Shadow Hunting:LitRPG (Shadow For Hire) Read online

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  As Kragg landed, I jumped off Smoke. I made a show of looking about for an escape. A trapped, frightened animal. This only got Kragg's blood-lust up more.

  The ogre dismounted and grinned. “That was fun,” he said. He patted the huge mallet against a meaty palm. “But this little game is over,” he said.

  In answer, I snapped my fingers and Smoke winked out of existence. Then I drew my sword, turned and promptly fled into the tunnel entrance.

  Kragg shouted something which was filtered, but I ignored him as I ran through the darkness.

  The tunnel was short, and I emerged in a vaulted chamber. Huge, ancient tapestries lined the walls, punctuated by the occasional fire sconce. The floor was made of flat stone, covered in a thin layer of sand.

  I looked about. There was nowhere else to go. From the tunnel I heard more filtered words, getting louder. He was coming.

  I dashed to the wall on the other side of the chamber and turned, sword at the ready.

  Kragg burst in, blood covered mallet in his hands. He stopped when he saw me and took a moment to examine the new surroundings. Then he smiled.

  “You want to die here? Not outside?” he shrugged. “Doesn't matter to me.” He sauntered forward.

  I waited. Not yet, I thought. Not quite yet.

  “I'm a little disappointed with you, little Shadow,” Kragg said. He took another step closer. “I expected greater things. A bigger fight. You have a reputation as someone not to tangle with.” He laughed.

  I said nothing and concentrated on his position. This would be close.

  “All those tough quests you've completed. A legendary one, too. Now it all comes down to this.” He motioned at the chamber dramatically. “You die in little room in the dirt. So sad.”

  Another step. This one kicked some of the sand aside, revealing the section of a symbol painted on the stone floor beneath.

  “What do you have to say now, little Shadow? Do you-,” Kragg's gaze snagged on the partial symbol. “What is-,” he said, but didn't finish. At the last moment, his eyes widened at his mistake.

  “Now!” I shouted.

  One of the tapestries fell to the ground. Behind it, stood a tall breast-plate wearing minotaur. The man-bull was not carrying a weapon. Instead, he clutched a crystal orb in each of his huge hands.

  “No!” shouted Kragg as he turned to confront this new threat.

  The minotaur, with a wide maniacal grin, smashed the orbs together, and they shattered.

  Instantly, from the drawn symbol on the floor, a massive glass orb bubbled up and fully encased Kragg.

  The ogre blinked in shock, hands outstretched pressing against the inside of the orb. The orb floated up a short distance from the ground with Kragg inside, like the universe's ugliest snow globe. He looked from the minotaur to me, in stunned amazement.

  “What do I have to say about this?” I said, looking smug. I raised eyebrows and offered a huge smile. “Gotcha!”

  CHAPTER TWO

  Kragg punched a massive fist against the clear material of the orb which only produced a low thud. “What the FILTERED is this?” he roared. The orb allowed sound to pass through it, but nothing else.

  The minotaur stood next to me, wiping shards of crystal from his large hands. “That is your new home, Snot-rag.” He looked to me and grinned. “I did good, didn't I, Vee?”

  I nodded and patted his huge arm. “You always do good, Muddie. Even if I say you don't.” Muddie – or Mudhoof – was a warrior-minotaur and long-time fellow adventurer. We'd completed a lot of quests together and failed our fair share of them as well. But I could always count on the guy to fight to the bitter end. No logging out of the game because things got too tough.

  Kragg, now furious, punched the interior of the orb several more times and yelled profanities. After a few moments he stopped to glare at us. “Let me out of here! NOW! If you know what's good for you.”

  I watched the ugly green ogre, trapped and helpless within his prison, up to the count of ten. Then I said, “We need to have a conversation before I even consider letting you out of there.”

  Kragg turned to look at the tunnel entrance. He seemed to expect something.

  I shook my head. “Nope, no mount, sorry. The moment the orb encases a subject all summonings, companions, mounts and whatnot are disbanded. Your crazy yellow friend won't be able to help you now.”

  Mudhoof looked confused. “Yo, Snot-rag. What's the deal with riding around on a yellow unicorn? It makes little sense. Don't you have any dignity?”

  “Shut up!” Kragg roared. He was panting heavily, working himself up into a real lather.

  Mudhoof asked quizzically, “Or maybe there's a more deep-seated reason for prancing around on a horse with a long thing on its forehead. Trying to make up for something, or we? A little short where it counts? Betcha don't even know that's why you ride around on it, huh?”

  Kragg was now shaking, eyes bulging out of his head, knuckles of his fists pressing hard against the orb.

  “I think he's gonna blow,” Mudhoof said.

  Kragg did. The ogre exploded into a fury of filtered expletives and roars as he punched, kicked, and even head-butted his enclosure. This went on for several minutes while Mudhoof and I watched, unimpressed.

  Then, spent of energy, Kragg stopped and went silent, panting heavily. He sagged down within the orb, his legs crossed beneath him.

  “Berzerker-Rage ability timed out, huh?” I said. “Good, because now we can have a civil conversation.”

