XaiJu
Foxmoor Fiction
Foxmoor Fiction

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SSD 4.40 - Information Wants to Be Free

Another chapter for all of you.

We get to be in Tarrae's head again for this. 

Enjoy:

“How the early priests came into possession of these secrets does not appear, and if there were ever any records of this kind the Church would hardly allow them to become public.”

-Harry Houdini

==Tarrae==

==Earlier That Day==

Delving through the dungeon had not proven a terribly difficult experience so far, though there had been a few moments where the newness of our team had proven a hindrance. They were minor issues while dealing with the low level monsters, but they could easily get us killed in more challenging situations.

Honestly, the progressive difficulty of this dungeon was amazing. It was perfect for integrating a new team. We had only just finished up the sewers, and things were feeling much more cohesive. We hadn’t had a chance to get into the rolling meadow we had seen outside the town, yet. And we weren’t sure when we would actually get a chance to do so.

The Adar occupation of the Starlight Grotto had proven an inconvenient development. Not due to any issue with their developing encampment, but rather due to them denying entrance to the dungeon.

Still, that was their right.

I was hoping to get back into it soon, however.

For the moment, my team was handing out with the remains of the other. Zidaun was off overseeing the other Adar, as well as visiting with his old friend.

According to Inda, Zidaun was likely to hate dealing with all the administrative details. So I couldn’t even really blame him for the delay, either.

Discussions had progressed in different directions, and Soara had enthusiastically listened to Inda discussing the details of different countries and the different dungeons she had delved. Anaath had wandered off at some point. We were delving better as a team, but Anaath hadn’t lost his sour disposition, and he didn’t socialize with us much.

In the meantime, in a one of the comfortable side rooms, Gurek and I had fallen into a common adventurer pastime with new people, telling how we became adventurers in the first place.

“Yeah, my parents worry all the time, too.” He said, sharing a wry grin that I returned, before he continued. “Cooking just wasn’t my thing. And after I burned enough food they finally agreed that I should try something else. They wanted me to become a Spice Merchant.”

Gurek shook his head.

“They still have contacts back in Ungea. It was a perfect idea in their heads. They use a lot of non-local spices in the restaurant, and I could go back to Ungea and buy spices.”

I absently note Gurek’s parents as a potential contact, years of living in a merchant household having made it an automatic skill. My family does some trading up in Ungea...

Gurek shrugged, his hands raising up into the air in front of him, while I just nodded as I listened.

“I mean, they are probably right. I could have made a lot of money, but I wanted more than that. They tried anyway, and then I told them I wasn’t interested enough times that they finally listened. Now, I’ve always loved nature. I love the small parks in the city. So, my parents had the bright idea that maybe I could get a class specialized in growing plants and grow the spices myself. We wouldn’t be growing more than a small greenhouse full, so it wouldn’t run afoul of any Farmers.”

I nodded sagely.

Always bad to annoy anyone with power.

“So I agreed, I mean, I do love plants after all. My teacher refunded my parents after only a week. I killed any plant I tried to raise. My teacher seriously thought I might have some sort of affinity with death magic.”

I start to chuckle, and Gurek joins me.

“Ha, you laugh now, but I was devastated at the time. I still loved plants though, still do, as a matter of fact. So, I had loved learning about them. The categorizing, and learning the various traits, it all appealed to me. So did discovering all these new varieties.

At one point some adventurers were talking about a dungeon in my family’s restaurant. They were talking about a new plant that had suddenly appeared there. How they had to be careful, since it could be poisonous, or acidic, and so on, and how all the samples they brought back were in bad condition. The adventurers guild apparently didn’t want to pay them much for them.

So, I had a thought. I couldn’t keep a plant alive, but my cuttings of plants had been pretty good. And I really wanted to see new types of plants. So, I was young and stupid, and decided that this was going to be my new career. I had obviously listed far too much to some of the stories and songs the Performers did at our restaurant for big nights.

My parents were horrified. Understandably. After it became obvious that I was going to do it, regardless of what they wanted, they arranged for me to get training. I would have died far too many times without that training. That was their caveat. I said I wanted to go and do this, so they hired a trainer. If I quit, I had to give up on becoming an adventurer.

I didn’t know it at the time, but my trainer specialized in this. His whole shtick was training would be adventurers and making them quit because his training was so sadistic. Turns out, my family got a refund, because I never quit.

I whined, and moaned, and complained so much, but I kept going. Eventually, I got a class that allows me to endure things. At that point, my trainer conceded defeat, and told my parents that no one was going to be able to make me stop. And, by that point, I was well trained to deal with a dungeon, too. With the system giving me a new class and validating my work, my parents gave in.

They got their money refunded, so they used some of it to get me some specialized training in dealing with dungeon plants. Then they bought me the best gear they could afford.”

