System Architect - Ch 86
Added 2025-02-05 17:25:49 +0000 UTCI woke with a headache so powerful it brought tears to my eyes. I sat up in bed and screamed. There was simply no holding it backâit hurt too much! My hands clutched my head when I heard stomps in the distance. It was Dad, rushing from the room next door. In his hands was a baseball bat. Upon seeing me, he dropped it and rushed to my side.
âWhatâs wrong, Milton?â he asked, rubbing his hand against my back.
âHead,â I choked out between the tears.
âDid you fall?â
I went to shake my head, but the pain was too much. Instead, I gave a thumbs-down gesture.
âLet me get some medicine.â
He left my bedroom and returned with a small cup of liquid pain-relief medicine. I carefully downed it before giving it back. It tasted pretty terrible, but it wouldâhopefullyâreduce the pain some⊠in an hour. Dad sat with me the whole time. As the medicine began to kick in twenty minutes later, I finally stopped crying.
âAre you ok now?â he asked.
âStill hurts but not as bad,â I told him.
âNeed me to stay with you?â
âNo. I think Iâm ok now.â
He nodded and left me alone, taking the baseball bat with him. If it had been Mom, I would have been at the hospital alreadyâand maybe she was right to be worried like that. Yet, for this, I knew what was going on. The mass of memories had been shoved back into my headâanother fifteen years was not doing my brain any favors.
With the lessened pain, I could think long enough to realize what I needed to do.
Skill Purchased: Heal
Current Exp: 16,338,487
I tried to Heal myself but ran into an error immediately.
Skill Heal cannot be used without having a form of energy.
Right. There was that. I remembered my plan and purchased the stats I wanted to test.
Personal Feature Unlocked: Body
Current Exp: 16,337,987
Personal Feature Unlocked: Mind
Current Exp: 16,337,487
Personal Feature Unlocked: Spirit
Current Exp: 16,336,987
Personal Feature Unlocked: Blood
Current Exp: 16,336,487
Personal Feature Unlocked: Faith
Current Exp: 16,336,387
After buying what I wanted, I Healed myself until doing so made my headache worse instead of better. Bloodâit turned outâwas a combination of health and magic. Using a small amount didnât have much of an effect, on how I feltâlike there was a sort of buffer thereâbut overdrawing it would have adverse effects on my body. It was the sort of thing I now had an intuitive understanding of after unlocking it.
I sighed now that my headache was mostly goneânotwithstanding the overdrawn blood. I debated going back to sleep, but decided to at least read over the note Iâd shoved to the side of my vision before I did.
Back for another go? Well, last time was certainly better than the first time around. Your fifteen years are on the clock. Will you return to the present or will this be the final run? Whichever you choose, Iâll be watching!
I shuddered after reading the note. I didnât like the idea someoneâor somethingâwatching me at all times. I couldnât imagine being intimate with someoneâor even myselfâknowing that some deity was recording the whole thing like some kind of pervert. The whole thing left a bad taste in my mouth. It would have been better to be blissfully unaware.
As I thought about it more, it did make sense. How else would the system know when to give me experience for what I did? Quests seemed to come from what I was doing or what I was about to do. The only way that would be possible was if itâthe system or the deity, it didnât matter whichâwas able to read my mind and actions at all times. Ugh!
At the end of the day, I knew it didnât really matter. I was being spied on and there wasnât anything I could do about itânot really. Anything capable of making the system and turning back time was more than capable of snapping me out of existence. I knew it would take note of my grumblings, but what else was I to do? Nothing! Thatâs what.
I closed my eyes. It took far longer than it needed to, but I fell into a fitful sleep. Dreams of being turned to paste by some sort of eldritch being or another haunted me.
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I awoke late in the morning to the smell of food wafting up from below. I dressed and walked downstairs. My head still hurt, but it was muted now. Even though the medicine had worn off, the healing Iâd done on myself had been enough to ease my suffering enough to be functional.
As I walked down the stairs, I considered the best way to convince Dad that I was a time traveler⊠again. It was already the third time I was doing this and this whole song and dance was getting old. A floating light was just boring. If I was going to wow him, I would do it right. A floating me, on the other hand⊠now that would be something. The problem was that I didnât have any practice flying around. That was something I would need to try, but for now, I needed something flashy that I had some skill doing. A quick Search found the perfect candidate.
Skill Purchased: Spark
Current Exp: 16,335,387
The skill allowed me to cast a series of sparks from my hand. After testing it, I guessed I could light a fire with them if I tried, but they would suit my purposes. Flashy was what I wanted and the skill had that in spades.
âGood morning,â Dad said when he saw me walk through the kitchen and into the hallway where we ate out meals. âHowâs the head?â
âBetter,â I said.
âGood. Good. Hungry?â
âMhm.â
âSit down. Iâll bring you something.â
I did as he said and he returned with my least favorite sweetened-sand in milk. Still, I was too hungry to complain. Didnât mean I was happy about the breakfast offering.
