Chapter 24: Truth! Honesty!
“Can I see as well?” Xim asked. I also granted her access and sat for several minutes while they combed through the text, my knee bouncing with anxiety.
Name: Arlo, Esquire
Age: 0 (Physical age 18. Actual age 35)
Citizenship: The United States of America
Delver Level: 1
Level Breakdown: Copper: 0, Silver: 0, Gold: 0, Platinum: 1
Special Delves Completed: 0
Health: 362
Health Regeneration: 188/hour
Stamina: 222
Stamina Regeneration: 72/hour
Mana: 45
Mana Regeneration: 16/hour
Race: Human
Subrace: Extradimensional Entity
Birth Sign: The Traveler
Divine Patron: ????
Racial Bonuses:
Adaptable: +100% to crafting skill progression.
Subracial Bonuses:
From the Beyond: Your mind and body have been subjected to incredible dimensional forces and your soul has been irrevocably altered.
Acquired Dimensional Attunement
Dimensional Magic Intrinsic Skill granted at Level 10 (Bonus altered due to inability to acquire Intrinsic Skills when granted)
+100% to Dimensional Magic skill progression
+50% resistance to non-consensual dimensional effects
Granted Active Ability: Shortcut
Birth Sign Bonuses:
Spectacular Vernacular: You have an eidetic memory for languages and an intuitive grasp of grammar. You learn new languages and dialects at incredible speed.
That’s a Lot of Stats!: You can gain bonus attribute points through training up to a maximum score of ten in each attribute.
Divine Bonuses:
Divine Favor: For better or worse you have garnered the attention of a divine being. This divine being is currently your patron and has granted you a series of perks. Continue to garner their favor to be granted additional rewards. Anger your patron and suffer the consequences.
Divine Perks: Respawn, Customized Physical Appearance, Unique Birth Sign, Bonus Item Selection, Carryover Stats.
Carryover Stats: Your achievements from a past life have earned you bonus attribute points to certain stats.
+1 STR
+1 AGI
+1 SPD
+1 FOR
+4 INT
+3 WIS
+2 CHA
+1 LCK
Stats:
Strength 2
Agility 2
Speed 2
Fortitude 22
Intelligence 5
Wisdom 4
Charisma 3
Luck 2
You have 0 points to distribute.
Stat Evolutions:
Fortitude: (2/5)
Level 10: I Can Do This All Day: Health and Stamina regeneration bonuses from Fortitude are doubled.ViiSiit novelbi/n(.)c/(o)m for latest novels
Level 20: Body of Theseus: Extra critical damage you take and status effects you accrue from injuries to your organs is reduced by a % amount equal to your Fortitude. Current critical damage and status effect reduction: 22%.
Level 40: (Locked)
Level 70: (Locked)
Level 100: (Locked)
Attunements: 1/1
Dimensional
Active Skills: 2/10
Oblivion Orb: For the briefest moment you create a small dimensional tear in the shape of an orb in your palm, which transports whatever it touches to another plane of existence. Higher levels of Intelligence increase the size of the orb.
Mana Cost: 5
Cooldown: None
Requirements: Dimensional Attunement
Shortcut: Travel through the cracks between dimensions and teleport to a place you can see within (30) meters. Higher levels of Dimensional Magic skill increase range and may unlock new effects.
Mana Cost: 10
Cooldown: None
Requirements: Dimensional Magic 10
Passive Skills: 2/4
Who Needs a Cleric? (Aura): Level 1
You and your allies gain an additional amount of Health regeneration equal to your Fortitude up to a maximum of 25. Each level beyond the first provides +10% Aura Range and increases maximum base effect by 1.
“Some of this looks normal, though,” he said. “This Exposure Therapy achievement. I got one similar, though the name isn’t the same.”
“Me too,” said Xim. “Mine gave me the option of getting Cleanse as an active ability and made it cost half mana when cleansing poison.”
“That’s pretty good.”
“Yeah. I was looking for Cleanse anyway, so it worked out.”
“If I’m doing my math right,” said Varrin, “then if you trained everything to ten without doing another Delve, you’d already be a D-class Delver.”
“D-class at level one!” said Xim. She looked at me, excited, but quickly realized I had no idea what she was talking about. “Sorry. For reference, a level one Delver is F-class, regardless of the difficulty Delve they did. That’s just how the stats work out. A copper that has done a full career of thirty copper Delves ends up with forty-eight total stats, which barely puts them in E-class.”
“Where do you get forty-eight from?” I said.
“You have eight to start, one in each of your primary stats. Then you get ten to distribute at character creation, so that gives you eighteen. Copper Delves give one stat point a piece, so doing thirty gets you thirty more stats. Add that together and you get forty-eight.”
“The classes are divided into tiers,” said Varrin, ”based on your total number of stats, but that’s something we can go over later. It gets complicated.”
“It’s not that complicated.”
“You’re just saying that because you’ve spent your whole life knowing about it. Imagine trying to explain to a five-year-old the nuance of the Delver tiers.”
“He’s not five.”
“You’re right. His character screen says that he’s zero. Insofar as this world and this culture, that’s the truth.”
“I still don’t think it’s that complicated.”
“How about this,” said Varrin. “Imagine that a Hiwardian peasant woke up in the Third Layer and you wanted to tell them everything about Adaramalech and the nine hierarchies of Ghotrithodon?”
“That’s a bit of an esoteric subject. First, I’d have to figure out how to keep them from dying.”