  Kragg focused on me and leaned forward. “I don't care what you have to say, little Shadow. It won't matter. I'm still going to kill you and collect that bounty.” He sneered at Mudhoof. “I'll take out this walking cheese burger, too, as a bonus.”

  Mudhoof snorted and kicked a hoof through the sand on the floor. “You won't be killing anyone today, Snot-rag. And try not to look so smug. Who's the one who got his dumb-ass led straight into a simple trap?”

  I raised a hand. “Mudhoof, please.”

  The minotaur snorted again, but went quiet. Mudhoof knew when I used his full name it meant to chill out. Long-time friends can get away with that.

  To Kragg, I said, “Yes, we trapped you. And it wasn't hard. We've been tracking you for a few days now, waiting for a chance for you to 'find' me.”

  Kragg furrowed his unibrow, “You tracked me? What for? You should be doing everything to avoid me. I'm the bounty hunter, not you. What kind of idiot goes out of their way to get caught?”

  Mudhoof took an intake of breath but I cut him off with a glance before he could say anything.

  I gave Kragg a serious look and pointed a thumb at myself, “This idiot is sick and tired of being hunted by half the gaming universe. So, to put an end to all this bounty nonsense I decided that, as the game's most influential bounty hunter, we could come to an arrangement.”

  Kragg was thoroughly confused. “You want to split the bounty? Is that it? Let me kill you so we can share the reward?” He made a show of thinking, looking up in the air pensively and screwing a finger against his chin. “Hmm. Nope. Not gonna happen. Still going to kill you, and the bounty is all mine.”

  “You're not in a position to negotiate, Booger,” Mudhoof blurted.

  I said, “At least hear me out. It's not like you are going anywhere for a while.”

  Kragg barked a laugh. “Okay, I've had enough of this. I'm outta here.” He wore a tiny leather vest that only came down past his armpits. He reached inside and rummaged around.

  Mudhoof and I watched expectantly.

  With a dramatic flourish the ogre pulled out a large gold coin and held it up for us to see. “Teleport Token, morons,” he said with a wide grin. “Going to port back to my guildhall, round up some friends, and come find you. Bring this to a close.” He rubbed at the Token.

  “Not going to work,” I said.

  After a few seconds of rubbing, nothing happened. Kragg got more agitated. “What the FILTERED? This should work. They always do!


  I stepped forward and rapped a knuckle against the orb's clear material. “Not in this, it won't. In fact, nothing will. It's called an Orb of Oblivion for a reason.”

  Kragg blinked at the Token, then at me in bewilderment. Once it had sunk in he wasn't going anywhere, he slipped it back into his vest and sagged back down; a look of consternation plastered on his face. “Okay, fine. What do you want to talk about? The latest patch notes? How my class is now gimped for PvP in the war-arenas? I'd be willing to talk a lot about that.”

  Shaking my head, I said, “I want to get rid of the bounty on my head.”

  The ogre snorted. “Then you shouldn't have ticked off Ogden Trite. That guy is the definition of over-powered. At least when it comes to gold.”

  Ogden Trite. One of the richest players in the whole game tried to renege on a deal we made. I'd been hired to finish a Legendary Quest, which resulted in finding the Cloak of Shadows. But instead of paying me he tried to have me killed and take the Cloak, anyway. Didn't work out the way he hoped. Now he's placed a large bounty on my head, mostly out of spite.

  The silver lining to this whole dilemma is I now own the Cloak. But questing, even general game play, was made impossible by the stupid bounty. Everyone and their game-playing grandmother is out to get me. I had to get rid of this bounty once and for all.

  “Ogden is an idiot if he ever thought this bounty thing would work out in his favor,” I said. “No one wants to give up a Legendary item, regardless of the reward.”

  “Oh, yeah?” Kragg laughed. “Why do you say that?”

  “Because the amount of Legendaries in the game are finite. Minuscule in number. But making more gold in this game is the easy part. So it doesn't matter the amount of the payout. It's money you'd eventually earn, anyway.”

  Kragg rolled his big beady eyes. “Yeah, the bounty includes an insane bonus for the Cloak, but I'll decide what to do with it after I kill you.”

  Okay, time to play hardball, I thought.

  I pointed at the chamber wall next to where Kragg floated.

  Summon Void Portal.

  A tiny black dot appeared at the wall's center. It then grew bigger and bigger. In moments it was as large as the wall itself and looked like a huge black dish. From within the dish could be seen stars and multicolored gas clouds floating in the void of dark space.

  Kragg sat up and looked at the portal in unmasked awe. “Whoa,” he said. “What's that?”

  “That is a gateway into the Void Dimension. Heard of it?” I said.

  “Yeah,” said Kragg. “People go in, but they never come out again.” He looked at me, worried now.

  I said, “Kragg, I know you can't remove the bounty on my head, not without killing me at least, which will not happen. But you have information which could help me on my way to having the bounty negated.”

  “What's that?” the ogre asked, genuinely curious.

  “If I kill Ogden Trite, the bounty is canceled. And, as everyone knows, Ogden always hides in his guildhall, and you know where his guildhall is hidden.”

