Born a Monster Chapter 433

Novel: Born a Monster Author: MikeKochis Updated:
Font Size
15px

433 333 – Fall of Miletus

I had been expecting Honorius or so other heavily armored type to co; I wasn’t worried about Miletus Gregorius.

“Pick those up yourself.” I said.

“They won’t fit .” he replied. “You know you’re a slave, in chains or out.”

I blinked at him. “If you try to sell , you might end up a slave as well.”

He snorted. “Might? My entry price into Domina Scaro Pelletus’ household is you. Having put on chains willingly, so that you can’t challenge your status.”

“Miletus.” I said. “Do you want one of us to slay the other?”

“One of us? I’ve been watching you. You can’t be at full health.”

I smacked my lips. “I have scales. And my claws are coming back in. You’ve lost, Miletus.”

He turned back the edge of his sleeve, showing the chainmail beneath. “Live as a slave, or die denying your truth.”

.....

“So.” I said, “You prepared. You truly want this.”

“It’s the best life that I can have here.” he said. “No more hunger. No more need to be the rchant, thanking adults for spitting on while stealing from . I’ll never hold power; my birth as a male has seen to that. But I can live in better chains than anyone else here.”

I had to pause, and rub my eyes. When I opened them, he had a nasty looking axe in his hands. “Why don’t you just make a better life for yourselves elsewhere?”

“Oh? Where? Down Deep, where the dwarves won’t even let us be ourselves? The surface, where we need to choose whether it’s spiders or cyclopses that eat us? No. Damn the dragon, for gathering us all together here, where we’re trapped inside a mountain. Do you know what we were, before he ca?”

“I doubt anyone truly knows that.” I said. “Perhaps not even the Dragon of Wands himself.”

Miletus wasn’t daunted. “We once walked the surface, tended orchards, raised flocks of sheep and goats. Sure, the won were in charge, but a man could earn a living, if he was willing to work for it. Look around you. Are we going to earn a living, no matter how hard we work?”

“I think we can help each other.” I said, eventually. “If there are...”

“Whatcha up to?” Decima said, Caesarius pulsing in her arms.

“Decima.” Miletus said. To , “We will help each other. Put on those chains, and let’s go.”

“Go?” Decima said, dropping the leech. “But you can’t go, Miletus. You just can’t. You’re the smartest of us, even Hexie says so. Don’t LEAVE us!”

She rushed toward him, but stopped when he swept the axe through the air before her. “Go away, Decima.” he said. “It’s ti for to beco a man. And YOU, stop stalling and put those on.”

I sighed. “No, I have other things that I need to do. I’m not your path to prosperity, Miletus.”

He adjusted his grip on the axe, stood tall. He might have been intimidating, if he weren’t so lean. “Say the words, then.”

“Oh, what words are you looking for?” I asked.

He curled his lip at . “I claim you, slave, for the house of Domina Scaro Pelletus.”

“Oh, no.” Domina said, and began running.

“Miletus. Look at the numbers. Your Might...”

“I CLAIM YOU, SLAVE!” he bellowed.

There was no help for it, then. “I reject your claim.” I said, sliding my left arm into the ager shield that just a few days before had been a chair.

“And?” he asked.

I yawned, and he nearly charged then. “I reject your claim by force of arm and steel.” I said.

He thrust his chest forward, his head up, and let out a credible bellow. When he lowered his head to look at , he was frothing at the lips.

“Ah, crap.” I said.

He charged; of course he charged. I’d spent enough ti among the Norvik to recognize Berserker class features. Miletus, the gentle mathematician and rchant, procurer of food for the pride, was also a single-minded killing machine.

It really was one or the other of us.

And damn you, Miletus, it was never a contest. I had the Valor; I had the skills. The knife in my hand might not have been Heart’s Protector, kept safe in the dwarven vaults below, but it sufficed. Had it co down to it, I could have finished him with only my claws.

It ended with standing over his body, leaking out the last of his blood onto the floor. My own mingled with his, primarily from a gap left by one of my cheeks, deftly removed by one of his better strikes.

“Why?” I asked him. “Why did you force it to this?”

He spat blood at , shook a final ti, and died silently.

The knife had never been ant for combat; the tip was gone, the edge missing two pieces, and there were cracks throughout. I let it drop to the floor.

