The primal hunter 13, p.2

The Primal Hunter 13, page 2

 

The Primal Hunter 13
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  Through much drama and suspense, the Leaderboards were revealed, and it was shown that Ell’Hakan stood at the top of the Era Leaderboards, and even in the ninth spot of the All-Time Leaderboard. A Leaderboard that his Patron, Yip of Yore, sits atop of… For now, anyway.

  Because, while all this is going on, Jake was having a pleasant chat with Nevermore—the Bound God of the World Wonder, whom he also met back in book 11. Rather than being thrown out of the World Wonder right away, Jake was taken here, where he was held until it was time for the grand reveal that Jake had not only managed to snatch the top spot of the Era Leaderboard, but had even pushed down Yip of Yore to second place, making Jake the top scorer on the All-Time Leaderboard.

  This granted him the Peerless Conqueror of Nevermore title and also fully pushed Jake to the forefront of everyone’s attention in the multiverse. Shortly after this reveal, there was a small gathering for all those with high placements on the Nevermore Leaderboards, which naturally included Jake and his entire party.

  During this meeting, Jake met several of the top scorers on the Leaderboards, few of whom are relevant in this book, besides Jake Ell’Hakan, with whom he had another minor confrontation. Jake also met with Eversmile in disguise and learned that somehow, the Primordial felt a connection to Jake’s boots.

  Jake did his best to keep anything related to the First Sage as vague as possible and got away from the conversation in one piece. This was naturally discussed with the Malefic Viper afterward.

  Besides that, Jake had a few other minor encounters. This included the one ranking just below Ell’Hakan and Jake on the Leaderboards, a Demon Prince known as the Cerulean Demon. This demon asks Jake for help with a special ritual, hoping Jake’s unique qualities as a Harbinger of Primeval Origins, which allowed him to create Sylphie, Vesperia, and Sandy, would be useful. Something Jake agrees to do before returning to Earth.

  After this party, Jake fucked around a bit in Nevermore City. He got a drink with the Malefic Viper, collected time magic manure from a hobgoblin mage, and spent quality time with Carmen—the Runemaiden of Valhal—before it was time to help the demon with his special ritual.

  The ritual went, to put it bluntly, horribly. The Demon Prince wanted to use several Demon Lord hearts to empower a fragment of an ancient, dead devil, known as the Cerulean Devil. Seeing as devils were the name demons gave to gods, this was quite a bit more than the Demon Prince could handle.

  Luckily for him, Jake was on site and did something most would consider insane: he entered the Soulspace of the Demon Prince and assisted him there directly. The final outcome of the reckless ritual, where they’d even signed a liability waiver beforehand, was the birth of a Cerulean Demon Lord, turning the Demon Prince far more powerful. As a bonus, Jake even saved the guy from turning into a mindless beast in the process, making it all a great success.

  Plus, it gave Jake a bunch of levels, so, totally worth it. As for any potential consequences that assisting in this ritual could lead to… well, Jake didn’t really think about that.

  With another ritual for the history books, it was finally time for Jake to leave Nevermore. First stop: the Order of the Malefic Viper.

  Once back in his residence at the Order, Jake met up with Meira and Irin, who were both awaiting his return. Meira—the elf that had once been forced on Jake when he arrived at the Order—now the Chosen of Duskleaf, and Irin, the succubus who’d been assigned to Jake and later appointed official liaison, were naturally both happy to see him, and had evidently bonded a bit during Jake’s Nevermore adventures.

  Jake was also happy to see that Meira had become the Chosen of Duskleaf, and he decided to make Irin even happier by giving her a token he’d been given by the Demon Prince, telling her to go there as his representative. After getting a bit of interesting lore on demon society, Jake headed back to Earth once more, where things naturally progressed quite a bit in his absence.

  His home and city—Haven—had grown significantly larger, primarily due to the influx of gifted and now freed slaves, but also because of Jake’s appointment as World Leader, resulting in more wanting to be close to the leader of the planet.

