Delve Chapter 173: Propagation

Novel: Delve Author: SenescentSoul Updated:
Font Size
15px

“So, how’s things?” Rain asked, painting targets one by one as the dog-sized lizards charged him. Radiance responded, beams of golden light lancing into each monster as he removed IFF’s protection.

The lair had turned out to be a cave system. It was ludicrously hot inside, the walls literally glowing with the heat. As for monsters, these Firetail Geckos were it. They were weak, but nurous, coming in a few different sizes. The flaming tails reminded Rain a bit of Charmander, but that was where the similarities ended. They had dark skin cracked with red, like magma beneath a crust of hardened rock, and they fought with tooth, claw, and fire from their tails. Truthfully, they weren’t much of a threat. The walls were probably more dangerous.

“Oh, ya know how it is,” Carten said with a grunt. There was a crunch of shattering bone and a hiss of blood boiling as he slamd one of the lizards into the heated stone. “Jus’ doin’ thing. This is a nice break. Gettin’ right tired o walkin’, that’s fer sure.”

“I’m getting tired of being carried,” Rain replied, casually backhanding one of the monsters as it lunged for his face. He walked past it, leaving Radiance’s beam to drill into its stony hide as he fended off its friends. It would only be a few more seconds before the spell finished with them, excluding those he’d left for Carten. “I’d kill to be able to stretch my legs. Hey, I’ve been aning to ask you. How are things with Evonna? Are you two still an item?”

“Fer sure!” Carten said happily, bringing his shields together, then slamming their bottom edges down on the neck of a lizard whose legs he’d just broken. The shields made the world’s dullest guillotine, and there was a wet, crunching schlink as the creature’s head was shorn from its body. “She completes . A woman after own heart.”

Rain rolled his eyes as the last of the lizards succumbed to Radiance. He dropped the spell, and the glow from the walls faded, no longer bolstered by his magic. A quick blast of Purify took care of the ss, and then Detection pointed the way forward. “You two are perfect for each other.”

“S’truth,” Carten agreed, and there was a scrape of tal as he hurried to catch up. Neither he nor Rain were bothering to collect any fallen Tel or Crysts. Others would take care of that later. “Velika ain’t got nothin’ on ‘er. I an, sure, it ain’t as excitin’, knowin’ she can’t snap bones by mistake if she gets real inta’ it, but she’s got more’n enough spice in her kitchen ta’ make up fer tha’, if ya know what I an.”

“You have issues, Carten,” Rain said, chuckling to himself.

“Oh, an’ yer one ta talk?” Carten scoffed. “Aliah, now. There’s a woman tha—“

“You don’t want to finish that sentence. More coming. From the long tunnel to the left.”

“Oi, jus’ how many lizard shits is in here, anyway?” Carten asked, raising his shields.

“I haven’t bothered counting,” Rain said, his eyes darting over the targets as one by one he marked them for death. “This lair is kinda...basic. The heat seems to be the real—Ah! There’s our prize.”

Firetail Gecko – Level 7

“Where?” Carten asked, and Rain pointed. “Oh. Bit of a runt.”

“Don’t let your guard down. We’re in here alone, rember. Co on, let’s catch it,” Rain said, walking forward. Radiance seared rcilessly into the other oncoming monsters, leaving the blue untouched. “Interesting,” he said, in no rush to close the distance. “It’s got the sa na as the common ones, just like my Musk Wolf and your Face Stabber. Damn, I really wish Detection was able to identify blues when they aren’t aberrant.”

“Would be convenient,” Carten agreed, hunkering behind his shield as the blue crashed into it. It had outpaced its fellows by virtue of not having a golden death laser to contend with. Carten grunted in surprise, and there was a screech of tal scraping across stone as he was pushed back. “Oi!” he shouted in indignation.

“Just keep it busy for a second, Carten. And don’t break it.”

“Aww!” Carten shouted, and there was a blast of heat as the essence monster bathed him in a torrent of fire from its tail, arced over its back like that of a scorpion. When the plu of fla faded, Carten was unhard and unhappy. “Ain’t no fun left. Tha’ plate ya gave took all the danger out. Tha’ weren’t no worse’n a sumr breeze.”

