âHold still, youâve got a bad cut here.â
âYes maâam,â Syd groaned, wincing as Aila slathered more of the minty-smelling poultice on the back of her legs.
âYou need helmets. I have no idea how you managed to avoid having one or more of your skulls split open with how you three get knocked about in that fight,â Aila mused as she tended to Sydâs wounds. âFrankly, itâs a miracle.â
âNot sure I didnât put a bit of a crack in one,â Syd touched the back of her head gingerly.
Aila slapped her hand away from the lump there, admonishing her not to mess up the application of aid sheâd already given.
Syd was lying face down on the grass of the valley, stripped of all armor and clothing except for her undergarments. All the wounds Jadisâ three selves had received over the course of the intense fight had been transferred onto her body so Aila could apply a healing salve while the other two of Jadis gathered the eyeball cores of the demons to turn in for bounties. The two also took the time to fully investigate the sea cove, looking for any signs of more danger or items of interest.
Aila worked diligently to soothe and mitigate what damage she could, fretting over Jadisâ injuries while doing her best to not look like she was fretting. Jadis smiled to herself, immensely relieved just to have Aila safe and mostly uninjured despite her fall from the cliff. She was content to let Aila say and do whatever she wanted in whatever way she wanted, so long as she was unharmed.
Seeing Aila drop off the edge had scared her more than any other moment in her fight against the gigantic sea bull monster. If she hadnât been able to catch her in time, if Ailaâs acrobatic enhancement from Dance of the D hadnât given her the boost she needed to kick off from the cliff and into Dysâ arms, then Jadis wasnât honestly sure she knew what she would have done. Ever since coming to Oros, Jadis had been dealing with near death experiences on almost a daily basis while fighting demons. The danger was real and she knew it was, but somehow, she handled it well, the fear and panic mostly staying in the back of her mind while the thrill of combat kept her focused. She didnât feel invulnerable or anything, but she could accept the risks she was taking with her own life when she took bold action. She was putting in her best effort, so she didnât fear the consequences of what could happen.
Ailaâs life, though, wasnât something she wanted to risk again.
Not that it was her choice. Aila wanted to be a mercenary. She wanted to cast battle magic and slay demons and be in the thick of combat. Jadis couldnât tell her not to pursue what she wanted to do, not just because she herself was suddenly feeling nervous about her companionâs survivability in dangerous situations.
What she could do, though, was swear to herself that she wouldnât let Aila come that close to death ever again.
âAre you sure youâre okay?â Syd asked, glancing over her shoulder at Aila.
âIâm fine,â Aila said. âMy health only went down by seventeen points. Iâm very lucky you caught me.â
âQuick thinking, pushing off the cliff like that,â Syd said, trying to not sound overprotective. âVery smart. Iâm glad you have such good reflexes.â
âThank you,â Aila responded, eyes focused on her work. âAnd thank you again for saving me.â
âOf course, any time,â Syd said with a half grin. âThough not literally, please. Iâd like to keep you around.â
âIâd like to keep around you, too,â Aila quipped, tone light, but with an undercurrent of some emotion Jadis thought might be bashfulness.
A shy silence fell over the two for a short time as Aila continued to apply treatment to Jadisâ injuries. Briefly lacking something to say, Jadis had the thought to check through her mental notifications. One notification prompted her to break the silence.
âNice! I got level fourteen in my ritualist class,â she exclaimed happily before remembering to ask the most obvious question. âOh, shit, did you check your notifications? Did you level?â
Aila looked up from her self-imposed task of tending Jadisâ injuries and blinked owlishly, a confused look washing over her face.
âGods, I completely forgot to check. I just got so distracted by everything that happenedâ¦â she trailed off, a distant look enveloping her expression as she read something only she could see.
A second later pure elation beamed from her face as she excitedly cried out her news. At the same time, she pounced at Syd, wrapping her arms around her neck and hugging her ecstatically.
âI leveled! Level twenty!â
âCongratulations!â Syd said, rolling over with a wince as she tried to hug her companion back.
Two more shouts and whoops of congratulations also echoed in the cove from where Jadisâ other two selves joined in on the excitement.
âThank you, thank you!â Aila said between a flurry of little kisses applied to Sydâs cheeks and lips. âI owe you so much!â
âNo you donât,â Syd assured, turning one of Ailaâs little kisses into a deeper one. âI wanted to help you. You donât need to give anything back.â
Aila broke away from Jadisâ kiss and gave her a determined look that told her that Aila wouldn't be okay with just accepting her good will without giving something back. She didnât push the matter, though. Aila had her own moral code, one that Jadis quite liked. If she felt she needed to show her appreciation, that was fine, so long as she knew Jadis wasnât requiring anything in return for what she had done freely.
âAlright, lie back down and let me finish bandaging you up,â Aila said while pushing Syd back into position on the ground.
