The Captain lived up to exactly her reputation, except that Rayna hadn't expected her to be so short. After sending Pirr to a medic and shoving Rast out to the same place after he'd delivered a report, she turned to the two players. "Thank you. Out here, we need all the help we can get. I'll make sure you're rewarded for this, but I have to go through some red tape first since this wasn't an officially posted bill or anything..at the very least, I can put you up in an inn for the night. I'm sorry if this business sidetracked you much from wherever you were going before."
"Ah, actually we were headed to this town anyway," said
Lynn.
"And neither of us is that good with directions, so if anything
we got here faster," added the fox-girl.
"That's good to hear. I'm guessing you two are adventurers
coming out to the frontier for work?"
"Pretty much," said Rayna.
"Pretty much," said Rayna.
"Well, you're better than you look." She turned toward a
board on the wall covered in papers. "These are the guardhouse
bills. They're tougher jobs than the ones out on the board in the
main square, but give better rewards. Normally we require people to
take on some of the easier ones first, but I can make an exception
based on Rast's recommendation. Just..don't take these jobs lightly.
Lot of people get killed trying to do too much, too early."
She shook her head, and then turned to one of the guards.
"Heron."
"Yes!" he said, standing upright at attention.
"Yes!" he said, standing upright at attention.
"Show these two to the Broken Dragon. Tell 'em it's on me."
"Sir!" He nodded to them, and they followed him out.
The guardsman left once they had reached the inn in question, and
they looked at each other briefly before walking in and finding a
seat.
"'Better than we look.' Is that a compliment or an insult?"
said Rayna.
"Well, to be fair, I look kinda frail and you look..." Lynn
waved vaguely at the other girl, "...worse."
"Hey, what's that supposed to mean?"
"Your clothes don't exactly look combat-ready, for one
thing."
"Well neither do yours, you're just wearing a dress..thing."
"Well neither do yours, you're just wearing a dress..thing."
"It's all one piece, and I can move around in it without
worrying about it falling off."
"I'll have you know I'm not worried at all about my clothes falling off," said the fox-girl with a slightly mischeivous grin.
"I'll have you know I'm not worried at all about my clothes falling off," said the fox-girl with a slightly mischeivous grin.
"That worries me more. And you're kind of overweight, too."
"No, I'm busty and charismatic. There's a difference. If I was overweight this thing wouldn't fit me at all," said Rayna, pointing at the belt-thing around her waist.
"No, I'm busty and charismatic. There's a difference. If I was overweight this thing wouldn't fit me at all," said Rayna, pointing at the belt-thing around her waist.
"Well, you aren't exactly built for running."
"I'm a mage. Mages are never built for running."
"I'm a mage. Mages are never built for running."
"...Fair point.
"But they should be. If I was being raised as a mage I
would take up every sport I possibly could at the same time. People
would come and try to beat up on the squishy mage and they wouldn't
even be able to land a hit."
"Ehh, you didn't exactly do that your first time around—being
raised as a nerd, you know? Maybe real people just aren't built for
min-maxing."
"Sure they are. Just isn't a lot of fun to live that way..."
"Hey, speaking of clothes," said Rayna, "I don't think
either of us has a single thing besides what we're wearing right now.
You think we could go and buy a few with whatever the guard captain
pays us?"
"Eh, sure, I guess so. I mean, I need to buy a few more
arrows—which isn't something I usually think about, so I assume I'm
only thinking about it because of the same class-based mental
whatever that lets me know exactly how to make an arrow light itself
on fire—but that can't possibly be too expensive. I mean,
most game shops sell you arrows for an in-game cent and won't buy
them because they're just that worthless. Anyway, we could both use
something more practical for fighting monsters."
"Psh, practical. I just wanna have more cute but culturally
inaccurate furisodes."
"So you're not worried about being useless after your
clothes fall off or get torn up in the middle of a battle,
then?"
"Lynn, my class is entirely charisma based. I'd be just the opposite of useless if that happened...and anyway, I can make illusory clothes if I wanna."
