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Chapter 39 - Escort Duty

  After

  a weekend of fruitful spellstudy, Seventh's triumphant return to his

  guild was promptly squashed by Garth's cheerful announcement of the

  newest dungeon restrictions.

  “What

  do you mean I'm not allowed inside the dungeon?” Seventh asked

  incredulously.

  “Well,

  found a nest inside the sewers, decided to eradicate

  it alone, without notifying the guild or the watch immediately, so

  the Dungeon Watch has decided to clear out the sewers themselves and

  raised the rank requirements,” Garth answered with an amused smile

  on his face.

  Seventh

  drew his hand across his face. “That doesn't even make any sense,”

  he muttered into his hand. “I did report it after the fight, and

  went straight into the guild!”

  Garth

  shrugged. “Politics. The sewer is still backed up since we haven't

  found the blockage, and the mayor just needed any reason to mobilize

  the Watch.”

  The

  new restriction and the earlier one that raised the main dungeon to

  Steel rank due to the still continuing Conjunction Event. Seventh

  hadn't really looked into the Event, but had heard the basics.

  Dungeons forcibly merging together and having a mix of monsters from

  both of the dungeons, possibly even birthing new creatures and

  creating new passages.

  The

  Dungeon of Tears' Conjunction Event was also more unusual due to the

  fact that the dungeon it was merging with, the Spidersilk Grove, was

  hundreds of miles away, crossing borders and making local governance

  uneasy, and when government was uneasy, they made arbitrary—

  bordering on stupid and rash— decisions the adventurers did not

  like.

  Now

  the lowest-ranking adventurers were locked out of the dungeon, and

  they were out for blood. Seventh's flamboyant head-drop couple of

  days ago hadn't left a single doubt about who was behind the nest

  extermination, making the Necromancer an easy target for the

  collective ire of the adventuring community.

  “So,”

  Garth said. “In my professional opinion, you should take a nice,

  couple of days long quest outside the city and let the tempers cool

  for a bit.”

  “Surely,

  it can't be that bad. Right?”

  “I

  have seen an adventurer accidentally revealing that there is an

  entire cave system with Bellarom Libertas flowers, plummeting the

  prices. He was... found three days after donning a stylish coating of

  tar and feathers.”

  Seventh

  tried a cocky chuckle that tangled his throat and made his voice

  croak. “I see. Sooo, do I go upstairs or...?”

  “I

  wouldn't. We can attach you to a quest with my own Nexus Stone. No

  need to pop up to check the ambiance.” Garth pursed his lips and

  looked up in thought. “I would slip out through the abattoir

  though...”

  Swallowing

  his throat clear, Seventh gave Garth a thumbs up. He had wondered why

  so many adventurers had eyed him when he had come in, but had ignored

  the gazes. He thought they had identified him as a necromancer or

  something.

  Garth

  tapped his magical mirror and scrolled the interface, looking for

  something interesting.

  ”Missing

  cat, missing cat, guard for lettuce farm, fighting boars, fighting

  boars... eh, it's quite the slim pickings. Do you mind some dullness?

  There are a couple of escort missions... oh, this is interesting and

  fitting for you.” Garth turned the mirror towards Seventh so he

  could read the notice.

  Needed:

  one (1) Bronze or higher rank guard for merchant escort.


  One-way

  trip through the Whispering Delta, up to ten hours. Departure

  immediately, preferably within two (2) to four (4) days. Reporting to

  Rudrig Gridleford at the Narrow Marrow Inn.


  Reward:

  five (5) silver per day, return trip included.


  Threat

  assessment: Moderate. Reported bandit activity. Missing hunting party

  with historical records of umbrefel attacks.


  It

  wasn't a glamorous job, but the threat assessment piqued Seventh's

  interest. “Bandits and a possible umbrefel? Why isn't it higher?

  Bronze feels a bit... lacking?”

  Garth

  shrugged. “The Guild probably doesn't consider the possibility

  high. Out of season, nesting time, hibernation, take your pick. I'd

  worry about the bandits more, but a couple of Shadowbolts and one

  pissed off ratkin undead should make them run head as a third keg

  away to the hills.”

  “There

  are also missing hunters?”

  Garth

  looked at Seventh with the air of an old man. “The world is

  dangerous, Seventh. There's always somebody missing, lost, or dead.

  Just make sure you ain't gonna be one, yes?”

