Blake opened one eye from the shade of his napping tree, and put his hands behind his head.
āIām thinking braised halibut for supper,ā he yawned. āWhat do you say, Chef?ā
Hank grinned, and kept filleting his catch. Turned out Hank the Angler was also something of a cook. He even had a collection of tools in a big leather bagāspices, and various dry ingredientsāas part of his ācivilian packageā.
āIām really a
retired
fisherman,ā he said happily, adding what looked like a packet of fat or grease to his pan over the fire. āI bought and ran a restaurant for the last decade or so when I settled up in Washington. Cooking was always my passion.ā
āSo why didnāt you pick a chef class?ā Blake yawned and stretched lazily.
āFigured catching fish might be more useful at the end of the world. Anyway, I expect I can diversify.ā
Blake nodded and rose to a sit. His plan was proceeding smoothly. Doug the carpenterāwith some minor guidance from Hankāhad already figured out a design for the boat and started on the bottom. Er, the hull? Whatever. The players were taking turns chopping and cleaning trees like lumberjacks, and Hank and the others had focused on gathering enough sea life for a veritable feast, as well as some mushrooms, berries, and even some kind of dragon fruit.
When the day was hottest they all took turns resting under the beautiful palm trees. Blake yawned again, casting a sleepy eye at the lithe, athletic form of the girl sleeping next to him. Turned out Mona had been a college gymnast before her job in physical therapy. She was some kind of physical class now with a vicious looking spear, and she was one of Blakeās main supporters. He caught Hankās eye, who caught him staring and gave him a raised brow and a knowing grin as he hummed and stirred his fish.
Blake watched a few white clouds drift in the warm, gentle breeze. Theyād have their boat finished soon, then theyād make their way to the coast, and from thereā¦well, who knew? But he expected thereād be more people and more opportunities. The new world wasnāt so bad. Not so bad at all.
* * *
Mason forced himself to sit up and examine his injured chest. He peeled away the bloody strips of cloth, then stared in amazement at the skin underneath. All of the wounds were entirely gone. All that remained were scabs, red lines, and in one case, an actual
scar
, like heād been healing for a month. The pain was gone, and though he was thirsty and hungry, he felt almostā¦
fine
.
He rose up with renewed purpose, deciding to continue with the gnolls. Now that he knew he could heal, and quickly at that, he didnāt fear taking some damage. Since the gnolls seemed not to work in large groups, he figured he could just take them all apart one damn creature at a time, and soon began tracking them near the clearing. He got his first down with only his bow and a single broken arrow from Power Shot, which seemed to destroy the arrow every time. He took his second with two shots, and finished it with his knife. Number three got too close and forced him to rest again to heal a vicious slash across his shoulders. But it went smoother after that.
By mid afternoon, he was up to six,
Mason cursed as his Power Shot broke its fifth arrow on the skull of gnoll number seven. The creature staggered and stumbled like a drunk, and Mason reloaded and whistled a Crippling shot into its calf. Two more arrows, both poorly placed, then he drew his knife.
āCome on, you big bastard. Show me those fangs.
The creature roared and obliged, with a quick but sloppy charge. But Mason had learned from the last several kills.
He waited by a tree, and at the last moment dodged behind it, then slashed down at the creatureās extended hand. He didnāt quite sever it, but certainly rendered it useless. Then he stabbed his blade into its gut before leaping away, abusing the creatureās crippled leg and poor reach as he slashed and withdrew. Three strikes. Four. And the creature dropped with a final, bloody gurgle.
[Kill awarded. Congratulations, you have earned enough experience to level your primary class to three!]
Mason closed his eyes, panting in the cooling night air as looked up at the bright, three quarters moon. He wanted to howl, to cry out that he, Mason Nimitz, was still alive, and victorious. Instead he watched his surroundings in silence, ensuring he was alone and unobserved. Finally satisfied, he crept away from the corpse, flattened against a new tree, and brought up his āprofileā with a thought. Nothing had really changed save for showing his Regeneration power.
[Level available. Please select your new power in the next sixty minutes, or you will gain a power at random.]
Hell yeah
, he thought.
Here we go.
Though the deadline was new. It was pretty clear to Mason at this point that these āpowersā were the driving force of success in this new world. So far it seemed the only way to gain and improve them was to level, and the only way to level was to kill things. That suited Mason just fine.