"Well, speak for yourself. Archer class does a lot of jumping and running around, and this stupid short dress thing isn't gonnna cut it for me."
"Lynn, my class is entirely charisma based. I'd be just the opposite of useless if that happened...and anyway, I can make illusory clothes if I wanna."
"Well, speak for yourself. Archer class does a lot of jumping and running around, and this stupid short dress thing isn't gonnna cut it for me."
The first time he'd gone and bought clothes, Zack had taken as little
time as possible between removing his armor and putting everything
back on in the right order, avoiding the changing room mirror as much
as possible. This time he had a lot of clothes to try on and needed
to make sure they fit right since they weren't just acting as an
extra layer of undergarments to the armor. Besides which, avoiding
mirrors for however long he was in this game was ridiculous. He
needed to get used to this..body..so it couldn't be used against him
in combat. Someone could get hurt.
So this time, he removed his armor and put it on the opposite side of
the room from the clothes he was going to try on, and forced himself
to turn fully toward the mirror. A beautiful woman looked back,
blinking a couple of times. She had a very generous figure and a
pretty face, but also a kind of physical sturdiness, some visible
muscle on her stomach and limbs. Her expression was (aside from a
slight blush) serious, stern even; her ears were folded back
slightly, but still twitching occasionally, picking up the noise from
the shop outside. The lingerie she was wearing was black and lacy, a
little too ornate, really.
He would have asked a girl like that out on a date any time...even
though the wolf ears and tail were a little strange. Zack started to
open his mouth to say something to himself, but paused, noticing that
some of the girl's teeth actually looked sharper than usual. Curious,
he stuck out his tongue and saw that it was actually longer than a
normal human tongue, or at least it was able to move farther out of
his mouth than seemed quite right. This didn't make any sense; teeth
like those and a longer tongue should make it harder to speak
normally, or at least to speak human languages. Then again, his hair
(which he noted was still ridiculously long) should have been
chopped up in fights at least six or seven times by now. The "game"
made accommodations like that that clearly weren't magic at all, but
were still in violation of basic physics, so why should he be
surprised?
Zack crossed his arms, trying to find a comfortable way to do it with
the big chest in the way, and thought about finding some new
underwear, too. After all, anything else he wore was apparently
subject to damage from fights, and it would suck to have none at all.
It would mean actually changing underwear, which in turn meant
not wearing anything for a few seconds...but oh well, this was his
body right now and he'd just have to put up with it. Someone could
get hurt.
He tried briefly to imagine what the girl in the mirror would look
like as a guy: Taller, very muscular, short hair thanks, but
the image of a muscular guy gave him an odd feeling between his legs
and a slight heat in his cheeks that he immediately did not
like. He shook his head to dispel the image, his hair swishing
around, and wondered briefly how it stayed so straight, like it had
just been brushed, after lying in bed multiple times. Did this world
have "no-bed-hair" magic, too? Whatever.
Dismissing the thought, Zack turned toward the pile of clothes with a
small sigh, picking up the first few to try on.
Katherine came out of the changing room wearing a t-shirt, some jean
shorts and dark stockings. "What d'you think?" she asked,
giving a small spin.
"It looks cute!" said Mika, Nora nodding in agreement.
"Kinda like a Pokemon trainer, though."
"With a bust this size?" she said, prodding her
chest with an finger. "Please. They're like, twelve. You'd
look like a trainer in this..but only with a ridiculous hairstyle."
"Haha, yeah."
Nora said, "Wait..h-how does that fit with your tail..?"
Nora said, "Wait..h-how does that fit with your tail..?"
"It comes out above the hips, see?" She turned to one side
and pulled the back of the shirt up a bit to demonstrate. "Why
do you think my skirt never got flipped up at the back?"
"I j-just thought you were being careful.."
"In the middle of a fight with a giant goblin?"
"In the middle of a fight with a giant goblin?"
"W-well, I wasn't there to see that..."
"The fire thing chasing Mika around?"
"Oh..y-yes."
