You reach out and pluck two small threads of pyra, knotting them together in one hand and holding them there loosely as they begin to spark. "A flame needs only three things to survive," you hear your teacher's voice in your ear. "something to eat, something to breathe, and room to grow; just like little bairn." With practiced fingers, you select two more small threads of mana, one of ligna and one of aethra, adding them to the loose bundle in your hand and tying the spell off, but careful not to tie it too tight lest it create something less like a candleflame, and more like a bomb. "That's the difference," you repeat your teacher's words quietly to yourself like a mantra. "Things under pressure tend to explode."

Holding the spell in your empty palm, you blow gently, and watch the threads begin to glow hot, hotter, hottest, and then spring to life as a small cluster of flames dancing about an inch above your outstretched hand. To anyone not practiced in the arts, it might have looked like magic, but you know the truth. It's just a skill. One of many.

The tunnel mouth yawns before you, descending into the darkness at a rather severe pitch. You hold your spell-hand outstretched in front, take a deep breath in and out, swallow your fears, and begin. As you travel, you can't help but reminisce about home. The low dirt-walled tunnel reminds you of the streets of your city, hidden away from the sun, hidden away from invaders. Hidden and safe. It was exactly that safety which you had chafed against. "Things under pressure tend to explode."

And you had.

At first, your acts of rebellion were small, easily forgivable sins. A stolen pie from a neighbor's window, a few coins gone missing from the collection plate on Sûneday. But eventually your actions escalated, and the town council had no choice. You can still remember your mother weeping as the council gave its unanimous vote: banishment. Never to return.

The tunnel continues to forge ahead, straight as an arrow shot from a greatbow. To what destination, you couldn't even hazard a guess. But at some point the tunnel had leveled out, continued for a fair pace, and now seems to be pitching back upwards at a similarly steep incline as before. You take that as a good sign. Eventually, a stream of light up ahead causes you to hastily extinguish your candle spell as you approach; the strands of pyra, aethra, and ligna cooling as they separate, rejoining the fabric of reality. All things return to the Source.

You investigate the light ahead. Sunlight. You can tell that much immediately. From the low angle and the soft, buttery color, you'd say the hour out there must be getting late. Close to sunset. What was immediately apparent to your eye is that a small scree of topsoil and gravel had come loose near one of the joists holding up the low ceiling. You can't see much through the gap based on its tiny size and relative angle, but you reach up and poke two fingers into the crevice anyway. You can feel roots and grass. A dog howls in the distance. A soft breeze blows across your face.

Outside things. These small reminders of the freedom of outside fill you with a frankly unreasonable amount of wild hope.

What do you do?

#MastoDnD

Stop and rest a moment
Stop and turn back
Stop and call for help
Stop and get your bearings
Continue onward
Poll ends at .

"No matter," you hear the slightly muffled voice of the smiling man say to the cook, or to himself, or perhaps to no one in particular. "All in due time, along in due time." He chuckles to himself, amused by his little joke.

You pick yourself up off the floor after waiting a moment to be sure the smiling man had truly gone and was not simply lying in wait for you to reveal yourself. Looking around, you find yourself in a surprisingly well-crafted tunnel of sorts. The floor, though dirty from disuse, appears to be made of well laid brick cobble, and the walls and arched ceiling are reinforced with regularly spaced lumber. And not the cheap kind, either. Whoever made this clearly cared about its construction, and had money to spare to ensure it would continue to endure for years, decades, maybe even generations.

As your eyes adjust to the near-darkness, you can see that the main tunnel itself descends at a steep angle into the earth, disappearing after a few feet into the subterranean pitch black. You shudder a bit. You never did like being underground. Reminds you a bit too much of home, truth be told.

However, you can also see a ladder perched against what you assume to be the exterior wall, given the howling of the wind just outside. Crazy to think that only a few feet of rock and dirt likely stand between you and your freedom. What you wouldn't give for a pickaxe, you think to yourself. Or a stick of dyno. You wonder briefly how likely the explosion of a fireball spell would be to simply kill you in small quarters like this. You pluck a few threads of pyra absent-mindedly, the spell sparking and fizzling, sparking and fizzling repeatedly in your left hand, as you consider your options.

What do you do?

#MastoDnD

Explore the tunnel
33.3%
Exploit the ladder
29.2%
Explode a fireball
8.3%
Expand your options
14.6%
Express an expletive
14.6%
Poll ended at .

You lift the wooden latch and throw open the tall, narrow door, not exactly sure what you were expecting. Maybe a servant's stairs, or even a side alley exit - but whatever you were expecting, it wasn't this. You find yourself staring glumly at the contents of a poorly stocked kitchen pantry.

The walk-in pantry is just wide enough to enter, and about 6 feet deep, with two rows of shelving on the right and left. You spy some jars of honey, a few mostly-empty bags of rice flour and finely ground khaffa flakes, a single sack of sad looking potatoes with deeply sunken eyes, and a loose collection of root vegetable odds and ends in a basket. Against the back of the pantry stands a large brining barrel for storing fish or poultry.

