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Chapter 4 - Shrimp Slayer

  Marisol jumped onto the rocky railings and swallowed a hard gulp.

  The leviathan’s shadow was still swirling under the wreckage, and it was still raining and thundering. The storm was a violent, starving beast that couldn’t be calmed. In less than five minutes, the ship was going to sink, so it was do or die. Jump or fall.

  She chose to climb down the hull because her legs were still a bit shaky.

  the Archive muttered.

  “God forbid a Sand-Dancer is just the tiniest bit afraid of the sea,” she mumbled back, using the protruding cannons as handholds, stabbing her glaives directly into the hull for stability. “Also, you could embellish the number a little to give me more confidence, you know? Do you to say I only have a five percent chance of success?”

  She didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. “See? At least the number’s bigger now, right?” she whispered, chortling lightly, doing her best to dispel the tension weighing on her shoulders without losing her grip. She’d probably accidentally let go of a cannon if she forced herself to laugh too hard.

  Quickly, she reached the bottom of the ship where the waves crashed against the hull. Seawater doused her clothes and satchel, completely soaking her from top to bottom. The water was . She wanted to bite her teeth, hug herself, and climb back up, but instead she recited the Sand-Dancer’s tenet over and over in her head: 'grace above all else, fearlessness and recklessness hand in hand'.

  She closed her eyes and sucked in a cool, slow breath.

  Then she let go of the cannon and dropped.

  For a second, she was worried she was going to sink straight into the abyss, but she landed on the tip of her glaives and immediately started wobbling around. It was a sickening sensation, like standing on quicksand, but the ‘quicksand’ here was frothy and salty and wavy, immediately pulling her away from the relative safety of the hull. Biting her tongue, she shot her arms out as she tried to find her center of balance—'grace above all else'—and thankfully, she managed to stay upright after a few seconds of wobbling around.

  With her heart hammering in her ears, she swallowed another gulp and squinted out at the wreckage.

  the Archive said, sounding quite disbelieving.

  She managed a small, quivering smile as she glanced at the little bug on her shoulder. “Why do you sound like you’re having fun watching me trying not to fall?”

  Thunder cracked far away. Her smile turned into a dark scowl as she looked and saw waves splitting in half, a dozen armored legs breaching the surface and kicking upside-down towards her.

  No more hesitating. No more thinking. She inhaled sharply and shifted into the starting stance of a Sand-Dancer’s glide—a pose that steadied her mind as much as her body. She raised her thigh, then her lower glaive, then— she thought. That was too slow. She needed speed. She needed. She couldn’t be carefully adjusting her posture while a leviathan was hot on her heels, could she?

  She was careful not to slam her legs down with much force lest she pierce the surface, but then she started skipping, prancing across rolling waves of water.

  It probably looked ridiculous to an outsider, and it certainly ridiculous, but this much was nothing for a Sand-Dancer. She’d practiced walking only on the tip of her toes for weeks on end just to train her balance—a Sand-Dancer couldn’t afford to fall, after all. Her practice was paying off now in the most unbelievable of situations, keeping her from falling off her glaives.

  A particularly violent wave threw her off balance and onto a floating plank, her chest slamming hard into the wood. She groaned and clutched her stomach as she kicked her legs out of the water, frightful there were other beasts lurking just beneath the waves. There was none. But when she looked behind her, she saw the fairy shrimp had sensed her and began to pick up speed.

  She had to move, and she had to move .

  the Archive said, shaking its little head on her shoulder as she crawled to her glaives, desperately trying to balance on the plank of wood once again.

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  Of course. She already knew that. One misstep on the seas and she’d never find her footing again.

  She’d simply forgotten the ‘grace’ in her steps.

  Steadying her shaky breaths, she clasped her hands together before pulling them apart, infusing ‘elegance’ into even the tip of her fingers as she began her most basic dance routine—one that began with a single step forward, and then down a windy slope of sand.

  She imagined that slope of sand as a churning wave.

  As the shrimp charged her from behind, she leapt off her plank to land on the tip of her glaives—and this time, she wasn’t walking. She wasn’t skipping. She was forward, dragging one leg before the other, hands swinging free and wide, her body leaning low and forward to reduce air resistance.

