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Friend of fear was doing its thing, and despite knowing I was utterly terrified and was going to live or die at the whim of either a spider or else so other creepy-crawly that lived in the middle of the nest of cobwebs, I calmly considered my options. The thing wasn't moving, just paying attention to

with whatever esoteric senses it happened to have. It wasn't visible from here, so it shouldn't be able to see

with conventional sight either.

Running was pointless; there was no way whatever it was wouldn't be able to catch

if it wanted. Staying frozen like this wasn't a viable long-term solution, even if it continued to not move; I needed to eat and sleep and stuff. Either I walked calmly away and hoped it lost interest, or I started collecting silk and hoped I could stash a useful amount into my item box before it ca and killed . Collecting the silk had the largest chance of death, and I didn't want to waste the respawn ti right now, but if this silk had been produced by a monster of that power, I'd bet it was a heck of a lot better than what I was currently using.

Which probably ant my spider claw daggers couldn't cut it, now that I thought it through... Although it also ant that if it was sticky, I might be able to make climbing gloves that would let

do a spiderman impression on the cliff, rather than requiring a rope.

I'd been exploring the jungle for long enough that the fox-kin had probably set up camp in the shrine room already, so dying would at least let

cross back to my own cave without bumping into them. I drew a dagger and tried to cut the nearest strand. As expected, I had no luck. My professional spear with its attack rating of twenty-five could, as could my sword of paralysis, but both were a bit unwieldy to be collecting whole webs.

Not that I'd get the chance, because the presence had started moving. I spun towards it, but still saw nothing. Please don't be an invisible spider...

"What a brave little fly you are. Or perhaps your brain is as lacking as your ears?"

I still saw nothing. No, wait, there was a spider sitting on a tree branch, but it was ten centitres across at most, and that was including its long, spindly legs. The body was even smaller. It was practically Earth sized! The presence I was feeling ca from that?

Novice empath picked up a burst of anger and hatred, before it suddenly cut off, replaced by resignation and hopefulness. An interesting combination, but not one I could explain right now. It was, however, within my appraisal range...

Aranea regina

The monarch of all aranea. Not only may she command her lesser kin as she sees fit, but she has powerful weapons of her own. Her silk is stronger than steel, her venomous bite poisonous enough to kill the strongest of adventures, and her acid powerful enough to lt even enchanted armour. Even her sharp legs are spears that could pierce through flesh and bone without resistance. She also wields powerful magic of ice and decay. Any who fall into her webs should despair.

No ntion of her size, I thought with a smirk. Of course, smirking in front of the intelligent monarch of all spiders wasn't the greatest of ideas... I felt a light impact on my leg, and looked down to see a thin strand of silk wrapped around it, just in ti for the world to flip over. By the ti everything stopped spinning, I was hanging upside-down in the web I'd been trying to collect, the spider queen standing right in front of my face.

"Do I amuse you, little fly?" she asked. Her voice was remarkably eloquent for a tiny spider. Her mouth wasn't even moving! Where was the sound coming from?

I was probably dead again, and I hadn't managed to collect any web whatsoever. Should have walked away... Even so, best not to piss off the monster any further. "Sorry, I was reading your species' description. That's what I found amusing, not you."

"Oh? A description? Is that one of your vulpes abilities? By all ans, please do tell."

Vulpes? That explained her ear comnt. "I'm not one of the vulpes," I clarified, "but yes it's one of my abilities." I read it out in its entirety.

"And yet, despite the advice of your own ability, you remain remarkably free from despair," she comnted. "Still, that description pleases . What about it provided you with amusent?"

"It didn't ntion your size," I answered honestly.

The spider queen stared at

in silence for a few seconds. "Yes, well," she finally started. "I know there are so who judge things solely by their appearance. They generally do not live long. A smaller body ans lower food requirents, easier living arrangents, and it's simpler to move around this place without wrecking everything. It's greatly convenient, and if it causes idiots to underestimate , that's nothing more than another benefit."

She resud her silent stare for a few more seconds before continuing, "Are you underestimating , too? Is that why you show no fear?"

"Nah, I'm plenty afraid. I just have another ability that lets

not show it. I've also been eaten by a spider once before, but I got over it, so it's not the end of the world if it happens again."

The spider queen couldn't blink, and had no eyebrows to raise, but nevertheless managed to radiate surprise.

Novice empath advanced to level 3

Ah, right, I still had that skill turned on.

"One does not generally 'get over' being eaten, but your abilities are very strange. Perhaps that is one too. But it need not happen again, if you are willing to offer

a favour. You claim to not be of the vulpes sagax, despite sharing much of their form. Tell , are you their ally?"

Oh joy, a second overly powerful monster is about to offer

a deal. Let's hope this one goes better than the last. At least her question was easy to answer.

"Fuck no. The first ti we t, they tried to enslave . The second ti they tortured and tried to rape . So of the individuals are okay, but the species as a whole is not sothing I want to try my luck with for a third ti."

The spider queen's hopefulness switched off, and instead she radiated pure glee and anticipation. Apparently, I'd given the correct answer. "Excellent. This jungle is nice, but it is... limited. I long for juicier at. Alas, the barrier around the area prevents

from leaving. Promise to find

so way to leave this place, to enter the cavern the vulpes sagax occupy, and I shall spare you."

