Chapters 113 and 114
Added 2020-11-18 13:02:26 +0000 UTCChapter 113
The announcement came and went. There was nothing of significance. She spoke of the doubling of bounties for those whoâd been on the list. She reminded us that sponsorship bidding was underway. There was a warning that just because we were outside that we shouldnât use the big, wide world as a bathroom and that there were restrooms in the towns. But if we had to go while we were outside, they wouldnât penalize us. We needed to announce that we were going to the bathroom out loud, wait five seconds, and then do our business. The idea was so ridiculous, it made me want to laugh.
All of us, including Mordecai, exited the personal space and walked into the Toe to find the other crawlers waiting for us. Louis and Firas, who were still drunk, plus Langley and the other five car salesmen-turned-archers all sat at the bar. The archer guys had all leveled one or two times each since weâd last talked. All eight crawlers looked at me expectantly.
Juice Box the changeling prostitute sat on Louisâs lap. Sheâd transformed into something⊠odd. Like a rodent/human hybrid, but with orange hair and a purple jumpsuit. Whatever it was, the resulting creature looked like Chuck E. Cheese in drag.
I sighed.
Mordecai: That changeling is a lot more powerful than she looks. Itâs very odd. Do you see how easily sheâs altering herself? Itâs almost like sheâs a doppelganger.
I examined Juice Box. The note over her head said she was a Ratkin Brood Mother Attendant, but as I watched, she turned more mouse-like, and it switched to Mouser Dame.
Carl: Are you sure sheâs not a doppelganger?
Mordecai: Yes, Iâm sure.
Carl: Do you guys have some sort of changeling spidey-sense or something?
Mordecai: You can see it in how she changes. Sheâs switching to the race and then altering the appearance to make it look like whatever the hell theyâre requesting. Itâs like dressing up stock photos instead of drawing something from scratch. Even if I had all my changeling abilities and wasnât at half power, I still wouldnât be able to do that.
Carl: She canât be too strong. Sheâs only level 17.
Mordecai: Thatâs misleading. Regular crawlers who become changelings can only shift once every ten minutes. Shifting on demand is a skill unique to the race. She is easily the equivalent of level 15 in the Race Shifter Skill, and Iâm willing to bet every one of these prostitutes in town is the same. A changeling who can switch that quickly is very dangerous. Remember, unlike doppelgangers, changelings gain some of the abilities of the race theyâre mimicking. She can turn into a gorgon at the snap of the finger and hit you with a petrify spell, then switch to a rocksling to shatter your stone body into dust, and thenturn to a forge ogre and take that dust and pressurize it enough to make it a diamond. All before you could say âOuch.â
Carl: Can she turn into a storm giant or something? Something like Grull?
Mordecai: No. There are mass limits, but itâs not nearly as strict as what Katia has to deal with. There are lots of weird, complicated rules. The stronger the monster they emulate, the lower the chance of being at full power. But there are still plenty of things she can turn into that will ruin your day.
Carl: So what youâre telling me is to be nice to Juice Box.
Mordecai: Yes. And all the other prostitutes. Be polite. And make sure all these scrubs understand it, too. Especially that Louis idiot.
I realized everyone was staring at me, so I started talking.
âThere may be others in this quadrant, but if theyâre alive, they probably just got their bell rung pretty bad,â I said. âSo it might be just us dealing with that fortress.â I gave a worried glance at the dromedarian barkeep, who was watching us with interest. He was a pleasant enough guy, unlike most of the other camels. Heâd given both Donut and Mongo treats, happily patting them on the head. Mongo was practically ready to leave us for him. However, this next part of the conversation involved doing something the camels would not like. We had to get out of his earshot.
âBut first, weâre all going to get a tour of our personal space. We can talk more comfortably in there.â
âItâs called the Royal Palace of Princess Donut!â Donut added.
âLouis, look, itâs that cat again from the television,â Firas said.
I realized that while the two men had been drunk the first time we met them, theyâd been mostly coherent and aware of their surroundings. In the nine hours since weâd last spoken, it appeared theyâd managed to get themselves even more plastered. My initial instinct was to just kick them out of the Toe, but I was worried theyâd do something extra stupid. Like cause the town to get obliterated like the other one. I needed to keep an eye on them until we figured out the whole picture.
Carl: Mordecai, Iâm out of the alcohol cure potions. Do you have the stuff for more?
Mordecai: You read my mind. Iâll whip up a batch when we get inside. With my upgraded table, I can make a version thatâs a little more potent.
âLetâs go see the space,â Louis said, standing up. Juice Box slid off his voluminous lap with a squeak. âIâve always wanted to see how the other half lives.â
âMe too,â Juice Box said, jumping up.
âOh, honey,â Donut said. âNot dressed like that youâre not.â
Juice Box patted Donut on the head. âYou are just the most adorable thing I have ever seen. If you want, I can turn into a whatever it is you are and show you a great time. Iâve never done it with royalty before. No charge. Itâd be great for my rĂ©sumĂ©. Are you some sort of long-haired dog?â
Louis and Firas both laughed.
All of Donutâs hair poofed out. âWhat did you just call me?â
I stepped forward to intervene. âSorry, pretty lady,â I said to Juice Box. âThe personal space is just for my friends here.â I tossed her a gold coin, which she deftly caught in midair. He hand moved so quickly it reminded me of viper strike. She didnât turn her head to catch the coin, which gave me an unexpected and sudden chill.
âCan you do me a favor,â I said. âIf you see any other non-locals like us around, let me know. Iâll give you a gold coin for each one you find.â
She, still in her Mouser form, turned her gaze from Donut and gave me a salute. She planted a smile on her face and rubbed Louis on the stomach. âDonât forget our date tonight, big boy. Maybe Iâll try out that Nurse Joy person you were describing.â
âCome on,â I said, herding everybody toward the door. I had to go into the personal space menu and give each of them permission to enter. I could do it individually or by party. It only worked while they were standing next to me and at the door. There were multiple options. I went with the most restrictive setting, which was Enter One Time Only. May Not Interact With Environmental Upgrades. None of the settings allowed them to just enter whenever and from wherever they wanted. Even the most permissive setting required them to use the most recent saferoom to enter, and only when there was a resident occupying the room. None allowed them to enter if nobody was already in there. The only way to give someone carte blanche to come and go as they pleased from anywhere in the dungeon would be to put them in the party.
