Novels2Search

Chapter 30 Perfect Spies

image [https://i.imgur.com/NModgl3.jpg]

When we finished circling, we determined that the distance to the center measured about 100 yards. It spanned enough space to disorient visitors but looked smaller than we feared. We wouldn’t lose ourselves forever if we got lost, and our interface map kept the cardinal points of the compass oriented. However, labyrinths usually have minotaurs, so we refreshed our Heavenly Favor buffs.

Iris and Fletcher surprised me by casting Presence. Between the three of us, we had plenty of light.

We moved through the web toward the center in a spiraling path. Some curtains stretched wider than others, and their curves grew more pronounced the further we moved into the maze. Along the way, we methodically Scorched errant zombies. When we reached about a third of the way into the complex, Iris held up her hand and froze.

We followed her gaze.

A fist-sized albino spider perched itself beneath a branch of pine needles. Its stubby legs and spherical body made it surprisingly cute. Was this the baby spider that Ally had scared us about? It seemed improbable.

Name

Spy Weaver

Level

4

Difficulty

Easy (green)

Health

51/51

I joked to Charitybelle. “You see? This isn’t so bad. We’ll be out of here in no time.”

Unamused, Charitybelle slapped my arm.

When Fabulosa reached our position and spotted the spy weaver, Iris pulled her bow out. She slowly nocked an arrow and drew the bowstring.

Fletcher noticed our alarmed looks and smirked with pride. “Iris’s rank in ranged weapons is 21.”

Iris released her string with a swoosh. The arrow sailed into and out of a blue plume of smoke.

/Iris misses Spy Weaver.

The spider disappeared without even shaking the branches. The arrow seemed dead-on accurate and shouldn’t have missed. After bracing ourselves for a counterattack that never came, we approached and searched the nearby branches until we grew sure it no longer remained.

I cast Detect Magic and Detect Stealth, but nothing glowed. Activating my shield to enable its True Sight ability might reveal something, but I dismissed the thought. I might need it for the center of the web. Using its once-per-day ability seemed wasteful for non-emergencies.

We continued along a decaying orbital path toward the maze’s center. When passing through two curtains of webbing, the arrow showing North on my interface slid to the two o’clock position. My map orientation spun counterclockwise, then clockwise—something it had never done. Everyone else had confused looks on their faces, so I assumed I wasn’t the only one experiencing irregularities.

Fabulosa sighed. “Oh, come on.”

“Our interface compass is magnetic? That’s kinda cool!” Charitybelle looked around to see if anyone else appreciated the game’s workings.

Fabulosa looked unimpressed. “So much for not getting lost.”

I moved further into the curved corridor of webbing, and my compass needle spun to the five o’clock position. My map details spun in the opposite direction. I briefly wondered if the newly unlocked Magnetize spell might be of some good, especially around these metal webs. It might require too much concentration, so I gave up on the idea and kept moving.

When I stopped, Charitybelle bumped into me from behind. She stayed close by—which I didn’t mind.

I pointed out a pair of spy weavers. One clung to the side of a tree trunk, partially hidden from our view. The other tucked itself on the underside of a branch.

“The spy weavers’ camouflage don’t work very well. They don’t exactly live up to their name, do they?” I approached them, targeted the spider clinging to the tree trunk, and cast Scorch. When the spell fizzled, I growled in frustration. “What is going on with my primal spells?”

Iris furrowed her brow. “Put your shield away. It has too much metal. Your offensive spells won’t work when it’s equipped.” Iris’s voice conveyed amusement as if someone my level ought to know better.

But she wasn’t wrong. I couldn’t believe how foolish I’d been. Casters in games couldn’t walk around in heavy armor. Every time my spells had failed, I had held a shield.

Putting away my Prismatic Shield, I targeted the spy weaver once more. “It’s simple enough to test on you, my pale little friend.”

/You hit Spy Weaver with Scorch for 9 damage (29 resisted).

With another wisp of blue smoke, the spy weaver disappeared.

Stolen novel; please report.

It incensed me that the little sucker had avoided 29 damage. Feeling reckless and frustrated with the recent losing streak of fizzled spells, I cast another Scorch at the weaver in the trees. I didn’t care if the whole decrepit forest caught on fire.

/You miss Spy Weaver with Scorch.

Instead of catching on fire, the blazing branches erupted in blue puffs of smoke. The spy weavers winked in and out of existence around the flames. Either the teleport mechanic created vacuums, or the blue vapors smothered the fire. The burning needles flickered with spiders until nothing remained but smoldering smoke. These little spiders weren’t just spies—they acted like firefighters.

Fabulosa groaned. “I’d hoped to light up the trees with Fireball and call it a day.”

I resolved an internal debate about my shield. If spy weavers made offensive spells worthless, I might as well become the party’s tank.

The option of switching from caster to tank gave us versatility. The first role-playing games rigidly enforced roles. Healers healed, tanks tanked, and damage dealers dealt damage, and their roles rarely crossed over. It made for a straightforward narrative but became too repetitive and hard to balance. Hybrid classes allowed for more flexibility and created interesting class combinations. The Book of Dungeons had no classes. Instead, it offered a buffet of game mechanics.

The concentric curtains progressively impeded our vision as we progressed toward the center. Everyone expected the zombies in the treetops to drop on top of us, but so far, they remained aloft.

I stayed close to Charitybelle.

We progressed to where webs and wires surrounded us. The metal ranged from singular strands as thick as a finger to crisscrossed netlike sections. Thin veins of colored metal, probably copper, ran down many of the lengths.

