Chapter 143: Companion information
Beneath the Dragoneye Moons
Julius got us through the gates no problem, although he got a number of funny looks.
Entering late at night, escorting a woman less than half his age? I briefly considered spiking his wheel, but decided that we were probably going to have a long working relationship together, and annoying him too much was probably a poor idea.
âLeveled up a bunch from that?â Julius asked me, referring to Deva.
âYup! Good experience.â I said.
And that reminded me.
Iâd been sitting on my free stats far too long, and I decided to finally allocate them, splitting them between vitality and speed, evening them out then splitting the remainder. Iâd need to do some serious thinking as to which stats I needed to prioritize on my next class up. A solid discussion to have with Night at some point.
Before long I was back at Headquarters, had another luxurious bath, and the next morning was rolling around. Time for another meeting!
Ocean wasnât around â on pirate clean-up duty â but Acquisition was looking smug.
âIâve reached a compromise with most of the high-level thieves in the area.â He said. âTheyâll tell the remaining ones. Anyone whoâs not high level we donât need to worry about.â
I raised my hand and gave him a Look. Thieves were the bane of my existence.
âMost mid and low-level thieves arenât playing âbest thiefâ contest and trying to rob Sentinels.â Acquisition said, giving me a flat look. âThe deal I struck with them is weâll have a cloth on us that they can try to snag instead.â
Night gave him a Look.
âThat is unacceptable. Sentinels are not playthings.â
Glares around the room at Acquisition.
Acquisition held up his hands.
âI know. I KNOW! But theyâre lawless. How am I supposed to get them to start following our laws? This is one of the only things theyâd accept. Theyâll get bored soon enough, plus,â Acquisition grinned, like heâd stolen something invaluable. âthe cloth in question is easy to manufacture and copy. Iâm going to simply flood the area with it, soon itâll be impossible for the thieves to tell if a trophy is genuine or not, then theyâll get bored and go back to robbing Senators and grabbing fancy statues and the like.â
He turned to Night.
âOr just, you know, let me declare myself the best thief in Remus, prove it by robbing the Senators of their clothes while theyâre in the Senate, and stop the pissing contest thatâs thieves trying to one-up each other by robbing us.â
I tuned out the rest of the argument and the debate. I thought being a Sentinel would be interesting and exciting, not arguing about the merits of government-sponsored thieves, and how to get thieves out of our business.
After a point, Night released us, but Brawling and I were the only ones to leave. Everyone else was enjoying the discussion too much.
Brawling headed out â he didnât have tons to contribute to the Hell Months, being an almost pure physical Classer, and screwing with Trainees seemed a lot less fun without anyone else around. I gave them a pass. The Dawn wouldnât rise this morning.
Make it even worse on them, if they could never guess when Iâd show up and start a light show.
My armor was back and fixed, and I picked it up from the Quartermaster. They worked fast. Then again, 90% of their job was getting Rangers and their gear set, but the 10% of the job dedicated to supporting Sentinels? That got top priority.
I swung by the Gemstone dude, and we had a nice chat. The long and the short of it was â with my improved knowledge of the System with how [Persistent Casting] worked with my images, I made some of the Moonstones I was charging with [Phases of the Moon] âbetterâ. That was to say â some Moonstones I made good at handling cuts, some I made better at dealing with poisons â basically, they were all heal-alls, but some did a better job at healing a specific type of injury.
The Gemstone dude seemed to know exactly what I was doing though, and I trusted him to properly pass it off to the other Sentinels.
I cursed. Bluebeard. I still wanted a long chat with him about companions.
I hurried back down to our meeting room, and I was lucky enough to catch him.
âHunting! Hey, Hunting!â I called out, waving to him.
âDawn! What can I do for our newest Sentinel?â He asked me.
âCompanions! Hoping to have a nice long talk about them. Hoping to get your input.â I said.
He eyed me.
âYeah, I can see why one would be perfect for you. Have you eaten breakfast yet?â
I shook my head.
âWhy donât we grab a bite to eat together, and I can tell you all about them? Iâm not surprised youâre interested, not after seeing you with Katastrofi.â
I blinked at him.
