Corminar went to retrieve Alenna.
Faced with the two bodies in their corrupted, burnt states, we knew it wouldn’t do any good. There was nothing that even the most talented healer could do to save them now, and yet it seemed the right thing to do. At the very least, the scientist might be able to explain what went wrong.
There was a school of thought—one which Raelas shared—that Alenna was to blame. That if she hadn’t assured us that Ama was fine, then we wouldn’t have brought her here. Carle would never have been touched by the corruption. Raelas would have lost one friend, not two.
The owner of the inn plied us with food and drink and anything else we needed, recognising both the grief and the fact that we’d saved her inn from certain destruction—ignoring the fact that we’d also brought the destruction to her. It was a nice gesture, and one I think the pale Raelas would have been more grateful for if she wasn’t in a daze.
Even Val had been sympathetic to the tiefling, in a departure from her normal glaring. She was at this very moment making her a tea in the inn’s kitchen, something that I’d never seen her do for anyone.
I was sitting at Raelas’s side, a comforting hand on her upper back as she stared numbly at the bowl of stew sitting in front of her, untouched. And that wasn’t to comment on the quality of the stew; if Lore wasn’t off somewhere, he’d have been salivating at the aroma. My incomplete ability selection notification weighed on my mind, but there was be time for that later; some things were more important.
At that moment, Corminar entered the inn, Alenna at his side.
‘They’re out there,’ Raelas breathed.
Alenna nodded. ‘I’ll see to them. I just wanted to say… I’m sorry, Raelas. I really thought she was cured.’
I noticed that the wording was I thought she was cured, and not I thought I’d cured her.
Raelas said nothing, but turned back to the bowl of stew, and shifted a shaky hand towards the spoon. I watched her take a deep breath before sipping lightly at the broth, and out of the corner of my eye, I saw Arzak slink upstairs.
As we sat in silence, and nobody would be any the wiser, I thought there might be time to review the ability selection after all, so I brought it up. There were only two choices this time.
Ability selection unlocked
Select an ability from the list below:
Option 1: Weaken Metal II (Worldbending) — Your magicks find flaws within metalwork and exacerbate these flaws, leading to objects becoming immediately weaker. Some enchanted objects may still withstand this spell.
This was an upgrade to an ability I’d passed on previously. There were definitely a good few use cases for it—breaking into place and, shattering weapons to name a few—but it didn’t feel like enough. If I picked this, then I’d be missing out on the other ability choice, and in this case, the latter seemed to be more useful.
Option 2: Portal Relay II (Worldbending) — Up to ten small-scale portals can now be positioned stationary to an entity, and used to communicate sound. In addition, your standard portals may be used to communicate sound.
I’d been given the level 1 option of this ability back when we’d defeated Niamh, and I’d immediately come to regret it. This ability came with use cases including spying on people—something I was a big fan of—but also allowing us to coordinate our attacks better as a group, as we could all be in direct communication with one another. It would almost be selfish not to pick this one. And I liked to think I’d grown out of selfishness.
Ability unlocked — Portal Relay II
Portal Relay II (Worldbending) — Up to ten small-scale portals can now be positioned stationary to an entity, and used to communicate sound. In addition, your standard portals may be used to communicate sound.
As Alenna and Corminar entered the inn once more, I turned to the scientist. ‘Do you know what you…’ I started. ‘Do you know what went wrong?’
Alenna shook her head. ‘The ward, it…’ She glanced at Raelas, and I took the unspoken point; maybe the tiefling didn’t need to hear this.
I stood up, and approached Alenna and Corminar at the edge of the room.
‘I used a ward to stop the corruption spreading,’ Alenna said. ‘You remember that book you retrieved for me? It was about using the body’s power to sustain wards. That was supposed to be the cure, and I thought from my tests that it would work.’
‘You didn’t check?’ I asked.
A flash of irritation crossed Alenna’s eyes. ‘I did check. The ward was stable. The corruption shouldn’t have spread. But something—I don’t know what—it overwhelmed the ward. It’s almost like the corruption grew more powerful by itself.’