Corpses tangled in metal knots hung from the trees. The netting holding them wasn’t as thick as cocoons, but the macabre bindings served the same purpose. The zombies rasped and struggled with their bonds. We Scorched the low-hanging undead, but most hung outside of spell range.

We pointed out spy weavers whenever we saw them. They winked away from Shocking Reaches and Lightning Bolts. Arrows flew too slowly, and the critters somehow avoided the spontaneous combustion of Scorch. We eventually stopped attacking them and accepted their ubiquity. Each made the perfect spy and watched us with impunity.

Webbed curtains surrounded us by the time we traveled two-thirds into the circular maze, but even though we could see through them, it created claustrophobic conditions. With a ceiling of evergreen branches overhead, it felt like an open indoor space, perhaps as roomy as a grocery store—instead of shopping aisles restricting our movement, swathes of metal nets impeded us.

A loud clacking above us caught our attention when we reached a small clearing. The source came from 50 yards away, in the labyrinth’s center. It sounded like a giant woodpecker hammering its beak against sheet metal.

Bundles hit the ground with metallic crunches. The noises came from outside our visual range. Something had cut free the suspended cocoons. We retraced our steps from the clearing.

Everyone bunching up between the webs bothered me. “Wait, a second. Maybe this isn’t the best place to fight. I don’t trust these webs, and there’s not a lot of room here. We can use ranged weapons without hitting one another in the clearing ahead.”

No one objected, so I led the way into the open area, venturing to the far side to detect more zombie bundles. If undead surrounded us, it made sense to know beforehand. While counting trussed-up zombies in the trees, my foot slipped into a hole, and I fell over hard. When I hit the pine needles, I didn’t feel the impact of the ground. Weightlessness overtook me before I landed violently on sharp metal spikes. Jagged rods of metal punctured my legs and back. I banged my forehead on something. My headache nearly drowned out the distant electrical clicking sounds.

My Prismatic Shield’s +10 stamina raised my health to 330, but the fall and spikes inflicted 80 damage—below the 30 percent threshold for an automatic trigger of Anticipate. Pine needles covered me, preventing me from opening my eyes until I blinked them away. I smelled earth, and the potency of a foul stench made me cough. What caused that smell?

I cast Hot Air to liberate myself from the metal skewers. I’d landed in a pit trap. My companions’ heals landed on me as I lifted off the spikes.

In the distance, people shouted to one another—or perhaps they yelled at me. The rustling, dead branches obscured the words as hands grabbed my feet. My ascent stalled after barely clearing the spikes.

I felt the hands on my rope belt, and they pulled me to the sides of the pit where no spikes threatened to injure me. They pulled me back to the ground, and I regained my footing.

Dirt falling from my air and tree roots interfered with my vision. Spitting, I tried to thank whoever helped me to my feet, but I doubted anyone could understand my sputters.

A close guttural moan prompted me to crane my neck. I wasn’t being helped off the ground by one of my friends—a giant rotting monster had taken hold of me and sunk its teeth into my right shoulder.

I screamed. Somewhere in the distance, Charitybelle yelled my name. The echoes reminded me I wasn’t in the sound-dampened pine forest anymore. I’d fallen into an earthen hole, and whatever held me wasn’t an ally.

Casting Slipstream didn’t whisk me out of the pit, and I cursed myself for trying. I couldn’t cast it again for five minutes unless I activated my cassock’s daily ability to reset its cooldown.

I remained suspended in the air, but this zombie thing stopped Hot Air from levitating me to freedom. With only seconds left on the spell, I twisted into a position that would land me on my feet while avoiding the metal skewers. Impossibly, I held onto my cudgel throughout the ordeal.

I swung my weapon upward to break the grapple and failed. The teeth found another purchase in my neck region. I flailed again and finally landed a blow, breaking the grasp of whatever had me.

Name

Wrought Iron Bugbear

Level

11

Difficulty

Easy (green)

Health

221/240

Even after sizing up this monstrosity, I still didn’t know what they looked like. Its decay erased all features except size. Black straps of metal crosshatched the rotting giant. While clasps and cords held it together, swivel joints permitted movement. Loose skin and tissue obscured some fittings, giving the impression that the abomination would fall apart if I removed the harness. However, it wasn’t buckles, cantilevers, hooks, or ties holding the undead together—something had welded their metalwork.

I popped a Rejuvenate on myself and got my bearings. Had I fallen into an empty grave? The pit’s dimensions spanned 15 feet across and measured just as deep. Jagged metal spikes covered the uneven ground, wet earth sloped inward from every side, and dark tangles of roots bristled from the walls. The roots presented significant combat hazards. I couldn’t swing a weapon, even a mace, without risking it getting snagged or tangled. I had to remain in the center, surrounded by spikes. The pit harbored no other corpses, animated or otherwise, aside from the 8-foot horror lunging at me.

Stepping into the pit’s center, I shuffled my feet before shifting my weight to avoid the spikes. This metalwork zombie looked clumsy, and the uneven spikes worked against the creature’s advance. As my heals brought me back to nearly full health, I jabbed at the creature’s attacks, making me grateful for hanging onto my mace, which defended well against something as big as a bugbear.

Muffled shouts and distant sounds of combat made me realize my friends had come under attack. “Are you guys all right up there?” The pit’s soft earth echoed my voice, but I doubt it projected far beyond its opening. I couldn’t be sure if they heard me, but the lack of replies answered in its own right.