home

search

Chapter 41 - Open Wounds

  Seventh

  stared as the dying embers slowly ate through the wood in a

  fireplace. The logs were almost all burnt to ash, barely held

  together by the last vestiges of glowing wood.

  The

  fire would die out soon. Leaving the room in darkness.

  Blinking

  at the thought, Seventh looked around. He was sitting on a simple

  wooden stool in a dark room dimly lit by the fireplace. He couldn't

  see the walls, but the room felt constrained. Small.

  The

  floor was filthy. Dust was everywhere, and old pools of blood could

  be seen on the splintered floorboards.

  It

  all felt... familiar, yet so distant.

  He

  wasn't supposed to be here.

  Slowly

  rising up, Seventh felt his wound ache. Warm, piercing pain pulsing

  with a heartbeat. Not his, he didn’t feel anything on his chest.

  Raising

  his hand to hold the wound, Seventh saw his skin. Green, yellow, and

  black. Rot and decay. Missing fingers and bone splinters tearing the

  skin open.

  The

  room shuddered.

  Seventh's

  breath quickened.

  Nononono!

  This isn't... not... not again! Nononono—


  His

  other hand was the same. Slowly rotting away. Seventh could smell the

  stench of his own decomposition.

  A

  familiar whistling wheeze broke above the rising tinnitus. The wound

  on his throat was back.

  With

  a shuddering boom, the whole room tilted, throwing Seventh to a wall,

  next to a window without glass. He could only see the darkness and

  twisting purple haze outside.

  Twisting

  lightning lit the rising spires in the night.

  His

  head hurt, a splitting headache slammed into him as the wood and

  stone started to crumble all around him. The roof snapped in half,

  and a tidal wave of burnt-red roof tiles fell to the floor,

  shattering into pieces.

  The

  wound throbbed faster and faster. An echo of a heartbeat he didn’t

  have.

  With

  a final, snapping shudder, the wood below Seventh gave away to the

  rot and abuse, plunging him into the darkness.

  He

  started to scream.

  The

  frightened wail continued without a breath all the way down to the

  pile of writhing undead who surged forwards to grab him, and pull his

  head below the surface of writhing heads and limbs.

  He

  was home, next to his heartless brethren.

  The

  scream continued to the real world as Seventh awakened on the mossy

  forest floor, met by a cheesy stench of Fang-Knife's breath and a

  raised arm readied for the next slap.

  Seventh's

  cheek pulsed in pain and heat. He squinted at his minion still

  putting pressure on his wound by kneeling on him.

  Fang's

  eyes narrowed as he surveyed his groggy master. The Necromancer

  clearly wasn’t fully in this world, so the ratkin gave him a quick,

  crisp slap to the cheek.

  ”Fang...would

  you kindly get your face off from mine?” Seventh asked with a croak

  as the slap's echo slowly died down. He felt like he had been thrown

  down a cliff straight to a smaller ravine, and rolled flat with

  uneven rolling pins.

  The

  nursing ratkin squeaked happily, seeing his master alive and well.

  Well...

  at least live.

  Seventh

  saw Potion Toxicity had gone away, and drew a Healing Potion from his

  belt.

  ”Good

  job,” Seventh said before hungrily gulping the potion down, feeling

  the liquid surge inside him, trying to mend his broken body back

  together.

  As

  his general condition improved significantly, he noticed that the

  Bleeding effect was still active and the arrow wound refused to

  close.

  Pulling

  three more potions out of his inventory— two for him, one for Fang—

  he slurped his potions down to get his flesh fully knitted together.

  The wound started to close, pushing red bandages out, but stayed

  open, keeping the effect active.

  Now

  that the Wizard-Killing Arrow didn't hinder his casting, Seventh

  tried to cleanse the Bleeding away with the Mantle of Decay.

  The

  spell failed, and he kept bleeding.

  A

  cold sweat trickled down Seventh's brow.

  With

  only mild panic, he checked his LOG for answers and found a

  displeasing one.

  Seventh

  slowly turned his head to look at the body next to him. The bandit

  woman was peacefully looking up, eyes slowly glazing over. How many

  times had they used the same tactic? Was she at Iron rank?

  Focus,

  that is not important now. How long does the Bleeding lasts? Can it

  be stemmed? Situation, resources, action
.

  7.89%

  success rate for survival per cast was a chance any dying man would

  gladly take. Having enough mana for five casts, the success was

  almost guaranteed in Seventh's mind.