“Issues,” Rain repeated.

“Oh, hush yer noise,” Carten grumped. “REBOUND!” This ti, it was the lizard’s turn to hiss in surprise as it bounced away from the impact. Rain pounced on the monster before it could recover, grabbing it by the leg and pulling it into a bear hug. Its claws scrabbled against his armor to no effect, and he was glad he’d left his cloak at the entrance. The light faded as he dropped Radiance, the other geckos already dead.

“Been anin’ ta ask ye,” Carten said, standing and resting his shields on the ground, having to raise his voice over the angry hissing and scrabbling of claws. “Did ye take a skill or sothin’? Ta’ make ye all…” Carten gestured vaguely. “…that? Unless yer armor’s thicker’n it seems, there’s a lotta at fer yer lady friend in there.”

“at for my…” Rain sighed, then shook his head as he bit off his reply. It’s not worth it.

“Jus’ sayin’!” Carten said with a laugh. He walked over, then clapped Rain on the back with a shield, almost making him drop the lizard. “I an, hells, jus’ look at ye! Little Mouse, all grown up!”

Rain snorted at the nickna as the lizard tried to bathe him in fire, managing only the tiniest puff before he quashed its magic with Suppression. He tightened his grip, but the monster didn’t stop struggling. It never would, not until it was completely out of stamina. It wasn’t an animal that he could intimidate into submission. This one didn’t have any intelligence, only instinct. It would never recognize that it posed no more danger to him than a buzzing fly.

Rain looked up at Carten as the Gecko continued to struggle against him. He’d searched his heart for regret over the creature’s doom, but found only resolve. “I suppose I am.”

Aliah tilted the cup sitting on the table in front of her, peeking underneath to count the faces shown on the nine six-sided dice beneath. Once she had them morized, she set the cup back down, then looked at her opponents. “One two.” She then picked up a Tel from the pile in front of her and tossed it into the center of the table.

“Two twos,” Tallheart said, adding a Tel of his own.

Aliah looked at the third player at the table—more accurately, on it—then smiled. “Dozer?”

*pop* *pop* *pop* … *pop* *pop* *pop*

Aliah chuckled to herself. “Three threes. Go on then.”

There was another pop as Dozer spat a Tel over his cup to land with a clatter next to the others.

Aliah looked back at Tallheart. “Okay, I guess I’ll have to say four twos, then.”

“Five twos,” Tallheart replied.

*pop* *pop* *pop* … *pop* *pop* *pop*

“Three threes again,” Aliah said, patting the sli. “Good job. Ah, ah, ah, you don’t need to stake until the next hand. Wait. Waaaait. That’s a good boy.” She looked back at Tallheart, ignoring the sli’s invalid bid. She thought for a mont. “Six fours.”

“Hmph,” Tallheart snorted. “This ga is uninteresting with only two…” he hesitated, glancing at Dozer, “…three…players.”

“So you challenge?” Aliah asked.

Tallheart snorted again. “Seven twos.”

“Challenge,” Aliah replied instantly, smiling. Technically, Dozer should have been the one to do it, but so allowances had to be made. She lifted her cup, revealing her dice, not a single one with two pips showing.

Silently, Tallheart turned over his own cup. Aliah raised an eyebrow, seeing that he did actually have a lot of twos. Four out of nine, in fact, which didn’t seem very likely. Rain could have doubtless told her the exact probability. If there was one thing she’d learned, it was not to play Rain at Nine Dice. She regretted teaching it to him.

*pop*

Dozer glomd onto the side of his cup, attempting to lift it, and Aliah quickly moved to help before he sent the dice tumbling everywhere. It turned out that Dozer had two twos, for a total of six when combined with Tallheart’s.

“Hmmm,” Tallheart rumbled, setting down his cup. “You have won again.”

“Thank you for your donation,” Aliah said, sweeping up the Tel from the center of the table. They weren’t actually playing for money, just to pass the ti. One Tel wasn’t much of an ante, and these ones had technically co from Dozer. She still hadn’t quite gotten over the shock of discovering that the tiny sli was literally making them out of nothing.

