Camelot Defiant_An Arthurian LitRPG

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Camelot Defiant_An Arthurian LitRPG Page 1

by Galen Wolf




  Camelot Defiant

  Book 3 in the Camelot LitRPG Series

  Galen Wolf

  Copyright © 2017 by Galen Wolf

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

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  Contents

  The Black Dragon

  The Beastmen

  Level Two

  Sir Lancelot and Sir Bors

  Ingredients

  An Intrusion

  Facing the Fangs

  Following the Fangs

  Holy Light

  The Wall

  Elizabeth Bathory, Heretic

  Blowing the Gaff

  The Blasted Heath

  The Cockatrice

  Lindisfarne

  The Jabberwock

  Defending Lindisfarne

  Saving Elizabeth Bathory

  Pit Fiends

  Sailing South

  Shipwreck

  The Hedge

  Hellsmouth

  Running for Home

  Barons and Paladins

  Vorpal

  Riding to War

  The Red Dragon

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  Also by Galen Wolf

  The Black Dragon

  Even when I’m not playing, dreams of Camelot call me back. When I’m going about real-life business, I keep wanting to log on and be Gorrow again. I take a break deliberately, but then I have to go back.

  Four game days have gone by the next time I log into the Camelot game. The Forgotten Chapel Dungeon has levelled to Level 5. I’ve Levelled, my dungeon buddy Tye has levelled to Level 7. The Silver Drift Mine settlement has levelled to Level 2. We killed our enemies or they died fleeing, so what’s not good? Everything, actually.

  The enemy now knows we are running the Forgotten Chapel Dungeon but that in itself isn’t so bad, because they can’t break the dungeon. They can send their high levels in and loot it repeatedly and kill all the mobs, but the mobs will re-spawn, and as we’ve shown, we will get some of them too, so them sending teams in could slowly benefit us and help the dungeon to level. No it’s not that.

  There’s plenty of work to do in the dungeon. I’ve got Thorvald and his NPC miners digging out Level 2 under the supervision of my alchemist buddy Bernard who will be boss of this level and with the rather creepy, but technically brilliant attention of Peter the Silent, the NPC rogue and trap smith. Work goes ahead, new mobs, new traps. I’m looking forward to that.

  Work goes on in the Silver Drift Mine settlement. We’re extending the place to bring the barracks underground and in fact everything that doesn’t need the sunshine will come underground eventually. We’ve now got a settlement milestone underground so all the player characters can bind there — that’s me (Sir Gorrow of the Bloody Field), Bernard the Alchemist, Tye the Fire Mage and Saint Fitheach, the… saint. Pretty peachy.

  So what’s the problem? The problem is that I know Maligon baron of the neighbouring evil town of Carrionburg. Until recently, he didn’t know the Forgotten Chapel Dungeon was run by me, a Knight of King Arthur’s Round Table, but now he does. He’s going to search for us and if he searches long enough he’s going to find our back door in the Secret Valley. And when he finds our buildings and fields in the Secret Valley, he’s going to bring enough troops to burn them to ashes.

  Our food supply was always precarious. I look at the scarred wooden desktop in front of me. On it are two items, a red and white-spotted toadstool and a smoky grey quartz crystal. These two objects have been making me ponder recently and I wonder if between them they don’t offer a solution to our problems. Asterix the dwarf wondered if we couldn’t eat the mushrooms and that would solve our food problems, but when some of the NPC miners tried, they got sick and spent the day vomiting. We certainly can’t eat the Smoky Crystal, but it has to be good for something.

  I lift the crystal to my ear and hear it buzzing. It’s faintly warm to the touch. There’s something magical going on in this crystal and the Evil One was putting enough effort into mining it from the deposits at Carrionburg to show it’s of high value. Trouble is, we just have no clue what it’s for.