I noticed that Katia had been smart enough to remove everyone from Heklaâs team from the guest list, which was good, because I had completely forgotten that she had given them permission in the first place.
We all entered the personal space as they looked about in wonder. Langley and the other archers moved around, inspecting everything while Louis and Firas jumped onto the couch. The cleaner bot beeped mournfully as Firas put his boots on the little table.
âWhereâs the bell?â Firas asked, his voice slurring.
âBell?â I asked.
âYou said something about a bell ringing.â
I took a deep breath and decided not to engage. âOkay, guys,â I said, waving everyone to sit. âAs you probably noticed, the gnomes just bombed the hell out of that other town. Nobody knows why yet, but if I had to guess, it probably has something to do with whatever collateral they had in their town hall. Maybe some crawler in that other town ended up accidentally killing it or setting it free or something. Something changed that let the gnomes know the Bactrians no longer had collateral.â
âHey, I have a question,â Firas said, raising his hand. The hand wavered in the air. Even from halfway across the room, I could smell the alcohol on both of them. I was reasonably certain alcohol wasnât the only thing they were on.
Goddamnit. âYes?â
âYeah, we, like, donât know what youâre talking about. Whatâs a Bactrian? What collateral? Whereâs the bell?â
Earlier, I had been assuming that Firas was from the middle east somewhere and Louis was Spanish. It was now clear that both of them were fellow Americans.
âI had to put my car up as collateral for a loan once,â Louis said. âI used to lock it up in my old ladyâs garage every night so they couldnât repo it. The bastards got it anyway when I was at the club.â
âBastards,â Firas agreed. He turned to look at Katia. âDo you work here? Do you have anything to drink? Iâm almost out of gold.â
I was in the middle of renegotiating my personal vow not to outright murder fellow crawlers when Mordecai jumped across the room, landing heavily on the same side table Firas had his boots upon. The table shattered into pieces. Mordecai spread his wings out and leaned forward, glaring at the two wide-eyed crawlers. He lifted a claw, careful not to actually touch or make a movement toward either of them. Still, the razor-sharp talon glinted like a knife as he pointed it at each in turn.
âI want you two fuckwits to listen, and I want you both to listen very carefully. I donât know how in the gods you survived this long, but I am about five seconds from telling my client to eviscerate both of you and to use your bodies as zombie meat shields. And donât think she canât do it. Isnât that right, Donut?â
Donut growled.
âWe are in a very dire situation here. But guess what? You two mouth breathers hit the survival lottery when you got put in the same quadrant as us, and youâre too stupid to even realize it. You can still get out of this, and you can still make it to the sixth floor if you take this seriously. If you donât, you are doing more harm than good. And we do not have time for that. I have a drink that I am going to make for each of you, but itâs going to take about five minutes. So help me gods, if you two donât shut the hell up and just listen, you will not survive long enough for me to make the potion for you.â
âWhoa, chill,â Louis said.
Firas looked at Louis. âWhy did you tell the hooker to turn into a big bird? I ainât banging anything from Sesame Street, man. Thatâs fucked up.â
âHeâs an eagle. Dude, did you ever watch G.I. Joe? Remember the Indian guy? He had an eagle named Freedom.â He laughed. âThat show was so damn racist.â
âNo, I never really watched it. I saw the Muppets though. And thatâs the same thing as Sesame Street.â
Louis almost jumped up from his seat, eyes going wide. He looked at the door. âG.I. Joe. The Baroness. Thatâd be a lot easier than Gadget.â
âItâd be better than this eagle, thatâs for sure.â
âIâll be back,â Mordecai said, sounding exasperated. He disappeared into the crafting room.
âYou know what,â I said. âWeâre going to wait for Mordecai to make your drinks.â
âTell him to make us Dirty Shirleys,â Louis said.
Donut gasped. âYou know about Dirty Shirleys?â
He laughed. âYeah, we saw it on the recap show. Some dumb crawler got drunk on them and called out Lucia Mar. We use them now to see how good a bartender is. We get them as the first drink in every bar.â
Donut: IF I MAGIC MISSILE HIM IN THE HEAD, WILL I GET IN TROUBLE?
Carl: Yes. Youâll have to wait until weâre outside.
Katia: They are so drunk that if you cast your new fire wall spell anywhere in the room, their breath will likely ignite, and they will self-immolate. You probably wouldnât get blamed for that.
Donut: YOU ARE A GENIUS. IâM GOING TO TRY IT.
Carl: No, youâre not.
Mordecai: Donât worry. Iâll take care of the issue.
âPlease,â Langley the Finnish archer said to Louis, speaking for the first time. âYou must be serious. This is very serious. Listen to Carl.â
Louis turned to the archer. âWe are taking it seriously. We made it this far havenât we?â
As we waited for Mordecai to return, I sent a message to Elle and asked her if they also had a bunch of dumbass crawlers in her group. I knew the chat was public now, but I didnât care. Team Meadow Lark had managed to secure another type of boat, a galley with fish-people rowers. They were probing the defenses of their assigned castle, an orc-run oil rig that shot fireballs at anybody who came close
Elle: Weâre the only ones in the water quadrant. Weâve seen the people on the land, but we havenât talked to any of them. Their castle is similar to ours. Itâs an oil refinery. The whole bubble is some stupid story about how we earthlings ruined our own planet. I think the air castle is just a storm cloud that rains acid. You get saddled with a bunch of layabouts?
Carl: You donât even want to know.
âHow did you two make it this far?â Katia asked Louis and Firas.
