<Isra can’t hear that,> said Alfric. <Isra, Mizuki just raised her hand.>
<Thank you,> came Isra’s disembodied voice.
<Naps are traditional in Kiromo,> said Mizuki. <I don’t actually know why, but that’s what Grandpa said. I like to take catnaps.>
<That’s fine,> said Alfric. <If you think someone might be asleep, a soft whisper to check is good. Additionally, I think it would be good for us to have a daily check-in, if we’re not all together in person, just so we all know each other’s plans.>
<Ugh,> said Mizuki.
<I agree,> said Hannah. <Ugh.>
<Fine, fine,> said Alfric. <But maybe if we’re all in different hexes.>
<Will we be?> asked Mizuki. <Ever?>
<Scattering to the six winds seems unlikely,> said Verity. <But if it happens, yes, we can do check-ins.>
<I think that’s all I have for now,> said Alfric.
<Just try not to be annoyin’,> said Hannah. Some people had trouble with that. Mizuki was the obvious contender, but she had sweet kind of annoyingness to her, a little-sister quality. It seemed more likely that someone else would get on their collective nerves without even realizing it.
<Goodbye,> said Isra, and that, at least, had a note of finality.
“I kind of wanted to play with it more,” said Mizuki. Besides Isra, they were all sitting in the dining room together, with the remains of their lunch in front of them. “It’s been a bit.”
“Well, it’s not for playin’ with,” said Hannah. “Though I suppose it might have been good to set aside some time for it, to get it out of your system. That’s what they do for the fresh little acolytes.”
“You know I’m the oldest one here, right?” asked Mizuki. “And I have been in a party before, it’s just been a few years.”
“So long as we’re not using the channel to do music,” said Verity with a sigh. “I have nightmares of playing with a quintet and having the people sitting next to me talking into my ear while I’m trying to play.”
“Actual nightmares?” asked Mizuki.
Verity nodded. “There was a lot of pressure. It’s part of why I live here now. There’s no one at the Fig and Gristle that pushes me to do more, or do better, or sing differently, or add more effects. Everything is on my own terms.”
“I can see why you didn’t want to do dungeons,” said Mizuki. “I mean, also the risk of being killed.”
“There wasn’t any pressure in the dungeon,” said Verity. “Or… the pressure was for something, it wasn’t just someone trying to squeeze me because they thought I needed squeezing, it was me trying my best to give you all what you needed. And in that sense, it was rewarding, I suppose.”
“Part of a party is trust,” said Alfric. “We trust you to do your part, and to have a good understanding of what’s best in any circumstance. The plan right now is to head southwest as soon as we have armor and the channel, do the dungeon in Traeg’s Knob, then continue on to Liberfell, which I’ll do with Isra, and whoever else wants to come with. It would make sense to do the Liberfell dungeon, but it’s a larger city, and that means more rogue mana, and I’d like another five or so easy ones before we make an attempt at Liberfell or Tarchwood or someplace bigger.”
“While we’re in Liberfell, we’ll want to get somethin’ to capture beasts,” said Hannah. “Or at least some pots to put live plants in. Isra may not be able to soothe the monsters, but she can help with anythin’ else, to see whether it’s worth it to take out, or safe.” She nodded to herself. “We’ll take the storage book in, naturally, which can probably help. Have we tested whether things can live in it?”
“I put in a grasshopper,” said Alfric. “When I pulled it out an hour later, it was dead. I tried again by putting a grasshopper in a bottle with a cork in it, and it was fine. I think it continues to live in there, so if we put an animal in, it’s just a question of whether it has enough food and air.”
“A ventstone then?” asked Hannah. “Those are pricey.”
“Do I need to be here for this?” asked Verity. “I was going to go practice my music for a bit and get ready for my session at the Fig and Gristle tonight.”
“You’re still going there?” asked Alfric.
“Yes,” said Verity. “It’s where I went off to last night.”
“You don’t need the money,” said Alfric.
“That’s right,” Verity said. “But I feel some obligation to Cynthia, and I enjoy playing for a crowd, knowing that I’m making their lives a little better for as long as the tune stays in the air.” She shrugged. “I’m not going to give it up just because I have more money than I need. It was never really about the money, it was just a comfortable place to play some songs.”
“Do you mind if I come by?” asked Alfric.
“Of course not,” said Verity. “But… why?”
“I enjoy your music,” said Alfric. “And that way I can take a break from relying on Mizuki for food.”
“I really don’t mind,” said Mizuki. “Except for chopping veggies, cooking for more people isn’t actually all that much more work.” She looked at Verity. “Do you prefer to eat before or after?”
“After,” said Verity. “I play better when I’m a bit hungry.”
“Then I’ll have something for you in the chiller,” said Mizuki with a nod.
“I have a standing offer from Cynthia for food,” said Verity. “There’s usually something left at the end of the dining hours anyway.” She paused. “Thank you for the offer, though.”
“Why don’t we all go?” asked Hannah. “Make a night of us, the three of us together, listenin’ to Verity? I don’t think I’ve heard many of her tavern songs.”
“I suppose,” said Mizuki. “You would all tell me if you didn’t like my cooking, right?”
Alfric laughed. “Mizuki, the food you cook is on par with actual professional cooking in Dondrian. If you wanted to stop being a sorcerer, you could legitimately make it as a professional chef.”
Mizuki blushed. “Well, I guess. But I think I would end up hating it, if I was forced to do it every day. Instead, I choose to do it every day.”
“It was the same with me and music,” said Verity. “I love music, plucking the strings, finding melodies, and even the magical aspects of it, but when it was an obligation, I felt like hanging myself from the rafters.” She paused. “Sorry if that was too morose.”
“You let us know if you ever need some time,” said Hannah. “Alfric has a notion to push us through the dungeons, and I think there might be somethin’ to that, but we don’t want you hatin’ the party. We want you to be happy you’re goin’ on trips with us.”
“Personally,” said Mizuki, “I think it would be great to go into a dungeon if we didn’t have to worry about the monsters. Wouldn’t it be nice if you could just waltz in, pick up some new entads, then waltz out?”
“But then everyone would do it,” said Alfric.
“Och,” said Hannah. “You’re not one of those that thinks the Editors made the dungeons full of monsters on purpose, are you?”
“Well, I don’t know about that,” said Alfric. “But I do think that the way things are has a certain, I don’t know. Niceness to it?”
“The monsters are nice to you?” asked Mizuki. “The ones that tried to rip you up and claw your face?”
“Well, yes,” said Alfric. “The dungeons are wild. They’re one of the only wild places left in the entire world. Everything has been mapped and tamed, except for the north. The beastmasters will track and find anything that’s all that dangerous, we have programs for keeping things contained and safe, it’s been a century since we’ve had a war… but the dungeons are the one place none of that is true. And if you could just go in and grab what was there without a fight, without risk, then I don’t know. I don’t think I would be so enamored.”