  I stand then tap the toadstool and feel its spongy surface give under my fingertips. To think my staffing agency dwarf Asterix believes my NPCs can live off these things once the potatoes run out. Imagine drinking toadstool beer! I need to discuss recipes with my brewer and business manager, Jason. I rub my forehead. I thought this game would be about me swinging my sword and cutting down enemies but instead, I’m a manager, well on my way to being a baron, when I would have preferred to be a paladin.

  I turn and step out of my chambers into the rocky passage outside. Guttering torches give it a flickering light and the air smells of smoke and burned wax. I’m planning to go and see how Level Two of the dungeon is coming along when I bump into Tye, our flame-haired fire mage in his wizard robes. ‘Gorrow, I was just coming to see you. Do we have any money left for some more mobs? I fancy getting some Smoke Bugs. They’re really cool… well they’re hot really, but you know—’

  Tye’s halfway through his explanation about why I should pay for extra monsters for his dungeon level when we hear the echoing footsteps of someone running down the stone corridor. We both pivot round to see who it is.

  A militia man appears from the Long Corridor that leads to the settlement back door to the Secret Valley. He pauses, saluting, still out of breath.

  ‘Take your time man,’ I say but he blusters on, the words falling over themselves as he pushes them out in his urgency. ‘Sir, Gorrow, sir… Secret Valley. We weren’t expecting…’ He flaps his hand. ‘Came from over the hills…’

  Tye raises an eyebrow. ‘What came over the hills?’

  This talk of things coming over the hills is alarming me. I start to stride off in the direction of the Secret Valley door. Tye follows. ‘I’m coming too.’

  The militia man turns and runs. Six feet behind us he yells, ‘It’s a black dragon.’

  I remember black dragons. I fought one when I was a squire under Sir Mercurius. They are evil in alignment and breathe acid. Not all of them are allied with the Evil One. They tend to help him when it suits them rather than being on the payroll.

  Even so, we hurry.

  The two militia guards at the entrance to the Secret Valley thud the feet of their spears on the rock floor in salute and draw the mighty doors open. I smell the biting stench of hydrochloric acid even from here. The black-winged worm is hovering, flapping its leathery wings so it remains stationary in the air while it spouts floods of acid down onto the farms and fields below. Cows scream in pain as the acid bites through their hides right down to the bone.

  I turn to the guards. ‘Where’s Armand?’ Armand is my sergeant at arms and in charge of the troops out here. The guard points a leather gloved hand. ‘Down there, sir.’

  And I see him. Armand is marshalling the Raffles Light Archers, the remnants of the regiment we rescued from the burning ruins of Camelot just as it fell to the enemy.

  They’re behind tall pavises, which protect them from some of the dragon’s acid breath. Flights of arrows shoot into the air at Armand’s command.

  ‘Draw. Wait.’

  The archers stand, their bows bent, their drawstrings taut.

  ‘Wait, wait, get your aim. And fire.’ Armand brings down his arm and at that signal, twent
y arrows from our twenty archers fly through the air and clatter against the dragon. Most bounce off its armoured skin but some get through, but for all the damage they do, it seems hardly worth it.

  The dragon is devastating the settlement. I see farmers lying in hissing heaps of bones and skin beside their animals. I shake my head. I still have no ranged weapon ability. I bought a longbow a long time ago and have failed to develop that skill. There are so many other skills demanding a share of the points I get through levelling.

  We run over and I put my hand on Armand’s back to let him know I’m there. I don’t want to break his concentration. Another sheet of arrows flies up and most bounce off uselessly. Our counterattack is pathetic compared with the dragon’s assault.

  Armand shakes his head. ‘We’re hardly hurting it.’

  ‘What about the eagles?’

  ‘Most were out on far patrol patterns. I extended their range so we could get an idea of enemy troop movements well before they came close.’ He gestures up towards the great reptile. ‘The two or three that were here got killed pretty fast. They’re no match for that thing.’

