Days had passed as Aaron lay on a bed, his body and soul aching. But it had gotten better as the days passed. And after a while, he had recovered enough that he felt quite good while he was resting. The problem that remained was everything else.
The moment he tried to get up, he was instantly reminded of how bad his condition was, and the world began to spin, and his body was drained of energy almost immediately.
The reality was, despite growing much stronger, that strength was being used to keep his damaged soul from falling apart on him.
But he wasnât without help. Healers from the settlement visited regularly, not that they did a whole lot. It wasnât because of a lack of effort, though. The E grade healers were geared toward healing physical wounds, not wounds made to the soul itself.
Aaronâs condition was simply out of scope, regardless of how hard they tried.
However, there were more ways in which the people could help. And they were desperate to do so, and not just because Aaron was technically their leader. There was a general feeling of debt toward him for everything he had done so far, and most settlers in their little growing camp wanted to make right on that debt.
And so when the healers failed to achieve much, everyone who was strong enough to wander the surroundings did so. They went looking for spiritual items that might help him.
Unfortunately, such things were not particularly easy to find. Certainly not as easy to come by as they were in the trials. And it took quite some time before even meagre results were achieved.
Still, with dozens of roaming groups blanketing the surrounding areas, they managed to find a few weak spiritual herbs, and an alchemist whipped them up into a soul-healing potion.
Though even with the healing potion, it felt as if he were taping up his shattered soul. Aaron was thankful for the potion and all the effort, but his wounds were clearly a step above what these people were used to dealing with. A couple of potions certainly wouldnât cure him just like that.
But at least he got to the point of sitting up after a few days. Which was nice because he would actually watch as his little camp was developed around him. A decent upgrade from the boring bed.
Still, though, for someone like Aaron, and everything he had been through since the integration, this change of pace seemed incredibly slow.
That said, it was nice to see how things were coming along. His people were hardworkers, and the scenery around him was changing every day.
There were some things he would rather not happen. For example, the people of New Haven had insisted on building a statue of him. He had tried to talk them out of it for a while, but eventually gave up when they started calling him the messiah.
Their behavior wasnât the end of the world as long as he could avoid it for the most part. Which meant letting them build their statues and avoiding conversation.
He just hoped they wouldnât throw the statues up all around the place, as they had with the bear statues back in New Haven.
As he sat on his newly constructed porch, watching the day go by on a custom-built rocking chair someone had made at his request, he heard a voice.
âHey there, Mr. Top Ranker.â
Aaron turned his head. Talia was walking toward him, waving, and she looked⊠different. She was still clearly herself, but it looked like she was halfway to going goth. Despite not having her avatar active, her hair was pitch black, her lips were dark, and her skin was almost as pale as his own.
âFinally decided to visit, huh?â he said. âAnd whatâs with the makeover? Finally letting your inner edgelord take over?â
âOh, rightâŠâ she said, looking mildly embarrassed. âI was out hunting the other day and apparently reached the Racial Evolution threshold, so I did it, and this happened.â
âOh. Wait, then it
is
your inner edgelord taking over! âCause it changes your appearance based on your desires!â
âShut up,â she said, shoving him lightly.
âAnyway, whatâs this about top ranker?â
âSeriously? You havenât checked?â She said, placing her hands on her thighs and tilting her head as she reached him. âWhat do you think Iâm talking about?â
Raising a brow, Aaron realized that he hadnât checked his rank since evolving to D-grade race or forming his core, something that he was positive no other person on their world would have achieved yet. Hell, the only reason he was able to was thanks to a series of fortunate circumstances, circumstances that had allowed him to survive something that almost anybody else would have died doing.
âI ah,â he murmured and opened the ranking list.
Planetary rankings:
Darius Nessar
Raksha Tiksus Vakmal
Ernest Sheridan
Erdek Foulbreath
Talia Rhineheart
Ikran Teshk Ungari
Edwan Coser
Vikran Takeshi Udon
Terry Cadillac
Aaron Dober
Kim Soohyun
âWait, Iâm 10th? When the hell did that happen?â He blurted out as if he didnât know the answer, though of course he did.
Then, Aaron just sat there, wide-eyed and looking at the list for a while. He knew that what he had achieved would have thrown him up in the rankings, but so far? He had started so very far behind, thanks to missing the Tutorial, and these were the greatest talents of their entire world. And that's not just the greatest talents of earth. The greatest talents of three entire worlds.
