Novels2Search
TheirWorld
Chapter 34

Chapter 34

Relief washing over her, Guin knelt next to the little fox, petting him as he mourned.

The fox spirit looked over at her, “Have you truly come to help?”

Guin glared but allowed herself to relax a bit as she saw a bit of softness in the fox’s expression. After Guin nodded, the fox sat in the air and returned to her unhappy, haughty look.

“Fine,” said the fox. “We will see what you can do.”

“How?” Guin asked. An exasperated look appeared on the fox spirit’s face. Clearing her throat, Guin asked, “Who killed you? Was it the same hunters that killed all the other animals out in the forest? Is that why you are so angry and the Che?”

“Of course not,” scoffed the fox. “I wouldn’t be so angry even if they had killed my kit. No, silly girl, death is not a cause for anger. Death is a natural process, the flow of energy and life. It is how those who hunted me and the others have treated death in their ignorance. Never, in the history of this forest as I know it, has the Great Law been so profaned!”

“The Law?” Guin asked, furrowing her brow.

“The Great Law! The Great Law! The Law that has existed since the gods first created the creatures of the land!” The fox spat. “How times have changed—to think that you do not even know of the Great Laws! Allow me to educate you, ignorant creature. This forest is sacred to both veil and che-kind, but it belongs to the spirits! To the veil! To the land! In the past, even your kind and others like you knew and acknowledged the Law. It is something that even the most basic of beasts understands, and yet you, with all your books and clever little tools, you know nothing! You are not even children in this world—you are devils!”

“Forgive me,” Guin said flatly, impressed with her own nerve. “I have not been taught about such a thing. Please, teach me. Tell me, what is the law that has been violated?”

“The Law that Death is sacred,” the fox spirit’s voice was lined with venom.

Liorax then appeared in a flash of green light and landed on Guin’s shoulder. His appearance, of course, meant that the buff that had been keeping her senses at bay dissipated, leaving her coughing and gagging on the deathly sweet air in the cave. Her eyes stung with tears as she watched the fox spirit’s eyes narrow as they laid eyes upon the floating cat.

“Harbinger,” the fox spirit acknowledged curtly.

“Indeed,” answered Liorex with a grim voice. “I see that it is as I thought. Feel honored, Candidate. This is no mere Land Fox.”

“‘Candidate’?” the fox spirit repeated, setting her eyes once more upon Guin.

“What do you mean?” Guin asked.

“In life, she was not so common a creature as Land Fox you might find anywhere. Those things are no stronger than the beedants and the moarbits you have so recently mastered,” Liorax explained. “Rather, this Lady before you is a Che-Bound Spirit Fox.

“In the White Fox Forest, the Spirit Foxes are, for all intents and purposes, the nobility. They enforce the laws and guard the land from those who would seek to pollute it. Descendants of the Amikavi, they are mighty. The Che-Bound Spirit Foxes are a rarity indeed; they're the ones that have been placed in the Che to mediate between the realms,” Liorax told her, nodding over at Tik-Tak, who was still ‘yii’-ing at his mother’s spectral form. “This fox child, too, then. He is, like his mother, a Che-Bound Spirit Fox—and if it is as he says that his father, assuming that to mean his blood father, is following the Frost Wyrm, it would not be unremarkable if that father of his was one of the great-tailed children of Amikavi herself. The most remarkable things about him is that he seems himself to be naught but a Land Fox with little to no power and that he was born at all.” The spirit fox remained quiet as they looked at her confused, crying cub. “...I say that,” Liorax added with distaste. “But he is a pitiful thing...”

“Hush!” the spirit fox snapped at him. “You may be a Harbinger, but I shall not allow such words!” Liorex snorted at her but otherwise ignored the provocation.

Guin looked more closely at her little fox friend. Little to no power? She thought to herself. She had never considered Tik-Tak a ‘mere Land Fox,’ partly because she hadn’t known the difference but more because it simply didn’t feel true. Wasn’t simply having the power of speech an unusual trait? And what about that time she had gone to look for him in the woods? She had felt as if the world were being crushed. That had also been Tik-Tak’s doing, had it not?

