Book 1: Chapter 9: Human affairs II
Morning could not come quickly enough. By the time dawns first rays broke the horizon, I was wide awake. Breakfast already in my belly and mind filled with unreasonable excitement, I was already outside to greet the sun.
Most of the wagon had stayed loaded throughout the night with only the essentials being taken inside before I collapsed. Half-way through my stride I froze and realized a new, massive issue.
I had no hats.
This small, inconsequential detail bothered me. Before, I had always worn hats. Caps covered my head at all times, shielded my eyes from the sun and kept the dirt from my brow. Here, I had nothing. I was bare. Exposed. Just as suddenly as the problem had lept upon me, it resided into a malicious giggle beneath the surface.
I would have to rectify this.
But for now, I had fence-posts to pound and a pasture to outline.
A full armload of stakes for Garek proved to cover quite a distance. One of the many things I appreciated about my new body was the large amount it could carry with ease. Although hat-less, I didnt mind. The morning was cool and cloudy, which I preferred. With warhammer in hand and a trail of fenceposts laid out before me, I set to work.
Hold post straight. Whack post. Replace post because it hit a rock and splintered from the force of whack. Consider toning down whacks.
The early morning passed fairly methodically, a simple and repetitive task laid out before me. But it took amazingly little time, and soon I had a fairly large pasture staked out.
Ishila skipped down the road just in time to help me pull the wire. With a much smaller hammer, leverage and specific fence clips, we had multiple rows of wire pulled and the gate mounted before noon.
And now, we need to fill it. I sighed. A shed first, or cows?
Cows. She answered almost immediately. You already have a forest around you as a windbreak. What you dont have are the actual animals. An empty shed produces no product.
Smart. I remarked. Good business sense.
Thanks, She grinned. Got it from Ma.
Well then, I groaned and stretched to work the stiff muscles in my back. Do you know anyone who would sell us cows?
Welllll, Ishila bit her lip and frowned. There was a pensive expression on her face as she chewed over her thoughts before speaking.
I doooo know a fellow. Several, actually. See, we have a few options.
I nodded along as she talked, interested in where this was going. We leaned against the newly erected fence-posts and watched Gol as it sniffed around the wrong side of the fence.
See, if we go regular cows, we need to get a bull, manage pastures, rotate and all that other stuff because they only provide milk when with calf.
Yes, I nodded. I had accounted for this.
Orrrrrrr. She paused again. You could not.
Explain.The debut release of this chapter happened at Ñòv€l-B1n.
My da knows a fellow who modifies animals. Gets em system-touched. One of his applications was farm animals. He breeds a type of cow that never stops havin milk, see?
I blinked and processed this information.
And why is this cow not a common sight on every farm, then?
Well, on account of them being system-touched and with the modifications, theyre now very big and very mean. Like, first-birth momma cow and you just took away her calf mean, xcept its all the time.
Oh. I could see how that would quickly dissuade anyone with any sort of interest. But I was not just anyone, to pat my own proverbial back and hang medals in my own praise.
So, where can we acquire some of these?
Anything she was about to say further was cut off as Ishilas face lit up and she began to violently wave past me. My eyes followed hers and caught the huntresss form just as she seemed to materialize. An active camouflage skill?
Lerish carried a bundle of hides upon her shoulder, which she deposited down and then sat upon. With nary a word, the bronzed woman pulled a pipe from her robes, deposited some clear goo inside, and then lit it with a tap.
Ishila. She nodded in greeting between puffs. Bull.
An excellent morning to you as well. I nodded and glanced at the roll of hides she had brought. That was quick.
Mmmm. She nodded non-committaly. For you, perhaps.
A job done is a job done. I shrugged. Our paces may differ, but it is done the same.
Ishila here knows the location of a farmer willing to sell me cows. A bit stronger and sturdier than usual, or so she says. It would save us quite a bit of time if you could go with her and drive them back here. Ill send you gold to make the purchase immediately.
Lerish nodded as Ishila nodded excitedly behind her back.
I know who you speak of. Have dealt with him before. Can do this.
And with that, they were gone moments later. Ishila waved back, and then they rounded the bend and vanished from sight. With them gone, for now, I sighed and returned to my work. Much as I wanted to go and pore over my new plants, the fields called to be cleared. And my work mattered more than my curiosity. That was the justification I fed myself as I hauled yet another boulder from the ground and tossed it toward the pile I had gathered.
And so my afternoon dragged on. I cleared stumps, hacked apart roots, and yanked trees right out of the ground. With the monotony only broken by short breaks to drink water from the now-clear stream, my mind wandered.
I was becoming used to this world. Getting used to this body. And it felt comfortable. No longer did I awkwardly stumble around, about to trip over my own feet every few steps. Most of the time. The fact that everything and everyone had classes, skills, and levels was not an insane concept anymore, but an everyday thing. Perhaps it was because I had been able to detach from reality back home that I so easily accepted this now.
I still knew little of the local pantheon, what gods were who and what people worshipped. Nor was I in any hurry to entangle myself in that. But I had deduced that most people viewed the system as a tool of the Gods Above, and I had no evidence to suggest otherwise.
