10 Malachite, 212, Mid-Summer (Late Afternoon)
=============
Inside Zeke's sett, the fire was still burning in the hearth, and the deceased goblin bodies were still lying where they were slain. "Sorry, haven't had time to totally clean up the place yet. I got the blood up, at least, but, y'know, maybe a couple of gob' bodies lying around will dissuade them from robbing me again. Make yourselves at home, and let's deal!"
"What'll you give us for eight eggs?" asked Edward, charmingly.
"It's a good haul," said Zeke. "I'll give you four hundred gold in credit for 'em."
"Four hundred, is that all?" the bard pressed. "These beasts were much more difficult than we expected, and you could have told us a little more about them first. We almost lost an ally to one, after all."
"And I saved him, didn't I?" said Zeke, squaring his shoulders for a Commanding Presence. "I told you, I charge for mercenary services, too. There was some give-and-take on that one, since I helped out. I think I'm already being pretty generous, considering."
"Alright, alright," said Edward, backing down. "Fair's fair."
Space Pants stared at Zeke from afar, remaining Subtle. Zeke's ear twitched.
WIS save... The badger blinked twice. Then, he looked at Zumies. "You alright? You took a pretty bad tumble out there, that much is true."
"Yeah, I'm alright," said Zumies. "I'm not happy they got the drop on me like that, but, well... s'pose it was about time I had a taste of my own medicine. Now I know what it feels like when I take a monster's life by surprise."
ratNAROk eyed the rogue warily. "Uhh, is that a good thing? Sounds kinda raw."
"It's given me a much needed change in perspective and appreciation in the art of the silent take-down."
"Sooo... Good? Bad?"
"It was cool!"
"Ach. I should've known."
Zeke nodded to himself, scratching his ear. "Still, that was a pretty close call, and you were doing it for me. I suppose I could... oh, what am I doing, I'm really going to regret this... ah,
staki ni'kash. I do like you guys, so... We'll say eight hundred."
Edward was beaming. "Really? You'll do eight?! That would be great!"
"We like you too," said Meepo.
"Yeah... yeah, wow, why am I doing this... yeah, okay, eight hundred it is. Let's see what happens."
The cat flashed a coy, victorious smile, then decided to double down on the party's successful negotiation. "I have a Suggestion: You should come with us. Join our group."
"You can make a portal anywhere to get to your shop, right?" said ratNAROk, in a completely different accent than he was using earlier.
"Oh, yeah! Totally."
"You should give one to us. That way, we can get to you, and you can get to us. Yeah?"
"What, a teleporter?? Oh, no no no no! I absolutely cannot do that. I told you, this technology isn't supposed to exist on this world. I can't just give it away! Besides, it doesn't fully work anyway - without knowing where in the galaxy I am, I can't set starting coordinates to get out of here with this."
"What would we have to do to get you to give us one? We could start an investment?"
"An investment?" The badger looked tired.
"Yeah. We'll put eight hundred gold towards it now, and pay you the rest later."
"Whoa, hold it!" Meepo threw his little kobold hands up. "Why you spending all our hard earned gold all at once?"
"Did we all agree to this?" said Edward.
"Just hold on there, rat," said the cat. "We also got a button, twenty-three silver, and eleven copper. Every little bit towards our downpayment chips away at the interest in the long run, you gotta use your head."
Zeke looked at Space Pants. "...A button?"
"Some guy gave it to us," said the felis sorcerer, laughing to himself. "Bunch of guys gave it to us, actually. They said we were awesome."
"That's perfect," ratNAROk laughed. "I mean-- yes, that's exactly what happened."
Space Pants looked around the tables of Zeke's wares to see if there was anything that would raise his defensive capability. He happened upon a Ring of Protection, which he may or may not have noticed before - but the cat was clever, and knew better than to ask directly for the thing he wanted. "Do you have anything that'll cure a fear of snakes? I'm asking for Cutter, of course."
Zeke, who had eyes and could see clearly what item the cat was looking at, had a pretty good idea he might have what Space Pants was looking for. "Actually, yeah. If you want to feel tougher against snakes - or anything - then nothing beats a Ring of Protection."
"Wow, do you have any?"
"...Yes, right--"
"Wow, cool, thank you!"
"Those are
pretty darn rare, though, I'm afraid. That'll cost you five
thousand gold."
"
Five thousand gold?" Space Pants spat. "What am I, made of money? Give it to me for free."
