《Dreamland》Chapter 19 - Fight and Loot

Advertisement

There was a moment of hesitation and silence; then, the paladin came running out from his hideout. The hunter released his arrow, followed by the mage, which erupted from the bushes shooting a line of fire.

But she was no longer there. The arrows and the fire missed her, and long before the paladin reached her, she fought the rogue. The strikes followed in fast succession, with the rogue screaming in pain as one of her long knives had cut deep into his side.

As the ambush did not work out as it should, and the fighting took place in a slightly different location, a tree was now obscuring the hunter's vision. The hunter cursed, going fast to find a better position. The mage started a long spell whilst the rogue tried to evade her. She stopped him with her knives puncturing him again, blocking his way. A silver light enveloped the rogue as the elf healed him.

She turned, and a trap ensnared the paladin before he could reach her. The rogue used the moment to escape.

The mage shot now a terrible fire lance. She ducked, and the lance hit the rogue enveloping him in flames. She was damn fast!

Now finally, the hunter stopped and bent his giant bow again.

Tercan thought the rogue would die, but the healer-elf was desperately casting spell after spell, illuminating the bush where she was like a firework, healing the rogue back to life. He jumped further away in another evading movement.

She ran behind the rogue trying to finish him.

The paladin had cast a spell, light enveloping him, burning the dark tentacles of the trap. As the hunter released the arrow with a sonic boom and the rogue blocked the next couple of hits, now with the paladin advancing, ready to strike with his double-edged giant sword, Tercan wondered if the rogue was not right, and she would lose in the end.

At that moment, she disappeared.

He could not see the arrow, it was that fast, but it drew a line in the air, tight between the paladin and the rogue, and exploded against a distant trunk.

The elf was still healing the rogue when Tercan saw the princess reappearing with her foot hitting the mage's side. The mage was thrown against a trunk, and even from his place, he did hear the air leaving the mage's lungs in an agonizing breath.

She hit him before the mage could recover, planting the long dagger into his liver with her left hand. After spelling a fire explosion, the mage tried to teleport, but her right hand had just swiped his neck clean; his head fell, rolling to the ground whilst his disarticulated body teleported, blood erupting from the severed neck.

She was burning all over after the fire explosion, but she did not stop for a moment, running towards the elf healer, a strange light illuminating her body. Was it a reflection of the fire or a reaction to it? Surprisingly she did not seem to suffer from her wounds.

The hunter screamed:

“Terri, run!”

whilst the rogue burst into a fast run behind her.

The healer transformed into a lovely gazelle and ran away with the princess following close, the rogue a dozen of meters behind. Tercan almost lost them from sight when the princess turned suddenly against the rogue, who was gaining ground on her. Before the running gazelle stopped, she succeeded in wounding him seriously.

The hunter shot an arrow, but he was too far, and the rogue was in between, so it was easy for her to avoid it.

Advertisement

The elf stopped, transformed into the elf-healer form, and started a spell when she was struck with an iron star, her unfinished chant ending in a croak. It didn't seem much, but the elf fell to the ground with a pained scream.

The rogue used the moment to strike at the princess, wounding her, but again a strange light washed over her body, healing her.

The rogue screamed, unhappy:

“She has a healer somewhere!”

The hunter lost precious seconds looking for the unseen healer whilst the rogue fought desperately for his life, the paladin still far from them stomping with his heavy boots through the bushes.

The fight between the princess and the rogue was a fascinating succession of fast strikes, feints, and probably magic or alchemy, but whilst she was healed from time to time, the rogue was looking worse and worse.

Then suddenly, her movements accelerated, the rogue no longer able to keep pace with her. She was moving like a blur; you could only guess where her blades had been, seeing blood bursts.

The hunter tried again to shoot but missed, afraid to hit the rogue.

The running paladin screamed desperately:

“Disengage!”

But it was too late; with a final stroke, she decapitated the rogue just before the paladin would have arrived in range.