âHe has a spell,â Firas said. âHe got it for being the first crawler to drive a van into the dungeon.â
âYou drove a van into the dungeon?â I asked. âI thought all the vehicles collapsed.â
âNot the convertibles,â Louis said proudly. âI had the top off when it happened. And I didnât see the stairwell until I was on top of it. It was right in the middle of 95. I was so fucked up, I didnât know what was happening. The road was all jacked all of a sudden. It was a bumpy ride. I saw the glowing entrance. Slammed the brakes, but it didnât matter. I slid right in. Broke the axle. But it made it down the stairs and hit those doors and crashed right into the dungeon.â
Mordecai returned, holding a pair of potions in a talon. They were not the regular alcohol cure potions. These were white with little frothy bubbles. I was about to examine one of them when the ridiculousness of what Louis said struck me.
âIâm sorry,â I said. âA convertible van? Like a cargo van with the top off?â
âYeah man, it was sweet. It was my momâs Chevy Astro. We took the top off. My friend Jojo saw this thing online on how to pimp out vans into convertibles, so we did it. My mom got really mad, but it got like 100 thousand likes on Instagram.â
âWhere are you from? Wasnât it snowing?â
âNah, man,â Louis said. âWe didnât get much snow in Miami. It was cold as shit, though. It was like five in the morning when it happened, too. I was driving back from Jojoâs. Saved my life.â
âAre you from Florida, too?â I asked Firas.
âNah. Michigan. But we met up on the second floor.â
âHow old are you?â Katia asked Louis, looking at the balding, overweight man up and down.
âIâm 27. How old are you, Punky Brewster?â
âWhatâs the spell?â I asked. âAnd what happened to your van? Did you take any of the parts?â
Mordecai handed each of the two men a potion. âDrink it.â
Louis looked at the potion dubiously. But he shrugged and downed it. âVan was wrecked. Why would I take any parts? Itâs not like I can build another Chevy Astro in the dungeon. Oh, so the spell is pretty badass. Check it out. Itâs called Cloud of Exhaust. We donât have to fight shit when I cast it. And Firas has his escape spell if we get in trouble. Itâs called Puddle Jumper.â
âWhat level is your Cloud of Exhaust?â Mordecai asked sharply.
âWhyâs the description on the potion blank?â Firas asked, holding the white potion up to the light.
âOh man, my head hurts. Cloud spell is Level 11,â Louis said. âI have to use it a lot. It has a ten-minute cooldown, though. Seriously, I think Iâm going to be sick.â
âYouâll be fine in a minute. Cloud of Exhaustâs cooldown is normally an hour,â Mordecai said. âDrink the potion, Firas. It wonât hurt you.â
Louis shrugged. He was starting to look a little green. âYeah, so my Pest Control class makes it so cloud-based spells or something have faster cooldowns. And are more effective. My guide guy said the only way I could possibly live was to choose that class. He was a dick. Kinda like you.â
âYou sound like you had a competent guide who did the best he could,â Mordecai said.
âYo, man. Somethingâs weird,â Firas said. âI donât think we should take these potions.â
âAnd you just paralyze whole groups of mobs and Puddle Jump out of there?â Mordecai asked. âYou donât kill them when theyâre seized up?â
âNah,â Louis said. âSometimes we do, but they wake up after you hit them. Some of those higher-level mobs, especially on the last floor, take a lot of hits to kill. We usually just spray and run. The spell was really effective in those tunnels and on the trains.â
âDid you drink yours already?â Firas said.
âHe did. And heâs fine,â Mordecai said. âHeâs not drunk anymore, are you Louis?â
âNah, man. That sobered me up real quick. I still feel sick though.â
âYou still have alcohol in your system. Donât worry. It wonât be long.â
âYou sure I should take this?â Firas asked. âThereâs no description. Iâve never seen that.â
Carl: Youâre not poisoning him, are you?
Mordecai: No. Well, sort of. But itâs the good kind of poisoning. Trust me.
âJesus dude, just drink it,â I said. âWeâre all waiting on you.â
Firas downed the potion at the same moment Louis projectile vomited all over the floor.
The cleaner bot let out an angry trill.
~
Mordecai: Okay, hereâs the deal with these assholes. Louis has an enhanced, legendary-tier spell called Cloud of Exhaust. It has a high-probability to knock out mobs for a variable amount of time, depending on the level difference. I donât remember the specifics, but even high-level mobs will get conked out for a little bit. Theyâll wake up the moment theyâre touched. But any damage to them is enhanced for an additional thirty seconds after they wake. Itâs one of those spells that helps guarantee that youâll breeze through all the early floors. Iâm almost certain itâs the same spell the goat lady Miriam Dom has. But instead of utilizing this like she has, these two idiots have been fleeing every encounter. It worked fine for them at first, but now theyâre screwed. That moron doesnât even realize what he has. He should be level 40 by now, at least.
I barely registered what Mordecai had said. The two crawlers were still on their hands and knees, scream-vomiting on the floor. Neither had stopped for several minutes. It reminded me of that week of leave we got after boot. Those of us without families spent it in Philadelphia drinking until we blacked out.
Carl: Mordecai, what the hell did you give them?
Mordecai: Theyâll be fine. Itâs called Rapid Detox. Clears them of alcohol and any negative effects of most drugs. Works great. It makes it so certain toxins will no longer affect them. It only lasts for a single floor.
Carl: So they canât get drunk anymore?
Mordecai: Or high. And if they do drink, they become violently ill. Itâs used to treat alcoholism.
Katia: Why couldnât he read the description?
Mordecai: I added sage beetle ichor. It disguises potions, but it makes it so they go bad after an hour. Itâs a good hack. Some places will have protections against the use of certain types of potions. Like battle arenas where you canât use health pots. But if the potion is treated with the ichor, it makes it usable again.
âChrist, man,â Louis said, standing up on unsteady legs. He was still breathing heavily.
âCan we get on with this now?â I asked.