“Yes. Right now, Arlo is in a similar boat. The Delver tiers don’t matter. What matters is trying to get this figured out so that Arlo doesn’t get killed, kidnapped, or imprisoned.”
“Are those all likely possibilities?” I said.
I began to feel a warmness in my chest over Varrin’s concern. The two of them weren’t freaking out. They weren’t accusing me of being a lunatic or trying to trick them. They weren’t trying to abduct me or sell me to some shady laboratory. They were explaining shit to me. And it seemed like they genuinely wanted to help. It took a huge weight off that I didn’t realize I’d been holding, and I was truly grateful for it.
“Delvers are not a monolithic organization,” said Varrin. “In Hiward, access to the Delves is restricted to the noble classes, but we are bound by treaty to offer a certain number of slots to neighboring nations, whose access is governed by their own rules. Even within Hiward, where Delvers are some of the most visible members of society, many underground organizations still form to achieve their ends through illegal means.”
“He’s saying yes,” said Xim. “People will be very interested in your abilities and even more interested in reincarnation and dimensional travel. While there may not be any official organizations that will lock you in a dungeon and extract your bone marrow, there are some unofficial ones that will.”
“Like the Cabal of Shadows,” said Varrin.
“Or the Obsidian Court,” said Xim.
“Or the Cult of Singularity.”
“Maybe even the Three Scales.”
“I wouldn’t put it past the Beacon Watch, either.”
“Jesus,” I said. “That’s so many. Why are there so many? Why do you know about so many?”
“I’m a low-lord,” said Varrin. “My mother and father keep me apprised of the goings-on in the realms.”
“And I just think they’re neat,” said Xim.
I shuddered.
“There’s enough evidence here to convince most that what you’re saying is at least partially true,” said Varrin. “That information can prove dangerous, so you should be careful who you tell.”
“No trouble there,” I said. “I almost didn’t tell you two.”
“I understand your hesitation, but I also believe that would have made things very difficult for you.”
“So, what now?”
“You’re already in the Delver system. That is proof that you are who you say you are.”
“Like a state-issued ID?” I said.
“More or less.”
“It’s better than that,” said Xim. “Your Delver credentials are embedded in the System itself. The slate Myriam had you touch just shows her the info that’s in there. The System-provided information is absolute proof and can’t be faked.”
“There’s some info that gets added by the government, like entry permissions and Delve fee records,” said Varrin. “It’s easy to tell the difference, though. The System-generated info will always be prioritized.”
“So what all does that do for me?”
“It satisfies almost everything that would require proof of identity,” said Varrin. “For Delvers it is the best form of identification. You can use it to buy property, open bank accounts and lines of credit, or as an entry pass to events where you’re a listed guest, such as balls or private dinners, or any other circumstance where your identity might be questioned.”
“I don’t need to forge a passport and social security number,” I said. “Got it.”
“There is the minor issue of your country of origin, though.”
“Right. The USA. Obviously not a country here, so how does that work?”
“I’m not really sure. Since it’s in the System it won’t be disputed that it exists, but you may be met with some hard questions as to where it is or what it’s like.”
“Is the whole world mapped?” I asked. Varrin shrugged.
“Maybe. Up until a century ago it was common knowledge that the known world was limited to Arzia. However, as technology has improved since the discovery of the Delves, it’s now being theorized that there is more to the world than we thought. There is no country known as the USA in Arzia, but it is possible you could claim to be from beyond the continent’s borders.”
“That’s technically true,” I said.
“That’s my least favorite kind of true,” said Xim.
“You told Myria and Lito that you were portalled in?” said Varrin.
“Yeah.”
“Then you’ll want to keep that story. You’re not from Arzia. You were portalled in for the Creation Delve. And now...”
“He’s stuck here?” suggested Xim.
“That might work. No one here would know where to portal him back to. The issue with that story is how you got on the list without anyone in the Hiwardian government realizing you were from outside of Arzia. If that were the case someone of note would have been made aware, since it confirms the idea that there are nations beyond the ones we know. It probably wouldn’t be the type of thing that is spoken about publicly, so it’s possible that you may get lost in the bureaucracy. Maybe.”
“But if someone starts digging,” I said, “they’d realize no one actually approved my presence.”
“The approval is in the System, though,” said Varrin. “That alone should trump any independent investigation.”
“Is knowing all this part of your lordly training?”
“Yes. It also helps that my parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents are well-known Delvers. My family helped write many of the laws that surround the governance of Delvers and incorporation of the System into the existing power structures.”
“Oh. Ok.”
“The best move would be to have you immigrate. That way you can claim Hiwardian citizenship and avoid questions about the USA.”
“You can just call it the U.S.”
“I thought the USA was already an abbreviated term. It’s what you used earlier.”
“It is, but that’s like, the formal abbreviation? No one really says that. It’s just ‘the US’, or ‘America’. But I always thought America was presumptuous. There’s North America, Central America, South America. It’s not like the US is all of those. It’s not even all of North America.”
“I see. I’ll just say the US then.”
“Thanks.”
“As I was saying, if you immigrate, you can claim Hiward as your home country and that settles most of your problems.”
“Then you’ll just be that weird guy who refers to things that no one understands,” said Xim.
“Like twinkies and hotdogs and AR-15’s?”
“Exactly like that,” said Xim.
“Maybe try not to,” said Varrin. “As tempting as I’m sure you’ll find it.”
“Well, that sounds like a plan.” I stood and stretched, then clapped my hands together.
“So, how do I immigrate?”