, cut into the stone at regular intervals, sized for the statues that once stood in them. The statues depicted heroic things. Battles. Moments. The kind of images that say: this person mattered, and here is why. They were ornate. That is precisely why they were taken.

But not all of them were taken cleanly.

The camera pulls in tight on the remnants. Some of the statues were too deeply set, or the stone gave wrong when they tried to pull them free. So they broke them. The rubble is still here: fragments of carved faces, stone fingers, pieces of whatever heroic pose held until someone decided it was worth more as portable wealth than as memory.

Tengi slows down. The camera holds on his face as he moves along the niches.

There is something wrong with the fragments. Not wrong in a way he can point to. Wrong in the way that a place is wrong when something in it is paying attention. Around the rubble of the broken statues, the feeling is cold and specific and unhappy.

He keeps walking. He does not touch the rubble.


The Chapel

The camera follows the party along the right-hand wall.

The passage winds through the dark and the torchlight moves with it, and the sounds from deeper in stay at a distance that is not quite reassuring. They find the chapel.

The camera opens wide on the room: rectangular, low-ceilinged. It smells of old stone and the faint sweetness of decay. The benches are overturned, the wood splintered in ways that suggest violence rather than time. Where the altar wall should be inlaid with precious metals and gems depicting the gods of Ahknoor, there is bare stone: scraped clean, the shapes of what was there still visible as shadows in the rock.

The empty plinths stand where statuary once stood. All of them empty.

Almost all of them.

The camera finds the central alcove. A columnar plinth, not freestanding but carved from the wall itself. Above it: a statue. Still here. Still standing. The hands are broken off at the wrists. The eyes have been gouged out.

One socket is empty. The other is not.

The camera pulls in very close. A glass eye sits in the hollow where the stone eye used to be, placed there by someone, deliberately, after the original was removed. It is intact. It is catching the light. From across the room, it gives the impression that the statue is looking at something specific, and the camera slowly pulls back to reveal the angle of its gaze.

Hold.


What the Chapel Feels Like

The camera cuts between three faces.

Tengi: standing in the room as the feeling of it settles over him. There is reverence here, underneath everything else. The looting did not take it. The broken benches did not take it. The chapel still breathes tranquility, still holds the shape of what it was built to do. It is calming, in the way that holy places are calming, until you notice the statue. Until you notice that the statue is eyeless and handless and still seems to be looking at you, still seems to be reaching for you, still seems to want something it cannot take. He does not look away from the statue. The statue does not look away from him.

Caspian: feeling the weight of the watching. There is a benevolence to it, he thinks, or something that wears benevolence the way a magistrate wears authority, which is to say as a tool. The room is pleased, so far. The room is measuring. He has the distinct feeling that the moment someone steps out of line, the nature of the watching will change completely.

So far.

Swalthazar: who left the room briefly and came back to find his companions staring at the statue. He turns to show them something. He turns back to his companions. He opens his mouth. He turns to show them. The room is empty. The mannequins are gone.

Hold on the empty benches. Hold on the overturned wood. Hold on the place where they were.


What Comes Out of the Dark

The camera catches the movement in the hallway off the chapel.

The cat sees it first.

Close on Ink, who has been here the whole time, whose opinion about this room has been a matter of contained unease that a cat can project without much effort. The cat was uneasy. The cat is now frightened. The cat moves in one decisive motion to the space directly behind Caspian, putting him between itself and the doorway.

The doorway where the sound is coming from.

The camera turns.

There is a figure in the hallway. It approaches slowly, in the manner of something that does not need to hurry. The torchlight reaches it.

Close on what it was, once: a human corpse, more or less intact, more or less upright. Close on what it is now: the skin moves. Not with decay. With occupancy. There are holes, and through the holes the camera can see movement, and the movement resolves into wings, and the wings resolve into insects, dozens of them, flying in and out of the body like it is a structure they have built and not a thing that was once alive.

The buzzing becomes audible. It has been audible for a moment. Nobody noticed when it started.

The figure steps into the light.

The camera holds on the doorway. On the chapel. On the glass eye, catching the torchlight from its socket. On four people and something that is no longer concerned with the business of the living.

Cut to black.


Where Things Stand

One clue. One room. Four other locations nobody has seen: the reliquary, the vestiary, the processional hall, the ossuary of the lonely dead. All of them somewhere in the dark, past the thing standing in the doorway.

The Scar of Lost Grief waits if any of them need it. The catacombs were built for people who died without enough ceremony. The scar fits.

The Children of Senkrit are somewhere in the dark. Beornhelm is the walls. Malric Vane has not been accounted for. The glass eye is watching something specific, and no one has yet looked at what it is aimed at.

Ink has made her position on all of this very clear.

Next session picks up exactly here.