  After

  five failed casts and a beginning headache after using all of his

  mana, Seventh contemplated his math skills and muttered low curses.

  Applying

  pressure, the bleeding effect greyed in and out while the timer

  continued ticking down, but every three seconds or so, Seventh lost a

  percent of his health, meaning he would bleed out in three minutes or

  so at full health, which he wasn't.

  The

  bleeding hadn't been nearly as fast during the fight. Seventh thought

  that he must have done some additional damage when he pulled the

  arrow out.

  Rookie

  mistake. Never hurt yourself more than needed,
he thought as he

  opened his Inventory Screen.

  He

  still had a grand total of eleven Healing Potions— yes, everyone

  with a bottomless inventory Skill becomes a hoarder, especially with

  potions and food— meaning he could heal himself fully almost three

  times, but the Potion Toxicity would kick in after three potions or

  so.

  Seventh

  hadn't actually tested how many Healing Potions he could drink, but

  since his Mana Potion Tolerance was five, it would be around that.

  If

  only Mantle could clear out the Toxicity... I could just drink

  potions without a care in the world!


  Slapping

  himself hard, Seventh forced himself to focus on the situation.

  With

  the bleeding effect running at over fifteen minutes... he was a dead

  man many times over if he didn't figure something out.

  “Fang,

  check their pockets and belts. Bring me all the medical equipment and

  potions they have.” Seventh ordered as he kept the pressure up and

  slowly counted seconds go by as he dragged himself to lean on a

  nearby tree.

  He

  had vain hopes that the change of position would help, but all it did

  was to expend his dwindling energy. The short crawl had winded him

  up, and all he could do was short, shallow breaths.

  The

  bandits had only a single expired healing kit and one Healing Potion

  each. Useless junk for Seventh's predicament.

  Health

  and options slowly disintegrating, Seventh considered a more drastic

  option, possession.

  If

  he chose to use his racial ability, he'd have to enter either one of

  the bandits' bodies he had just killed, a rotting bear carcass, or

  one of his minions' bodies.

  Every

  single option was worse than the other.

  Who

  knew what kind of psychological damage entering another human's body

  and mind would do to Seventh, not to talk about a veltid mind.

  Seventh shuddered, equally from the thought and the bloodloss. A

  large pool had started to form under him.

  Maybe

  he could pray for God of Hunting, Monsters for help?

  This

  whole shebang was clearly in the loony god's territory. There was a

  litter of monsters all around, and a hunt had been the accelerant for

  the whole event chain.

  But

  no, Seventh wouldn't stoop to praying. There would be a price in

  there somewhere. A price he refused to even look at.

  The

  Loon would demand two left feet or something equally stupid. I

  refuse, thank you very much.


  That

  left the final, and honestly, the most obvious solution.

  Medical

  intervention.

  “Fang,

  other ratkin! Get me wood. Branches, twigs, and some kindling.

  Quickly!”

  Before

  long, a small pile of flammables was in front of Seventh, and he

  searched his satchel for a flint and steel. Quickly snapping the wood

  into smaller pieces and piling them into a small teepee campfire,

  Seventh handed the flint and steel to Fang.

  Even

  without an order, the ratkin promptly struck sparks to the dry wood.

  He and Seventh both blew air into the smouldering pile until it

  caught a flame, and a small campfire started to warm Seventh up. He

  hadn't even noticed how cold he was and chugged down a potion. As a

  small graze, Potion Toxicity didn't activate yet, giving Seventh just

  a handful of moments more time.

  Stoking

  the fire, he ordered Fang to bring the last item he needed, the

  archer's dagger. It was long and sleek, perfect for stabbing,

  slicing, and cutting unsuspecting throats but not much else.

  Seventh's own knife was a single-bladed utility knife equally as good

  for chopping small woods or whittling kindling, and stabbing small

  monsters.

  Weighing

  the pros and cons between the knives, Seventh plunged his own into

  the fire. While he waited for it to gain some colour, he and Fang

  laboriously undressed Seventh's upper half. He felt every small nudge

  and shift in his posture, much more painful than during fighting. All

  his adrenaline had drained up long ago, and now Seventh was running

  on pure desperation and stubbornness.

  Knife

  starting to faintly glow red, Seventh positioned himself as well as

  he could, making practice movements with his hands while Fang pressed

  the wound.

  Making

  sure Fang knew the plan and everything was ready, Seventh drank the

  fifth potion, ignoring the Toxicity icon popping in his vision.

  He

  had full health. He

  hoped it was enough.