‘Can that happen?’ Corminar asked.
‘No. Not without—’
Alenna trailed off, her eyes on something across the room. I followed her gaze to see Arzak standing at the foot of the stairs, her nostrils flaring with an anger I’d never before seen in her.
‘Upstairs. Now,’ the orc said.
Raelas whipped her head up from her bowl.
‘What—’ Val started, poking her head in from the kitchen.
‘Now,’ Arzak said again. ‘Stuff you need see.’
The grieving tiefling rose from her seat, eyes on Arzak. ‘What stuff?’ she asked. There was panic in her tone.
The narrative has been stolen; if detected on Amazon, report the infringement.
The orc didn’t acknowledge her in the slightest. ‘How many time I need say? Come now.’
Val, Corminar, Alenna and I strode over to the stairs, and Raelas whipped her hand out to grab my arm as I passed. ‘It’s not what you think,’ she said.
I looked to Arzak, who held my gaze, a scowl on her face.
‘What isn’t?’ I asked the tiefling.
But Raelas had no answer.
I yanked my arm free of her grasp, and as I joined the others on the staircase, Arzak led us upstairs and along the corridor.
‘I went up to Ama room, see if more information for Alenna. See if more information to understand corruption.’ Arzak paused. ‘I think I find it.’ She came to a halt in front of Carle and Ama’s room, and she placed her hand on the door. She sighed, and then pushed. The hinges groaned as the door opened.
I saw nothing at first, only a dusty room much the same as my own. Except, this one had more stuff being stored in it, a good dozen small crates stacked in one corner of the room, away from the beds.
One of them moved. Just a little. But enough.
‘Don’t tell me…’ Val said, getting there before I did.
‘Malae,’ Arzak said.
A chill ran down my spine. ‘Why? What in the gods’ names could they want with…’ I started, but then an answer occurred to me.
‘Ah,’ Alenna said. ‘That… that’d do it. That’s why my ward didn’t hold up—the corruption did grow stronger. It fed on the malae in this very room. My ward… didn’t stand a chance.’
But I wasn’t interested in this anger; I now felt ire to rival Arzak’s. I turned around, pushed through the small crowd at the threshold of the room, and charged down the corridor.
Raelas recoiled when she saw the fury burning on my face. ‘It’s not what you—’ she said, stumbling backwards into a table, knocking glassware smashing to the floor.
‘Why?’ I roared. ‘Why do you have them?’
‘It was… it was…’ Raelas stuttered, gulping.
‘Why?’ I shouted once more, striding towards her.
‘It was payment!’ the tiefling blurted out.
I came to an abrupt stop, perplexed by this response.
‘We knew you were never gonna pay up,’ Raelas said. ‘And I think you knew we knew.’
‘I thought you wanted to do what was right.’
‘You heard our story,’ the tiefling replied, now shouting too. ‘You know what we came from. What we had to survive. There’s safety in coin. There’s no safety in doing the right thing. But we came anyway, because we know how valuable those creatures are. This was our payment.’
Fury blossomed through me. To think I’d thought Raelas might have been a good one. No. No, she was no hero; she was just like the rest of them. Without a word, I grabbed Raelas by the wrist and pulled her towards the staircase.
‘Styk, no, I—’
‘Yes, Raelas. You’re dealing with them now. I don’t care what else you’re going through, this is too far. You saved malae. Malae! You know what these creatures can do, and you gambled lives on them for the sake of coin. I can stand you gambling your own lives on them, but what about everyone else? What about the others staying in the inn? What about me? Or did you not think about that?’
Raelas followed quietly, giving up any resistance. The others parts at the doorway as I pushed Raelas inside.
‘Portal them out, and burn them,’ I said. ‘Now.’
‘Styk, I didn’t mean to…’ Raelas said, staggering back to her feet and coming back towards me with begging eyes. ‘I do care. I did think about—’
When she tried to touch me, I instinctively pushed her away. I didn’t want her touching me. I couldn’t stand the idea anymore.
