Six hours.
It took the party to escape with their lives. Bugsy spent all his SP casting Agility Up over and over again as Basil guided him through the Landes forest. The gearsman stopped hunting the party before the watchers, but eventually, all of them gave up. Only when Basil was convinced that nobody would follow them to the house did he and his pets return home safely.
âI am fireâ¦â Bugsy collapsed in exhaustion on the houseâs lawn, under the faint light of the sunset. âI amâ¦deathâ¦â
âYouâve done well, Bugsy,â Basil thanked the centimagma before stepping down from his back. âIâll cook anything you want tonight.â
âMister, I donât want to go to human cities anymore,â Rosemarine whined. âTheyâre scary!â
âI need a sofa,â Plato declared. The cat didnât look as winded as Bugsy, but he clearly wanted nothing more than to sleep. âMy kingdom for a cushion!â
Basil helped Bugsy drink a potion to satisfy his thirst. He had believed the Unity lacked forces to properly defend Dax, but when a single watcher sounded the alarm, dozens answered the call. The machines could mobilize quickly. Now that they knew of the partyâs existence, returning to the city to scavenge for supplies would grow even riskier.
And worst of all, Basil didnât find any monster to build a flower hedge!
âWe need a better defensive perimeter.â Basil would set traps in the forest in case the watchers sent hunting parties. âWeâll keep our heads down and stick to the wilderness from now on.â
It was for the better. Monsters prioritized cities, and Basil didnât need urban infrastructures. Modern medicine and technology mattered, but he could probably replace both with crafted substitutes given time.
He had work ahead of himself. Bugsyâs new transformation meant that the centimagma would consume more food than before. Basil kept sizable reserves in his basement, but he would rather avoid tapping into them unless strictly necessary.
Basil thought upon entering the house. Plato fulfilled his oath and bolted to the sofa. Bugsy tried to squeeze himself through the entrance, but his new size prevented him from succeeding.
âYou can sleep in the garage for now,â Basil told Bugsy. âWeâll go chip wood and pull down the entranceâs wall tomorrow. I donât know much about woodworking, but it canât be that hard.â
âIâm so sorry, Boss,â Bugsy apologized. âI didnât want to become a burden.â
âYou never were one and never will be,â Basil reassured him. âYou saved us all back then. Without your enhanced agility, the bots would have caught up to us.â
When the watchers failed to petrify the group because of their higher levels, they had started throwing themselves at them like kamikaze drones. Failure to escape would have spelled the partyâs death.
The errand might have been a bust, but they at least gathered information, and the cathedralâs holy grimoires could perhaps procure a solution to the petrification ailment. And if normal books transformed into spellcasting manuals with the Systemâs arrival, perhaps a few in Basilâs library had gained magical properties, too.
There was much work to do, but Basil was too tired to start it now. He would cook for everyone, and then go to bed right afterward.
His party had earned a moment to rest.
Basil barely enjoyed a few hours of sleep before Plato woke him up.
âBasil, Basil!â The cat kneaded his ownerâs back. âCome on, wake up!â
âWhat?â Basil groaned, his head half-buried in a cushion. The sun hadnât yet risen and the world was dark beyond his windows. âI put leftovers on the kitchen counterâ¦â
âI know, I ate them already.â The cat hadnât woken up his owner to satisfy his craving for food. âRosemarine found a clam in the garden.â
âA clam?â Basil locked eyes with his cat, his vision blurring from the sleeplessness. âThe mollusk?â
âYes, the mollusk. In the garden.â
Basil slumped back into the pillow. He didnât have time for this nonsense. âJust kill it.â
âI tried, but it has cannons pointed at the house!â
Basil listened to his catâs sentence, his sleepy mind failing to process the words properly. When it did, he bolted out of bed, summoned his axe from the Inventory, and prepared to clobber his way back to slumber.
Nobody woke Basil Bohen before noon and lived to tell the tale!
