Layhla was a cruel mistress. Mud’s mind could barely form thoughts
through the haze of exhaustion as he forced his heavy, trembling legs
to take another agonizing step. Then another.
Ironically only an
hour ago, he’d been admiring the way the sunlight played with her
long, golden hair and the feline grace of her movements. Watched in
awe, marveling at how every muscle in her body seemed to work in
harmonious tandem.
Now, he was fairly
certain she was the devil in disguise.
“Hey… I think…
I need a break,” he panted. His foot caught on a clump of raised
dirt and he missed a step, stumbling as he almost went face-first
into the ground. He barely recovered, his breath coming in ragged,
painful gulps. “We’ve been moving for an hour. Where are we
going?”
“We are heading
to that small copse of trees just ahead,” she said curtly. “We
could have taken a more direct path here, but we took a more…
scenic route, so you could get some exercise.”
She didn’t even
sound winded as she said those horrific words.
“You’re evil,”
Mud panted, the words scraping like sandpaper against his raw throat.
“Does… exercise… even matter in a place like this?”
Without warning,
Layhla came to a blessed, sudden stop. Mud, unable to halt his own
momentum, nearly plowed right into her. His boots skidded through the
loose dirt and gravel, kicking up a small cloud of dust.
“You’re right.
Exercising isn’t just about strengthening the muscles, though”
she said, looking back at him with an unreadable expression. “In
this world, you could run from dawn to dusk and never lose a single
pound. Your physical form is locked in its current mold. Everything
is dictated by your level, and more importantly your Stat Points.”
She sighed,
watching him double over. “But exercise is for the mind, too. We
have to train your brain to push your body, even when your body is
screaming at you to stop. If you can’t handle a short jog, you are
going to be in real trouble when we get to some of the harder content
later.”
“That’s dumb,”
Mud replied, though his voice faltered.
He knew she was
right. He just really didn’t want to admit it, and he hated running
even more.
“No, it’s not,
and you know it.” She punched him roughly in the shoulder, a solid
stinging reminder that she wasn’t going to let him slide. “Now
come on. We’re nearly there.”
A final, agonizing
few minutes of cursed ‘jogging’ finally brought them to the edge
of the copse. Mud veritably collapsed, going down like an avalanche
of flesh, momentum carrying him into the dirt with a heavy thud.
“Oh, sweet mother
of god,” he wheezed, rolling onto his back with his arms splayed.
“I have never loved the ground so much.” He eventually managed to
drag himself upright, leaning his sweat-slicked back up against a
smooth rock.
“So, what are we
here for?” he asked, squinting past the first line of trees to find
whatever mystery lay hidden in the shadows. “Seems pretty peaceful
to me.”
“Well, first, we
need to get you an actual weapon. Unless you plan to punch your way
through the world,” she said, her voice dripping with its usual
sarcasm. “This area is a known farming ground for Imps. They’re
low-level and easy to kill, but most importantly, they have a chance
to drop elemental staves.”
You could be reading stolen content. Head to the original site for the genuine story.
She looked him
over. “Based on everything I’ve seen, I’m going to assume your
absolutely terrible in melee combat. We need to get you something
with range, that way you can hide behind your summons.”
“You really don’t
hold back with the compliments, do you?” Mud sighed, running his
arm across his forehead to wipe the sweat and salt from above his
eyes.
“You want a
compliment? Earn it.” She reached out, offering him a hand to haul
him up from the dirt. “It turns out I need something here too, a
small wooden core with a fairly low drop rate. If we see any of
those, they’re mine. Everything else is yours.”
Mud pulled up his
menu, his fingers moving with confidence as he selected Ricky from
the list. He aimed the glowing reticle at a patch of mossy earth, and
with a familiar shimmer, his furry companion appeared.
“Well,” Mud
said, trying to somehow bolster his own courage. “Let’s get this
over with.”
Layhla frowned,
looking down at the rat as it sniffed innocently at the air. “You
realize that rodent isn’t going to stand a chance against an imp,
right?”
“I don’t plan
to use him to fight,” Mud said, shrugging sheepishly. “I figured
he could scout ahead for us. He’s stealthy and quick. You know, a
summon can be valuable even if it’s not the best for combat."
Ricky darted off
into the shadows of the trees, as if he understood his mission. Mud
turned his gaze to Layhla, his voice dropping. “To be totally
honest with you, Layhla… as obsessed as you are with strength and
power, why are you even here? Why help me? I’m arguably the weakest
player in Horizon City.”