She reached over to pat the sli before collecting its dice. Well, not nothing. He only does it for a few hours after Rain feeds him. It’s probably either mana or essence. I wish I had Mana Sight right now so I could try to figure out which one.

“Another ga?” Tallheart asked.

“Sure, why not?” Aliah replied, shaking Dozer’s dice in his cup. Suddenly, she stopped mid-shake and looked up, having felt Winter wash over her. “He’s back.”

“Mmm,” Tallheart replied. The three of them watched—listened, in Dozer’s case—as Rain made his way over to them. Once he reached them, he plopped himself down into Dozer’s unused chair, catching the ecstatic sli as it flung itself at his chest.

“Can I get in on this?” he asked by way of greeting.

“No,” Aliah and Tallheart replied together.

Rain snorted, removing his helt and placing it on the table. “Co on. It’s just basic statistics. And watching people. Tallheart’s face is an open book.”

Tallheart perford one of his signature slow blinks.

“Why are you back so soon, anyway?” Aliah asked, hiding her smile. “I thought you were going to clear the lair.”

“Already did that,” Rain replied, waving a hand. “Don’t worry, it wasn’t that dangerous, just really, really hot, and I didn’t go alone. Carten ca with .”

“I see,” Aliah said neutrally. It would have been safer without him. “And what did you find?”

Rain smiled. “We caught a level-seven blue. The first group of eight is already awakened, and Samson’s going to take the next group in to clean up the loot before they break the core. They don’t need for that.”

“Shouldn’t you sound more excited?” Aliah asked, observing him carefully.

“Oh, I’m excited,” Rain said, gracing her with a smile. “It’s great. It just isn’t as simple as all that. You didn’t have to deal with the politics leading up to it.”

“Mmm,” Tallheart rumbled. “We know better.”

Rain snorted. “All the slots are settled now at least. Tarny’s still dead set on Logistics Beacon. He says he wants to follow in my footsteps, not retread them. He’s taking the four seasons, with Amplify and Extend so he can get to Fall faster. It’s still going to take ages. He hasn’t made up his mind past that.”

“Admirable,” Tallheart said. “This is what the company needs. Hmm. And you will no longer need to take them yourself.”

Rain shrugged. “Yeah, but he’s basically signing himself up to stay with Ascension forever. There’s a reason Beacons end up enslaved.” Rain paused, considering his phrasing. “Not that that’s what he’s going to—what we’re going to—“

“We know what you ant,” Aliah said, smiling, “I’m sure he doesn’t see it that way.”

“I know,” Rain said with a sigh. “It’s just, if it really looked like we were going to starve out, you could still take Fall. By the ti food becos a problem, the Knives should have either given up or attacked already. Not that I’m hoping for that second one. It would be a relief, though. Knowing.”

“Mmm,” Tallheart said. “I believe we have escaped pursuit. The Empire has better uses for their assassins. However, a belief such as mine only increases the threat. We cannot relax. Not until we have left the forest. Perhaps not even then.”

“Tell about it,” Aliah said, leaning back in her chair and rubbing at her eyes. “I was thinking we’d be fine if we just made it to the plains, but then I rembered Lightbreaker. He’s not with them, obviously, but just because Rain can’t get Val to talk, it doesn’t an Fecht will have that problem getting secrets out of his father.”

“Val did tell a few things, actually,” Rain said.

“Wait, what?” Aliah asked, straightening. “When?”

“Before the earthquake. I was going to ntion it, but I got distracted, and then, well…” He shrugged. “It didn’t seem important compared to everything else that’s been going on.”

“Spill it,” she said, using one of his expressions.

Rain smiled. “Fine, fine. It’s a rare class called Contender of Light, and it boosts all Light magic. When he took it, it created three brand new skill trees for him, Daybreak, Midlight, and Nightfall, stealing the Light skills he already had from their original locations. So yeah, recombination is a thing. Apart from that, the pretentious na, and the stupid solo requirent, it’s about what you’d expect. It boosts the impact of Focus like Mage does and increases the cap for Light skills by two across all three trees. Given his level, he can’t see any skills past rank two, but there isn’t anything he can see that would hide a group. I asked. If you want the full details, just check the book. The information is free to Entrusted.”