Not the best hiding spot, you admit. But, any port in a storm, as your gran would say. You dive inside and close the door, hearing the latch click shut behind you. Your only light is a silver thread of lamplight sneaking like a thief through a small crack between the door and its frame to your hiding place. Pushing yourself into the farthest corner recess of the larder behind the brining barrel, willing yourself to somehow become smaller and unnoticeable, the faint salty scent of vinegar hits your nose, like the mere wisp of a memory of the sea, half-forgotten, and clouded with time. Suddenly, even that meagre light is extinguished as the pantry is thrown into darkness. A shape, a figure, a shadow of a person is occluding the firelight, positioning itself directly in front of the tall, thin door.

It laughs.

Your heart dies inside your chest and every hair on your body prickles. What in Goddess' name ever made you think this would be a good idea? Your hands begin scrabbling at the walls around you in a blind panic, trying to find something - anything useful - a weapon, a magic ward, anything. And then, a miracle occurs. Your fingers do find something. A small loop of fabric, at ground level, in the back corner behind the pickling barrel. It feels like the string of a yo-yo, or the tag on the back of a shirt that's all fancy-like.

The thing at the door begins to hum a jaunty little nameless tune, and you hear the unmistakable sound of a wooden latch being lifted. Sending a prayer to whatever Gods or Goddesses might be listening, you pull the loop and feel the wall behind you suddenly recess backwards on silent hinges, sliding off to one side. Having thoroughly wedged yourself into the back corner, you practically fall over yourself in a backwards somersault. The thing at the door growls and sniffs the air. Deep, raspy, and gutteral, like a wildcat defending a recent kill.

That specific sound seems to awaken some sort of primordial instinct in your body. You kick with your legs, pistoning your feet, shoving your body backwards through the opened doorway and into the secret passage beyond through sheer brute force alone. The last image you see as the wall slides itself back into place in front of you on silent counterweights, is the pantry door beginning to open, and the low animal growl suddenly turning into a hiss of disappointment.

You freeze, motionless, staring at the blank featureless back of the pantry wall, afraid to make any sound at all. Afraid to even breathe. There is a moment when the only sounds you can hear are the pounding of blood in your own ears and the shriek of the wind howling down the alley outside the tavern. And then the moment passes, and you hear the larder door snick shut again as the smiling man lets out an audible snort of frustration.

You allow yourself to draw a single, shaky breath.

What do you do?

#MastoDnD

Explore the secret passageway
17.2%
Explore the secret pаssageway
15.1%
Explore the secret passаgeway
18.3%
Explore the secret pаssаgeway
32.3%
Explore the secret pаssаgewаy
17.2%
Poll ended at .

You turn on your heels and run. No thought behind it. No hesitation. You always wondered how you'd react if you ever felt in mortal danger and now you know.

You're the kind of person who runs.

Something about that smile. That creepy, thin-lipped smile. You'd never seen someone smile like that before. It was as if someone just took hold of the man's cheeks and *pulled* - stretching the skin tight over bone and muscle. It was unhinged. People don't smile like that. *Humans* don't smile like that.

Leaping over a table where two guests sat, silently playing some unidentifiable local card game, you stumble blindly into the kitchen, bursting through the double doors like a cowboy in an old westry tale, the table flipping on its side behind you and spilling cards all across the rough-hewn floor. You throw a glance over your shoulder. The two patrons didn't seem to mind - or even notice. You watch as one takes a card from their hand and drops it in mid-air on a stack of cards that no longer existed. The card flutters meaninglessly to the ground, taking up residence against one of the gentleman's brown leather riding boots. Face up, in this moment seemingly suspended in time, you can even see the face of the card. The four of clovers; an omen card. Misfortune. Betrayal. Death.

You look wildly around the small kitchen, searching for any exit at all. There is a tall narrow door to your left, a staircase leading down, and what appears to be a short, squat metal door with a handle along the top side. Not an oven, but similarly shaped. The cook has stopped what he's doing, seemingly frozen in place, watching you, holding a tray of biscuits with a drizzled honeyed glaze on top. Your mouth waters involuntarily. It's been years since you've eaten khaffa cakes. Not since you were a little bairn. You have a sudden urge to stuff your cheeks full of tiny honeyed biscuits like a squirrel storing nuts for the winter. You start to giggle. You wonder if you're going mad.

What do you do?

#MastoDnD

Take the tall, narrow door
37.3%
Take the short, squat door
5.3%
Take the stairs
13.3%
Take a khaffa cake
25.3%
Take a hostage
4%
Take one last look behind you
14.7%
Poll ended at .

"It's not stealing," you think wildly to yourself as you reach for the pie. "It's not stealing because it's already been paid for." You remember putting the two coins on the table. One coin, then another, both whisked away by the waitress. So why does it *feel* like stealing? Your hand hesitates, and for a moment, you see on the table, two copper coins, flashing in the late midday sun where the pie should be. You shake your head to clear it. No, no that already happened. Your hand reaches for the pie again, and the coins vanish like a mirage. You expected the pie to be hot, but instead you find it to be strangely cool to the touch, as if several days old already. You pocket the meat pie in one of the deep recesses of your coat and stumble to your feet. When did it become so muzzy in here? So hard to breathe?

