Jack squeezed hard, feeling the sticky spread of his blood as it oozed out against the slick surface of the stone. They sure love their blood magic, these mundians, he thought. In any case, he kept up the pressure, supposedly infusing the token with his âessenceâ. Presumably Tiarraluna had done the same, along with every other member of the guild. Seemed overly complicated, but whatever.
âAlright,â Tiarraluna translated for the guildmaster, who tossed him a towel. âThat is enough. Wipe the stone clean with this cloth and give them both to me.â
He did as instructed, looking down at his new ID before handing it over. It had gone from a sort of clear quartz to a smokey dark, almost black onyx. Far darker than Tiarralunaâs had been from the short glimpses of it heâd gotten earlier.
The guildmaster fed the stone into the reader, and the translucent image of Jackson Grenell, gentleman adventurer sprang to life above it. Every detail, from his current tunic right down to the fiery red, suspiciously hand print shaped splash the size of a pancake smeared across his forehead.
His hand went instinctively to the place the burn had been, though there was almost no trace left after Tiarralunaâs ministrations. Obviously, the reader and mirror were connected somehow.
âWell, now,â Jonkins muttered. "Eighteen years old?â he looked over at Jack. âThe way you handle yourself?â
âThe transfer affects the physical body, Grandmother says,â Tiarraluna answered for Jack, who had no idea what had been said. âSo far as Mund is concerned, Jack san is apparently eighteen.â
âRight.â Jonkins looked back to the projection. Agility and strength were both stupidly high for his rank, perception even moreso. Oh, right. That was the effect of the sentinel class adding two points to each of those stats. As was his ability to use just about anything he picked up as a weapon.
Intelligence was a cut or two above the norm, but nothing spectacular for an artificer. Wisdom was moderately high for his given age, but not, he supposed, for the age heâd been before coming here. Whatever that might be. Heâd really like to discuss tactics or philosophy over a pint. Heâd wager the journey had shaved five or ten years from him. The only low stat of the lot was endurance, and that one wasnât exactly bad, but for its comparison with the others.
âWell,â he waved a hand. âJehsha definitely saw him, and accepted. Heâs got the bonuses and traits of his classes noted. Even the weapon ranks and percentage bonuses I granted out on the floor, and thatâs a neat trick, since I havenât entered them in yet. And an overall level of nine?â he looked to the boy again, shaking his head. âNine. Well,â he shrugged, throwing up his hands. âWhoâm I to gainsay Jehsha? Letâs go look at the board.â he slid the token from the slot and tossed it to Jack as he made for the far side of the guildâs main hall. Jack would have preferred to have examined the field awhile longer. Maybe have the girl explain some of those class traits to him.
The bounty board was huge, covering the whole of the long wall, from knee height to a good stretch above for a tall man. It was, Tiarraluna explained, divided into sections, separating quests of differing levels for differing party ranks.
âI have a few questions,â Jack announced as the guildmaster came to a halt before what would be the section for rank nineteen parties. In truth, the banner read ranks fifteen to twenty, but he still couldnât read tandrian.
Tiarraluna translated, fearing what the questions would be. Jack san was no fool, and she thought that she already knew their general thread.
âWeâve been here all morning,â Jack began. âAnd yet I havenât seen another soul enter the hall. Nor have I heard any noise beyond what weâve been making ourselves. The section of the market that would normally cater to adventures is a ghost town, and looks to have been so for awhile.
âI havenât seen anybody who might be mistaken for a guardsman since... well, at all. Not a one. Not inside the town, nor outside on our way here. And every living soul I saw outside the walls looked terrified.â
Tiarraluna sighed resignedly, but duly translated.
âAstute observations,â the guildmaster allowed. âBut Iâve heard no questions.â
âOne question, then,â Jack frowned. âWhy? Where is everybody? The guards, the adventurers who should be around? The army? Oh, and another. This area, if Iâm not horribly wrong, shouldnât be dangerous enough to have so many unfulfilled bounties. Why arenât they being served?â
Again, Tiarraluna translated, her voice low. The guildmaster sighed this time as well, rolling his shoulders. He looked up at the bounty wall and out the doorway into the street before answering.