“Hmm,” Tallheart said. “Interesting. And good to know. The Empire does not allow common soldiers access to tier-three skills. That restriction does not apply to Knives, but I have never seen one use Light Magic. Their builds are rigid, with only minor variations. If they are not behind us when we enter the plains, it will be safe to let down our guard. As much as that is ever wise.”

“Right,” Rain said, nodding. “Lightbreaker’s been working for the Empire for a long ti, so if his build was spreading to the extent that they could hide armies without him, I’d think we’d have heard about it. Just what is his deal, anyway? What’s Fecht got on him?”

“You haven’t asked Val?” Aliah said.

Rain sighed. “Of course I’ve asked. He doesn’t know. Other than the build, it’s like Lightbreaker and the father Val rembers are two completely different people. I wouldn’t rule out mind magic. Fecht’s an Omnimage, right?”

“Mmm,” Tallheart replied. “A warrior as well. And an artisan. Even I do not know what his class is in truth. In the Empire, none doubt that the Potentate’s skill exceeds that of a master in all crafts.”

“Damn cult of personality, god-emperor bullshit,” Rain said, rubbing his eyes. “How are we even supposed to deal with that?”

“Relax, Rain,” Aliah said, reaching over to lay a hand on his shoulder. “It’s not our place to deal with that. We just need to get away.”

“Right,” Rain said, placing his hand atop hers. “Obviously, you’re right. Vatreece will stop him. Or Kev… Okay, maybe not Kev.”

Aliah chuckled, squeezing his shoulder before breaking the contact. “So, are we going to have any new Contenders of Light now that Val’s talking?”

Rain looked down at Dozer, who was still clinging happily to his breastplate. He pulled the sli free with a sucking sound, then placed him back on the table and began petting him to keep him there. “No. There are three problems with that. First, the class is rare, so it’s locked down to Entrusted after I lost that vote, second, the stupid solo requirent, and third, we’ve already filled that niche, so the credit threshold is really high. The sa applies to Cold Mage—Mahria’s talking too, if you didn’t know. She sold her class info so she could afford the respec. She’s been much more cooperative since then, but...”

He paused, looking around and lowering his voice. “Speaking candidly, I’m worried that she’ll leave once we get to Three Cliffs. Her and the others who didn’t want to be Entrusted. Until she does, though, I can’t justify lowering the price for her slot.”

“I hear you on that, but I think she might surprise you,” Aliah said.

Rain nodded. “I hope so. Anyway, as for other rare classes, True Jack has that damn waiting period, so nobody really considered it. We did get a Monolith, though. Gigs went with Tortugo.”

Aliah nodded. “Yeah, I overheard him arguing about it with Staavo earlier this morning. Should be interesting. Tallheart can make stuff to help him deal with the imbalance.” She jerked her thumb at Tallheart. “Speaking of this guy, are we going to have another Runic Powersmith?”

“Ellis,” Rain said, nodding. “As a talworker, anyway. I don’t know that anyone will be able to et the requirents for the evolution. They’re…a little insane.”

“Mmm,” Tallheart rumbled.

Rain smiled, but then sighed and reached up to rub at his neck. “Certain people aren’t thrilled with about the slot picks. They’re blaming for overpricing the rare classes. Calling a hypocrite. As if it wasn’t the council heads that decided on the rules while we were gone. As if they didn’t vote to confirm them. You joke, but you two really are smart to stay out of it.”

“I’m sure they’ll get over it,” Aliah said with a shrug. “They knew what they signed up for. And you have to admit, the new rules make more sense than your original ones. Sorry, but it’s true.”

Rain nodded. “You don’t need to be sorry. I freely admit that I was shortsighted about a few things. That’s why I wanted this to be a democracy—well, one reason. Anyway, none of this will matter unless we can find ourselves a place away from all this insanity. We need ti for Ascension to get on a firr footing, and for that, we need to get off this damn continent as soon as possible. Can you take up now to get a look at those plains? I want to see how far it is to the ocean. Stupid, dark-age, lazy-ass, finger-painting cartographers.”