âWhere is the victim?â Basil asked upon stepping outside the house with Plato. A sleepy Bugsy and Rosemarine surrounded a giant shell that washed up on the streamâs shore. Indeed it looked like a clam on a closer look, albeit bigger than a cow, light blue, and with a set of steel barrels sticking out of the carapace. The System immediately identified it as a monster.
Level 6 [Aquatic/Slime]
A girl? Fine by Basil. He was a true feminist: the kind that would hit a female monster as hard as a male one.
âMister, I canât eat the food inside!â Rosemarine complained. âWhen I evolve, I will break the shell with my teeth and gorge myself on sweet blood!â
âDo I cook it with my breath, Boss?â Bugsy asked. The shellâs barrels immediately pointed at the centimagma, startling him. âHey!â
âCould be a spy from the city,â Plato muttered. âOr dangerous.â
Since the monster hadnât opened fire immediately, Basil gave her the benefit of the doubt.
âYouâve got five seconds to explain what youâre doing here or get the fuck off my property,â he warned the clam. âStarting right now.â
Silence stretched on for one second, two seconds, three secondsâ¦
âPsst, psst.â
A squeaky, girly voice came out of the shell. Basil lowered his gaze as it opened slightly; two red eyes peered through them.
âWanna trade?â the creature asked. âWanna make some sweet money?â
Basil stared back without a word. His mouth went dry from the lack of sleep and the surreal nature of the conversation.
âWhen I saw your shiny house, I knew you were a potential customer with taste,â she tried to sweet-talk him into lowering his guard. âThe kind of person who wonât settle for anything but the best!â
âIâve got quality stuff to trade in this new brand shell of mine. Weapons, shiniesâ¦the real deal.â The creature winked at Basil. âMy fares are so low youâll have to sit down!â
Basil didnât answer. The tense silence stretched on. Shellgirl winked repeatedly, as if it would break the deadlock.
âBugsy?â Basil broke the silence.
âYes, Boss?â
âThrow this thing back into the stream. Sheâs the worst kind of monster.â Basil glared at the giant clam. âA door-to-door saleswoman.â
âI canât believe this vermin managed to slip in, Basil.â Plato hissed at the clam mimic. âI swear, I was on the lookout for these pests!â
âHey, hey, come on!â Shellgirl protested. âI swear, Iâm not that kind of gal!â
âYouâre sure, Boss?â Bugsy asked, ignoring the clam.
âThrow her down the stream,â Basil insisted. âSalesmen are an invasive species. You feed a single one, and then they start breeding all over the neighborhood.â
Rosemarine slumped in the grass. âCanât we eat her for experience first, Mister?â
âSalesmen donât give exp, they give calls.â Basil remained unmoved. âThrow her down the stream.â
Bugsy pushed the salesmonster back with his tail toward the river, much to her chagrin. âStop!â she protested with a shrill voice. âIâll make it worth your time, I swear!â
âThey all say that,â Basil replied before turning his back on the scene. âNow, if you excuse me, Iâll go back to sleep andââ
Boom!
The noise of a gun firing stopped Basil where he stood. When he hastily turned around, Bugsy and the others had backed away from Shellgirl. One of her barrels pointed at the skies and steamed mist.
A warning shot.
âEverybody calms down!â The clamâs eyes vanished inside her shell, and she started muttering to herself. âWhere did it go wrongâ¦flatter the customer, I did itâ¦tempt them with elusive promises about your product to foster interest, done⦠Oh, introduce yourself to the customer to build trust! I skipped that part!â
Basil resisted the urge to pinch his nose in annoyance. âAre you reading a business book inside your shell?â
Her brief silence, followed by an embarrassed answer, confirmed his theory. âNo, Iâm not⦠Okay, Iâm trying to figure it out all right! Iâm a, aâ¦what do humans call itâ¦â
Basil picked up the sound of flipping pages. His pets sent him confused gazes, unsure how to react to this nonsense.
âA startup! Iâm a startup!â said the clam monster. âOkay, letâs start over.â
The clamshell widened further to reveal the creature inside: the slim figure of a female humanoid made not of flesh but translucent green slime. She had arms and breasts but tendrils growing from the shell below the waist. Hair made of goo flowed down her head above two crimson eyes and a wicked, impish face.
