Chapter 194: Morning Connection

Chapter 194: Morning Connection

The next day, Erani and I left town to go meet up with Ainash in the early morning. I had something I needed to do, after all.

I’d looked at my Spell choices the night before, and while they were good, it simply didn’t compare to finally being able to bring others back in time with me—especially when I wasn’t actually giving anything up, just slightly delaying when I’d be able to get it.

I still hadn’t told Erani what, specifically, we were headed out of town to do. Part of my not telling her was functional—talking about time travel in public seemed like a great way to spread my secret to strangers—but honestly, I also just wanted to be able to build up the fanfare. I wanted to see her react fully, without having to limit her words or hide her emotions due to people being around us.

Once we met up with Ainash outside of town, I finally got to telling her.

“Wait, really?” she asked once I was done.

“That’s what Index said. Once we’ve both given Ainash Tribute, we’ll be able to transfer memories between us. Which means you’ll get to keep your memories through Time Loop, effectively.”

“...Wow.” She blinked, giving her head a minute shake, eyes staring off in the distance as though she could physically see the possibilities. After a moment, she looked back at me. “So are we doing it now?”

I laughed. “I don’t know why, but I was expecting you to take a little more time to process before trying to jump headfirst into time travel.”

“Listen, there are some things you just can’t wrap your head around. Time travel is one of them. Trust me, I’ve tried. Several times. But this is something where it’s impossible to think before leaping.” A slight smile spread across her face. “Plus, I just really, really want to see what it’s like.”

“Yeah, I get how you feel.” I turned to Ainash. “So, how are we supposed to actually do a Tribute?”

“Do not know!”

“Wait, really? I thought you’d be an expert on that.”

“No, I am expert at receiving Tributes, not giving them.”

“...Huh.” I frowned. “Well, let’s see. The other times you’ve gotten Tribute, it’s always been with the person touching you in some way, right? So...”

I placed a hand on her forehead and closed my eyes, trying to focus my mind. For a moment, I didn’t feel anything, but eventually, once I found the right way to think to get the System to recognize my ‘intent’ to give her Tribute, I felt something in my mind unlock. I tried pushing and pulling, forcing the intent through, but it didn’t budge. Seemed like the System really wanted to make it difficult to do this—though I got why, considering doing it by accident would be quite the mistake.

It took some time to figure out, but eventually I got the mental block to move. It was like I had to clear my mind of everything entirely, while also completely filling it with the intent to give up a Level all at the same time. A difficult thing to do, but I figured it out. Eventually, I got a notification.

Beginning Tribute of 1 Level to Level 33 Draconiad...

Breaking physical contact will stop this transfer.

I held on, and felt a warm sensation coming from my hand. Opening my eyes, I saw that the spot of her head, where I was holding onto, had begun glowing. A second passed, and...

Tribute has been completed.

Your Level is now 20.

-You have lost 1 Endurance.

-You have lost 2 Conjuration.

-You have lost 1 Intelligence.

-You have lost 3 Stat Points.

-Time Loop Talent Rank is now 20.

-You no longer have access to a Spell.

I sighed, taking my hand away.

“Alright,” I said, “so now—”

Your Bond with Level 33 Draconiad has evolved.

Ainash opened her eyes, too, eyes wide and mouth agape.

“Did it work?” I asked.

“That was so cool!” she mentally yelled to me. “Felt like I was in your body! Like was living in your life for some seconds! Could feel and hear and smell and taste everything, could even think what you thought! Father, you are so weird with your thinking! So different from me! And wow, the bed is so soft! Way softer than rocks!”

I laughed. “Yeah, I’m sure it’s softer than a rock. So you think that, if I gave you Erani’s memories from a different timeline, you could give them back to her without anything lost?”

“Probably!”

“Well, that’s as good as we’ll get, I guess.” I looked over at Erani. “Seems like it’ll work just fine. Plus, you get free Mana out of the Tribute, so it can’t be a bad idea, regardless.”

