Nobody exactly knew how the Tear, opening up the earth next to the Adamantine Bastion, had been formed.
Most scholars debated whether the formation was natural or the result
of a massive ancient mining operation. The oldest claims stated that
the legendary miner Eron had dug the whole chasm himself while searching for small splinters of adamantine around the main vein.
These claims were on a shaky
foundation.
Surely, Eron would have
mined all the adamantine he would have found, not leaving the
mythically large vein untouched. Closer investigations into the
lowest parts of the adamantine revealed ancient toolmarks indicating
somebody actually had been mining in the tear, but dating such marks
had been futile as adamantine was impervious to erosion and didn’t
bear any marks of time passing by.
Even if Eron had found the
vein in his youth and had been unable to mine it, surely he would
have returned afterwards when his rank and Skills allowed him to do
so? Alas, that hadn’t happened, and now the Bastion stood
steadfastly on the greenish rock, overlooking the prosperous city.
None of that mattered to the
city's citizens and visitors. All the Tear in actuality did was to
create a massive headache for the Dungeon Watch and precariously
segregated city planning.
Western Lip, as it was
named, was largely built on an outward protruding lip on the stone,
making it somedays looking like it floated in the air when thick fog
coalesced in the dungeon opening.
When the original city had
been built and started to grow, most of the citizens were worried the
rock would snap and the whole neighborhood would plummet down to the
dungeon, causing most of the richer builders to choose the eastern
side of the city to build on. The ground there was pleasingly sturdy
and far away from the gaping maw of a dungeon.
Hundreds of years later, the
Lip was still there, happily supporting the grinding middle class and
destitute adventurers, like Seventh Seven, who was following two
women deeper into the western parts of the city.
While following Viv and
Jenn, Seventh noticed how the streets were gradually turning more and
more patched and broken until wide potholes were left untouched,
filled only with water and mud. The houses on both sides of the
cracked streets weren’t any better. The wood used in their
construction looked crooked and cheap, paint was seldom used, and
none of the houses had an ounce of glass on their windows. Only
narrow slits with simple shutters.
Even the passersbys acted
differently compared to the other side of the city. All of them had a
peculiar mix of keen vigilance and selective forgetfulness. Stares
and leers of the people slid off the trio like water from the duck’s
back as they walked along. Almost as if they had been seen, but
nobody really wanted to keep their attention on them, just not to see
anything that could complicate their lives.
Walking downhill, the walls
of the city slowly rose up almost to an impossible degree, and
Seventh had to take a double-take to see what was going on there.
Nothing astoundingly unusual, it would seem. The walls were simply
built on bare rock, and the houses on softer ground, sinking into the
loose earth since almost none of them had a proper foundation.
“So, uh, Jenn?” Seventh
asked.
The Ranger softly harrumphed
as a reply.
“You know where we’re
going?” Seventh asked while they walked past a group of burly men
with a collection of old and new scars running on their faces and
arms, ragged clothes tightly wound up on their waists to act as
belts. All of the men aggressively looked straight ahead, actively
ignoring the trio.
“Nope,” Jenn said while
grinning merrily. “Don’t worry, we’ll keep you safe and sound,
and won’t let the big, bad locals scare you.”
“That’s... not really
what I meant...”
“Suuure it wasn’t. I can
almost hear you clutching your coinpouch and looking for the nearest
exits.”
Seventh licked his lips and
shifted his gaze from the nearest getaway route, a shady-looking
alleyway he could easily block with one Bone Wall. At least he wasn’t
clutching his coin since all of it was safely stored in his
voidspace.
“It’s just a reflex...”
Seventh muttered.
“You don’t need to
worry,” Jenn said. “It might look like a tough neighborhood, but
if you talk to us like we're people, we respond in kind.”
“We?” Seventh asked
while making a quick glance at Jenn walking next to him.
She was walking forward
without looking around, relaxed and poised. “Born and raised in the
Slip.”
Oh, that explains it.
“Alright. Any pitfalls you see me falling into?”