"Ahh, no."
"You mentioned a twenty-percent discount the last time we met," said Space Pants. "Are we still good for that?"
"I did?" said Zeke. "That feels like weeks ago."
"How much have you drank between this morning and now, because that's when we talked to you," the cat said.
"None," said the badger. "If I did say that, I'm not sure what I'd said it in reference to. If you haven't noticed, I've been very loose with my prices as we go, depending on how things are vibing at the time."
"Is that so," Space Pants grumbled, recalculating his approach.
Zeke reconsidered. "How about three thousand?"
"I don't have that," Space Pants said flatly.
"Do you have an ōdachi?" asked ratNAROk. "Anything big would be nice."
"Ah, well, I haven't had time to look for new stock since we last spoke. However... Hang on, I do have something kind of whacky in the back you might like. Wait here."
Zeke moved towards the door to the east. ratNAROk followed him. The badger turned around, bothered. "Ah, sorry, no access beyond this point. I have stuff back here you guys shouldn't see. Please, step back."
"Aw, but we're pals, aren't we? You can trust me."
"Still working on that, bud. Please step back." The rodent barbarian stepped sideways, but not away. "No, back. Please. No-- you're bumping into me now, that's obviously too close."
"What's in the secret room behind the velvet curtains back there?" teased Edward.
"I told you, it's all the cool stuff I'm not allowed to show you. Now please, give me some space, my dude! I'll be back in, like, sixty seconds."
"Ugghhh. Fine." ratNAROk stomped his feet as he begrudgingly stepped away from the door. Unnoticed by all, Bubb snuck a single fly into the door as Zeke slipped in to take a peek for himself.
"He's taking too long!" said ratNAROk after ten seconds. "Where is he? I'm about to
rage!!"
"Friend ratNAROk," said Sergei, "please be patient. Come, take chair. You are very small, your blood pressure can very quickly... please, have a seat."
The mouse barbarian clenched his fists, and a vein bulged out of the side of his neck. "I don't like waiting. I want my ōdachi."
"Geez, calm down, buddy." Space Pants cast Calm Emotions. "You gotta learn to chill out while we're bartering. You stress him out, he's gonna raise his prices!"
ratNAROk paused, then looked around. From somewhere in the room, a tinny song could be heard playing on a loop. "Where... is this music... coming from?!"
"I legit took a spell slot to cast Calm Emotions on you," reminded Space Pants.
"Ahhh," said ratNAROk, choosing to relax and stare at the ceiling. With dreamy eyes, the barbarian looked wistfully at Sergei and whispered, "I'm still angry."
"It's fine," said the dragonborn fighter. "Sit in chair. Breathe. Exhale the bad air, inhale the good air."
ratNAROk took a deep, deep breath. "I have...
so many weapons on me right now."
"I know," said Sergei. "It's kind of hilarious."
Behind the door, Bubb's fly immediately spotted something new. Along the left wall was a string of colored lights hanging from a wire, wrapped around a peg on the wall and looping back around the corner. The lights clearly weren't natural, didn't appear to be magical, and even though it was most likely man-made, it didn't look like any modern home lighting solution Bubb had ever seen. The hallway continued a short distance to the west, revealing three doors on the north wall, and one iron door down at the very end. There was another door to the south, near the one they had entered from the common area. The lights-on-a-wire appeared to be plugged into a socket in the wall, but it was difficult to tell what exactly was going on with it.
As Zeke opened the first door on the north wall, Bubb spotted a metalsmith's forge and a woodfurnace, built of black bronze but propped up with what appeared to be prefabricated poles and panels. In the back of the room was a small, empty cubby with bits of bark on the floor, probably a place where logs were usually kept but currently held none. Zeke searched through the +Armor Bin (Willow)+, then the ≡Birchen bin≡ next to it before finding what he was looking for.
Meanwhile, out in the common area, Space Pants was rummaging through boxes left unattended that Zeke would soon have to learn not to leave unattended. "I am in like... a dark tube, or something," the cat said, his legs sticking out of the box his head was buried inside of. "Is anybody else in this really dark tube?"
"Come out of the tube," said Sergei. "You don't know where any of that has been."
Space Pants pulled his head out of the box with a plastic veterinarian's cone around his neck. "I have no idea what this is made out of. Do you think this will protect me in a fight?"