Of course, the one who had been there with her during that time wasn’t Liorax, but the Webspinner. Would the Webspinner know the truth behind Tik-Tak’s power and lineage?

“The Law that has been violated,” Liorax was saying, seeming to be deep in thought. “It is not something to do with the traps and death itself. I sense that while your spirit is the cause of the greater corruption—scaled, I imagine, to the size of your powers—it is not your malevolent spirit alone that resides within this cave. Guin. Take your torch deeper.”

Nodding, Guin did as she was told. The fox spirit followed them, but it didn’t take them long to find what Liorax had been referring to. As she drew a hand up to her mouth and nose, she couldn’t tell if the tears in her eyes were from the smell, or the horror, as she looked upon a pile of dozens of corpses, all stripped of their skin and left to rot. Liorax nudged Guin’s face and turned back into a buff.

“Oh my god...,” Guin managed to murmur before turning away, but she nearly fell into the pile herself as she found herself face to face with the bright green fox spirit’s face in hers, eyes blazing.

“Turning away?” the fox spirit asked. “Do you not have the stomach to handle what your kind has done to our forest? To my kind? My people? Cower away, would you, from this grotesque monstrosity that defiles even the laws of simple beasts?”

Guin glared, stubbornly trying to keep her own pride in the face of the adversity she faced, but she had no answers. This was a video game. The same was set up to be this way, she reminded herself. No animals were killed in the making of this game.

This tale has been pilfered from Royal Road. If found on Amazon, kindly file a report.

Guin slammed her eyes shut, gathering the strength to regain her composure. “What can I do?” she asked, opening them with determination.

“You?” the fox spirit sneered. “You can do nothing. You can only cower away back to your village with your tail set firmly between your legs!”

“I won’t!” Guin shouted. Her frustration growing, she demanded to know: “Why won’t you help me? Hate me and my kind all you want, I don't care. Do it for the forest, the animals, whatever! Even if it’s only for Tik-Tak’s sake, help me to help you! I am asking for nothing in return—not even forgiveness!”

Tik-Tak then appeared behind his mother’s spirit, looking pitiful with his tail between his legs and his head lowered. “Momma...”

The fox spirit sighed at her cub. “...Very well. If you want to help, even a little, perhaps there is something you can do—for his sake.” Success!--was what Guin wanted to feel, but her emotions and mind felt so toyed with up to this point that she couldn’t exactly see it that way. The fox spirit looked back and began floating back in the direction of her corpse and spoke:

“We are all hunters. Humans. Beasts. Spirits. We all hunt for something, be it happiness, food, love, or general survival. There are some, however, that hunt only for the joy of killing. These, we do not accept, even among our own.” Guin and Tik-Tak followed her back out to the mouth of the cave, where she continued. “When you kill an animal in these woods, your heart and reason should be pure. One should use all the parts of the animal that can be used if possible, and if not, then what is left should be left for others to partake in. This creates the circle that has maintained these woods for centuries. Had these che hunters that took my life followed this rule, then we would have nothing to say.” The green flame that made up the fox spirit’s body turned hot and violent. “But these, they took our pelts alone and left us in the cave to rot!” The flames died down as she looked back. I cannot speak for them, but if you wish to show me your sincerity, go to these hunters who have failed in their ritual and find my pelt. You will know it is mine, for my color is shared by my son, save for a perfectly white diamond upon the middle of my back. Bring it to me, human girl, and I shall teach you how to purify the corruption and the spirits of these woods.”

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(Update) You have spoken to the Great Owl Wise, who has told you to speak to the spirit of Tik-Tak’s mother and find the reason for her anger. Should you solve it, Wise believes the spirit will be purified.

(Update) You have spoken to the spirit of Tik-Tak’s mother, who seems to be the cause of the corruption of the forest. After speaking with her, she has requested that you bring her pelt back to her. If you do this, she will teach you how to purify the corrupted woods.