Seventh was well aware of
his social shortcomings— like living in a tavern, but not going
down for a drink to socialize once in a while— and general lack of
common sense.
“Well... you’re polite—
that keeps most knives sheathed in here— but if someone tells you a
price of something, it doesn't matter of its a copper, silver, or
gold, pay that. No more, no less. no
haggling. You can flaunt with your Skills and Classes all you want,
but the moment you throw money at a problem...”
She didn't finish the
thought, and Seventh nodded in understanding. “Why not haggling?”
“During business deals
it's fine, but people here know their worth. It's just a waste of
time.”
“Got it.”
Seventh tried to copy Jenn
and Viv’s nonchalant stride, but he was constantly looking for the
holes on the ground, carefully skipping over pools of mud, and at the
same time carefully scanning his surroundings.
It was inevitable he would
make a mistake somewhere, and soon his leg sloshed in an almost
impossibly deep puddle well past his shin-high boot.
The mud was sticky with a
greenish hue, slurping loudly when Seventh pulled his leg off. He
almost lost a boot to the urban trap and shook his leg in a vain
effort to get some of the mud off. A group of children close by
started to laugh and point at his demise.
“Chunker got chunks!”
Seventh gave the kids a
scandalized stare and stuck his tongue out at them. He was met with a
wall of raspberrying little tongues and even more giggles.
Choosing his battles wisely,
Seventh just scraped the bottom of his shoe mostly clean and left the
mud on elsewhere. With a friendly nod at the children, he returned to
his journey.
Viv had stopped when she had
noticed Seventh was being left behind. Corners of her mouth twitched,
probably suppressing a laugh. Jenn wasn’t as merciful and snorted a
laugh when she heard Seventh’s sticky steps.
Continuing the journey, Viv
turned right into a narrow alleyway. Trying to keep a mental map,
just in case, Seventh counted the turns, made note of recognizable
buildings, and silently hoped his Cartography would help if he got
lost in the labyrinthine collection of alleyways, backyards, and
hidden streets.
Trying to even see the sun
above to get the general bearing, Seventh saw long poles with
canvases stretched between them, mostly covering most of the streets
with gentle shade. They didn’t plot out the sun entirely, and
Seventh could see the city wall from the cracks. And the guards.
“Watch covers,” Jenn
explained when she saw Seventh’s craned neck and puzzled look.
“Keeps the unwanted eyes off our streets.”
Seventh raised an eyebrow.
“Your streets?”
“Yep. The Lords and Ladies
of the Bastion might claim they own us and the streets, but I'd like
to see them walk down here with demands. Every now and again, a
huffed and puffed lord comes here with an escort demanding things
like taxes, census data, proper city planning, and whatnot. We send
them back with the only thing we have no shortage of. A tax return of
kinds.”
“Dare I ask what this
thing is you have in abundance?”
“The same stuff they float
to us every day: chunky water. If you follow any flow in the sewers
to its end, you’ll end up somewhere in here.” Jenn beamed at
Seventh.
“So, when a lordlings come
in here, we bathe them in the stuff. If we're really generous, we
give some feathers as a tip.” Jenn chuckled merrily, obviously
thinking back at such joyous occasions.
Seeing her more relaxed and
not so doom-and-gloom like in the tavern made Seventh more at ease
about the whole situation. He still shuddered at the thought of
getting bathed in the stuff he had seen the whole of last week. Now
he hoped the meeting would go smoothly.
Viv suddenly stopped to
inspect a nondescript wooden door. The only good thing it had going
was that only one of its hinges was badly damaged, and the other one
was just barely rusted through. Nodding approvingly, Viv knocked on
the wood with a rapid sequence that ended in a hefty kick on the
doorframe.
A small peephole, so
skillfully carved into the wood that you couldn't possibly notice it
when it was closed, opened, and a pair of grey eyes stared out,
slowly from Viv to Jenn, stopping at Seventh and lingering for a
moment longer on him.
The peephole closed,
masquerading as a solid block of wood, and after a series of metallic
clicks and clangs, the door opened silently outwards.