"I think it will cause enemy to stop and stare, of that much I'm sure," said Sergei. "Now come, quit fooling around before you vaporize yourself or something."
At last, Zeke returned to the common area, carrying a giant tool in both hands.
"Whatchu got? Whatchu got?" ratNAROk hopped back and forth on his feet like an excited pooch ready for a treat.
The tool in Zeke's hands was enormous - it was, in essence, a four-foot long pipe wrench, with a head as heavy as a maul and a crescent-shaped notch on its end.
"Yep, yep, yep," said ratNAROk, bouncing visibly. "How much? How much?"
Zeke put a hand out to calm ratNAROk down. "Slow down, let me explain what it does! This is something I call, 'The Nutcracker.'"
Meepo burst out laughing. "The
what?!"
"Now, I know you wanted a sword, and this is pretty much the opposite. But it is big, like you asked!"
"Yeah, yeah, it's big, I like it," said ratNAROk. "How much?"
"This industrial tool is meant for a machine that you'll never see on this world. It's designed for loosening and tightening high-torque lug nuts. You don't know what those are, but long story short..." The badger turned the wrench over, showing a switch on the handle. "Push this up or down, and the notch will quarter-turn whatever's inside with enough pneumatic force to easily break a weapon, or snap a limb, or whatever else you can imagine needs a good twist."
Alefgard inspected the device with awe. "How does it... this is not magic, this is something else. Your sword, too - it's not only not-of-this-world, it's completely incomprehensible to me how such a thing functions. What do you call this?"
Zeke struggled for an explanation. "Okay, so you know how you have 'magic' weapons, right? I think instead, you would want to call these 'tech' weapons."
"'Tech' weapons?" The wizard's curiosity was piqued. "What is this 'tech?'"
"Weapons powered by battery and programmed by circuitry to produce manufactured advantages. Much like one would say a magic weapon is +1 or +2 M, a tech weapon would be described as +1 or +2 T, with the same bonus to attack and damage."
"Does it have the same ability to bypass damage reduction, like magic weapons?" asked Meepo.
"No, but it has other properties that I haven't fully discovered yet. The fey
definitely don't like it, pretty much all fey are extra vulnerable to these kinds of weapons."
"You said it was powered by, wot," said ratNAROk, "a 'battery?' What's that?"
"A battery holds the juice that powers the weapon. Sometimes, it's solar charging, hand-cranked, or shaken; Sometimes, you plug it in and let it charge for a few hours; Sometimes, it's replaceable, and you throw it out and pop in a new one. There are many different kinds, but they all perform the same function: The battery stores a charge that is eventually delivered to the weapon when needed to perform its function."
"Oh, so like a wand with charges in it," said Alefgard. "How many charges can fit in it?"
"If I had to wager, I'd estimate you could get about twenty turns with this bad boy on a charge. Then you'd need to plug it in for eight hours, which... you can't do, since there's nothing for you to plug it into on your world."
"Don't you?" asked Bubb, pointedly. "You have something to 'plug it into,' don't you?"
"I do," replied the badger, nervously. "Of course, I would let you charge it here."
"So, how much is it?" said ratNAROk, impatiently.
Zeke opened his mouth to reply--
"Nevermind, I play it cool now," ratNAROk cut in. "I don't want it anymore."
"You don't want it anymore?"
"Yeah, I do. But I don't. You feel me?"
"Yeah... yeah, no, I don't. It'll be at least four thousand for this one."
"Mm-mmm," ratNAROk shook his head. "Go down."
"You're never gonna see another of these," Zeke held firm. "They're not of this world."
"Cool, cool. There's a whole bunch of other worlds. Go down."
Meepo tapped ratNAROk on the shoulder, casting Guidance to assist in his attempts at Persuasion. "Keep going! You got him on the ropes!"
ratNAROk prepared to give his closing argument, but stopped short as he saw Zeke staring him down - not aggressively, but arrestingly with his Commanding Presence.
"Aw, man, I can't even beat that with Guidance!" wailed ratNAROk.
"You can't even beat that with a twenty," said Meepo.
"Yep, I tried that earlier," said Edward. "He is one tough nut to crack."
"I can't even help you at four grand," said Space Pants. "That's so far out of the ball park..."
"Alright, alright," said ratNAROk. "How about this... Do you do financing?"
Zumies laughed out loud. Zeke, with thinly veiled annoyance, said, "Go on."
