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Chapter 13: Companionship



Chapter 13: Companionship

We walked into the room – the interrogation room, apparently – and he asked me to sit in a chair, then promptly walked out, leaving me alone. The place itself was plain, a small square room with simple wooden walls, and a stone table in the middle. I sat there, wondering what kind of trouble I was in – if I was even in trouble. They clearly weren’t worried about me escaping, what with how I was currently completely unguarded, unrestrained, and in a room with the door wide open, so I had to assume that nothing serious had happened.

After about a minute, I finally heard some footsteps, and the gruff guy from earlier came in. He wasn’t wearing his plate armor anymore, but it didn’t make his large frame any less imposing. His dark skin glistened with sweat, making me wonder just how hot he got, standing in that thick armor all day. He sat in the wooden chair across from me, the feeble furniture creaking suspiciously but holding strong under his weight.

“Alright, son, you’re not in legal trouble – yet – but I still got a few questions for you about that whole Banestinger incident.” he spoke in a much softer voice than the yelling he was doing before, but his voice was still deep and hard. “First off, just to make sure I don’t get in any trouble here, you do know what a Truth Stone is, right?”

“Uh, no, I don’t. Is it some sort of Enchanted item?”

“Yeah, it is. It’s somethin’ we here in the guarding business use to make sure people’s tellin’ the truth. Only works for the simpler sort of statements, so if I ever wanna make sure you ain’t lyin’. I’m just gonna bring it out, and ask you a yes or no question. It’ll light up if you lie. But I’d hope it don’t come to that. You understand now?”

“Yeah,” I leaned back in my chair. I was from a small enough village that crimes weren’t committed with enough frequency to justify something so serious – and probably expensive – ever being used. “So, why exactly do you have me here? What’d I do?”

“Son, you brought a Level 30 monster to our town and you’re gonna sit there and ask me what you did? I understand you didn’t break a law, but your actions were reckless and selfish and I think you need a stern talkin’ to.”

I squinted incredulously. “Oh? All due respect, but I’m not sure that I had a choice there. Would you have preferred that I just let it kill me?” I understood that this definitely wasn’t the best way to handle the situation, but I’d just fought my ass off to stay alive, and I’d walk through every hell in the Underworld before letting some asshole scold me for it.

“No, I wouldn’t prefer you let it kill you. I would prefer if youngsters like you would stop wanderin’ your ways off into the wilderness and expectin’ us adults to save you when you realize what a mistake you’ve made. Especially when you’re goin’ into Banestinger territory and bringin’ one of them back for us to fend off.”

I set my jaw, waiting for him to finish. When he did, I said, “I don’t think you understand my situation, and I’d prefer it if you’d let me explain myself before lecturing me over something I didn’t do.”

The man sat there for a moment, eyes glaring at me, before nodding. “Fine. Go on.”

“First off, I’m not from here. I hired a pair of adventurers to help me get my Class about five days ago. They took me into the woods, and got killed by a monster during a fight. I finished it off, but ended up lost with no guide. During these past five days, I’ve been stranded and wandering to find civilization, surviving constant monster attacks and trying my best to keep from being mauled from a stray Wood Wraith. Found a road, started walking down it, got ambushed by the scorpion thing on my way. Now I’m here.”

The gruff man looked at me for a moment, took a breath, and then reached over to place an unassuming stone on the table – I imagined that was the Truth Stone he’d mentioned earlier. “Place your hand on here.”

I did.

“Can you verify that everything you have said to me during this conversation has been nothing but truthful, and you have not deceived me in any way?”

“Yes.”

He looked at the stone for a moment, which did nothing. He seemed to be satisfied with its response, taking the rock and putting it back into his pocket. “Alright, I believe you. ‘Least it explains why you stink to high hell. I’ll let you use the prisoner baths just this once as an apology for keepin’ you, but I don’t like your attitude. That said, it’s not like givin’ me lip is against the law, so you\'re free to go. Just don’t let me catch you doin’ anything you’re not supposed to.” He got up from the table, and so did I. On his way out of the room, he turned to me. “Oh, and one more thing, son. Welcome to Ordensville.”

The bath wasn’t exactly comfortable – just a scrub-down with cold water – but it felt a lot nicer to get that layer of grime, sweat, and blood off of me. Of course, I had to get right back into my disgusting clothes afterward, so it didn’t do much, but it was better than nothing.

After that, I was on my own, pretty much. I stepped out of the jailhouse I had been in, and into the town, Ordensville. It was large – much larger than my little unnamed village – and a bit intimidating. There were buildings all around, and what seemed to be a main set of stone roads with smaller, dirt roads branching off of them. At this point, it was getting to be early morning, and I could see some people walking along the roads as the sun rose over the horizon.

I realized just then that I had pretty much no plan. I’d been so focused on returning to civilization that I didn’t think about what I’d actually do when I got there. All my possessions were back at my village, and I didn’t even know anyone here, either. It wasn’t like I had a whole lot of stuff or had made a bunch of connections back home, but finding myself without a single copper piece to my name, everyone around me a stranger, I felt myself panicking a bit.

I breathed, trying to calm myself down. The hard part was over. And it wasn’t like I was starting from scratch, either. I had a Class now, one that I could hopefully use to make some money. From there, I could figure out what I wanted to do.

I walked up to one of the people walking down the main road, a middle-aged man wheeling a cart through the street.

“Excuse me,” I asked, “do you know where an adventurer could go to make money?”