âYou remember that?â
âOf course I remember that! Do you know how few people want to get near Katastrofi? Then thereâs a girl, hanging out with a full Ranger team, who has [Detailed Restoration] of all the skills, who instead of fleecing me for everything I have on me wants a ride?â
Well. When he put it like that.
âLemme gear up real fast.â I said, quickly darting into my room, changing into full armor â with my cape.
The cape of âIâm here to look badass, not get in a fight.â
Capes were terrible for fights, unless you had skills or something. Too easy to snag on things, and they did nothing for you in a fight.
Hunting quirked an eyebrow up at my outfit.
âPlanning on getting a discount somewhere?â He asked.
I did my best flycatcher impression.
âA lot of stores will give us a discount if we show up looking like that.â Hunting said, nodding at me.
âNo â well, now yes â but no, I was planning on yelling at the Adventurerâs Guild.â
âCareful with that. Yell at them for screwing up with âyour good friendâ, not with you. Reputation and picture of invincibility and all that.â
Ooooh good point. âYes, Sentinel Dawn hired adventurers to protect herâ â everything said after that would go in one ear and out the other. The rumor mill would have a field day though. Not that the Guildmaster probably didnât have my number, but again â plausible deniability.
âSounds good!â
We wandered through the city, and I was a little surprised we didnât just grab a bite at the first vendor and called it a day. Rather â I grabbed something, and was letting my breakfast rapidly cool as Bluebeard seemed to be picky, looking and dismissing vendor after vendor.
âWhatcha looking for?â I asked, after the 8th vendor in a row got dismissed.
âBulk meat.â Hunting answered. âFirst rule of companions â they eat before you do. Katastrofi requires huge amounts of food, and my usual vendorâs not in town, and my backupâs having supply problems. Gotta find someone who doesnât screw with the meat too much, and who wonât charge me too much.â
âThought the armor was good for a discount.â
âIt is. But when a merchant smells money, and my need to buy? Doesnât stop large scale purchases being expensive.â
Bluebeard eventually finished his shopping, and we headed out of town. Bluebeard was balancing a stack of meat, all of it still raw and dripping.
I kept my distance.
My outfit got me a straight pass through the gates, and Bluebeard nodded in a familiar way to the guards, who just cheerily waved him through. If he fed Katastrofi daily â which was possible I guess, but I didnât know enough about dinosaurs â the guards would get to know him real well.
My question of âwhere did you store a multi-ton dinoâ and âhow did Hunting make this all workâ were answered as we arrived at a large, sprawling villa located outside the town walls. A huge âpenâ was arranged for Katastrofi, but given that I could hop over the fence, it seemed to be more of a social warning, than anything that could stop Katastrofi. She could literally step over it â or on it â and not even notice. Well-trained to stay inside.
Very graphic signs posted around made it abundantly clear, without using a single word, that stepping inside the pen would result in being eaten.
With Remusâs justice system, the guards might not even talk with Hunting over it.
Hunting whistled, and Katastrofi came bounding over, great footsteps shaking the earth as the Abelisaurus came bounding over like an overeager puppy. She gave me a look, a sniff, and having determined that I was no threat, and that breakfast was here, happily snatched huge chunks of meat out of the air that Hunting was throwing at her.
âItâs good practice.â Hunting said, seeing my look. âLots of small flying things that she needs to bite. Your companion is your life, your other half. Some treat them as just a pet, a tool. Then they wonder why they never bond, why the System never offers them the [Companion] skill. Theyâre so much more than pets.â
âItâs almost a lifelong commitment to have a companion. They change you, change you in many ways unique to each bond, and youâre changed in return. Abelisauruses arenât particularly smart, but Katastrofiâs incredibly intelligent. She got that from me. Iâm stronger, faster, and heavier.â
âItâs not all sunshine and rainbows. Iâm meaner. Angrier. Quicker to lose my temper, to throw a punch. Iâve got self-control, but itâs an unpleasant feeling, feeling rage bubble up at the most innocent and harmless of things and needing to fight it down. Katastrofiâs missing some of her instincts, canât naturally do things other Abelisauruses do without thinking. She eats tons more than other dinosaurs, but sheâs a lot more energetic. Itâs give and take.â
âI also need twice the experience to level in anything. Itâs mitigated by Katastrofi splitting any experience she gets with me. Itâs why people donât just bond with anything. When she was born, she was level 1 like anything else is. I was stuck at the same level for years while she grew up, until she caught up with me in level. Itâs why people donât just get a companion âjust becauseâ â there are real downsides to go with the upsides. You need to make sure itâs worth it.â
âYou also lose a general skill slot, or with rare classes, you lose a class skill slot.â
Hunting gave me some of Katastrofiâs breakfast, and I started tossing the hunks of meat to her, watching with delight as she snapped it out of the air.
