19 - Nobody Expects the Hiwardian Inquisition
Dalton gave Lito an irritated look.
“I’m sure it’s just an oversight," he said, waving away some of Lito's smoke. "Our branch upstairs has direct access to Central’s records. I just need to make sure that you, Esquire Arlo, check in before leaving. So that we can get everything documented appropriately.” He gave up trying to stave off the guardian's secondhand, and began pulling at his middle finger until a knuckle popped.
“Sure thing,” I said, not sure how this was going to play out. “What if my name didn’t make it onto your list for some reason?”
Dalton moved to pulling on his thumb. “That would result in an investigation into the… error. We keep a good handle on who should or shouldn’t be participating.”
“Not a lot of trespassers,” said Lito, still smiling.
“We’ve had documentation errors once or twice,” Dalton said, then paused to clear his throat. “Clerical oversights. I’m sure it will be sorted to everyone’s satisfaction. Aside from that, there is also the issue of your two guests.” He nodded first at the baby-c’thon form of Grotto, and then at the severed head.
“I was just wondering what to do with this,” I said, looking down at Hognay. I tried to avoid looking at the hole my Oblivion Orb had made in the base of his skull.
“And I was wondering why you have… that with you. All one hundred participants have been accounted for, yourself included. That is, one hundred participants came out. You weren’t on the records, as I mentioned, but there are always one hundred participants… So this, um, gentleman is unexpected.”
“He was inside,” I said with a shrug. “Tried to kill us. He was responsible for,” I looked toward Sayil and Chilla’s groups, “the deaths inside.”
“Really now?” said Lito. His smile didn’t change, but there was obvious skepticism in his voice. I was beginning to dislike Lito.
“I see,” said Dalton. “It is a tragedy when we lose any Delver, but especially during a Creation Delve. Every year we have one or two that get in over their heads and try to tackle a gold without the proper preparation, but we lost more this year than we have for some time.”
“I’m sorry to hear that.”
“Thank you. It is one of the dangers of this whole business. Most people with a good head on their shoulders stick to silver and copper, so it’s usually not an issue.” Lito gave Dalton a serious side-eye as he said this, and Dalton cleared his throat again. “Of course, there are talented Delvers who belong in gold Delves,” he quickly added. “As for your other friend here, could you tell me what type of creature that is?”
I looked up at Grotto, who hovered in the air next to me, staring Lito down. The uniformed man took another puff of his cigarette and stared back.
“It’s a c’thon,” I said. Dalton’s face lost some color.
“And what is the nature of your relationship with it?”
“It’s my bonded familiar,” I said, repeating what the System had told me. Lito let out a low whistle.
“That’s pretty rare,” the smoking man said. “Guess you found that in the Delve?”
“Yeah.”
“Haven’t seen a c’thon inside a Delve before,” said Lito. “Dangerous place to find a mana fiend.”
“Why’s that?”
“‘Cause they eat all the mana and get tough to kill. Lucky you ran into a little one.”
“Guess I am,” I said. “There was a bigger one too.”
“How much bigger?”
“A lot bigger.”
Lito scratched his head and looked thoughtful.
“What difficulty did your party tackle?”
“Platinum.”
Lito grunted. “Lucky any of you came out in one piece. Do you know if that guy,” he gestured at Hognay, “had anything to do with c’thons being in there?”
“Yeah, I’m pretty sure he did. He had a broken summoning tablet.”
Dalton’s eyes went wide.
“He was another Delver?!” he said. “With a summoning tablet?”
“What level was he?” asked Lito.
“Two,” I said. “That’s what the System said after he was dead.”
“Damn,” said Lito. “A c’thon and a level two inside of a platinum Creation Delve. You’re one lucky bastard.”
“I guess so.”
“This is very irregular, to say the least,” said Dalton. “Obviously this, erm…” he waved his hand at the head.
“His name was Hognay,” I said. “Hognay Haskagander.”