Seventh noticed how the wood
was noticeably thicker than he had expected, and the hinges on the
outside were just decorative. The real hinges were hidden at the
opposite side, deep in the wood. They were also thick pieces of
steel, glimmering with a fresh coating of oil.
Stepping inside, Seventh was
met with a pleasantly warm, oil-lamp-lit room with sour faced, burly
man on both of his sides. He half expected them to check his person
for weapons and confiscate his knife, but they just waved a flat
piece of rock in front of him and a wooden paddle with runic
inscriptions.
With only a cursory glance,
Seventh couldn't say exactly what the paddle did, but the rune array
had something to do with scrying, observing, or something like that.
His vocabulary of magical symbols was heavily leaned into making
light and basic shapes.
While waiting for the guards
to check whatever they were checking, Seventh inspected the room and
realized he was actually standing in a foyer of a much bigger house
than expected. It wasn’t “bigger in the inside” magic, just
clever carpentry.
Looking closely at the wall
boards, Seventh could see where one hovel had ended, and another one
started. Someone had just cut the walls off and boarded the windows
to make the large house look like a row of smaller ones. Or maybe it
had been custom-built for that precise purpose from the ground up.
“That's cool,” Seventh
muttered, and earned a sour stare from a guard. Bouncer?
Seventh pointed around. “The
walls, I mean.”
All he got was a blank
stare. These men could be sphinxes for all Seventh knew. They were
guarding a passage and were weirdly expressionless. They also hadn't
waved for Seventh to continue.
This content has been unlawfully taken from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.
”Erh, you have a riddle
for me? One of you speaks only the truth while the other only speaks
lies?” Seventh said, trying to lighten the mood. He wasn't sure if
it worked, but he could swear a microscopic ghost of a smile flashed
on the man’s face on the right side.
After an awkward silence,
the man on the right gestured for Seventh to move. He earned an
elbow-jab immediately when he was at Jenn's striking distance.
He grimaced. ”What?”
“Behave,” she said
between closed lips, barely audible.
“I am,” he whispered
through his teeth.
”It's not my fault you're
here. You could have just said no to Viv.”
Seventh turned to look at
Jenn incredulously. “I have a vivid memory of you being the reason
for all of this. Care to remind me how she knew about my Skill
again?”
Jenn had the decency to
squirm a little. “It wasn't anything like that. Just some girltalk
among friends, nothing too serious.”
“Nothing too serious? Were
walking a rat maze of hallways and rooms to gods know where. We have
gone past that painting twice!” Seventh pointed at a badly made
painting that had a bundle of... bananas? Something long and yellow.
He prayed to the gods that they were bananas.
Jenn tried to dismiss
Seventh's worries with a gesture. “That's just a trick to confuse
the enemies. There’s like four or five different paintings with
copies all around.”
“That wasn’t reassuring.
At all.”
“Look,” Jenn said and
patted Seventh's shoulder. “Just go with the flow, and nothing bad
happens. The worst thing that can happen is that you walk back home
without a deal and owe me like... a thousand drinks.”
“And the best-case
scenario?”
“You owe me two thousand
drinks!”
“Jenn...”
“Okay. You have a deal and
a friend in the Family. Just relax, and all will be fine.”
Belatedly, Seventh realized
Jenn might not have been only talking to him. There wasn’t worry in
her tone, but her shoulders were hunched a fraction, and she was
gently rubbing her calloused fingers together as if she was hoping to
find an arrow to pull.
Seventh decided to be on his
best behavior from here on out. He didn’t really worry about
himself, but for Jenn. A sour deal here could reflect badly on the
Ranger.
And maybe at Viv, too. I
don’t really know what to think about her, though. She seems to do
fine in here.
Viv had indeed continued her
relaxed stride and was gently tapping on the wall as she walked by.
Suddenly, she stopped. Took a backstep and tapped at the wall with
mild interest.
Something clicked behind the
wall, and Viv was able to swing open a portion of the wall, gesturing
for Seventh and Jenn to step in.
