“You should talk to them,” said Bethany. “It’s been some time. But yes,
he was fine, nothing that a cleric couldn’t heal, but it was a near
thing, mostly in terms of getting
“Well, I don’t have magical earrings, not yet,” said Mizuki. She laughed, but it felt weak. The falling-out with the Pedder boys had hit her hard, and learning that they’d risked their lives without her… Well, it was certainly in keeping with their nature, but there was a familiar sour feeling.
“We’ll be careful,” said Hannah. “Alfric is about as good of a dungeoneer as you can get for someone just startin’ out, and he comes from a long line of them, it seems. Most people who go into dungeons pass a simple test from the League, then go off like they know a thing or two, and it’s no wonder they come out injured. We went in and came out with not a scratch on us, and I don’t just attribute that to luck. It was a hard dungeon, come to that.”
“I got a neat spoon out of it,” said Mizuki. “It can change shape to almost anything that’s still a spoon.”
Bethany laughed at that, and Mizuki pulled the spoon out of her bag to show it off.
They bought quite a bit, including some frozen chicken and a fair number of vegetables for dinner, then said their goodbyes to Bethany. It was even more rings gone, enough that there could be a meal for four, plus more food for the days ahead, and Mizuki reminded herself that she was flush with money, and that this wasn’t a thing to worry about.
“Sorry if I was boastin’ in there,” said Hannah. “I didn’t mean to, but
I’ve some pride in our party and Alfric in particular. People
“You said it was safe,” said Mizuki.
“Oh, ay,” said Hannah. “Mostly people die in the bigger dungeons, in places with more magic floatin’ around. Some of it’s variance, worse than what we’ve seen so far. That you can’t blame someone for. But more than it should be, it’s people who have no business bein’ in the place they’re in. The Pedder boys are friends of yours, or were, I gather, but a dungeon needs a bit of respect. People forget that.”
She sounded almost
If she was going to be a dungeoneer, she wasn’t going to make that same mistake twice.
Isra moved through the woods, following a path the deer normally took.
The world was looking different to her, and she didn’t know how much of
that was in her head. Did normal people follow deer paths? Could they
even find them? She would have to ask, and there was a chance that they
would give her odd looks and ask her what a deer path was, as though
that wasn’t completely obvious. Of course, most people
Other people couldn’t talk to animals, or if they did, the animals
didn’t listen very well. She had
Other people couldn’t predict the next day’s weather. What else did other people not know? What else couldn’t they do? There were so many things about her life that Isra was now realizing she took for granted. Could normal people identify a bird by its song? It seemed equally plausible that they could or they could not. Could they see through a bird’s eyes? The more she thought about it, the more she thought that perhaps they couldn’t. She thought back to all the times her father had seemed oblivious or unaware, and in retrospect perhaps that was simply because he couldn’t see the woods like she did. She was always better at setting traps, always faster to find the deer, always more capable of tending to their garden or finding forage.
Could normal people coax a plant to grow? Isra thought that perhaps they couldn’t. She wondered what would happen if they tried. Other people had gardens though, so why was that? Were they just planting seeds and hoping for the best? Weeding and watering and that was it?