"The barbarian wants to propose
financing?" Edward clapped his hands. "The comedy just writes itself! I don't even have to do any work."
Meepo said, "He's about to go from pretending he didn't want it, to selling his soul for it."
"Oh! Will you take my soul? I don't need that. Is that on the table?"
Zeke looked uncomfortable. "Ahh... sorry, I don't have any need for souls right now. Kind of a rough market to get into."
"Ahh, nuts."
Zeke paused. "...Then again, hypothetically, if you
did have a device that captured someone's soul and then sold it to me,
then I'd have a valuable item I could probably sell at a high price to the right buyer. If you had something like that, then we'd have something to talk about."
"Ah, what you're talking about is called a 'phylactery,'" said ratNAROk. "Very hard to come by."
"Indeed."
ratNAROk felt his own coin pouch, and almost laughed at himself for thinking there might be anywhere near four thousand gold inside. "A moment, let me talk to my crew."
"Yep," said Zeke. "Take your time."
The barbarian turned to his companions. "Alright, what are we doing with the eight hundred from the fire snake eggs? We splitting it?"
"Pushy barbarian," said Edward. "I haven't even taken a good look at his wares myself, and you're trying to spend all our money on yourself!"
"But think about it, fellas! One big, powerful weapon for the big, powerful fighter means the whole group benefits from me tanking more baddies!"
"I'm the fighter," said Sergei. "You are one of two-and-a-half barbarians."
"Is it two half-barbarians? Erky's a cleric/barbarian, right?"
"Well, first off, Zeke is no true barbarian," said Sergei, resting an elbow on his Shield of the Sentinel. Emblazoned with an eye on its front, it has been the source of his Advantage on Initiative and Perception since the beginning. "His battle rage seems to be a blessing from his badger heritage, and one he has clearly taken full advantage of in his style. But it comes from his species, not his class. Erky, on the other hand, has indeed embraced the path of the barbarian... in a very special way."
"I don't understand," said Edward. "What do you mean, 'class?'"
"So far, all of us have specialized in a single school of martial or magical practice - a 'class,' if you will. However, it is possible to walk two or more paths at once, dabbling in the arts of other 'classes.' This is called 'multi-classing.'"
"You're losing me," said the bard. "We're talking real life, not some dragon-game, right?"
The dragonborn snorted puffs of flames from his nostrils. "Just... bear with me here, please, while I partake of the wisdom of my dragon people. Normally, taking on a new class is an additive feature. Let's say tomorrow, you found yourself a patron and decided to become a warlock. You'd be a 4 Bard / 1 Warlock, effectively."
"Again, with the numbers - quit gamifying my life!"
"These are ancient battlefield tactics of dragonkind!" said Sergei, exasperated. "An abstraction. Think of it as an analogy. You are good with stories, you know what an
analogy is, right?"
"Yes, and what you're describing is more like a
metaphor."
"...You just used an
analogy, not a
metaphor!"
"Yes! You were supposed to laugh at the joke, not explain it!"
"I hope I am not wasting my time explaining this to you..." The dragonborn went on. "Anyway, you get my point - the new skills you gain are added
in addition to those you already have. You neither gain more experience as a bard, nor gain all the experience of a fifth-level warlock."
"Okay, in this...
extremely hypothetical scenario you've come up with, that all makes perfect sense. So Erky is, what... 3 Cleric / 1 Barbarian, in this war game of yours?"
"No. A barbarian as recent as he is should not already possess the ability to command the spirits of goblins as he has already, not while also wielding magic as a cleric of the same strength. He and Zeke have unlocked something different. Something more powerful that we've seen only in individuals who have survived unimaginable duress."
"Who, Erky?" said Space Pants who, while a moment prior had something witty to say, changed his tune as he noticed the gnome speaking to the badger in private while the rest of them were huddled together. "Oh, he has no idea..."
"I've seen it in the badger's eyes, too," said Sergei. "Last evening, as he sat by the fire. He's known many people in his past, none of whom are here. He's an alien, alone and stranded on a world far behind his own technologically. By his account, this is not the first time this has happened."
"So, what does that mean? In '
game terms?'"
"It means that, rather than multi-classing by normal means, their overcoming of a great inner-turmoil has unlocked for them a power that we call the 'Gestalt multi-class.' Instead of adding new abilities to their existing repertoire, in a moment of great personal strife one might suddenly unlock all the features of another class, and gain the best of both."
"Soo, that means..."
