“Okay so right there is where Akresh says the Raid Boss is.” Loth said, pointing out a spot near dead center on the map.
Will frowned, studying the X in the middle of a lake below a waterfall.
“This hasn’t been discovered in a thousand years?” Will asked. It was in the center of the map, partly between the Wyrd Stronghold and all the Key Sites.
“I’m sure it has, but it’s likely rare.” Loth said, pulling out a pen and laying it between the Stronghold and key site, drawing a straight line between the two.
It bypassed the lake.
For illustration, Loth laid the pen between all the other sites. None of them crossed the lake.
“Climbers don’t just…wander around aimlessly if they can help it.” Will said, nodding.
“Not the ones who have survived this far. Most people are headed directly to a Stronghold to rest, or directly to a key site to change Floors. Most grinding is done within a few hours walk of the Stronghold.” Loth said.
Unconsciously, Will’s eyes traced the edges of the map.
If there’s sothing hiding at the center of the map, how many more things have never been discovered along the edges? Will wondered.
“Now as for how we can fit this in to the Caravan’s schedule,” Loth said, “The walk there will take roughly three days, so we may have to arrange for temporary protection for the Caravan while we deal with the Raid Boss.
“Three days?” Will asked with a frown. “I’ll get us there in ten minutes.”
Loth paused, twirling the pen in her hand. “I forget you’re actually becoming a Lord sotis.”
“It would be irresponsible to leave them entirely undefended while we’re gone, though,” Will said, prompting Loth to nod.
“I don’t want to leave Arkesh here with the Caravan. Not even for twenty minutes.” Loth said.
“I totally agree,” Will said. The old snake had promised not to harm the six of them that had t him outside the caravan, but that promise didn’t extend to anyone outside of those six, nor was a promise so unbreakable thing they should be riding their whole future on.
“Drop him on the Wyrd Stronghold?” Loth asked, getting a chuckle out of Will.
As amusing as the idea of Arkesh the Mind-Conqueror suddenly appearing in the middle of the Stronghold was, that was pretty much cold-blooded murder of hundreds of civilians.
Which I still want to avoid, Will thought. There were still lines he hadn’t crossed yet.
“Honestly I can’t think of anything better than just throw him a few miles out and hope he doesn’t find his way back.” Will said
“That’s a terrible idea.” Loth said.
“I know.”
“We could just kill him?” Loth suggested.
“Feels wrong.” Will said. “Even with him wanting to die, and it being a vacation from life for him…Still feels wrong.”
Will glanced up at the tent’s door. “Abyss, let’s just ask him.” he said, hopping to his feet and striding out into the caravan, where Arkesh was still chatting with Reese.
“Hey, Arkesh the Mind-Conquerer,” Will said. “You are a wonderful guest, but we are going to arrive at the Wyrd Stronghold soon, and you present a diplomatic risk if your identity is discovered.”
Will modified the reason for kicking the snake out of the caravan to shift bla onto Mark Wyrd, so as not to offend the giant snake.
Will began rolling up his sleeves.
“So do you want to kill you now, or…?”
“No!” Arkesh said, holding up a hand. “I’ve lived through nearly a dozen Coils, but I’ve never t you…or the person filling your role before, I suppose. I’ve missed the drama of the end of the Coil every ti. Usually I was just sunning myself out in the middle of the jungle, and the System Announcent hit everyone at once.
“I never…witnessed it happening. Please…This is the most interesting thing that’s happened to in six thousand years.”
Arkesh gave Will big, watery eyes.
“…Fine. Trim your beard, take a bath, wear clothes, and find sowhere else to be for the next week, and you can follow us up.” Will said.
Arkesh moved to hug Will, who stopped him with a hand on his chest.
“Trim your beard, take a bath, wear clothes, and then you get a hug.”
“Right away!” Arkesh said, turning away, before pausing and turning back to Will. “…What’s a bath?”
“Not it.” Loth said, turning and leaving the situation at the exact right ti.
“Damnit.” Will grumbled under his breath.
Will would really rather be doing anything other than teaching a slly old man how to bathe and dress himself, but Arkesh was simply too slly and too dangerous to foist that duty off on any of the civilians or Anna.
Will could easily imagine Arkesh accidentally squishing soone because he was ticklish.
