You wake on the same stone slab. It is wet from the chamber's constant dampness. The air sticks to your skin like a second layer of clothing. It is thick and heavy. It tastes of salt and something older. Something from deep places where light has never reached.
Your clothes were once part of a fancy costume. The embroidered patterns are now hard to see under layers of mildew. They stopped being dry long ago. The stone beneath you is cold. Always cold. It doesn't matter how many months you have been here. Three months now? Four? Time moves strangely in these flooded places. You don't measure it by sun or moon. Instead, you measure it by prayers whispered in voices that bubble and rasp.
The Kuo-toa believe you are a god. They call you SHOOGBIMBHALD.
Each day their prayers wash over you like waves. They never stop. And each day something happens. Last night you raised your hand and the waters of the flooded hall parted. You had only wished it, and it happened. The fish people threw themselves on the ground. Their bulging eyes gleamed with worship. Their sticky webbed hands pressed to the slimy floor. You saw yourself reflected in those eyes. Something bright, something vast, something different.
But the memory of last night is not what wakes you now. Your breath comes quick and shallow. Your body is covered with sweat despite the cold chamber. It is the dream.
The statue.
You cannot remember its face, if it even had a face. But you remember the weight of it, the presence. It filled your sleeping mind, vast and silent. It was carved from stone so black it seemed to swallow the darkness around it. You stood before it in your dream. Though it did not move, though it did not speak, you knew it was aware of you. Watching. Waiting.
And you knew where it stood.
The forbidden chamber.
Your followers do not speak of it. That is what they are now. When you have asked about it, their bulging eyes look away. Their gill slits flutter. The priests croak warnings in their wet, garbled language. The warriors block the passage with their crude spears. Forbidden, they say. Sacred. Death.
The cathedral itself is ancient beyond measure. You have seen enough of the building to know the fish people did not build it. The graceful arches are now broken.
The columns are carved with ancient Elvish, though time and water have worn many of the words away. You can understand a couple of words, but the full meaning escapes you. The style is elegant, cruel, beautiful in its precision. The Kuo-toa whisper that the drow built these stones. The dark elves of Lunalis, before their kingdom fled west as the sea came creeping in. That was centuries ago. The waters have pulled back since then, but the deep remains close. The sea caverns open wide in the flooded depths below. The cathedral's towers hang upside down, like roots seeking sky. In their upside-down halls, the Kuo-toa have made their home.
And you, their god.
You swing your legs from the slab. Your feet find the always-damp floor. Your fingers brush the tarnished bells that were once sewn into your costume's hem. They are silent now, waterlogged. The costume you wore when the mind flayers attacked your mistress's caravan. The costume you still wore when you and your flumph companion stumbled upon this place. Somewhere in the twisted halls beyond, you hear the wet slap of footsteps. The bubbling chant of morning prayers. They will come soon with offerings: blind fish, cavern mushrooms, trinkets pulled from drowned places.
Your flumph friend drifts nearby, a soft glow in the darkness. It has stayed with you since that day. Since you led the gas spores to the duergar slavers. Since the Kuo-toa burst from these doors and saw what they wanted to see.
And you have always been very good at going where you were not supposed to go.
As you wake up, what do you do?
Your clothes were once part of a fancy costume. The embroidered patterns are now hard to see under layers of mildew. They stopped being dry long ago. The stone beneath you is cold. Always cold. It doesn't matter how many months you have been here. Three months now? Four? Time moves strangely in these flooded places. You don't measure it by sun or moon. Instead, you measure it by prayers whispered in voices that bubble and rasp.
The Kuo-toa believe you are a god. They call you SHOOGBIMBHALD.
Each day their prayers wash over you like waves. They never stop. And each day something happens. Last night you raised your hand and the waters of the flooded hall parted. You had only wished it, and it happened. The fish people threw themselves on the ground. Their bulging eyes gleamed with worship. Their sticky webbed hands pressed to the slimy floor. You saw yourself reflected in those eyes. Something bright, something vast, something different.
But the memory of last night is not what wakes you now. Your breath comes quick and shallow. Your body is covered with sweat despite the cold chamber. It is the dream.
The statue.
You cannot remember its face, if it even had a face. But you remember the weight of it, the presence. It filled your sleeping mind, vast and silent. It was carved from stone so black it seemed to swallow the darkness around it. You stood before it in your dream. Though it did not move, though it did not speak, you knew it was aware of you. Watching. Waiting.
And you knew where it stood.
The forbidden chamber.
Your followers do not speak of it. That is what they are now. When you have asked about it, their bulging eyes look away. Their gill slits flutter. The priests croak warnings in their wet, garbled language. The warriors block the passage with their crude spears. Forbidden, they say. Sacred. Death.
The cathedral itself is ancient beyond measure. You have seen enough of the building to know the fish people did not build it. The graceful arches are now broken.
The columns are carved with ancient Elvish, though time and water have worn many of the words away. You can understand a couple of words, but the full meaning escapes you. The style is elegant, cruel, beautiful in its precision. The Kuo-toa whisper that the drow built these stones. The dark elves of Lunalis, before their kingdom fled west as the sea came creeping in. That was centuries ago. The waters have pulled back since then, but the deep remains close. The sea caverns open wide in the flooded depths below. The cathedral's towers hang upside down, like roots seeking sky. In their upside-down halls, the Kuo-toa have made their home.
And you, their god.
You swing your legs from the slab. Your feet find the always-damp floor. Your fingers brush the tarnished bells that were once sewn into your costume's hem. They are silent now, waterlogged. The costume you wore when the mind flayers attacked your mistress's caravan. The costume you still wore when you and your flumph companion stumbled upon this place. Somewhere in the twisted halls beyond, you hear the wet slap of footsteps. The bubbling chant of morning prayers. They will come soon with offerings: blind fish, cavern mushrooms, trinkets pulled from drowned places.
Your flumph friend drifts nearby, a soft glow in the darkness. It has stayed with you since that day. Since you led the gas spores to the duergar slavers. Since the Kuo-toa burst from these doors and saw what they wanted to see.
And you have always been very good at going where you were not supposed to go.
As you wake up, what do you do?