"That means Erky is a cleric that gains a barbarian's vigor, a cleric's skills, and all the abilities of rage and spellcasting each has to offer. He's not a 3 Cleric / 1 Barbarian; He's a 4 (Cleric/Barbarian), with all the best features of both at each level."
"...That's cheating," said Edward. "I mean-- if we were playing a game, that is."
"Well, call it what you will, it is reality. And Zeke, our badger friend there... I watch him fight. He is Gestalt too. (Fighter/Rogue), at least a 10."
"Wait a minute," said the bard. "A 3 Cleric/1 Barbarian would still be considered a '4,' right? It evens out. But not with these Gestalts. A 4 (Cleric/Barbarian) is stronger than a '4,' right?"
"That is correct - it is not doubled, he would not be as strong as an '8.' Maybe a '5,' possibly even a '6' or so, it is difficult to gauge. But a '10,' like Zeke? Who knows? They get exponentially stronger the higher they go."
"So that means we'd better keep the dirt merchant on our good side," said Space Pants. "For now."
"It also means you've created a monster in Erky," said Sergei, "and maybe you should find a way onto
his good side before he grows too powerful for you to stop."
Edward and Space Pants both laughed in Sergei's face. "Hoo, boy!" said the cat. "You really had me goin' there, scalemaster. Can you even imagine, like, a Super Erky just going full scorched-Buzong on all of us? Wouldn't that be amazing?"
"I've been nice to him," said Meepo. "So, at least he'll probably kill me last."
"Hey, are we still trading?" Zeke waved over to the huddled group of adventurers.
"Oh, shoot! We forgot to talk about prices!" said ratNAROk. The barbarian hefted his silvered, masterwork greataxe, as the party lifted their heads from their huddle. "Aye, yes... How much would you be willing to accept for this as trade?"
"Ooh! Masterwork, silvered..." The badger nodded with appreciation. "Not magical, though. Hm, I gotta do some calculation here... It's still a long ways off from four thousand."
Bubb raised a metallic arm, pointed at Zeke, and cast Command: "Discount."
Zeke's mouth hung open for a moment. "
Two thousand." Then, six seconds later, the spell wore off. The badger shook his head and snarled. "Hey, are you casting spells on me?! Not cool!"
Just as it seemed a fight was about to break out, Bubb, Sergei, and Zeke suddenly settled down and relaxed, deciding all at once to be totally chill with one another. "Eh," said Zeke, "you know what? Forget it. Let's just move on."
"Yes," said Space Pants, a Subtle gleam in his eye. "Of course. Let us resume these negotiations with Calm Emotions."
"So back to my question," said ratNAROk. "Financing?"
"Ah, right. Um, what do you propose?"
"What's your rate?"
Zeke was starting to get annoyed. "The real question is, when am I going to see you guys again? It's not exactly easy to stay in contact in a world like this, so how do I know you'll ever get around to keeping up your payments?"
"Well, you would if you gave us a way to get back here, now wouldn't ye?" The barbarian pointed again at the teleporter on Zeke's belt. "Like one o' those?"
"Your
proposal is that I
give to you, for
free, a priceless device that should not even exist on this world, so you can pay off a loan for
another device that shouldn't exist on this world. That you're probably going to use to clobber people with."
"No, see, that's where you're wrong! I
am going to clobber people with it, as a certainty!"
"Give him 10% down and 4% on the big," said Space Pants. "Every day he doesn't see ya... Bigger."
"I'll give you 177 gold for that Nutcracker right now, what do you say?"
"...Uhm--"
"
Plus, the axe."
"...So--"
"
Plus, this platinum flute!"
Zeke waited to be sure the meadowguard was finished. "You might not like this, but the only way I could possibly consider a 'financing' option would be, as you say, if we had a way to get back in contact with one another, and that means first I'm going to have to sell you something that's pretty rare."
"Yes, with a teleporter!"
"No, with
this!" Zeke turned around and rummaged through the box Space Pants was digging in earlier. He eventually pulled out a device that looked just like the one on his belt that was playing music during battle. "Alright, check this out. This is what we call a
cell phone. Normally, these function with these big towers that you're never going to see on your world, but this particular model has a short-range function that lets it connect directly to your contacts so long as they're within a hundred miles!"
"What's a 'mile?'" said Edward.
"Oh, ah... shoot, what's your unit of measurement here? 'Urists?'"