Will heaved a long sigh. “let’s get this over with.”
The next hour was a mory that Will wished he could forget, but at least the old man was a quick study, so Will would never have to repeat the process.
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All told, once they were done, Arkesh was dressed in a fine shirt, shoes, and slacks, his white beard trimd close to his face.
“Wow, my skin and face actually feel much better.” Arkesh mused, idly straightening his shirt.
“That’s why we do it.” Will said. “Now find us again after the caravan is over fifteen miles out from the Wyrd Stronghold, understood? If you show up before we’re outside that range, I’ll assu it’s because you changed your mind about wanting to die.”
“Very well, great uncle.” Arkesh said, nodding deeply.
“Don’t call uncle,” Will said. “It’s weird.”
“You’re the son of my father’s uncle, so-“
“Just call Will,” Will said. “…You still want that hug?”
“No…the mont’s passed.” Arkesh said, looking up at Will from his clothes. “Don’t get ambushed and die before I get a chance to find you again. Humans are always getting betrayed and dying and then not coming back with their mories intact.”
Arkesh tapped his chin in thought. “I’m fairly certain you take after your mother in that regard.”
Will frowned. “…Yeah. Probably. I’ve never tried it…Dying, that is.”
“Well be careful. I hear the lord of this Stronghold is a real bastard.”
“Mark or Frederick?” Will asked.
“Heath Wainwright.”
Will frowned.
“How long ago was that?”
“Ummm…I want to say…four hundred years.”
“…Well, okay then,” Will said, clapping Arkesh on the shoulder. “I’ll see you in a week or so.”
Arkesh nodded.
“I look forward to committing your story to mory. Perhaps I’ll even pass it on to your successor after you die.”
“Lovely,” Will said, gesturing the ancient snake towards the jungle.
In a matter of minutes, Arkesh was gone, and Will made another pass with his mory Key to make sure the snake wasn’t trying to pull one over on him.
It seed like the old snake stuck to his word.
…That was good.
After Will was sure the snake was gone, he gathered up his Party.
“Alright, Loth got a map to a raid boss from Arkesh. I’m going to pick so people to co with to kill it.”
“Ooh, ooh, pick !” Jason said, raising his hand.
“And so people to stay here and guard the caravan.”
Jason lowered his hand.
“What’s the raid boss?” Travis asked, arms tucked around his knees.
“It’s a tallic sli.” Loth said. “It’s an unusual case that spawned in a higher floor and found its way down to this Floor. Very resistant to physical damage, can make weapons out of its own body. According to Arkesh, it found a place it liked in this lake eight hundred years ago and just…stayed there, getting more and more dangerous, picking off any Climbers unlucky enough to co across it.”
“Okay, if physical damage doesn’t bother it, we’ll leave June, and since it’s a sli without have any squishy weakpoints, we can leave Alicia.” Will said.
“Fine by .” June said with a shrug. Alicia nodded.
“Mason, you want to co with?” Will asked, turning his attention to the skinny Nuker. Mason’s ability to modify his damage type would probably co in handy against sothing with a strange anatomy like a tallic sli.
“Damn right I do,” Mason said with a nod.
“I’ll co!” Jason said.
Will glanced at Reggie.
“…I’ll keep him alive,” Reggie sighed.
“Hey!” Jason said, frowning at Reggie.
“So that’s , Mason, Jason, and Reggie,” Will Mused. It wasn’t a bad team, all things considered.
“Why do I need a babysitter?” Jason asked.
“Your Class might be super tough, but you don’t have any good Abilities specifically for defense or mobility, do you?”
“Why does that matter?” Jason asked.
“Because from this floor onward, so of the monsters are going to be able to put you in checkmate before you can blink.” Will said.
Loth picked up the slack, sitting down beside Jason.
“A tallic sli forms a needle-like protrusion in a fraction of a second that it thrusts into your body” Loth said, poking Jason in the side with a claw. “But it doesn’t stop there. It likes blood because of the iron, so it injects a portion of itself inside you, following every major vein in your body, rupturing them from the inside out as it greedily feeds on your blood.”
Loth traced her fingernail up to Jason’s neck. “It’s the most agonizing pain you can imagine, your body being ripped apart from the inside out. Finally, it reaches your brain, and you experience a strange sense of disconnect as the individual parts of your mind are uncoupled from each other, experiencing an odd, disjointed confusion as everything fades to black.”
