When Simon realized he was ba his instead of his sick bed back at the inn, he sighed and rolled over to go back to sleep. This was to keep away the parts of his brain that flickered to life with a persecution plex almost instantly more than any fatigue, though.
She only killed me because I was starting to find happiness, his mind told him.
That wasn’t true, of course, probably. It was far more likely that life was short and capricious, especially in the medieval era. Even with magic to keep the perils of disease away, not all of his deaths would occur at the hands of people who were trying to kill him. Some of them would just be acts.
But the idea that most of those acts seemed to occur when he was happy enough to let his guard down stu his craw. Simon’s life in Sny hadn’t been perfect, of course, but it had beey great. A unity full of people who knew him and thought well of him, a woman who was into him, and all the time in the world to experiment with magic. He’d been burning through his life at the rate of about a decade a year as he experimented, so he wasly destio lead a long and happy life by any measure, though there were solutions to that if he could stomach them.
Eventually, he dragged himself out of bed and stoked the fire in his stove so he could roast some sausages. “Alright, mirror, tell me what we’ve learned from this life.”
Simon expected it to show his character sheet or tell him it didn’t uand. Instead, when he looked over at it, his mouth fell open. There, printed on the gss, was ‘As you requested, you are to avoid the tar in Liepzen castle, and you should avoid fighting fire elementals on level ten in your journey into the Pit.’
“Wait… How do you know that?” Simon asked. “I thought you couldn’t tell me things about the individual levels.”
‘Nor I,’ it answered. ‘But you tell me things, and I will remember them for you.’
“Wait, back up. Didn’t Hedes say that you were supposed to help me?” he asked.
In respohe mirror pyed back to his st enter with Hedes. “Follow this wisp, and it will take you to the pit,” she told him pleasantly. “I’ll look forward to our enter, and I hope you enjoy the pit as much as you think you will.”
Simon realized then just how little he remembered of his first life here. He remembered the room that the versation was in but very little else about it.
“How e you could tell me about that enter but not others,” Simon asked.
‘Because I was there,’ the mirror answered instantly. ‘I am not alresent for your other advehough I do sometimes catch glimpses.’
“You what?” Simon asked, almost annoyed by how te he was learning all this, as he was excited to finally make some headway with this freaking thing. “How you catch glimpses of me on other levels.”
The mirror proceeded to py more clips. In one, he was fighting zombies in the bar, and in the , he was being run through in the haunted castle. There were other ooo. A glimpse of him from the wagon he’d rescued the children from, a quick shot of him with a volo in the background, and one of him walking around the vine-covered ruins from a very low angle. All of these followed in quick succession, oer the other.
For a moment, Simon almost saattern as he struggled to remember what each of those pces would have looked like, but all the pieces didn’t quite fit together. “Wait, so you’re in all the mirrors?” he said finally, not 100% certain he was right.
‘Not all,’ it wrote in its glowing blue writing, “But many. Each offered a glimpse into your journey in other times and pces. Sometimes, though, you stay in pces without mirrors for aended period of time, or you move between levels quickly. Since you never call out to me, it make finding you difficult. Uhe Goddess I serve, I am not om.”
Simon was stunned by this news. His first thought, though, was to curse the fact that he’d never gotten around to getting a nice mirror for the home he shared with Freya; if he had, well, he could watch a strange sort of home movies for as long as wanted. It’s probably for the best that I didn’t, though, he said, realizing that he could spend whole lifetimes doing just that.
Before he could ask the thing to show him any other snapshots of her, though, ahought struck him.
“There aren’t any mirrors on the jungle level, a you saw me there. How?” he snapped.
‘Mirrors are not the deg factor,’ the mirror expined, ‘All I need is a clear enough refle to find you.’
“So puddles work, too. Got it. And what’s the point of all this? You just follow around behind me like some sort of notepad?” Or spy, Simon thought to himself. The idea was dumb, but holy, it could have been useful, too. He had years and years worth of hat he could have kept if he’d known all of this before now.
“Why did Hedes give you to me?” he asked. “Are you a babysitter or a notepad?”
‘Having a spirit to watch over those who chose to brave the pit was decided long ago,’ it wrote. ‘Much like the potion that the Goddess gave you so that you might uand all the nguages of the world, it was meant to be a tool for those who lose their way.’
“Lose their way?” Simon asked.
