âIâm afraid there is no help for it,â Mohrdrand admitted late in the afternoon, having poured over several volumes from his library. âYou either have one, or you donât. Itâs a thing for the gods, not for humble workers in magic such as I.â
âI see,â Jack frowned.
âDo you, I wonder?â the old man raised an eyebrow. âJackson Grenell,â he leaned forward, his voice growing serious. âYou wield a mythic grade weapon and have vanquished monsters of some substantial rank. I think it safe to say at this juncture that you are most assuredly gifted, and will do perfectly fine without a crystal.â
âButââ
âShe is wrong every twenty or so years,â the old man laughed. âAlthough youâll have a devil of a time getting her to admit it.
âSitting here with you,â he went on. âI can just see your status bars, as we are on friendly terms and wearing these rings. They are faint, granted, and health and mana only. I see no status effects, no alignment, no guild affiliation, nor your name, class, nor species. But I suppose that should be enough. Button?â
She still wasnât happy at being so addressed, but sheâd apparently decided to put up with it, at least for the time being. âI see the same,â she announced. âAlthough his health and mana bars are clear and bright for me. And during the fight, I was able to see status and affect modifiers.â
âAs they should be for you,â the old man nodded. âGiven your connection.â
âAnd you, Jack?â he asked, ignoring the look she shot him.
âNothing,â Jack told him after a short span of staring at him through narrowed eyes. âNothing over either of you.â
âHmm. Is this normal on your world?â
âMine or the one Iâm supposed to be going to?â Jack wondered.
âYours first, I believe,â the old man said.
âSame as Iâm seeing now,â Jack admitted. âNothing.â
âWait,â the wizard straightened in his seat. âAre you telling me that, on your world, no one has status bars or identifiers?â
âPretty much. We also donât have âgiftedâ people as you understand them. At least as far as Iâve ever heard.â
âThen how do you determine friend from foe? Monster from farm animal?â
âIâm told,â Jack grinned. âThat more people are killed by cows every year than by sharks.â when that response garnered only confused stares, he clarified. âWe pretty much have to guess.â
âGuess?â Mohrdrand gaped.
âWell,â he clarified. âGuess based on observation and experience. It does lead to trouble. Weâre forced to judge people by their actions. Or by cues in body language. Sometimes by affiliation. It gets kind of muddy, and frequently there are issues caused by misidentification, or by basing decisions on the wrong cues or just bad information.â
âI should imagine,â the old man shook his head. âHow do you manage? I mean, how do you know who to be cautious of and who cannot fight?â
That drew a burst of laughter. âFriend Mohrdrand,â he said. âOn Earth, you have to be cautious of everything, and everything fights. Even a mouse will take a chunk out of you if itâs cornered.â
âWell, of course,â the old man agreed. âBut a mouse does not rank up and become more dangerous. The ungifted will fight if cornered, but theyâre awful at it and cannot use weapons or armor stronger than rank zero. This renders them mostly harmless to the gifted. Even low ranking gifted.
âAnd the world you are journeying to?â he ventured then.
âA bit more like here,â Jack said. âBut not exactly. First off, any sort of identification requires a learned skill. Often, several skills. And you have to be actively using them to get any sort of information. Otherwise, thereâs no difference at all between active characters and NPCâ er, ungifted.
âEven then, from a distance,â he went on uncomfortably. âItâs like home. Nothing, even with skills. As you get closer, though, and depending on the situation and which skills youâve learned, some designators begin to appear. General at first, but more specific the nearer you get. A monster, for instance. At range, the first thing youâll see is the species. A troll, say. Of course, by then, if you know what a troll looks like, youâll already know, so itâs kind of useless.
âCloser in, youâll get the level. Thatâs like your ranks. That is, if your own level and skill modifier is high enough. If itâs too low, all youâll see is a skull. That generally means it's one of two flavors of get the hell away, itâs too powerful for you.
âOnce youâre really close, and with the proper skillset, you might see weaknesses, strengths, and specials. But that takes a lot more training âlike your appraisal skillâ and isnât available until youâve leveled up a ways.â
âIndeed,â the wizard was stroking his beard now, leaning in.
âYou wonât see enemy life bars or health indicators until you enter combat,â Jack finished. "Thereâs a point, though, when you just stop messing with it. After youâve gotten familiar enough with who and what youâre going to be up against, you just know. So you use the concentration youâd ordinarily spend on the identification skills and apply it to fighting."
