Chapter 176: Dwarves I
Beneath the Dragoneye Moons
Hunting and I looked at each other with concerned bemusement. On one hand, the call to arms from the wall was mildly worrisome to put it gently. On the other, we just couldnât get over being called Formorians.
The call to arms went on for a few minutes, Hunting and I awkwardly trading looks between each other then the wall, before a number of bearded faces popped over the walls.
I was not impressed with the response time. At all.
I was significantly more impressed â and concerned â when panels in the wall started to slide apart, and huge arrows, powered by massive ballistas, poked out of the walls.
I promptly ignored Huntingâs instructions to not do anything unless absolutely needed, and raised my hands.
âWhoa! Donât shoot!â I yelled at them, getting a withering look from Hunting.
I shot him a âAre you fucking seriousâ look as he started to hunker down behind his shield.
âHold! Hold fire!â A different voice called from the wall.
More inquisitive faces popped over the wall â along with a bunch of crossbows. I heard a loud curse, and some of the faces vanished.
Iâm pretty sure we werenât supposed to hear what was happening, but the dudes were loud. Also, Iâm pretty sure the guy wanted all his minions to hear the dressing down.
âThofur Krelur the 93rd! You worm-ridden cheese-for-brains idiot! Do those look like Formorians!? Are they large, menacing ants!? Is that an unbreakable, unending tide? What was that? I didnât hear you! Thatâs what I thought! NO!â
More faces popped up, took a look at us. Vanished again to discuss, this time at a quieter volume.
âAre you sure youâre not Formorians?â Another head popped up and asked us.
We looked at each other.
âThink we should say we killed them?â I whispered to Hunting, only 60% confident that they couldnât hear us from a distance.
Hunting looked at me, clearly weighing my words in his mind. He eventually shook his head.
âThey clearly seem hostile towards the Formorians, but what if they consider us to be a bigger threat because we killed them? Nah, we can always let them know later.â
Wasnât going to argue with that.
A number of the ballistas withdrew into the walls, which wouldâve been more reassuring if the three that were pointed towards us had also gone back in the walls. No, those ones turned to aim at us, which I didnât consider to be an improvement at all.
Eventually a door in the wall, so cleverly done that it was impossible to see that it was there at all, opened up, and a very nervous-looking, very short man with a massive beard walked out. Trembling somewhat, he walked towards us.
The penny dropped.
They werenât human.
These were dwarves.
He had on armor, but it was strange. I was somewhat biased from my experiences. I expected metal and leather, same as what we had. Instead, everything seemed to be made out of a shiny wood.
No â varnished wood. But it only looked like wood. I had enough experience with armor to see that it didnât move like wood at all, in spite of it obviously being wood.
It didnât look slapped together either. It was strong, solid, and had that polished look to it that high quality crafted goods tended to have.
âHi! Iâm Elaine! Nice to meet you!â I said, waving cheerfully at him. Everyone liked cheerful!
He got close enough for me to identify him.
[Warrior]. Around level 280 or so?
How was someone so damn high level so scared? He should be a fearless warrior.
He was clearly [Identify]ing us as well, as he bowed towards us.
âHealer. You grace us with your presence, and I wish to invite you to break bread and share salt with us.â
I glanced at Hunting. That was an encouraging start to things!
âThofur Krelur the 93rd! Sheep have more sense than you! Stop extending hospitality to them until we know more!â The voice from the wall yelled down.
âSheâs a healer! Tradition demands that we extend hospitality!â He yelled back.
That statement caused a lot of muttering on the wall, and more than a bit of yelling. Not enough to get anything concrete, but it seemed that when âTraditionâ and âBorder Securityâ collided, there was a strong question of which one took priority.
âFine! Healer! You grace us with your presence, and I wish to invite you to break bread and share salt with us!â The command dwarf yelled from the wall.
I glanced at Hunting. He shrugged, and whispered to me.
âSeems to be an in. Letâs take it, see what theyâre like. This tradition of theirs seems strong, and youâre unlikely to get hurt by it.â
I nodded, grinning.
âEveryone likes healers.â
Thorfur Krelur the 93rd suddenly turned, and ran screaming back into the walls.
âVoid mage! Void mage! Heâs a Void mage!â
And it had been going so well to boot.
Thorfur Krelur the 93rd â it only seemed appropriate to say his entire name, given that every time we heard his name it was the full thing â was running screaming back to the wall, and the ballista all came thundering back out of their holes. More holes in the wall opened up, and large gemstones, surrounded by glowing lines and Arcanite, popped out.
