The Unwanted Undead Adventurer: Volume 8 Read online




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  Chapter 1: The State of Maalt

  Wolf asked me to help search for thralls and vampires.

  “I don’t mind, but are you sure?” I replied.

  “Sure about what?” he asked and cocked his head.

  “You know I’m a vampire. Not that I had anything to do with this chaos, but don’t you worry I might join their side?”

  That seemed like a normal concern to have, and Wolf said, “Well, maybe it’s not impossible.”

  “In that case—”

  “But from what I can see, it’s not happening.”

  Now I was the one who was confused.

  “Did you already forget why I wanted you to join the guild staff?” he said with a sigh. “Simply put, I value all the work you do for this city and its adventurers. I know how much good you’ve done. These guys are just trying to destroy the place, so I don’t see why you’d work with them, fellow vampire or not. It’s obvious. Am I right?”

  I was a little surprised. I did get the feeling that he thought a lot of me, but I didn’t think it went that far. Maybe I just had a low opinion of myself. It seemed unusual for a guildmaster to pay such attention to each individual adventurer, though. Wolf was just special.

  And he was right. All I felt when I saw Maalt like this was anger. It wasn’t the biggest or best city, but the peaceful lives of its people were being ruined for probably selfish reasons. I loved this town, its adventurers, and its citizens. Seeing it like this was nothing but enraging.

  “You’re absolutely right,” I said to Wolf. “Got it. I’ll join the search. Can I decide where to go, though?”

  Those decisions were usually made by the guild for the sake of efficiency. They didn’t always operate that way, but Wolf was a competent and rational guildmaster. I presumed he would prioritize productivity.

  “Fine with me. Got any place in mind?” he responded promptly, contrary to expectations.

  “Yeah, sort of. Besides that, there’s the fact I’m a vampire to worry about. If I work with other adventurers, they might get suspicious of me.”

  “Right, makes sense. Well, I’m sure you can handle yourself, but be careful out there. Now get going!”

  I dashed from the office and out onto the city streets.

  ◆◇◆◇◆

  I ran through the town with my destination already decided. The city was in a dire state, so I took a look around to get a grasp of the situation first, but I had come back to Maalt for Edel, so he was my priority. I’d only waited as long as I did because I had confirmed he was alive and in a place where he would likely be safe for a bit.

  Unlike other monsters, the undead could survive and recover from any amount of damage so long as their head remained intact, so I knew Edel would be okay. I was a bit afraid to test that by blowing my own head off to see if I could revive, but maybe even that was possible after enough time. I had no desire to try it out, though.

  As for where I was going, it was Maalt’s Second Orphanage. That was the home of Alize, Lillian, and the other orphans, as well as Edel’s base of operations. I got a reading from Edel, and it was coming from there. He still seemed to be unconscious, but he was alive, so he was at least fine in some sense. I also wanted to know if Alize, Lillian, and the orphans were safe.

  I rushed through town until I arrived at the orphanage. I saw people scrambling around on the way there, and I helped some who were stuck under debris, but I didn’t see any vampires or thralls. Helping people didn’t take too much time. This body made it pretty easy to move heavy objects and avoid harm. It was like nothing I could have imagined in the past.

  I thought the changes to my senses might help locate vampires and thralls, but that proved difficult. They seemed to be concealing themselves with magic like Wolf mentioned, including their scent. I was personally so dry that I didn’t have much of a smell, but some thralls were supposed to be more damp than others. I’d heard they could smell pretty nasty if they didn’t get enough nutrition, but I’d never tested to see if that was true myself.

  In any case, I didn’t take the time to use the knocker. I threw the orphanage door open and stepped inside.

  “Rentt?!” Alize cried.

  She was standing right at the entrance with her wand in hand, pointing it straight at me. I guess she was trying to protect the orphanage as best she could. Lillian stood next to her with a spear at the ready. She was a plump middle-aged woman, but her stance had the mark of combat expertise. Maybe she actually knew how to fight. I never got that sense from her when she was sick and lying in bed, but looking at her now, it seemed likely. It was as if she had lived through her fair share of battles.

  “Alize, Lillian, you’re safe?” I asked.

  Alize ran up to me and clung to my hips. “I was scared,” she said. I stroked her head.

  Lillian approached me next. “We heard about the thralls, so we’ve been defending ourselves here. I can use divinity, so perhaps I should be going out to hunt them, but I do have orphans to look after.”

  I didn’t know exactly how powerful Lillian was, but I knew she had a fair amount of divinity in addition to the signs of combat experience I could identify. Maybe she would be more than a match for the thralls, but this situation was a little unique.

  “Even if the children would be safe without you, I don’t think you should go out there,” I said.

  “Why not?”

  “I don’t know how much you’ve heard, but the thralls seem to be disguising themselves as humans. You won’t be able to find them easily.”

  If not for that, each of the churches could have sent out their divinity users to make quick work of the monsters. But since their locations were unknown, having adventurers meticulously search the city to root them out was more efficient.

  Besides, divinity users could vary. Lillian could use a weapon and defend herself, but most weren’t like that. The majority just went from town to town to provide blessings and had guards do the fighting for them. With the city in such chaos, sending them out didn’t sound like such a good idea. If this city lost some saints, it would probably be a nightmare down the road.