  After

  confirming he would take the quest and slipping out from the

  abattoir's back door, Seventh walked around the city, searching for

  the Narrow Marrow, which was easily found at the northern side of the

  city. Two hours later, he was regretting his life decisions. Mostly

  about clearing the nest and taking this particular quest.

  Rudrig

  Gridleford, Ford for his friends, was a talker. After Seventh had

  mentioned in passing that he actually had killed an umbrefel before,

  and had Alchemist's Fire on hand, the Necromancer had found himself

  on a heavy wagon pulled by two horses and assaulted by a merry

  logorrhea.

  Ford

  was in his fifties, with a balding spot slowly conquering his last

  vestiges of hair, small ears, and dark, sunken eyes making him

  resemble a mole from a distance. He probably breathed through his

  ears since for the two hours Seventh had known him, he had been

  silent only when he took a sip from his waterskin. The blessed

  silence was too few and far between.

  “....

  and yeah, that's why I will never, ever buy wheat from a dwarf again!

  Nothing against the short folk, you understand, but iron and steel

  are where their true talents lie! Now cabrases on the other hand,

  those are the true farmers of the realm! Warriors and farmers to be

  exact— apparently they got Farmer Warrior Classes during

  Awakening. Natural warriors and farmers, they say, nice folk too,

  haven't been able to leave a cabras household without some damn fine

  deals and meals...”

  It

  had to be a Skill. Or two. Maaaybe three.

  Closing

  his left eye, Seventh focused on his Wandering Eye tethered on a

  ten-foot pole. He had erected it before they left the city and kept

  watch from an elevated position. It felt like he was watching the

  road and slowly emerging forest from a moving guard tower. When the

  wagon moved through fields, he could see almost half a mile in every

  direction, but now the trees were starting to break his line of

  sight. It was relaxing to look over the golden fields, Ford's words

  slowly turning into a white background noise.

  Suddenly,

  Seventh realized there was an odd silence and broke the connection.

  Ford was looking at him, expectantly.

  “Erh.

  Sorry, I was focusing on my Skill,” Seventh said and pointed at the

  eye-on-a-stick. ”What did you ask?”

  The

  old merchant smiled. ”Nothing, nothing. I just said you don't need

  to worry too much. I need a guard for insurance reasons, nothing

  more. They always claim there's this monster and that, bandits

  roaming around, so my guild gets fussy. Demands guards, safer and

  longer roads, nights at villages, and other poppycock.”

  “Well,

  it doesn't hurt to stay vigilant, does it?”

  Ford

  nodded vigorously. ”Yep. That actually reminds me, ever seen the

  Reach Wall? Crazy dwarves, carving the whole Skyreach Mountains

  hollow, just to make some battlements. I mean, humans landed Valeria

  thousands of years ago, give it a rest...”

  For

  the next three hours, Seventh had to fight to keep his soul in his

  body. For all he knew, as a Wraith, he might be capable of doing

  that, and a blabbermouth like Ford being a witness would be a

  disaster in the making.

  Keeping

  his mind fresh, he focused regularly on his Eye and made it wander

  around. Raising it far up above them made a good general view, but

  the thickening spruce forest made a birds-eye-view almost useless

  unless there were ambushers out in the open. Seventh had to zip and

  zoom between the trees with his vision, checking the suspicious

  shadows one by one.

  On

  their right-hand side, Seventh found something interesting on a

  riverbank. Large tapering boulders were spaced evenly along the

  riverbank, with a dozen or so in the water. In a moment's lapse of

  judgment, Seventh mentioned it to Ford. Seventh wasn't ready for the

  talkative merchant's knowledge about them. Especially how they

  behaved during the summer.

  ”...yep,

  yep. I wouldn't dip for a swim in there, no sireee-e.

  After the mating season is over, the juveniles start to pop up from

  the river. The grown-up ironstone crabs climb away from the water to

  leave more food for the next generation. I had a riverboat once, rode

  the Drownflow with it all the way to the Boiling Sea once, but it was

  a hassle. I ran one of those little runts over once, and their

  five-ton papa comes and made my day displeasingly wet. Safer to stay

  on dry land. I move less merchandise, sure, but I also got a bit

  seasick. In a river!” Ford laughed merrily and sipped from his

  waterskin.

  When

  Seventh woke up in the morning, he hadn't expected to receive a

  description of local crab mating rituals and

  practices. Now it was lodged deep, right next to the burning veltid

  undead.

