The boar charged, a steam engine made of muscle and ivory. Mud
didn’t flinch or cower. He calmly leveled the Staff of Embers, and
a firebolt hissed through the air, catching the beast squarely on the
side of its jaw. The impact forced the creature to veer, its hooves
digging deep into the dirt and loam as it skidded to a halt.
Before the beast
could recover for a second pass, the shadows of the plains came to
life.
A tide of fur and
teeth erupted from every crevice. Led by Ricky, the small army of
rats swarmed the boar, scaling its legs like acrobats and burying
themselves in its thick hide. The boar squealed, bucking and twisting
in a wild attempt to dislodge the biting frenzy. Its health bar
flickered, bleeding away under a dozen tiny, relentless attacks.
With a desperate
heave, the boar sent the last of the rats flying and lowered its head
for a final, suicidal charge. Mud was already prepared. His firebolt
hit the monster directly between its eyes.
There was an
explosion of white, and it was over.
[Mud has reached
Level 3]
[Ricky has
reached Level 3]
[Summon Monster
reached Level 3: Master and Commander Unlocked] Summon
multiple monster
simultaneously. The number of monsters summoned depends on the
strength and mana of the caster.
The small army, two
dozen strong, sauntered back toward him. They sat on their haunches
in a perfect, eerie semicircle, forty-eight beady eyes locked onto
Mud with absolute discipline. At their head stood Ricky, a general
among his men, thanks to his new ability: [Rat King]
With a silent wave
of his hand, the rats fanned out, vanishing into the brush in a dozen
different directions, hunting for a specific target.
This was their
eighth kill this morning, if you counted the five that Layhla had
effortlessly destroyed nearby. But none of them were the target that
Mud was searching for.
The system prompt
was clear: .
That was the
stipulation needed to add the Great Boar to his team, but first he
needed to locate his old nemesis.
“You’re
improving!”
Layhla trotted
over. She glanced at the lingering line of rats as they dispersed
into the tall grass. “I can’t say I’m a fan of Ricky’s new…
fan club, but I can’t deny their usefulness. They’re effective
little terrors.”
“The smaller ones
are good practice, but they aren’t the real prize,” Mud said,
adjusting his new black feather cloak. His gaze traveled over the
emerald, shimmering reaches of the plains. “If we can bring their
boss down, it adds an incredible boost to my combat effectiveness.”
“I like this side
of you,” she said, shoving him playfully. Her eyes were bright and
proud, offering him one of her rare, genuine smiles. “You’re
finally starting to find some confidence in yourself. Something that
might be even more important than being a good fighter.”
Mud kicked at a dry
patch of hard-packed dirt, creating a small wave of dust that floated
gracefully away on the breeze. He watched it scatter, trying to hide
the sudden red that enveloped his cheeks.
The tale has been illicitly lifted; should you spot it on Amazon, report the violation.
“I don’t know
if I’d call it confidence,” he whispered, “More like
make-believe. Like a child playing with dolls.”
He grunted and
shook his head. “Fake it till you make it, I guess.”
Sudden, acute
turmoil replaced the smile on Layhla’s face. “Fake it till you
make it…” she repeated, her voice quietly trailing off, lost
somewhere in the vast open plains.
With a sudden jolt,
she turned on him. Her bright blue eyes weren’t just angry; they
were desperate, a thunderstorm.
“I hate that
saying. It’s stupid. It’s… it’s a lie,” she hissed, her
voice trembling with an unnatural intensity. “Don’t ‘fake’
anything, Mud.”
She jabbed her
finger into his chest, her touch pointed and sharp. “Just do. Push
forward. Overcome the obstacle. When you stand over that smoking hunk
of meat, victorious.” Her finger pointed directly between his eyes.
“Look for another obstacle.”
For a second she
went blank, completely frozen, like the world had lagged for just a
moment. Her arm, that had been aimed for his face, dropped
mechanically to her side.
Mud stared at her,
nearly petrified and confused by the raw, existential panic behind
her eyes, as if his simple, off-handed statement had tugged at a
thread that threatened to unravel her entire persona. “Okay…”
he stammered, placing a jittery hand on her shoulder to steady her.
“Layhla? Are you alright?”