  Luckily, despite the expansion, his good old lodge remained the same, and once there, Jake made sure to give his banana musa the special fertilizer to hopefully allow it to grow even more.

  Jake had returned to Earth with Sandy in tow. This is also around the same time we first meet Tom. Who is Tom, you might ask? Tom is Tom. Stop asking stupid questions that you already know the answer to.

  Not long after, Jake and Sandy found themselves at Arnold’s place, where they discovered that the mad scientist and follower of the Void God Oras had also returned to Earth after a pretty damn good performance in Nevermore. While there, Jake learned Sandy had improved significantly in long-distance travel, opening up new possibilities for exploring the solar system…

  Before that, Jake wanted a small break to relax after spending fifty years in Nevermore. It was also high time he visited his parents again, after not seeing them for so long, even if it had only been a few years for his parents due to the time dilation of Nevermore.

  After checking in on Rick, the gardener troll below Haven, Jake was off. On the way to Skyggen, the Court of Shadows city where his parents live with Jake’s brother, Caleb, and the rest of his family, Jake stopped by to check in on a certain wyvern he encountered the first time he went to visit his old folk.

  The wyvern in question turned out to be busy engaging a raid of vampires from the Sword Saint’s clan, who were trying to attack the Northpeak Wyvern. In classic Jake fashion, he decided to sit back and observe as the vampires were mostly killed off, with the only survivors frozen.

  The wyvern noticed Jake after the fight and sought him out, which was when Jake learned that the damn thing didn’t even remember when it sent him flying with a frost breath all the way back in book… I think book 4? Definitely in that 3-to-5 range. Been a while, for sure.

  Jake gave the wyvern a well-deserved scolding for being an asshole, freed the remaining frozen vampires, and headed off to finally go on holiday at his parents’ place.

  Getting there didn’t take long, and Jake proceeded to spend much needed quality time just relaxing and bonding with his family.

  Alas, nothing lasts forever. That includes both this recap, where I’ve definitely forgotten to mention a lot of important things, and Jake’s quality time with family. With the appearance of Sandy, Jake must once more answer the call to adventure.

  As for the destination this time?

  Straight to the moon!

  Unlike my stock portfolio…

  Chapter 1

  To The Moon!

  Who hadn’t, at one point or another, dreamed of visiting the moon? Or maybe Jake was just weird, but he sure had wanted to at least try going there at least once to see the world from an entirely new perspective and, more importantly, finally confirm that Earth wasn’t flat like a pancake.

  Setting off from Skyggen with Sandy, Jake was naturally eaten and entered one of the space worm’s many stomachs. At this point, Jake had no idea how many Sandy had, but he was sure he would figure that out eventually, as he expected the two of them to spend quite a lot of time traveling together over the next few months.

  Looking around the stomach he had entered, it was more just one large room. The floors were rock-like, with the walls also reminiscent of being inside of a cave, and the rectangular shape made it hard to imagine he was currently inside of a creature.

  Within this room, he spotted a bunch of furniture. The place was set up like an apartment, and when he looked toward the end of the rectangle, he even saw a sealed-off glass cube containing a lot of familiar instruments and tools.

  “Is… this an alchemy lab?” Jake said with raised eyebrows.

  “Yep, had some people from the Order set it up,” Sandy responded quickly. “Plus, even if you do poison stuff, it won’t be annoying anymore as it’s sealed within the cube, and I added special ventilation!”

  “Do I want to know how you exhaust these toxic fumes?” Jake joked.

  “Why would I exhaust them? I put them in another stomach with some toxin-absorbent materials to help them grow,” Sandy responded as if Jake was being an idiot.

  “I see,” Jake muttered, sad his fart joke had failed, as he turned his attention elsewhere.

  One of the room’s walls was entirely see-through so Jake could observe the outside world. Sandy had even placed windows elsewhere, making it seem as if Jake was flying within a big worm-shaped plane. Of course, Jake knew it wasn’t as if these were actually windows. They were more just screens displaying the outside.

