069: Hangover
"Hnurrrrrg…"
Rain groaned as he drifted back to consciousness. There was no single word to adequately describe the magnitude of his discomfort. He felt brittle like glass and inflated like a balloon. His muscles clenched painfully at the slightest attempted movement, and his stomach was squirming as if it was attempting to climb up his esophagus and out his mouth. He somehow didn't have a headache despite everything, but his eyes kept slipping in and out of focus as he tried to look around the room.
He was lying in his bed of leaves in Tallheart's hut, sunlight streaming in through the door. He panicked as he realized that he wasn't wearing his armor. Tallheart's shadow appeared as the man moved into the doorway, blocking the light. Rain relaxed. If Tallheart was here, he was fine.
"Rain," Tallheart rumbled.
"Owwwwwwww…." Rain said.
"What is the ring set to?"
Rain blinked, "Wha?" He held up his hand jerkily, his eyes gliding over the ring before snapping back to it. "Oh." His fingers felt like overstuffed sausages, though they looked normal. He pulled up the controls. "Sixty."
"Sixty what?" Tallheart asked.
"Recovery."
"Mmm," Tallheart said. "I am glad I decided not to remove it then. Bring that down to twenty, and add ten points each to Vigor, Strength, Focus, and Endurance. Do not put anything in Clarity."
Rain obeyed. Immediately, he felt better. The feeling of pressure faded and the other symptoms were likewise lessened. Now he only felt mentally drained and thrashed from head to toe, as if he'd spent a whole day doing crossfit while trying to derive a proof for special relativity in his head. Believe it or not, it was an improvement.
"Better?" Tallheart asked.
Rain nodded weakly.
"Leave it there. The only cure for this is time," Tallheart said, turning to walk away.
"Wait," Rain coughed. "Ameliah?"
"Gone," Tallheart said. "How much do you remember?"
Rain's face fell. He hadn't even gotten a chance to say goodbye properly. He thought back. "Right up until I passed out by the fire. I…almost wish I didn't."
Tallheart nodded. "Good. Rest now. Do not strain yourself further." He moved away, the dawn light filling the hut once more.
Rain let his head fall back with a groan. He was about to open his menus but stopped himself. If he did that, he'd be tempted to try and find a way to get the system to display his adaptation level to the ring. Messing with the system struck him as a bad idea, given his current state. It was time to try something new.
He would try doing nothing.
"Hnurrrrrg…"
"Oh, good, you're awake."
Jamus blinked, squinting to block out the blinding candlelight. "Meloni? What? How did you get in here?" He pressed a hand to his head in an attempt to quiet the throbbing pain.
Meloni set her candle on his bedside table. "Bek let me in. He said you were tossing and turning all night."
Jamus sighed. "That man."
Meloni laughed. "He thinks we should get together."
"I hired him to watch my house, not play matchmaker," Jamus grumbled. He looked at his next-door neighbor blearily. Meloni was a little older than he was by his estimate. He knew better than to ask her exact age. Her long graying hair was brushed straight and her face was creased with the shadows of lines. Jamus thought that only made her look even kinder when she smiled. She was smiling now.
"Is he wrong?" she asked.
"No," Jamus said, lying back with a sigh. He and Meloni had become friends a while ago, kindred spirits, as it were. He'd tried to keep himself at a distance, though. He was an adventurer; she worked in the city. He didn't feel like it would be fair to start a relationship with her if he was always going to be away. However, he was old enough to know that what the heart wanted had nothing to do with what was fair.
Meloni smiled at him. "About time you admitted it. I don't know how much more obvious I could have made it for you. We're not teenagers. I'm much too old to waste time beating around the bush. I like you, you like me. Simple. We're together now."
Jamus groaned. His head was killing him. He'd wanted to have this conversation with her later, once he was feeling better.
"Bad?" Meloni asked. He nodded against his pillow, squeezing his eyes shut. Meloni laid her hand on his shoulder. "Here, I've got something that may help. Sit up and drink this."
Jamus opened one eye, seeing the small vial that she was holding out to him. He sat up, both eyes open now, his headache momentarily forgotten. "You figured it out?"
"I think so," Meloni said. "Bop said it wouldn't kill anyone who drinks it, at least."
Jamus snorted, then winced. He took the vial, uncorking it and gulping down the contents without even bothering to sniff it. He shuddered. "Horrid."
Meloni laughed. "I never claimed it would taste good. Well?"
Jamus summoned his book and turned the page. His eyebrows rose in surprise. "You actually did it…" he said, marveling at what he saw written there.
Chemical Effect – Beginner's Clarity Tonic +5 Clarity, 42 minutes |
He could already feel his headache starting to fade. With as low as his Clarity was, even a little boost made a big difference. He looked up at Meloni. "And you made this yourself? It wasn't Reason?"
Meloni nodded, grinning from ear to ear. "Yes!" she said, elated at her success.
"I didn't think it was possible," Jamus said, staring down at the vial.
"Bop says chemistry isn't magic. Anyone can do it if they follow the recipe closely enough, even an unawakened like me. He just cheats."
"And still you call him Bop? After he taught you to make this?"
Meloni laughed. "Yes, I do. He's far too melodramatic. Both of them. Always going around in those outfits and insisting that people call them Myth and Reason. I'm calling them Bip and Bop until they tell me their real names."
Jamus laughed. "You're going to make them regret hiring you."
"Nonsense," Meloni said. "Those two have no idea how to run a business. They need me."