âI see,â the wizard said after a bit. âAnd friends?â
Jack gave it some thought. âParty members, youâll see names, life and mana bars. But thatâs it. Any other information you have access to will be in menâ er... visible by other means.â
Mohrdrand narrowed his eyes, a hint of suspicion edging his face. âBut nothing like the life crystals?â
Jack gave it some thought. âMonsters drop cores,â he said tentatively. âI think thatâs the closest it gets.â
âMonsters, but not people?â
âRight.â
âIndeed.â
At some point during their discussions, an old woman let herself in the front door, quietly passing them and vanishing into the depths of the building where Tiarraluna had previously ventured. Shortly thereafter, the aromas of cooking began to fill the structure, setting mouths to watering. It grew more difficult for the old wizardâs guests to concentrate on the topics at hand.
Eventually, Mohrdrand called a halt to the discussion and they adjourned to the dining room, a brightly lighted venue with brightly glowing lamps set in ornate sconces arranged along the walls. Dinner was served by the still silent old woman, who vanished into what was undoubtedly the kitchen while they ate, and emerged only to clean the table.
They were back in the previous room, a fire now lit in the hearth, when she passed them on her way out. Sheâd uttered not a single sound the entire time sheâd been there. The wizard offered no explanation, and Jack didnât inquire.
The topic for the remainder of the evening fluctuated between Jackâs descriptions of his true destination insofar as he could extrapolate from the game, and questions regarding how he might cope in the world in which he currently found himself. The old wizard tried various trinkets in an effort to allow Jack to see status indicators and life crystals. None worked. He tried various spells. None of them worked either.
Eventually, the effort was curtailed in favor of a nightâs sleep. Jack was shown to a small, sparsely decorated cubby. Tiarraluna apparently had her own room, arguing that she was a more regular guest, or had been so at some point in the past.
Jack lay awake for a long time, gazing at the ceiling, his head resting on one forearm as he stared up into the darkness. He was beginning to chafe at the delay of his journey. In his opinion, the past several hours had been a complete waste of time. Mohrdrand didnât really need to know about Tarr, and he didnât, he thought, need to be able to see crystals or stats. His plans involved avoiding fights on this side if possible. Failing that, knowing how high the levels of any opponents were was pointless, as heâd have to fight them anyway. That was the way unavoidable fights were. Unavoidable.
The big question, though, hadnât been addressed at all. What was going on around here that had everybody afraid, and the guard missing? True, it wasnât really any of his business. These werenât the people he was supposed to protect. Of course, that hadnât ever stopped him in the past, had it? And he knew in the back of his mind that it wouldnât stop him now, if he decided that something had to be done.
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Somewhere during these contemplations, sleep took him.
Breakfast was already on the table when he rejoined the others early the next morning. There was no sign of the old woman. Perhaps Tiarraluna had prepared it. The meal certainly lacked some of the complexity and flair of the previous eveningâs endeavor. Simple cereal cakes and oatmeal. Substantial looking, but rather bland. However, and this made up for all the rest, the old man had coffee! and sugar.
âWhere do I go from here?â Jack asked the old wizard as he was savoring his second cup. He wouldnât ask about the local situation. The subject had been conspicuously avoided by his hosts up until now, and he figured his asking would only cause friction. Heâd find out somehow once he left the wizardâs home.
âThe capitol,â the wizard said around a thick chunk of cereal cake liberally smeared with butter. âI have it on good authority that the king has access to an exit portal. The one that he, himself, was supposed to use to return to his home before he decided to remain and rule Tandera.
"Iâm no expert on portal dynamics, so Iâm not sure it will help. It may be possible to select a destination, or it may simply return you to your world. Itâs a chance, at least, and the best I can think of.â
That made sense. âFine. How far is it?â
A shrug. âAs the calta flies, around three thousand lenn.â
Jack narrowed an eye as a stab of pain shot through his forehead. He looked down to the ring. It seemed to be having trouble converting the term to a concept he could understand. âLenn?â
âAh,â the old wizard nodded. âAh, a lenn is a measure of distance. Letâs see... Ah, this house is slightly more than two-thirds of one lenn from the city gate by the way you traveled.â
Jack nodded. If he had his distances right, they were about a mile in. Which put a lenn at around a mile and a half. So, forty-five hundred miles. Whoof! âAnd what sort of terrain am I looking at between here and there?â
âAt least two mountain ranges,â the old wizard ticked off on his fingers. âThe Sessik plain, which is more a desert, assuming you donât go around and add another four hundred miles to yourââ
"Hold it,â Jack interrupted. âDid you just say miles?â
"Did I say what?â the old man asked. âNo, I said miles.â
Jack frowned and gave the ring another scowl. So, once he learned a word, it would add it to his dictionary. Good to know.