The question hit
her harder than he had expected, almost like a physical blow. For the
first time since he had met her, her composure slipped and she seemed
uncertain.
“You… confuse
me,” she replied. Her words were slow and methodic, the usual sharp
edge gone. Shaking her head she gestured in the direction Ricky had
entered the trees. “I don’t want to talk about it. Just… Let’s
follow the rat.”
They pushed through
the dense tree-line for several minutes. Every so often, Ricky would
dart back from the shadows, chitter at them, as if making a report,
and then vanish again into the underbrush. The deeper they went, the
more the forest seemed to close in; the vines and low-hanging
branches felt like reaching fingers, snagging against Mud’s heavy
frame and making every step a struggle.
“Be alert,”
Layhla whispered. Her hand hovered warily over the hilt of her short
blade. “Forest Imps are tricky pests. In these woods, they are
pretty much another part of the foliage.”
She scanned the
canopy, her eyes sharp and alert. “Be prepared to move at a moments
notice.”
A sudden, frantic
squeaking erupted from the undergrowth at his feet. Ricky exploded
from the ferns, his tiny claws using Mud’s leather vest as a
makeshift ladder. The rat scrambled up his body and over his
shoulder, launching himself into the air toward a nearby trunk, his
teeth sinking into something fleshy and rough that had been hidden
expertly camouflaged against the bark.
A thin, bony arm
flailed in surprise, trying to shake the clinging rat. Ricky was
tossed back with a small spray of dark green blood, vanishing into
the ferns, but the enemy’s cover was blown. The Imp, a gnarled,
three-foot-tall creature with spindly limbs and rows of needle sharp
teeth screeched and launched itself at Mud’s throat.
In a blind panic,
Mud threw his arms up to defend his face. He caught the living
missile mid-air, his fingers slipping on its greasy skin. The
creature was a blur of motion, gnashing its teeth inches from Mud’s
nose and thrashing with surprising, wiry strength.
He struggled to
keep the monster at bay, his muscles burning as he gripped its narrow
shoulders. The Imp arched its head back, preparing to give a final
desperate bite, but instead its head simply vanished.
There was no sound
of a struggle, just a clean, silver arc of steel that came
dangerously close to Mud’s unprotected face. The Imp’s body went
limp in Mud’s hands, and for a fraction of a second, he saw what
appeared to be a green health bar fade away.
The notifications
flooded his vision, scrolling past in a triumphant blur.
[Mud has
reached LV. 2]
[Ricky has
reached LV. 2]
[Summon Monster
has reached Lv. 2]
New Skill
Unlocked:[Eagle Eyes]See through the eyes of your
summoned monster
Mud
dropped to his knees, desperately
parting the thick ferns. “Ricky? You okay, buddy?”
A
moment later, the rat emerged. He scrambled gracefully up Mud’s arm
and took his place on his shoulder, looking immensely proud of
himself despite being matted with sticky, dark green gore.
Layhla
reached over, her movements surprisingly gentle as she patted the
rat’s head with a fingertip. “Maybe I underestimated you, little
guy. That was incredibly brave.”
“Oh,
so now the gets a
compliment?” Mud asked, his voice thick with sarcasm.
“He
earned it,” she replied, a tiny, rare grin tugging at the corners
of her lips. She turned her gaze to Mud, her eyes mischievous. “And
you? Oh, Mud, the way you so gracefully panicked… it nearly took my
breath away. Truly, I’m swooning!”
Ignoring
her jests, Mud turned his attention back to the fallen Imp. He
noticed a small, flickering icon hovering over the corpse. With a
quick tap, he opened the creature’s loot window.
[5
Gold]
“Well
that's disappointing,” he said, his shoulders slumping. “The
little blighter didn’t have either of the items we need.”
“That’s fine. This forest is crawling with them; we just need to
keep hunting,” Layhla said, casually wiping green ichor from her
blade using a clump of grass. “And don’t forget to allocate those
new stat points. Congrats on the level, by the way. Maybe consider
putting a few of them into Stamina?”
Mud grumbled something incoherent under his breath, opening his
character sheet as they moved deeper into the shadows of the forest.
They didn’t notice the yellow eyes tracking their every move from
the safety of the canopy. The forest was watching, and they were
about to find exactly what they were looking for, along with
something they weren’t.

