âPut it down over there.â
Dee and Dum did as I said, dumping the last few armfuls of thatching in the corner of the warehouse. I didnât know where theyâd gotten it from, but that was secondary to getting our base of operations up and running.
âYou two, finish repairing the eves.â I held out a roll of parchment Iâd found on Blue. âI drew the design for you. Donât damage the parchment.â
I never thought Iâd be working with a sharpened stick of charcoal, but the needs must when the devil drives.
Or demons, as it were.
With a sigh, I moved over the chair Iâd gotten myself. It wasnât even upholstered, but after the day Iâd had, Iâd take anything to rest my feet. I plopped down, the wooden frame creaking slightly. I smirked to myself as I ran a hand over my mechanical spiderâs metal carapace.
It beeped once, tilting slightly and sensors flashing, before settling back down on its perch. âGood work, General Tok.â Iâd decided to name him after his stellar performance at the warehouse. His diagnostics seemed to be going pretty well, from what Iâd seen.
Beneath Tok, my newest demon rumbled, craning its neck. With a huff I gave him a few scratches as well. âDonât worry, Blue, I havenât forgotten about you either.â
My lizard let out a low trill, resting its head on the ground as Dee and Dum got to work.
I turned to my final follower. âRun over what you told me again.â
Rel nodded. âY-yes, milady.â I held back a sigh at the âmilady,â next thing heâd be wearing a fedora or something. I waved for him to continue. âThe uh, Red Scars were a pretty small street gang. They hadâuhâanother two or three guys.â He shrugged. âProlly long gone by now.â
I nodded. âSo, no one else is likely to come after us?â Truth be told, I had been expecting to be noticed eventually. I just thought Iâd have a bit more time to prepare before people came calling. It wouldnât be due to be caught unaware twice in a row.
âUh, not for a few days?â He shrugged. âNo one really cares about the olâ docks.â
âHence why these louts were here in the first place.â I rubbed my face. âWhat territory did they control?â
âA bit oâ the docks? Not much, mostly they just shook down anyone caught out after the eveninâ bell.â
I nodded. âWell that will have to change.â For the first part, mugging nobodies was no way to generate revenue. Or at least, not in the quantities I needed if I was ever going to amount to anything. Those people had nothing, taking from them was an exercise in futility. A million times zero was still zero.
Sometimes, you needed to add something first.
âBut, uh, the Red Scars paid some tribute to one aâ the other gangs on the north side.â
I nodded again. âYou told me, the Rusted Knives. How long until their next payment comes due and they send people sniffing around?â
âThe boys uh, donât know?â Rel wrung his hands. âThey said their boss took care of that stuff.â
âIâm sure he did.â All the better to hide how much of the take he was pocketing. Heâd had a full enough purse, covered in blood as it was. I wanted to track down the rest of his stashes, but that was a foolâs errand. I had more important matters to attend to.
I rubbed my brow. âWeâll need to start talking to the locals then. I assume people still live around here?â
Rel shrugged. âA few? I dunno. My Da said it was only fishermen and people who couldnât put a roof over their heads.â
At that, I smiled. âPerfect.â
Rel blinked.
I patted him on the shoulder. âNever underestimate the ability of desperate people.â I smiled a bit wider, thumbing the bulging coin purse tied to my belt. âThereâs a lot we can do with a bit of money, and hopefully, we wonât even have to resort to extortion.â
There were other matters to be worried about as well, of course. The guard, tax collectors, the other bigger gangs. But for now, it looked like I had time to get situated, start laying the foundations Iâd need for my own little industrial revolution.
Hopefully, without children working in coal mines, this time around. There was enough gilt leafing this world already. Besides, I raised a hand, pooling a bit of mana into my palm, I had plenty of disposable labor to work with. I wondered if there were forge demons, and what theyâd take for barter.
âGood work.â I turned back to Rel. âIf there wasnât anything else, go help Dee and Dum with the roof.â I flicked a glance towards the grey sky. âIâd like to get it finished before it starts to rain.â
From there, Iâd need more stone, more wood⦠more everything, really. But none of that would matter if I didnât have a place to keep it all. Iâd need more people as well, for things that I couldnât just turn over to convenient demons.