"A hundred urists isn't very far," said Alefgard. "I could speak briskly at that distance and you'd hear me."
"Alright, well, whatever it is, it's a lot farther than that. Point is, I have one of these myself, so if I sell you this one, we'll be able to call each other up any time and arrange a meeting for your next payment. But I do need you to purchase this phone first - and I'm sorry, it feels smarmy for me to make you buy something else in advance, but that's the only way I could consider a financing option like you're proposing. Best I can do is be up front with you on that."
"Will you do financing on the phone?"
"...No, I can't do financing on the phone. Too easy for me to never see you again with that, not to mention it's too deep an investment for me."
"Aw, nuts. How much is it then?"
Zeke thought about it as he turned the phone over in his digging claws. "I would let this go... considering it's to do further business with you in the future... for five hundred gold."
"How many more phones do you have?" asked Space Pants. "In case we all want to call each other?"
"Just what I need," said Zumies. "Space Pants calling me in the middle of the night because he has a question."
"Is there a family plan?" asked Alefgard.
"Yes, sell us the family plan," added Space Pants.
"I had a friend back when I was a kid, named 'Spam,'" Zumies went on. "He used to bother me twenty-seven times a day. I beg of you, do not sell this man a phone."
"Guys, huddle!" ratNAROk called everyone together again. "This one's easy! We'll just sell his data and make our money back right quick!"
"What are you all talking about?!" cried Edward. "How do you guys already know how this thing works?"
"I only have two more for sale," Zeke blurted out, "besides my own. So there are four total cell phones in this entire world, and I currently own them all."
"...Family
discount?" said ratNAROk.
"That's a really bad deal for me, unfortunately. I'd like to spread my contacts wider than this one circle right here - to do that, I'd rather sell those phones to other people."
"I thought you said you were trying to keep this tech on the down-low," accused Alefgard. "Not spread it wider."
"W-- well... you never know! The right contacts lead to the right business, and you gotta learn to take risks."
"Well what is a good deal for you, huh Zeke?" Alefgard stood up from his chair, frustration unbidden.
Zeke took a breath. "
That's what I'm trying to find. If you can't do four thousand on the Nutcracker, then I'm willing to do financing -
provided we have a means of contacting each other. For that, I'm proposing the sale of this unique, one-of-a-kind communications device - it does other stuff too, I'll show you, it even has games - for a one-time fee of five hundred. I'd only like to sell you this one, if you want the other two they are full price. Once that is settled, then we can talk about financing your Nutcracker, and anything else here you find interesting but may be lacking the immediate funds for. Make sense?"
"This is exactly what I wanted to do with my night after work," grumbled Edward. "
Accounting."
"It's only 3:30!" said Zeke, checking the phone in his hand.
"What does that mean?!" yelled the bard.
"I-- it means... Don't worry about it, it's not that late!"
"Wait a minute," said Space Pants, his eyes lighting up with realization. "I could call Zeke at any time, about anything I want, and he has to pick it up?"
"Uhh, I don't
have to--"
"Guys," Space Pants said proudly, "You're all about to witness the invention of prank calling on Buzong Xömlox, the World of Typhoons!"
"And, now I'm definitely not going to."
"Look, all we need to do is bring this phone to an artificer, and we can get like six more, alright?" ratNAROk said sagely. "We just need one as a template."
"That's precisely what I
don't want to see you do with it," said Zeke.
"Boy, you count as well as Space Pants," said Meepo to ratNAROk.
"Noo, noo, that was spoken out-of-game," said ratNAROk.
"We're done with dragon games!" Edward was losing his mind. "We're not playing dragon games! Enough talking about games now, thank you!"
ratNAROk planted a chair firmly in the dirt and stood on top of it. "People! What I'm trying to say is, we can call this merchant up at any time! If we need to buy something, or if we need too much stuff we gotta sell, we can have all that on speed-dial! I think this is worth pooling our resources for, you dig?"
"Yeah, and he could come save us in a scrape," said Edward.
Zeke nodded. "If I'm in the area, I'll get to you as quick as I can to lend you a hand."
"
Or, we could call him, and pretend like we're someone else," said Space Pants, still workshopping his 'prank call' scheme.
"I will remind you there are exactly four phones in this entire world," said Zeke. "I think I'll be able to narrow it down."
"Make sure to call him to tell him his warranty is expired," said Zumies.
"You can use Meepo's share of the eight hundred from the eggs," said the kobold.
