Chapter ???? – The Coven of Fabulous Witches III
Poor Larry, the clerk in the store all six of them had found themselves in, led the way down the street. Ariane followed imperiously behind him, like nothing else could be more natural than the mortal bending to her every whim. Ilea came next, the multi-dimensional hopper always having a way home. This particr adventure was significantly less trippy than some of the other realms she’d been in.
Broli and ine came after. Getting yoinked from A to B wasn’t exactly new, but it wasn’t like they had 30 different skills dedicated to it.
40? It was hard to keep track sometimes.
Candle and Eve brought up the rear, intrigued by the prospect of seeing new, different weaponry, unsure what this new world would bring.
“Soooo… Vampire?” ine asked Ariane.
“That is correct,” Ariane said, not taking her eyes off the road, off the horizon, scanning for some store that screamed ‘HEAVY FIREPOWER’.
“My boss is a vampire progenitor. Old dude, like 5000 years old or something.” ine said, trying to make some sort of conversation. Kinda flubbing it awkwardly.
“A progenitor? Is he obnoxiously self-confident?” Ariane asked, suddenly a lot more invested in the conversation.
“Mmmm. Kinda. Looks down on just about everyone - well, he’s got the levels and stats and power and position to do so - but, like, also lets everyone mostly do what they want and feel is needed. Just steps in when we’re, like, going to all get ourselves killed doing something extra-stupid.” Ariane snorted.
“Typical. They rely too much on their powers, and power is a crutch. You wouldn’t happen to have a vial of his blood, would you?”
ine really didn’t have anything to say to that.
Meanwhile, in the back, Broli and Eve were having a conversation.
“I’m sure you’ll get your loaf of bread one day Ms. Eve.” Broli said. “I know! Let’s go together, and make you a loaf!”
Eve sighed.
“No, it won’t work. It never works. Something will just go wrong, I know.”
“That’s okay!” The irrepressible, perpetually cheerful Broli said. “We can just try again!”
“But it’ll break again.” Eve pointed out.
“But then we try, try, and try again! One day, we can do it! I just know it!” Broli replied. “I believe!”
The two started to get into a circr argument in the back, and Candle sighed. She knew it was going to have to be up to her to break them out of the loop they’d found themselves in, but she couldn’t get a word in edgewise.
Meanwhile, ine and Ilea had gotten chatting.
“You’re also a healer?” ine asked, confirming her earlier observation. Self-decapitation and still being alive helped significantly with the guess, but ine’s <strong>[Identify]</strong> was on the fritz. She was getting back rainbow-colored eldritch nonsense instead of anything reasonable, and wasn’t taking any chances.
“Yup!” Ilea confirmed. “Also - ‘also’?”
“Same here! Although, I can’t regrow my entire body.” ine said, briefly thinking about and discarding adding a “yet”. Either way, Ilea was clearly more powerful in every way. “Any tips?”
“Work on your resistance skills. Try to get as many as possible.” Ilea promptly answered without thinking, almost like she’d been asked the question hundreds of times and was sick and tired of it.
“I have one…” ine said, trailing off. “But I have limited skill slots. I could only get seven more, tops, and that’s if I dumped all my other general skills. Heck, I don’t even know if I <em>can</em> get resistance skills as a general skill.”
Ilea paused, looking at ine with horror, the thought of having “only” eight resistance skills too much for her.
She closed her mouth, and patted ine on the shoulder with a look of pity.
“Good luck.”
“We’re here.” Larry said.
“Yessss. Show me the weapons.” Ariane said, throwing open the doors and striding inside.
“Shopkeeper! I wish to peruse your finest firearms!” Ariane dered, as the rest of the gang piled in behind her.
The floor creaked ominously under Ilea. She looked slightly guilty, and the floorboards bent back into position.
Roughly.
They took a look around the store. It wasn’t particrly impressive. A few pistols were in a ss case, a couple of single-shot rifles on one wall, a few sad, scattered boxes of ammo on the other. You could shrink the store to a third of its size, and there’d still be leftover room for more merchandise. Not exactly the most amazing of ces.
“Whaddaya want?” The bored store owner asked from behind the ss case. “It’s a five-day minimum wait to purchase any guns while the check clears.” He said in a monotone, “damn these window shoppers” tone.
Ariane looked around, disappointment clear on her face.
“Well. If this is the best that can be done, there is nothing for it. I will simple have to-”
Candle sniffed.
“I smell chocte. And gunpowder. Under there.” She said, pointing to a now rather-obvious trapdoor.
Everyone piled in, ignoring the protests of the shop owner.
It was clear that the store upstairs was a decoy, a front. The real weapon store was down here.
And oh, what a weapon store it was.
A giant, cavernous space hosted the weapons.