  Making

  deep and slow breaths, Seventh tried to find a happy little place for

  his mind to wander, but all he had was a cosy little corner in a

  Necromancer's guild hall.

  It

  would have to do.

  The

  dagger sliced his flesh easily, it had been kept sharp. Seventh

  grunted between his teeth, sending spit flying, as he furiously

  searched the bleeding vein. He couldn't just slap the heated knife on

  his skin, the bleeding spot had to be cauterised, not just the

  superficial wound.

  He

  felt blood squirting next to his fingers. He

  would aim there.

  After

  a handful of quick, shallow breaths, Seventh grabbed his own knife

  and plunged it in.

  His

  roar of pain echoed in the darkening forest, making a flock of birds

  take flight as they scrambled to get away from the pained monster

  within the Whispering Delta.

  He

  wasn't sure if he lost consciousness.

  All

  was pain and wiggly lines in his vision.

  There

  was a bright blue in front of him.

  The

  sky? His Heaven?

  It

  promised salvation with a word. He remembered the boiling healing of

  potions. He accepted and croaked his salvation.

  Rejuvenate.

  Rejuvenate, Rejuvenate

  Purple

  was spreading in his vision—

  A

  triad of slaps woke him up yet again, and Fang was offering a Healing

  Potion. Groggy, but not too much to check his icons, Seventh saw his

  Potion Toxicity had been cleared and gladly accepted the potion.

  Trying

  to keep his eyes open was too hard, so he focused on his HUD. There

  were... surprises in his LOG

  

  Letting

  out a mroan— a simultaneous groan and moan— Seventh squeezed his

  eyes tightly closed in anger. That was four classes now, and half of

  them were non-combat ones. Wasn't one hard-to-train class enough? Had

  there had to be another one?

  Don't

  judge too hastily, Seventh. Rejuvenate has been good so far. A little

  healing hasn't hurt anybody.


  Saving

  his judgment for later, the Bleeding Necromancer of the Dark Woods

  checked his new class while he waited for the strength to return to

  his limbs.

  Cursed

  be Caleb Garth and his brainwashing ways! That last one is clearly

  some Fleshcrafter adjacent Skill!


  Seventh

  had been tricked, and quite possibly, bamboozled into some diluted

  zombie crafting Path. At least the Skills were useful at this red

  minute.

  Holding

  his left hand on his freshly burnt skin, Seventh chanted, “Numb.”

  It

  didn't feel pleasant, hot or cold. All Seventh could feel in the

  Skill's area of effect was emptiness. It wasn't... bad, but the Skill

  clearly wasn't for combat. It was more like for patching wounds after

  a mass casualty event and keeping people alive until a proper healer

  passed by.

  Seventh

  wasn't quite sure which one was worse: the stabbing pain or the

  hollowness from Numb.

  Lifting

  his head up and daring to open one eye, Seventh looked at his

  slightly burnt and charred wound. It was the culprit of the whole

  Class Obtaining.

  The

  major problem with Numb was that it needed a willing target, meaning

  that Seventh couldn't use it in a fight before he figured out how to

  use it offensively. Ranking it up would be a chore.

  Out

  of the three new Skills, Material Recomposition: Organic was the most

  interesting one. It had a similarly detached language as in Void of

  Entropy, down to the coldly clinical indexing and the restrictions,

  but here was one major difference: Recomposition wasn't restricted to

  dead material.

  Seventh

  looked at his right hand, and its two short stubs for fingers. With

  enough practice, he could grow his them back, have a better grip on

  his weapons and...

  Seventh

  stopped the train of thought before it even started properly and

  shook his stubbed hand.

  He

  needed that broken hand to remind him, to keep him reigned in, when

  he was starting to feel cocky. He should probably have been watching

  that hand today more, but hubris was dangerous.

  He

  should have gone back to the village to find a guide. He didn't.

  He

  should have turned back when he felt something odd in the forest. He

  hadn't.

  He

  should have a party backing him up, not just a horde.

  ...well,

  that would need some socialising. How is that going again?


  “It's

  going pretty bloody well, thanks for asking,” Seventh muttered out

  loud, earning a questioning squeak from Fang, who offered him another

  potion. Seventh refused it with a dismissive hand-wave.

  “Thanks,

  but I think we can save up with the potions.”

  He

  felt the System pushing inside his head, but he didn't want to look

  at the messages and pushed them away. Seventh knew what they would

  say, give him praise and shower him with progress.

  It

  all felt so hollow right now. He had wanted that to happen after

  killing monsters, not... not like this.