The hunter's fury scream echoed into the woods whilst the paladin attacked with his double sword.

She avoided the paladin's strike and ran incredibly fast, as a blur through the bushes, then teleported to hit the hunter as she did against the mage before, with her left foot hitting the hunter hard. Shocked by the hit, the hunter escaped the arrow against the ground. She planted first her left long knife under his chain armour, then with the right blade, she'd cut deep into his bone.

The hunter pushed her back with his giant bow, a pained scream escaping his lips. He then dropped a trap in front of him.

The paladin hesitated a second about whether to run to the healer to see if she was still alive or to run to help the hunter. He decided on the latter, turned back, and raised his sword again, blasting another spell around him.

She avoided the trap, pressing the hunter again with her long knives.

He dropped his bow and drew a longsword, but they were too close for him to manoeuvre it properly. Wounded, he moved with difficulty whilst she danced around him, chaining hit after hit, bleeding him, looking for an opening. No longer the blur that she was before, but still very fast. Before the paladin arrived, the hunter moved the sword in one hand and retrieved a healing potion, but she was faster, hitting his hand, spilling the precious elixir, and then with a final stroke, she cut his jugular. A fountain of blood erupted whilst the hunter left the sword to fall, trying in vain to stop the blood from leaving his body with his hands. He fell first on his knees, then to the ground under her implacable eyes.

The paladin bowed to touch the hunter, to heal him, but it was too late. She could have struck him, but she just watched.

The paladin screamed, standing back on his feet:

“You! Damn assassin! Calamity Lara, I'm going to kill you!”

She shrugged and asked surprisingly calm:

“Do I know you?”

She looked utterly unharmed after another bout of light illuminated her body like a divine emanation. Tercan had never seen such magic. Was the forest itself healing her? Obviously, she did not cast that spell, yet she was healed. Was the rogue right? But he had seen no other healer.

Advertisement

Tercan wondered how she could be so calm. What kind of people is talking calmly about killing each other? OK, as a matter of fact, the paladin was not calm.

The paladin exclaimed exasperated:

“You! Did you forget? Snowridge mine!?”

“What mine? Where? What about Snowwhat mine? Was it in the Calawan empire?”

The paladin exhaled with a distressed face.

“No, the Sassuan Kingdom. You killed us!”

“Oh! Ahem.” - she shrugged again - “I probably did that. Sorry. It must have been a quest. A contract from the temple. Again, sorry for that. I think a corrupt local governor was the culprit that gave the quest, but I do not know for sure. Now that you named it, I think I remember; it was a really good paying quest. You are all from there?”

She was speaking as if meeting old acquaintances?

“No. The healer was new. We hired her to help us. Poor Terri”

“Look, I am sorry. I do not do temple quests for some time. Let's call it quits.”

“No. I drank a dragon's blood potion to fight you. That had cost me almost as much as a resurrection would. You just jumped around, avoiding me. I'm going to kill you here and now!”

She answered half mockingly, half wondering:

“Even if the potion was expensive, is it worth dying for? You'll only double your costs!? By the way, you know I could run, and you would not catch me!? Look, now if I think about it, I am not sorry for what I did; you used slaves in that mine.

“Don't tell me you did that job to free those slaves. I don't believe you!”

She grinned:

“I just said I am not sorry I did it. Actually, it was part of the reason.”

“Bunch of ex-pirates. You did that just to get friendly with them.”

She grinned:

“Yep! That's true. The pirates know how to party, and they threw a special party just for me.”

He snorted.

The fight that followed was, to Tercan's surprise, longer than the previous fight with all five. Longer than the fight with the mage. Well, about that long. It took the princess almost five minutes to finish the paladin.

With his last breath, the paladin did not seem so angry anymore:

“I almost brought you down. Fuck. If I were a couple of levels higher, I would have finished you!”

He was down on his back, lying against a log. He must have said a spell that kept him several seconds from dying, or was this a feature paladins have? She looked at him.

“Yeah. Almost. Too bad I cannot heal like you.”