âErr, sorry Soohyun, I guess.â
âI donât think sheâll be the last,â Talia smiled. âBut Iâm going to treasure my rank and the fact that itâs higher than yours as long as it lasts. And let me tell you, Iâm not just sitting around waiting for you to pass me. Iâve been out hunting, and grinding my Profession every minute youâve been here slacking off and sleeping. So donât think Iâll make passing me easy,â she wagged her finger.
âHey, Iâm not slacking off over here! This bloody core of mine damn near killed me.â
âRightâŠâ Talia went suddenly quiet. âI have to say, your aura⊠Itâs incredible. It feels like the densest energy Iâve ever sensed. At least it is besides gods. How did youââ
âYou donât wanna even try. Iâm almost certain any normal person wouldâve gotten themselves killed doing what I did. Best to wait. If youâre lucky, maybe you can try for it at High D-grade, before hitting C-grade. If you can pull that off, maybe you can snatch up that Title.â
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âYeah, I might just have to try for that. Youâll have to give me pointers later.â
âI can try. But my methods arenât particularly orthodox.â
âHah, thatâs certainly a way of putting it.â
Aaron smiled. âSo, anyway, are the rankings the entire reason you dropped by? Or were you just missing me?â
âOf course I missed you, dumbass. Like I said, I was training. Iâm not going to sit around by your bedside every time you get yourself hurt. And no, itâs not the only reason I dropped by. It's the settlement. We decided it's time we set a proper name for it. And since you're lying about like a lazy bastard here, we figured what better time than now to do it. After all, once youâre back to your normal self, youâre no doubt going to be off running around again.â
âName? So, youâre telling me Aaronland isnât good enough for you?â
âHa, right,â Talia narrowed her gaze. âI might just take back leadership if you try to push a name like that on us.â
âAlright, alright, sorry. I can be reasonable. Aarontopia it is.â
Talia rolled her eyes. âThe decision is being made in the Bellagio. Are you coming or not?â
Aaron looked down at his body. âIâm kind of⊠crippled. At least until my soul can heal.â
âPiggyback?â
âErr, seriously?â
âOr do you want to miss out? Who knows? Maybe weâll go with Talialand.â
âFine! I suppose that works.â
Aaron laboriously pulled his crippled body up and onto Taliaâs back, and her avatarâs wings spread out and sent them soaring into the sky toward the casino.
It was a short trip, and within minutes they were inside the presidential suite, sitting across from Julius. Ryan and a couple of his other senior people were also present, some poring over notes and pads.
âGood to see you're healthy enough to join us, Aaron,â Julius said, rising and shaking Aaronâs weak hand with a double clasp of his own.
âYeah, it takes a little more than just killing me to stop me, mate.â
âI saw you took an interesting ride in here,â Ryan said.
âMy legs and well, pretty much all of me isnât working quite as well right now,â Aaron grimaced. âIâll be back soon enough, though.â
âRight,â Julius winced at the comment. Aaronâs sickly pallor and his evident weakness were impossible to ignore. And it was a little disconcerting to see a man who could literally pull himself together after death looking in such a way.
âWell, I am, Iâm glad you joined us anyway. Now, letâs get comfortable and go over the names. Weâve got a list of possible options that have been compiled by suggestions we have collected from around camp. The names are as follows: We have Salvation, Oasis, Hope, Elysium, New Vegas, The Strip, BogtownâŠâ Julius trailed off. âYeah, some of these names arenât as good as others.â
âIâll say,â Talia quipped.
âYou know what? I kinda like Bogtown,â Aaron said. âWe are surrounded by peat bogs, after all.â
âWe are not calling the capital of our faction, or whatever we are, Bogtown,â Talia said.
âCity of Bogs?â Ryan offered and caught glares from several in the room. âWhat? Itâs not terrible, is it?â
âAhem,â Julius cleared his throat. âAnyway. Personally, even though weâre set up here in the Bellagio, I would like to remove any references to Vegas on this list. Weâre not building a casino here, and Iâd rather not lean into that.â
âYeah, suppose that makes sense,â Aaron agreed. âWe donât want people to think weâre sleazy gamblers.â
âAnd the flowery optimistic ones are cringe as fuck,â Talia added, drawing surprised gazes from around. âWhat? I know youâre all thinking it. Who actually wants to live in a city called Hope?â she crossed her arms defiantly.
Damn, her inner edgelord is
really
taking over
, thought Aaron.
âOkay, so nothing overly flowery ones?â Julius said. âAnd nothing Vegas related, and nothing with bog in the name. That leaves us with⊠it leaves us with nothing,â he slumped into his chair.
âOh, come on. Coming up with a name canât be that hard. What about Swampsville, Marsh City, Fertile Plainsââ
âNothing swamp-related!â Talia interjected.
