As soon as they reached an agreement, Duwa started moving.
It didn’t take Percy long to understand how the child had ended up brushing with death. The environment on Gallimus was quite harsh. The scorching heat and the crushing gravity were already difficult to endure, but that was merely the beginning.
Each individual bush didn’t offer much resistance, but trudging through hundreds of them slowly chipped away at his host’s stamina. Whenever the loose ground under their feet gave way, sending them tumbling down the hills, the brittle plants failed to cushion their fall in the slightest. The awkward landings didn’t hurt too badly, but each blunder set them back by several minutes, often forcing them to climb a hill twice or thrice.
As a native – and a Green – Duwa was probably better equipped to handle the arduous journey than most, but every little thing still sapped away some of his strength, building up his frustration and his fatigue.
‘It’s reckless to ask so much of a child…’ Percy thought, but kept that to himself.
He understood why they did it, of course. While he didn’t doubt that many of their Green-borns died during the harsh training, the few that made it to the higher grades were probably much more likely to attain godhood. Percy wouldn’t be surprised if they made for stronger – and nobler – deities too.
But he did struggle to understand how their parents were okay with this. Duwa wasn’t an orphan – he had a father waiting for him at home – yet the man had clearly sent the child to his doom, and with no supervision to boot.
In any case, Percy remained mostly silent during the first day, not wanting to bother the already-tired boy too much. It wasn’t until Duwa took the initiative to speak that Percy realized his host could probably use the distraction, to pry his mind off the hardships he had to endure. During their second day together, they talked about a wide variety of topics, giving Percy the opportunity to learn a lot more about Gallimus and its people.
Days were longer than nights here, largely thanks to the presence of multiple suns. This wasn’t his first visit on a planet like this, but the two stars were spaced farther apart than the ones on Felmara, stretching the days and eating into the nights some more. That said, the day-night cycle as a whole wasn’t any longer than the one on Remior, which made it easier for Percy to compare the two worlds. At least, that was the case for now – a strange distinction to make, but an important one, considering everything else the boy had shared.
Gallimus always required the same amount of time to orbit the twin stars, but everything else was fluid – from the number of days in a year, to their durations, and even the way they were grouped together. The Gallimians didn’t use weeks or months, opting to bundle their days directly into seasons. They did have warmer and colder seasons like Remior, but it was a lot more complicated than that.
Apparently, their solar system contained dozens of planets, many of the larger ones orbiting near Gallimus. So close were they, in fact, that some of them were visible at night. Whenever Gallimus passed by them, their gravity tugged at the planet’s surface, inflicting all manners of strangeness on Duwa’s world.
Gallimus’s rotation was often affected, stretching or shrinking days and nights in various ways. This also gave rise to devastating waves, mountain-splitting earthquakes, and calamitous hurricanes, that often resulted in countless casualties and massive changes to the very geography of the planet. Even the gravity wasn’t spared, fluctuating during the course of each day, increasing or decreasing depending on whether the heavenly body in question was above or below the Gallimians’ heads.
According to Duwa, the current year was divided into seventeen seasons, further split into a total of six hundred and eighty-three days. Ten of these seasons had elapsed since the Green-born set out on his quest. He had been travelling for over four hundred days, though he had only delayed his advancement by about three hundred – close to a year on Remior. It was ultimately just a drop in the bucket given his grade, but still a long time for the equivalent of an eleven-year old boy, bracing the wilderness by himself.
Percy also confirmed that this place was indeed a lesser – not a greater – spring. They had elixirs about as effective as the ones on Remior, having relatively developed branches of alchemy and runecrafting. Sadly, Duwa wasn’t well-versed in either field, so Percy didn’t know if they had discovered any alchemic principles he could master. the boy said, consoling himself more than his guest.
Not wasting time, Duwa had already leaned forward, searching through the bushes for another snack.
‘Or, you know… we could just eat some of the food from my spatial seal…’ Percy suggested – and not for the first time.
He didn’t have that much on him, since most of his space was taken by the green mushrooms, but he’d definitely brought enough to last them a few weeks if they used it sparingly. If only his stubborn host hadn’t refused his offer whenever he’d brought it up…
The boy insisted that accepting external help would go against the spirit of the trial. Percy had been tempted to point out that, technically, Duwa had already died – and would have stayed dead – if not for his “external help”. In the end, he chose to keep his mouth shut, however, realizing the kid was crazy enough to potentially kill himself out of shame if he said anything.
To Duwa’s great joy – and Percy’s mild contentment – they found a second centipede a few minutes later, and a third one not long after. Stuffing his face full of the modest snacks, the boy seemed to enjoy his first meal in days a lot more than Percy did. Only when he had his fill did he take off again, heading straight toward what Percy assumed was the source of the creatures.
‘Duwa, mind telling me what we’re trying to accomplish here? You’ve been travelling at random, without much of a plan. I doubt you’re going anywhere specific, so am I right to assume this is some kind of hunting trip? Are we looking for a particular beast to kill?’
‘Not exactly. Though fighting against beasts is one of the best ways to make progress. That’s why I’m currently looking for the stronger centipedes,’ Duwa said. ‘Look, I’ll explain everything later. It’ll make more sense after you watch me fight.’
Percy nodded, guessing that the beasts were just a means to an end – they probably amounted to little more than practice dummies to help his host perfect some kind of obscure spell or technique. Though, that didn’t really explain why the kid had to spend a year roaming in the wild. Couldn’t his people just bring him some opponents to fight?
By the time the first of the two suns set, Duwa located some higher-graded centipedes. The Red ones were as thin and flat as his palm, though only half as wide. They were long enough to reach from the tips of his fingers all the way to his elbow.
Meanwhile, the Orange ones had a similar shape, but they were longer than Duwa was tall. Their smooth shells looked very different from those of the mundane variants they had eaten earlier, however. Shimmering in a pale light, they appeared to be made of diamonds more than chitin, making Percy shudder at the mere thought of munching on them. At the same time, they possessed even more limbs than their weaker kin, their countless needle-like legs rhythmically stabbing through dirt and rock as the bugs sped toward the Green-born.
Duwa evaded the charging creatures with ease, pinning them and crushing them under the balls of his feet with some well-executed stomps, whittling their numbers down rapidly. Thankfully, he didn’t try to eat any of them this time, probably realizing he’d only be cracking his teeth on their shells.
Percy and his host advanced even more slowly than before, the centipedes growing stronger and more numerous with every hill they traversed. It wasn’t until both crimson suns emerged from the horizon once again that they finally stumbled upon what Percy assumed were their targets.
They had to be, given the boy’s elation at the sight.
Duwa took on a fighting stance, as he glared at the three Yellow centipedes, as wide as the boy himself, but over twice as long as the child was tall. The creatures noticed them too.
They surrounded the kid, cautiously closing in as their crooked mandibles clicked and clacked repeatedly, their sharp tips dripping with venom.