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Published at 22nd of March 2024 08:08:41 AM


Chapter 107: Sierra Smuggle

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Chapter 107: Sierra Smuggle

“Rings!” was all I could get out, activating mine as quickly as I could.

You have been made invisible.

For the next 15 minutes, you gain the following effects:

-You are affected by invisibility. You cannot be sensed visually by anyone.

-If you take damage, invisibility automatically ends.

Instantly, I disappeared from sight. I looked down and couldn’t see my hands, body, or clothes. Invisibility was interesting because, in addition to making your own person unable to be seen, it would also affect certain things you carried with you.

Nobody was quite sure how it decided, but, for example, while a shirt would be made invisible, a backpack wouldn’t. Gloves would, but a sword you held wouldn’t. And, obviously, the moment you removed any of these objects from your person, they’d instantly become visible.

Of course, I consciously understood what invisibility would mean. Nobody, not even I, would be able to see me. However, I didn’t realize just how disorienting something like that would be.The initial posting of this chapter occurred via Ñøv€l-B!n.

I’d let my hair grow out a bit recently – some of that due to the necessity of recent events – and so, at this point, it was always down at the sides of my head, framing my face. There were always strands falling down in front of my eyes every now and then, and any time I moved my eyes upward or to the sides I could always see it. But not anymore. I could still feel my hair there, it should have been there, but I couldn’t see it.

I also couldn’t see my nose between my eyes. Normally, I wasn’t even aware of my nose always present in my sight, but now I couldn’t get the pointed lack of it out of my thoughts. It just felt wrong. And, of course, worst of all – I could still see when I blinked, straight through my eyelids.

During the few seconds it took for me to adjust to these changes – and during the time it took to deal with the excruciating pain from the hole torn in my shoulder – I watched Erani and the Dryad disappear from sight, as well.

“C’mon, we need to move,” I silently messaged the Dryad. “Tell Erani too, follow me– or, wait. You can’t see me. Uh... Go over there, in the direction of that big tree. We need to stick together so we aren’t isolated when the effect wears off.”

I moved away, watching my footsteps and the footsteps of my two companions impact the ground so I could keep basic track of where we all were. It was very strange to look down and not see my own body below me, but I was beginning to get used to it.

The soldiers of the army, of course, had begun moving forward to attack us after that Archer woman – Asmo – spotted and shot me, but it didn’t seem like they knew we’d turned invisible yet. They were still moving toward our original position where we’d hidden at first, but we were now long gone from there. Hopefully they’d have trouble tracking us as we moved further.

I was, of course, using Regenerate to try and heal some of the damage I’d taken from Asmo’s shot as we moved, each activation of the Talent increasing my Health by 22 over the course of 10 seconds. It wore off after the first activation, and I used it a second time, eager to move out of the dangerous territory of being able to be killed by a single one of her arrows.

You have activated Regenerate. You will gain 22.1 Health over the next 10 seconds.

42.2 Stamina Cost. Your Stamina is 56.

I technically had enough Stamina for one more activation after this, but I still wanted to keep enough energy to actually move up this mountain, so I wasn’t sure if I’d use it. After I saw the full effect of this activation of Regenerate, my Health would be sitting at 233, so I was at least out of the immediate danger zone for now.

One thing I’d noticed as I Leveled up more and more was the effects of increasing my Stamina/Minute. Generally speaking, exerting the body a certain amount would always cost the same amount of Stamina. If a person weighed the same amount, carried the same gear, and moved over similar terrain over the course of multiple days, each time they moved over that same terrain, it’d cost them the same amount of Stamina.

So, if moving over that terrain cost the person, say, 2 Stamina every minute, it wouldn’t matter what Level they were. It’d always cost 2 Stamina every minute to move in that way. Obviously, increasing maximum Stamina would allow a person to move for a longer amount of time, but so would Stamina/Minute.

Most people thought of that number as just something that would help rest after exerting your body, but in truth, it was always regenerating Stamina, even while you were draining it. Currently, my Stamina/Minute was a bit over 1. Compared to the 0.36 all Unclassed people had, that meant, in the previous example with movement costing 2 Stamina every minute, I’d be able to travel for twice the amount of time they could – and that was before taking into account the fact that I’d also be starting out with a higher Stamina value than them, too.

Where this really started to get ridiculous was once Stamina/Minute overtook the amount of Stamina expended per minute. Hells, I’d already noticed at times that, when we were moving at a more leisurely pace and went some time without having to hike up hills or fight monsters, I’d check my Stamina, go thirty minutes of walking, and then check my Stamina again to see it was higher than I’d started at. What that meant was, during those moments of walking, I must have been using up less than 1 Stamina every minute, and therefore my Stamina/Minute was enough to cover it with some extra on top.