  Kragg blanched, which is strange to see considering how green he is. “I don't know that. Never been there.”. He folded his arms in front of him.

  “No?” I asked, then gave the orb a small push. It, along with Kragg inside, floated a few feet toward the gaping portal. “We've done our research on you, buddy, and wouldn't be asking if you didn't have the answer.”

  Kragg's eyes widened in alarm. “Wait! Don't!”

  Mudhoof chuckled. “Got something to share with us, Booger?”

  The ogre seemed to wrestle with himself over spilling the beans. I gave the orb another little nudge.

  “Okay!” Kragg finally said. “I'll tell you what I know. Just stop pushing me!” His eyes stared at the gate in fear. And he had reason to be. Once inside the Void there was no way out. Not any way that is known. He could be floating forever in there. Even if he died or deleted his character, the new one would appear back inside the void, floating through space.

  “Where is he?” I asked.

  “Well, I don't know where he is at this exact moment. But, like you said, he has a guildhall.”

  “Where is it located?”

  “I don't know the exact spot,” Kragg said.

  Mudhoof snorted and tapped his horns, which were tipped in steel, against the orb. The orb moved closer to the portal.

  Kragg held up his hands. “No one knows exactly where the guildhall is, but I know where the travel gate is that will lead you to it.”

  I waited a heartbeat then motioned for him to keep talking.

  “Wally's Womp,” Kragg said.

  “Wally's Womp?” Mudhoof said. “There's a place called Wally's Womp?”

  Kragg shook his head. “No beef-for-brains. It's the name of the travel gate.”

  “Watch your mouth!” Mudhoof said. The two scowled at each other.

  “Huh?” I said, befuddled. “Wally's Womp is the name of the gate? That doesn't make sense.”

  Kragg waved a hand dismissively, “You know what, this is crap. How am I suppose to deal with someone so dense? Besides, without an invite from Ogden himself, you won't gain access to the gate.”

  Mudhoof said to me, “Do you believe him?”

  I saw Kragg give the Void Portal another worried glance. “Yeah, I think so.”

  “Really?” Mudhoof said, sceptical. “Why?”

  “Because if I faced my character floating through a void for all eternity, I'd spill the beans, too.” I said and meant it. I looked to the Void Portal. The view it gave was beautiful but cold. Then I thought I glanced something moving, far off in the distance, snake-like and huge. But before I could query the game for an identity and statistics, the thing was gone.

  Mudhoof's voice pulled me back to the situation.

  “There is no such thing as a Wally's Womp,” Mudhoof said. He hitched a thumb at Kragg. “This green sack of unicorn dung is worthless.”

  Now enraged, Kragg stood up in the orb. “It does exist! But if you weren't so daft you would take the time to check it out.” He punched at the orb. “Let me out of here and I'll turn you into hamburger, stupid man-cow!”

  “That's it!” Mudhoof yelled and with nostrils flaring suddenly used his Charge ability.

  “No!” I shouted and reached for Mudhoof. But there was no way you could stop a charging minotaur.

  Mudhoof head-butted the orb at full speed hitting it with a loud crack. His head whipped back from the impact, snorting with rage.

  The orb shot away, with Kragg panicking inside, and passed straight into the Void Portal. The moment the orb crossed over from our dimension into the other, the gate instantly shrunk and vanished.

  Mudhoof looked at me with a sheepish grin. “Been wanting to do that since this started.”

  “That was uncalled for,” I said. I intended to let Kragg go, but by leaving him here in the Orb for a few days, at least. Once we checked out if the gate existed where he said, I would return and reverse the orb's creation. Now that would not happen at all.

  Mudhoof shrugged, “Yeah, maybe a little, but it felt good. So, Vee, what do we do now?”

  I let my anger subside. Mudhoof was one of only a handful of allies I had in this entire game. I could not afford to alienate him by losing my temper. Instead, I put Kragg out of my mind and answered Mudhoof's question.

  “Now?” I said. “Now we go kill Ogden Trite.”

  CHAPTER THREE

  We emerged from the dank chamber and out into the shadows cast by the high cliffs which surrounded us.

  I glanced over at the river and its opposite bank. There was no one here. None of Kragg's cronies had arrived, yet. But I did not doubt they were coming. We may have trapped the ogre in the Orb, but that did not prevent him from using the in-game chat to call for help. While we were interrogating him he was calling in favors.

  Mudhoof must have been thinking the same thing. “We need to make tracks, Vee. The cavalry may be coming.”

/>   “Agreed,” I said, “let's find the closest Locators Guild, then try to get a bead on this Wally's Womp.” I pulled up the local area map and did a quick search.

  While I did so, a chat request appeared at the edge of my vision. From 'Bishop The Red'. I rejected the request out of annoyance. Whoever it was could wait.

  Mudhoof snorted and kicked at the sand. “Wally's Womp? Nonsense. We couldn't trust that guy to tell the truth, anyway. Yeah, it was worth the shot to trap him, and kinda fun, too, but come on. Can't trust him as far as I could throw him.” He thought for a moment. “Oh, wait. I did throw him, and damn far, too. Never mind.”