ANOTHER UNFAMILIAR CEILING. It was the first time I could think that
in ages. I really thought I'd go the rest of my life without making that
Evangelion reference again! It really was an unfamiliar ceiling!
It wasn't just an unfamiliar cave in some unfamiliar woods. It sure as
hell wasn't an unfamiliar high school girl—none of them were unfamiliar at
this point. I didn't care whether this place was called the Lady Finger
Boudoir or the Laddy Flinger Boudoir, it had an authentic unfamiliar
ceiling. I may have seen it before I went to sleep, but I think it was still
unfamiliar enough when I woke up!
Seriously, how did it take me nearly twenty days to run into a new
ceiling?
"At last, I've reached a town," I said to myself. "Is this the
completion of my quest? Game over? Credits roll?"
At that moment, Class Rep stepped into the room. "Good morning,
Haruka-kun. I hope it's not game over for you. Reaching a town wasn't
your goal in the first place, so I doubt you've completed your quest. Why
do you phrase everything as a question, anyway?!"
Instead of a wake-up call, this inn offered a wake-up scold.
"Good morning, Class Rep," I said. "You look very classy and
representative today."
"Why do you look like you think you paid me a big compliment?
Don't be smug. And stop calling me Class Rep already! We haven't been in
school for nearly three weeks!"
Apparently the Class Rep didn't understand that I was giving her the
highest form of praise possible, at least in my book.
"So, what's up? Couldn't wait for breakfast? Do you miss grilled
mushrooms that much?"
"Why do you think I'm always looking for food? Are you? I came to
talk, not eat!"
My mistake, she didn't have the Gluttony skill after all. Maybe it was
another one of her skills she…uh, never mind!
"We learned some things at the guild yesterday," she said. "So…I
need to tell you something. You should sit down for this, okay?"
She made it sound like I'd fall into a pit of despair when I heard the
news.
"Oh, you heard about the level wall?"
"What? You knew?"
Yep, she just found out and was trying to find a gentle way to break it
to me. No one wanted to be the bearer of bad news—they always rehearsed
a million different scenarios in their head, trying to find the perfect way to
deliver the truth. But I had to find out eventually, since the level wall was
an unavoidable fact of this world.
All combat techniques required a minimum level in a relevant combat
skill. If I was a sword fighter, for example, my Sword Mastery skill would
need to be level 20 before I could learn basic techniques like Slash and
Thrust. Of course, lacking those techniques didn't prevent me from slashing
and thrusting with a sword, but combat techniques were far more powerful
than any regular attack.
That was the level wall. It was the real reason levels meant
everything in this world—your level determined what techniques were
available to you. High-level defensive combat techniques could completely
neutralize any normal attack. It didn't matter what my stats were, I'd still
lose to a higher-level opponent.
Monsters knew combat techniques, and they never took prisoners.
Without access to combat techniques, I was inevitably doomed. Game over.
That was why the Class Rep came here so early in the morning,
looking so worried. Only she would be so caring and sensitive. That's what
made her the Class Rep. No one wanted to tell someone such bad news, but
it had to be done. In matters of life and death, it was better to know. She
knew I might have blamed her and even hated her, but she did the difficult
thing anyway.
"That one old guy told me. You know, not the first old man or the
second one, but the third guy—do you remember him?"
"Oh, you mean Guild Master Hakiess? Okay, you only know three
old men, but you couldn't remember any of their names or even that one of
them is the guild master?"
"Thanks for trying to tell me about the level wall anyway, Class Rep.
Did you lose sheep on my account?"
The Class Rep had dark circles under her eyes. She must have stayed
up late thinking of ways to tell me.
"Lost sheep? Sheep have nothing to do with it! Sleep, not sheep!"
Huh? Don't you count sheep when you have trouble sleeping? She
looks like she kept losing count. I wonder how all the sheep are doing back
in the real world.
Fish girl dropped by with breakfast—bread! How I missed bread!
Sweet…rock-hard bread. Most rocks are softer than this.
"If it's a world with bread, it's a world with flour! Let's go buy flour
and never look back! And any other ingredients we can carry! It will all
belong to me! All the food will be mine! Bwa ha ha!"
"All the food?" cried Fish Girl. "How did gnawing on that bread turn
you into a megalomaniac?"
Was Fish Girl upset because I didn't like the bread? If she really was
raised by fish like she kept saying, no wonder she had strong feelings about
hunks of bread.
"You're homesick, aren't you?" I said. "It's okay, I feel you. Don't
worry. I'm sure your mom and dad are swimming merrily across the seven
seas."
"My mom and dad are not fish!"
Why was she admonishing me? She said they were fish, didn't she?
Maybe she meant that her parents were named Mr. and Mrs. Fish?!
Sometimes the real world was more fanciful than a fantasy world.
"So, what's our plan for the day?" I asked. "Heading out soon? Think
we should stop by the guild? We should make a quick stop at the guild,
yeah?"
If we wanted to go shopping, we'd need to go to the guild first, since
I was totally broke.
"You make going to the guild sound like getting a morning coffee!"
"Well, I do remember seeing a sign on the wall advertising discount
drinks. What if they have a café?"
It said drinks cost 100 eles on a sign, which meant that an ele was
roughly equal to a yen. Maybe there were 100-ele shops? Definitely no
bookstores, though…
Money was my first concern. I may have turned in a lot of F-class
magic stones, but I doubted they were worth much.
It wasn't like I needed to be rich. At level 9, I couldn't even equip
new weapons or armor—not even leather armor. And I didn't want to
become an adventurer in the first place. Should I just stay unemployed?
However, I was desperate for new food and kitchen supplies,
especially spices! At least I had a seemingly limitless supply of salt. Just
how much salt did Villager A buy?