After a quick jab to the
ribs, Seventh stepped in first into a cozy study room with a
crackling fireplace surrounded by two soft-looking couches. On his
right, a large shape rose up behind his desk, quickly approaching.
”Viv! Jenn!” A merry
voice boomed in the room, and a small, well-dressed mountain grabbed
Jenn for a fierce hug.
While Jenn’s ribs were
rearranged, Seventh ogled the over seven feet tall man with
stark-white hair. He wasn't that old, around thirty, just prematurely
whitened hair and beard cut to a short hairstyle, bringing his grey
three-piece suit nicely together.
There was something familiar
in the man’s facial structure and stature. Seventh could vaguely
remember the two guards at the Guild that escorted— carried,
really— him to the interrogation room. They had happily chatted
about their other cousin— uncle?— the one that had ‘gone to the
other side’.
When Jenn had been safely
returned to the floor, Seventh noticed a quick flash of crimson
before her face contorted into mild disgust. As Jenn took a step
closer to the liquor cabinet, a shovel-sized hand appeared for a
shake in front of Seventh.
“And this must be the
famed Seventh Seven, the Sammy-boy, the Necromancer of the Sewers.
You can call me—”
“Bosco, right?” Seventh
finally remembered the name and shook the man’s hand. Seventh’s
whole hand disappeared into the man's mighty paw as it squeezed. A
little bit too hard.
“Oh?” The merryness
cracked a little, and Bosco looked at the women. “I wasn't
expecting my name to be distributed so... carelessly.”
Jenn let out a loud gulp and
looked wide-eyed at Seventh. Viv in the other hand, had a curious
expression, an eyebrow raised and a rising smile on her lips.
“They didn't,” Seventh
hurried to clarify while his hand was slowly losing all feeling. “I
have just heard about you before, you know?”
”Ahh, so that's how it is.
I can’t blame my glory being known all over the Realm now, can I?”
Bosco said and released Seventh's hand with a boisterous laugh. “Now,
sit down, sit down! Care for a glass of something smooth before
business?”
“I wouldn't waste anything
too fine on me, but I'll take a finger of anything you're having,”
Seventh said as he sat down on one of the couches, gently flexing his
hand, hoping to gain some blood flow back.
Jenn sat on his left side
while Viv took the right. Bosco placed a tray of drinks on a small
sofa table between himself and the trio, giving Seventh a sly grin.
“Comfortable?”
“Can't really complain,
can I?”
Bosco's chuckle made
Seventh's diaphragm vibrate as the mountainous man sat down across
him. “So, I like to cut to the chase, we can leave the roses and
thorns outside of these walls. You have something unique to offer for
the Essence Stone business. A Skill, I heard?”
“You heard correctly. If
you don't mind?” Seventh raised his free hand and waited for
permission. Receiving a nod, he collected all of his magical might
for Mana Crystallization and created a small, barely a fraction of an
inch-sized Entropy Essence Stone.
Handing it to Bosco, Seventh
made an apologetic smile while ignoring the slight queasiness he was
feeling after emptying all of his mana. “I know it's not too much
to look at.”
The grain of magic
disappeared in Bosco's palm while the man fished out a tiny monocle
from his pocket and peered through it. “I see. Small indeed... I
take it this is all you can do? No Skills lowering the casting cost
or raising the quality?”
“No, sir.”
Bosco peeked at Seventh over
the monocle’s rim. “Just Bosco is fine, Seventh. Do you mind if I
call you Seventh? Anyways, you’re still Bronze rank?”
“Full Bronze.”
“Marvelous.” Bosco
dropped the Stone on the table. Only a small glint of red betrayed
its location. “With Iron Focus and Essence, we can safely assume
almost forty percent bigger results. And who knows? Maybe the System
gives something nice for spellcasting with your final push out of the
Foundation.”
All ranks below E rank, or
Iron rank as it was known around the Kingdom of Iron, were called
Foundation, the easiest ranks to raise, and with every Attribute
raise you gained a new Skill.