âIn any case,â the wizard went on, âthere are marshlands to the south that youâll want to avoid if you can.â
âSo,â Jack mused. âItâs gonna take me awhile.â
âIn all probability,â the old man agreed.
âHey,â Jack snapped his fingers. âYouâre a high ranking wizard, right? Canât you guys teleport or something? Wizards can always teleport to wherever they want, or so Iâve always heard.â
Mohrdrand frowned, quirking a lip. âWherever do you learn these supposed facts?â he wondered.
âSo you canât?â
A shrug. âNot exactly,â the old man admitted. âNo such spell or magic exists here. There is a spell which allows us to... travel around time... but the mana requirements are massive, and while the distance traveled is certainly less, the journey only seems instantaneous from the outside.â
âSo, you canât just take my hand and sling us to the capital,â it wasnât really a question.
Mohrdrand let go a bark of laughter. âI would do well to sling myself to the capital in less than a couple of weeks,â he said. âIt would require many castings, much travail, and even using the most powerful potions I possess more rapidly than is remotely safe, enough mana that I would be a year fully recovering.â he paused for the magnitude of the task to take hold. âAnd that would be proceeding on my own. I wouldnât dare to contemplate dragging another along with me.â
âSo,â Jack frowned. âIâm walking or riding. Any estimates?â
âDepending on mode of travel and route,â the old wizard contemplated. âClose enough to a year as doesnât matter. If you proceed directly there, which you will not be able to do.â
âOh?â Jack straightened in his seat. âAnd why not?â
The old man rocked back and raised his eyebrows. He looked to Tiarraluna, and back to Jack. âHow would you go about it?â he asked, his voice serious. âIs it common for your people to just take off walking on long journeys without even a proper shirt to wear, let alone provisions of any sort?â
Oh, yeah. Jack thought, his face reddening.
âI may have an old tunic that will go over your shoulders,â the old man postulated. âAlthough it would be quite snug. Nor is it armored in any way.â
âThere is also the inconvenience of your not speaking Tandrian,â Tiarraluna pointed out. âYou will be unable to communicate with the citizenry. Not to ask directions, nor to purchase food or lodging.â
âWhich you would not be able to pay for in any case,â Mohrdrand took up the warning.
Right. Money. âI donât suppose this will help,â he fished around in his satchel and withdrew the gold coins the teufeljaegers had dropped.
The old man leaned forward and took a few of the coins, examining them closely before handing them back. âIâm afraid not,â he shook his head. âThey appear to be of a much higher gold content than the local currency, but I doubt youâll find anyone willing to take them as payment.â
âSo what youâre not quite telling me,â Jack frowned, shoving the coins back into the satchel. âIs that Iâm gonna need to find a job.â
âNot precisely,â the wizard stroked at his beard. âMokkelton isnât exactly the sort of place someone of your... attributes is likely to find gainful employment. At least of the normal sort.â
Jackâs eyes narrowed. âYouâre leading up to something. We arriving there any time soon?â
Mohrdrand didnât answer him right away. Instead, an uncomfortable silence grew between them. Finally, âBounties, Jackson,â the old wizard heaved a great breath. âSomehow, youâre going to have to convince the local adventurerâs guild to accept you so that you may go out searching for bounties.â
Jack blinked.
Mohrdrand held up a hand before he could say anything. âFace the facts, Jackson,â he urged. âYou will not earn sufficient gold at any sort of mundane job youâre likely to find to finance even a journey to the next city, let alone the capitol. Youâll be ten years reaching the king. Your only hope is to garner some bounty money, and perhaps a bit of plunder.â
âIn a city where, as itâs recently been pointed out, I donât speak the language,â Jack grumbled. âIn a land where my lack of a life crystal marks me as a peasant, not a fighter.â
âI will act as your interpreter,â Tiarraluna offered.
âYou most certainly will not,â Jack turned on her. âYour task was done when you brought me here.â
âAnd so I shall begin a new task,â she seemed undeterred.
âI wonât expose you toââ
âIf you say danger, Jack san,â she warned, âI shall smack you with my staff. I am a rank ten advanced novice mage, and have been, I would wager, on more adventures than you.â
He doubted that, but he was saved from the folly of saying so.
âI may have a solution to your other problem,â Mohrdrand interrupted, a small smile quirking his lip.
Jack turned back to him, his mind still working on what to do with the girl.
âI will write you a letter of recommendation,â the old wizard informed him. âExplaining your situation. Iâm sure Guild Master Jonkins will accept.â
âAnd then what?â Jack wondered.