âIâm Shellgirl. Iâm the owner of a small import-export business with high potential for growth.â Her lines sounded straight out of an MBA seminar. âYou wanna invest in the ?â
She stressed out the last word as if it had magical properties.
âDo you sell tickets to Mars?â Basil snorted, utterly unimpressed.
The slime girl squinted at him. âWhere is this ? Is there money to make there?â
âNot that I know of.â
âThen no, Iâm not going to Mars.â She put a hand on her breasts and grinned. âMy only journey is the journey to the grind! I let the current carry me to new opportunities!â
âI donât get it.â Plato didnât hide his skepticism. âYou want to make money, not levels?â
âI have the urge to level-up, too, but it doesnât compare to the joy of filling my shell with wealth. When I add a new treasure inside me, I feelâ¦â Shellgirl gave the party a perverted grin and exhaled. âI feel Basil suddenly remembered that she was a clam . If his experience with roleplaying games applied here, mimics were monsters acting as living treasure chests. A clam with its pearl made for a fitting aquatic version.
âYou know, I tried to kill humans and monsters for their money,â Shellgirl admitted. âBut fighting is so risky! I figured I should work smarter, not harder. Get it?â
âBy becoming a saleswoman and annoying people in the middle of the night?â Basil asked. âIâve waged wars for less.â
âWell, uhâ¦â She snapped her clamshell shut and muttered to herself again. âOkay, make jokes to defuse tensionâ¦impress them with your past deals as proof of conceptâ¦â
Shellgirl was so busy studying that she missed Plato whispering at his owner. âBasil, you give the word, and I will silence the pest on the spot.â
The cat mimicked a gutting motion with his claw. Rosemarine salivated hungrily, and Bugsy snapped his mandibles in annoyance. Basil only had to give the order, and they would tear the shell mimic to pieces. At four against one with higher levels on average, the fight should end quickly.
Basil almost gave the go-ahead when a brighter idea crossed his mind. âYou said you traveled across the river?â
âYes, I did!â The slime girl came out of her shell again in record speed, smelling the opportunity. âI traveled far and wide, collected treasures from the world overââ
âIâm looking for information,â Basil cut through her crappy self-promotion attempt. âIf you have it, then we could make a deal.â
While she was annoying and a pest, Shellgirl was one of the few monsters Basil met that didnât try to attack him on sight. If she wanted to trade with humans rather than kill them, then she must have heard interesting rumors.
Basil couldnât rule out the possibility that she was a spy infiltrating human society either. If she failed to earn his trust, she wouldnât live to reveal the houseâs location to anyone.
âInformation?â The exuberant mimic suddenly became far more reserved. âDepends, I canât discuss where my merchandise comes from or how much money I make. It makes people violently jealous.â
Basil thought. If she had to threaten him into buying her stuff and spill common sales bullcrap, she had to be dirt poor. âIâm looking for intel on two groups calling themselves the Unity and the Apocalypse Force.â
âOh, those guys?â Shellgirl stroked her chin, and goo slipped from her cheeks. âYeah, I might know a thing or two. Not much about the Unity, since they attack on sightâ¦but the Apocalypse Forceâ¦â
Basil exchanged a glance with his pets. Rosemarine whined upon realizing that she wouldnât eat the clam anytime soon, and the others looked more skeptical than anything.
âStart talking,â Basil all but ordered.
âWell, where should I start? Back to the beginning of my illustrious career!â Shellgirl cleared her throat, mostly for dramatic effect. âI was born in the Water Sanctuary dungeon in Lourdes. A pretty nice place full of undead and aquatic monsters.â
âLourdes?â Plato glanced at Basil. âDidnât we visit that place with René?â
âWe did,â Basil confirmed. Lourdes was a pilgrim hotspot whose waters had supposedly miraculous properties. They didnât cure Renéâs cancer as he had hoped, but he enjoyed his stay in the city all the same. âIt welcomes millions of pilgrims each year.â
âYeah, when I checked the humansâ shops, I just knew I had to open my own business,â Shellgirl said. âUnfortunately I was born one day after the dungeon appeared, so I couldnât find a good mentor. A zombieâs belly is never full, if you catch my drift.â
Basil suppressed a wince. âThey slaughtered the cityâs population?â
âMostly. Some priests managed to fight back, but then the bugs showed up.â
âThe bugs?â Bugsyâs mandibles snapped in dread.