He had a few new options this time. āTrapmakingā seemed like an entirely new avenue to pursue, but he figured he could make his own traps eventually anyway. There was another shot which sounded little different than the ones he had, and the hard truth was he was going to run out of arrows sooner or later. His eyes strayed to a melee power called Predatorās Strike, and he stared so long he thought he might burn a hole. Then he took it.
Mason had taken āhunterā in the first place because he wanted to kill with as little risk as possible. But his bow and especially his arrows were crap, and now that he could literally regenerate, it was likely time to adapt. He needed to be able to kill up close. Efficiently. Quickly.
Decision made, he felt better. No doubt heād be testing that power soon enough. But it was getting dark and Masonās mind and body needed rest. He cut off a few pieces of vine to use like rope, then climbed up a tree to sleep like the descendant of chimps he was.
But first, he made a few snares with the vine, in case anyone decided he was an easy targetā¦
* * *
Blakeās first night in the new world passed uneventfully. In fact, it was downright pleasant. It had gotten a little cool in the night, and Mona ended up closer and closer until sheād obviously felt a little embarrassed about it and whispered āitās just for the heatā. Of course, she could have cuddled up to just about anyone, and sheād chosen him, but he let that little fact slide. Anyway, he was cold too. Though he would have happily spent a night next to Mona even if he wasnāt.
The dawn rose red and beautiful and Blake grinned at the system message that filled his vision.
[Congratulations, you have survived your first night in New Earth! Experience earned. Congratulations, you have reached level two!]
āHey,ā he nudged Mona. āYou level for surviving the night, too?ā
āWhat?ā She rubbed at sleepy eyes and tried in vain to fix her tussled her, then stilled. āWell look at that. Yes I did.ā
Blake nodded, then watched a veritable wall of ghostly text override the pleasant view the moment heād wondered how to level.
[Player profile accessed. Level available. Please select a new power.]
Well. Well. Another power was a big deal, considering how useful they seemed. Blake had played plenty of video games in his day, and everything about this new AI world was screaming MRPG, or Multiplayer Role Playing Game. He checked out the list of possibilities.
As before, the list was practically endless. Support spells, offensive and defensive options, creation and pets, and everything in between. Blake scrolled without much information except the names, trying not to be overly frustrated. One power in particular, though, caught his eye:
Meditation. Increase mana recharge rate.
Heād already noticed mana recovery was a huge issue. Just a few uses of Mental Influence and it took damn near an hour to recover. He could only imagine what it would be like going forward, and figured anything to speed up the process would be worth its weight in gold. Plus, holy hell, meditation? What was this, Everquest? This āNew Earthā might be a more āold schoolā version of the games Blake loved, where things justā¦
took awhile.
He perused the details of some of the many other options, but in the end he felt he didnāt have much choice. Maybe heād get an automatic version later, but he couldnāt know, and anyway theyād likely stack. He took meditation without further hesitation, then immediately sat down and focused on the power. His eyes closed almost on instinct as the system took over, so at least it worked. But he had full mana so it heād have to test it later.
āGet anything good?ā he asked Mona. She frowned.
āI canāt decide. Offense or defense?ā
Blake shrugged. Survivability or toughness was almost always the right choice in such games in the long run. But offense would probably matter more in the beginning to improve faster. Blake didnāt want the responsibility for Monaās decision in any case and shook his head like he had no idea.
āGo with your gut,ā he said. āI took a mana re-charge power.ā
Mona nodded, frowning one more time before she seemed to decide. Then she stood up and stretched her lithe, long limbs before offering Blake her hand.
āBest get an early start. You never know when those ābogloksā or whatever the hell will show up and ruin our paradise vacation.ā
āSo,ā Blake grinned, ālying next to me is your idea of a paradise vacation?ā Her smile faltered and Blake laughed. āRelax.ā He grabbed her hand before she could pull it away and sprung to his feet. āUp and at āem,ā he groaned as he stretched his back. And because he couldnāt help himself, he sent a little spike of friendly energy into Monaās mind with Mental Influence. He needed to use some mana anyway.
āGet up you lazy peons!ā he smiled to himself at the reference. āWeāve got a damn boat to build.ā