  Black dragons are pretty rare; they’re top predators so they have a big area where they are the only one of their kind. This one must have just stumbled into the Secret Valley looking for somewhere to nest and decided it needed to clear us humans out first. At least I hope that’s how it came and it’s not spying for the Evil one.

  ‘Fire is the answer,’ Tye says. Tye is now Level 7. He’s not really a match for the thing above, but he’s an enthusiast.

  ‘With your permission, boss, can I blast it?’

  I nod. ‘Of course.’ Everything helps.

  A Flaming Ray darts across the sky and sears dragon as it hovers, its big wings flapping like leather bellows. The thing screams out in pain and its black beady eyes swivel round looking for the one who caused it. The next bright ray confirms Tye is the author of its agony.

  ‘I did fifty and seventy on it, and that’s not a crit yet,’ Tye says.

  The dragon turns and begins to flap in our direction.

  I remember my horse. ‘Is Spirit okay?’ I yell at Armand as I start to follow Tye who is already haring across the field. I’m guessing he wants to drag the dragon’s attention away from the vulnerable militia but he’s a long way from cover. I see he’s heading for a grass-fringed rock that stands maybe twenty feet high away from the farm buildings. He’s running as fast as he can, hitching up the blue skirt of his robe so he can go quicker.

  Armand yells back at me as I follow Tye across the field. ‘Yes, Spirit and the mules are safe. I moved them.’

  I’m sprinting after Tye. I don’t know what I’m going to do - maybe, stand in front of him? I’ve got 50% Acid Resistance on my armour and he probably has zilch on his robes.

  Then he turns. I see his face contort and he holds out both hands as blinding lines of fire spearhead out from each and zap towards the dragon. ‘Eat that, bitch,’ he mutters.

  I snap my head round and see the dragon take both rays in its chest. The power of Tye’s attack knocks it back slightly and it screams in pain.

  ‘Fifty and sixty!’ the wizard yells in triumph. But that dragon isn’t beaten, it’s just annoyed.

  ‘Run, Tye!’

  Tye pushes back his yellow-red hair from his forehead and turns and bolts. I scream up at the dragon, holding up my shield. I’m still all in green as the mysterious Green Knight. It glances at me but and disregards my challenge. The thing flaps on again after Tye and I have no attack to draw its aggro.

  But his attack and my shout have given Tye long enough to get to the rock. He dives behind it, disappearing into the long grass and then he must have crawled his way round because the next thing I see is his face peeping out the far side of the rock.

  The dragon isn’t fooled. It arches its neck and a flood of black-green acid streams out and smacks into the rock. The stone crumbles and hisses as parts of it melt away, crumbling in a flood of bits to drip into the grass and turn that black and dying.

  I see a hand emerge from a blue sleeve and another bolt hits the dragon. The dragon tries to fly around the rock but Tye runs the other way. When it backs off and comes round the reverse way, Tye repeats his move. It blasts the rock with acid, and Tye darts out and shoots rays of fire when he can. Slowly but surely, the dragon is eating through the rock, but Tye is causing it damage.

  ‘I’m nearly out of mana,’ yells Tye. ‘Just sayin’’

  The dragon blasts the rock again and Tye jumps out of cover and gives it a double blast. With a final roar, the flying beast decides to leave. It will slowly regenerate health but it doesn’t have any health potions like we have.

  With a buffet of air, the dragon turns and begins to flap away. I can’t have that. Even if they dragon hasn’t come as an enemy scout, it now knows we here. The thing has to die.

  Tye gives a hoot of victory and steps out of cover.

  ‘We need to kill it.’ By ‘we’ I mean him currently because I can’t hit it. It’s back over the ruined farm buildings. I see others of our team have emerged. Bernard the Alchemist is just coming out of the stone door from the Silver Drift Mine. He stands, pulling his wispy beard, perplexed, then he gets a flask of swirling blue liquid from his inventory and hurls it at the dragon.

  Tye and I run towards Bernard.