Well, that was an offer that opened up a lot of options. This spider queen could probably break through their checkpoint or weave a silk ladder all on her own. What she couldn't do was fight all of the fox-kin. I'd felt so that were at least as strong as her, and if they ganged up, she'd have no hope.

"They have people in their town that are at least as strong as you," I pointed out. "And what would stop

agreeing, but betraying you and never coming back here? Also, sparing

isn't much of a paynt, given that even if you didn't I would... well, get over it."

"I know their kind. Their higher ranked mbers are too... What would be the word? Not arrogant, although they are certainly that, too. Aloof, perhaps? They see 'simple' problems as being beneath them, and they won't move for a few missing adventurers and scouts. It is a rare occasion indeed on which one of their leaders leaves their town walls. I have enough self restraint to avoid attracting the attention of anything I can't handle. Just as I have the self restraint required to deal with you."

Her knowledge was actually a bit strange. She had in-depth knowledge of their civilization and the layout of the dungeon, despite only coming into existence when I fixed the shrine and never having left this cavern. Did she have so sort of life before then? Was she born with the knowledge?

"As for your betrayal," she continued, "I have nothing. Even if you did, I would lose little, but the fact that you asked the question is promising. Had you imdiately accepted, perhaps I would have reconsidered. And what is it you want for paynt?"

That was easy enough. "A reusable way down into their territory. It would need a long silk rope. Maybe five hundred tres. Maybe so resistance training later, but that can be another discussion, since you'd get sothing out of it too."

"Resistance training?" she asked, radiating confusion once more.

"Another of my abilities is that the more sothing injures , the more resistant to it I grow. You can offer poison, corrosion and ice, at least."

"You wish

to wound you?" she asked incredulously.

"Wound, kill. I'm not fussed. Like I said, you'd get sothing out of it; you can have the corpses afterwards. It's not as if I want them, and it's a waste to leave them lying around."

The spider fell silent once more, now feeling amusent and even more glee. I doubted she would reject the offer even before feeling her reaction; it was nothing but upsides for her, after all. "It is true I would get sothing from such an arrangent. But what manner of being are you, to make such an offer?" she asked eventually.

"A human," I answered. "We live on the surface."

"I... see. Never have I heard of such a creature. But very well, if you can get

out of here, I shall agree to your terms."

She waved a leg, and I fell from the web. The blood rushing away from my head as I was finally turned the right way up left

feeling dizzy, but despite that, I was pretty sure the queen had just cheated sohow. She'd been further than a leg length away from

and any part of the web, so how did I just fall off it? So sort of thread control ability?

Anyway, she seed to be acting like it was a done deal, but I was still considering it. The fox-kin were annoying buggers, but did I want to unleash this monster on them? The town was full of civilians and children... Who had all turned on

the mont they saw

collared, admittedly, and who were talking like they never left town, anyway. Who would leave town? The warrior caste? They were the ones who had annoyed

the most, so I had little pity for them.

Yes, the most likely targets she would catch would be warriors, and the fox-kin were capable of doing sothing about her if they ever wanted. It was a deal I was prepared to take. Then how would I smuggle her through the barrier? I had a few ideas, but we'd need to experint to see what worked.

"Well then, shall we get going?" I asked.

"Already? You are in a hurry, little fly."

"Katie," I said. "My na."

With an overpowered flesh-eating spider queen perched on my head like so sort of low-budget Halloween costu, I made my way back to the cavern entrance. I was starting to appreciate my mapping skill a little more now; with the dense trees and lack of visual range, there was no way I'd have found my way out so smoothly without it.

My first experint was to simply walk through the barrier with the spider on my head, but the barrier wouldn't let

pass. Not entirely unexpected; the centipedes had the sa problem. My next idea I'd already ruled out on the way, after trying to store one of the jungle's beetles in my item box and failing. Despite accepting moss, it didn't like more complex living things. Of the last two, she wouldn't like one, and I didn't like the other, because it would probably result in the shrine punishing .

"So, you could try to force your way through. I've seen soone of your power do so before, but presumably you've tried that already."

"Alas that it is not so simple. I've not tried before, but I don't need to. I know I can't force my way through the barrier."

How did she know that? If this is information implanted in her at creation, who says it needed to be accurate? Maybe the barrier was as psychological as it was physical?

"It might be worth a try even if you think it will fail," I said, "because I'm pretty sure you won't like my last idea. I could put a slave collar on you and remove it once the attempt is over, whether it works or not."

That was a stretch, too. So'layn had comnted that they didn't work on powerful monsters, and this spider certainly qualified as powerful. Not to ntion how small she was compared to the size of the collars I had. Even if she cooperated and could sohow let the collar take effect despite her resistance, would that be enough for the barrier to let us through? The only evidence I had was Ja'yakril's comnt about

getting so close to the town without a collar, but that was enough to make it worth a try.

She considered for a mont. "I do indeed not like it. That's rather more trust than I'm willing to put in you; should you betray , I would lose far more than a al. Nevertheless, I know I cannot force my way through."

Still unwilling to attempt to force her way. A pity... "Well, even if I fail to get you out of here, I'm still up for so resistance training. Maybe human at will suit your tastes?"

The spider leapt over to a wall and stared at

as hard as only sothing with eight eyes could. "So willing to trade your flesh to , little fly. Do you think so little of death? Humans are so sort of undead spirit, perhaps? Very well, we shall try your collar, but first..."

Before I could react, the spider queen leapt to my shoulder and plunged her fangs into my neck.

Poison resistance advanced to level 19

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