Ranking up to Iron with
Attributes was the last rank-up when there was a guaranteed new
Skill. After that, all one could hope for was Foundational Basic
Skills like Seventh's Lesser Stamina to evolve into better variants
or, in rare occurrences, other Skills evolving.
“I can only wish,”
Seventh said as he sipped the liquid in his glass. It was
delightfully mellow and fruity with a spicy aftertaste. Good
middle-quality rum or something like it.
In all honesty, Seventh
wasn’t hoping to gain such spellcasting Skills unless they also
boosted his necromancy spells. He wasn’t going to spend his life as
a glorified Essence Stone factory.
“ can only wish,”
Bosco corrected.
“Oh? Already considering
me one of you?”
“Hardly.” Bosco’s
predatory grin was full of teeth, and leaning heavily forward, he
seemed to fill Seventh's entire view with menace.
“You will be only a tool
for us. Nothing more, nothing less... We’ll see if you are worthy
of even considering becoming one of the Unseen Family after a,
hopefully, fruitful and long partnership. I sincerely hope that
doesn't wound your ego?”
Seventh took a long sip,
savoring the burning liquid before swallowing— staring unblinkingly
at Bosco's challenging eyes. “I’d need an ego first to get it
hurt. You have a spare one I can borrow?”
Seventh had to put his drink
down so as not to spill it during Bosco’s hollering guffaw. The
whole room seemed to shake, and Seventh noticed the new icon on his
HUD, a roaring golden lion.
Keeping one's aura in check
was basic manners, and Seventh didn't have his own active, but he
seriously considered it. He waited for the man across from him to
calm down from his merriment.
It was a nice tactic.
Drawing Seventh’s attention to the loud laughter while activating
an aura that made him more at ease, making him more prone to accept
whatever deal was on the table. If he didn’t have his HUD, Seventh
might have missed the trick altogether.
“I'd appreciate it if you
kept your aura in check, Bosco,” he said dryly.
Jenn's elbow once again
found Seventh's ribs. Bosco raised an eyebrow in surprise before
maneuvering around the fact that Seventh had noticed the Skill use.
“Jenn...” he almost
purred, word sweet with honey. “No need to steer the lad, he's
doing fine. Some arrogance and rough edges, but I could shape him
into something presentable... after he finds this missing ego of
his.”
“Just keeping my friends
safe, Knuckles.” Jenn’s voice was equally filled with venom and
ice, a stark contrast to her earlier mood.
A loud crack echoed in the
room when Bosco cracked his right hand's index finger with his thumb.
He looked down, almost surprised, and shook his hand, a masking smile
rising to his face.
“Now, now. We’re all
acquaintances here, no need to get spicy... no matter how much I
liked that in you, Jennifer.”
Jenn ground her teeth
together while she spoke, steering the conversation forward, “So,
the shipping and payment?”
“Right!” Bosco turned
back towards Seventh, ignoring Jenn for now. “Back to the business.
Can you handle a thimbleful— the bartender one— of similar
stones?” he asked while pointing at the stone on the table.
Seventh looked left and
right while thinking of an answer. Viv had been silent the entire
time, her legs slightly brushing Sevenths shin. She seemed pleased
when Seventh finally looked at her and sipped her drink.
Jenn was clutching her own
drink in both hands, not having taken a single sip. Seventh
recognized the clutching as something Jenn needed to do with her
hands, probably not to go and deck Bosco.
“I honestly haven’t
tried to do so many of them. We could do a practice run to see how
long it takes, and if my performance is lacking, we can get back to
the negotiations to see if the deal is worthwhile,” Seventh
suggested, hoping he could back down on the deal with a verbal
backdoor.
Bosco tapped his finger on
his lips, slightly displeased. “Hmhm. A little bit too nonchalant,
don't you think? I prefer when our tools have more work ethic. 'Yes,
boss, can do!', 'Of course, boss! I can have it done by tomorrow.
What color do you want?' You get my drift?”
I should have known he
was this kind of guy. “I think I do... boss.”