âThere are five guardsmen in Mokkelton,â he said slowly, voice somber. âThe highest ranked among them, their captain, is rank four. And thatâs counting his bonus for being within the walls. He crosses out through the gate and heâs back down to three. Heâs thirteen and a half years old.
âAs for adventurers,â he said with no more vigor. âWith Tiarraluna here, and now that youâre officially one of us, the total number within the walls has gone up to four, counting your friend Mohrdrand. Thereâs two more out on a quest, and theyâll complete the rolls of the Mokkelton guild as of this moment. One of them is also a freshly minted rank four, although heâs four at baseline.â
Six. In a town of this size? Jack thought, stunned. No, make that four. Iâve only just gotten here, and Tiarralunaâs from out of town. âHow is that even possible?â
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Tiarraluna didnât bother to translate. âYou must understand, Jack san,â she told him earnestly. âThe demon lord may be gone, but he was defeated only slightly more than a year ago.â
âAnd?â he prompted.
She raised her eyebrows in surprise. âDid you think the hero simply marched himself alone up the dark road to the demon lordâs obsidian fortress to slay him? No, Jack san,â she shook her head firmly. âEvery soldier. Every adventurer. Every guard, even, marched with him save a very, very few. Mohrdrand and grandmother,â she clarified. âDespite their power, are very old, and no longer fit for the battlefield or its trials. And so,â she finished. âOnly they were left to guard the town.â She half turned to the guildmaster. âAnd lord Jonkins, whoâs duty is to Mokkelton and the guild, which must always be manned.
âSurely,â he started, but she stopped him. âI remained behind because I was not old enough to go when the last of the reinforcements marched out nearly three years ago.
âItâs the same for Tiglund and the guards,â Jonkins supplied then. âCable was brought home by a group of the ungifted before the final campaign began. Wounded beyond the ability of any save Rosaluna to heal, but stubbornly clinging to life. By the time heâd recovered enough to walk on his own, the demon lord was gone, and so he stayed. Heâs been working to keep the worst of the problems at bay, but heâs only one man trying to cover an area that used to be served by a hundred or more.â
âBut arenât there always gifted being born?â Jack asked, confused. âAlways some ready to begin training?â
Tiarraluna rocked back as though she couldnât believe what she was hearing. âJack san,â she narrowed her eyes. âHow many of us do you think there are? Do we grow on trees, perhaps? Or are we planted like vegetables for harvest?
âOne child, or perhaps two of a hundred is granted any gifts at all,â she told him. âAnd most of those are born to the nobility. Even then, of all those born with gifts, no more than a third have any useful talent with them. Even of those, most gifts are not particularly useful in adventuring. We are rare, Jack san,â she repeated. âAnd, even were there dozens of us milling about, Who do you suppose would train us? Lord Jonkins, perhaps? His skills are not unlimited, nor universal. I was fortunate enough to have my grandmother to train me. Most are not so lucky.â
He stood for the scolding. He deserved it, he supposed. What were there around Mokkelton, five or six thousand people, maybe? Lucky they had as many as they did.
âBut,â he had a thought. âYou told me the demon lord was killed over a year ago, didnât you?â
âApproximately.â
âSo where is everybody, then?â he wondered. âWhy havenât any of those who went off to fight come home?â
Neither the girl nor the guildmaster had an answer, and there was the problem.
âFine,â he ran a hand across his face, glaring up at the board, temper flaring. âYou know what? Fine. Which of these is the most urgent then?â
âThat you can handle, you mean?â the guildmaster prompted.