  As he looked out, he saw them flying into the sky with speed surpassing anything Jake could do. It actually wasn’t that much faster than he was if he continually used One Step, but he knew this was far from Sandy’s top speed. Just going by how fast the worm had traveled from Haven to Skyggen, he knew the worm’s top speed was absolutely insane.

  The reason Sandy didn’t go full throttle right now was likely due to the way the sky worked. The atmosphere around Earth, and the sky in general, had several layers to it, and traveling through them haphazardly could get quite dangerous. Especially the outer layers of the atmosphere.

  B-grade was recognized as the grade in which one could begin to explore space, and that wasn’t only because that was when one rarely could find worthy foes on their home planets, but because that was often when one became able to even enter other planets safely.

  Surviving in space wasn’t that hard at all, and even D-grades could exist there. Sure, they would have to exhaust energy to protect themselves from the cold and the semi-vacuum of space, but it wasn’t that bad at all. It was more akin to just being pretty deep underwater. Granted, there were a lot of threats that could kill one out there, such as rampant blasts of energy just flying across the cosmos or small meteors striking you, but technically, one could live in space. It wasn’t recommended, but theoretically possible.

  Thing is… you would be kind of stuck there unless someone helped you get back to a planet or you chose to settle down on a large space rock without any proper atmosphere. Going to a place like Earth was out of the question, and Earth wasn’t even a massive planet by multiversal standards.

  Jake, even with his current level of power, would have to go all-out if he wanted to reenter Earth without the assistance of Sandy, with the atmosphere effectively creating a natural barrier protecting the planet from threats. Exiting was quite a lot easier than entering, but even that was pretty hard. Arnold had only managed to send out satellites and whatnot by coating them in special metals with high resistance to the concepts in the atmosphere, and Jake’s body was definitely not made of these resistant materials.

  Sandy’s was, though.

  The space worm’s thick skin seemed nearly unaffected, even as they entered the outer layers of the atmosphere. The dense energies and concepts that sought to tear apart anything they encountered washed over Sandy without any issues, and from inside the worm, Jake saw the grand vista that was Earth’s atmosphere.

  From below, it wasn’t visible, but once inside, it was as if he was standing inside the northern lights. Waves of energy crashed everywhere, and whatever small rocks entered it were instantly torn apart. These protective forces were entirely different from their pre-system versions, and Jake could only imagine how much stronger the natural defenses of a planet could get if one added their own barriers on top. If the core of the planet was used as a medium, one could perhaps even enhance certain concepts of this natural atmosphere…

  Soon, Jake saw they had passed the final layer. The waves of energy dispersed, and all became still, nothing but the emptiness of space all around them. Jake couldn’t feel the concepts outside, but he got the impression that there wasn’t much to feel for either. Space was called a vacuum for a reason, and while there certainly still was a lot of mana, the density was incredibly unvaried. The further they got from any celestial objects, the less mana there would also be, with certain sectors of space nearly entirely empty of anything at all, save for the bare minimum of space energy required to hold reality together.

  “So, are you ready?” Sandy asked. “I will have to turn the lookout holes off when I jump into Sandy’s Sand World.”

  “It isn’t like I’ll have to do anything, so sure, I’m ready,” Jake said, smiling. “How long do you reckon it’ll take to get there?”

  Jake already had an estimate in mind. It had taken them over an hour to reach space, as Sandy couldn’t go as fast in the upper layers as they wanted. Plus, Sandy had also clearly slowed down a lot and absorbed some energy here and there, allowing Jake to take in the atmosphere. Traveling through empty space would definitely be faster, especially if Sandy’s Sand World, as the big worm called it, was used.

  Considering the distance from Earth to the moon was approximately thirty times the diameter of Earth and that proportions had been kept roughly the same, Jake reckoned it would take less than a week to get there, maybe even five or six days if⁠—

  “Like half a day at most?” Sandy responded.

  “What?” Jake exclaimed. “Did you just say half a day?”