“Sure,” Aliah said, not bothering to hide her smile this ti. “Later. I actually wanted to work on my soul this afternoon. I feel like I’ve been slacking. Tallheart’s going to beat at this rate.”

Tallheart rumbled. “About that.”

Aliah whipped her head around to stare at him. True to Rain’s words, the cervidian’s face said it all. “You—?”

“Mmm,” Tallheart rumbled. “The Ava incident.”

“And you didn’t tell us about it until NOW!?” Rain exclaid, practically knocking the table over as he lurched to his feet.

Tallheart gave him another of his signature slow blinks. “It did not seem important compared to everything else that has been going on.”

Rain spluttered in consternation at having his own words fed back to him. Dozer, anwhile, dropped from the table to collect the dice that had been sent tumbling by his outburst. Watching this, Aliah laughed, pushing aside her disappointnt at losing—and her sha at feeling disappointnt instead of only happiness for her friend. Reaching up, she grabbed Rain’s arm and pulled him back into his chair before returning her attention to Tallheart.

“Congratulations. Really. Now tell exactly what you did.”

[I can’t believe he waited so long to tell us!] Rain sent to Dozer, petting the sli vigorously as he paced back and forth. [He saw Lilly?! I an, what?! That’s not how it works at all! And why wasn’t she there the next ti? Did he just hallucinate her or sothing? No, it has to be more than that. He’s having…like…a vision quest or sothing. Step one, get out of the workshop, step two, reconcile with your lost love, step three, conquer the tower of inner trials. Arrg! It’s so confusing!]

[Tall-Brother!] Dozer sent.

Rain blinked, stopping to lift the sli in front of his eyes. [Yes, that’s who I’m talking about. What about him?]

[Rain-King angry Tall-Brother?]

Rain blinked. [Wow, that was almost a sentence. Nice work.]

Dozer’s elation at being praised flooded into Rain, and he smiled despite himself. He could still feel the sli’s curiosity beneath, so he answered the question. [No, I’m not angry at him. I’m happy and annoyed at the sa ti, on top of being generally stressed.] Rain concentrated, sending the complicated emotion. [This.]

He waited.

Eventually, Dozer seed to co to a conclusion. [Human is confuse.]

[It’s our racial power,] Rain replied, looking up as he heard a polite woof. Cloud was looking at him expectantly, with Ror’s cat Nibs curled up on his fluffy back. Rain blinked, then smiled. “Playti already?”

Cloud chuffed again, his tail wagging precisely twice. anwhile, Dozer practically detonated with excitent as he realized who had co to visit. He launched himself from Rain’s hands, leaping for Cloud and slamming into the dog’s side like a gooey teor. Cloud hopped back, dislodging Nibs with a yowl, and then the three of them were off, chasing each other and leaving a trail of chaos through the camp.

Rain snorted, his troubles fading montarily into the background. At least it’s not Dust this ti, though if Cloud doesn’t stop growing soon, there’s hardly going to be a difference. Seriously, that dog has got to be part moose.

“I thought you said you were going to be quiet,” Aliah said suddenly.

Rain jumped, then winced as he looked over at her. She was seated cross-legged nearby with her eyes closed. Tallheart was there too, already inside his soul, or—more likely—simply ignoring the disturbance.

“Don’t bla ,” Rain said after a mont. “That was all Cloud’s fault.”

Aliah cracked open one eye to give him a look. “Blaming the dog? Really? Tell , who is it, exactly, that’s making the animals around here so odd?”

“Point,” Rain replied, smiling.

“Co sit,” Aliah said, closing her eye again and patting the ground next to her. “You have soul stuff to do too.”

“Don’t I know it,” Rain said, moving toward her.

He hadn’t made nearly as much progress as he’d hoped, it was true. The need to use Velocity precluded getting any work done during the day. When he’d been trapped in soulspace, he’d been able to control his spells freely, subject to input lag. Being inside his soul was different. Only recently had he managed to keep Winter without disrupting his ditation. Sothing like Velocity was utterly out of the question. Further, once he was in his soul, that was it. Winter would stay running if he did it right, but there was no turning it off or switching to sothing else, not even with a macro. His entire script layer needed to be reinitialized every ti he returned to his body.