âI just got a notification that says I canât drink anymore,â Louis said. His voice turned to a whisper. âNot cool, man. Not cool. Itâs all I got left.â
âThatâs not true. You still have your date with Juice Box,â said Donut.
Chapter 114
When the second, pale sun rose, it moved rapidly across the sky, closing in on the larger, yellow sun. This second sun was much smaller, but it caused the temperature to rise about twenty degrees. Once the two stars met in the sky, the sandstorm would start. I was never a physics guy, and I didnât know if this sun thing mimicked any sort of real, or possible, orbital pattern. After talking with Imani and Elle, I knew this light/day pattern was exclusive to this bubble, so it was all an illusion anyway, all projected onto the bubble wall.
I shielded my eyes, looking for the Wasteland. I couldnât see it at all from here, which meant itâd already hit the outer ring. The entire town was talking about the destruction of the other town, though not even Donut could get anything out of the camels or the changelings about whyit happened.
The stars might not be real, but the sudden rise in temperature was no joke. It was so hot outside, it was difficult to breathe. The camels did not deploy the city-wide awning. They saved it for the sandstorm, which was unfortunate. All the townâs outside activity ground to a halt. Everyone stayed inside, though the temperature wasnât much better inside the bars. Outside of town, the Thorny Devil mobs were replaced with something else. These were Donut-sized, fast-moving things called Dune Scythes. There were a lot of them outside the townâs walls, their red dots swarming about. I had no real desire to go out and face them, but I knew fighting them would be inevitable.
âWeâre going to need to install air conditioning on the Royal Chariot,â I said as I leaned against the back of the adobe building. We stood in the alley between two inns, facing the back of the town hall, which was behind the two buildings across the street. The closer alleyway was mere feet from the back of the Town Hall, and we didnât want to get that close.
Katia was there in that closer alleyway, leaned up against a metallic mechanism that snaked around the building that backed into the town hall. She was pretending to be a long, attached pipe, which gave her a raised view of the back door. She said the mechanism attached to the buildingâs side was pumping cold air to the residents within.
âThis is unbearable,â Donut said from my shoulder. âMy paws are sweating.â
âCats donât sweat,â I said. Mordecai was making us a temperature control potion. It wouldnât be ready until later, and we couldnât wait, so we were doing this now.
âIf cats donât sweat, explain this, Carl,â Donut said, rubbing her paw on my neck. I couldnât tell if it was wet or not since my entire body was drenched. I had a sweating problem. At the gym, I was one of those guys who left a puddle everywhere. I couldnât help it, and right now my skin was doing a pretty good faucet impersonation.
âShush,â I said. âSomeoneâs coming out.â
Weâd noticed earlier there were two entrances to the town hall. The main entrance, which nobody seemed to use, and the back entrance we now faced. We watched as a dromedarian opened the door, tied his headscarf tightly around his head, and loped away. I froze as the creature strode right past Katia, but he didnât pause. As the door closed, I caught sight of two guards standing inside. These were Waster Patrol dromedarians. Level 48 each.
The other camel turned left onto the street and disappeared, rounding the bend toward Weird Shit Alley.
Carl: Did you get a good enough look?
Katia: Yes. The guy who just left is named Henrik. Heâs just a regular level 30, but we have a problem. He showed some sort of ID to the guard before he left. In a town full of shapeshifters, it makes sense to have extra security I guess. Good news is, while the door was open, I could see the interior map for a minute. There are two guards at the back door, two more at the front, three more walking around inside plus a few spread out in random offices on the higher floors. Thereâs a small room inside that looks like it leads down into a basement. There are two more guards at that door. I canât see past that. Thereâs at least 12 camels in there.
Goddamnit.
Carl: Weâll have to go with plan B.
Katiaâs plan had been to get a good look at the next dromedarian to leave, emulate his clothes and looks the best she could, and âreturnâ inside just to get a quick peek. But with so many guards wandering aboutâguards who were likely on high alertâthat plan wasnât going to work.
This was a problem. The whole building was high security, and if we did breach, odds were good weâd only be able to do it once. We had no idea what was hidden inside, nor did we know what we were going to do about it once we learned. If it turned out to be the gnome leaderâs child or something, our best move was to leave him be for the moment. If my dual-stage rocket idea worked out, we wouldnât need to deal with this collateral storyline at all.
Carl: Did you see any guards on the second or third level?
Katia: Just the offices. Thereâs a camel in half of them. The second floor is less crowded than the third.
Weâd learned from the Toeâs barkeeper that the citizens did not rest during the two-hour night. Instead, they mostly slept in the hot hours before the sandstorm started. And with less people out on the streets, now was the best time to infiltrate the building.
I took a deep breath. This is a terrible idea. But short of going in there and just killing all the camel NPCs, I couldnât see an alternative. Not when we were under such a time crunch. Gwendolynâs team was building siege engines to breach the walls on the land quadrant, but she was worried they didnât have enough people to assault the sand castle of the âMad Dune Mage.â We hadnât heard shit from either of the other two quadrants. We had to get this done now.
Carl: Louis. Weâre going with the frog plan. Youâre up. Firas, you too.
Louis: Fuck, man. Really?
Carl: Come on. Hurry up.
Both Louis and Firas were inside the tavern next door. The two crawlers had been pouting about Mordecaiâs potion, but the men were much easier to deal with when they were sober. Firas was much quieter and more introspective. Heâd worked as a car detailer and audio installer before this. His Hammersmith class was melee-focused, specializing in hammer-based weapons and abilities. The only weapon he actually had was an intelligence-enhanced mace designed for a cleric. But his Puddle Jumper spell was at level 10, much higher than Donutâs six.
Sober Louis was still an ass. I was pretty sure the guy never had a job in his life. He wouldnât shut up about cartoons Iâd never heard of. When heâd found out Katia was from Iceland, he started calling her âLazy Town.â I had no idea why. He and Donut found common ground, however. Despite pretending to hate the show, Donut knew quite a bit about the 80âs program Knight Rider, much to Louisâs delight.