Rows upon rows of every conceivable gun was merely the start. From front-loaded single-shot rifles, to beautiful ivory-engraved pistols, moving to fully automated weapons, into the miniguns, straight to the anti-aircraft weapons, skipping weapons that were loaded onto tanks, and transitioning right into guns that would be right at home on a battlecruiser. 127mm to 155mm guns, toorge for any human to pick up and carry.
Blessedly (cursedly?) Ariane wasn’t human. Things like “too heavy” didn’t apply, and she was giddy like a schoolgirl, moving from onerge gun to the next, picking one up, “sighting” down the barrel, and putting it down, only to move onto the next.
And yet. Guns were barely the start.
Grenades were next. Smoke, fragmentation, stun, sh-bangs, cluster, big, small, little. You wanted a grenade? They’ve got em!
Hiding innocently inside the grenade section, just, hanging out there, was a rack dedicated to bread. All types. White, wheat, sourdough, baguette, pita, brioche. It was like a mad baker had baked every single bread in existence, and just ced them in “Gluten”, next to “Grenade”.
Eve eyed the bread.
Eyed the grenades.
Put one and one together.
“EVERYONE DOWN!” She yelled, throwing herself to the floor.
Ilea was reced with a winged, horned demon of ash, tendril trailing from behind her.
ine snapped up a shield, shimmering and glowing like the Aurora Borealis.
Everyone else threw themselves to the ground.
…
This narrative has been purloined without the author''s approval. Report any appearances on Amazon.
“Excuse me Ms. Eve, but what are we waiting for?” Broli asked. “I’m okay with this, but shouldn’t something be happening?”
Eve spluttered.
“The grenades - the bread - they - argh!” She said. “The moment I get close to the bread, something will go wrong and destroy them. Most likely, the grenades will blow up, then ALL of them will blow up, and it’ll be bad.”
The ashen demon nodded.
“Yeah, that’d be pretty bad. I’ll shield all of you. Just get a bit closer to trigger it.
“Are you quite certain?” Ariane asked, uneasily eyeing a grenadebeled “high incidindary” “That does not appear to be the safest course of action.”
Ilea shrugged.
“If it’s going to go wrong, might as well be in a controlled situation.”
Hesitantly, then slowly going forward, Eve crept towards the bread. One step, a pause. One step, a flinch, expecting a massive explosion to tear through the facility.
Ten steps away.
Five steps. The closest she’d ever been to Bread since getting the Quest.
Three steps.
Two.
One.
Hesitating, disbelieving, Eve reached out with one hand, touching a loaf of banana bread. Could it be this easy? Was her Quest at longstplete?
It felt weird. Eve had expected the bread to be soft, pliable. Something you wanted to eat. This was cold. Hard to the touch. Unyielding. It -
“THIS ISN’T FUCKING BREAD!” Eve cried out, grabbing it and throwing it to the floor. “ITS ANOTHER DAMN FUCKING GRENADE! ARGH!”
The loaf-grenade hit the floor.
In two pieces.
Right next to the “H” for “High Explosives”
“Oh Fu-” Eve got out, right before the grenade went off.
It was Candle who saved them all. She drew, at lightning speed, a rune in the air that froze the grenade, stopping it from going off, saving them all from an untimely end.
Well. Untimely for everyone but Ilea. She’d have survived it.
Missileunchers. Bazookas. Land mines. Sea mines. Air mines. Space mines. Bays. Carbon-fiber knives and swords. methrowers, from tiny to XXL. Mortars, artillery trucks, jeeps, tanks, grenadeunchers - conveniently next to the grenades - missiles, torpedos.
Submarines. Helicopters. Fighter jets.
The <em>pièce de résistance</em>.
Arge bomb in a crystal case, surrounded by beeping counters. It was ubeled, with just the name “Fat Boy” on it.
“No. Nope nope nope no.” Ilea said, vanishing the weapon. “Absolutely never not nope.”
“Howrge is this ce?” Candle asked, voice echoing throughout.
No answer was given, as a roar of gunfire preceded maniacalughter.
“Yes. YES!” Ariane cried out, as the unyielding firestorm resumed. “This is IT!”
The others stopped their wandering, and made their way over to the noise.
Ariane had found miniguns were <em>exactly</em> to her taste, and was busy test-firing arger-than-life one at the firing range. The barrels slowed down as she finished firing thetest rounds at the now-former targets, revealing that <em>someone</em> had been visited by the “Good Idea” fairy, and had ced bays on the end. One per barrel.
“Alright, alright, I think I’ve got the hang of this.” Ariane said. “Watch.”
Moving to another section, she pressed the trigger, and the minigun spat out bullets with a roar.
In under a second she stopped, and pointed gleefully at her work.
Two hundred dummies were in the section, each with a single bullet expertly ced in a lethal spot.
“This is <em>perfect.</em>” Ariane dered.