Loth gave the frozen prophet a sharp-toothed grin.
The whole party stared at Loth in silence, especially the pale Jason.
“There’s iron in blood!?” Will broke the silence.
Loth turned back to Will.
“Hemoglobin. Noun. ‘A red protein responsible for transporting oxygen in the blood of vertebrates. Its molecule comprises four subunits, each containing an iron atom bound to a he group.’ It’s amazing how much you can learn just by reading a dictionary.”
“Noted.” Will said with a shrug before turning his attention back to the horrified Jason. “Anyway Without an Ability that can let you dodge, or absorb…that, it’s best to bring a Tank for you.”
“Okay.” Jason whispered, hugging his knees.
“Travis, Stay or go?” Will asked.
“You’re giving a choice?” Travis asked.
“I think you’d be equally useful here or there.”
“I’ll take the levels, obviously.” Travis said, nodding.
“Loth?” Will asked.
“I’ll stay. My current selection of insects won’t be able to damage it in any aningful way...Not to ntion…” Her eyes slid to the barrel where her Cuirass of the Cruel Tyrant was baking.
“Without my best damage soak, it would be too dangerous.”
“Alright, so , Mason, Jason, Travis and Reggie.” Will said, ticking them off with his fingers. Skirmisher, Nuker, Buffer, Decoy, and Tank. Not a bad selection.
“Hey! It’s a guy’s night out!” Reggie said, clapping Jason on the shoulder.
“…This is going to go horribly.” June said, poking the fire with a stick.
Loth nodded.
“True…” Alicia whispered.
“...And we’re taking a few Rias with us,” Will added, pointing at Ria.
Ria blinked, frowning.
“But I thought it was resistant to physical damage?” Mason asked.
“Ria’s coming along to establish a line of communication between us and the caravan in case of an ergency.” Will said.
There was also an unspoken understanding that if things went really bad, they could leave her behind and run, like a lizard abandoning its tail. It was unpleasant, but a serious consideration.
“Whew, dodged a calamity there,” June said.
“Aw man…guy’s night out…” Reggie moped.
“You could take with you instead,” Bee said as she arrived beside Ria.
I forgot about Bee. Will had kind of written her off as a useful mber of the Party.
“Why you?” Will asked, glancing up at her. Ria must’ve contacted Bee, or perhaps it had been the other way around.
“Ria doesn’t enjoy danger for danger’s sake.” Bee said, looping one of her arms around her ‘sister’s shoulders. “? I can’t get enough of it. You’ll get all the benefits of having Ria there,”
“and…” Bee said, her body growing larger, voice deepening as she took the form of the young man she’d tried to trick Will with on the Fifth Floor. “We can still have a guy’s night out.”
Bee waggled ‘his’ eyebrows.
Mason looked shocked, but Reggie took it in stride.
“Whoo! Guy’s night is back on!” Reggie shouted.
“Sobody’s gonna get hurt,” June said, putting one of Loth’s at-bugs on a spit and sprinkling so salt over it.
Alicia nodded.
Will had to make a decision.
Bee was significantly more unstable than the other two fragnts of Brianna’s personality. Chaotic and prone to impulse.
She was objectively a worse choice than Ria.
But Bee had offered to help. Spurning her help here was a good way to make her bitter and more reluctant to help in the future, and might delay Brianna’s recovery. If they could improve her attitude and find sothing Bee excelled at…that benefited everyone.
“Tell Jean you’re coming with us and make two extra copies, and you can co.” Will’s reasoning was that Jean was well aware of Bee’s foibles, and would monitor the situation from her end. if sothing went bad, she would know about it without Bee needing to be particularly responsible with her communication duties.
“WHOOO!” Bee joined Reggie’s chanting.
“Guy’s night! Guy’s night! Guy’s night!”
I hope I didn’t just ss up really really bad, Will thought. Unfortunately there was no crystal ball that could see the future. At least none that I’ve heard of.
“You guys realize we’ll be heading out tomorrow morning, not at night, right?” Will asked. “A couple hours during the afternoon, tops then right back. There will be no ‘guy’s night’.”
Bee blew a raspberry. “Not with that attitude.”
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