"Alright! Anybody else want to pitch in? Anyone?" Silence. "Come on," said the barbarian, "think about it! Phone? Merchant?" He gestured around to the wide dirt chamber around them. "Portable resting place? In the middle of a dungeon, we could have this place right here to stay, anywhere we want. What do you say?"
"Trade him the bag of holding," said Space Pants.
"No, we really need that," said Sergei.
"We've got the platinum flute!" said ratNAROk. "And my axe!"
"I'll give you 120 for the axe," Zeke said, getting tired of this nonsense.
"Okay! So that's three-hundred ninety and... hey, wait a minute! 120 is a terrible amount for this axe!"
"Not by my figure," the badger shrugged. "I've gotta make a profit somehow."
"Zeke is every miserly jerk I've ever dealt with in this realm," Alefgard muttered under his breath to Edward. "His stuff is so good, our stuff is garbage... He's basically James's Stop."
"Next he'll be asking us to preorder it," said the bard.
"Ach, if you're gonna go low on my axe, then I'm goin' low on your phone! I won't buy it for more than 300!"
"No."
"Yes," ratNAROk pressed, with Inspiration.
Zeke sucked in his breath, puffing out his chest as he did so. "Hmmm..."
"No."
"Man, you are impossible to beat."
Zeke was feeling a little winded. This had gone on long enough, and he hadn't moved any product yet. Though he may have been successful at holding his ground, Zeke had learned through experience that to truly be successful as a merchant, he had to know when to give in even when he thought he was winning in order to close a deal.
"...435."
"Sold," said ratNAROk.
"Cool. So, that platinum flute..." The badger looked it over. "Base quality, huh... still, that's easily a hundred gold, since it's platinum."
"Yep. Sold. Easy."
The badger and the mouse exchange gold and goods, and moments later, ratNAROk was holding a brand new, slightly-used cell phone.
"This is cool! I can't wait to see what it does!"
The barbarian flipped open the phone. There was a glowing screen inside displaying text in a language the mouse had hopelessly never seen before in his life.
"Uh... How do I... what do these buttons do..."
"Alright, lemme walk you through this. This button here--"
"Nuh uh. Mm-mm. Mm-mm. No. I don't want to know. Don't tell me."
"But-- at least let me show you how to call me!"
"No, no." ratNAROk held the phone out at arm's length like it needed its diaper changed. "I'm not smart enough for this. Someone else touch it."
"Give it to Alefgard," suggested Edward. "Or Space Pants, he's smart."
"Give the phone to Cutter," said Space Pants. The skeleton merely stared incomprehendingly at the device.
"Please, give the phone to Space Pants," said Meepo. "For all of us."
The bard said, "Wait, I take it back--"
"Here you go," said Zeke, handing the phone to Space Pants.
"Awesome." The meddling cat sorcerer stared at the fancy, futuristic device from another world. "Does this thing get long distance?"
"Again, how do you know how a phone works?!" said Edward.
"I don't," said Space Pants. "I mean, 'meow.'"
"Okay, so to call me, you gotta--"
"Show him," said Space Pants, pointing at Alefgard, "then he can tell me."
"...Fine," said the badger. Zeke did his best to walk Alefgard through the sequence of menus to find and call Zeke, but after three attempts, the wizard still wasn't getting it. Between the foreign language on the device, some unspoken standards on user interface that he did not grasp, and generally failing to comprehend how such a small device can do so much, the wizard's mind was fully blown.
"Don't worry," said Zeke, "I know it's a lot. Actually, I have a few scrolls over there that might be useful to you in bridging the gap between magic and technology."
"Not yet," said Alefgard. "This is a lot. One thing at a time."
Edward nudged Alefgard and said, "Don't forget to ask about the data plan!"
"How do
you know how it works?!" said Alefgard, calling Edward out.
"What I want to know," said Meepo, "is why are there are so many buttons on this phone, when there are only three other phones to call?"
"'Hello?'" said Alefgard. "Oh, sorry, wrong number, I meant to call '3,' who's this?"
"Zeke, I have a proposition," said Space Pants. "What are you doin' here, exactly? What's your thing?"
"Well, like I said before, I go around to ruins, dungeons, things like that, I find magic items, and I sell 'em."
"And then I mark them up eight million percent," sneered Alefgard.
