2.02 Self Reflections

2.4K 109 8
                                        

It was past dark when the outpost came into view. Zoey's legs ached from the walk. She hadn't been an inactive person back home, but she'd been exerting herself (in more than a few meanings of the word) constantly since waking ten hours ago, and the activities had taken their toll. Fortunately, she had magical assistance to lean on. The murky-yellow potions they'd looted provided a supernatural boost in stamina which eased her pained muscles, and the blisters she had started to collect were washed away by their red counterparts, the health potions.

Magic. Super convenient stuff.

They had stumbled on a dirt path after an hour of walking. Whether by providence or luck, Zoey didn't know. Rosalie said it was faster than usual, but most ventures back to town were short things. From there, a two hour's trip led them to the edges of a tiny outpost. She meant tiny; there were six or seven buildings in total. Outposts were scattered all throughout the Fractures, ready to host people in her and Rosalie's situation, and since the Fractures were already less populous than Haven—where the bulk of this world's society lived—these outposts usually held less than twenty people, and much of them were migratory.

Zoey admired the architecture as Rosalie beelined to the inn, where they'd be resting for the night. The buildings were well-made but distinctly medieval-European. She intuited a few answers to her earlier musings: the world's technology level wasn't quite caught up to Zoey's. That was bizarre to think about. She hoped she wouldn't be lacking too many modern amenities. Zoey would miss cellphones and being able to look up whatever she wanted, when she wanted, but it wasn't something she'd die without. Running water, plumbing, air conditioning, and such? She hoped Rosalie's world had figured out magical alternatives to those, because she'd feel those absences much more sharply.

Entering the tiny inn (at a guess, it could host up to four; these outposts weren't meant to be stayed at for long, or see traffic in general) Zoey saw they had at least figured out pseudo-electrical lighting: warm yellow lights hummed in the ceilings, some—what appeared to be—arcane symbol carved into the glass, and only visible because Zoey had squinted up at it in curiosity. The lantern left a black afterimage. Zoey briefly, and humorously, wondered if a health potion would make it go away faster, but she didn't test it; she simply blinked the imprint away while Rosalie greeted a heavyset innkeeper at the counter.

Emphasis on heavy-set.

For, uh.

A couple reasons.

The man was made of granite.

What the hell, Zoey thought. She had given thought to the possibility of other races existing in this world, but she'd forgotten about it, truth told. Until here, now, with an animated piece of rock hunched over the counter and speaking to Rosalie.

"One night, and a meal in the morning, if you please." Rosalie spoke to him with the dismissive nature of someone used to making these professional arrangements. The fact he was a person composed of chunky, interlocking blocks of stone didn't provide the slightest reaction; this was an utterly mundane sight to Rosalie.

The innkeeper didn't seem offended for Rosalie's brusqueness. He was blinking sleep out of his eyes, with her and Rosalie having arrived past when he'd settled down for the night. The bleariness was seriously odd for how humanizing it was. Zoey shook away the disorientation; she didn't want to be caught staring. This should seem normal to her, even accounting for amnesia.

"Two rooms or one?" the rock-man asked.

"Tw—" Rosalie barely started, before being interrupted by Zoey.

"One is fine."

Rosalie narrowed her eyes at Zoey, but after Zoey grinned at her, she conceded. "One is fine."

This Ascent to Divinity is Lewder than Expected (A Futa LitRPG)Where stories live. Discover now