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104. The Pretjordian (Part 1)

  104. The Pretjordian (Part 1)

  As far as hunting methods went, Serac Edin’s was unique among the Pretjordians.

  In a Realm populated largely by ripple-readers, most Yaksha hunters had to learn how to minimize their own imprints on their surroundings. Predation, therefore, became a game of distance and speed. How close could you get to your target before they noticed your presence and intent? And how fast could you bridge that gap, whether by foot or with your weapon of choice?

  Serac didn’t worry about any of that. Not because she didn’t see the merit in such an method, but simply because she didn’t possess the requisite skills or tools. Instead, she’d invented her own strategy, namely that of using herself as bait.

  As many had predicted, the Roots’ revival had sparked the return of plants and wildlife into the region. Which in turn brought about increased Yaksha activity—and the resurgence of Aberrants drawn to the fresh supply of potential prey. More Aberrants, of course, also meant the need for stronger Wayfaring presence.

  Serac and Zacko had been more than happy to provide that presence—not least because no one else seemed to want the job. In exchange, they received food and board at Rotgard’s fledgling version of a ‘Town Market’. They also had a personal ‘chef’ to convert all of Serac’s [Harvested] ingredients into ready-to-use consumables. And perhaps most importantly (at least in Serac’s mind), they had access to an on-demand tailoring service—which was rather timely, given the chilly turn the weather had taken of late.

  Presently, as she stood atop her living castle’s ramparts, Serac felt warm, comfortable, and fashionable in her winter attire. It consisted of three sensible components: 1) long-sleeved undertunic and leg wrappings, 2) a woolen, knee-length tunic for the middle layer, and 3) a fur-lined cloak to wrap everything together, dyed the same ash-gray as Serac’s own hair—not for any practical reason, but simply because she liked the color.

  If she had one complaint about her new clothes, it was that they were a rather tight fit. But in fairness, she only had herself to blame for that, what with having pumped three of her last six level-ups into [Substance] to give herself somewhat respectable muscle definition.

  All in all, the slight discomfort was a small price to pay for a significant buff to [Style]. If she were to act as bait to lure in some monsters, she wanted to look good doing it.

  One might picture a ‘food chain’ to have a beginning and an endpoint, but in reality, it often functioned more like an infinite feedback loop. The introduction of Serac and Zacko into the Rotgardian ecosystem had served as an invitation for a certain subset of Wildspawns to join the party—those attracted to the glow of the Wayfarers’ ‘soul’ rather than the substance of their flesh. One such Wildspawn was called the [Nokken], an individual among which made its approach now, playing that typical game of distance and speed.

  From atop Ashvanaga’s battlement, Serac couldn’t see the Nokken’s approach with her Rakshasa eyes. Instead, all around her spread a stubby grassland, already ravaged by frost. An unfortunate irony of Rotgard’s return to form had been that it’d coincided with the arrival of winter. Hunting opportunities would be harder and harder to come by, and Serac would do well to make each one count—even if her target happened to be a master of camouflage.

  When her usual sensory organs failed her, Serac turned to her horns. She shut her eyes and calmed her mind, the better to focus all of her energy on reading.

  “Did I hear you correctly, Miss Serac?” had been Petter Svensen’s round-eyed response when she’d first brought up the topic. “You want to learn how to read the ripples?”

  “Yup! Do you think I could do it?”

  “No! Well, actually, I don’t know anymore. I always thought you needed scales or a close substitute to ripple-read, but… if what you say about the Finless is true, I suppose that rule doesn’t quite hold up.”

  “Yeah, Renate’s as smooth and pink as my little Trinket here,” Serac had said while fiddling with the Froggy at her belt. “She did say you Yakshas have to learn it from a young age, though. Do you think it’s too late for me?”

  At this, Petter had scrunched up his mackerel face in deep thought, evidently having taken Serac’s long-shot idea to heart. In the end, he’d looked up with a characteristically tentative smile.

  “I suppose we won’t know until we try.”

  And try they did, every evening for the last two months, as they gathered for supper at the end of their respective ‘work days’. Petter, admittedly, was a much better chef than he was a teacher, but there was no faulting his effort or sincerity. The result of two months’ of trial and error was a Rakshasa who used a scale ‘substitute’—her horns—to read the ripples.

  Well, perhaps ‘read’ was far too strong a word. Even with her other senses shut off and all of her concentration trained on the signals that passed through her horns, the best Serac could produce was a kind of blurry abstract painting. Wind, rustling grass, and even the susurrus of tiny critters all conspired to confuse and misdirect.

  “When that happens,” one of Petter’s more coherent pieces of advice came back to her now, “it’s best to look at the picture as a whole, rather than try to identify its individual elements. When you take a step back, you might just catch patterns that weren’t there before.”

  Serac followed that advice now, which was much easier said than done. She’d had plenty of experience ‘zooming in and out’ with her eyes, but doing that with her horns was a different matter.

  Yet, even in the midst of her struggle, she managed to perceive a promising signal. A set of willowy waves appeared to move as a discrete group and out of step with everything else. Most importantly, there was a sense of ‘direction’ to the movement of these waves—in this case, inching closer and closer towards Serac and Ash.

  Unauthorized duplication: this narrative has been taken without consent. Report sightings.

  Gotcha.

  Serac made sure to use her inside voice, ever careful not to spook her predator. Then she promptly threw the [Blood-Tipped Javelin] in her right hand, with a practiced power and precision to match her six-shooter marksmanship.