Jack looked over his shoulder at the man, his eyes steady. âWhatâs urgent?â he repeated. âWhatâs getting people killed?â
Jonkins returned the stare thoughtfully. Drifting through his mind were the memories of watching the boy in the arena and the improbable class heâd been given. Sentinel. An old class. A special class. There were powers at play here. Powers he wasnât privy to. But heâd been at this game a long time, had Guildmaster Jonkins, and he knew a thing or two.
âI think I probably know the answer already,â he asked sort of casually. âBut you ever kill a man? I mean close up, at armâs reach, while you looked him in the eye.â The way Jackâs eyes went to flint told him everything he needed.
To Tiarraluna. âYou, little one?â
She shook her head. âBeasts only,â she admitted. âBeasts and low level monsters.â
âCould you?â he asked. âIf it came down to it? If you had to? Could you end a human being?â
âI...â she stumbled. âIf I must... if....â
Both men were giving her the eye.
âWhatâs the bounty?â Jack asked into the silence.
âOn its face?â the guildmaster replied after Tiarralunaâs stuttering translation. âNo more than a scout, with the potential to turn into a cleanup.
âWeâve been getting reports of troubles to the north. Travelers waylaid, mostly. Bodies found on the roads, stripped of valuables. Now some of the locals have gone missing. Some steadings have been raided and pillaged.
âBandits, obviously,â he nodded when Jack would speak. âBut we havenât gotten any clear notion of how many or who. Thatâs the job. Find out whoâs doing it. If itâs only normal brigands, see if you can bring them in, but donât be silly about it. Dead or alive, ungifted bandits are worth two silver rondels each.
âIf theyâre gifted, and there are only a few of them and theyâre low enough rank, feel free to take them out. The pay is two gold rondels per rank for each of them you bring back proof of death for. Plus, of course, whatever plunder you retrieve from them.
âIf you decide that there are too many of them, or if theyâre too strong,â he went on. âHie yourselves on back here and weâll try to figure something out. In that case, you get ten gold rondels for the location of the camp.â
Jack gave Tiarraluna a long look. He was ready, but he doubted she was. âHow about it, little sister?â he asked finally.
The name got him a hint of her old glare, but she didnât follow it up. âI... I will try, Jack san,â she said slowly. âI... I cannot promise...â
âNo need,â he shook his head. âJust try, thatâs all I ask. Iâll take care of the rest.â
âYou are very sure, Jack san,â her eyes narrowed.
âNot my first rodeo,â he smiled, though it was a cold sort of smile, and the rodeo part had her frowning at her ring again.
âWe will take the bounty, Lord Jonkins,â she nodded to the guildmaster.
âAre you sure?â he asked dubiously.
Another look to Jack, before, âyes, Lord Jonkins,â she nodded again. âWe are sure.â
Back to the counter and he took their tokens, sliding them together into the reader, sliding the bounty into another slot. âAs the higher ranking member and leader,â he wondered over his shoulder to Tiarraluna, âdo you want to assign a name to your party?â
âNo thank you,â she answered quickly, without consulting Jack. âPerhaps later,â she added, casting a sideways glance to her companion.
There was no keyboard to the device. Notations were made longhand with a quill pen within a shimmering field. Notations done, a bounty token slid out the bottom of the reader and into the guildmasterâs hand. Similar to the guild tokens, it was larger, and engraved with a glyph. He withdrew it and their guild tokens and passed them back to their owners. âYouâre now officially assigned the bounty,â he smiled. âGood luck to you both. Now get lost, Iâve got work to do.â He turned without further ceremony and vanished into the buildingâs interior.
âIs this normal here?â Jack asked softly as he regarded the empty doorway, thinking of his erstwhile hostess and her habits.
âNot really,â Tiarraluna replied equally softly, herself giving attention to the empty portal. âAt least, I do not think so. I remind you, Jack san, this is not my home guild, and their ways may be different. In any case, shall we be on about our business?â
Jack stared down at his guild token, really wanting to get a more in depth idea of what was going on with it. But theyâd pretty clearly been dismissed, so he turned towards the outer door, nodding. âMay as well,â he shrugged as he slid the token into his pouch.