âThe Apocalypse Force.â Shellgirl shuddered as if remembering a bad memory. âThree of them, level 10 each. They went into the dungeon like big hornets in the beehive, killed the old Boss, and took over the place.â
The story sounded a bit too familiar to Basilâs liking. âWhat happened afterward?â
âThey split us into two halves and ordered that we wipe out the other,â Shellgirl admitted without any cheerfulness. âThey had no time for weaklings.
they said, â
The mention of a barrier againâ¦and it appeared the Apocalypse Force and the Unity pursued completely opposite goals. It made sense for them to fight.
âThe horsemen?â Plato asked in confusion. âHorse riders?â
A chill went down Basilâs spine. The words sparked a memory of his childhood, back when he listened to a fiery sermon.
âThe Horsemen of the Apocalypse?â Basil dared to ask, his voice breaking.
âDunno, I bailed out after the first elimination round,â Shellgirl replied. âWay it went, I figured I would end up on the wrong side of the culling sooner or later.â
It didnât dispel Basilâs doubts. Megabug mentioned a certain Apollyon, and now the name sounded so familiar. Basil must have heard it in a sermon before, too. It could be a coincidence, butâ¦somehow he couldnât bring himself to believe it.
Basil dealt with his anxiety about mankindâs future the healthy way: by repressing and trying to forget about it.
âAnd thatâs how I decided to retrain professionally,â Shellgirl continued her tale. âI wandered around Lourdes when I received a revelation: I could become a merchant and fill my shell with wealth without tempting death!â
âYou found a business book in the cityâs ruins?â Basil guessed, trying to focus on smaller details rather than the scarier big picture. âItâs okay, you donât have to hide it. I have a few in my library.â
Shellgirl tried not to look too interested, but she lacked the poker face needed for it. âI see, I see,â she said evasively, âI also heard rumors of a third faction on the block, too. Metal Olympus or something. My best customer advice, donât get involved with Big Business when youâre small.â
âWise words to live by,â Basil replied. âHave you traded with other monsters?â
âPlenty! A witch in the woods, hobgoblins, an orc clan, spellcasters⦠Some tried to rob me, too, but I shot them right between the eyes!â
âBut no humans?â
âAlive? Nope, youâre actually my first living human customer! Iâm super excited to make this sale!â Shellgirl clapped her hands. âSo, what do I get for answering your questions? Iâm looking for potions to resell to a witch, but I could settle for the business books you mentioned. For another client, of course.â
âYou misheard.â Basil smirked. âI said that if you had the info Iâm looking for, we can make a deal.â
âYou got her, chief!â Bugsy complimented him.
âThatâs just a devious move!â To Basilâs surprise, Shellgirl nodded to herself as if taking mental notes. âI like it. I learned something tonight!â
âSeriously?â Plato complained. âCanât we just kill her and steal her stuff?â
âI made a promise,â Basil replied with a tone that brooked no disobedience.
âJust try to kill me, kitty cat.â Shellgirl pointed at her cannons with her thumb. âThese babies arenât just for show.â
Basil showcased his old iron axe. âMine is bigger.â
âIs it?â Shellgirl answered with a coy grin. âWhat if I told you I could make it longer?â
Basil raised a single eyebrow.
The mimic merchant answered the challenge by joining her hands. An item appeared between her fingers in a familiar flash of light: the same that flared whenever Basil opened his Inventory.
An enormous axe materialized in Shellgirlâs hands, as long as a spear and topped with a spike. A cutting half-crescent blade protruded from one side and a cruel hook from the other. The staff was made of strong polished wood, the rest of stainless steel.