The Garek who inhabited this body before had been a man of incredible violence. The Garek that inhabited it now would be a man of incredible farming. The joys of rampant capitalism, I thought to myself. I was ready to introduce them to the world.
But all of this was just an attempt to keep myself occupied, and soon I was bored beyond belief. My mind strayed again and again to my monstrous plants. And after some time, I simply gave up and decided to come back tomorrow.
I had already worked a decent days stretch, and now it was time to slake my thirst for knowledge. Gol followed me towards where the plants had been moved, and then sat back, wary. There was no small amount of satisfaction on my face as I examined the biter pods. There were pieces of small insects scattered about where they were planted. In the single day I had been absent, these plants had grown the most.
Weeds, Ishila had called them. And they seemed to grow as such. But insects were not all. What seemed like rodent pieces lay devoured around the stalks. As I squatted on my haunches, something rustled beneath another plant. A squirrel staggered about beneath the fat leaves of a puffer plant, dazed and with spores all over its fur. It had made it only several steps before the vines bent and the biter pods snapped down.
It was gone before I could blink, and any desire to help the little creature was washed away with fascination as to how these plants worked together.
The wide, fat puffer plants lay dormant on the ground, while the biters were too slow to actually catch animals. By luck, we had planted them close together, and now they worked in tandem. The biters dropped blood near the puffer plants, and I could not yet tell if they fed off the liquid.
Everything and everyone steered clear of the armored ballbomb. There was nothing that went near them. Ishila had warned me of how volatile these were, and each of them was planted separately. Something that had already been useful. Whatever had disturbed this one plant was gone, obliterated by the power of incredible violence. The metallic bulbs that had grown on its outside shell were gone, instead embedded into the rock that surrounded it.
The plant had burst its growths off like high-force projectiles, and whatever had disturbed it was now a smear across the soil. Now it was slowly regrowing, more bulbs sprouting in the bare spots on its carapace. These, I was not eager to disturb, but excited for the applications. Could they be harvested and turned into grenades somehow? The thought both mortified and amused me that I was essentially growing my own grenades.
The small, sickly tree-like growth was the slowest to grow. Small corpses decorated its branches, and a stench of gloom and rot emanated from it. There was an uneasy feeling in my gut as I observed this one in particular, but curiosity outweighed any dread I could sum up. Uneasiness curdled within my gut the longer I stared at it. It was wrong, on some level.
There was a series of vines that dangled grape-like fruits from their stem. There seemed nothing special about these plants, save that the small buds of fruit seemed colorless. Out of curiosity, I snatched up a piece of insect remains from the biter pods and tossed it near the plant. With excruciating slowness, the stalk sunk down until the fruit touched the piece of carapace Id just tossed there. It vanished into the plant on touch, and color spread through it.
Huh.
With a sigh, I heaved myself up and strode over to the crops edge where we had transplanted the pepper-like plants. To some satisfaction of mine, they had not leaked their acidic fluid into the soil and turned everything into a slurry. Instead, it glimmered within cupped leaves, a sweet scent that filled the air. These leaves were unfurled now, large and filled with a shallow pool of acid. As I watched, an insect buzzed by, only to turn around and land on the pepper-like top. A stream of acid squirted from the surface on contact, and I watched in morbid fascination as it ate through the insects body.
There were more, of course. A singular large plant that resembled the early stages of flytrap lay open in the sun, only I could see a tongue that tasted the air and heard rattles within. Another was a single flower perched atop a stiff, narrow stalk that seemed to radiate a golden light.
Any further discovery was interrupted as I saw a man walk up the road from the direction of Hullbretch. Even from a distance, he moved quickly despite taking only what I could see were normal human-sized steps. He appeared smartly dressed, with clothes of good make, a large book in hand, and an air of assurance around himself.
An unexpected guest, perhaps. I did not know where he was headed. Up the mountain, perhaps? Should I warn him of the Apex? As it turns out I neednt have worried as to his destination. The man strode right up to me and sniffed as if he was not a small, skinny thing of a human in front of an eight-foot-tall minotaur.
I am in search of one mister Garek, owner of this property. He sniffed. If you would be so kind as to call him, for I have matters that do not concern the hired help.
A moment passed. Then another as I stood without deigning to reply. Until finally he attempted to break the awkwardness and glanced at papers he carried.
This is the home of one mister Garek, is it not?
Indeed.
The man looked around and adjusted his glasses.
Then, where is the man? I havent all day. Time is Money, after all.
He stands before you. I replied, my tone curt. So far, I counted myself lucky to have escaped those who would belittle me for my race and appearance, but I could not evade them forever.
I say; my word. He grimaced and adjusted his glasses. First that orc and elf interbreeders, and now the bulls? Who next, the goblins?
I do not like your tone, I warned ever so politely. I was not a man to anger easily, but in some magical way, this person knew exactly which buttons to press.
Then it is with great pleasure that I inform you that I care little for what you think. He sniffed again. I am in the employ of Baron Ironmoor, and am here in regards to the sale of this land toyou, apparently.
You have my attention on that matter. State your business.
You see, Garek, here in these lands, we do not believe that the debt incurred by one should be excused with them shuffling off this mortal coil. As you will be pleased to know, the previous owner of this splendid farm incurred a significant sum which is owed to the good baron, and I am here to collect.