  “Oh, here we go, making fun of the worm for not being fast enough. I’m trying here, and before I reach B-grade, I can’t go really fast, so it’s kind of rude to bully me like this. Actually, maybe I should just spit you out here and now, and you can just fly yourself. Yeah, let’s do that; let’s see who’s faster!”

  Jake allowed the worm to vent their frustrations until it reached a point where he was afraid of getting tossed out. “No… I meant that it’s faster than I expected,” Jake said in a calming tone. “From speaking to Arnold, the changes in space have resulted in pre-system space travel no longer being viable, as it’s no longer considered a complete vacuum, making the constant accelerations not a thing anymore.”

  At least, that was how Jake had understood what Arnold said. He didn’t really know overly much about space travel, but he was pretty sure that traveling to the moon hadn’t even taken a week before the system, despite the long distance. Jake would have been impressed if Sandy, as a barely mid-tier C-grade, could rival that with the changes to space travel.

  So, seeing Sandy not just match it but be a lot faster was great. It boded well for what the giant space worm would be capable of in the future when it was time to truly explore space in B-grade.

  “Oh, you were praising me?” Sandy said. “In that case, ignore everything I just said and keep recognizing my awesomeness. Now get ready; we’re about to enter the sand world.”

  “Ready,” Jake said, nodding. He wasn’t sure what he was supposed to be ready for, though.

  In the next instant, the windows to the outside world disappeared, and Jake felt the shift. Through his sphere that extended outside of Sandy, he saw everything warp. It was as if space contracted around Sandy before everything suddenly broke apart.

  A headache instantly assaulted Jake as he took in the environment of the subspace. He saw reality itself stretch and contract in impossible ways as concepts such as distance became nothing more than relative terms. Despite the headache, Jake held on, vaguely feeling himself and Sandy move. Despite the odd changed space, Sandy still managed to wiggle forward, as if swimming through a world that simply didn’t make any sense from Jake’s perspective.

  For a moment, Jake considered releasing a Pulse of Perception, then thought twice about doing that unless he wanted to knock himself out. He was curious, true, but not curious enough to potentially deal soul damage to himself by overloading his brain. The chances of it happening were low but still too high to entertain his vanity.

  Instead, he contracted his sphere to relieve his headache, pulled out his cauldron, and went into the alchemy bubble Sandy had created for him. Well, alright, that Sandy had tasked people from the Order to create for Jake, but it was the thought that counts.

  Jake had a lot of profession levels to go before he would catch up to his class, and while half a day, or even half a year, wouldn’t do much to close the gap, every little bit counted. Seeing as he was good on potions, Jake worked a bit on poisons, and the hours quickly passed. The trip to the moon, which Jake had expected to be a long endeavor, was over before it had barely begun.

  “Alright, we’re pretty close now,” Sandy said after what had only been ten and a half hours.

  “How do you even know we’re close?” Jake questioned, as the outside world still didn’t make any sense to him when he expanded his sphere back out a bit.

  “Because I’m smart.”

  “Yeah, that doesn’t really answer anything… Like, what’s the tell?” Jake kept pressing.

  “Alright, alright. You know how when you’re swimming through the sand, all the sand looks identical, but if you get really close, no two pieces of sand are the same, and sometimes there’s even other stuff mixed in, like small bones, stones, and whatnot?”

  “Sure, let’s say I do.”

  “Well, it’s a bit like that. Big stuff is like bones and stuff within the sand, while space itself is like every little sand grain. It varies a bit, and when close to bigger stuff, like planets—or the moon, in this case—every grain is also a bit different. So, it’s just about feeling for that. When I then know I’m close to where I wanna go, I wiggle out, and boom, I’m right at where I wanna be.”

  “I see,” Jake said, nodding at the very sand-based explanation. He was pretty sure he got it, at least partly, even if it still didn’t make that much sense. It was honestly interesting how stuff like this worked. Sandy legitimately saw the world as filled with sand everywhere, and going into subspace like this was just diving into dense sand. Others could see the subspace entirely differently, maybe like being underwater, a dark void, a beam of light, or nearly anything else.

 

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