  The flask arcs lazily through the air and smacks against the dragon, exploding with a flash of light and a scream of dragon pain. It’s some kind of light bomb in the flask, I’ve never seen Bernard use that before. He must have just got the skill.

  I say, ‘Shoot it, Tye.’

  Tye stops, aims and another Flaming Ray lances from his right hand and strikes the dragon as it flies away. It hits it right in the tail. The thing is looking decidedly ill now, black blood dripping. And then, in a casual act of malice, it turns its head and pours acid down on where Armand the Tall and the archers are standing under the eaves of one of the remaining farmhouses.

  Some of the archers reel back shouting in pain, others are protected from the worst of it by their pavises, but Armand takes the blast of acid in his face. He shrieks and staggers back, fingers clawing at his destroyed face. He falls and I rush over to him, but when I get to him the acid has eaten through his skin, showing bone and brain and with a wet cough, he dies. Armand the Tall, my Sergeant at Arms who’s been with me since the beginning of Silver Drift is dead. Grief hits me like a blow. He was an NPC but he was a friend. And for NPCs, there is no resurrection. I’m on one mailed knee, my hand on Armand’s chest as his pixelated body breaks up and fades out, never to return.

  I roar, ‘Get that dragon!’

  I see Bernard hand a bottle of mana potion to Tye and see the wizard gulp it down, wiping his chin. Then firing ray after ray, transfixing the flying lizard-like pins through a huge moth. Because he’s only low level his individual rays don’t do much damage - not as much as the alchemical flasks hurled by Bernard. They fly with supernatural accuracy and crack in blinding flashes along the flanks of the dragon. One, then two, then three hit it and with a final roar, the beast crumples and crashes to the ground, flattening the pine trees that line the slopes of the tall hills that guard the Secret Valley.

 

  I didn’t actually do anything. I was just grouped with Tye and Bernard who did.

  ‘Got it,’ mutters Bernard.

  Tye nods then turns to me where I’m still kneeling where Armand died. I rise to my feet.

  ‘At least it didn’t escape, boss,’ Tye says. ‘It won’t be telling anyone we’re here.’

  Bernard mutters, ‘But there will be more.’

  ‘Armand’s dead,’ I say.

  I know they will be thinking I can just promote another militia man, who’ll eventually level to be the same level as Armand. But he won’t be Armand. Stupid and sentimental, I know, but maybe I am.

  I twist my mouth as I look around at the ruined farms and dead
farmers and animals. We will regain those losses, we will rebuild the farms and get the crops in so Silver Drift can survive, but we have to improve our defences.

  Then I hear a cry from the far side of the fields, where the rough stone walls make a boundary with the dark pine trees. There are militia there, some of the Halberdiers from the Currock Yeomanry are there and it looks like they’re in combat. I look around from some answers and I see soldiers running. I call out to one of them. ‘What’s up, soldier?’

  He points. ‘There are beastmen in the woods. Lots of them.’

  The Beastmen

  The pine wood on the slopes of the valley opposite where I’m standing blossoms in flames. If the dragon’s incursion over the Secret Valley was just the whim of the giant reptile, this beastman visit looks like a proper raid. And Armand’s dead. The militia mill around leaderless until I pick one who looks like he has an ounce of sense. ‘You, what’s your name?’

  ‘Uchtred, sir.’

  ‘Okay, Uchtred. You’re in charge of the soldiers for now at least. Can you rally them into formation and follow us over to the woods?’

  He gives a brisk salute and starts barking orders at his former comrades.

  ‘By us, you mean us?’ Tye says, pointing to himself and Bernard. I give a grim smile. ‘You got it. Let’s go.’

  But first I have to find Spirit. The others follow me as I head left round the stone walls, past the smoking acid-stinking ruins of the farms. There’s Spirit with the blaze on his nose in the field with Henry and the mules. He snickers when he sees me and I run over and open the gate.

 

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