  It

  wasn't all bad, though. Realizing that Ford was a font of knowledge,

  both mundane and exoteric in equal measures, Seventh started to steer

  the merchant's vocal output to monsters and traderoutes. Apparently,

  these ironstone crabs were a delicacy in the cirties, but hunting

  them was hard. Cracking one open could take hours, and the price of

  meat went up just because of the effort. Some even made shields and

  armor out of the mineral-rich carapache.

  Hard

  carapache and five-ton bodies? I wonder how hardy they would be as

  undead?
Seventh thought as he took a final glance over the

  snaking riverfront. It was filled with crabs in hiding, making the

  river foam around their shells.

  Seventh

  also asked why the woods were called Whispering Delta, but Ford just

  shrugged and told him he had no idea. There weren't any weird winds

  or spirits that could explain the whispering bit, only some trolls

  and goblins further north, closer to the mountains. Just when Ford

  was wondering if it was a relic of elven language and conquering

  humans just copied the name, a village was coming into view.

  “Oh

  my, time really flies with good company! This must be the first time

  my guards didn't ask for a single break! Usually, they see something

  in the distance and go check it, or just want to spread their legs.

  Not you, though, no sireee-e! You got an Iron Butt for a Skill or

  something?”

  Seventh

  shrugged. “I just did what was told to do. I kept watch and let the

  time just flow by.”

  The

  village seemed like any other small village, thatched roofs with

  small chimneys lofting smoke above, sturdy wood-frames with

  occasional embellishment of bright paint, and people walking around,

  doing their daily tasks with heavy burdens or small handcarts. The

  road split before the village, giving Ford a choice of either going

  around or straight into the village. He chose to go in, and a man

  with a spear and a leather helmet approached to meet them.

  He

  was young, somewhere in his early twenties. Somewhat well-fitted

  leather gear that had been well maintained. While walking towards the

  approaching wagon, he started to lift his hand, but abandoned the

  gesture when he recognized Ford.

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  “Ford?

  Getting the day done early? Is there a cheap beer somewhere and

  nobody told me about it?” he asked with a slow drawl and easygoing

  attitude.

  “Nah.

  This one—” Ford pointed at Seventh. “— is a world-class

  sitter! Didn't even need to take a leak the whole way here.”

  The

  merchant cocked his head, and worry entered his voice. “Say, why

  are you all geared up and ready to fight? Was the threat assessment

  correct for once? Bandits? Umbrefel? I must say, for the last decade

  I have never—”

  The

  guard waved his free hand dismissively, surprisingly silencing Ford.

  Seventh wished he had known about the gesture during the day. “No,

  no. Nothing like that. A bear has been spotted closer and closer to

  the village, and the Militia has been ordered to keep watch, just in

  case.”

  “Oh?”

  Ford sounded surprised. “Did Yselle finally kick the bucket, or has

  she been lazy?”

  The

  guard looked around, checking who was listening. The wagon had been

  stopped just before the village proper, and nobody was in sight.

  “Officially, her gout is just flaring up. Unofficially....” he

  eyed at Swventh, taking a measure of him. “... the bear got her

  good. She swore up and down that there was something odd about it.

  Her bolts pounced off its hide, like it had a Skill— or buff.”

  Ford

  let out a low whistle. “Evolution? Any idea what kind?”

  “Nah.

  Yselle said it was just like any other brown bear. No glowing fangs

  or teeth, fur was the usual color, and it obeyed steel like any other

  beast. Just... her bolts didn't work at first.”

  The

  two men silently nodded their heads repeatedly before turning to look

  at Seventh. “What?” he asked.

  “This

  is usually the point when an adventurer starts to ask how much they

  get if they kill the beast,” the guard said.

  “Oh.

  Well, where's this Yselle now? I'd like to ask her a couple of

  questions first.”

  Looking

  at Seventh with reservation, the guard walked past the back of the

  wagon and pointed towards the village, avoiding road. “Her...

  cottage is half a mile that way. Can't miss it, she tans her hides so

  the smell is... tangible.”

  “Thanks.”

  Seventh looked at Ford. “Is it okay with you if I hop off now? Any

  further need for assistance?”

  “Nah,

  nah. You can go. I'll do some haggling around here for a couple of

  days, and continue further east, then north. It's a dwarven lands and

  their own laws cover any lost or stolen merchandise. No need to pay

  for protection,” Ford said and offered his hand.

  Seventh

  grabbed it to shake, but to his surprise, Ford spoke, “Quest

  complete: Escort Rudrig Gridleford to Mireholt,” and a blue box

  appeared, confirming his job was done.