  The

  bandit woman was lying still on the green moss. Her hand was still

  holding her sliced open throat, painting her hand red. A tear had dug

  a groove down her face, a single clean spot on her young face.

  After

  slowly getting himself up, Seventh found himself looking down at the

  woman. Her mana was still there, beckoning to be used, whispering

  about the great power an advanced undead born from a human corpse

  would give.

  Seventh's

  hand rose as mana collected around his fingertips.

  A

  bear was a fine price, but nothing compared to trained killers. What

  could an undead Berserker do? How about that Swordsman with earth

  Skills? Untold terror and damage to Seventh's enemies.

  Glory

  and victory. Power.

  Seventh

  tapped his temple with his palm as the purple portal to somewhere

  else sucked in the bandit's corpse.

  He

  had made a promise to her, no matter how hollow and meaningless, but

  it was still his word. He didn't have much else, so morals were

  something to hold on to.

  Still,

  the temptation was there even when Seventh stored the two other

  bandits. He hadn't promised anything to them, but...

  They

  deserve something decent as a burial, I suppose.


  He

  wanted to do something. To cry, yell at the Heavens, kick and scream

  until his voice went hoarse.

  Something.

  Instead,

  all he felt was the tiredness and cold slowly creeping into his

  hands, and loneliness. He hoped it was a normal reaction. There

  wasn’t anybody to ask. Not anybody living, anyway.

  Collecting

  all his equipment, armour, and the bandit's dropped gear, Seventh

  stumbled to the cavemouth. The stench wasn't as bad as he expected,

  but it was... pungent. Something he could almost bite

  into.

  Most

  of his horde was already gone, casting Raise Dead to the bear was

  pleasantly cheap, and soon the undead bear sauntered out of the cave

  for Seventh's assessment. He ignored the System trying to invade his

  consciousness and focused on the new undead.

  It

  was Easily eight feet high when standing on its hind

  legs, possibly weighing tons.

  After

  hanging a corpse lantern on the bear's neck, Seventh sent it to his

  voidspace just to get some fresh air, but the cave still emanated a

  strong reminder of Seventh's new furry undead's unpleasant passing.

  Wrinkling

  his nose, Seventh looked around in the forest. It was getting dark

  quickly, and he wasn't nowhere near good shape enough to get away

  from the possible umbrefel hunting grounds.

  “Ehh,

  balls. I have to sleep in there, don't I?” Seventh asked nobody in

  particular, but nevertheless got an affirming nod from Fang.

  Turning

  to glare at his minion incredulously, Seventh asked, “How are you

  
so calm about going in there? What about your nose?”

  Smiling

  smugly, Fang pointed at his nose, pinched his fingers together, and

  twisted while making a clicking sound.

  “Now,

  that's some royal bullshit. Why can't turn my nose off? I'm

  an undead!”

  Fang

  crossed his arms and looked up at Seventh.

  “...technically,”

  he muttered in defeat. “Let's just check the cave out and decide

  then. I'm too weak to argue or to find a new camping spot.”

  Slowly

  descending the sloped floor with shaking legs, Seventh found out the

  obvious source of the stench: a large pool of dried, rotting blood.

  The

  simplest solution would be just to create a large sheet of Bone Wall

  to block out the smell, but then there wouldn't be enough casts to

  block the cave securely. Kneeling next to the blood, Seventh looked

  over his new Skills. It wouldn't hurt to test one out. Worst-case

  scenario, he would waste some mana. Best-case scenario, no more

  smelly cave.

  After

  tentatively poking the blood with his finger, Seventh silently

  chanted, “Reconstitute.”

  His

  vision was quickly bombarded with a wild collection of angry blue

  boxes that hurt his tired eyes and mind. Most of them didn't even

  make sense to Seventh. The boxes were filled with text and pictures

  of organs, bones, and pieces of meat, all angrily telling him with

  big red letters that he couldn't do that specific Reconstitute due to

  his low mana.

  Most

  of the boxes were different transmutations from one material to

  another, with varying costs. He started to click the boxes away until

  he was left with only one:

  There was a weird bar with a diamond shaped selector for Seventh to choose. He didn't recognise the symbols changing as he moved a slider to the far

  right, the max amount.

  When

  he confirmed his selection, all of his mana flowed out of him, making

  his weak knees give out, slamming him into a cursing heap.

  His

  dignity was wounded further by a quiet snicker from Fang.