Gurek sighed, shaking his head.

“I was still really lucky. I survived a few things that probably should have killed me. My class… it saved my life for sure. After I got past the usual survival time, I was able to team up with some more experienced delvers.”

Gurek closed his eyes as tears squeezed out. His voice was soft and shaky as he finally spoke again.

“They didn’t make it, but I did. Dungeon had a new monster with poison. Wasn’t on any of the reports. I was able to delay the effects long enough to get to a healer.”

“Sorry,” I say, my voice soft. “It’s never easy, especially if they are on your team.”

Seen too many die, too.

Gurek shakes his head, and his voice grows heated.

“Not your fault, wasn’t even my fault. That was always something I thought was awful. It wasn’t anyone’s fault. Dungeon grew a bit and something changed. No one knew until I came back to tell them. Then a proper team went out to scout it out.

It’s what made me join a scout team, in the end. If I was joining to deal with that danger at random anyway, I might as well get properly paid for it. And, well, the scout teams see more new stuff than anyone else.

Haven’t lost anyone in this party. Been more grateful for that than I can say.”

He looks at me and his gaze is piercing, his words fervent.

“I’ve lost more people than I ever wanted to. I tried helping newbies, but so many of them died. I’m sure I helped some of them live longer, but… Getting proper training is expensive. They died learning the lessons they needed to know. Not many still alive.

Every dungeon should be like this. Teach people how to delve properly. Then, maybe I wouldn’t have… One of the ones who had survived a long time… right before we came here… he didn’t come back. I didn’t tell my team, we needed to be focused...”

He cuts off, his voice choking.

“I’ve, lost people too.” I say, falteringly. “Tried to help some newbies. I think most of the decent adventurers try to help out. I stopped after a while too. It gets too hard when they don’t come back. I don’t know if my heart got harder, or I just had to stop letting myself care so I didn’t… break.”

Gurek nods at me, tears streaming down his face, and my own bead up in my eyes. I do my best to blink them away, but a few escape to stream across my cheeks anyway.

“What would you do if you could make things better? Make it so less people died.” Gurek finally asked, his voice serious.

He looks at me again, his eyes like hard stone beneath the sheen of tears.

“Would you spread a secret, even if you knew if might get you killed?”

I pause for a moment.

I think of my family and want to say “No,” but some of my nieces and nephews have been asking about what I do. Some of them have been expressing interest. My family helped me, got me the training that helped me survive, but like Gurek, I still had my fair share of close calls. And, I remember faces, voices, that have been absent for years.

“Yes,” I whisper. “Yes, I would.”

Gurek slumps in his seat for a moment, before speaking a short phrase.

“I give to you that which was given to me.”

A notification blooms in my senses, and the System puts a pressure on me.

I open it.

The rightful owner of the Artifact, The Eternal Blossom, has transferred ownership to you:

The Eternal Blossom

Artifact – Unique

Immune to Theft – Dungeon Bound – Indestructible – Transferable

A manifestation of the dungeon’s desire for beauty and perfection, and its desire to share it.

Benefits:

+Owner instinctively knows the benefits of Artifact

+Owner has a telepathic link with the dungeon, even when Artifact is elsewhere

+Owner can allow another individual telepathic contact with the dungeon while they touch Artifact

+Owner can establish a temporary telepathic link when another is touching the Artifact

+Owner can have the dungeon store Artifact, or recall it from anywhere inside the dungeon at will

+Owner may transfer ownership of Artifact to another, however, this fails under any form of persuasion, threat, etc… even indirect forms, like social pressure or preexisting contracts

+Dungeon may assign another owner upon death

With the notification, knowledge unfolds like a blooming flower in my head.

I know more about the Artifact than just what the system said.

I am connected to it. I can pull it to me with just a thought, but I don’t dare to do so while I am here. I am sure Soara has been damping down his ability to listen to us, out of respect, but he would probably notice the Artifact appearing. I don’t even need to see it to know what it looks like. I can turn and twist its image in my head at my leisure.

I can feel the deep appreciation for beauty that was the reason for its creation. I can feel a connection in my head to the creator, a channel waiting to be used. I know how to let another channel open for another with the Artifact, either to me or… the dungeon.

For I intrinsically know that this was made by a person. A person, who is also a dungeon.

What the hell does this even mean?

It… made the dungeon. It set it up as a training ground.

“What,” I start, before my voice fades away and I try again. “Are all of them like this?”

“I wish I could help you,” Gurek says, his eyes gazing at me with fixed intensity.

I can see the tension of his body. He is quivering with the strain of it.

The last piece falls into place.