You blink and shake your head again, turning for the door, to find that blocking your way is the elderly gentleman in the grey travel-worn coat. The one who had been sipping his soup by the fire. Not looking so old and frail now, his frame seems to entirely fill your vision.

"Now now where are we going in such a hurry?" he says with a pleasant lilt in his voice - as if talking to an old friend. "We've only just started getting acquainted."

He smiles thinly, and his smile is the smile of cadavers. The smile of the moon on a moonless night. The smile of a god in his domain.

What do you do?

#MastoDnD

Seduce stranger
26.1%
Stab stranger
4.3%
Fireball stranger
23.2%
Run from stranger
30.4%
Rob stranger
4.3%
Accept your fate
11.6%
Poll ended at .

You find a seat at an empty table and finger the dwindling copper coins in your pocket, your stomach growling, even at the faint promise of boiled potatoes and chopped carrots in a meagre broth. The barmaid shuffles over on nearly silent footsteps as you slide a single coin onto the table, and then, after a small hesitation, a second one. Fuck it. You can sleep in the stables tonight instead of a bed. You've managed worse.

"Food," you mumble while barely even glancing in her direction, following it with a hasty "...erm, please." Your mama didn't raise you without manners.

The coins are whisked away into a fold of skirt, as the barmaid disappears into the kitchen. You take a moment to survey the strange tavern you've found yourself in - if, in fact, it is a tavern. Never have you heard a local pub so full and yet so eerily quiet. There are no raucous shouts or whoops or hollars. No spilled drinks. No dancers, shaking the rooftops with the pounding of feet to a lovely fiddle or drum. No musicians at all, come to think of it. And yet - and yet. Nobody here seems at all disturbed by that, either. The gentleman in a grey travel-worn cloak seems content to eat his soup by the fire. The couple in the corner seems happy to merely gaze dreamily into one another's eyes. Even the cook in the back, barely glimpsed through the swinging double doors, seems to be in no particular hurry as he prepares the evening meal.

Your reverie is broken as the barmaid slides a small pie in front of you. Goddess, she's quiet! You didn't even hear her approach, and that's really saying something for you. The pie smells very very faintly of chicken, potato, and spiced root veg. Your stomach grumbles, and the sound is strangely loud in this cadaverously quiet place. You look up at her face, and register it for the first time. Not a beautiful face, but strangely compelling in a kind of forgettable way. But it's her expression that stills your hand, even as it reaches for a spoon. Her eyes are wide, nostrils flared. This is not the kind, but practiced neutral expression of a friendly waitress, but rather someone in the grips of absolute terror.

"Get out." she mouths silently, in exaggerated words, even as she slides the spoon toward you. "GET. OUT. NOW."

You look down at the meat pie on its wooden plate before you. It's bubbling as if dangerously, delightfully, piping hot.

What do you do?

#MastoDnD

Ponder pie
6.5%
Fireball pie
6.5%
Stab pie
19.4%
Speak to pie
9.7%
Steal pie
32.3%
Eat pie
25.8%
Poll ended at .

The sign above the door reads "The Anxious Trumpet". The local tavern, you assume, stepping foot inside the doors and knocking the mud from your boots against the doorframe. But the raucous shouts and jeers you’ve come to associate with taverns are nowhere to be heard here. You peer inside the dimly lit room, worried that they may be closed, but no—the place is actually quite lively. Most of the tables are occupied, and a barkeep slinks around the tavern, their shoes making barely a whisper of sound, occasionally leaning down and murmuring quietly with a patron before returning to the bar to pour drinks. The hearth is shielded by a tinted screen, and the stew cooking in the cauldron releases only a faint scent of potato and carrots. Everyone seems perfectly content with the quiet, the dimness, and the lack of fragrance.

What do you do?

#MastoDnD

Order a drink
25%
Get some hot food
36.8%
Chat to one of the locals
9.2%
Rent a warm bed for the night
10.5%
Sharpen your knife
7.9%
Read your spellbook
10.5%
Poll ended at .
@dungeons cont.| Fight! #DnD5e #MastoDnD [2/2]
@dungeons Listen up! Our Half-Orc Cleric, Skribe, is in a rough spot, low on HP and out of hitdice. Melee or ranged, both roll with disadvantage due to Pseudodragon's sting. The best bet is Sacred Flame. It's a saving throw spell, so no disadvantage. If it misses, no spell slot lost. Still, be wary, folks. The critter's got full HP and a fair AC. Running could be an option, but checks are uncertain. Stick to the flames, but keep your wits about you. #dnd5e #MastoDnD
@dungeons Hear ye, adventurers! A Pseudodragon is nigh! Consider using Sacred Flame – it's a spell that ignores armor, handy against this critter's defense. Remember, your out-of-range attacks roll with disadvantage, making the improvised ranged option risky. Melee, though potentially high-damage, also comes with a disadvantage. Running? Well, that's a gamble. In my grizzled opinion, Sacred Flame is your best shot. Stand firm! Burn this dragonlet with divine fire!
#DnD #MastoDnD