  From

  his downed position, Seventh's displeasure quickly dissipated as he

  saw his new Skill in action. The dry blood cracked open and started

  to flow as a liquid into a single point, forming a perfect sphere of

  stark-white flesh gleaming with crimson blood right in front of

  Seventh's eyes.

  Even

  Fang seemed fascinated by the show and poked the quivering ball with

  his finger after all the blood had condensed into flesh.

  “Okay...

  That was interesting,” Seventh said as he lifted the ball for examination.

  It

  was a heavy, solid mass of flesh and nothing else. The Necromancer

  wondered if it would make a good steak.

  Probably?

  But it's made from... rotted blood. Yeah, hard pass.


  Deciding

  he would find something to do with a ball of bear meat on a later

  date, Seventh dropped the ball in his inventory and raised Bone Walls

  to block the cavemouth.

  For

  extra security, he meticulously created a dozen clear white balls of

  light to shine light into every nook and cranny in the cave, making

  it one hundred percent protected from umbrefels. He still had to cast

  the spell the Wizardy way, the System hadn't granted him the skill,

  but Seventh had a nagging suspicion that would change soon.

  Safe

  inside a lighted-up cave, Seventh let out a relaxed sigh, rolling his

  shoulders. There was a lot of tension to be unwound there, but now...

  he was too tired to even make dinner, not to mention a proper

  stretching. He would do all that in the morning.

  As

  he started to gnaw a bar of dried meat and wheat freshly dropped from

  his inventory, Seventh glanced at Fang. The entrepreneurial ratkin

  had found bones from the cave and was happily whittling them into

  whatever Fang always did with the bones and other monster pieces he

  had picked up on the way.

  “Fang,

  catch!”

  The

  ratkin's eyes went huge when he saw the two Semner-cheese wheels

  rolling towards him. He squeaked in joy and pounced on his prize,

  meeting Seventh's gaze with eyes shimmering with excitement.

  “Yeah,

  both are for you. You did an excellent job keeping me alive. Thank

  you.”

  The

  minion and his Necromancer stared at each other for a long while

  before making simultaneous manly grunts and nods, both returning to

  their own nighttime preparations.

  Looking

  over his battered armour, Seventh remembered his arm wound from the

  Stone Spike and inspected the damage. The ripped open wound had

  already scabbed all over, and the more serious wound on his chest

  stole all the attention Seventh had for pain.

  Healing

  Potions hadn't done much for the wound. Those always tried to heal

  the most serious injuries first, and had just stemmed the bleeding

  when Seventh had slammed potion after potion to keep himself alive.

  Now

  that he had time and mana, Seventh focused on the information

  trickling inside his head, teaching him the correct usage of

  Rejuvenate.

  It

  turned out all he needed to do was think of the area he wanted the

  magic to focus on and cast the spell. Additionally, the Spell could

  also replace his lost blood.

  “Rejuvenate.”

  His

  arm tingled as his body sped up the healing process and slowly shed

  the dried blood and scab off his arm. Seventh had focused on his arm

  specifically, and a pulsing green cross icon verified the spell

  worked on his hand exclusively.

  How

  about a general one?


  Even

  though one spell was already active, a general Rejuvenate started to

  work on all of the aches and pains all over Seventh's body. He didn't

  feel a tingle, but he trusted something was happening. The pressure

  increasing from the System's intruding scratching more or less

  confirmed that.

  Both

  of the spells had a ten-minute timer, and the amount they healed

  Seventh was quite lacking compared to the mana used. That, combined

  with the slowness of the spell, made Rejuvenate a bad choice for

  combat, cementing Seventh's assessment of the Class as a non-combat

  one.

  A

  third cast started to replenish Seventh's parched blood vessels with

  brand new blood. With three active healing spells, Seventh felt a

  little smug. This was some great savings on Healing Potions.

  And,

  of course, he could use Rejuvenate on his minions!

  After

  slapping the same three Rejuvenates on Fang, there wasn't much for

  Seventh to do except to drop his blanket and pillow to the floor and

  find a good spot to crash out.

  Curling

  under a warm blanket, his mind wandered through the day. The mistakes

  he had made. A possible outcome if he had been prepared.

  What

  if he had been with the West Wind? Or a similar team?


  A

  Ranger or Scout would have informed of the oddness of the forest, a

  Leader would have made them move more carefully, and the bandits

  would have probably run away in fear.

  The

  bear would have been found dead, and Seventh would have bitched and

  moaned about lost fighting experience and Class rank-ups. Everybody

  would have gone to bed happily and unharmed.

