Chapter 115: Cheese Morale
by‘I feel I was denied….critical…NEED TO KNOW…information.’
- Caddock, to the High Saint’s Council of Granesh.
“He tested three places last night.” The scout said, gesturing. “This one was the hardest hit, and where he slipped through. Their commander was known to have thought that Damage Chains were a waste of resources and invested more heavily in warriors and support staff.”
“I guess he learned his lesson,” Caddock mused, glancing over at a corpse wearing the gold tassels of a commander.
Caddock stood in front of a line of dead men, his eye twitching as his remaining scouts walked him through exactly how such a disaster could have happened.
“So judging by the angle everyone was flung compared to where they were standing, William Oh shot them from an angle, tracing the side of the mountain from there to there, starting further away and ending closer, to cluster the hits together so there was no warning.
“How fast would he have to be moving to make that work?” Caddock asked the obvious question.
“Ummm…fast. The difference between an arrow flight from five hundred yards and one hundred is only a few seconds.”
“If he could move that fast, why didn’t he just punch through the line before they had a chance to stop him?”
“It wasn’t him that moved that fast.” The older scout said, shaking his head. “Nobody saw the Deceiver blazing across the side of the mountain throwing arrowheads at them. It was an Ability.”
Caddock remembered the cannonball that had manifested out of nothing and caught him square in the chest.
“Ah.”
The Deceiver had used his rare and valuable dimensional storage Ability for the pedestrian purpose of launching hundreds of arrowheads in a very short time. Not to say it didn’t work.
“See if you can pin down how fast the thing launching arrowheads moved.” Caddock said to his scouts. He’d wager that would describe the boy’s Dimensional Storage’s maximum speed, which would be a nice thing for the church to know.
“Sir.” The second scout nodded, thinking for a moment before sprinting off to retrieve their logistician for his math skills.
“You see how the arrowheads fell right between these men’s footprints?” The scout said, moving past the line of dead men and pointing at a glittering triangle of Blessed Steel.
“The arrowheads had just barely enough energy to clear them?” Caddock asked, but even to him that sounded wrong.
“No, they were suspended in midair. Like someone used a ring of snaring to hold the arrowhead in place, and then drew the men’s bodies forward through the arrows,” The scout made a pulling motion before pointing at the line of corpses some eight feet from where they had stood in life. “Like cheese through a wire.”
“And the accuracy?”
Most of the hits were in the eye and face region, the blessed steel arrowhead punching through helmets and bone with equal ease.
“Ring of Accuracy? A good one. At least six degrees.”
The boy doesn’t have two hands for two rings to make a soft set…It’s part of the Dimensional Storage.
According to his timeline of reports from their battle, William oh started out very fast and adding a bit of lightning damage to his attacks, then when he was wounded, he slowed down a bit and gained lifesteal. A respectable amount that allowed him to shed minor wounds easily as he fought, and an absolutely devastating Hoarfrost debuff.
Then this. Accuracy and a devastating on-hit effect.
But he never switches backwards. Never changing back to something he had previously in short order. There’s some kind of cooldown. Not to mention, according to his dossier, he should be able take one out and put it on, since he didn’t have any kit when we caught him in the smithy.
…He can’t take them out. They’re not ‘stored’, they’re bound to his Dimensional Storage, absorbed by the Ability itself.
Each item he switched to had granted William Oh a massive, noticeable stat boost that anyone would arrange their entire Build around…like one might expect from rare mutated Relics or those from the Unreachable Floors.
How did a poor orphan boy get four rare and valuable Relics?
Caddock’s eyes widened.
He doesn’t have four incredibly powerful Relics in that Ability. The Dimensional Storage is boosting them.
A six-point ring of accuracy was nearly impossible to acquire, but a three point one? Expensive, but still a consumer item.
A single item that imposed sixty percent Hoarfrost that lasted ten whole seconds? Caddock had never seen one. Thirty percent for five? Not unheard of.
That’s how he’s doing it. Caddock nodded to himself. Even completely unarmed, William Oh should be considered to be wearing the equivalent of two or more identical Relics stacking their effects…Probably scaling with Acuity since the boy seems to be focusing on it.
This meant that any synergies the boy discovered could become wildly more powerful than they had any right to be, because they would be bouncing off an item that was boosted far beyond its original scope.
Caddock found a nearby rock and sat down, staring down over the slopes of the mountain.
William Oh had cut through the inner ring, but not the outer one.