She glared at him,
but it was becoming softer and losing its edge. “I’m fine, let’s
just push forward.” She swiped his hand from her shoulder. “And
don’t touch me.”
The heavy,
suffocating silence was shattered by a returning line of rats. Ricky
trotted proudly at the head of the swarm, chittering and snapping his
jaws as if delivering a military report. He reached up and snagged
the hem of Mud’s robes with his fangs, tugging firmly towards the
horizon.
For the next few
minutes, Mud and Layhla followed the rats at a rapid pace. Mud was
surprised to find that while his lungs were still working hard, he
wasn’t gasping for air. The increase in his Stamina stat was
helping. He was merely breathing heavily, instead of knocking on
death’s door.
Finally, Ricky came
to a halt at the edge of a quaint, lush oasis, a ring of ancient,
gnarled trees surrounding a placid pond. Behind the water rose a
gentle, grassy hill.
Standing atop that
hill, towering over the savanna, a lord presided over his land.
The Patriarch was
colossal, his scarred hide a hymn of past battles and conflict. He
stood motionless, watching over his kingdom, unaware of the intruders
who had come to claim him.
“That’s him,”
Mud whispered. His throat felt like it was lined with sandpaper.
His hands began to
twitch uncontrollably, his fingers drumming against his staff. Then,
his head jerked, an involuntary snap of his neck to the side. It was
a nervous tic he hadn’t dealt with since childhood, a ghost from
his past life.
Layhla’s frown
deepened as she studied the Patriarch. “This is going to be rough,”
she whispered, her hand tightening around the hilt of her blade.
“He’s a higher level than both of us. Honestly… he’s even a
step up from that owl.”
Mud took a long,
steadying breath, fighting to still the unwelcome tremors. He forced
his lungs to expand, trying to drown out the frenzied pounding of his
pulse. “I have a few ideas,” he said, his voice steadier than he
felt. “But I don’t know how well they’ll work on something of
this scale. I… I forgot how large he was.”
Reaching out, he
called to Chedda, willing a second string of mana to life.
With a soft pop,
Chedda appeared. The Forest Imp stood before them, looking
uncharacteristically focused, a small white knapsack tied firmly
across his chest.
Layhla’s head
snapped toward the Imp, her eyes wide. “You can summon two at once?
I… I didn’t think that was possible.”
Mud wiped a bead of
sweat from his brow. The mental strain to maintain both summons was
much higher than he expected. “It’s a first for me, too. I just
unlocked the ability when I hit level three.”
Testing the limits,
he reached out once more attempting to force Sludge’s viscous body
into existence. The air rippled, then went still.
Nothing happened.
“I think two is
my limit for now,” he said.
“Masta, I has
whats you asks for.” Chedda gestured proudly to his knapsack, but
his bravado withered as his gaze climbed the grassy hill to the
Patriarch. “Oh… he’s a biggy-boy, isn’t he?”
“Don’t worry.
Between you and Ricky, we’ve got this,” Mud said, patting the
Imp’s head in an attempt to steady both of their nerves.
“What is a…
Riggee?” Chedda asked, butchering the name, his head tilted in
confusion.
Mud pointed down at
his feet. Ricky was sitting there, chest puffed out, staring up at
the Imp with an air of authority.
“Riggee is dinna
food?” the Imp asked, his voice hopeful.
Ricky erupted. The
rat shrieked and squealed with heated indignation, his jaws snapping.
Chedda flinched, looking slightly abashed as the rat’s tirade
continued. For the next few seconds, the two summons engaged in a
chaotic, high-pitched argument, clearly debating who held the higher
rank in Mud’s growing army.
“You two need to
stop,” Layhla hissed. “You’re going to alert… wait.”
She went dead
silent. The bickering stopped instantly, their gazes going up to the
grassy hill in unison.
It was empty. The
Great Boar had simply vanished.
Chedda’s scream
decimated the stillness. It was a high-pitched squeal that was cut
short as the Patriarch exploded from the brush behind them. It plowed
through the space where the Imp was standing, a force of nature. It
was a mountain of bristled muscle and thundering hooves; its twin
ivory tusks nearly as long as Mud’s entire body.
A spatter of green
blood marred the dry earth where Chedda had been standing. The Imp
was gone, his terrified screams echoing through the open tundra.
It was time for the
rematch.