There is only one good reason to do it like this, to just give it to me. He could easily have told me and then shown me the Artifact as proof. My old Potential Value II skill is pinging like crazy at me. Though, I hardly needed it to know that an Artifact would be valuable.

The only reason to tell me like this, is because Gurek couldn’t tell me any other way. He is bound in some fashion. A skill, a ritual, an object… I can’t say, and neither can he.

However, I now how he was able to do it.

The description of The Eternal Blossom says that there is no way to force someone to give it away. What it doesn’t say, is that there is also no way to force someone to keep it. No matter the method, nothing can prevent the owner from giving it away. A spell of silence would fail, just for the words needed to give it away. Nothing can prevent that, even if it means bypassing a binding meant to prevent that exact thing, or using it to share information.

The only reason to share this, is if this dungeon isn’t unique. Which… means that the others could be safer, too. I need to get this information out as soon as possible.

“I’ll get the secret out,” I whisper hoarsely. “I’ll make sure people know that at least some of them are more.”

Gurek sighs, his body collapsing in on itself.

“Thank you.” He says, “Thank You.”

He looks like he has lifted an enormous weight off his shoulders.

I look the delicate blooming flower over again in my head. It would be valuable just for the intricate workmanship. I want to keep it, but it wouldn’t be right.

“I give to…” I start, when Gurek interrupts me and I stop.

“Don’t! It’s yours. Keep it. Consider it payment for the risk.”

I nod slowly.

Well… if I can leverage the earning power of this… I can encourage my family to spend a bit more getting the word out. I’ll let them use my savings too.

If I am going to get this done… it is best done now. I was already going to do a report after I got back into the dungeon, but I suppose a proper report on the Adar is a good enough reason to send one early.

The adventurer’s guild won’t mind if I add a small ciphered message for my family. Technically it is against the rules, but it has long been considered one of the perks of being on a scout team. As long as it doesn’t get overused, no one cares.

I stand up and Gurek smiles at me, while I smile back.

“I have a report that needs to get done,” I said. “I’ll talk to you later.”

Then I go up to my room.

It is time to take a secret, and unmake it.

Comments

handing -> hanging

Potion

I think the info is gonna get out either way because I don't think Caden himself is gonna be able to keep the secret. He wants interactions too much. So gurek getting the info out is just gonna speed things up a bit And in the end two things can happen 1 people try to convince dungeons and it doesn't work. Heck the Adars probably tried something like that multiple times and it probably did not work 2 Caden after proving that long-term his farming technique is more profitable for dungeons convinces some himself.

bbk

I would have thought Gurek would have some more patience and wait until he could talk with Zidaun again.

Rebecca

well... so far the message isn't sent, and we know it is a dangerous world. if the messenger dies before he can send it, everything will be fine.

TargetDrone

well... there is hope he dies before he can send the message.... then the secret will stay safe.

TargetDrone

Retard.... why do you think things are like this for thousands of years and its keep secret? maybe they are reason huh? Not thinking at all what it will create....and the repercussion...and global ones it will create, whine whine for some people dying when its their choice they delve in the first place and they know it where they are going and what they gamble, how many (way more) dead and conflit will it create now with what they will do just here.... The problems and death it will create..... ''The only reason to share this, is if this dungeon isn’t unique. Which… means that the others could be safer, too.'' ''Every dungeon should be like this. Teach people how to delve properly.'' Make Dungeon safer huh, be a good slave we can use like we want and accomodate all what we need/want, its not like people go into it knowing exactly where they going and for what and so totally their choice..... Argg i know more or less where it was going the second the artifact appeared and the character whining on some things but damn its irking :PPP Really hope the story don't go with a goffy two shoe MC who don't know where to put the line, and hope shit like teleport if they dying (can be 'okay' if they are a big price to pay and its not easely accesible and so alway on) (or even worse ressurection) don't appear in his dungeon, doing all it can for them and serve them, this is a exchange, they know what they are doing by delving (risk life for greed and power) and its their own choice to do, so plz not kiddy glove and keep giving them failsafe for them :)

Zarik0

That's not gonna be what people think, it's gonna be dungeons are intelligent and the Adar knew and did nothing to stop them from killing people.

why_n0t

The problem is even the Adar die in their dungeons, and it's not like they control the dungeons.

ShadeByTheSea

Exactly.

Novel Cat

Can't help but feel like this is the sort of thing that gets the Adar locked in a war with all of the other races.

why_n0t

Shocking, I tell you, shocking!

Foxmoor Fiction

yeah somehow I don't think this is going to go as swimmingly as he thinks. They've mistook a relatively unique situation for a general rule.

abowden

This might not be as good as Gurik thinks it is once people start trying to destroy dungeons because they think they're all people

Munirah Hutchinson

Thanks for the interesting chapter!

ZCochraine!%


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