Sitting beside Aliah with a sigh, Rain crossed his legs and summoned his interface. Before he got to work, he had a few other things to take care of. Typing in a few commands, he pulled up his copy of Ascension’s roster, then set about updating the status of the new awakened. When he was finished, he sorted the results by level and filtered the list. If there was one thing he’d made progress on while traveling, it was his spreadsheet application.

roster.ods

B

U

I

Text Color

Cell Color

A

B

C

D

E

1

Total mbers

121

#todo standardize class naming convention

2

Entrusted

24

#todo maybe just leave untranslated?

3

Trusted

27

4

Aspirant

70

5

Awakened mbers

45

6

Cumulative Level

262

7

Average Level

2.17

8

9

Na

LVL

CAP

Class (*Planned)

Rank

10

Tallheart

37

37

Runic Powersmith

Entrusted

11

Aliah

31

31

Uncertain Savior

Entrusted

12

Rain

25

30

Dynamo

Entrusted

13

Jamus

12

12

Arcane [Mysteries] Mage

Entrusted

14

Carten

12

12

Shield Turtle

Entrusted

15

Staavo

10

10

Swordsman [Spellsword]

Entrusted

16

Val

8

8

Contender of Light

Entrusted

17

Mahria

7

15

Cold Mage

Trusted

18

Corrin

7

9

Geomancer

Trusted

19

Ava Lek-Ani

7

7

Pyromancer

Entrusted

20

Mlemlek Ko-Latti

7

7

Swordsman

Entrusted

21

Samson Darr

6

6

Swordsman

Entrusted

22

Reason

6

6

Chemist

Trusted

23

Myth

6

6

Alchemist

Trusted

24

Kettel

6

6

Pyromancer

Trusted

25

Ruce

5

9

Diviner*

Entrusted

26

Mollo

5

9

Artificer [Jeweler]*

Entrusted

27

Lago (Lauger)

5

9

Heavy [Armor] Turtle*

Trusted

28

Fredek

5

9

Brawler [Passivist?]*

Trusted

29

Clubbs

5

9

Hydromancer*

Trusted

30

“Quickhand” Telen

5

9

Rogue*

Trusted

31

Vanna

5

5

Elental Enhancer*

Entrusted

32

Tahir

5

5

Healer

Entrusted

33

Stint

5

5

Sharpshooter

Aspirant

34

Shena

5

5

Woodsmith [Bowyer]*

Entrusted

35

Ror

5

5

Runescribe*

Entrusted

36

reck

5

5

Healer

Entrusted

37

Lyn Aleuas Draves

5

5

Staff Defender*

Entrusted

38

Hanes

5

5

Sharpshooter*

Trusted

39

Evonna

5

5

Shield Turtle

Trusted

40

Nails

9

ntalist*

Trusted

41

loni

9

Chemist [Potionmaker]*

Entrusted

42

Gigs (Dewiggen)

9

Tortugo*

Entrusted

43

Erton Sale

9

Aeromancer*

Trusted

44

Ellis

9

talworker*

Entrusted

45

Tarny

9

Logistics Beacon*

Entrusted

46

Belson

9

Hurler*

Trusted

47

Ujesh

7

Tar*

Trusted

48

Delfina

7

Beam Mage*

Trusted

49

Slt

7

Utility ta-Mage*

Entrusted

50

Shortcrust (Joyanna)

7

Spearwielder*

Trusted

51

Ron (Taron)

7

Acid Mage [Acerbomancer?]*

Trusted

52

Kal (Kalman)

7

Elental Inhibitor*

Trusted

53

Gardener

7

Tracker*

Trusted

54

Finn (Finnbogi)

7

[Arcane] Shifter*

Trusted

Despite his lingering stress, Rain smiled. Ascension was working. All but a handful of the original mbers were now awakened. With their overall mbership, he put their combined power on the level of the Fel Sadanis guild—excluding Halgrave, naturally. Even better, they had a much broader and well-rounded set of abilities. They lacked so higher-level classes, of course, such as a Translocationist, but of what was available at bronze, they had their bases covered. They had Warriors, Defenders, and combat Mages of all elents—even Dark, though only through Shroud and Ray of Eclipse. They had Healers, an Enhancer, an Inhibitor, a Tracker, and a Diviner.

