Chapter 15

Chapter 15

Summoning was a bitch and a half.

Imagine reaching up, grabbing a fistful of hair, then pulling away from yourself slowly, deliberately, every singular pinprick of detaching follicles popping out a reminder of what you were doing. Now imagine that feeling over your entire body. Little bits of yourself tearing away to create something entirely new.

Well, almost entirely new.

By the time it was done, I was a sweat-covered, heaving mess, only partially able to remember why Id thought putting myself through this was worth doing. And as far as I could tell, the process failed. There was nothing but me and the empty clearing.

I pulled the neck of my hoodie up to wipe the still flowing sheet of sweat from my forehead. It might be time to call this particular venture. I hadnt exactly come away with the Master Sword, but Id found some supposedly valuable alchemical components and nearly doubled my level.

When I let my now soaked collar drop from my eyes, I found a spiky hazel face staring back at me.

Meat?

Jesus Christ! I fell back on my hands, scrambling away.

What the actual fuck, Awareness?

This flower was taller than the others by about a foot, its face larger and more perfectly circular. Its vines were a muted green. But the most significant difference was the dark violet petals that tapered from nearly black to violet. It dipped away from me with a hiss, its posture and expression a mix of confusion and fear.





That was interesting. Possibly why it had escaped notice in the first place. In my experience, summoner classes werent the most exciting to play in RPGs. Either the pets did next to nothing, requiring the summoner to dual-spec to achieve any real damage, or they did all the damageoften while you played something else on your phone. The difference here seemed to be that its stats would reflect my own. Though I wasnt certain how intelligent I wanted a flower with a taste for human flesh to be.

I glanced up from the system text to watch my summon. It had wandered a small distance away and was poking at one of the fallen flowers with an errant vine. I kept my distance, taking an indirect path for a better look.

The flower was bent over, its face scrunched in concentration. It grabbed one of the smaller flowers and shook it gently, then harder.

Not very useful, if it cant tell the difference between a live enemy and a dead one.

I bent down to get a better look. Immediately, vines dragged the fallen flower away from me. My summon hissed aggressively.

This was a problem if it was going to be territorial.

Then it spoke. Not meat. Visit no(v)eLb(i)n.com for the best novel reading experience

Oh. Oh.

Not meat. I repeated, trying to convey that I understood.

This was only partially a lie.

I had no intention of throwing away my only summon. I was about to push further into the dungeon, after all. It was pragmatism. I had to use what I had, and falling back on keening morality in the midst of this situation was foolishness.

But there was something distinctly unpalatable about the idea of enslaving a creature intelligent enough to speak and forcing it to do my bidding. That was a dodgy proposition on any metric, moral or otherwise. If it refused, Id make ample use of Suggestion for the remainder of my venture, then release it on this floor on my way out. No matter how useful it was.

There had to be lines. Even for me. Perhaps especially for me.

The flower seemed to come to a decision. Want to see big meat. It was both the creatures longest sentence and its most definitive.

I smiled and reached out towards it. Glad to hear it.



Soft petals tickled my palm as It leaned into my touch, the same way a domesticated animal might. I rifled through my inventory and withdrew a bag stuffed with jerky, intending to feed my new acquisition.

Something snapped the bag out of my hands before I could react.

Vines coiled around the bag, the flowers sharp teeth flashing as it tore through the plastic and disemboweled the container in graphic detail.

I tried not to think about the fact that something similar could have easily been my fate.

Probably best to keep you, far, far away from Iris and Ellison.

Happy with the outcome, I crossed the meadow, returning to the elevator.



Of course it has.

My summon followed into the iron cage of the elevator. It struggled with the changing terrain but adapted quickly, its vines forming supporting loops. The doors shut behind us.

It stared up at me expectantly. Name?

Oh, right. I considered the question. Flowers were hermaphroditic, but its voice read as vaguely female. Then I considered the rest of it. A carnivorous plant that would grow in both power and size, with an unnatural fixation on meat?

There was only one answer.

Your name is Audrey.

Audrey bobbed back and forth in delight as the elevator began to move, rising further into the abyss above.