  “They’re in disguise?” Lillian asked. “Can they not be detected with divine arts?”

  “I don’t know precisely how much divine arts can do, but would you be able to detect a thrall from within a crowd?” If she could, it’d be nice if she would. Either that or she could teach me how to do it. If it was easy enough, I could try it myself.

  “It would be hard to do on such a large scale. I could do it, but it would severely exhaust me. If there are a lot of them to find, I don’t think there is much I can do.”

  In the end, it sounded like the adventurers’ search would be more efficient. The certainty she could have provided might’ve helped, but this was such an emergency that the searchers could get by with just tearing suspects’ clothes off. There was no need to make her go out there. Besides, Lillian had a responsibility to protect this orphanage.

  “So it seems,” I said. “Are all the orphans safe?”

  “Yes. Alize volunteered to help defend the orphanage with the magic she learned, but there have been no invaders as of yet.”

  “That’s good. Do you know what it’s like under the orphanage?”

  I asked because that was where Edel was. Alize and Lillian both knew he lived there too.

  “You want to know about Edel?” Alize asked, still clinging to me but looking up at my face. “Oh right, I haven’t seen him. At a time like this, you’d think he’d be crawling out to talk with the other mice.”

  I knew that Edel’s mouse communication network w
as vast and that the mice frequently spoke to each other. This seemed like the perfect time to take advantage of that, so it was strange he hadn’t been seen anywhere.

  “I’ll go check the basement. I think you two would be better off hiding further inside. If something happens, shout for me. I’ll run up here right away,” I said and then headed to the basement.

  ◆◇◆◇◆

  “Hey, Edel!” I yelled as I entered the basement.

  Five mice scurried up to me. They were the henchmice who’d attended Edel on our first encounter. Maybe it was because they served Edel, or maybe my power had an influence on them, but they were somewhat smarter than the average puchi suri. They understood human words and emotions to some extent. When they gathered around me, I knew something had happened.

  “Where’s Edel?” I asked. One of the mice walked off to the side, wanting me to follow. The basement wasn’t that big, but it was packed with things and a bit hard to navigate. I stepped around the junk in my path as I followed the mouse to a black puchi suri lying near the wall. It was Edel.

  “Hey!”

  I hurried over and laid a hand on him. He looked dead, but he clearly wasn’t. Still, I didn’t know exactly what kind of state he was in. I could feel him breathing and didn’t see any noteworthy injuries. Although, it was questionable as to how much breathing meant to the undead. I breathed, but mostly just to blend in. I sometimes noticed I would stop breathing in tough situations, so I knew this couldn’t be too rough for Edel. He just seemed to be unconscious.

  I thought it might be safe to force him awake, so I sent mana and spirit flowing into him. It looked like he was lacking in both. The great distance I’d traveled might have weakened the supply of energy I sent him. I didn’t know for sure, but I could ask once he was awake.

  “Sqreak!” Edel cried as he abruptly opened his eyes and got up. He looked around warily until he saw me and relaxed. Something strange must have happened if he was so on edge, but I didn’t know what.

  Edel read my thoughts and communicated his own through images. In my mind I could vividly see what he had seen. The number of things Edel could do kept increasing. I didn’t remember him being able to do this before, but I appreciated having such an exemplary familiar.

  “Is this a dungeon? The Water Moon Dungeon? No, the New Moon Dungeon?” I wondered aloud.

  This image was probably from the perspective of one of Edel’s henchmice. It was less agile than he was. It didn’t act much smarter than a typical mouse either. It zigzagged around needlessly, but it was certainly heading somewhere.

  Then I saw someone. That would have been fine, except that this person was biting an adventurer’s neck, blood dripping from his mouth. When he spotted the mouse, he said it wasn’t nice to watch. Then he unleashed flames and the image went dark. The mouse probably died, sadly. I could feel Edel’s rage at the death of his ally.

  I wondered who this person was. I knew he was a vampire, considering he was sucking blood. This wasn’t anyone I knew, though. There were a few people whom I suspected of being vampires, but he wasn’t one of them. Despite that, I felt like I had seen him somewhere before, or heard his voice.

  That’s when I recalled a singular, brief memory. It was from one of the times I explored the New Moon Dungeon. I was hunting orcs, and as I left the dungeon, I passed by someone. His voice had been exactly like this vampire’s. I was surprised to remember him in Maalt so long ago, but I also recalled that this was around the time new adventurers began to disappear. Suddenly, it all started to make sense. I met him not far from where the novice adventurers Raiz and Lola were fighting when I first saw them. I thought maybe our encounter was a coincidence, but considering his true nature, maybe he was targeting those two. But my presence there made him fear exposure, so he didn’t do anything...or something like that. If so, Raiz and Lola lucked out. At any rate, now I knew the identity of the vampire and likely the culprit behind the missing adventurers as well.

  I had to report this to the guild, but I didn’t know where that vampire was, with my only guess being the New Moon Dungeon. I asked Edel, but he said he didn’t know. From the images he showed, he couldn’t catch the exact location in the end. Considering that the shock of watching through that mouse’s eyes as it died made him pass out, it was to be expected.