More importantly, they had Workers. As Ascension’s armory grew, so too would their unawakened mbers grow in capability. They would learn to use the weapons the crafters made, not just generally, but with actual Katas guiding their hands. Both Samson and Lyn were still holding their classes, though only the most able-bodied had the energy for them when they stopped each night. That would change once their flight was ended.

And then there was Engineering.

The generator. Light bulbs. Telescopes. Airships...

Rain paused, then sighed. He was getting distracted, not to ntion ahead of himself. With a flick of his wrist, he closed out the window in front of him, replacing it with his progress report. Long-term plans were great, but he couldn’t lose track of his more imdiate goal.

Progress Report

marker_1: marathon2 [3061 Promise 02 06:42]

marker_2: sales_delving [3061 Promise 10 12:08]

Span: 8.2 days

Character

Skills

Chemical Ward: 5 -> 10 ( 5)

Suppression: 5 -> 10 ( 5)

Tolerance

Recovery: 71 -> 77 ( 6)

Vigor: 113 -> 114 ( 1)

Focus: 198 -> 200 ( 2)

Clarity: 181 -> 200 ( 19)

Attribute Buff: 254 -> 268 ( 14)

Speed: 4 -> 7 ( 3)

Synchronization

Strength: 17.3 -> 20.6 ( 3.3)

Endurance: 6.6 -> 7.0 ( 0.4)

Focus: 48.4 -> 50.0 ( 1.6)

Perception: 9.6 -> 9.7 ( 0.1)

The only skill left to level was ntal Ward, which was still languishing at level one. That wouldn’t last. With Nails investing in Psionics, Rain would soon have the training partner he needed. Nails would start off weak, but with Winter, he would grow stronger quickly, eliminating the need for Aliah to compromise her build. Rain wasn’t worried about his mind being damaged, let alone read. In the days to co, Nails would be the one with the headache.

As for the rest of what the dialog was showing him, progress was slowing to a halt. He was reaching his limit. He could no longer maintain his stat boosts at twenty past his cap, as had beco his custom. It wasn’t just that he’d maxed out the Malleable Ring, though there was that. Tallheart would have gladly made him an upgraded version had he asked. It simply wouldn’t do him any good before silver. For whatever reason, Rain was able to push past his level-defined limit, but only so far.

His soul could take it; it was his body that couldn’t keep up.

At two-fifty stats applied, he felt nothing. At two-seventy, he felt only a slight, familiar warmth, and even then, only if he exerted himself for far too long. At two-ninety, however—achieved by borrowing so of the new stat rings from the armory—the heat was excruciating, searing the inside of his skeleton rcilessly. It was bearable, if only just, but pushing through it was a pointless risk. There was still work to be done without going that far. However, bringing his individual tolerances up to snuff was of secondary importance, so his heart wasn’t really in it. For now, there was one and only one thing that he needed to be concentrating on.

And here I am thinking about it when I should be doing it.

Banishing his interface with a thought, Rain looked at Aliah beside him, a veneer of frustration marring her beautiful features. Beside her, Tallheart sat placidly, his face, in contrast, a perfect picture of stoic serenity. Rain reached out, gently taking Aliah’s hand. She stiffened, startled at the contact, then opened her eyes.

“What is it?”

Rain smiled softly, then settled their clasped hands on the dirt between them. Looking forward, he closed his eyes, then exhaled. “You can do it,” he said, no doubt in his voice, for he had none. “Just let yourself go.” He squeezed her hand gently. He could feel the warmth of her skin against his, not blocked by the cold and lifeless tal between. “I won’t let you float away.”

Aliah snorted, squeezing back. “Cheesy.”

Rain smiled but didn’t let go, and after a mont, Aliah took a deep breath, then exhaled, matching her breathing to his. As Rain drifted down toward his soul, he focused on the comforting presence of her fingers, interlaced with his.

She would get there. It was only a matter of ti.

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

You are reading Delve Chapter 173: Propagation 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

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.