  [180!]

  [NOKKEN Status Effect: BLEED]

  Serac opened her eyes. For one fleeting Ksana, she was able to spy the Nokken’s startled figure using her more traditional sensory organ.

  On land, the thing took the fancifully elegant form of a tree-horse hybrid—with its overgrown mane of leafy vines providing the basis for its magical camouflage. In the brief time where its spell wore off, it made itself rather large, rearing on its hindquarters and letting out a silent scream. Ash’s Javelin could be seen sticking out of its haunches, which, to be fair, must’ve been quite painful.

  But the tree-horse Wildspawn quickly recast its camouflage as it turned tail and ran. Serac could be sure of this because A) she knew the Nokken to be a cowardly creature who’d switch over to self-protection mode at the first sign of trouble, and B) she could see the trail of blood it left as it fled.

  “Time to go!”

  Serac reached with both hands and tugged on the ‘reins’ to either side of her. Ash the mobile fortress rumbled to life, in response both to its master’s command and the ‘steering’ courtesy of the Manusya inside its cabin. The navigator-driver partnership was back on, and so was the chase.

  “Let’s hope we can catch it before it reaches the river.”

  The Nokken, as was typical of cowardly creatures, could be very fast when it wanted to be. Indeed, it managed to keep its slim lead on a living castle at full throttle, even while its trail of blood snaked this way and that, no doubt desperate to sabotage its prey-turned-predator.

  By now, Serac was well-versed in the art of ‘leading her shots’. But having to do that against a near-invisible target certainly upped the degree of difficulty. Her first shot missed, leaving a wisp of smoke that overlapped with a drop of the Nokken’s blood.

  She settled her nerves and took her time with the next shot. She needed to make this one count.

  [Chamber Two: HARVEST]

  [83!]

  [NOKKEN Status Effect: EARMARKED]

  It hit! With the necessary preparations in order, all that was left was to actually smite the damn thing. To that end, Serac continued to rain bullets from above, a little more liberally now that ‘Chamber discipline’ was no longer an issue.

  [131!], miss, [131!], [131!], speedload, Stamina break, miss…

  Back to Chamber Two. The gunslinger now had a decision to make.

  The three extra levels to [Substance] had translated to a seven-point damage boost per unimbued bullet. Not bad, but Serac was growing a little impatient, especially with the river coming into view ahead…

  Swiftly, she reached into the pocket of her cloak and retrieved a [Rumpepille]. It was the same Tadpole goop from the erstwhile cave expedition, air-dried, ground up, and compressed into consumable form. And even after two months, Serac still had plenty of it, thanks to the large haul she’d [Harvested] from a Rumpejette.

  She popped one into her mouth now and chewed as fast as Rakshasa-ly possible, doing her best to ignore the unpleasant gunpowder taste. The [Rumpepille]’s effect on a [Synthesis]-adept Wayfarer was to reduce the rate of [Satiety] depletion for the next hour. This reduction also applied to spell-casting costs, which paired perfectly with:

  [Chamber Two: APPETIZER]

  The end of REVOLVER’s barrel now took on a faint green aura, ready to unleash its Zealous-imbued bullets. With this slight modification to the plan, Serac went right back to blasting.

  [165!], [165!], miss, [165!]

  At Karmic Level of 44 now, Serac had spent the other three levels on [Immanence], which further buffed her Zealous AV—already the highest among her three available damage types. A 34-point difference over Physical was nothing to sneeze at, but on this occasion, even that fell short of finishing the job.

  The Nokken, as was rather atypical of cowardly creatures, was tanky as all hell—not just in Health, but also in Poise. Between the Javelin, the [Bleed] effect, and REVOLVER shots both Physical and Zealous, it must’ve taken upwards of 1,300 points of damage. And still, it continued its invisible gallop, with its trail of blood never losing its helter-skelter momentum.

  In the end, Serac was forced to pause her blasting and reach for Ash’s reins again, this time to ‘brake’. For the chase had already taken them to the edge of dry land, and Serac wasn’t about to risk water damage to the interiors of her castle.

  The Nokken’s trail cut off at the riverbank. Only a moment later, a sloppy splash indicated that it’d dove into the water. The tree-horse would’ve taken on its even slipperier aquatic form now, and even its bloody marker would be washed away.

  Somewhere from beneath Serac’s feet, Zacko’s muffled shout barely made it past Ash’s stone exterior:

  “Did we get it?”

  “Not yet!” Serac shouted back. “But don’t worry. I don’t intend to let a perfectly good [Earmark] go to waste. Time for plan B.”

  With that, Serac ‘dismissed’ Ash into its portable form, not even bothering to step off the battlement. The castle disappeared in an instant, only to reclaim its spot on its master’s belt.

  As for the master herself, she lost her stone footing and fell through the air, before landing neatly atop a saddle. A saddle on a turtle shell.

  It was a turtle for private use, large enough for tandem riding and shared between Serac and Zacko—just another perk of being Rotgard’s resident Wayfarers. They brought it everywhere with them on their foraging runs, usually stowed safely inside Ash’s cabin. Right now, however, it was time for the turtle to show its chops as ‘plan B’.

  “Let’s go!”

  Serac called cheerfully, even as Zacko hopped on to take his place as oarsman. And as Serac and her turtle splashed onto the river, the dense-boned Rakshasa showed not a single sign of fear. For like any Pretjordian worth her salt, she’d learned to fight on both land and water.

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