Nobody was inclined to argue with her.
“Um, excuse me Ms. Vampire.” Broli asked. “Should you really be doing that without the permission of the person who owns the ce? He might be sad.”
“Hmmm. You bring up an excellent point. I must find the owner of this establishment, and reimburse him.” Ariane said.
“Why don’t we all find something we like, and pay at the end?” ine suggested.
The looting began.
Ariane grabbed the minigun, then started picking up, testing, and strapping weapons she deemed “eptable” to her back. She started to look a bit like a hedgehog. Sniper rifle, assault rifle, hand guns, and more. The author’s not a gun nut, and can’t reallyment past this. Lots of guns.
Ilea grabbed a little of everything. Some grenades, some bazookas, a few guns. Her ashen limbs behind her rearranged themselves, each one holding a gun.
A one-woman army of weapons.
Quite frankly, a downgrade from her normal fighting prowess. Still, it was fun, and hey, who knows, maybe she’d get another 10 general skills from it. A <strong>[Missile Launcher]</strong> skill, a <strong>[Grenade Launcher]</strong> skill, a <strong>[Bazooka]</strong> skill, an <strong>[Anti-Aircraft weaponry]</strong> skill....
Illea had to collect them all.
Eve looked around morosely, before deciding that her current weapons were just fine.
ine picked up a handgun, and went to the firing range. She experimentally, inexpertly, tried to fire a few shots at the targets.
“Do you require assistance or instruction as to the use of firearms?” Ariane asked her.
ine hesitated.
“Yes, but I don’t think I’ve got the time to learn how to use a gun properly. Like. I’d need to <em>aim</em> and track and such.”
Ariane tilted her head.
ine figured a practical demonstration would work better. She didn’t even need to point. One moment she was standing there, the next a beam of burning, golden light shot from her, piercing straight through a target dummy’s head.
Ariane hissed at her.
“No sunlight!”
“Rx, it’s not sunlight, it’s Radiance. Looks the same, feels the same. Isn’t sunlight. Does sunlight make you explode into mes?” ine asked rhetorically.
“<em>Yes.”</em> Ariane hissed back.
“Ah, um. Sorry?”
Candle found the “field rations”, which ranged from “technically edible” to -
Well. Candle never found out what they ranged to. She stopped at “Chocte.”
She transformed into a massive, mighty dragon - still rtively tiny inside the space - to better load herself up with chocte.
She didn’t know why coconut-vored chocte was considered an army ration, but she wasn’t going toin.
Broli looked around, ears t.
Then she spotted the swimming pool. Everyone else was busy finding weapons. Broli didn’t think weapons were needed. Just a nice chat and a hug! That’s all anyone ever needed, really.
Broli got to the swimming pool, and eyed it doubtfully. Was asking for a swimming pool of water too much? Instead, it was full of ammo, just loosely piled around.
With a diving board.
It was a gun nut’s version of a Scrooge Mcduck money tower.
Eventually, the looting shopping spree came to an end, and everyone got back together.
“Hang on.” Broli asked. “How are we going to pay for any of this?”
There was an awkward moment as everyone took out what they had.
ine had some round iron coins with a triangle in the middle.
Ariane had a few bills.
Nobody else had much more that was better.
“How are we going to get out with all this stuff?” ine asked, doubtfully eyeing Ariane and her many guns.
“Also, we should talk about how we get to the ind.” Eve said. “Apparently, the metal birds can fly?”
Candle snorted, small mes emerging from her nostrils. ine took a few steps back, making sure she was well and clear from the Dr-
<em>No don’t say it don’t think it. It’s not a D----g. Just a transformed human with poor taste. It must be.</em>
“I’m bigger and faster than anything <em>iron.</em> Can’t even see how it flies.” She said.
Some cajoling, begging, pleading, bribery, and tteryter, and Candle had agreed to take them all to the ind.
“Now we’ve gotta pay.” Ilea said, using space magic to transport them all back to the main store.
“Proprietor!” Arianemanded. “You have a most impressive selection of weaponry. You may be a supplicant, for a generous donation.”
He snorted.
“What, you think you’re some sort of jedi, waving your hand around like that? Fancy mind tricks don’t work on me. Only money.” He said, drawing thest two words out and rubbing his fingers together.
Broli eagerly offered up everything she had.
“Here you go mister! It’s all I’ve got.”
He looked doubtfully at the offering.
“That’ll pay for three bullets.”
ine offered her coin pouch - along with a few diamonds.
“Now we’re talking! That pays for the training dummies and rounds you all used.” He said.
Ilea rolled her eyes, and out of nowhere, summoned a giant chunk of gold,rger than she was.
A look of greed crossed the storekeeper’s face for a brief instant.
However, the added weight of the gold was one insult too many for the floorboards. Ilea did a Wile-E-coyote.
Read the next part here!