“Yes, this Hognay was certainly not supposed to be inside. And if he were level two there’s no way he could have entered through normal means. But let’s put that aside for a moment. I know you must be tired, and your attendant is here.” A blue-robed woman had approached and was waiting patiently for our conversation to end. “We’ll need to file a formal report. The unusual circumstances surrounding the death of your two party members are enough to trigger that, but a level two summoning c’thons into a Creation Delve!” He was now squeezing his fingers hard enough for his knuckles to go white. He looked down, realized what he was doing, and dropped them to his sides. “I have what I need for the moment. Guardian Lito will accompany you to make sure you can, ah, find your way to the appropriate office to have your records sorted out.”
I nodded, understanding Lito’s presence for what it was. He wasn’t there to be a guide, I figured the initiate waiting nearby could do that. He was there to make sure that I actually went to the office, rather than sneaking off.
“No problem,” I said. “I appreciate your help.”
“Of course, Esquire Arlo,” said Dalton. Then he reached down toward Hognay’s head, but paused, struggling to decide where to grip it.
“The hair is probably the best part to grab. It’s greasy, but it’s cleaner than the rest of him.”
He eventually produced a handkerchief to wrap around his hand, and took the head in the way I’d suggested, holding it away from his body.
“I’ll make certain that this is documented and preserved as evidence. We’ll also have a look into his identity, naturally. If I am able, I’ll let you know what we find.” He looked like he might gag, but managed to give me a quick bow. He nodded to Lito, then walked off toward the room’s exit.
The young woman approached, looking hesitantly at Lito, then to me.
“If it pleases you, m’lord, I’ll show you to the baths.”
*****
Xim was still unconscious and Varrin was having his armor dissected, so I followed the initiate out of the room without speaking to either, Lito close behind me. We exited into a large, curving hallway, the type you might see around the outside of an arena or stadium. The hall was filled with dozens of other people, milling about and making their way up or down the hall. Those sporting armor or adventuring gear were doted upon by servants, and praised–or consoled–by richly-dressed friends and relatives.
The people we walked past displayed a variety of moods. Some were sullen, like Chilla and Sayil’s people, but many more were excited, telling bombastic stories about what happened inside their Delve. A few were having more heated discussions, going over some mistake or issue that they had run into as a party. I watched everyone as we went past, not trying to hide my curiosity, but few people paid me any attention. One or two caught sight of my outfit and gaped for a moment, one even chuckled to himself, but they quickly went back to their own business. I wasn’t that much of a novelty, I surmised.
Lito walked just behind me, so it was difficult to get a good look at him without being obvious. I glanced back at him a couple times as we walked, and he’d shoot me a hollow smile, then go back to scanning over everyone we passed. He was walking casually, but I could tell he was watching the others around us with more than passing interest.
I thought about asking him a few questions, but the lawyer inside me took over and I decided not to engage. He felt like some sort of cop or security, and he already distrusted me. No reason to give him anything else. Talking to someone whose main motivation was to find a reason that you were guilty of something usually did more harm than good. Besides, I may have committed some sort of crime, unwittingly. It’s not like I knew anything about the criminal justice system here.
We finally made our way off into a side hall, the air humid and filled with floral scents, where a series of single doors lined the walls. Most were closed, but we came to one that was open in short order, and the initiate gestured for me to enter. She followed me as I walked in, pointing out the fresh set of clothes sitting on a bench in the middle of the small, tiled room.
“We’ve guessed at your measurements,” she said, “but the garments are designed to be loose-fitting. There’s a simple belt to cinch the shirt. If it pleases you, I can take your boots to be cleaned, or to find another set in the same size.”
“I really don’t want to make you carry these,” I said. There was a thick layer of mud coating the outside, and a variety of… fluids… on the inside.
“It’s no trouble, m’lord. I’m used to handling items that have seen significant use within the Delves.”
“Alright, if you insist,” I said, sitting on the bench and beginning to pull off the boots. They practically fell apart as I tugged at them. “I don’t think cleaning is the way to go.” I handed them to her and she took them, holding them by the cuffs with one hand. She kept them far away from her body, like Dalton had done with Hognay. I resolved not to make it a habit to continually hand disgusting things to the people I meet.