“What was that with the healer? Do you have a healer here or not?”

“I told him not to heal me during this fight….”

“Oh.”

“You did not succeed with the team, and you had to try it alone?”

He sighed:

“Merwan always sucked at pvp...”

“Who?”

“The hunter. Yuun the mage is not better. He almost killed Togas, our rogue. Only Togas is good, but he forgets to disengage when he should do that. Oh well, see you next time Cala!”

He raised a hand to salute. She shook her head.

“Oh, by the way! I just met a ghost before; he said there are some problems with the resurrection process. He was going to the entry portal in Act 1 to investigate. Just saying...”

“Now, you say?”

She raised her shoulders:

“You did not ask...”

He sighed one last time, and his head fell to the side.

“LNowl, lnowl, lyou flolgot tlis lone!”

A giant lynx appeared, bringing an elf-girl in his mouth. She laughed:

“One does not speak with a full mouth.”

Tercan was shocked. The Lynx, the dreaded Lynx, was working with the princess! What a revelation!

The Lynx dropped the elf girl, who tried hard to scramble on all four. She had great difficulties coordinating her limbs whilst a line of spittle was hanging from her to the Lynx's mouth.

“Paralyzing toxin,” - the princess said with a smirk - “you should not eat her.”

The elf girl trembled visibly. The Lynx spat like a cat would, shaking his body.

“It's not funny. I do not eat elves. What do you plan to do with her? Drats, my tongue is numb...”

The princess came to the elf girl and moved her with ease near the dead paladin. She talked to the elf girl:

“Just wait; the toxin should cease its effect soon. You should train your resistance; the rogue was much better.”

The elf nodded vaguely, bale dropping from her mouth. The princess cleaned her face.

“I don't plan to kill her. The stupid healer class is difficult to level, but she has to pay, so I'll only rob her.”

She then said suddenly:

“That bird could not count. There were five of them!”

She was now taking out the elf's shoes. The elf protested with a moan.

What bird?

The Lynx approached them, looking curious at the poor elf that was being robbed. He answered:

“Birds can count only to three.”

“But she said four?”

“Four means more than three.”

“Oh! Now it is clear! Apologies, little bird!”

Tercat did not understand; was this a secret language?

The princess laughed, continuing to undress the elf in a not very elegant manner.

The almost naked elf mumbled:

“You...ro..bb..er!”

The princess shrugged.

“Be quiet; you are alive! Welcome to hardcore Mephi. Is it the first time you're getting robbed?”

She was now checking the paladin's pockets

“As..healer?.. You..re..joking.. but..”

As she walked back, the Lynx wondered:

“What are you doing?”

“Going to loot the others too. Just give me a minute.”

Now Tercat understood. She must be the thief's princess! Yes, robber princess, they said it before!

The elf turned to the Lynx, wondering:

“I never… had… a … talking… pet.”

“I am not her pet! I am her companion!”

“Yeah… that's a pet for you.”

The elf, who was starting to recover, laughed. She scrambled with difficulty back on her feet and whispered in the direction of the princess:

“And because you were mean to me, I will not heal you!”

The princess answered from a distance:

“I can hear you! Besides, he is my mount, not my pet! Can you rezz* them? I would let you do it!”

The Lynx protested indignantly:

“I am not your mount; I am your companion!”

“No, it is too late for me to rezz. They'll need to take their divine rezz. I'll heal you for my gown! I'll pay another 100 gold for it! You cannot sell it; it is bound to me!”

The princess answered on her way back, whilst the elf girl was dressing in a simple cotton dress.

“I'll destroy it and sell the material. That will do at least 150.”

The elf girl nodded:

“OK, deal!”

“You pay now, and you get it.”

“No. In town. I don't take the risk to be robbed again.”

The princess raised her shoulders.

“As you wish. I would not rob you again, but be aware that towns are no longer protected.”

“A thief with honour? What? Towns no longer protected? How can that be? Are they crazy?”

“No. See?”