He’s going to find a way to punch through sooner or later. Trying to pen him in with level fifteens just isn’t working.
They’d caught William Oh on his worst day: Out of Charge, out of Kit, and missing a hand.
And he still managed to get through.
Caddock hadn’t missed the massive chest that the kobold had shoved through the door. The ash concentrator had just been used, the glowing remnants of purified miasmatic ash caked on the bowl.
William Oh’s kit was inside that chest, baking with concentrated Deceiver ash.
Whatever came out of that chest was going to be powerful, whether it was a true Set, or simply a synergistic soft-set.
The Prophet was going through his Trial. He would likely wait for it to bake before donning the set himself. That would be the best way to carry it.
The Prophet would be strengthened by the Relics, but William Oh? He would become unstoppable if he met up with Jason Salazar and donned his Set.
I need to get to him before William Oh. Caddock knew in his heart that William Oh’s one goal was going to be to get that set back, and if Will got a lead on Caddock, he would never catch up. Caddock needed a head-start.
Caddock acknowledged the fact that this army of level fifteens wouldn’t be able to stop him, but they might slow him down long enough so that Caddock could head him off…At the cost of many lives.
For the actual act of finishing him, I need a Party of my peers. Level fifty and up. Saints. None of these rosy-cheeked level fifteens.
The problem was, these people were rare, and entrenched in church politics, such that trying to requisition a Party of them to hunt down a single Deceiver would be met with gales of laughter.
…had he not stolen the Prophet, destroyed Laniston, and killed nearly a hundred soldiers in a matter of seconds.
I need to get moving.
“Hiro.” Caddock said, rising to his feet.
“Sir.” Hiro said, nodding.
The story has been taken without consent; if you see it on Amazon, report the incident.
“I’m leaving.”
“Sir?” Hiro asked, frowning.
“I want you to work together with our beancounter to build a nation here. A nation called ‘Keep William Oh Inside This Line.’”
“Umm.”
“Your role is to not allow the commanders to get any bright ideas. All they need to do is maintain the integrity of their defense. Tried and true, basic siege tactics. Staggered, flexible lines, harriers keeping his charge Low.”
“…How long?” Hiro asked.
“Until William Oh escapes or I come back and give the all-clear.”
“Yessir.”
Caddock moved to turn away before pausing and returning his gaze to Hiro.
“Your biggest challenge is going to be keeping morale strong. They’re already tired, feet hurt, wondering why their commanders are ordering them to just waste their time standing in place rather than doing anything. Not to mention that while I’m gone, a few of them are going to die every day as William Oh tests the fence. That’s going to make their attitude sour damn quick.”
“I can handle it, sir.” Hiro said.
“Cheese.” Caddock said.
“Eh?”
“There’s a town a little ways to the southeast that produces the most amazing truffle cheese you’ve ever tasted.”
“Sir?”
“The High Saint’s Council has a reserve there for their gatherings. Acquire it for the men. Should buy you a day or two of morale.”
“Understood.”
“…Maybe some hookers while you’re at it.” Caddock mused to himself.
Hiro choked on his own spit for a moment, coughing and nodding.
Caddock put a hand on Hiro’s shoulder.
“Try not to die.”
Hiro straightened. “Yessir.”
“May Granesh be with you.” Caddock said.
***William Oh***
What the Abyss? Will thought, frowning as he studied the two-story gazebos from his vantage point high on the mountain.
Over the last week, there had been a flurry of building in the line surrounding the mountain, and Will had assumed they were temporary fortifications meant to slow him down. Not that they would, but that’s what Will had assumed they were building.
Nope. It was gazebos and furniture.
There were currently hundreds of men on break sitting under the eaves, enjoying a respite from the sun, a cool breeze, and being served bread and marbled cheese by young women.
Will could smell it from here.
Smelled pretty damn good.
“You…bastards.” Will growled. Partly because he hadn’t eaten anything better than tree bark and twigs in days, but mostly because it revealed their plan.
They were getting comfortable. Settling in for the long haul. Outwaiting him.
Will could survive as long as he wanted. There was plenty of treebark and muddy rainwater to allow that. Aspect didn’t mind.
But starving him out wasn’t their goal. They were investing a lot of effort in buying time rather than trying to seize him by brute force, but it wasn’t to finish him off.
Because they knew they couldn’t.
I haven’t seen the big one since the fire.
Will’s eyes widened.




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