They were gathered, the other fourteen of them.

“What just happened here?” Hexanter asked.

I kicked the manacles, still there on the floor. “Does anyone else mistake for a slave?”

It was pure bravado, of course. I summoned the Miko Light, but it takes two days to regrow a cheek. Longer, the way we were fed. Or more to the point, not fed.

“Miletus was our contact with the markets.” one of the younger boys said.

“They know .” Hexanter said. To , she said, “What will we sell to them, though?”

I walked over to Miletus, ripped his shirt open. “What about a suit of chainmail?” I asked.

“Set to the fra of a starveling?” she asked. “They’ll call it scrap.”

They would. Just as human rchants would. Greedy bastards.

“The axe is still serviceable. I can work the chainmail, given tools and ti.” I said.

“Coins.” said Arcturus. “Miletus kept a supply of coins for ergencies.”

Hexanter held up a small leather pouch. “This supply?” She upended it, dropping three silver coins and one of copper into her hand. “Still, how did he afford such equipnt?”

“He ntioned Domina Scaro Pelletus.” I said. “But she’s one of the middle families, I thought.”

“Lower middle families, perhaps.” Gregorious said. “She couldn’t afford this. Not unless she got an advance from one of the ladies above you.”

“What makes you so valuable, anyway?” Domina asked.

“Rude!” Hexanter rebuked. “But she has a point. You have skills, and magic, but there’s better at both running free in the marketplace.”

“It’s the symbol.” Gregorious said. “Three of the big four have tried to claim him a slave, and failed. Plus there was that big brawl in the arena. He’s not just free, he’s the incarnation of everyone who’s stomped a foot and said, not .”

“I’m really not.” I said.

Hexanter glared at . “Miletus seed to feel otherwise. You clean up your own ss. Then back to work. I have a pride to feed.”

“I have an idea on that, as well.” I said.

She turned her back on . “I’m not going to like this, am I?”

“The odds won’t be as good as they were when my skills were unknown.” I said, “But throw into the arena. I’m tired of just facing these claims, one after another. Let fight them off, one a week.”

She lowered her head. “I was wrong.” she said. “You eventually die in the arena, and until then, you kill a scum a week? Sounds like a win for all of us.”

I got to work. Half of the day, I would work on restorations. The other half, I split links, joined them. A chainmail coif may not be the best of helts, but it isn’t the worst, either.

By the ti of the next Wrathday, I was as ready as I was going to get. The axe looked ridiculous in my arms, but I had the Might to wield it without penalty (according to my System, at any rate).

I worried about what I would do without a shield, but my first victory would take care of that. Even at my reduced odds, the winnings from a decent match would buy one.

And the pride could eat.

My siblings, were they eating? Were they truly happy in the Block? When I left, should I offer to take them with ?

What position would they have in Achea?

Should I leave them here?

Would they have been better off if I’d left them in the lagoon?

And how was I worried about THAT when I should have instead been working myself up for an arena battle against a stronger, better armored opponent?

One of these days, I was going to be challenged by the minotaur equivalent of myself. No contest; if soone with my level of skills and higher statistics faced , I was just dead.

Ah, there it was. The familiar lack of saliva in my mouth, the irrational level of calm as my emotions and I temporarily parted ways.

I made my way around to the announcers, surrounded by the bet-keepers. They rembered , were eager to schedule against Banarius Gothicus Antares, champion of Lady ndotica Erogenesis Stampsfoot, who had in a claim.

“I’ll be facing a claim a week until I’m dead, or until there are no more claims.”

You are reading Born a Monster Chapter 433 on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

On the Path to the Great Dao cover
Similar genre

On the Path to the Great Dao

Pig Nerd ·Action

【Fromtheauthorof''!】Mygrandfatherisverypeculiar.Everyday,helightsincenseforhimselfandeatscandlesinfrontofhisownancestraltablet.Thevillagersareallte...

Elven Invasion cover
Similar genre

Elven Invasion

Respro ·Action

MagicvsScience HumanvsElves EarthvsForestia MortalvsGod ThisisataleinwhichGoddessLunainordertosaveherplanetandcivilizationstartsainvasiononEarth,Wi...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.