Naturally, they all turned and pointed at us.
I had no idea what skills were stored in those gems, but I didnât want to find out.
âVoid Mage! You have six seconds to leave!â
âSix!â
Hunting and I looked at each other, briefly at a loss for words. If theyâd attacked immediately, weâd be on the move, shielding and shooting and getting the heck out of here. The countdown starting at six, and not ten to boot?
Weird.
âFive!â
That got us talking, mostly over each other.
âI should stay.â
âYou should stay.â
I tilted my head, letting Hunting take the lead, and the reins.
âFour!â
âThey like you, theyâre clearly traditional, youâre unlikely â scratch that, impossible â to be harmed. Plus, you could easily fly out if needed.â
âAgreed.â I said.
âThree!â
âThey should have writing supplies. Get some. Take notes, lots of notes, on anything and everything. From the people you meet to the food. Get it all. Iâm going to head back, and get a real team sent out here to relieve you.â
âTwo!â Our time was running out.
âHopefully Night and Ocean, at the bare minimum. Maybe more. Anyways. Good luck, and when in doubt, shut up and donât do anything.â Hunting said, continuing to give me the crash course.
âONE!â
Hunting mock-groaned.
âI canât believe the architect of the Pastos incident is being used as a diplomat. What did I ever do wrong in life? Weâre all doomed.â He said.
âGood luck.â Were his parting words, as he vanished so fast it made my hair whip around.
I stared at the wall, the ballistas and glowing arrays of gemstones armed, primed, and pointed at me.
I held up my hands again.
âPlease donât shoot.â
âHold! Hold! Withdraw!â Commander-dwarf was yelling and shouting. One by one, then in a sudden wave, the various arrays and ballista were withdrawn, folding back into the wall in such a seamless manner that I couldnât tell they were there.
With a bunch of muttering, most of the dwarves vanished off the wall, while I stood outside, awkwardly not moving.
Was I supposed to say something? Walk up? Stay here?
The awkwardness of the moment just made the seconds stretch out, longer and longer. I was just starting to think I should turn around and try to catch Hunting, when a door in the wall opened up, and Commander-dwarf showed up.
âSorry about that.â He said, before straightening up â hilariously, shorter than me still â and going all formal on me.
âI am Tilruk Falvim the 91st.â He said, then stopped, staring at me expectantly.
âUm, hi. Iâm Elaine.â I said.
If the area wasnât a complete disaster, we wouldâve had tumbleweeds. Tilruk Falvim the 91stâs eyebrows started to climb a bit. I got some divine intervention, and the penny dropped for me.
âNo, really. Elaineâs my full, entire name. We donât do numbering. Well, some people number their kids, but they do it as their name, not as an add-on. Like Septima. She was super nice. Helped me at the river, kept reminding me when I lost stuff. Or like Octavia. She was the 8th kid. Got the name eight. Yikes, I havenât thought about Octavia in ages.â I said, wincing as I remembered her fate.
Almost mine.
I was completely punting this, wasnât I? First human contact with another intelligent, reasonable civilization, and I was blathering.
I didnât count goblins as intelligent or reasonable, and selkies were inexplicably murderous. Although, I had somewhat worked with that one tribeâ¦
Focus.
Tilruk Falvim the 91st seemed to mentally struggle for a moment. I could see his beard twitching every which way, as different parts of him went to war. No idea what that was, reading normal people was hard enough, let alone dwarves. before relaxing and deciding that what I said had been good enough.
âGreetings, Healer Elaine⦠how old are you?â He said, half-bowing, adding the last part sort of as a question.
I saw no reason not to answer that.
â19.â I said, which got an eyebrow quirking up in surprise.
â19, 19⦠thatâd put you in the 94th generationâ¦â He mused out loud.
âGreetings, Healer Elaine the 94thâ Tilruk Falvim the 91st formally said again.
I had this feeling that I was about to deal with a large amount of formality and repetition. My sanity was going to be in question at the end of this.
âSure, Elaine the 94th, why not.â I said, agreeing amicably. I wasnât about to go into titles and alternative names, not until I had a better grasp of what was what.
Also, I had a feeling that explaining what a Sentinel was wouldnât turn out great. Maybe theyâd respect me for mentioning I was recognized as one of humanityâs best. Maybe theyâd be unhappy that I was in an organization full of âkill stuff deadâ people. Maybe thatâd strip the respect for my healer title away.
Not like I was hiding it, not with my armor on and weapons obviously visible on my waist and pack.