  I didn’t know exactly how to handle this. If I just went and told people there was a vampire in the New Moon Dungeon, it would sound sketchy. Besides, I had no way of knowing if he was still there. I needed something more convincing.

  “What’s that? You have a good idea where the thralls are, you say?” I asked Edel. He responded affirmatively.

  According to him, mice were informing him of bizarre acts being committed all around town, everything from loitering to arson. They were probably seeing thralls. Most of Edel’s henchmice weren’t especially strong the way Edel was, so they couldn’t defeat monsters, but they could at least keep an eye on them.

  In that case, maybe it would be best to first clear out all the thralls from the city. Vampires had the ability to produce more thralls, but they couldn’t do it easily. It wasn’t like baking a cake. Even that could take a while, but making a monster took even longer. First they needed humans to use as a base, then they had to suck the blood out of them and replace it with some of their own. But even then, they had to wait a while before the person became a thrall. They had to ferment first, to put it in a not-so-funny way.

  It took a long time for humans to become monsters, which is why people would say to burn any suspicious corpses on sight. Even if they were in the middle of turning into a thrall, burning them to ash before the process finished would destroy them. There were exceptions to this, though. Vampires could instantly create thralls too, but it cost them a lot of energy. I didn’t know whether it was their mana or blood that was the problem, but it didn’t matter so much.

  If Wolf was right and there were close to a hundred thralls around, then they couldn’t have been made just now. They had to have been produced over a long time and hidden away. This wasn’t possible in a matter of hours, but if he had weeks, he could have made a hundred thralls.

  “All right, guess I’ll start with the thralls. But that vampire might have left the New Moon Dungeon and returned to town too. If I find him, let’s make him our priority,” I told Edel, who agreed. He was always dependable, not to mention extremely convenient to have around. “Can I have you watch over the orphanage too? If any thralls come, warn Lillian and Alize as soon as possible.”

  He told me he would, so that was one concern taken care of. Now I could go thrall hunting with no regrets. Well, first I needed to tell Lillian and Alize that Edel’s henchmice would be standing watch around the orphanage.

  ◆◇◆◇◆

  “I see, that’s greatly appreciated. Thank you,” Lillian said when I told her. “But is this a safe way to use familiars? I’m not an expert, but I’ve heard you can’t control so many monsters at once.” She wasn’t concerned about whether they would do the job but about whether they would obstruct the thrall hunt somehow.

  “I only really control Edel, and he controls the others. He seems to have a ton of henchmice, so they can do multiple jobs at once,” I said.

  “I see, so you indirectly have power over all these monsters, in a way.”

  I guess Lillian thought I was a monster tamer. She looked impressed. I didn’t know anything about them myself, so this could have been perfectly normal for monster tamers as far as I knew. Maybe there were monster tamers doing the same thing as me, and if so, then they must have had insane information-gathering skills. But I preferred to think that this ability was unique to Edel. Still, I figured it would be a good idea to learn something about monster taming eventually. I could have asked my dad about it, but he wasn’t exactly normal either. I wanted to find some ordinary monster tamer to acquaint myself with.

  “This is one of my secrets, so please don’t tell anyone.”

  ◆◇◆◇◆

>   I left the orphanage and ran through the city. Edel was sitting on my shoulder and directing me toward any suspected thralls. He received that information by viewing images through the eyes of his henchmice stationed throughout Maalt. Or so I assumed, but I wasn’t receiving the same information and couldn’t say for sure. Trying to look at all that myself sounded pretty brutal. He showed it to me for just a bit as a test and it took a lot out of me, so I didn’t feel like trying it myself.

  On the other hand, Edel had an easy time with it. It felt kind of weird that he had some abilities greater than his master’s, but that could happen with familiars. My dad had a familiar who could fly, but he couldn’t fly on his own. As far as I knew, at least. I couldn’t rule it out, but I’d be pretty shocked to see wings sprout from my middle-aged dad’s back. I guess I could do something similar, though. Anyway, from that perspective, Edel’s range of skills wasn’t that strange. I was the stronger fighter, so we complemented each other in that way.

  I was surprised by just how many puchi suri there were all over the city. I’d never thought much about it, but now I was seeing them on every street corner and in every nook and cranny. Edel was probably seeing through their eyes. Having so many eyes everywhere certainly made it easier to find thralls.

  Edel squeaked at me when we neared a crowd. The first thrall seemed to be here, but as I got closer, I realized that this would be pretty difficult. This was the town square, but it looked like the townspeople were using it as a gathering place for those fleeing from the fires. There were a lot of people around, and I couldn’t tell who was a thrall at a glance. They were presumably using magic to disguise themselves, so there was no way for me to recognize them. But Edel seemed to know. He telepathically told me who the thrall was.

  It was a man sitting on the fountain in the middle of the town square. He had a beard but otherwise didn’t stand out much from the crowd. He was wary of his surroundings, but so was everyone else who had just fled from the fires. I doubted anyone would believe he was a thrall, but Edel guaranteed me that he was. If so, there was something I had to do.