âWhy, you look at the bounty board and pick a mission,â the old man said. âSomething youâre strong enough to accomplish, but not so ruinously dangerous your journey ends here.â
âThatâs it?â
âWhat else would you need?â
Jack scratched at the back of his head, wincing. The list would be voluminous. He looked over at FoeSmite, leaning against the wall. Melee. The sword, too. Melee. If he was expected to go monster hunting, he needed something with range. Heâd had quite enough of wading into contact distance to start trouble.
âUnless Iâm gonna finance the trip by killing gophers,â he said, irritation tinging his voice, Iâll need more equipment than I currently have.â
The old wizard nodded. âI suppose you will,â he commiserated, though he didnât offer solution.
Tiarraluna drew breath to speak, but Jack turned to her again, âNo,â he said, voice flat.
Her face drew into a volcanic frown.
Back to Mohrdrand. âThis recommendation,â he asked. âCan you make it clear enough that I donât need a translator?â
The old man shook his head. âIâm a mage, Jackson,â he chuckled. âNot a seer. I cannot predict all that you would need. Nor could I possibly predict the totality of the bounties that may be present on the board. And before you ask,â he gestured with the hand again. âNo, I cannot accompany you. Iâve business of my own to attend to that Iâve already put off for longer than I ought.â
Jack scrubbed at his face, irritation growing. This was why the world spells on language existed. âAnother ring, maybe?â he asked forlornly. âSomething I can hand over to whoever I need to speak to?â
Mohrdrand frowned. âJust exactly how much is it you anticipate I owe you, Jackson Grenell?â he asked quietly.
âHuh?â
âWhat I have done,â the old man announced. âAnd what I am doing, I do as a favor to Rosaluna, who is an old friend. I owe no allegiances to these people you travel to save. My loyalties lie with Mokkelton and Tandera.
Jack gave it some thought. âAnd the rings are expensive?â he asked after a short while.
âVery expensive,â the old man nodded. âI donât mind feeding you for a day or two, or giving you an old tunic. But I must draw the line at equipping you with high order magical items, or performing magical tasks beyond the minor. The recommendation, I will provide because it costs me nothing more than these discussions weâve been having. Beyond that, Iâm afraid I will have to begin charging you for services.â
So. Back to square one. Or was it two? He cast a sidelong glance at Tiarraluna. Button. Her face remained angry, but still focused on him.
âI donât imagine youâd consider a small loan?â he wondered of the old wizard. âJust enough to buy a decent bow and maybe some sort of cheap armor.â
The old man rested his elbows on the arms of his chair and steepled his fingers, his face stern. He drew breath to speak, but hesitated, his eyes shifting slightly to his right.
Jack followed the shift and caught Tiarraluna glaring silently at the old man.
âIâm afraid not,â Mohrdrand sighed still regarding the girl. âI have no idea when or if I might ever see you again, Jackson. It would be a poor investment.â
Now it was Jackâs turn to glare. âTiarraluna....â
Her glare was gone, her face benign. Smiling, even. âJack san?â she beamed. âYou will listen to me now?â
He scrubbed at his face once more. He wasnât in control here. Not even close, and it bothered him. Reminded him too much of other places where heâd been forced into situations against his better judgement.
But the push to move had him. Ever since his realization that he wasnât where he was meant to be, and particularly once heâd encountered the jaegers. There was a place âpeopleâ who needed him, and sitting here wasnât getting him there.
âAlright, Tiarraluna,â he sighed without removing his hand from his face. âLetâs have it.â
Her grin widened. âI will accompany and translate for you,â she started. âAnd I will loan you the money to ready yourself for your first adventure. I do not have much, but it should be enough.â
âAnd in exchange?â
âYou will pay me back,â she said simply.
He peeked through two fingers at her, smiling smugly over there. His eye shifted to the old wizard, who seemed strangely relaxed. âAnd what would that look like?â he wondered.
The question seemed to confuse her. âJack san?â she wondered, eyes narrowing, âJust how is it you imagine I make my living?â
His eyes widened and his hand moved from his face.
âYes, Jack san,â she grinned. âI am an adventurer. How is it, I wonder, that you have not already come to this conclusion? How did you suppose one became an advanced novice mage?â
He really hadnât given it any thought. His mind had been otherwise engaged the whole of the time theyâd known each other. âYou want to come along, then.â
âDo I?â she giggled. âJack san,â she informed him then, a patently false sonorous note to her voice. âI am afraid you do not understand your situation here. I am rank ten. You are... something other. It is you who will be coming along with me.â
The old wizard seemed to be getting a kick out of this. Jack less so. So he was the sidekick, huh? He didnât like the sound of that. Oh, it made sense now that sheâd laid it out in the open, but that only made it worse.
âSo, the letter?â he asked the old wizard, his voice resigned.