âAre you going to tell me what class options you got?â
âYes, definitely,â she nodded. âLet me review for a second and Iâll go over them with you. Iâd like to discuss what might synergize best with you without crippling my own versatility. Hopefully the gods gave me several options of mage classes.â
Syd raised an eyebrow curiously. âDid you get more than three options? I only ever got three for primary and secondary.â
âNo, just three. Iâve heard of some people getting more or less, but thatâs unusual. Iâve heard some say the Hero gets dozens of different hero related classes to choose from, but I donât know if thatâs true.â
As Aila explained, Jadis started to bring her other two bodies back up from the shore. She wanted all her selves to be present while Ailaâs new class was decided. She was also just about done with her investigation of the sea cove, more or less.
âHey, before you start, it looks like there was some kind of fight here before we showed up,â Syd remarked, interrupting Ailaâs commentary on class mechanics to give her the information her other selves were coming across.
âWhat do you mean?â Aila asked, looking up from where she was gently applying more salve to the bad wound on Sydâs calf that had happened from the sea bullâs water jet spell.
âJay and Dys are finding more bodies along the shore, west side of the cove,â Syd pointed without looking. âHas to be a dozen twisted wretches at least so far.â
Aila looked in the direction of the two distant giants picking along the shoreline.
âThat makes sense, actually,â she said. âI would bet a gold coin what we stumbled on here was the tail end of a demon possession of that sea bull. The twisted wretches must have subdued the sea bull somehow and brought the arcane corruptor to possess it.â
âHowâs that work, anyway?â Syd asked, sitting up on her elbows to look back at where Aila was still tending to her leg. âLooking at my notifications just now, the message that came from you sticking that fucker with your knife said we killed an âArcane Corruptor of Fleshâ. I thought you said it was called a sea bull?â
âThe magic beast
a sea bull,â Aila explained. âBut the demon, the arcane corruptor, had possessed it. It killed the sea bullâs mind but kept the body for its own. Corruptor demons can do that, itâs what makes them so much more dangerous than more regular varieties of demon.â
âIt possessed the sea bullâs body and that gave it control over its skills and spells, too?â Syd guessed with her brow furrowed in thought. âDoes that mean magic beasts have skills and spells, and a class system the way we do?â
Aila looked up and met Sydâs violet eyes. Her normally neutral mask was softened with a tinge of obvious concern.
âDid no one in your village explain these kinds of things to you? About magic beasts and demons and the like?â
âNo,â Syd shook her head. âIâve never had any of this taught to me before. It just didnât come up, I guess,â she said while shrugging one shoulder lamely.
âI donât know how it is you can come across as both educated and ignorant at the same time, Jadis,â Aila grumbled before shifting forward and pushing Syd to lay back down again. âYouâve had a peculiar upbringing.â
âI guess so,â Syd agreed, feeling a bit uncomfortable with how she wasnât quite being truthful with Aila on why she didnât know anything about demons and magic.
âWell, to put it simply, magic beasts have spells and skills, but they donât have classes. Any other sea bulls you might come across would have those same spells that one was casting, only difference might be in how powerful the spells are or how much magic they have to keep casting or what have you. You wonât find a sea bull that casts earth magic because it chose a different spell path or anything like that.â
As Aila talked, she pulled some cloth bandages out from her pack lying on the ground at her side. The blue eye of the demon hatchling that they had brought with her watched unblinkingly as she wrapped Sydâs skinned leg with the bandages. Aila had taken the jarred demon out of her backpack and set it on the ground nearby so she could get to her supplies underneath.
Jadis idly wondered what the demon thought about being tossed around inside of the pack, if it had any conception of what had been happening at all.
âPeople like you and me have more options with our classes. Even if by some strange joke of the gods I was given the option to be a Mirror Knight like you, I wouldnât necessarily have the same options as you. Depending on the skills I chose to take and focus on, I could end up being wildly different from you functionally, even if some of our base abilities were the same.â
Jadis had already figured as much. Since whenever she reached an odd numbered level she was given two different choices for skills or spells, and those choices offered were dependent on her activities prior to leveling, she could easily imagine a lot of variety between individuals who had the same named class.
âMagical beasts donât have any options like we do. Theyâre only going to have what all of their kind have, just with varying levels of proficiency.â
âInteresting,â Syd hummed. âAnd corruptor demons? How do they work?â
âMost demons are like those wretches,â Aila motioned to the bodies further up the slope. âThey twist and warp flesh and bone, or create bodies from things like stoneââ
âLike the grundwyrm,â Syd interrupted.
âYes, like grundwyrms,â Aila agreed. âThe malformed bodies they create relate to the spells and skills they use, but a wretch wonât get any skills or spells from the dead they stole their bodies from, not even if theyâre from an intelligent race.
âCorruptor demons, though, when they take possession of a body, they keep the abilities of the creature or person theyâve corrupted. They also donât change the bodies much, not the way a wretch would for example. Some corruptors you canât even tell that the body has been possessed.â
âSo, demons can do to people what they did to that magic beast back there?â Syd asked.
âSome can, yes,â Aila confirmed. âSome even have skills that let them blend in, using the memories of their âhostâ to make them seem normal.â
ââ¦that sounds like fairly intelligent behavior to me, Blue.â Syd pointed out, thinking about how Aila had said she doubted demons were any more intelligent than animals.