“Eh, yeah,” he eyed my clothes suspiciously, but still answered. “There’s a job board in the town square just down that way.” He pointed backwards, up the main street opposite the direction he was going.

“Thanks,” I smiled to him and walked in the direction he indicated. I was glad the streets were so unpopulated at this time of night – I’d spent so long away from people that I felt a bit uncomfortable socializing now. Whenever I passed someone I let out an instinctual puff of Noxious Grasp to try and help calm my nerves, which I was sure didn’t help; I doubted I’d feel safe walking past a stranger in tattered clothes who avoided eye contact and then started physically smoking when I walked close.

But, despite that, I got to the town square without incident. I could see a few vendors setting up shop for the morning, but the main attraction was the simple wooden board nailed up in the center of the plaza. It had papers hanging from it in random spots, all of them looking to be handwritten. Ordensville was bigger than my village, but it still wouldn’t be considered to be a ‘big city’ by any stretch of the definition. In fact, most larger cities had entire organizations dedicated to managing adventurers. This simple job board was not that.

But it would work more than well for me.

I walked up and began examining the papers that had been nailed up. My main goal for now was pretty much just to get enough money to pay for some food, a room, and maybe a change of clothes. In total, all of that would add up to be about… 80 copper coins, maybe? 40, not counting the clothes. If things were more expensive than expected, maybe 100 copper – which was equal to 1 silver. Whatever. I’d figure it out. For now, at least, I just wanted some money for food. I was dying for a proper meal; it felt like I hadn’t had bread in ages.

The many different types of requests on the board mashed together in an unorganized mess. Some of them wouldn’t be helpful to me, jobs taking weeks to complete or that paid out too little. Others were too difficult, asking to kill a monster that was terrorizing a farm but was way too high-Level for me, or asking for someone to divert the flow of a river – that particular request seemed to have been untouched up on the board for a long time. It was hard to parse the useful requests out from the jumble of other papers.

As I was trying to make sense of it all, though, I felt someone tap on my shoulder.

“There you are!” a familiar female voice came from behind me. “I knew you’d be around here somewhere.”

I turned around, finding myself face-to-face with the red-haired woman I’d run from the Banestinger alongside. Now that I wasn’t fleeing for my life and got an actual good look at her, I saw that she was actually pretty attractive. She was a bit shorter than me, and had sharp features that included blue eyes which contrasted heavily with her red hair, but in a good way. Also, those blue eyes were glaring angrily at me.

“Uh, hey,” I said, still a bit caught off-guard from being confronted unexpectedly, “were you looking for me?”

“Yes, of course I was. I expect you weren’t planning on ignoring that promise you made me?”

“...What promise?” I didn’t think we’d said a word to each other after the thing died, much less promised each other anything. I’d pretty much passed out immediately, if I remembered correctly.

She rolled her eyes. “You promised you’d help me get my knife back! The one you threw?”

“Oh…” I did sort of remember taking her knife and throwing it at the scorpion’s eye, when I thought about it. “Yeah, I guess I did do that. Sorry about leading that thing to you, by the way. I really didn’t mean to put your life in danger like that. My name’s Arlan, by the way,” I put out a hand. “Nice to meet you.”

She took it and we shook. I was glad I’d taken a bath; my hand was so caked in dirt and grime before that I was sure it would’ve left a visible handprint on her when she shook it. “It’s fine. I mean, the situation sucked,” she laughed, “but you’re fine. It’s not like you knew I was there, and you didn\'t really have any choice in it, anyway. My name’s Erani. It’s nice to make your acquaintance,” she nodded and smiled, then seemed to get focused again. “But seriously. You are going to help me get that knife back, right?”

“I- yeah, sure, if it’s that important to you. Just, can you do me a favor in return?”

“That’s not how promising to help someone works,” she laughed. “You can’t start retroactively demanding payment after you made the promise.”

“No, no, I don’t want payment or anything,” I reassured her, though I was pretty sure she was just joking. “I was just trying to find a job on here, something relatively quick that could make me a decent bit of money? I’ve tried looking around, but it’s hard to even find anything in the mess of requests.”

“Why don’t you just do Alfo Arcian’s Collection Quest?”

“...What?”

The woman – Erani – laughed. “Okay, I guess the name’s a bit silly, but here,” she fished around in the many papers nailed to the board until she found the one she was looking for, and pointed it out to me. It had a big ‘Do Not Take Down; Repeating Request’ stamped on the top. “It\'s a request by this guy, Alfo Arcian. He runs an alchemist’s shop downtown and sources materials from the surrounding forest. So, if you just go out and grab a bunch of the plants and monster parts he has written down on here, he’ll buy them from you for a set price. They’re all listed here,” she tapped the paper. “Rimelotus petals, Trimp tails, that sort of thing. Local adventurers love the guy. I was actually doing this very request when you ran up to me with your monster pal.”

I let out an involuntary chuckle at ‘monster pal.’ “Well, yeah, that’s pretty much exactly what I’m looking for. Thanks. You wanna do this with me when we go out to grab that knife? We can both gather the ingredients and just split the profit, if you want. Hopefully sticking together we can fend off any more forest friends that might attack us.”

She chuckled back at ‘forest friends,’ which made me feel nice. Being isolated in the wilderness for so long made me forget how much fun it could be to just talk to people. “Yeah, that sounds good. As long as we get my knife back. You busy now? I’m good to go if you are.”

It was a bit soon to go right back into the woods that I had been so desperate to get out of, but it was voluntary, now. I had a companion. I smiled, “Absolutely.”


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