“I suppose so,” Erani said, taking a step forward. “Okay. Walk me through how you did it?”

It took some time, but we eventually got everything figured out. Erani gave Ainash her own Tribute, then we took turns swapping random sample memories between us. Ainash’s amazement of the memory transfer was very accurate, I found, after I’d had it done to me. It really was like I’d suddenly found myself having lived someone else’s life. It wasn’t just having my mind put into their body, it was having my consciousness put into their mind. I had these memories of their thoughts, their feelings, everything. And it turned out different people thought in very different ways.

Ainash’s perspective was the most unique. I supposed it naturally would be, considering she was a completely different species from me. Her thoughts didn’t take the form of words, and she didn’t even think in numbers, which felt bizarre to me, considering numbers were the main way the System communicated with us. Rather, all of her thoughts took the form of more vague concepts and feelings, while still somehow being fully able to achieve the same level of complex thought as anyone else could. It was just in a totally different shape.

As for Erani, the memory I got from her was slightly distorted from Ainash’s transfer, but not too much. At the very least, I could understand what the memory was just fine—I just missed out on the finer details.

“Okay,” Erani said once we’d gotten everything working, “I want to go back in time.”

I raised my eyebrows. “That’s sudden.”

“Oh, come on, I bet you used your ability the moment you got it. It’s time travel! There’s no such thing as patience when it comes to experiencing that.”

I laughed. “Well, that’s pretty true. But I can’t just use it for no reason. I’m trying to keep as many uses as possible unspent, remember? That way I get the Stats out of Recycled Loop. So we should probably wait until we have some sort of a reason, at the very least.”

“Alright,” she said, looking down. “Let’s see, let’s see...”

“What are you doing?”

“Coming up with a reason.”

“I can help come up with reason!” Ainash said, looking down and putting a hand to her chin in mimicry of Erani’s pose.

I chuckled. “I don’t know if you can just randomly come up with a reason. It’s gotta come up naturally.”

“Oh! Have idea!” Ainash suddenly said, looking up with an excited look on her face. “Can explore Human settlement, and go into places you normally cannot go! Humans get you in trouble if you do that, so if you go and get into lots of trouble, and then go back, they will not remember you are supposed to be in trouble!”

“But what would we even do?” I responded. “Normally, the reason you aren’t allowed to go into those places is because if you did, you'd steal something from them, or whatever. But we won’t be able to keep anything, so there’s no point.”

“Well,” Erani interjected, thoughtful look on her face, “the adventurer’s guild normally has a delay between a job being requested and it actually being put up, right? They take a while to figure out all the details for most jobs before making them public. But all the jobs that haven’t been put up yet have to be kept somewhere, written down. So if we break into that place and read through as much as we can before going back, then we basically have a couple days in advance where we have first choice on all the newest jobs.”

I nodded slowly. “Certainly helps us with the problem of getting past competition. We just go and do the job before anyone else has the chance to, then once the job is actually posted, we go in and hand in the reward? Or, at the very least, we can prepare to do the job while everyone else has no idea, so we can go and do it first.”

“Exactly. Seems like a good enough use of your abilities, if you ask me. Sneak in and out, and if we get caught, no consequences.”

“What about Ainash, though? If the whole point is stealth, we probably won’t be able to have her with us.”

She frowned. “Hm, yeah, I guess—”

“I know!” Ainash interrupted. “Can go into forest and practice recruiting Goblins! That way, if I have to kill any Goblins for being bad, they will not stay dead, and can go to do it again! Will be able to try so many methods that would normally not work because they kill so many Goblins! And then will keep all memories of what worked and what did not work.”

“...Right,” I replied, “I guess that works. Especially since the Dragon is dead now, seems like a good time to ramp up your recruiting efforts.”

“Try not to hurt them too much though, okay?” Erani said.

“Okay!”

I looked back at Erani. “Alright, let’s go back to town. And on the way, I guess you can just mentally prepare yourself to travel through time. You’ll probably need it.”