âFertile Plains isnât swamp-related?â
âAnd somehow it is even worse,â Talia said. âFertile? It gives me the ick.â
âOkay, so what? You got something better?â
âBetter? I can think of a few,â she said. âWhat about Onyx Tower, or Night City. Maybe Tears of the Abyssââ
âOkay, Talia isnât picking. Iâm not sure exactly what happened to her, but sheâs apparently going through a goth phase.â
âRight,â Julius nodded.
Talia looked like she wanted to protest until she saw the others nodding all around. Then, she seemed to be hit by a sudden wave of embarrassment and shrank back for a second.
âItâs just a name,â Ryan said, leaning back in his chair. âLetâs keep it simple. No need to go overthinking things. Names are weird like that, right? They kinda just grow on you, even the bad ones.â
âYeah, youâre right. Letâs just call it Bogeden or something,â Aaron threw up his hands.
âWeâre not using Bogââ Talia cut herself off, as if the word tasted strange in her mouth. âBogeden? Wait, no. I stick with my initial thoughts. Thatâs terrible.â
âYouâre still overthinking things. What about we just use our great leaderâs name? Dober. Thereâs a city on earth called that, isnât there? Or at least there was. It doesnât matter. Even if there wasnât, it sounds like a city, right? Dober,â Ryan repeated.
Eyes glanced around the room every which way, looking for confirmation.
âHmm, heâs got a point. Dober. Itâs a perfectly fine city name,â Julius said. âStill, we canât go calling our faction Dober. As much as it sounds like a city, it does not sound like a faction.â
âOur faction should probably reflect who is in it, shouldnât it? We have goblins and humans. And a weird mix at that,â said one of the others. âWe donât want anybody to feel left out, do we? And people are evolving in strange ways all the time,â their eyes glanced across at Aaron.
âWhat about the United Front?â Another said.
âSounds very formal, and controllingâŠâ Talia said. âCanât it be a little more rebellious-sounding? Sounds like the evil empire from a sci-fi flick, or something."
âYouâre not entirely wrong,â Ryan said. âBut I like it. I think it perfectly captures what we are. And we want to come across strong, donât we?â
âWe donât want to come across authoritarian, do we?â
âMaybe we do?â Aaron shrugged. âAt least until we get things sorted. We live in a dangerous world, after all. I bet there are a lot of people out there begging for authority. Better than being eaten by a monster.â
âIt does sound strong. I agree, I think United Front is great,â Julius strummed his fingers, thinking deeply about the name.
MeanwhileâŠ
Scattered along the edges of the jungle before the mighty plains, several ants began to sniff about, their antennae twitching with every movement.
Cautiously, one ant reached out with a leg, stepping out from the jungle, and then another. Before long, the ant had completely crossed into the plains, and barely a second later, an empowered arrow blasted straight into it from somewhere out of sight.
The ant collapsed dead, but with its death, the ants scuttling about near the edge of the jungle grew larger in number. They seemed apprehensive to cross into the plains, but that was slipping.
âTheyâre getting more adventurous,â a scout said to their partner several kilometers away. âThatâs the fifth one today. Up from two yesterday.â
âYeah,â the other man nodded. âWe'd better tell someone about this.â
**Yendal**
Yendal sighed in exasperation as she watched her Chosen joke around like nothing had happened when he had nearly just died. A death from having his soul torn apart, no less. He seemed to think that since he had survived and was recovering, everything was fine. Everything was most definitely
not
fine.
Aaron Dober had an unusually resilient soul. Most couldnât survive more than a couple of dozen deaths in the Shadow Trials, but he had gone through literal thousands without issue. He had died so many times that he incorporated it into his abilities, literally willing himself back to life using his soul. And now, he had brought that very same soul to the verge of complete destruction, and somehow didnât understand the magnitude of what he had done.
Anyone with half a brain would have known they shouldnât put divine energy directly into their soul at E grade. Yet Aaron had gone a step further and shoved it into his core. If it went wrong, in the absolute best-case scenario, he would have been crippled for life, unable to form a core. At D grade, it wouldnât have been an issue, and he would even have been able to get by at C grade, but for B grade and beyond, forming a core was a necessity. He would have been hard-capped. In the worst case, his soul would have been so thoroughly shattered that even the System wouldnât have known what to do with it.
Yet he had somehow succeeded, and she had no doubt that in his ignorance, he would try something similar eventually. He still had the divine shard, after all.
Sounds like he needs another lesson
, she thought.
And maybe a little discipline. A few deaths should drive the point homeâŠ