  The

  merchant laughed. “Oh, you should see your face! You really are

  greener than breadmold!” Seventh barely had time to take his pole

  off the wagon before Ford clicked his tongue and lightly pulled the

  reins to get his horses moving again.

  While

  Seventh was storing his pole and dismissing his Eye, the guard gave

  him a worried look. “You are an Iron-rank, right?”

  “Nope,

  upper Bronze.”

  “Oh.”

  The guard looked disappointed. “Well, maybe we can wait for Yselle

  to heal up then.”

  Affronted,

  Seventh swung his halberd onto his shoulder with a smooth arc. “Oh

  yeah? You don't think I can handle one bear?”

  “Well,

  no. Yselle is Hunter, upper Iron. Her Skills are basically all about

  killing game and monsters, so... I don't see how a rank lower Fighter

  could do better than her.”

  Seventh

  gave the guard a mischievous smile. “Well, see... I'm Seventh, by

  the way. Seventh Seven.”

  Taking

  the offered hand and shaking, the guard introduced himself, ”Branik.

  Branik Vellmont. Say, did your—”

  ”No.”

  Seventh interrupted, annoyed. ”Nobody stuttered, read my name

  wrong, cursed me, nor have ever been in a church, drunk, to change my

  name.”

  There

  had been different guesses about his name. All were

  wrong, it was just his name.

  Branik

  squinted his eyes in suspicion. ”Riiight. And it isn't an alias? Do

  you have papers to prove your name?”

  Taking

  the question as an order, Seventh pulled his Identify results from

  his voidspace. That creepy Tobias elf had actually filed them after

  the interrogation, so Seventh hadn't needed to bother visiting a

  Guild-certified Scholar for Identify. He'd have to do that when his

  combat Classes hit Iron to become an official Iron-rank adventurer.

  Looking

  over the parchment, Branik's eyes widened from the quint. Seventh

  could take a wild guess at what he had noticed.

  “Necromancer?”

  “Yep.”

  “Like...

  You raise up the dead?”

  “That’s

  right.”

  “And...

  order them around.”

  “I

  sure do.”

  “Ummm...”

  The young guard was clearly at a loss for words. This was probably

  the first time he had met a real practitioner of the “dark arts”.

  Seventh

  caught the ball for him. “I am allowed to have one undead minion in

  the village's premises. If I am attacked, I can and will use all my

  Skills to their fullest extent, including raising as many minions as

  I please...” He leaned forward to cast shadows over his eyes. “But

  I am a good boy, and keep my minions out of the village.”

  “Ergh,”

  Branik said.

  “Quite.

  I'll go now to check your Hunter, and talk with her if I should go to

  hunt this bear down. May I have my parchment back?”

  The

  clearly nervous guard licked his lips and wordlessly turned towards

  the village to power walk after Ford after giving back Seventh's

  parchmentwork.

  He

  said to follow the road, right? Time to meet an upper Iron ranker.


  Upper

  and lower were adventurer shorthand that saved time to tell how many

  of his Skills were at the same rank. Most of Seventh's Skills were at

  double-E, so he was an upper Bronze-rank adventurer. He could also

  say he was bordering on Iron to drive home how close his Classes

  were, but it didn't really matter unless he was joining a party for

  an extended period of time.

  All

  he needed was a proper foe, like a mysterious bear, to fight with to

  bring his Light Armor Proficiency and Combat Footwork to EE. Unlike

  you might think, armor proficiencies weren't about taking hits with

  proper armor, but Seventh usually blocked,

  tried to block, or just took the lighter blows head-on, so he needed

  to change his fighting habits to complement his Skills better.

  Combat

  Footwork was probably a clue from the System to Seventh, telling him

  what he should be doing with his fighting. According to his research—

  reading the Skills and You: a Child's Guide to Active and Passive

  Skills
and other works in the same series— the System did that

  in the lower ranks and was the basis for the Church of the System to

  look at the Skills gained from Attribute rank-ups as almost a divine

  gospel of a person's Path.

  Following

  the road cutting through the trees, Seventh noticed a small footpath,

  neatly marked with round riverstones painted white, starting after a

  shallow ditch. It was almost hidden, if Seventh hadn't been looking

  for something indicating a house, he probably could have walked right

  past it.

  Following

  the stones— and increasingly his nose— a small hut appeared next

  to a small clearing. It was severely weather-torn, old wood rotting

  at places, but Seventh could see fresh repairs along the wall, and

  the yard was neatly kept clean.