âOh! Something I almost didnât mention. Itâs hard, bordering on impossible, to bond with a fully grown creature. Their minds are formed already, their bodies have grown. They have a personality. You need to have almost exactly the same mindset ahead of time to bond with a grown creature, otherwise it just wonât work, for whatever reason.â
I nodded. âYou mentioned you thought a companion would be good for me?â
âYeah. Youâre young, which helps. You two can mold each other. It gets harder the older â and more stubborn and set in your ways â you get. Youâve got plenty of strengths, and some glaring weaknesses, which a companion easily covers. Youâve got a good, caring heart, which is a major plus. Youâd do well, unlike, say, Magic, whoâd just see the animal as another tool.â
Katastrofiâs breakfast was over, and with Huntingâs encouraging nod, I moved forward, to slowly stroke her scaly legs. They were surprisingly warm to the touch, and she made a low growling noise, which almost sounded like a cat trying to purr.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
A t-rex, making a content noise. What was the world coming to?
I had a thought.
âCan people bond with each other?â
Bluebeard sucked in air through his teeth.
âTechnically â TECHNICALLY â itâs possible. I think. Iâve seen nothing to suggest it isnât, but itâs like trying to bond a grown creature, but eight times as difficult. Both parties start off highly intelligent. Both parties have their own sense of self, have their own dreams and ambitions. If thereâs any shred of doubt, it wonât work. And itâs all too easy to think âwhat if theyâll change in the future? What ifâ¦â. So many âwhat-ifsâ. But yes. The famous romances bards sing about, when they sing of people in lifetime commitments, above and beyond mortal means â thatâs usually bards taking a System bond and putting it into extra-flowery terms. If you somehow pull it off, congratulations, youâve got a romance for the ages.â
He eyed me.
âNo offense, but I doubt thatâll happen with you. Youâre too strong, too powerful, at a young age, isolated and alone. I have no doubt youâll find a measure of happiness one day, but someone exactly like you who youâd bond with? Weâd already know about them.â
Well, Romance with a capital R was pretty far out of my mind at the moment, with my latest stab at it almost ending with me drained of all my blood. I was insatiable, and I wanted, needed, to know more. Interrogation away!
âWhat do you recommend for me? Also, Wolfy had multiple companions, how did that work?â
âWolfy?â Hunting asked me.
Whoops.
âErm. Dude in my graduating class, had two wolves as his companions.â
âAh. Generally, itâs hard to get multiple companions, but wolves are one of the exceptions. They naturally fall into packs, and his arrangement and bond with them is probably pack-like. Something more solitary â like a saber-tooth cat, like a bear â is unlikely to work for a multi-companion bond.â
âSpeaking of, that Wolfy of yours got extremely lucky with not one, but two casters. Generally, you bond early on, before you know what skills theyâll get. The smarter the creature, the higher chance of being a caster, and bonding does help with that. Still. Casters are rare.â
âHeâs not my Wolfy!â I protested.
Bluebeard stared at me, fierce eyes over blue⦠beard⦠examining me.
âAs for you. You lack in the physical department. Low level, something like a wolf would work well, something that could carry you, move you quickly between places, and that could physically fight and block things for you. A saber-tooth cat is more of an ambush fighter, and doesnât quite have the same ability to move or take hits for you, for example.â
âBut youâre Sentinel Dawn. You can do better than a single wolf. I wonât discount the value of a pack of casters, but thatâs a different story.â
I could see that Hunting was working towards something here, and was basically thinking out loud.