  Great Makers, she knew how much danger she was in with every wave she rode, but there was something magical about froth bubbles parting in front of her, the winds funneling past her face, and the speedThe . Her lips twisted with wicked delight as she zoomed towards the first shipwreck, eyeing a few frayed knots dangling from the half-broken mast.

  Without slowing down, she jumped two meters over the railings, onto the deck of the sinking ship, grabbed the frayed knots, and then vaulted over the railings on the other side. The shrimp smashed right through the center of the ship mere seconds later, rumbling with what could be hunger, what could be the thrill of the chase. She wouldn’t know.

  Bending her knees, she looked in the direction she had to turn and twisted around, leaning on the very edge of her glaive to skate a full half-circle towards the second shipwreck. The shrimp’s spear-like antennae shot out from the surface where she was just a moment ago. Laughing nervously, she exhaled coolly and rode the waves, launching onto the second ship to grab her second set of ropes.

  she thought, vaulting off the second ship and headed for the third.

  It was difficult working her arms while skating up and down—only the Great Makers knew how many times she came close to losing her balance—but she managed to tie both the first and second set of ropes together as she reached the third shipwreck. This time, she decided to add a little flair. She launched, spun, and then grabbed the third set of ropes off the deck at the same time she landed.

  Then she backflipped over the railings, and over the shrimp as it smashed through the ship.

  she thought to the Archive.

  Skating back towards the water-logged crates and barrels all clumped up in the center of the shipwrecks, she jumped onto one of the bigger crates and stabbed her glaives into it for stability. Rain smashed into the back of her head, and constant thunder made it difficult to focus. She bit her lip and looked for anything she could secure her ultra-long ropes onto. There were metal hooks jutting out the side of the crate—just for what she needed them for.

  While she scrambled to tie the ropes around the hooks, securing them onto the crate as firmly as she could, she heard massive waves splitting behind her. The shrimp was fast approaching. Shaking wet hair out of her face and pushing through the rope burns on her palms, she gave each rope a hard pat just to see if they’d hold.

  Thankfully, they did.

  With a heavy heart, she exhaled and rose to her feet, puffing out her chest as she whirled to face the charging shrimp. The dark shadow may be terrifying, and its dozen upside-down legs cleaving through the surface may be eerie beyond compare, but she’d seen scarier. The desert during a sandstorm was scarier. The deep sea itself was scarier. Her mama, bedbound for the rest of her life, never to see or smell the brine of her homeland ever again… was scarier.

  What was one measly bug in the face of all that?

  Right as the shrimp was about to smash into her wooden crate, she backflipped, than she’d ever jumped, and time slowed to a crawl. She heard the shrimp swallowing the crate she was standing on. She heard it dragging the crate down, down, and down into the abyss, taking the impossibly taut ropes with it—and then the half-broken masts the ropes were connected to .

  Three giant wooden stakes flew inwards to impale the shrimp from three separate directions, piercing through its fleshy underside.

  And she’d backflipped so high—with such flourish, such elegance, such a joyous on her face—that she landed on top of one of the wooden stakes, staring down at the dying shrimp on the tip of her glaives.

  She watched its legs twitch, its antennae swish around, its tail kick up and down… and she watched it die. Its fleshy abdomen rose to the surface as it became something akin to a buoyant raft.

  she thought.

  So, she bowed to the storm, to the seas, and to her enemy. It may be dead in the water, and it may not be deserving of her respect, but the fairy shrimp had been the sole witness to her first performance on the seas.

  She would give it a bow, and nothing more.

  the Archive murmured as she hopped off the wooden stake, landing on the giant shrimp’s abdomen. It was extremely wobbly, but she felt she could stand on its carcass longer than any of the surrounding sinking ships.

  she thought dryly.

  [Objective #1 Completed: Slay the F-Rank Giant-Class Fairy Shrimp]

  [Reward: 10 points]

  [Grade: A-Rank Critter-Class → F-Rank Giant-Class]

  the Archive said, and she looked grimly down at the fairy shrimp. Her glaives were already half-submerged in the wavy waters; the Archive wasn’t lying when it said she’d lose even this foothold sooner or later.

  She blinked pointedly, flicking wet hair out of her face as she looked at the little bug on her shoulder.

  she thought.

  The Archive hopped off her shoulder and landed on the surface, just a few inches above the fairy shrimp’s fleshy abdomen.

  Then it started tapping the shrimp, as though telling her to kneel down to its level.

  the Archive said,

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