Iâd much rather have one of Langleyâs guys in on this, but that group wasnât very useful here. I had them all using their car-selling skills. On my word, theyâd all ascend to the rooftops and cover our escape if everything went sideways. In the meantime, they went to work, the six of them spreading out to the different bars. The taverns would be mostly empty at this hour, but that was okay. Mordecai was currently doing the same. At this moment, he was sitting inside the Toe, drinking blood wine, telling the second-shift bartender about the group of grulke toad soldiers heâd seen out in the desert.
The second floor of Town Hall was ringed by exterior balconies. Katia said the one facing the alley was attached to an office that appeared to be empty. We decided to keep Katia outside and hidden while Donut, Louis, Firas, and I all puddle jumped to the terrace. Since the cooldown of Puddle Jumper was five hours, weâd use Firas for the casting, and weâd save Donut for our escape.
At level 10, the casting of the spell was instantaneous. He said he could âprobablyâ teleport us through the closed door, but I didnât trust him.
âOkay, once weâre in there,â I whispered, âkeep your mouths shut. If someone sees us, weâre gonna have to kill them. The camels are assholes, but I want to avoid that if possible. So listen to me or Donut and do as youâre told.â
They both nodded. I waited for Katia to give the all-clear, and Firas cast his spell, teleporting us to the balcony. Part of me was shocked it actually worked. All four of us crowded onto the metal railing. We all crouched down, trying to make ourselves look smaller. Above, the twin suns beat down onto us. I saw a single dromedarian from up here, two streets over, but his back was turned. We needed to hurry.
A tall set of double doors led into the interior of the building. I grabbed the handle and tried to turn it, but it was locked. This was a thick, metal-reinforced security door, but thankfully it wasnât magically locked.
âDoor,â I said to Donut. âAnd wait a few seconds before you withdraw the spell this time.â
Weâd practiced this a little bit. The last time we tried it, Donut had almost lopped my hand off. She cast Hole just above the handle. Thanks to her Glass Cannon class, the spell was significantly more powerful on this floor. The hole reached all the way through the thick door. I reached in, found the bolt, and I slowly turned it. The door opened with a click. I retracted my hand, and I peered inside, looking for threats. I saw nothing in the office. Donut snapped off the spell.
âRemember when we cut that guyâs head off?â Donut whispered as we sneaked into the empty room.
âYeah, I still have that guyâs head in my inventory,â I said. Louis and Firas stumbled in after me. Louis was sweating so profusely, he had to be losing an ounce of water weight a minute. I pushed the door closed. This office didnât appear to be in regular use. There was a large, camel-sized desk and chair, a table with nothing on it, and an open and empty chest. The walls were made of wooden pillars. The floors creaked with each step. A complicated system of brass pipes ran along the interior wall. They looked to be either part of a steampunk-style AC, or an old-school pneumatic tube messaging system.
Now that we were inside, my map populated with everything on the floor. There were multiple offices on this level, and only one appeared to be occupied. The three roaming guards moved through the hallways, though they hit the down stairwell and disappeared from my map.
âBe careful before you step,â I said, moving as quietly as I could to the desk. I had a few buffs that disguised my footsteps. Louis and Firas had nothing, and they both stood there with their arms out, like they were surfing. âLetâs wait until the roaming guards return and go upstairs, and then weâll move. Louis, be ready.â Louis nodded, not saying anything for the first time ever.
I rifled through the desk, looting everything that wasnât bolted down. It wasnât much. I took the chair. I knew I could easily lift the desk, but I didnât want to risk making a loud noise.
Katia: The three guards just stepped outside. Theyâre smoking cigarettes and talking, huddling against the wall in the shade from the balconies. I think theyâre taking a break. When the door was open, I could see the four of you and one more camel on the second floor. Your path to the room with the basement is clear. Go now. Iâll warn you if they come back in.
I hesitated. This wasnât the plan. The three guards could walk back in at any moment.
Katia: Oh shit, I see several more camels out there. Theyâre making their way down the street. I think itâs a shift change. Unless you want to sit there for the next hour while everyone gets settled, go now.
Louis moved, and the floorboard creaked loudly. Damnit, I thought. We couldnât wait.
âAll right, weâre moving out,â I said. âWe canât disguise our steps on these floors, so walk with calm purpose. Not fast, not slow.â
âI donât know what that means,â Firas said.
âJust follow me,â I said. I strode out the door, revealing a long hallway. A row of paintings hung on the wall, each portraying the image of a stuffy, bored-looking camel. The wood floor was covered with a runner carpet, long and intricately patterned. The building was noticeably cooler. We walked down the hallway and down the stairs.
We quickly crossed the hallway at the bottom of the stairs, which branched off toward both exits. The guards at either end did not see us as we walked past. We passed a few open rooms, a small kitchen, and then we came to a fortified door at the end of the hall.
âOkay, same thing,â I whispered. âThere are two guards on the other side of this door, so we have to do it quickly. Donut will cast her Hole, and youâll cast your Cloud spell. You have to wait until after their dots turn red. Iâll take care of that. Donât step in front of the hole in the door. We donât want them seeing you. Once theyâre down, Iâll try to open the door.â
Louis looked as if he was about to pass out. I didnât know how this guy had managed to make it this far. He cracked his neck and hopped back and forth on his legs like he was getting ready to run a sprint. âDo it.â
Donut cast Hole, and I tossed one of my new sparklers through the opening. Iâd discovered them while trying to make lower-powered explosives. All they consisted of was a wick and fuse from a hob lobber. They did hardly any damage. They made very little sound. But they shot sparks everywhere for a good five seconds. The crackling flickers shot off like angry hornets, stinging when they hit.
âNow,â I hissed the moment the two dots turned red.
Louis flung his arms forward, casting his spell. I stood off to the side, but in that moment, I saw the distinctive shape of a camel. He was sitting at a table, holding playing cards in his hands, covering his face in surprise at the sparkler attack. A heavy spear was leaned up against the wall.