“I’ll fetch a new pair and have them ready for you when you are finished. The bath is through that curtain. There is a small shower to rinse yourself prior to using the tub. Should you wish, that is. M’lord.” It didn’t sound like a suggestion. “There’s also soap and towels set out, but more are in this cupboard.” She opened the cabinet, and left it open.
“Thanks,” I said, smiling. She gave a bow, then left. Before she could close the door behind her, Lito put a hand on it and leaned in.
“I’ll be right out here,” he said, smoking cigarette dangling from his lips. “Take your time.”
“Uhhh, ok,” I said. The man gave me the creeps. He let the door close, and I was on my own.
The room was small and covered in blue tile from floor to ceiling. There was a drain set into the center made from a dark metal, which suggested that they had some level of indoor plumbing. A godsend, if there ever was one. There was a full-sized standing mirror next to a tall wooden dresser.
I took a look at myself in the mirror, then regretted it. I looked every bit as disgusting and ridiculous as I thought I did, and seeing it made real was unsettling. I pulled off my feather boa and leather vest, then inspected them to see how gross they’d gotten from being in contact with me. They were both spotless, which seemed unlikely. I frowned, then tucked them into the dresser. I peeled off my pants and underwear–a pair of long-johns–and tossed them into a corner. They landed with a splat, and I already felt cleaner now that they were gone. Those needed to get thrown into a furnace somewhere, like the boots. There was no saving them.
I walked past the curtain and found a warm room with a tub the size of a jacuzzi in the middle, water steaming within. The only lighting was a few fragrant candles burning atop low tables, and the place had the feeling of a spa. I found the shower the woman had mentioned, which was just a small platform with a tile lip around it and a grated hole in the ceiling above it.
After poking around some, I found a crystal set into the wall which shone red when I touched it. A rain of water fell down on me from above, warm and pleasant.
Here I was, in what I assumed to be a medieval-era world, and they had better plumbing, heating, and water pressure than I’d had in my three-bedroom house back on Earth.
I let the water run over me, hunting with my hands to wipe away all the areas that had accumulated extra-thick layers of gross, and found more chunks of unidentifiable matter than I cared for. Any amount of unidentifiable chunks caked onto my naked body were more than I cared for, but my current predicament had markedly skewed my expectations. Finally, after several minutes of rinsing, I made my way to the tub.
The water was hot enough that I had to slide in nice and slow, my skin turning pink in less than a minute. It was the exact temperature my fiancée liked, and that I would normally hate. Then again, maybe it was hot enough to boil a lobster. With my Fortitude, who knew.
I found the soap and lathered up, letting my mind wander over the events of the day. A few scenes repeated themselves over and over in my mind. My death, Xim smashing through an Atrocidile eye, finding Chilla and Sayil murdered, the endless field of green crystals, the enraged c’thon. I was too weary to give them much thought, and fell back on letting them replay time and again as I worked to clean myself. I’d gone over my entire body at least three times before I’d finished, and the bar of soap was reduced to mushy remnants. Its valiant sacrifice had not gone in vain, and I released its specter to the murky water with a thankful prayer to the gods of sanitation and lather.
I’d need another run under the shower before I felt really clean, but I took a moment to sit back in the tub, letting the calm and quiet wash over me.
My eyes fluttered and I fell asleep for a few seconds, coming to as I slipped a little further into the tub. I rubbed my face, dispelling some of the fatigue, then brought up my character sheet. I had a free moment to think and I’d rather pass out in a bed than a public bathhouse. I took a look at my status, and examined my stats.
Stats:
Strength 2
Agility 2
Speed 2
Fortitude 13
Intelligence 5
Wisdom 4
Charisma 3
Luck 2
You have 8 attribute points to distribute. You have 23 hours until you lose 1 of your available points. Thereafter, 1 additional point will be lost every 3 hours.
This should have been an easy decision. I was angling toward a magic-focused build and my mana pool and regeneration were trash, at least compared to my health. I needed Intelligence and Wisdom to round out my build, but I also didn’t want to waste my bonus from my unique birth sign’s ability: That’s a Lot of Stats! I read back over the description.