Summoning was⦠frowned upon in this kingdom, apparentlyânot that anyone in my little band of misfits had ever been beyond the city of Silverwall.
âUmâ¦â
I raised an eyebrow at Rel. âHmm?â
âThere was somethinâ else too.â
âWell?â I waved a hand. âDonât keep me waiting.â
âYou said to tell you when I got a new class.â
I nodded. âI did. So? Was it a rare class?â
âUh, yes, Lady Via.â He frowned. âLeast, I think it is, I donât really understand it.â
âWhatâs it called,â I asked.
âFillet Minion.â
I groaned into my palm.
Rel shuffled, voice squeaking. âUh, Lady Via.â
âJust⦠read the unlock description.â
âFer, ah⦠defending your mistress with blades.â
I nodded, face still resting in my hand. âIt would be something like that, wouldnât it?â If I ever met the gods of this world, Iâd kill them. âIâm just surprised they counted that rusted old sword of yours as a blade.â It seemed that you unlocked classes based on some esoteric sense of 'achievement.' Apparently, it happened rather easily as well.
Though hopefully there weren't any more 'Fillet Minions' running around. I'd hate to have to cut down the competition.
âWhat should I do?â
I let out a deep breath. âI donât suppose cobblers have much in the way of interesting skills?â
âNo, maâam.â Rel tugged down on his cap. âI can repair shoesâ¦? Nothinâ like what you have. Least thugs like the boys get blunt weapon mastery.â
Yes, another interesting distinction Iâd discovered in this world. The rarer the class, the more active abilities it had, while common classes had more simple passives. Given time, rare skills like mine were supposed to unlock passive abilities of their own. Of course, all of this information was based on hearsay.
Forget a portal, Iâd kill for access to a Wiki about this world.
âTake the class.â I said. âWe donât have much need for new shoes here, at the moment.â My own suit had inbuilt boots Iâd trust over anything this world could provide. And the boys, all three of them, looked like theyâd recently stolen a pair or three.
âYes maâam.â
I saw him go slightly cross eyed as he manipulated his menu. I really needed to work on that tell, for myself if no one else.
âDone⦠Lady Via.â
I tilted my head. His posture had straightened slightly, hands going back down to his sides. âWell, what does that class of yours do?â
âI⦠assist my Mistress in a-achieving her ends wherever possible?â His eyes glanced to me. âAnd⦠predicting her desires.â
I hummed at that. âWell, I suppose youâve been better than the usual minion Iâve had to work with in the past. And your skill?â
He quirked his lip, as if holding back a laugh. âCutting Words.â
I sighed. âAnd there we go again.â I waved him off. âGet some practice with that. Outside.â
Rel looked at me sheepishly, closing his mouth. âYes, Lady Via.â
âGood.â Reaching into my pouch, I pulled out two silver coins. A new class required some testing after all. âAfter youâre reasonably sure you can control whatever it does, preferably without cutting anyone important, go to the market district; weâre going to need some additional supplies.â I glanced over towards Dee and Dum, who by now seemed to have gotten the hang of things and no longer needed my diagram. âIâll make you a list.â
I opened my mouth to add some more instructions, such as what to prioritize, and what to do when he ran out of money, but then I paused. His class was supposed to make him better at serving me, just like my class was supposed to make me better at summoning demons.
And maybe actual demagoguery as well, but Iâd have to test that at a later time.
In any case, it stood to reason that heâd gain experience by doing what his class was meant to do.
With a small smirk, I wrote up a list, containing both the essentials, food, basic building materials, and the like, along with a short wishlist of things, capping it off with a lodestone.
If I could get my hands on that and some copper wire, the possibilities would be truly limitless.
I handed it to Rel, who swallowed, before tucking it up his sleeve. âI⦠I wonât let you down, Lady Via!â
I raised an eyebrow at that. The boy was really coming into his own, wasnât he? Still, it wouldnât do to make him overconfident, so I just gave him a wan smile.
âYou havenât yet.â