I stood up after finishing my cereal, which caused Dad to look up from his phone. I waved to get his attention.
âDad, I have to show you something,â I said.
âOh?â
âYouâll want to sit down for this one, and probably put the phone down. I donât want you to break it by accident.â
Dad dutifully put his phone down and gave me his attention.
âThereâs a famous movie line⊠weâre not in Kansas anymore. Well, look at this.â
I put my hand out, palm up. I cast Spark twice to make a small shower of sparks. It was like a sparkler that shot upwards. Thanks to my testing, I knew they would burn out long before they reached the floor below. Dad didnât know that and jumped up.
âWhat?!â He exclaimed.
âMagic, Dad.â
âAgain. What?!â
âYouâd best start believing in ghost stories, âcause youâre in one? Yer a wizard, Milton?â
âB-Wh-Can you just not do that inside?â
âI wonât burn the house down, if thatâs what youâre saying. Time travelâs a weird thing, you know?â
âOh, time travel as well? What are you going to tell me next⊠the worldâs ending?â
âWell, thereâs that, too, I suppose.â
âAaaah!â Dad yelled.
âWell, thatâs certainly more of a reaction than me spinning a ball of light around like I did last time,â I grumbled.
âWell at least that wouldnât have potentially burned the house down!â
âI did say you should sit down for this,â I chuckled. âSo can you please? Iâd like to hit the ground running and do better than I did last time.â
âWell, mister time traveler, what did you do last time?â Dad asked, sitting down in his chair.
âFarming, mostly. Some magic, too. Helped a bit, but a bit isnât enough to save humanity, so here I am to try again.â
âWell thatâs a letdown. And here I thought youâd win the lottery and take over the world.â
âMight help, but no. I do know the lottery numbers for this week and next week. But those arenât important, you know? Didnât help enough.â
âFine! I get it, just tell me, ok?â Dad pleaded.
âCan you at least call me Eddy? Milton is too old fashioned.â
âAlright, Eddy, Iâll do that. Please tell me the lotto numbers.â
âI will, I will. First things first, though. I need to talk to Grandpa Joe. Heâs got some seed money thatâll get me going. Can I borrow your phone?â
Dad picked his phone up and handed it to me. I input his code and sent the email to Grandpa Joe. I included the code words and some other notes. I stressed the need for the laptop and the crypto. Without those, I was pretty much dead in the water. When I was done, I locked the phone and handed it back to Dad.
âSo what now?â he asked.
âYour lotto numbers and then off to the back yard to mess around and wait for Grandpa Joe to come over. Also, can you please get some internet for the house? I could really use that⊠and a way to drop out of school, too. That would be nice.â
âI donât have money for an internet connection right now. After the lottery?â
âFine. The drawingâs in two days. I need it by Monday next week at the latest.â
âAlright, alright. Iâll do that, provided I win.â
I gave Dad the lotto numbers before going to the backyard. I originally planned on doing more of the sameâfarmingâbut I wasnât so sure. With how much strain the time travel was putting on my bodyâspecifically my brainâI didnât think I could handle more than one more restart. And even that was going to be rough!
Even if I included investing in businesses, I didnât think I would come close to what I really needed. No, whatever I did, this was going to be the last real chance I would have to get big chunks of experience. When I went back the next time, that was it. Anything I wantedâor neededâto test would have to happen now. I couldnât put it off until later.
As for earning that experience? Well, the pesticide dumping project had given me some ideas. I was caught because I didnât take precautions. I wasnât going to be so foolish this time around. With some planningâand abusing the systemâI would be able to do as I pleased.
I knew thatâby going this routeâthere would be some negative consequences to what I was going to do. That said, everything would return to how it was supposed to be as soon as I restarted again. It was a comfort to know that everythingâand everyoneâwas essentially fake. I was glad they wouldnât remember. It would be better that way.
Before I went back inside, I thought over the vision I had been granted. It revealed issues I hadnât really thought about that much. There were the obvious onesâlike how skills needed an energy sourceâbut there were more obscure ones. There was too much variety in terms of skills available. Without some kind of limiter to direct people towards what they needed, it was a free-for-all and the outcomes werenât good.
The solutionâin my eyesâwas classes. A class was a way of tilting the distribution of points in whichever stats I ended up going with. It would also allow me to narrow down the amount of skills available to pick from. Maybe there were ways I could have the classes give free skills in the same themeâlike gun skills for a duelist. Then there was the other side of things: the professions. Was that something worth including as a class or as a separate choice? I added these to my list of things I needed to try.
I headed back inside and up to my room to think. Dad gave me some paper and a pen to write down my notes. By the end of the day, I had a pretty good idea of what I wanted to accomplish. I had a lot of experience that was simply burning a hole in my pocket. I would keep enough to restart in an emergency, but the rest would go towards forwarding my plans.