A deep, black smoke filled the room. The two camels within collapsed. One of them knocked over something, probably the damn card table, and a loud crash echoed throughout the hallway.
âFuck,â I whispered. I put my arm through the hole and reached desperately for the latch. Only there was no bolt to turn. It was just a key hole. And it was higher than I expected. It did not line up with the key hole on this side. There were two bolts, I realized. One had to unlock it from both sides to open the door.
âShit, I canât get the door open,â I said, retracting my arm.
âWhat was that?â A voice echoed down the hall.
âI donât know,â another called. These were the guards from the front and back talking to one another. We had less than a minute before theyâd wander down the hall to look in our direction.
âIâm gonna have to blow the door,â I said. âEverybody step back.â
âDonât be so dramatic, Carl,â Donut said. âWatch this.â
She snapped off her Hole spell. She cast it again, but this time she placed it a few inches to the right, so the disappearing part of the hole included the two deadbolts and part of the wall and door jamb. The spell currently had an effective depth of about eight inches, which was plenty thick. She pushed at the door, and it swung open easily. There was a half-moon bite taken out of the door. The second half of the hole remained in the wall.
âWhat the hell?â I said. âWhy havenât we been doing it like this the whole time?â
I pushed my way into the room as the black smoke billowed out.
âHow long does the smoke last?â I asked, waving at it, suddenly alarmed. It was much thicker than Iâd realized itâd be. Unlike with my smoke bombs, I couldnât see shit. It stank like diesel exhaust. I didnât want to move deeper into the room in fear of touching one of the two camels. They woke up the moment you touched them.
âItâs only a minute.â
I heard steps. A camel was coming to investigate. âShit, theyâre going to see the smoke.â
The smoke started to dissipate. I could now see the two forms on the ground, though there was something off about them. I pushed the door closed. âTurn off your hole, Donut.â
âReally, Carl. You need to find a less offensive way to say that.â
Shouting rose from down the hall.
Katia: A guard just opened the door and yelled something. All of the camels are pouring inside. You have about 15 of them coming at you.
âGoddamnit, Donut. Kill the spell.â
She killed the spell.
That ended up being a mistake. The moment it happened, I realized why we shouldnât ever use the Hole spell to break open doors if we wanted to ever utilize said doors again. Iâd either pushed the door closed too tightly, or not tightly enough, but when the missing part of the door reappeared from wherever it went, the bolts werenât perfectly lined up with how theyâd been before. The door cracked loudly and then swung back open. Two hunks of metalâpieces of the actual bolts, I realizedâfell to the floor. The whole side of the door looked as if Iâd hit it with a small charge.
âWell that was unexpected,â Donut said. âCarl, what did you do? If you were going to do that, you shouldâve just blown it up.â
âOh shit, oh shit,â Louis said. âWhatâre we going to do? Cat, you gotta teleport us out!â
I rolled a goblin smoke bomb down the hall and then pushed the free-swinging door back closed. I pulled one of the heavy chocks from the subway level. I leaned it against the entrance and pushed the brace against the ceiling. Theyâd have to work hard to get in here now. But we were also trapped.
âYou two, be useful and hold this closed.â
Louis and Firas jumped up and leaned against the door. Louis whimpered. Their presence against the door probably didnât help, but it gave them something to do.
I returned my gaze to the room, focusing on the two passed-out dromedarians. Only they werenât dromedarians anymore.
âWhat the shit?â
These were changelings. Theyâd both reverted to their faceless, humanoid form. The one Iâd seen just a moment ago playing cards was passed out on the floor, cards spread out all around him, only now he was much smaller. His head pulsed with an odd, sapphire luminescence, almost like a jellyfish.
I examined his properties. He had a 50-second timer over his head, which was significantly shorter than weâd anticipated, even with the level discrepancy between Louis and the mob. Louis said they were usually out for over five minutes.
Svern â Changeling Principal. Level 49.
This mob is Exhaust-ed.
Have you ever visited the home of an elderly widow and seen her collection of miniature spoons? Or thimbles? Maybe theyâre refrigerator magnets, or salt and pepper shakers. Itâs always something. Theyâre all part of a set. Thereâs a display case involved, with a special slot for each one. It was ambitious of her to buy the case before it was filled. It sits there in her home, a layer of dust atop it where she can no longer reach. A shrine to youthful optimism.
Inevitably, as life steamrolls on, sheâs become more concerned with what is missing from her collection than what she already has. That ashtray from Niagara Falls was a hard-won souvenir, sitting proudly next to the one from Branson. But the moment it was obtained, it lost its value. And now all she thinks about is that empty space, right there. Right next to Graceland. It eats at her.
It is a totem of everything she did not accomplish. Her failures. She stares at it, sometimes. That space. That damn, empty space. All she wants is to fill it.
That is both the curse and the driving force of the Changeling Principal.
Carl: What the fuck is a Changeling Principal? The description is some high school essay bullshit.
Mordecai: Ah, shit. Damn. I should have known.
Carl: Explain. The guards were these things, pretending to be camels. Now Iâm wondering if all the camels are shapeshifters. No wonder everybody hates you guys.
The door crashed, but it held firm. Louis cried out in fear. Firas gritted his teeth. We didnât have long.
Mordecai: Theyâre rare. Itâs an old story I havenât seen used in a long, long time. Theyâre a sect of changeling culture. Sometimes they give them new, special powers. Cultish, kind of like those city elves from the third floor, but less apocalyptic and more power-hungry. They are obsessed with getting a full library. Changelings can only change into something theyâve physically touched, so they seek out rare creatures.
Carl: Any special way to kill them when theyâre in their weird, faceless form?
Mordecai: Get the brain. The glowing part. If you kill one, take the head. I can make a cool potion from it. It only works if itâs not transformed when you kill it. Try to knock them out first. Sometimes that makes them revert form.