‘After spending lifetimes i, many adventurers bee lost in their lives and lose track of the rger picture,’ it expined. ‘I’m here to help with that.’
“I see,” Simon said. He did, too. Even after a couple of years living another life, he found his return to the beginning more than a little disorienting. If he ever put down roots somewhere and spent decades there, well - he could see how that would be difficult. “So… you’re a Journal.”
‘I am something for you to refle.’ the mirror answered.
That was enough for Simon to crack a bitter smile. “Cute,” he said. “I’ll remember that. Probably.”
By the time the versation was finished, his lunch was too, so he called up his character sheet and ate in silence while he reviewed his options.
‘Name: Simon Jackoby
Level: 20
Deaths: 37
Experience Points: -968,199
Skills: Agriculture [Below Average], Archery [Above Average], Armor (light) [Great], Armor (heavy) [Below Average], Armor (medium) [Average], Athletics [Average], Baking [Poor], Cook [Above Average], Craft [Average], Deception [Average], Escape [Poor], Healing [Above Average], Iigate [Above Average], Maces [Average], Ride [Average], Search [Average], Sneak [Above Average], Spears [Average], Spell Casting [Good], Steal [Poor], Swimming [Below Average], and Swords [Great].
Words of Pervuul (greater) Meiren (fire) Aufvarum (minor) Hyakk (healing) Vrazig (lightning) Dnarth (distant) Oo (force) Zyvon (transfer) Gelthic (ice) Karesh (prote) Uuvellum (boundary) Barom (light) Delzam (cure)’
He’d gained more thay thousand karma i life, which was more than he expected. He’d expected to gain perhaps half of that and wasn’t sure exactly how to at for the discrepancy. Was it because he had saved so many or because he’d killed so few? Maybe it was because he’d been really satisfied with the little life he was building or because he’d mao remove some of the dark clouds that had been hanging over his head for a few lives now.
He couldn’t say. Ultimately, it was one more data point to be filed away, and he chewed on it as he got ready to desd again into the depths.
When Simon was all ready, he wasn’t pletely surprised that the first level was still there. Part of him had thought that the food was there to prevent starvation, but part of him had decided it was the goblins he’d missed st time.
“I could be wrong on both ts,” he muttered to himself after he finished murdering the rats. “The goblin level could still be there, taunting me.”
Even if it was, though, he’d already decided he wasn’t going tain. He’d doerally everything he could think of. It was time to get to level 30 and have a nice long talk about Freya so he could put that memory behind him one way or the other. He could figure out how to resolve other levels once he’d resolved that question.
The trap level held nothing new, save for the ending. The goblin level was, in fact, gone. In its pce were the stairs that desded into the tomb of the skeleton knight.
“You know, it kind of makes more sehis way,” he said to himself as he desded the chilly stairs. An unassuming basement that led to a trap-ridden tomb with a mini-boss at the e like a proper dungeon, and he smiled at that as he pulled out his mad started smashing skulls.
They no longer presented a real challenge, but they were a workout he sorely needed as soon as he lost all the muscles he’d earned over the st few years. “How did I ever let myself get this weak?!” he roared as he beheaded the boss and then stooped to pick up the creature’s gau and sword.
Simon allowed himself a moment to rest, studying the coffins and other armor for aails that might give him more text about what this level was for, but anything that wasn’t magical had aged poorly and beyond an additional ce to study the runes of the sword, and especially its mystery power source, there was little here that ied him.
So, with that in mind, he unlocked the gate and prepared to ehe sewer. That wasn’t what he found, though. Instead, he found a bustling tavern waiting there for him. Simon was more than a little shocked, but as soon as people started to look at him, he quickly shut the door behind him, lest anyohe crypt he’d e from.
This was a level that Simon had already beaten. He was sure of that. He’d memorized every detail of this cursed inn, and more than that, he’d put it behind him. So how was it bao, how was it bad whole?
Simohe small dining room he was in, in a daze as he walked into the on room. Where were the zombies? Where were the dead bodies? He wondered.
It was a jarring moment, and he almost stopped to ask someone about it, but before he could open he saw her smiling across the room from him, and his mind froze pletely solid. Freya was alive, and straill; she was smiling.
Author's Note:
Monday, Golemancer, my sed webo be published was released on Amazon. It's about an AI that invades a fantasy world, ging it forever. It's pretty different from Death After Death, and cks time loops but if you like my writing, and dungeon cores ical warfare, sider pig up a copy.