The princess said that, pointing at the clouds.

The elf girl's answer was full of swear:

“Oh fuck me, we healers are now truly awesomely fucked.”

What did she see in the clouds?

“Now, do you want your dress?”

“OK, I'll risk it.”

She said that whilst conjuring out of thin air gold. A lot of gold. She must have one of those magical storage items!

The princess took the gold.

“You are not going to count it?”

“No. I trust you. Here's your dress. Besides, I'll see it in the inventory.”

“Thank you!”

“Ahem. Pardon me for asking, but this thing is intriguing me. How did you rob her, but she still has gold? You do seem to be very inefficient at what you do? At least robbing-wise...”

The elf girl laughed, now back in her shining dress:

“Your pet is too clever! What about my boots? My staff?”

“I told you he is my epic mount. Boots 80, staff 125!”

After saying this, the princess turned towards the lynx:

“She has more valuable things in her inventory box, but that is bound to her. I cannot open it, nor is there any way to open it. Besides, I told you not to talk when we are between humans?”

“She's an elf; that does not count as a human. You definitively said: humans. That inventory? You could still steal it?”

The princess rolled her eyes.

“Steal and destroy, yes, but that would have no value for me. I guess it would appear back in her possession. Magic worked this way previously.”

“Previously?”

The princess and Terri looked at each other then the princess answered:

“Well, yes, it had always worked like this”

“Aha!”

The way the Lynx had said that showed he was not convinced she answered fully.

Terri shook her head.

“Well, he is really an epic mount.” - then added, pointing at the dead - “Could I buy from you back their items too?”

“If you have money to throw out, yes. You think they will not respawn with them?”

What are they talking about? Tercat was preparing to climb down.

The Lynx watched them, intrigued:

“Will they respawn? Can this happen in this world?”

The elf girl laughed again:

“I told you your pet-mount is too clever. You should remove some intelligence points and put them somewhere else.”

“Nobody touches my intelligence!”

The Lynx said that, half-joking, half-serious, shaking his giant head, showing his sharp canines.

The princess watched him with a curious look:

"A divine being can bring them to life again... under some circumstances... two times per year no more..."

She then turned to the elf girl:

“Stop harassing my mount, or I'll let it eat you... He said he likes how you taste.”

The Lynx tried to protest, then changed his mind:

“I never... Do you know there is a little spy behind us, listening to this interesting conversation?”

He was looking exactly at the point where Tercat was. How could he see him?

The princess turned and looked in the same direction:

“You mean the little boy from the market? Curious little boy, eh? I thought I lost him.”

Tercat's blood froze in his veins. He wanted to run, but the panic froze him on the spot.

“Somehow, he found you back.”

“Yeah, he must have followed Terri and her group.” - She added then louder - “You can come out; the forest is too dangerous now… or at least follow us and do not get lost.”

They started to move towards the town, and after the first seconds of shock, Tercat continued to follow them. When he reached again in ear distance, they were almost out of the woods

The elf girl, who was watching another group engaging the road in the forest, exclaimed:

“Oh, there is a caravan for chapter one!”

The Lynx corrected her: “You mean towards Dungrew Town.”

The princess confirmed:

“Yep, that's what she means.”

At that moment, the elf girl ran away.

“I'll go catch them!”

The princess yelled behind the running healer:

“Take care; slavers have raided the trading station at the border!”

Tercat suddenly thought that it might be better to follow the elf girl. Travelling along the caravan was not a bad endeavour. There was always food and children to play and best, he would be away from the robber princess. Who knows what she and her crazy mount will do now to the town. He will wait for a caravan in the opposite direction and return to town only together with them.

    people are reading<Dreamland>
      Close message
      Advertisement
      You may like
      You can access <East Tale> through any of the following apps you have installed
      5800Coins for Signup,580 Coins daily.
      Update the hottest novels in time! Subscribe to push to read! Accurate recommendation from massive library!
      2 Then Click【Add To Home Screen】
      1Click