âBears start to look more attractive, and are a solid option. They can be tricky, along with anything that gives live birth, because you want to bond early â but the momma bear is going to object. Usually violently. And bear cubs need a lot of coddling when theyâre very young. Itâs tricky striking the right balance. Still. Youâve got the time, money, and resources to do it right, so theyâre on the table, while they might not be an option for people without a support network.â
Made sense, made sense. I could see myself riding a bear, then curling up with it in the evening, basking in its luxurious fur.
âNow, Iâm horribly biased, but Iâm a big fan of Abelisauruses. Large. Powerful. Will eat all your problems. Egg-based. Doesnât need a lot of care early on. Long lifespan. Carries all your stuff. Keeping them as an adult is tricky,â Bluebeard gestured behind him, at his massive villa and even larger area for Katastrofi to wander around in. âbut the payoff is worth the price.â
He looked at me, continuing to look thoughtful.
âNow, youâre small. Lightweight. And can fly. Which means fliers are on the menu. Thereâs nothing worse than being in a bad spot, being able to fly away yourself, but needing to leave your companion behind. I know of at least two Rangers who probably couldâve saved themselves, but chose to stand and fight with their companion and died as a result; who didnât want to leave their companion to die on their own. Knew one Ranger consumed by guilt for leaving their companion behind to die. There are a dozen different types of fliers, but all but two arenât worth mentioning, for reasons Iâll get into.â
Hunting leapt, in a single bound, up onto Katastrofi, then beckoned to me, indicating that I should climb up. With a delighted noise, I nimbly climbed up â a far cry from the first time Iâd done this.
I sat down in front of Hunting, and with barely a movement, Katastrofi started to walk, then run, then run. With great bounding strides, she ate up ground, and I could feel my hair waving behind me wildly â probably annoying the shit out of Hunting.
I couldnât help it. I let out a scream, the exact same I would going down a rollercoaster.
âWooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!â
We slowed down to a more reasonable, less hair-in-face pace, as Bluebeard finished up his lecture.
âThe first option is an Ornithocheirus. Nothing wrong with them, theyâre common, their nesting grounds are easy enough to find â heck, weâre constantly tracking them and trying to cull their population down, and dozens of eggs enter circulation annually as a result â we know how to saddle them, how to train them, and more.â
âMost other fliers arenât native to Remus, and will only fly over rarely, and itâs even rarer for them to nest here. Theyâre also weaker than the second option, and both being harder, being rarer, and being weaker are all enough strikes against them that itâs not worth bothering to go after them.â
âNo, the creature I think you should aim for, that if youâre game for weâll try to find, that you could put a quest in the Adventurerâs Guild for, is one of power and strength. One that can create thunder with its wings, and Lightning from its eyes.â
âA Thunderbird.â
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[Name: Elaine]
[Race: Human]
[Age: 18]
[Mana: 51840/51840]
[Mana Regen: 42269 (+17791.5)]
Stats
[Free Stats: 0]
[Strength: 244]
[Dexterity: 202]
[Vitality: 635]
[Speed: 635]
[Mana: 5184]
[Mana Regeneration: 4908 (+1779.15)]
[Magic Power: 4517 (+47654.35)]
[Magic Control: 4517 (+47654.35)]
[Class 1: [Constellation of the Healer - Celestial: Lv 246]]
[Celestial Affinity: 246]
[Warmth of the Sun: 198]
[Medicine: 215]
[Center of the Galaxy: 242]
[Phases of the Moon: 246]
[Moonlight: 246]
[Veil of the Aurora: 216]
[Vastness of the Stars: 144]
[Class 2: [Ranger-Mage - Radiance: Lv 188]]
[Radiance Affinity: 188]
[Radiance Resistance: 188]
[Radiance Conjuration: 188]
[Radiance Manipulation: 188]
[Sun-Kissed: 145]
[Blaze: 188]
[Talaria: 163]
[Nova: 188]
[Class 3: Locked]
General Skills
[Identify: 137]
[Recollection of a Distant Life: 159]
[Pretty: 136]
[Bullet Time: 198]
[Oath of Elaine to Lyra: 211]
[Sentinel's Superiority: 206]
[Persistent Casting: 56]
[Learning: 246]
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