"Well that's pretty much what we're doin'," said Space Pants. "You should just come with us. Only, we do some other stuff, too. Like Erky, here. He wears the skin of goblins."
"Sure,
so many goblins," said Erky, rolling his eyes.
"Don't listen to him. Ignore him, and you can just come with us, share the gold, be a part of the party... Erky can be your personal assistant."
The badger turned to the gnome. Erky looked at Space Pants, then at Zeke, and nodded. "Sure. We'll work out the deets later."
Zeke considered that, actually smiling for the first time in a while. "Y'know, I don't think I'm going to be making any more money off these goblins. I can't promise I'll stick with you long-term, but I can fight with you up to the tree. Eventually, I do need to break off and go find more stock to sell you guys, after all!"
"Hang on, hang on," said Space Pants. "There will be plenty of people to sell your goods to along the way. Plenty of 'em."
"Aren't we just going to kill them all?" said Bubb, in complete seriousness.
"Yes," said Space Pants, "but he can still sell them weapons first."
"To fight you with when you go to kill them? That sounds counterproductive," said Zeke.
Meepo replied, "But see, when we kill them and take their weapons back, we sell their weapons back to you, so you can sell them to somebody else for us to kill. It's an enterprise."
"No, listen." said Space Pants. "It's way simpler than that. You could come with us and sell your weapons, and we'll do whatever we want - we just travel alongside each other for protection. We'll help you acquire magic items to sell, and maybe from time to time you let us borrow them - because hey, the better we are at killin' stuff for you, the better loot we'll be able to find for you. How's that sound? Everybody wins."
"I will ask this in return," said Zeke. "Remember earlier, when I said I was looking for warriors to help take down my brothers and save my world from their corruption?"
"Oh, yeah, we'll kill them, no problem," said Space Pants. "We've killed at
least four people since we got here, we've got it covered. Look at Sergei, he's a dragon. That guy eats people."
"You keep spreading this falsehood," said Sergei. "Soon, it is going to stick."
"
No killing," said Zeke. "My blood is my blood. I won't be responsible for any of my brothers' deaths. Yes, they need to be stopped at all costs... but I must stop you from killing them if I'm able."
"Hold up, what are you dragging us into, cat?" said Edward. "You saw how powerful Zeke was! Zeke, how many brothers did you say you had?"
"Seven, not counting myself," said Zeke. "One of them isn't a threat... I think."
"
Seven?" said Edward. "If they're anywhere near as strong as you are, we are in deep."
"Are families usually that large on your world?" asked Alefgard.
"No, but... my father really wanted to spread his name around. He got what he wanted, I guess."
Meepo, already curled up for a nap in the corner, said, "Huh? Oh, sure, yeah, I'll go."
"You see that?" Space Pants pointed at Meepo. "You're lookin' at the king of the kobolds right here. See his crown?"
"Really?" Zeke cocked his head. "That's not what the kobolds upstairs told me."
"Uh oh," said Edward.
"Yeah, uh, which one was it... they've got so many weird names..." The badger cringed as he noticed Meepo. "I mean-- not weird, but I mean like-- ack, sorry, I didn't mean it like--"
Meepo sat up straight on the floor. "Who told you they were king?"
"Uh, what was his name... Magre? Yeah, Magre. That was it."
Space Pants turned to Meepo. "That don't sound like the name of the kobold you left in charge, is it?"
"It is not."
"Oh, that's not good for Magre."
"Magre." Meepo knew it, from the moment he'd dropped down that well he knew it would be Magre who would betray him. The head of Meepo's clan had always looked down on him. He was never going to submit to Meepo's rule. "Thank you, Zeke. I agree, Space Pants. We should go have a word with...Magre."
"Cutter," said Space Pants, "Here's what's gonna happen. Zeke's gonna tell you how to get upstairs. Once you get there, you're going to ask each kobold, 'Name?' and if they say 'Magre,' you stab them. You got it?"
"Uh, can that thing talk?" said Zeke.
"We'll give him a sign. Trust me, this is gonna work."
"Give him a little knapsack so Magre thinks we're sending him a gift," said Meepo.
"Ooh, great idea!" said Edward. "Then he could flip the sign around and it says, 'Meepo sends his regards.'"
"And then come back with Magre's eyeball in this pouch," said Space Pants, handing Cutter a leather pouch.
As soon as Zeke finished explaining where to go, Cutter left to go carry out his task. "Hah, yeah... great. I hope I'm not about to regret this."