  The

  clearing, on the other hand, was conquered by a creative chaos.

  Rusting and oxidizing iron and copper vats lay in heaps next to skin

  racks filled with tightly wound and stretching, fresh pelts. Seventh

  didn't know much about the tanning process, but almost all tanneries

  were outside of the cities— preferably downwind and stream—

  because of the smell. Eye-watering mixture of rotting flesh, urine,

  and the sharp bite of ammonia almost made Seventh gag. And he had

  spent the last week in a sewer!

  While

  he was concentrating on keeping his breakfast where it belonged, a

  sharp female voice commanded, “Keep your hands where I can see 'em.

  No sudden moves.” The voice didn't seem to come from anywhere in

  particular, but from every tree surrounding Seventh.

  He

  slowly lifted his right hand, left on the halberd. “Okay, no sudden

  moves. Yselle, I presume?”

  “Drop

  the halberd over your shoulder. Turn towards the clearing, and take

  five steps.”

  Dropping

  his weapon with a sigh, Seventh followed the orders and gingerly

  approached the poignant collection of vats and pans. His eyes started

  to tear up.

  “I'm

  an adventurer, I escorted Ford— Rudrig Gridleford— to the village and

  Branik told me about the bear situation,” Seventh said while

  rapidly blinking his eyes.

  He

  heard a faint scraping sound and started to turn his head.

  “Eyes

  front and nose up! Breathe the stuff in,” the voice, most likely

  Yselle, ordered.

  “Oh,

  gods, do I really have to? This isn't a proper way to treat guests.”

  “For

  bandits it is.”

  Seventh

  fractionally turned his head before stopping himself. Instead, he

  shifted his stance to a more relaxed position. “You think I'm a

  bandit? Hollering straight to your cottage, following the path? No

  skulking and sneaking around?”

  “I

  didn't say you were a smart one.”

  “Ouch.”

  “You

  did walk right past me, you know, not a good sales pitch for bear

  hunting.”

  Seventh

  shrugged. “Maybe not, but I have a Skill for looking around. It's a

  little weird, and I didn't want to seem rude. Also, I wouldn't go

  alone.”

  “You

  have friends in here?” Seventh noticed a well-hidden worry in the

  voice and a slight warble. Like she was turning her head around, and

  whatever Skill she was using to mask herself didn't correct it well.

  “No.

  I'm a Necromancer. I have minions that can scout for me.” At

  least I hope so. I haven't asked Fang how well he handles forests.


  There

  was a long silence while Seventh stood still in the stench.

  “So...

  we done sniffing each other out? You can either shoot me, let me go,

  or send me off with some information. Which one is it?”

  He

  heard an annoyed tsk behind him, only behind him since the Skill was

  apparently deactivated. “Eh, fuck it. I don't really care if ya

  kick the bucket while being all high and mighty big city adventurer.

  You can turn.”

  Still

  keeping his hands up, Seventh turned to see a tall, thin woman

  standing at the start of her stone-lined path. It wasn't a big

  surprise that Seventh had missed her: she was wearing clothes dyed

  green and brown, and a hooded cloak that apparently grew moss and

  sticks, covering most of her torso and legs. A crossbow was held at

  low-ready, pointing just so away from Seventh it wouldn't be rude,

  but close enough that she could make a quick snapshot.

  Seventh

  estimated that Yselle was somewhere in her later thirties, maybe

  early forties, depending on how much the rough outdoors life had aged

  her. Some wrinkles lined her blue eyes, and a trio of scars crossed

  her left cheek, clawmarks of some beast. Her left leg was tied to a

  splint, which made a scraping sound when she walked. She winced with

  every step made with the wounded leg.

  Seventh

  bit his tongue not to offer unsolicited help, and nodded instead.

  “Hi, I'm Seventh, by the way. Nice to meet you.”

  The

  hunter grunted with a nod as she dragged herself onto a small stool

  next to her hut and heavily sat down. ”Yselle. We'll see how

  pleased I'm gonna be.”

  Noticing

  his halberd was still on the ground, Seventh took a step towards it

  and pointed it with his right hand, hands still raised up.

  “Yeah,

  sure, you can take it. And lower those damn hands, you look like a

  badly controlled marionette.”

  “Okay...”

  Seventh grabbed his weapon and casually lowered it to rest on his

  left shoulder. “So, why the warm welcome? I thought there was a

  bear problem, not a bandit one.”

  Yselle

  shrugged. “There's a possibility that the bear was an animal

  companion. When I shoot at something, that something dies, no

  exceptions, but that fucking ball of furry shit just shrugged my

  shots off.”