“Uh, you may not want to do that.” It was Index. It’d been silent for a bit now, probably understanding that any sudden noise from it would startle me and threaten causing a scene that’d make us easier to spot, so if it was talking now, it was probably important.

“What?” I whispered in as silent a tone as possible. Really, it was more just moving my lips than anything. Index didn’t need to hear me as much as I just needed to put the intention of speaking into my mind so that Index’s log could pick it up and it could read my words from there. “Why?”

“Uh... shoot. I can’t really say.” It sounded stumped and frustrated. “Just– you’re going to want that Mana soon.”

I glanced around, side to side. Were there enemies around? Was it warning me of an ambush? I relayed everything it said to the Dryad, asking her to pass the words on to Erani, too. I felt Erani’s hand leave mine as she presumably glanced around for something that might attack us soon, too.

I didn’t see anything, but obviously Index wanted to warn us about something. What was it?

“Ah! Finally, I can tell you something else,” it’s voice came through again. “You’re looking in the wrong direction.

I glanced down. Hellions? No, I didn’t feel them. So if it wasn’t down, then it must’ve been...

“Oh no,” I muttered, not quite caring that I might be heard from someone. There were much bigger thoughts on my mind.

I glanced upward toward a figure that flew above us, blotting out the sun. Massive, covered in scales, and definitely not a Drake.

It roared. A Dragon’s roar. That deep bellowing scream echoed out as Astintash hurtled toward the ground in front of us, diving straight down toward the mountainside. It got closer and closer, until–

It crashed straight into the army’s forces, creating a massive shockwave and completely destroying the surrounding terrain. I was flung to the ground, as were Erani and the Dryad, I suspected. The trees around us split and splintered from the impact, and even some of the boulders closer to the impact cracked as the earth shook below us.

I groggily lifted my head and looked over to the Dragon which was now standing in the middle of the decimated army, corpses littering the ground around the crater that’d formed around its feet.

“You dare?!” Astintash boomed, spewing flames from its nostrils as it snapped its head around at the surrounding soldiers. “You dare muster this pathetic army to try and attack my home?!”

It stomped its feet once again and whipped its tail into a few stragglers behind it, then opened its mouth and billowed out a cone of flame, incinerating everyone in front of it, and turned around to spew them across the entire battlefield.

Even with us being quite a number of paces away, I could feel the heat from where we were.

Thankfully, as we weren’t Astintash’s main targets, I wasn't damaged. A message from the Dryad and whisper from Erani confirmed they were safe, too. The people in the army, however... Anyone who hadn’t already been crushed underneath Astintash’s feet was burnt to a crisp, the only survivors people who were either far enough away to begin with, or people high enough in Level to have escaped or tanked the damage.

Still, the Dragon wasn’t immortal. From the back of the army, I could see siege weapons being loaded and readied to fire. Astintash had caught them off-guard and destroyed a healthy portion of the forces, but it’d also made itself completely vulnerable in the process. This wasn’t one of its fly-by hit-and-runs like it did against the wall. It’d dropped itself in the middle of enemy forces in an effort to kill them all or die trying.

A ballista shot impacted its side, and when it turned to look at the shooter, it was hit in the side of the face by a glowing-white arrow – one that was no doubt shot by that damned Archer, Asmo. I hadn’t technically seen it, but I had no doubt she had some sort of movement ability to get out of that sort of trouble. Archers were notorious for being able to slip out of a Melee-Type Classer’s range in almost any situation.

Astintash stomped and scraped at the army, killing anyone who dared draw near, but the people were also fighting for their lives, chipping slowly away at the Dragon’s tanky body.

I felt Erani’s hand grab my shoulder. “They’re distracted, let’s go!”

“No, no,” I responded, trying to think through my injuries. “We’re still making ourselves vulnerable if we climb. Asmo’s alive, and if she decides to abandon the soldiers and keep searching for us, she’ll almost certainly be able to track us down. We were absolutely fucked before, but Astintash is providing us a chance to win here, whether it knows it or not. If we leave Astintash here, it’s possible the army could kill it. They brought resources, siege weapons, things specifically made to kill Dragons. They knew it might attack them and came prepared. It could beat them, but if they kill it, that’s our entire method of getting past the wall, gone. We’re back to square zero.”

“Then what the fuck do we do?!” Erani slightly raised her voice. I could tell she was panicking, and tried to stay calm, myself.

“We wanted to negotiate with it before, right? Well, it’s right in front of us, and needs our help. Why not get that negotiation done right now?”




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