  Maybe

  there would have even been some light horseplay on Seventh's sour

  mood.

  But

  no, that didn't happen.

  Now,

  Seventh was trying to find a good position with his aching body.

  Rejuvenate had run out long ago, and Seventh was oddly hesitant to

  cast it, feeling like he should still feel the pain. Make it matter.

  “Fang?”

  Seventh asked, looking at the lit roof. “Should we join a party?”

  “Squeak?”

  
The ratkin's voice was full of surprise, and Seventh heard a

  faint of a dropped cheese and a panicked scramble to pick

  it up again.

  Fang's

  momentary panic made Seventh chuckle a little. “Shocking, I know.

  We're not exactly the party material, but... today was close. Way too

  close.”

  Fang

  grunted defiantly and loudly sniffed from his cheese and bone-filled

  corner.

  “Oh

  yeah? Easy for you to say, I'm the one dying over here! Or I was,

  Spells are awesome... How would you feel if you were the one bleeding

  and dying? Actually, can you even bleed...? That doesn't matter— we

  two are connected, remember?”

  Seventh

  waved his finger between himself and Fang.

  “If

  I go, you will probably too. Not immediately, sure, but you're not

  like... me. You will stop ranking, and sometime in the future you'll

  stumble on something too much to chew on.”

  Like

  today. Luck will always run out, it is a finite resource.


  Silence

  fell in the cave as Fang stopped his whittling and changed his

  position. Seventh didn't see the ratkin's face, but he could feel the

  stare.

  “Let's

  face it, we— have winged it this far, but if I get almost

  killed every time we dip our toes into the deeper waters... We'll be

  killing rats and slimes until our hair and fur turns grey— or we

  die next week while over-extruding ourselves.”

  Seventh

  slowly lifted his head to meet Fang's stare. “I don't know about

  you, but that doesn't sound like the adventuring I signed up to do.

  The rat hunting and constant near-death experience, I mean. I want to

  help people. help people”

  He

  slowly lowered his head, closing his tired eyes. “Can't do that if

  you're dead... or eat cheese for that matter.”

  Seventh

  heard skittering and footsteps closing next to him. Upon lazily

  opening his eye, he saw Fang-Knife inches away from his face.

  The

  ratkin's dark, beady eyes stared down at him, evaluating his

  condition. Seeming his master fit, Fang flicked his finger painfully

  straight in the middle of Seventh's forehead.

  “What???”

  Seventh asked, irritated. The flick had come with considerable

  strength behind it.

  Fang

  pointed his gnarled finger at Seventh and then tapped his temple. He

  shook his head and made a sleeping noise.

  Slowly

  piecing together the pantomime, Seventh nodded. “I'll still wanna

  look into partying with other people tomorrow. This isn't just some

  stress release talking.”

  Fang

  made a deadpan stare at Seventh.

  “It

  isn't!... not that much anyways.”

  The

  ratkin slumped his shoulder in defeat and slapped his face, letting

  his hand slowly slide down.

  A

  worried expression rose to his fur-covered features as he signed by

  tapping his finger on his head, explosion sign, Fang hitting

  himself... tomorrow?

  “I

  don't follow. What?” Seventh asked with a puzzled expression.

  Fang

  stayed still for a long moment, wiggling his fingers and pondering

  how he could convey his meaning. Instead, the ratkin just shrugged

  and returned to his side of the cave.

  “Hey!

  What, Fang? What?” Seventh asked again with a rising annoyance, but

  all he got as an answer was just a retching sound.

  “Nevermind

  then. Keep your secrets. I'm too tired to think anyway,” Seventh

  said, almost spitting the words out. Who cared what a ratkin thought?

  As

  Seventh slowly slipped into unconsciousness, the System finally won

  the prolonged mental tug-of-war, and a split second before Seventh

  fell asleep, his mind was invaded by a swarm of blue boxes, slapping

  his mind wide awake.

  “For

  fucks sake, can't a man sleep in here without any interruptions?!”

  The

  Annoyed Necromancer of the Cave continued to grumble as he looked the

  boxes over.

  

  

  Seventh made a weary chuckle.

  The Soldier Class had popped like an overripe melon in a sweltering summer's heat— and Necromancer had taken a mighty leap towards Iron rank.

  There wasn't any happiness from the rank-up. Just regret what had been the final push for Seventh's progress.

  Three dead bandits, floating now somewhere in the Void of Entropy, waiting for a tomorrow, and an awkward conversation with the Watch or whoever took in the bandit bounties.

Recommended Popular Novels