That’s a Lot of Stats!: You can gain bonus attribute points through training up to a maximum score of ten in each attribute.
Again, I wanted to maximize that bonus, which meant that anything I had with a value less than ten needed to be trained to ten before I put any points into it. I would prefer to hoard my points and split them between Fortitude, Intelligence, and Wisdom once I had the other two at ten. But, the time limit.
The fucking time limit.
I didn’t want to risk losing the points, and I’m the type of guy that leaves an hour early to make an appointment twenty minutes away. You never know what might happen on the way there; traffic, car problems, vicious assault by otherworldly monsters and intervention by celestial manifestations of divine will. Sky was the limit. So, I sighed and tossed them all into Fortitude. It ticked up to twenty-one, then ticked over again to twenty-two after I confirmed, courtesy of my Dumping ability.
Dumping: After spending five or more stat points at once on a single attribute, you are granted one additional point in that attribute.
I took a look at my vital stats and shook my head at the enormous jump in HP.
Health: 473
Health Regeneration: 233/hour
Stamina: 220
Stamina Regeneration: 44/hour
Mana: 0/40
Mana Regeneration: 16/hour (Negated by Mana Overload)
My health and HP regen had both more than doubled, which confirmed my earlier belief that health scaled on some sort of exponential path. That meant the higher it went, the better the bonus got for each point invested. If I was going to be throwing all my points into one stat, that was a good thing. A very good thing.
Stamina was going up linearly, and the regen was locked in at twenty percent of the maximum value, so no escalating bonuses there.
The thing that really caught my attention was my mana regen. It had quadrupled, which wasn’t something I expected, especially since my Wisdom hadn’t increased. I scanned through my character sheet, trying to find something to explain the change, which is when I found the bonuses from my Bonded Familiar skill.
Bonded Familiar: A favored pet? A tamed wild beast? A former ally turned into an animal against their will and enslaved? Whatever the means, you have acquired a bonded familiar! The bonuses and benefits from a bonded familiar vary wildly depending on the entity chosen as your familiar, so we hope you considered it carefully.
Just kidding! We know you were forced to bond with a familiar with little or no forethought in order to escape near certain death. Oh well. What’s life without a little risk? And you really rolled the dice on this one. Hope it works out for you! Or not. Either way will be entertaining.
Your bonded familiar is a Delve Core that you and your allies gave the adorable little name Grotto, taken from the name of the Delve from whence he came. Very creative! By bonding with a Delve Core your Bonded Familiar ability gains the following traits!
Psychic Bond: The empathetically-challenged orb known as Grotto possesses psychic abilities and, if you allow, can communicate with you telepathically. This permits mental communication between the two of you, and grants Grotto limited access to thoughts and memories relevant to what you are currently doing or communicating about. While Grotto is able to force his mental voice into the minds of the weak, as his proud new owner you may toggle this ability on or off. It has been turned off by default. Savor the peace and quiet, or concentrate on the connection to activate the ability.
Shit. I concentrated on opening my thoughts up to Grotto, and heard his voice for the first time since leaving the Delve.
[...and I do not care for the one with the smelly smoking weed in his mouth,] came Grotto’s voice in my mind. [Although he’s better than that obsequious priestess with her nonsensical ramblings about the evil within Delves.]
[Hey,] I thought, focusing on Grotto. [Can you hear this?]
[Hmm, I see you have deemed it prudent to respond to my inquiries, finally. I was growing weary of your ignorant facade. Your vacuous sham. Your inane play-acting!]
[Alright man, chill.]
The feathery octopus swooped down in front of my face, the insectoid claws on the underside of his feelers clacking.
[They could not hear me and there was no need to ignore me completely.]
He… almost sounded hurt. I might have felt bad, but it was hard to drum up compassion for someone who'd aided and abetted hypnosis-induced excavation of people's insides.
[About that. Apparently this Bonded Familiar ability had you on mute by default.]
[Mute?] I felt a familiar scanning in my brain.
[It had me on mute?!]