Book 1: Chapter 60: Supply and demand.
Logistics was something much easier in imagination than reality, I found. In minds eye, acquiring additional taur-cows for the herd was a task that had been all but fulfilled. I had help, Ishila had the location and the coin was at hand. Now, as I stared down a baleful herd of temperamental half-monsters, I found myself unsure.
There was remarkably little I could do with a small whip in one hand and a dream in the other. A half-hearted crack at the air elicited no more than a few snorts of disdain. The pressure of Skills waiting to be chosen hovered at the edge of my vision, forcibly ignored as I attempted to challenge the systems patience.
Harder. Ishila grunted, followed by the air being loudly split apart. Her own whip came down mere handspans from a taur-cows face. If those flat faces could convey emotion, this one would be distinctly unimpressed.
Should have brought Gol. I sighed and contemplated the trek back. We would need to travel downhill, cut across several areas and finally meet up with the road that would lead back up the terrain towards my farm. I had started the journey exceptionally early with the assumption we would have returned by noon. I saw now my naivety and arrogance for daring to think that.
The farmer -if indeed I could call him that- offered no help whatsoever. He had happily taken my coin, opened the gate to the small, cramped pasture that contained this sullen herd, and promptly retreated to his decrepit cabin.
This was firmly our problem now. The sale had been made, and he had no further obligations in this matter.
Off tah try an find the next big breakthrough. Ishila mentioned once she followed my gaze. That coins gonna be gone within the next full moon, Id wager. Man could be half-rich by now but keeps throwin it at every new fancy an experiment that catches his eye.
The sight of this shoddy cabin, run-down yard, sagged fences, overgrown weeds combined with the general gloom struck a feeling in me. Almost pity, but also a hint relief at my own situation, weirdly enough.
This doesnt make him enough coin? I asked with another ineffective crack, my irritation mounting as the taur-cows refused to budge.
Heavens, yes. Ishila almost laughed. There some folks that pay ludicrous amounts for some of his experiments, but, if ya dont mind me bein blunt, he pisses it all away. New toys he uses once and never again, some expensive enchantents from far-off lands that dont live up to the myth, the most inane things. Ma and Pa have tried to help him since he crafted up some stuff for them, but he dont want none.
No one can argue hes not a genius, She scowled, face turned uncharacteristically sour. But people round here dont want occasional burst of glory followed by throughs of mediocrity. They want consistency and stability. Results delivered on time so their own businesses and farms can function without gamblin on someone elses moods.
Sounds to me like you speak from experience.
Yeah. Was all I got in return.
There was a brief moment in which I realized this man mirrored me in many aspects. A product in demand, ways of achieving it unbeknownst to others, resources at his command. Yet according to Ishila, he was content to squander it. It was at that time that I inwardly decided I would never be the same. Deliveries would be on time, rain or shine. I had established myself as a friendly, valuable source of goods in the area. Now I needed to prove the most meaningful test of all; reliability.
But first, these cows had to be driven home, and I tired of their disdain.
You may want to cover your ears. I suggested mildly, letting the whip fall and feeling the dry air sucked into my lungs. Scream of Fury shattered the air heartbeats after Ishilas hand clamped to her head. The shockwave of sound and sheer anger flared reaction and movement in the herd. The shifting mass turned and began to trot away, mooing all the while as they funneled down the narrow path.
Sometimes, all one needed was a little fear.
That works. Ishila commented as she jogged alongside me to keep up with the herds pace.
Not the skills intended use, but I would take it. Stubborn as they were, the taur-cows were still beasts, and prone to guidance from their instincts. They slowed, of course. Base fear only lasted for so long. Yet I was eager to supply them with more roars, much to the dismay of whatever wildlife existed nearby. Birds flapped from trees, animals burst from the bush and scattered in random directions as my wake continued.
Do tell. Ishila drawled.
The dungeon is waking rapidly. And with it, the danger grows with each day.
We knew this already. I confirmed the obvious.
Not to this extent. What we see now is merely the first shard stirred. The base monsters that swarm from the forts entrance stem from that sphere of influence. Now that it has shaken off the chains of slumber, it seeks to extend its influence towards the other shards. It is a vast mess of ecosystems and share-cores that all remain connected to the final, deepest layer of the dungeon, or so I suspect.
And now, the foremost part has been tickled awake. I have stalked the dungeons halls unseen, and insofar, only it has been woken. Why or how the rest has slept so far remains a mystery, but we must act soon, or it will not slumber for long.
So we prepare to storm the dungeons gates, then. I sighed. There had been some faint hope that if the situation could not be resolved without me, it would at least be delayed some time further in the future.
No. Tehalis grunted. A frontal assault would fail, regardless of how well our current numbers worked together. The swarm that awaits within will overrun almost any force. To attempt it would be the basest stupidity.
Then how? Ishila demanded.
The huntress searches for the Dreadknights tower and entrance concealed within. Tehalis stated. I will aid her search from within the dungeon myself.
Youll be fine? I asked, a healthy dose of skepitism in my mind. Much as I did not doubt she was a fearsome warrior, she had just finisged saying any frontal assault would fail.
The swarm cannot strike at what it cannot sense, bull. The Wyld Orc said. With the huntress searching overland and with my efforts to locate this shaft from within, we may soon find it. We need to find it.
Very well. I nodded. I will stand ready for when the time comes.
Good. Increase your alertness around here as well. The fort is quickly becoming an untenable position to hold. They know this. Even now, we have found traces of some stealth variant of these monsters slipping over the walls at night and disappearing into the forests. Be on your guard at all times.
Stock up on every item of importance you can think of. Tehalis looked around with those intense eyes. Once we enter the dungeon, none of us leave until the task is completed. We succeed, or we are buried in there.
You would lay down your life for these people? I asked with a genuine curiosity. Given what I knew of her and the elf, they did not strike me as the type.
No. Not for these humans. Not ever. But to stop another full awakening and the shambling apocalypse that follows The Swarm That Walks, yes. There are some things worth dying for.
The task before us is monumental, then. Are you sure we are enough for the occasion?
The nearest help is weeks away. These elite hunters that the Verdant Dawn has promised your human friend remain unknown, and even with news of a possible dungeon, it still requires time to travel to the ass-end of nowhere. I would place little faith in outside help at this point, minotaur. We will have to be enough.
And on that cheeery note, The orc departed as quickly as she had came, silence left in her wake.