I just had no idea about anything.
Which, honestly, was par for the course when it came to anything social.
Iâd gotten a blessed reprieve ever since Pastos.
I threw a quick [Identify] onto Tilruk, and got back a [Leader], around level 340 or so.
When in doubt, use a mirror.
âGreetings, Leader Tilruk Falvim the 91st.â I said, a heck of a lot more confidently than I felt, and bowed back.
âHealer. You grace us with your presence, and I wish to invite you to break bread and share salt with us.â Tilruk said, giving the formal-seeming invitation a third time. My theory of âlots of repetitionâ was confirmed to boot.
âIâd love to. What next?â I said, figuring Iâd try the direct route.
Maybe itâd be easier to be so far off of their normal traditional route, than to try and mimic it? Instead of trying to sing their song and being horribly off-key, I wouldnât sing, and Iâd just talk instead. Or some logic like that.
I dunno. I didnât do social stuff. Iâd call this a win if I managed to get out of this without starting a large-scale war. Small war, sure. That was a win in my book.
He hesitated, then gestured, a near-universal âcome on in, the doorâs open.â
âCome! Follow me.â He said, and I walked through the door in the wall.
I got a close, close look at the wall. Iâd mentally marked where one of the ballistas had retracted into the wall â right above the door I was about to enter â and no matter how close I got, no matter how carefully I looked, there wasnât even the line of a seam.
I stepped through the door, and it was like Iâd been drowning, and Iâd come up for air for the first time in my life. Light had touched my face, when Iâd lived in darkness. Water, quenching a thirst I never knew I had.
[*Ding!* Congratulations! [The Dawn Sentinel] has leveled up to level 305->306! +3 Dexterity, +24 Speed, +24 Vitality, +170 Mana, +170 Mana Regen, +48 Magic power, +48 Magic Control from your Class per level! +1 Free Stat for being Human per level! +1 Mana, +1 Mana Regen from your Element per level!]
[*Ding!* [Celestial Affinity] leveled up! 305 -> 306]
[*Ding!* [Dance with the Heavens] leveled up! 305 -> 306]
[*Ding!* [Sentinelâs Superiority] leveled up! 305 -> 306]
âWhoa!â I cried out, hand over my heart, breathing rapidly.
âAre you ok? Is something wrong?â Tilruk said, looking concerned and worried, eyebrows furrowed.
âOk? Ok!? I feel better than ok! I feel great! I feel wonderful! This is magical! Amazing! Fantastic! What did you do!? What is this? An inscription? Wow! Itâs one heck of an inscription! Iâve gotta know how to do this!â
Tilruk was looking at me like Iâd gone mad, which, in retrospect, wasnât an unfair assessment.
Slowly, like he was talking to a child, like he couldnât believe what he was asking, he spoke.
âHang on. Are you talking about the feeling of leaving the dead zone?â He asked.
[*Ding!* [Learning] leveled up! 280 -> 281]
âI dunno! If you mean that fantastic feeling just now, then yes!â I said, before my brain caught up to my mouth.
âWait, what do you mean, dead zone?â
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[Name: Elaine]
[Race: Human]
[Age: 19]
[Mana: 155500/155500]
[Mana Regen: 135176 (+99520)]
Stats
[Free Stats: 52]
[Strength: 293]
[Dexterity: 350]
[Vitality: 2200]
[Speed: 2200]
[Mana: 15550]
[Mana Regeneration: 15550 (+9952)]
[Magic Power: 7939 (+107176.5)]
[Magic Control: 7939 (+107176.5)]
[Class 1: [The Dawn Sentinel - Celestial: Lv 306]]
[Celestial Affinity: 306]
[Cosmic Presence: 231]
[Solar Infusion: 1]
[Center of the Universe: 285]
[Dance of the Heavens: 306]
[Wheel of Sun and Moon: 271]
[Mantle of the Stars: 256]
[Sunrise: 13]
[Class 2: [Ranger-Mage - Radiance: Lv 256]]
[Radiance Affinity: 256]
[Radiance Resistance: 256]
[Radiance Conjuration: 256]
[Shine: 111]
[Sun-Kissed: 256]
[Blaze: 256]
[Talaria: 256]
[Nova: 256]
[Class 3: Locked]
General Skills
[Identify: 151]
[Pristine Memories: 200]
[Pretty: 152]
[Bullet Time: 268]
[Oath of Elaine to Lyra: 270]
[Sentinel's Superiority: 306]
[Persistent Casting: 189]
[Learning: 281]
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