âMaybe,â Aila allowed, âbut theyâre using skills to mimic actions and words, not thinking for themselves. From what Iâve heard, they can be spotted easily once you get into any kind of real conversation with them. Gerwas told me he knew a man that encountered one once. Looked just like any other human, but when it spoke it just kept repeating the same greetings and nonsense phrases until it was confronted and it started attacking.â
That was some interesting nuance to the demon situation Aila had provided. Demons could possess a person and mimic their actions and words. That had to mean they were smart, at least more intelligent than Aila and those who had instructed her were giving the demons credit for, did it not? Jadis didnât think an animal could pretend to be a person for any length of time, whether they looked like one or not.
Except, she couldnât know how much skills would affect something like behavior. Maybe the demons that possessed humans or other races and managed to infiltrate communities really had no idea what they were saying or doing and were just using the lingering memories of their victims to duplicate actions. How could she test the facts, one way or the other?
Turning her head to look at the demon hatchling, Syd narrowed her eyes. She didnât think there was any circumstance that would convince her it was okay to let her little pet demonling do to a person what that arcane corruptor had done to the sea bull. She wanted to know more about demons and see just how much agency they actually had in the war between gods, but she wasnât going to sacrifice a person to a fate as horrible as what had been done to the giant seal monster.
As she considered the little demon, its glowing blue eye turned to meet hers.
Odd.
âWell, thanks for the lesson on beasts and demons,â Jay said, catching Ailaâs attention as she returned from the seashore. âBut how about we get up and head back to the city and you tell us all about the amazing new spell casting class youâve received.
âWe found eighteen dead wretches in total along the west side of the cove,â Dys added, hefting a bundle of scavenged weapons over her shoulder.
âWe took their demon eyes, too,â Jay held up a large burlap sack that was stained with black splotches soaking through the material. âFree money, I guess.â
Aila nodded in acknowledgement at Jay and Dys. Finished with binding Sydâs leg, she got to her feet and held up the jar of salve towards the two.
âNeed me to apply any of this to either of you two?â
âNo, Sydâs wearing all the damage right now.â
âConvenient,â Aila said before turning to repack her supplies.
âNot for me,â Syd groaned as Dys helped her to her feet. âMy back is killing me right now. It sucks being the injury mule.â
âAnd this doubly fucking sucks,â Jay held up Sydâs leather pants-skirt, showing the torn material of the lower leg. âJust got these and already ruined.â
âIâm sure Karla can patch them,â Aila said, slinging her pack onto her back, supplies and hatchling tucked away.
Jay passed the leather pants-skirt to Syd so she could get them pulled on. âNah. We can patch them. Weâve got a sewing needle and thread back at the inn.â
âYou mean like how you patched your old leather armor?â
âYeah,â Jay replied, picking up Sydâs shirt while Dys helped Syd hop into her pants.
âYou should probably just let Karla do the patching.â
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
Aila turned away and abruptly changed the subject.
âSo, my new classes. Letâs seeâ¦â
Jadis eyed Aila suspiciously but decided to let the matter drop. She was more interested in finally learning about Ailaâs new class options than she was in defending her admittedly poorly trained sewing ability.
Aila read her first secondary class option aloud for Jadis to hear while Syd got dressed and reequipped.
âA quartermaster style classâ¦â Aila said with barely hidden disdain. âI suppose thatâs actually an extremely good upgrade from Cart Driver, if I was interested in that kind of career.â
âNo magic though, I bet,â Jay commented with a frown. âSo, skip it.â
âThis next one has an odd nameâ¦â
âWhat
this?â Aila exclaimed, her voice growing more and more shocked as she read the description. âIâve never heard of
class as ridiculous as this! Who would take a class thatâs focused on falling off of cliffs? Why would the gods even offer something soâ so wrong!â
Jadis had paused while Aila had read out the odd class details. The description gave her an odd mental itch. Something told her it wasnât gods in general dictating the classes Aila was being offered. Just one god in particular that was sticking his non-descript nose into her business.
âI swear D, if you screwed Aila out of a good magic class Iâll track you down and choke you with your own cookies,â Dys whispered under her breath so Aila couldnât hear.
Aila was showing a lot of worry in her expression. âI guess thereâs not a lot of options, huh?â She gave Jay a worried look. âBut, itâs fine, as long as I get at least
magic class, itâll be fine.â
With a deep, nervous breath, she read the last class option out loud.
A gentle sea breeze was the only sound as Aila stared off into the distance. Jadis waited, all three of her stock still, anxiously watching the redhead.
Aila slowly turned and looked up at Jay, bewildered. âDid what I read out loud really just implyâ"
âThat your magic will be powered by fucking me?â
Aila flinched, then nodded her head. âYes, thatâs what I thought.â
There was another beat of silence before Jadis awkwardly gave an increasingly mortified Aila six thumbs up.
âCongratulations?â
ââ¦Thanks.â