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Chapter 11 — Nova

  Chapter

  11 — Nova

  Level

  9 arrived faster than expected. Vincent and Melo had developed a

  formidable efficiency—not because of revolutionary techniques or

  complex strategies, but simply because they functioned well together.

  Like two parts of a mechanism manufactured to interlock perfectly.

  Exactly

  like when Garou masters the Monster style,
Vincent thought.

  Technically, he was rationalizing his growing dependence on another

  human being as an "optimal game strategy." But then again,

  Olympic champions of mental gymnastics had to start somewhere.

  Melo

  cooked after every hunt, transforming raw loot into meals that didn't

  just restore, but IMPROVED. His cooking had become an art form—or

  perhaps an exact science disguised as art. Each dish was calibrated

  to maximize Psyché recovery while providing useful buffs for the

  next fight.

  
[Item

  Consumed: Weaver Sauté with Spore Reduction]

  [+25% Psyché

  regeneration (5 hours)]

  [+15 HP Stock]

  [+10% Attack Speed]

  [Psyché:

  78% → 81%]

  They

  reached Level 9 together, at the exact same moment, after defeating a

  mini-boss—a Level 10 Creeping Amalgam that had required fifteen

  minutes of coordinated combat and three instrument changes from Melo:

  harp for defensive buffs, jaw harp for offensive boosts, and at one

  point, a pipe that slowed the enemy's movements.

  
[Level

  Up!]

  [EchoZero: Level 8 → 9]

  [Melodream: Level 8 → 9]

  [XP to

  Level 10: 340/12,000]

  Vincent

  sat on a rock—still in his favorite Watchdog Man pose,

  obviously—watching the XP bar with a satisfaction he tried not to

  show.

  — Level 9. One more and we unlock the class quests.

  The word had changed meaning over the last few days. "We"

  was no longer an abstraction. It was concrete. It was him and Melo. A

  unit.

  They

  headed toward the [Agent’s] clearing to prepare for the search for

  the three missing members of their team. The Agent was there, as

  always, immobile, his cracked mask reflecting everything and nothing

  at once. He activated as they approached, his functions flickering

  into the interface.

  
[Zone

  Agent]

  Active Functions:

  [Buy / Sell]

  [Objectives]

  [Techniques]

  [Resurgence Point]

  [Class Quests — NEW]

  Vincent

  immediately selected [Class Quests], an anticipation he refused to

  call excitement bubbling in his chest. The Agent spoke, his flat,

  synthesized voice echoing in the air:

  — Access to Level 10 class

  quests available. Prerequisites: minimum group of five players, all

  Level 9 or higher. No member may exceed Level 12.

  A

  pause, then:

  — Your current group: two members. Insufficient. You

  must recruit three additional players before accessing class quests.

  Melo

  sighed.

  — Yeah, we expected that. So, how do we do this? Do we put

  out a general call? Look for other players in the zone?

  — There

  is a bulletin board, — the Agent continued. — Accessible in all

  Agent clearings. Players can post notices to form groups. I recommend

  this approach for efficient recruitment.

  The

  Agent gestured, and a holographic interface appeared—a virtual

  board filled with messages from players seeking groups, proposing

  trades, or simply... talking. Most were desperate. "Need help

  lvl 3 south zone." "Trading rare ingredients for

  protection." "SOS entire group wiped need resurrection."


  But

  a few were more structured. "Looking for lvl 8+ tank for

  Amalgam farming." "Support lvl 9 LFG class quest."

  "Ranged DPS available for raids."


  Vincent

  scanned the ads. They’re all struggling. All trying not to

  become monsters. Or maybe some have already given up.


  
[Psyché:

  83% → 82%]

  Melo

  placed a hand on his shoulder.

  — Hey. We’ll find the right

  people. Trust me.

  Vincent

  nodded and began drafting an announcement:

  Level 9 Group (DPS +

  Support) looking for 3 players for Level 10 class quests. Coordinated

  build, communication essential. Raid experience appreciated.”


  He

  hesitated, then added: “

  Because

  if they’re going to see me transform, they might as well know what

  they’re getting into. Partly, at least.
Melo read the draft and

  smiled.

  — Perfect. Professional but honest. Exactly what we need.

  Vincent

  posted the ad, and they waited. Five minutes. Ten. Fifteen. Nothing.

  Vincent was starting to think they should rephrase when a

  notification popped up.

  
[Message

  Received: Nova_Strider]

  “Hi. Level 9, Elite Hunter. I saw your ad.

  Your composition is unusual—very unusual—and I have questions

  before meeting you. Available to chat.”

  Vincent

  and Melo exchanged a look.

  If you stumble upon this narrative on Amazon, it's taken without the author's consent. Report it.

  — Elite Hunter?

  Melo whispered.

  —

  That’s a rare class. High mobility, very versatile.

  — She

  says she has questions. — Vincent narrowed the three holes of his

  mask. — Not "happy to meet you." Questions.

  — That’s

  normal, isn't it? She wants to make sure the group is good before

  committing.

  — Or

  she knows something she wants to verify.

  Melo

  looked at him, then shrugged.

  — We answer anyway. Meet here, at the

  Agent.

  Vincent

  replied: “OK. Agent Clearing, northwest sector. Fifteen

  minutes.”


  
[Message

  Sent]

  [Nova_Strider: “Good. See you soon.”]

  She

  arrived exactly on time.