Bosco tsked, but smiled
wryly. “I believe I can work with one without an ego blasting
through... So, the price. I was told you want a book?”
Bosch gestured towards the
bookshelves surrounding his desk. “Care to elaborate? I might have
it on the shelf.”
Seventh felt both women
shift slightly at his sides. “Not in such fair company. I’ll
leave the book’s name with the first shipment, and we’ll work a
deal from there. Sound good?”
Bosco made a slightly
displeased nod. “Very well. A thimbleful per week is eight gold, so
you know. If the book is pricey, you’ll get it you
have earned it.”
“Eight gold per week?”
Seventh asked blankly, focusing on not dropping his jaw. That was
double what he was expecting. He had a sudden memory of hundreds of
fist-sized Essence Stones in Oran's backpack.
Making some quick
calculations, Seventh slowly turned his head towards Jenn. She looked
back at him, puzzled. “What?”
“Hey, that's the price the
Boss told me to give to you,” Bosco said and raised his hands up
like he was surrendering. “Can't do anything about it.”
Seventh felt Jenn flinch a
fraction on his side at the mention of Boss. They must have been the
ones she feared the trio would be meeting today. In Seventh’s
opinion, the meeting had gone smoothly without any issues, he might
even say it had been a delight. But that might also be the aura
affecting his thoughts.
Curious, Ashen Will
hasn’t activated. Is it because the Lion’s Precedence is
considered a positive effect?
“Eight gold sounds
reasonable. I'm sure it's leaps and bounds beyond what Prismatic
Stone would give me,” Seventh said and rose up, offering his hand.
“I believe we have a deal?”
“That we have.” Bosco
also rose up— mainly for manners' sake, since he would have been at
eye level with Seventh even when sitting— and offered his enormous
shovel of a hand.
A knock on the door stopped
the gesture.
Bosco glanced at the door,
masked as a wall when it opened a fraction. His smile slowly melted
away as a gruff voice began to speak from the other side.
“Sorry to disturb you,
boss, but the Watch is coming.”
“Oh,” the mountainous
man said flatly. Coldness spread into his eyes, and his mouth froze
to a gentle smile that didn’t quite rise to his eyes. “I thought
this month's... assurances of peace were delivered in full to the
City Watch?”
“Eh, sorry, sir.” The
voice gained a sniveling quality when it continued. “I meant the
Dungeon Watch. Looks like captain Rowe's lot might be looking into
the... the thing with the other thing close to the other,
thing, you know?”
“I see. And they are
coming from where, exactly?”
There was a dangerous timbre
on the words. Seventh noticed Bosco's aura icon changing from gold to
red, taking in more predatory design of a roaring lion looking down,
and with the change came two differences to Seventh’s HUD.
Seventh sipped his drink
just to mask his gulp. Jenn and Viv didn’t seem to notice anything
different in the situation, but Seventh had a bad feeling about this
and he had activated his own aura. Just in case.
The two men continued their
conversation without noticing any changes in the invisible battle of
magical effects.
“Mudslip Gate. Probably
walked the guards outside of the walls so we missed seeing ’em.”
“Ah, I see. So they
followed.
That makes the rest of the meeting more... palatable,” Bosco’s
cold eyes swept through the couch in front of him. “Thank
you, Jasper. You can go now.”
Seventh let his shoulders
relax a bit. Hopefully, Bosco was seeing all this as it was: an
unhappy little coincidence and nothing more.
The door closed, and Bosco
turned to his guests. “I'm sorry, but that seems to be all the time
we have today. Viv, escort them out from the back. To the Kidneyrot,
if you please?”
“Sure thing, boss,” Viv
said and rose up. She briefly took support from Seventh’s thigh as
she rose, making a gentle squeeze.
Walking towards the door,
she turned around and flashed a smile while taking the last steps
backwards. “You coming with me, or are you gonna just ogle?”
A sharp jab made Seventh
jerk up from the couch, almost spilling the leftovers of his drink.
”I-ah-yes. Lead the way.”

