They pushed deeper beneath the blanketed shadows of the trees, Ricky
once again darting through the brush, a tiny vanguard, Mud pulled up
his glowing stats screen.
The level had
granted him five new points to distribute among his six primary
attributes. He didn’t think too long on the process his plan was
simple, intelligence and stamina.
Intelligence seemed
to be a given, it expanded his mana pool, ensuring he could
eventually use far higher tier summons, while simultaneously boosting
his elemental potency. As for Stamina… he could feel the reason for
that screaming its way through his exhausted limbs.
He carefully
adjusted the sliders, taking one final look at his updated profile
before committing.
[Mud (Level 2)]
[Strength] 11
[Constitution]
18
[Intelligence]
26
[Agility] 7
[Speed] 8
[Stamina] 10
Satisfied, he tapped accept.
The effect was instantaneous. A warm, electric tingle jolted through
the entirety of his body. Legs that had moments ago felt dead and
wooden came back to some form of life, and his mana bar grew by
twenty points.
“Wow, stat poi...”
Mud was cut off as Ricky came screaming back through the
undergrowth. The rat scrambled up his torso with practiced ease, a
habit he was beginning to find both endearing and painful, and he
promptly nipped Mud hard on the earlobe.
“Ouch! Dammit, Ricky!” Mud hissed, clapping a pudgy hand over
his now stinging ear. “What was that for?”
The rat ignored his protests entirely, his whiskers twitching with
anxious energy as he chittered a rapid-fire warning.
“I think hes found something,” Mud said, eyeing the rat, who
looked back with a smug, satisfied expression.
Layhla nodded, dropping into a feline, predatory crouch.
“Hold on. I have a new skill I want to try out.” Mud felt an
unusual surge of confidence. He plucked Ricky from his shoulder and
gently set him back on the mossy floor. “Can you watch my back for
a second? I’m going to be temporarily out of commission”
“Out of commission?” Layhla paused, her brow furrowed in
confusion. “What are you…”
Mud didn’t wait to explain. He pulled up his menu and selected
[Eagle Eyes], locking the target on his small furry
friend.
The sensation was slightly terrifying. It felt like the
moment of his death against the boar, his soul seemed to shatter,
fragmenting into a thousand shards of light as he was ripped from his
own skin. For a heartbeat, he was a ghost, viewing the world as an
invisible blur in the canopy, looking down at his own slumped shell
and Layhla’s perturbed face.
Then, the world accelerated. He was sucked downward, a cosmic weight
slamming his consciousness into Ricky’s tiny, compact form.
The world of a rat was nothing like he had expected.
The world became a streaking blur of emerald and earth. At this
height, the weeds and ferns transformed into a towering canopy of
their own, a forest within a forest, looming like ancient oaks over
his nimble, compact form. His vision sharpened, suddenly he was
seeing movements and textures he would have missed in his human body.
It was his nose that truly shocked him, though, The air was no longer
just ‘air’, it was a chaotic, overlapping tapestry of scents that
nearly overwhelmed his senses.
He wasn’t directly controlling Ricky. It felt more like riding
along behind his eyes, a passenger in an energetic, furry mind. Yet,
there was a tether, A quiet, wordless line of communication that
allowed him to nudge the rat toward whatever caught his interest.
The genuine version of this novel can be found on another site. Support the author by reading it there.
, Mud thought, and Ricky obeyed.
The rat took him toward the source of his distress, and the distance
was shorter than Mud had anticipated.
The dense forest broke abruptly, opening into a small, deceptively
peaceful clearing centered around a sun-dappled pond. Near the
water’s edge, four Imps were huddled together. They looked both
ridiculous and dangerous at the same time, their gangly, stick-thin
arms plunging into the water as they attempted to nab the passing
fish.
Mud warned Ricky to stay out of the open area. He guided the rat in
a slow, silent circuit of the clearing’s perimeter, keeping to the
thickest underbrush. A plan forming in his mind as he tried to burn
every detail of the clearing to his memory.
Satisfied, Mud severed the connection. The transition was violent;
his soul was yanked backward as if fired through a cannon, his
consciousness screaming across the forest floor until it slammed back
into his own heavy, sweaty body.
For a moment, the world felt awkward and slow. Mud’s soul
struggled to re-calibrate, the transition from Ricky’s agility to
his own massive frame felt like being plunged into a pool of tar. He
ran his fingers through a set of simple stretches to make sure
everything was working properly before gingerly hauling himself to
his feet.
“Four Imps. There’s a clearing just ahead,” he said, his voice
raspy.
Layhla was sitting nearby, her back against a tree in a state of
tense relaxation. Her short sword was already drawn, resting across
her lap like a coiled snake.
“Should be simple enough,” she said, with her usual air of
self-confidence. “Well, let’s get it done, then.”
Mud nodded. With a silent thank you to Ricky who had served him so
well, he dismissed the little rat and brought out Sludge. As the
translucent, gray mass materialized on the forest floor, Layhla’s
face twisted in a look of pure disgust.
“Why can’t we just stick with the rodent?” she muttered,
glaring at the pulsating goo. “At least he’s been somewhat useful
so far.”
“Hey… Sludge has feelings, too.” Mud stepped over and patted
the top of the slime’s head. The contact made a disgusting, wet
plop that echoed through the quiet woods. “He gets offended easily…
I think.”
He didn’t sound particularly convincing, even to himself.
Layhla grunted, her jaw tightening as if she were fighting the urge
to actually smile at the absurdity. She looked from the slime to Mud,
waiting.
