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Chapter 25 - Javeline Hot Potato

“We take it,” Rotte growled. “Kill later.”

Mitri reached down and scooped

up, throwing

over his shoulder. I winced. The pain of the Javeline spears was still fresh. But the bastards trussed

up like, well, like a prize pig, and cantered back into the woods.

We didn’t go far. They must have seen the glider from the ground, just as the night haunt had, and co to investigate. I started to sll sulfur and feel humidity dampen my fur, and realized we were heading toward the hot springs that I’d flown over. We broke into a small clearing with several steaming pools and a campsite nearby. Their camp was small and disorganized, with three small hide tents and so supplies. They’d left a fourth, smaller rutter to guard it and cook dinner, by the looks of things. It had a tal cook pot hanging on a hollow iron pole. The tender looked at

curiously.

Mitri tossed

down onto the ground, knocking the wind out of .

“Tie up.”

The smaller boar-man went to the packs and retrieved a length of chain—real tal chain. Not the rough cordage we were working with. God, the things I could do with a tal chain. They looped my wrists with the chain and then strung the whole thing around a branch, hoisting it to where I could barely sit.

“My tribe will co for ,” I said.

Mitri looked up at the last of the fading light and made a rude noise. “Is night. No goblin co.”

He was right. Goblins are chaos personified until about an hour after eating. When they crash, they crash hard. The javelines disregarded

for the ti being, busying themselves instead with scooping whatever stew they’d brewed out of the cook pot into wooden bowls, which they slurped from, slopping half of it down their bristly flavor-savers. That finished, Rotte trotted past

into the woods, and a few minutes later, a stench wafted out that made even my raw-at-eating goblin throat clench up and gag.

Rotte ca back into the camp, trailing the stink along with him. He huffed a laugh. “Was bad one,” he said, and then went to the cook pot for seconds. Disgusting creature. Once the hunting trio had eaten their fill, they sat back on their haunches and began to joke and laugh while the camp tender ate what little burnt scraps clung to the bottom of their pot.

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After a few hours, the third javeline, the one that had scared off the night haunt got bored or restless and wandered over to . He prodded my sloth-claw blade with his hoof. “Is truth you talk?”

I debated staying silent. But I had a feeling it would just lead to

getting the business end of a spear, again. “Yeah,” I said. “I talk.” I looked up. “My na is Apollo. What’s your na?”

“Muthus,” said the javeline rutter.

“Why are you keeping

prisoner?”

The javeline shrugged. “Is strange, goblin that talk. Don’t die. Maybe is worth sell.”

“We don’t have to be enemies,” I said. “If you take

back to my tribe, we could trade. You have tal. I’m sure we have things you could use.”

Muthus shook his head. “We trade goblin for tal. For spear. For pathfinding needle.” he stuck out his tongue and pulled his ears. At first, I thought he was just being rude. Then I rembered what Rotte had said at the crash site. Kill. Take tongue.

I shivered. “Why would anyone want goblin ears and tongues?” I asked.

Muthus rubbed his belly. “Tongue is good to human for cure poison.” He flattened his hands and raised them up. “Ears to elves for make potent.”

“Make… make potent?” I asked. Then I realized. “Oh… oh… Oh, no.”

Muthus squatted down on his haunches. “But goblin that talk like man? Goblin don’t die? Worth ears of twenty goblin. Maybe ten and twenty.”

“Is this what you do?” I asked. “Hunt goblins for a living?”

Muthus shrugged, getting back to his feet. “Hunt what need hunt. Goblin good. Goblin vermin. No one miss.”

No one miss. Again, I was reminded just how alone goblins were in this world. How dismissed and discarded they were. Elves were huffing our powdered ears before sexy-tis to raise their pavilions. Javelleros rounded us up for sport and profit. Lanclova was a harsh land, untad and coveted by jealous eyes. If I was to have any hope of achieving my goal, or even living long enough to have a chance at it, I had to secure Tribe Apollo’s place in the shadowed lands.

The javelines retired to their crude tents. I pulled at the chain, but the branch held firm and the chain just rattled loudly in the night.

“QUIET!” Rotte shouted from his tent.

I settled back, thinking. The tribe would be fine. For now. In the morning they might co look for . Javelines were strong, and if I interpreted the situation correctly, they could gain levels through this world’s System—unlike goblins, who were perpetually destined to be the weakest creatures. We were the joke, the speed bump for adventurers on their way to the real challenge. Well, there were 70 of us, and only 4 javelines. We may not have levels, but we’re legion.

The only problem was, how do I get them to co find ? Where would they even start looking? If the javelines broke camp and moved out early enough in the morning, they’d simply out-pace any goblins on foot, even with the benefit of flex-a-pult assisted launches and wranglers. No. I had to do sothing.

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