  Small. Lean. Her silhouette emerged from the

  skin-trees with a discretion that suggested she was built—or had

  built herself—not to be seen until she chose to be. Black hair,

  short in front, tied back in two tight braids against her neck.

  Violet eyes—a color that wasn't natural, even for this game—scanned

  the clearing in exactly two seconds: Vincent, Melo, the Agent, the

  exits, the angles.

  She

  was dressed lightly—supple leather armor that hugged her form

  without hindering movement. At her hips, a rapier and a main-gauche

  dagger in their sheaths. Strapped to her lower back were two single-shot pistols, short and stocky, with flared barrels.

  She

  stopped at three meters. No more, no less. A chosen distance.

  —

  EchoZero. Melodream.

  Her

  voice was crisp. Small, but sharp. Not sweet. Direct in a way that

  left no room for ambiguity.

  — I am Nova. She didn't smile.

  Melo,

  for his part, did smile. Obviously. — Hi Nova! Welcome. We’re

  glad you’re interested in our ad.

  — Interested,

  — she repeated, and the word came out neutral, without irony but

  without warmth. — That’s a strong word. Let’s say I’m...

  curious.

  She

  looked at Vincent. Really looked at him. Not his stats, not his

  level, not his username. Him. The mask. The claws. The translucent

  wax. The three black holes. Her violet eyes didn't blink.

  —

  Wìdjigò-Phase, — she said. It wasn't a question.

  — Yeah,

  — Vincent replied, his voice dryer than he intended.

  —Progression... — she narrowed her eyes for a second. —

  Five out of ten, minimum on some Predator Way. Maybe more.

  — Seven.

  — Seven.

  — She nodded once. — And him? She looked at Melo. —

  Troubadour-Sutler. Mandatory sleep, seven hours, active absorption

  during rest cycles. Buff-amplified cooking. Multi-buff harp.

  Anchoring jaw harp.

  The

  silence that followed lasted exactly three seconds. Melo didn't

  flinch. But his hands—the ones that usually held a pot or a

  spoon—clenched imperceptibly at his sides. — You’ve got good

  sources, — he said softly.

  — I

  do my research before committing, — Nova said. She didn't look

  away. — For everyone.

  Vincent

  stared at her. The three black holes couldn't express much, but the

  gaze behind them—the one seeking, analyzing, compiling—was very,

  very active. She knows. She knows about the absorption. She knows

  about the sleep. And she’s still here. Why?


  — Right,

  — Nova said after a moment. — I have other questions. But not

  here. Not now. She pulled a small device from her inventory—a sort

  of digital, translucent notebook—and jotted something down with a

  stylus. — I’m going to check something. I’ll contact you in a

  few hours. Don't worry.

  — We’re

  not worried, — Vincent said, his voice carrying an arrogance that

  wasn't entirely natural. — We’re Level 9. We’ve been crushing

  it without you.

  Nova

  looked at him. And for the first time, something passed over her

  face—not a smile, not quite—that looked like amusement. — I

  know, — she said. And she disappeared between the skin-trees with

  the same discretion she had used to enter.

  They

  stood in silence for ten seconds.

  — So, — Melo said. — She’s...

  — Creepy,

  — Vincent finished.

  — I

  was going to say "interesting."

  — She

  KNOWS, Melo. About you. The sleep. The absorption. She guessed

  everything in ten seconds.

  Melo

  remained calm. Too calm, perhaps—the kind of calm that isn't

  carelessness, but mastery.

  — I know.

  — And

  you... you’re not worried?

  — No.

  — Why?

  Melo

  looked at him—that soft, constant gaze that never wavered.

  —

  Because she’s still here. She could have left. She could have

  posted a hateful message on the board. She could have blacklisted us.

  She did none of those things. She said "I’m going to check

  something." That means she’s thinking, not running.

  Vincent

  chewed on that answer for a moment. He might be right. But she’s

  scary.


  
[Psyché:

  82% → 81%]

  — We wait, — Vincent said.

  — We wait, — Melo confirmed.

  The

  message arrived four hours later. Not a long message. No enthusiasm,

  no "cool, let's meet up!" Just two sentences.

  
[Message

  Received: Nova_Strider]

  “I checked. Your duo is... complicated. But

  the risk/reward ratio is in your favor if you’re honest. I don't

  accept yet. But I’m not saying no.”

  Vincent

  read the message three times. She doesn't accept. She says "not

  yet."


  He

  didn't know why that thought—the fear of Nova, this small girl with

  her daggers and single-shot pistols—touched him in a way that

  wasn't pride. Not exactly. It was something else.

  Melo

  read the message over his shoulder and nodded.

  — That’s good.

  Very good, even.

  — How

  so?

  — Because

  she would say "no" if she didn't want to. She’d say "no"

  and disappear. The "not yet"... it means she’s looking

  for a reason to say yes. We give her that reason, and she’ll be

  with us.

  Vincent

  looked at the message—those two sharp, factual sentences—and

  noted something. She’s afraid of the duo. Not of me. Not of

  Melo. Of the duo. Of what we are together.
She’s right to be

  afraid.


  
[Psyché:

  81%]

  He

  didn't reply to the message. Not yet. He needed to think. Melo,

  beside him, began cooking dinner—a simple dish this time, a basic

  stew, his movements mechanical and comforting. And in the grey light

  that was neither day nor night, two players waited for a third to

  decide if it was worth the risk.

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