What any of this had to do with the damn gnomes was beyond me, but I strongly suspected whatever was going on right now was a mirror of what had happened over in the Bactrian town. The crawlers had fucked up the City Hall quest, just like we were in the middle of doing.
The original plan was to get in and out without being noticed or hurting any of the NPCs. And if we had to do something with the collateral, we had a plan to shift the blame. But with this changeling fuckery, we couldnât afford to be diplomatic. I activated Talon Strike and smashed down on Svernâs head with my foot. The Exhausted debuff disappeared, but I hit him again before he could react, stunning him all over again. I hit him one more time, killing the level 49 monster. The moment he died, the body shriveled like a raisin, all except the round head. I picked the whole thing up, sticking it into my inventory.
There was another door here. A trap door, leading down to whatever it was they were protecting. Weâd get to that in a second. The second changeling guard had less than 15 seconds left until he reawakened.
âYou two. Kill the other one. Hurry.â
âWhat?â Louis asked, horrified. âHeâs going to wake up the second I hit him.â
âHeâs going to wake up anyway. Hurry the hell up. Hit him in the head.â
Firas pulled his mace, and Louis pulled his weapon: a glowing baseball bat covered in spikes. I leaned up against the chock as it banged again.
Carl: Donut, kill him the moment he wakes up. A full-power missile to the head. Just make sure they each get a few hits in.
Donut: HEâS BOSS LEVEL STRONG. WHAT IF IT DOESNâT WORK?
I didnât get a chance to answer. Firas took his mace and smashed it as hard as he could directly into the changeling just as the timer ran out. Louis smacked him with the bat. Both of them pummeled it in the head a few times. The spell enhanced the damage for several seconds, but they barely caused the creatureâs health to fall at all.
Donut slammed it in the head with a point-blank, double strength Magic Missile. It almost killed him. She quickly hit him again. That worked. Luminescent, blue material splattered over the room like sheâd broken open a glo stick.
âStay in the room,â I said as I pulled open the trap door. I was assaulted by a blast of fetid-smelling cold air. âAnd get back to the chock. Hold it closed.â
The two both returned to their spots against the metal blockage. âI went up two levels,â Louis said to Firas, who had also gone up to level 24.
Katia: Thereâs a bell ringing now. The camels are coming out.
I could hear the bell through the walls.
Carl: Stay put. Weâre almost done. I hope.
âDonut, pull out Mongo and stay up here.â I pointed at the solid, left wall. It led to the outside. âWeâre going to escape that way. If they breach before I come back up, go without me. Try not to let them see you, but if they do, flee. Donât fight. Weâll meet back up at the saferoom.â
She started to protest, but I quickly descended the stairs into the darkness.
~
I lit a torch and dropped it. It fell to the bottom of the short ladder, and it filled the cavern with light.
The shape of the room appeared on my map. It wasnât big. There didnât appear to be anyone else in here.
Mongo appeared at the top of the trapdoor and squawked at me. âStay up there,â I said.
The ground was stone, carved with symbols that looked like Egyptian hieroglyphs. I was standing atop the tomb. The ceiling was low enough that I had to stoop. There was no way a camel could fit in here. There was a table, and a small chair. On the table was a roll of paper. I picked it up.
Map. The Necropolis of Anser.
Youâve discovered the catacomb plans. The information has been added to your map and to the map of everyone in your party.
âShit,â I said as the scroll dissipated into dust. The minimap showing the area below my feet populated. I zoomed the map out, revealing a maze that made the map of the Iron Tangle look like childâs play. Fuck me.
There was also a small bowl on the table. It had a trio of shriveled, black plants within. Mushrooms, I realized. Not the kind you eat. At least not for food. I pulled the bowl into my inventory. Then I took the table and chair.
Katia: Something odd just happened. Two of the level-30 camels wanted into the town hall, but another camel stopped them. It was one of the waster guards. They fought, and the guard camel killed them both. He dragged their bodies inside.
Carl: Did they stay camels when they died?
Katia: Uh, yeah. Why?
Carl: Iâll explain later.
Donut: HURRY UP, CARL. I CAN HEAR THEM TALKING ABOUT HITTING THE DOOR WITH A MISSILE.
I could now see the room went on even further than I realized. What I thought was the end of the chamber was actually the boundary line to the subterranean zone. Even with the map, I wouldnât be allowed in there. Not until we dealt with the gnomish castle.
But I also noticed something else. The white dot of an NPC. It was on the other side of the barrier, so I wouldnât be able to get to him.
âHello?â I called. The back of the room was filled with shadow.
âHenrik? Is that you? Back so soon?â a voice croaked. âI heard fighting. Who will you pretend to be today? My mother, perhaps? The last dose has not worn off yet. If you feed me more, it might kill me this time. I can only hope.â
I couldnât see the creature, but the voice was similar to that of a Bopca.
I was about to light another torch when I saw the lantern hanging from the ceiling. It had a tiny flame within, like a pilot light. I turned the handle, and the whole room lit up.
The shimmering wall of the quadrant boundary appeared. And just past it, tied up in chains to the wall was an elderly gnome. The creature was not wearing the red hat, and he looked sickly and pale. He had scabs on his face, and he looked half starved to death.
Wynne. Dirigible Gnome Flesh Mechanic. Level 50.
The Dirigible Gnomes were once a peaceful race. All they ever wanted was two things. One, to figure out how the world worked. And two, to be left alone.
In order to escape a busy, teeming world filled with competing intelligent species, all of whom loved to wage war, the Dirigible Gnomes learned how to take to the clouds, building a variety of airships and floating settlements, allowing them to escape any sort of trouble.
But as we all know, trouble doesnât care if you donât want to be found.
The history of the Dirigible Gnomes is long, complicated, and tragic. But the end result is the inevitable result of all peaceful races. They were, eventually, forced to choose between fighting or being wiped out. They chose to fight.
Wynne is the great and favored uncle of Commandant Kane of the Dreadnaught Wasteland. He is a Flesh Mechanic, a healer gifted with the ability to bring the long dead back to life, if only temporarily. He is being held as hostage by the Dromedarians, as a guarantee of peace.