"True enough," Jamus said. His headache had faded to the background, but he knew it would worsen rapidly the moment he started using mana again. I should just give in and make my ratio a little less aggressive. I think Rain is a bad influence on me. I got used to that aura of his, and now I'm paying for it.
Meloni picked up her candle. "Come on, let's go have breakfast. I brought the puppy over. He'll be happy to see you."
"Just let me get dressed," Jamus said. "Then he can get as much fur on my robe as he likes."
Meloni smiled at him. "Oh, don't bother. I don't care if you're in your underwear."
Jamus chuckled. "This has got to be the most casual start to a relationship that I've ever had. Fine, I suppose I'm decent enough." He threw off his blanket, swinging his feet over the side of the bed and standing up. He was wearing a long white night robe that fell to his ankles. "Lead the way, home invader. I suppose I need to get you a key, now."
"Yes, you do," Meloni said, smiling at him. "Not like it matters. Bek always lets me in anyway."
Jamus laughed. "The man is going to be insufferable now." He followed her down the stairs, then was forced to stop and fend off an attack by a flying ball of fur heralded by a bark of excitement. "Hey, get down. Cut that out."
The puppy ignored him, jumping up and down trying to get to his face. Its long white fur was all puffed-up, making it look like a cloud that had fallen out of the sky and was trying frantically to get airborne once more. Fortunately for Jamus's headache, it only barked once upon seeing him. It was a proper bark, not the horrible yipping sound that smaller dogs tended to make. This particular dog was not going to be small. It was a mix between a Saint Bernard and something else. Probably a dandelion. Meloni had found it in an alley a few days before Jamus had returned to the city.
"Have you thought of a name for him yet?" Jamus asked, waiting for the dog to tire itself out so he could pet it without having to catch it first. There was no sign of Bek.
Meloni shook her head. "No. I wanted to call him 'Cloud', but it's a little on the nose. I had the idea of using the word in Zeelada instead. It's 'Sarilla', but that sounds more like a girl's name. Plus, enough people speak it that they might recognize it. I want to be a bit more original than that."
"How about another language?" Jamus asked. "Something really obscure. Didn't you say you were learning Vejik? What's the word for 'cloud'?"
"It's Vuu-gus'taak," Meloni said with a shrug. "So that's a hard no."
Jamus laughed. "I can't believe you can even pronounce that."
Meloni smiled. "I'm working on it. I need something to do while the store isn't busy, which is most of the time. Plus, I want to understand what Bip and Bop are always going on about behind my back."
"Humm," Jamus said. "How about a dead language? I could ask Staavo if he has any old…oh. I just had an idea."
"Think of a good name?" Meloni asked. She snagged the puppy out of midair, stumbling as she pulled it into her arms. "Ooph. He's heavier than he looks."
Jamus smiled and shook his head. "No, not a name. I know someone that I can ask. He speaks a language that…well, let's just say I guarantee that you haven't heard of it. It sounds pretty good, too. Maybe not as fluid as Zeelada, but it's more melodic than common."
"What language? Where's it from?"
"I…don't think I'm allowed to tell you," Jamus said.
Meloni raised an eyebrow. "Why not?"
Jamus shrugged. "I promised not to."
"Is it a secret language or something? Some sort of code?"
Jamus shook his head. "Nothing like that. My friend just doesn't want his origin to become common knowledge."
Meloni laughed. "You're not doing a good job of deflecting my curiosity. Now I really want to know. A mysterious stranger from a distant land, huh? Somewhere so far away that I won't have even heard of the language before?" Her eyes flashed. "He's from across the Gloomsea, isn't he?"
"No…" Jamus said. "At least, I don't think so…" He shook his head. "Please, just...don't ask. He might tell you himself once you meet him, but I don't want to reveal his secrets without his consent. I might have already said too much."
"Fair enough," Meloni said. She pushed the dog into his arms. "Hold this. I'm going to make breakfast."
Jamus struggled not to drop the fluffy bundle as it squirmed, trying to lick at his face. He laughed. "You're right. He is heavier than he looks. There's an awful lot of dog underneath all that fluff. How big is he going to get, do you think?"
Meloni shrugged. "No idea. I might need to get a bigger house."
Rain sighed. It turned out that doing nothing was incredibly boring. He wished he'd borrowed something to read from Staavo's library. Though he still felt dead tired, he couldn't get back to sleep. A nice paperback novel would have been perfect for this situation, but he had nothing. It was worse than being trapped in a bathroom without a smartphone. He couldn't even resort to reading the ingredients off the back of a shampoo bottle. Speaking of the bathroom, he had to go. Eating spicy food had consequences, and he wasn't sure if using Purify was a good idea at the moment.
The leaves crackled as he eased himself up into a sitting position. He didn't feel as weak as he had after the incident in the lair, but the soreness, pain, and general discomfort that came with his current condition made it at least as bad. His vision was still a bit off, the room twisting as he moved, then snapping back into focus. He opened up his menus to check just what he'd managed to do to himself the day before, mostly as a way to give himself time to get used to being vertical.
Training Overview
General Experience Earned Health Use: 54 Stamina Use: 520 Mana Use: 8282
Skill Experience Earned Mana Manipulation: 40 Aura Compression: 2118 [Rank Up] |
Well then. That's quite a bit of stamina. No wonder I feel like this. I shouldn't have asked Ameliah to top me up. Health too, I don't remember being that hurt, but there it is…
He shook his head, immediately regretting it as the room spun. Once that stopped, he took a quick look at the rest of his status.
Attributes Richmond Rain Stroudwater Level 18 Experience: 21659/22750 Dynamo
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