But I didn’t mean to push her towards the crates.
As Raelas fell backwards into them, the stack toppled, a handful of boxes falling to the floor. We all went immediately silent, waiting with bated breath to see if any of the monsters were free.
And then we heard a familiar noise.
Shlop. An oozing black limb popped out from behind one of the boxes, climbing on top. It waited there for a moment, looking at the fives of us.
Then it pounced towards Raelas.
For all her crimes, the tiefling didn’t deserve this. She didn’t deserve being touched by a mala. And I’d been the one to push her. I was the one who’d done it to her.
It was that line of thought, perhaps, that led to me yanking my dagger out and leaping between Raelas and the mala. My blade blocked it in midair, and I was about to breathe a sigh of relief when I felt something strangely cool touch my wrist.
When I looked down, I realised what I’d done. The mala had touched me. And the corruption began to spread.
"Styk"
Level 20 Bladespinner
Base Stats:
Vitality — 50
Intelligence — 224
Dexterity — 130
Strength — 79
Wisdom — 76
Charisma — 49
Skills:
Worldbending — Level 60
Knifework — Level 42
Stealth — Level 26
Identification — Level 18
Needlework — Level 18
Abilities:
Stab III — Put your weight behind your wielded blade and force the tip through tougher hides and armour. Damage scales on [STR], increased by an additional 50%.
Execution III — Attack a target while undetected for +300% damage.
Closed Reach — Bend reality to narrow the gap between blade and target by up to 8 inches. Uses mana.
Mana-Fuelled — Passive. Optionally, use mana in place of stamina to activate Knifework abilities.
Knifestorm — Lash out at all surrounding enemies in a tornado of blades, using either one or two daggers. All enemies with arm’s reach receive physical damage worth weapon’s base damage and additional damage scaling on [STR].
Enhanced Portals — Create a portal to another location within current range of sight or within a thirty yard radius. Support up to two pairs of portals at once. Uses mana to open portals only.
Portal Slice — Passive. Portals can now be spawned within non-sentient objects. Doing so slices through all objects that are not reinforced by magic.
Tamed Portals — Passive. Increased efficiency of portal magicks means that your portal glow is reduced by 50%, making them less likely to be detected by enemies.
Ash Husk — Convert your flesh to ash, strengthening it against flame for ten minutes. Gain 50% resistance to fire attacks.
Shrill Perimeter — Create a perimeter wall of 20 foot radius, invisible to all but those adept in magicks. If an enemy crosses this perimeter, this spell releases the shriek of a banshee.
Warped Shield — Passive. If an enemy strikes you with a low-level melee weapon, Warp Shield automatically activates to open a portal that deflects this attack. You must not have any portals currently active. Uses mana on activation.
Pocket Worlds — Open and access pocket dimensions. Storage capacity of summoned pocket worlds scales with [INT] of creator.
Silence III — Create a bubble of 20 yard radius in which sound is eradicated. Uses mana to cast, zero mana to maintain. You may only have one bubble active at any one time.
Saved Portals II — Select a location to “save” for future portals. Until your save point is moved, you may always open a portal here, even if it is beyond your current Local Portal range. Mana is used only upon opening the portal.
Portal Relay II - Up to ten small-scale portals can now be positioned stationary to an entity, and used to communicate sound. In addition, your standard portals may be used to communicate sound.
Stealth Attack III — Passive. 200% boost to damage when unnoticed by enemy.
In Plain Sight — When activated, you have a heightened abilitiy to hide in plain sight, and are able to spot opportunities to break from combat at a higher rate. Scales on [WIS].
Gentle Step — Passive. Your footsteps are dampened on even the hardest of surfaces. Reduce noise of movement by 80%.
Stitch — Create a basic stitch in common fabrics. Ability scales on [CHA].
Improved Cloth Armour — Craft a cloth armour of significantly higher quality, dependent on materials, time and skill level.
Active Effects:
Legacy of Sisyphus:
XP gain increased by +1,400%