Family: Weapon (Axe/Spear).
Quality: C.
Power: +13 STR.
Crit: +5%
Accuracy: 70%
Effect 1: Ignores half of a targetâs defensive stats during damage calculation.
Effect 2: [Empty].
Switzerlandâs third most popular invention after banking secrecy and pikemen, shamelessly copied by French and English alike.
It was love at first sight.
Even though Basil had been married to his old iron axe for years, the divorce happened in the blink of an eye. He dropped it on the ground without a look to seize the newer, prettier weapon. Shellgirl relinquished the halberd and let Basil examine it. His hands traveled down the shaft with desire.
Bugsy didnât hide his jealousy of Shellgirlâs ability. âHey, how is it that you have an inventory?â
âUnique mimic perk,â she gloated.
Basil mentally noted that specific monsters could access Player-exclusive features with the right Perks, but he could scarcely focus on anything but the beauty in his hands. His fingers trailed along the sharp curve of the blade. He needed to own it, to possess it, to make it .
âMister, are you all right?â Rosemarine asked with concern. âMister?â
Basilâs ears could hear her words, but he didnât listen to them. His doubts about the merchantâs motives vanished like the night before dawn. Someone with enough taste to carry such an exquisite ware couldnât possibly be a bad person.
Plato wagged his tail. âI think weâve lost him.â
, Basil thought as he struggled to suppress his ardent desire.
âMister Plato, whatâs happening?â Bugsy asked. He sounded somewhat worried. âIâve never seen the Boss like this.â
âItâs a Bulgarian thing,â Plato replied. âYou canât understand.â
That was one way to put it.
âOne of my ancestors,â Basil whispered softly, âwas a Swiss mercenary who fought in the armies of Bulgarian Tsar Ivan Shishman against the Ottoman Empire. He brought his halberd with him, and after the Turks finally conquered Bulgaria, he settled down with a local priestâs niece. The weapon has been passed down in my family for centuries since.â
At least, until Basilâs father sold the halberd for booze. His son never forgave him for the blunder. He knew the weapon in his hand wasnât his familyâs heirloom, but it was probably the closest thing he would ever get to a replacement.
âThe shaft is firm.â Basil waved the halberd. It felt so light between his fingers. âItâs got a long reach, too.â
âIt can pierce through even the moistest shells. I traded it with an undead knight for a sword. He couldnât last fifteen seconds before polishing it.â Shellgirlâs grin widened further and further. âKnow what? If you take this beautiful baby, Iâll give you a performance enhancer as a freebie.â
âMister, is she talking about weapons?â Rosemarine asked innocently. âCould I have one too?â
âYes, of course,â Basil replied before deciding he couldnât resist the halberdâs lure. âYou win, Shellgirl. How much do you want?â
âNow weâre talkinâ.â Shellgirl rubbed her hands. âWhat do you offer, big guy?â
âCan I pay you in liquid assets? I still have euros stashed away.â
âYou mean human currency?â Shellgirl wagged her finger at him. âSorry baby, currency fluctuates too much nowadays. Although I can accept shiny gold and silver.â
âI have tools, extra gasolineâ¦â Basil counted what he didnât need. âSpinotter fursâ¦â
âOgre bones, too,â Plato said. âOgremocheâs corpse is rotting in the fridge.â
Somehow, Basil kept forgetting about that. âIf youâre looking for potions, I have a few homemade ones, too. Mostly healing elixirs.â
âHomemade?â Shellgirlâs expression turned from cautious to excited. âYouâre a crafter?â
âYes, but I canât sell too much of my stock,â Basil haggled. âI have a limited supply of raw material, and I still need to complete my lab.â
It didnât deter Shellgirl. If anything, it only made her more curious. A frog-like tongue of slime stuck out of her mouth and licked her lips.
âShow me ,â she whispered.
Upon seeing the naked greed in the mimicâs eyes, Basil couldnât shake the feeling that he had made a terrible mistake.