"Oh..y-yes."
"Sooo, is this the last one?" said Mika.
"Yeah, I'm starting to get hungry for lunch, actually. Maybe
they'll let me wear this one out after we pay."
Once they were out and on the way back to the inn, the catgirl said,
"You know, it's never really occurred to me before now how weird
it is that girl shorts are so..short. It's like, if you're a guy and
you wanna wear shorts, they'd better go down to the knees, but for
girls...way up on the thighs is the norm?"
"I think there are some, uh, cultural..historical reasons or
something," said Nora. "N-not that that explains why it's
like that in this world, though."
"It's the same thing, though. If this world really is inside of
some kind of super-advanced video game, then that game was made by
someone from our world," said the witch.
"B-but there should still be s-some kind of internal reason, for
the setting to make any sense..right?"
"You know, the same kind of lore would be needed to explain why
girls wear skirts at all in this world when they apparently fight
just as much as guys do here, since pants are way better suited for
fighting," said Katherine.
"Um...I guess so. But it hasn't stopped you or Zack from
fighting in them..."
The archer and the illusionist received their pay for saving a couple
of the town guards the morning after they arrived in town. After
eating breakfast, they went out to look for clothes.
On the way, Rayna stopped dead, turning toward a window. "Hey,
look at that!"
Lynn nearly ran into the fox-girl, and wound up a with a facefull of
fur. "Pfft! Hey, you have a tail now, y'know!"
"Yeah yeah whatever, look."
"Yeah yeah whatever, look."
"What?" She turned to look. "Ray, that's a weapon
store. We have—well, I have a weapon already."
"Yeah, but look. The sign says that quiver is self-refilling. Didn't I hear you complaining about having to go pick up or make your own arrows all the time?"
"Yeah, but look. The sign says that quiver is self-refilling. Didn't I hear you complaining about having to go pick up or make your own arrows all the time?"
"I wasn't...well okay, I said I didn't like it but it makes
sense because it's realistic."
"Who cares about realistic when you have magic like that? Let's go get one."
"Who cares about realistic when you have magic like that? Let's go get one."
She ran inside, the human girl following her.
"Okay...that is definitely too expensive," said Lynn.
"We'll just have to come back for it later."
"But they only have one. What if someone else buys it first? Anyway, we do have enough to buy it..."
"But they only have one. What if someone else buys it first? Anyway, we do have enough to buy it..."
"...And then no new clothes. I'm not doing it."
"Hmm. Well, I have an idea, and I'm gonna try it."
"That sentence has heralded so many disasters, Ray.."
"Raynaaaa," said the fox-girl, "and just watch me."
"Hmm. Well, I have an idea, and I'm gonna try it."
"That sentence has heralded so many disasters, Ray.."
"Raynaaaa," said the fox-girl, "and just watch me."
She picked up the quiver and walked up to the store's counter,
looking the skinny guy behind it square in the eyes. "Hey,"
she said, leaning forward on the counter and putting the quiver down
next to her. "My friend and I are adventurers, and we just moved
into town, but we already helped the town guard out once. Lynn here
is an archer, and a quiver like this would be really useful,
but we can only afford to pay half of its price right now. We're
gonna take another job soon that should pay for the rest of it, and
even if it doesn't we're planning on sticking around for a while, so
we could always return it if things don't work out. Do you think we
could just put off paying the other half for a few days?"
"Uh, um," said the guy, blushing a little bit and conspicuously not trying to look at her chest. "Well, I mean, we didn't pay all that much for it...if you can pay half what it was marked for, you can have it, miss..."
"Uh, um," said the guy, blushing a little bit and conspicuously not trying to look at her chest. "Well, I mean, we didn't pay all that much for it...if you can pay half what it was marked for, you can have it, miss..."
"Rayna's the name," said the illusionist, standing back up
with a big grin and taking his hand before shaking it, "you've
got a deal, sir. Thanks so much!" She handed him the money, and
then walked out of the store with the quiver, the archer following.