Quest Complete. Stay out of city hall.
I now had more questions than answers. What had seemed so simple at first was now shaping into a complicated story. The dromedarians had this gnome guy as hostage. But it appeared the changelings had infiltrated the ranks of the camels, and they had their own interests in the gnome. And I still had no idea how I could use this information to get my ass into the throne room of the Wasteland, thousands of feet into the sky.
If I can get him out of those chains, we can take him. Talk ourselves onto the flying platform.
As if it was reading my mind, the system gave me an update.
New Quest. Free Wynne from his bondage.
Wynne the Dirigible Gnome is in chains. Free him, and he will provide easy access to the Wasteland.
Reward: You will receive a Silver Quest Box.
Katia: Nice. Now get the hell out of there.
Donut: CARL. I DONâT KNOW WHAT YOUâRE DOING DOWN THERE BUT YOU NEED TO GET BACK UP HERE BEFORE LOUIS DIES OF A HEART ATTACK.
I couldnât approach him. I had an idea, but it would require Donut. I started to call her, but I paused the moment I saw the group of five blue dots on the map.
Crawlers. On the subterranean side. They were running down a hall toward me, coming fast.
âA human?â Wynne said, looking in my direction. âThatâs a new one, Henrik. Do you think a human can talk me into revealing the spell?â
âItâs this way,â a voice cried. A man. The five crawlers rushed into the chamber, emerging out of the darkness. All five were male. All levels 23 to 26. It was an eclectic group. Three were human. One was an odd creature with a human head and torso, but the body of a tarantula. I didnât know what the hell the last guy was. He looked like a dude wearing a goddamn banana costume.
âYou bastard. You goddamn bastard,â a man said before I could say anything. âYou destroyed the map.â
I examined the man.
Crawler #4,778,551. âLow Thi.â
Level 25.
Race: Human.
Class: D-Bag Geek.
âHello to you, too,â I said. D-Bag Geek? Really? âThe map was on the table back here out of your reach. It disappeared the moment I picked it up. It installed itself into my system.â
âWell, weâre now fucked. There were two maps, and we lost both of them. This place is a goddamn nightmare. Weâre all thatâs left.â
âItâs Carl,â another crawler said. This was another human named Tyler Storm. A level 26 Weather Engineer.
âItâs not really a human,â Wynne said, looking between me and the newcomers. âHeâs a changeling named Henrik! Heâs torturing me, trying to get me to cast a spell that would give flesh to Quetzalcoatlus. He drugs me, and I wonât last much longer. I have the map to the temple. I know of your kind. If you kill me, you will have access. You can take it from me. Kill me. Kill me fast!â
âNo,â I said as Low Thi pulled a spear from his inventory. He raised it and pointed it at the gnomeâs head. âNo, no, no!â
The man jabbed forward. The NPC slouched over, dead.
Quest failed. Free Wynne from his bondage.
Low Thi looked up. âHey, I just got an achievement called Cockblock for ruining your quest. I guess you really are Carl.â
âThis guy doesnât have a map on him. He doesnât have shit,â the banana guy said. His name was Mike Barnes 3. He was a level 23 Banana Farmer. âWeâre screwed.â
Deep breath, deep breath.
âDo you assholes have any sort of towns or villages in there?â
âYes,â Low Thi said.
âDo any of you have Desperado Club access?â
âI do,â the spider guy said. He indicated the third human. âBobby and I are the only ones.â
âMeet me there in a goddamn hour.â
âWhy?â the spider asked. His name was Morris Sp. A level 23 Freelance Psychiatrist.
âBecause Iâm going to kick your goddamn ass. And then I need to transcribe your map to you. That is if this town doesnât get blown to hell in the meantime.â
***
Sorry about ending the chapter on a bit of a cliffhanger. They still have to get out of there. And what was the deal with the frogs? We have some answers now, but we also have more questions. But like with Elle and Imani's bubble, it's starting to become clear that the four quadrants may be separated, but they're all tied in together into a single storyline. Hopefully taking out the castles in the incorrect order doesn't have any sort of negative consequences. Thanks for reading!
Comments
Also, with the leech spell from the last update and Knight Rider reference, I feel like you're referencing He who fights with monsters which I FREAKING LOVE. If it is a subtle nod to that series, well played.
Nathan Orenstein
2023-04-28 16:13:02 +0000 UTCI know i'm 2 years late to this conversation, but the nurse joy fantasy got me lolololol
Nathan Orenstein
2023-04-28 15:54:26 +0000 UTCSo guess they were trying to get him to resurrect a rare creature to further their changeling collection. Gotta catch 'em all!
Jordan
2020-11-25 02:32:31 +0000 UTCTook me too long to realize. Low Thi group or someone else killed the gnome in the other city while trying to get the other map. Leading to the bombing.
ZH
2020-11-20 01:56:11 +0000 UTCYep. Cooperate. Maybe even make a some members of the party to share the map. Seems risky. Get mobs to work across the border.
ZH
2020-11-19 04:57:22 +0000 UTCThat exhaust skill has amazing synergy with sparky sparky boom Carl.
Arctruth
2020-11-18 19:37:47 +0000 UTCThat Low Thi fellow needs to die. With extreme prejudice!!! :|
Thian Eng Low
2020-11-18 14:10:54 +0000 UTCOoh, this floor is so much fun!
Deepak Kamlesh
2020-11-18 13:45:40 +0000 UTCIt looks like in order to solve this floor they need to have people cooperate across zones. There may even be some subtle cheating on the part of the AI to make that happen, because the odds are way against that group showing up less than two minutes after Carl did. The name Queztalcouatlus is interesting because it doesn't fit with the environment/society that we've seen thus far. I'll be interested to see where that fits... Maybe the gnomes have a South American vibe?
David K. Storrs
2020-11-18 13:40:50 +0000 UTC