Apparently, Sera did, too; she settled into a fighting stance that I’d seen both my mother and Tristan demonstrate, but I’d never learned. It was a high stance, with the sword raised above the head and the blade pointed toward the enemy. It looked impractical.
I was using a stance built for dueling canes, knees bent with the tip of the blade pointed directly toward the closest slime’s center of mass.
This was, of course, even less practical. Unlike a dueling cane, this sword didn’t have a rune to send a blast of energy out of the tip.
In short, we probably shouldn’t have been using weapons.
Jin stepped up to my left side. He hadn’t drawn any weapon at all.
I turned and gave him an expectant glance as the slimes slowly lumbered toward us.
He shrugged. “Don’t have a sword.”
Two pistols were clearly visible on his belt. I didn’t bother to point that out.
Okay, Jin. Have it your way.
I wasn’t going to wait until those things got close enough to swing at.
Stepping forward, I brought my sword up and back down in a diagonal slash and pushed the blade’s mana forward. The shockwave closed the distance in a second, cutting a deep gouge into the closest slime’s gelatinous body.
That didn’t slow it down, though.
Sera hit it next. Not with the sword, but with a rain of icy knives that manifested at her whispered word. That slime collapsed, falling still, but didn’t vanish.
The next closest slime crashed into it — and stretched out over it.
I blinked. “Is it…eating the other slime?”
I got my answer a moment later when top slime melted into the bottom one, causing it to swell in size. Then it started moving again, and considerably faster.
“That’s bad,” Sera mumbled. “Okay, Plan B. Hit it harder.”
I nodded, pointing with my demi-gauntlet and rapidly sending several surges of mana into it. I blasted the slime with a half-dozen globes of energy, tearing off bits of goo with each burst. I’d damaged it, but nowhere near enough.
Sword reach. I swung, but a pair of gelatinous spikes shot out of the creature’s side and deflected my blade. I barely had time to widen my eyes and side-step as more spikes shot out, piercing the air where I’d been standing a moment before.
Sera jabbed Selys-Lyann into the creature’s side, leaving an icy wound.
The slime shivered, tiny drops of slime raining everywhere, before firing a sustained barrage of gelatinous spines in Sera’s direction.
She didn’t move. Instead, she said, “Wall,” and any icy barrier sprung up in front of her, blocking the spines.
I took advantage of the distraction to run away.
Or, more accurately, to run toward the single isolated slime that was still half a room away from us. The two merged slimes were clearly much stronger, and I didn’t need this thing getting any more powerful from merging with a third slime.
I assaulted it with a series of quick cuts, the transference aura around my blade parting slime easily with each motion.
It didn’t take long for my barrage of slashes to wear the creature down. There was no obvious core — no vital organs — but once I’d slashed away enough of the creature’s mass, it collapsed like the previous one had. It looked almost like it was deflating. I hit it a few more times before it finally vanished, leaving a single green gem behind.
I ducked to grab the gemstone with my free hand and headed back toward Sera.
The merged slime had smashed through Sera’s wall, and she’d maneuvered around it to strike it with several more cuts. Three spears pierced through it into the stone floor, but they failed to pin it down. It simply tore through its own mass to surge toward her.
Sera stepped backward, slicing off a pair of encroaching spines, but it was closing the distance too fast. It would be on top of her in moments.
I poured mana into my gauntlet, sending a surge of transference mana. I’d hoped to knock the creature back, but it didn’t have the intended function.
Instead, it blasted a huge hole right through the slime’s center of mass.
The creature froze in place for an instant, giving Sera much-needed time to reorient and retreat.
Then the slime surged toward me absurdly fast, leaving an acidic trail in its wake.
I didn’t have time to dodge to the side, and I knew another slash wouldn’t be sufficient to stop it.
And so, with all the athleticism of a student who spends most of his time reading and enchanting, I tried to jump through the hole in the creature’s center.
To my credit, I almost made it.
My feet caught on the bottom of the hole, flipping me forward onto the stone floor. I hit the ground hard, the jolt of pain forcing me to drop my sword. My feet were stuck inside the slime; immobile, but fortunately not yet burning.
My shield sigil had activated, and it was repelling the acidic goop, but the slime was looming over me and about ready to crash down and crush me to a pulp.
A blur of movement. First from a humanoid figure in front of me, then the slime behind me.
I felt a tug on my feet as the slime wrenched backward, and then I was free.
I rolled over to find the slime flying backward, as if shoved by a giant hand, and then exploding when it hit the rear wall of the chamber.
Two more green gems fell to the floor as remaining slime goop vanished.
And, weirdly, a pickaxe also appeared amongst the slime’s remains.
Derek was standing over me, grinning broadly. He reached down to offer me a hand, which I grudgingly accepted.
“Not a bad jump there. It was a good reflex, even if it didn’t quite work. You kids did good for your first fight in here.”
I winced. “Thanks, I guess.”
He sounded genuine enough, but I couldn’t help but assume he was probably being snide about the whole thing. Maybe I was just too biased in my assumptions about his motives, though.
I reached down and picked up my sword, sheathing it and pointing at the pickaxe. “That’s a little weird.”
“Oh, that?” Derek walked over and picked up the pickaxe. “It’s for breaking stone.”
I sighed. “I know what a pickaxe is. I just was surprised to see one falling out of a slime?”
He laughed. “The tower provides. If there’s a need for a specific tool to solve a certain puzzle, or if there’s a secret passage nearby that a tool could help us find, you’ll find that tool somewhere. In this case, we’ll probably find a hollow wall—”
“Here.” Vera tapped a wall on the eastern side of the room. “Thinner than the ones in the other room and no mechanism on the other side.”
Derek turned to Vera. “Nice! I’d usually have to tap on every wall to hear what sounds hollow. Believe me, that’s a pain. You’re going to be very useful.”
He walked over to the wall, ignoring the green gems — and, by my logic, tacitly giving me permission to take them immediately.
I picked up the gems, and then handed them to Sera. “You did the heavy lifting on the big one. You should probably take these.”
She waved a hand. “Nah, aren’t those mana crystals? I can’t use them like you can.”
I shrugged. “They’re worth money, though.”
“I’m sure I’ll find something else in here I can actually use. You should hold onto those for an emergency.”
I nodded at the logic, tucking them away with the other one. Then, after thinking for a second, I pulled one back out. “Vera, can you check what these do?”
She accepted the gemstone. “Life mana crystal, class 3.”