"Well, was that great or what," said Rayna, handing her
friend the prize.
"I'm not even sure what that was," said Lynn in
retort. "I thought you were just gonna buy it anyway and make me
wait to buy more practical clothes."
"Aww, what kind of friend would that make me?"
"The kind you always are," said Lynn, starting along the road again. "But seriously, what did you do?"
"Aww, what kind of friend would that make me?"
"The kind you always are," said Lynn, starting along the road again. "But seriously, what did you do?"
"I just figured, I have all this ridiculous charisma, I may as
well use it..and it worked!"
"But you, you were totally flirting with that guy."
"Yeah. That's how you use charisma on the opposite sex, silly."
"Yeah. That's how you use charisma on the opposite sex, silly."
"Did you like him, though? Do you like guys?"
"Sure. Don't you?"
"Sure. Don't you?"
"I..." Lynn paused to think. "Huh. I guess I do.
That's weird and uncomfortable."
"Really? I think it's exciting. Like seeing the whole idea of
romance from a completely different angle."
"Are you gonna get you a bizarre fantasy world boyfriend,
Raynanana?"
"Mmmmaybe. I mean, if I find someone I actually really like.
First things first, though."
The three girls found Zach sitting with his legs crossed at one of
the tables in the inn, reading a newspaper and wearing a
loose-fitting shirt and jeans. The wolf was asleep next to him.
Still near the doorway, Katherine whispered, "I really
wish she'd quit this 'I'm still a guy' business because I swear she
looks gorgeous in everything. It's ridiculous."
"I know, right?" whispered Mika back.
"I know, right?" whispered Mika back.
Once at the table, the catgirl said, "A newspaper? Where did you
even find a newspaper?"
Putting the paper down, the knight said, "I just asked the
waitress if they had any. Thought it might be useful to get some clue
about the overall setting here."
"Well, were there any interesting articles?"
He shrugged. "A few. Apparently a prince of the country that
actually owns this town wants to visit soon, but they keep saying the
trip is too dangerous. They actually have statistics on the
number of people that die trying to get out to the frontier."
"What kind of statistics?" asked Mika.
"What kind of statistics?" asked Mika.
"Oregon trail statistics. Even though this is a huge city,
anyone who makes it here is lucky."
"Then how do they know the prince wants to visit if they can't
reliably get messages back and forth from the castle or
whatever?"
Zach shrugged. "Magic, probably. From what I can tell, these people use magic the way we use computers."
Zach shrugged. "Magic, probably. From what I can tell, these people use magic the way we use computers."
"To screw around and play games all day?" said the witch.
"For everything," said Zach. "You have a
disease, go find someone with healing magic. You're rich and want a
ridiculously tall thing built to honor yourself? Find some people
who'll do earth magic for cash." He pointed at another article
with a picture of a giant statue of a man on horseback, with an
actual person standing by the statue who looked tiny in comparison.
"I really wouldn't be surprised if there's a magic telegram
system or something where you can pay to have messages sent back and
forth between cities. Maybe rich people have magic two-way radios
made out of carved wooden ears or something."
"You didn't eat ahead of us again, did you?" said
Mika.
"No..you're not that late this time."
"No..you're not that late this time."
"Great, get a waiter, I'm starving!"
"Hmm.." said Katherine a little later, looking at
Zach.
"What?"
"What?"
"I dunno. You seem more relaxed than usual."
"Well, I'm finally wearing something halfway normal for once, I guess. And you're not being annoying right now."
"Well, I'm finally wearing something halfway normal for once, I guess. And you're not being annoying right now."
"You'll have to wear the skirty dress-armor again if we go out
to fight any more monsters, though," said Mika.
"Yeah..but at least I'm not wearing it all the time. Anyway,
there's no reason I can't afford better armor once we do a few more
jobs. I actually saw some sensibly-designed armor that would fit me
on the way back here, so I know it exists."
"Wow, if I knew all it took to cheer you up was a change of
clothes I would've suggested it ages ago," said Katherine.
"It's not all, but I'll take it for now."