  “It

  could be—”

  “It

  wasn't a damn evolved species. Hunter, remember? I know my critters

  and crawlers, and that bear was as common as your sorry ass,”

  Ysette spat on the ground bitterly before muttering, “Fancy city

  folk trying to school me about animals...”

  Seventh

  lifted his hand in an apologetic gesture. “Not trying to one-up

  you, honestly. Just trying to get the full picture,” he said, A

  small self-deprecating smile rising on his face. “A cityboy like me

  needs all the help I can get to survive.”

  “Yeah?

  You and your smile can go and shove cones where the sun doesn't shine

  for all I care,” Yselle said. “I know tricks of your kind. Smiles

  and handshakes as long as you get paid.”

  “Okay.

  Sure.” Seventh shifted his weight. He was slowly getting annoyed by

  how this woman threatened someone who was trying to help— until he

  recognized her look.

  It

  was plain old suspicion. He had told about his class, and now he

  wasn't a visitor or an adventurer anymore— he was just another

  potential problem. A Necromancer.

  She

  was looking for a trick, a trap he might spring. Treating him like a

  bandit who had wandered too close with a story ready.

  No

  wonder she lives here alone. It might not be only because of the

  tanning.


  He

  would still try to get all the information he could out of her. “How

  did you get away from the bear?”

  “I

  stabbed it, of course. And it hit back,” she answered and knocked

  on her splint, wincing a little. “Probably bled all the way to its

  burrow. If you find it dead, the kill is mine.”

  “Okay.

  I only need its body. Where exactly did you fight?”

  Disgust

  flashed on Yselle's face. ”You need its body? What kind of a freak

  are you?”

  ”Okay,

  that's it.” The woman's resistance finally boiled Seventh’s

  annoyance over, and he had enough. “If you don't want to help me,

  fine, then don't. Did I mention Branik was wearing his armor? The

  Militia is readying for a fight, and I can bet the villagers won't be

  too happy about that.”

  Seventh

  started to walk towards the wounded Hunter. ”You can have a

  negative impression of me. Fine. I'm increasingly getting used to

  that shit, Necromancer, remember? I'll need the body for my damn

  Skill. That's why I'm doing this— you can keep your gold, honor,

  and glory. All need is dead bodies to get stronger and help

  others.”

  He

  had walked closer than intended, almost looming over Yselle, who had

  turned her crossbow to aim at Seventh's gut. Her nose twitched as she

  tried to keep her snarl in.

  Letting

  out a disappointed sigh and giving Yselle a displeased look, Seventh

  turned around and chose a heading at random. If he didn't get any

  help, he would brute force the search, starting from here.

  He

  had almost crossed the pungent clearing when a voice called behind

  him, “Oi! City boy!”

  Seventh

  turned around, annoyed. “What!?”

  Yselle

  pointed at almost the completely opposite side of the clearing. ”That

  way, around three miles. There's an old lodging site, turn north, and

  you should be at its hunting ground. Good luck.”

  “Thanks,”

  Seventh said as he corrected his heading.

  After

  five minutes, Yselle and her tiny hut had disappeared behind the

  trees. Seventh continued for another five until he was sure she

  couldn't see him or hadn't followed. He couldn't be too sure about

  either, but her wound looked severe enough that she wouldn't be

  hopping around too much.

  The

  forest flashed purple as the Necromancer repeatedly opened his

  voidspace, letting his horde out. Six veltids, four dozen sewer rats,

  a trio of ratkin, and one confused Fang. The more cognitive ratkin

  spent a minute stabbing at spruce before he believed it was made of

  wood.

  After

  a brief lecture on where wood actually comes from, Seventh looked at

  his troops. “Spread out. Two dozen rats for the forward perimeter,

  one hundred feet. The rest of the rats, rear perimeter, one hundred

  feet. Veltids and ratkin trio, circle of fifty feet, circle around.

  Fang, you're free to do what you want, but I'd appreciate your close

  support.”

  Looking

  at his horde taking their positions, Seventh continued, ”There's a

  bear I want to reanimate. We are hunting it down, so if you see

  tracks or something bear-like, inform.”

  Taking

  a step forward, the undead held their position, creating a large

  sensory net for Seventh to find his prey.

  indecent amount of trivia about bovine copulation and absolutely no filter. Those six hours are buried somewhere deep in my brain and occasionally resurface when I’m standing in the milk aisle.

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