You have (6) Days to complete this quest.

This quest is optional. It can be skipped.>>

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Guin gave a determined smile and nodded, “This I will do!”

Tik-Tak excitedly bounced around and nuzzled the flames. “Thank you, Momma!” he cried as a faint smile drew across the mouth of the fox spirit.

“Wait for me, Lady Spirit Fox,” Guin told her. “I will find those hunters, your pelt, and give them all a piece of my mind while I’m at it!” Kneeling next to Tik-Tak, she patted him on the head. “I’ll have to go to town, so you stay here with your mother, Tik-Tak.”

“Yiii,” Tik-Tak squeezed out, though his disappointment was obvious. “Be careful, Guin! Don’t let the hunters get you!”

“You too! Stay hidden!” Guin waved at the little fox and his miserable-looking mother, who couldn’t seem to believe that she had just promised such a thing to a human.

Putting up her [Spirit Armor] and entering her fox form, she began a second great culling of the corrupted beasts. By the time she had gotten beyond the Border, she had leveled all of her skills at least once and gained several stat points.

It took her nearly an hour to reach Bade. It was getting late, and she needed to log off soon, but she at least wanted to see about finding the hunters before she went to bed. She would have all day tomorrow to see about the rest of it. Liorax appeared on her shoulder with a yawn as he was no longer needed as a buff. Night was falling in-game now too.

Not knowing where the hunters were to be found, Guin asked around town. Many of them seemed to ignore her; others told her that she should go home like a good girl. Those who were rude ended up being pounced on or tripped but Liorax, who had nothing better to do, and as they were unable to see him, he got away with everything. Though she wondered briefly why he seemed to have some power over the che realm, she was enjoying it too much to care.

As she was thinking of her options and laughing at the cat’s antics, a familiar voice called up from behind her.

“Guin?” she turned to see Pastor Jormund walking steadily towards her with his hands behind his back and a gentle smile across his face. “What are you doing out here so late?”

Bowing to him, Guin lied: “I was looking to talk to the hunters about getting a pelt, but I can’t seem to find them....” Giving a pouting face, she added, “I’ve been at this for hours!” Screw the game. Liorax floated around her, grinning quite wide as she spoke her childish words in an attempt to gain sympathy. She had to try very hard to keep a straight face.

The pastor gave her a rather strange, amused look. “Is that so?” he said. Then, his eyes seemed to glimmer as he asked, “...Guin, did you go into the woods earlier?”

“Eh?” she tilted her head. Did he see me?

“...Nevermind,” he said, shaking his head. Though his expression hadn’t changed, he seemed to think for a moment. Pointing a finger at her in a stern voice, he offered, “How about this: I will take you to the Hunter’s Guild if you tell me why you really want to go see them.”

“W-What do you mean?” Guin gave an awkward chuckle as he gave her an all-knowing smile. Annoyed, she sighed. “Is that the only way I’m going to get any help in this town at this point?” she asked no one, rolling her eyes.

“At this time of night? Probably,” he told her, crossing his arms and putting on the face of a man who knew he had won something. “Well then, out with it.”

“Would you believe me if I told you the truth?” she asked skeptically. “It’s quite the tall tale....”

“Most tales worth telling are,” the pastor said with a shrug. “Just look at the Book of the Lady. It’s filled with quite the most wonderful adventures.”

“...Is that supposed to be a suggestion?” she asked him dubiously.

“Should I have been more subtle?” he laughed with mischief in his eyes. “At the end of the day, I am still a pastor, you know.”

“Hmm.” Guin felt herself smiling, finding him far more endearing than she thought she would have. Though she had been weary of him when they first met, he had undoubtedly grown on her. The more she thought about it as they walked, she realized why. “Why do you seem to treat me differently than everyone else?”

He gave her a blank look. “Do I?”

“Uhn.”

“Well...,” he started, then frowned at her. “Let’s not distract from our deal, miss.”

Guin snorted. “Find. I’ll tell you...”

And so she did.