“So, um,” Mud said, clearing his throat and straightening his
clothing. “I have a plan. And if we play it right, this fight
should be quick and painless.”
***
Taking a deep, shaky breath, Mud stepped out from the safety of the
trees. He walked alone into the center of the clearing, the sound of
his heartbeat hammering in his ears. Near the pond, the four Imps
were still huddled together, unsuccessfully flailing at the water and
occasionally smacking one another in a frantic struggle to claim what
they considered the best fishing spot.
“Excuse me,” Mud called out, his voice wavering. “I’m going
to need you guys to take a quick break. I’ve been trying to reach
you about your car’s extended warranty.”
The effect was instantaneous. All four Imps jumped, their gangly
bodies snapping to attention as four sets of beady, hateful eyes
locked onto him. The one in front, apparently the leader, cackled, a
high pitched grating sound that made Mud’s skin crawl. He gestured
excitedly toward Mud, his sharp teeth bared.
“Food!” The creature laughed, his spindly arms waving. “Big
food! Many a meats!”
“What the hell did I get myself into?” Mud mumbled to himself,
his stomach rolling. The Imps began to stalk toward him, their mouths
watering at the prospect of the grand feast he represented.
Gradually, their pace increased. They broke into a sloppy,
disjointed run, a blur of spindly limbs and bobbing heads.
Suddenly, they just stopped.
It was as if they had run dead into an invisible wall. Their feet
stayed rooted to the earth while their momentum carried the rest of
their bodies forward, nearly sending them face first into the dirt.
They hissed in confusion, tugging at their legs, only to find the
ground beneath them had turned into a thick, murky sheet of
translucent gray.
“You know,” Mud said, a small, sly smile ghosting across his
face as he watched them struggle against the rubbery, suffocating
grip. “It’s incredibly rude to stand on a man’s backpack.
you’re going to get it all dirty.”
Mud raised a single finger, pointing it directly at the trapped
monsters, and pulled an invisible trigger.
From the treeline, Layhla exploded. Every muscle in her frame worked
in perfect, lethal tandem to propel her across the clearing like a
discharged bullet. She was a blur of steel and motion, closing the
gap before the Imps could even process the shift in the air.
Her blade sheared through the first Imp, traveling from waist to
shoulder in one clean arc. She didn’t slow down; she simply shoved
the bifurcated torso aside and let her sword dart forward, a striking
viper. It pierced the throat of the second creature, a spray of blood
painting the terrified faces of the remaining monsters.
“No! No! We big sorry!” the leader shrieked, his spindly legs
flailing against Sludge’s rubbery grip. His apology was cut short
as his head simply vanished in a fountain of gore.
The final Imp didn’t even try to fight. It just collapsed into the
slime wailing in terror as Layhla’s sword leveled off, aimed
directly for its chest.
“Layhla, wait!” Mud shouted, his voice urgent.
His fingers flew across his HUD, his eyes scanning the bestiary
entry he had ripped open in a panic.
[Forest Imp] Type:Forest Dweller. Behavior:
possesses a deep, innate
attunement to the forest they inhabit. Danger Level:Low.
Capture Requirement: Forge a pact.
Layhla froze, her blade
resting lightly against the final Imp’s chest. She glared at Mud in
confusion, but she didn’t finish the stroke. She just waited.
Mud didn’t go for the survivor first. He moved to the fallen
leader, his heart racing as he opened the loot window. The underlings
had yielded nothing but gold, but the leader’s inventory shimmered
with two very distinct icons: [Staff of Embers][Heart
of the forest]
He claimed the staff first. As his fingers closed around the
weathered wood, he felt an immediate, strange hum and a searing
warmth that seemed to radiate from the grain itself.
[New
Skill Unlocked: Fire Bolt]
[Sludge
has reached Level 2!]
“The
leader has the core you were looking for,” Mud said, “I’ll let
you loot it, but can I deal with the last one?”
She shrugged and sheathed her sword in one fluid motion, leaving the
survivor pinned and helpless in Sludge’s rubbery grip.
“Do you want to live?” Mud asked, looming over the ugly little
creature.
“Oh, yes yes!” The Imp tried to nod, but it’s head was stuck
in the slime. “Me want to live big time. Very big!”
“I’ll make a deal with you, then.” Mud reached into his pack
and pulled out a fresh cheese biscuit. He broke off a piece, the
aroma of cheddar and warm dough wafted through the clearing, and held
it to the Imp’s mouth. “If you join me, I’ll keep you fed with
food like this. And, more importantly, you won’t end up like your
friends over there.”
The Imp’s eyes darted to the headless corpse of its leader. It let
out a shaky, rattling breath. “You a big, tough deal-maker guy,”
the creature whispered, its spindly frame trembling. “Me thinks…
okay.”
A blinding flash of light swallowed the clearing. When it faded, the
Imp was gone.
[New
Summon Unlocked: Forest Imp (LV. 2)]
Mud
turned back toward Layhla, his face split by a triumphant grin, but
the smile died instantly. He nearly jumped out of his skin.
Looming over her was a massive owl, its form unnaturally large and
draped in dark feathers. It stood over her like a titan, its piercing
yellow eyes locked onto her. As it spread its wings, two enormous,
circular patterns on the underside of its feathers seemed to pulse
like hypnotic eyes.
Layhla stood transfixed, her gaze glassy and vacant. Slowly, her
head drooped, and her knees buckled as she collapsed silently into
the long grass of the clearing.

