©Novel Buddy
The Game Where I Was Rank One Became Reality-Chapter 24: The Blessing
Zephyr pulled up the believer roster.
Thirty-five entries. Each one a data point. Name, faith tier, class, age, role, FP generation, health status. He arranged them in a grid — columns sortable by any metric, rows color-coded by priority. The interface didn’t have a spreadsheet function, so he built one in his head, the way he’d built a hundred optimization matrices during late-night Theos Online sessions when everyone else on the leaderboard was sleeping and he was min-maxing population output at three in the morning.
Old habits. The best kind.
[FERTILE GROWTH BLESSING — Deployment Queue]
[Available FP: 1,247]
[Cost per blessing: 30 FP]
[Maximum deployments at current budget: 41]
Forty-one blessings. He had thirty-five believers. He could bless everyone and still have change left over.
He wasn’t going to.
Blessings were permanent, and permanent meant the cost had to justify itself over a lifetime. The math only worked if you applied them in the right order to the right people. Spray-and-pray blessings were what Rank 3 gods did when they had FP to burn and no discipline to spend it wisely. Zephyr had been Rank 1 in Theos Online precisely because he’d never wasted a single point on a blessing that didn’t return more than it cost.
He started with the mothers.
Three adult females in the tribe were carrying eggs. The system flagged them in the population data — a quiet biological indicator that most gods never bothered to check. Zephyr checked everything.
[Target: Shek — Adult Female, Age 14 (Lizardman years)]
[Faith Tier: Casual (1 FP/day)]
[Status: Egg-bearing (estimated clutch: 3-4)]
[Blessing: Fertile Growth]
[Effect: Health +20%, recovery +30%, fertility +40%, lifespan +15 years]
[ROI projection: 3-4 new believers within 60 days. FP return: 3-4 FP/day minimum (Casual tier). Breakeven: 8-10 days.]
Thirty FP for a believer factory. The ROI was obscene.
He blessed all three mothers. Ninety FP.
Then Krug. The anchor. The faith backbone. Krug generated more FP than any single believer in the territory — his Fanatic-tier devotion plus the Handler’s Bond multiplier plus the prayer-circle leadership bonus made him worth roughly forty FP per day. Losing Krug to illness, injury, or age would be a catastrophic hit to the entire economy. The blessing was insurance.
[Target: Krug — High Priest / Handler]
[Faith Tier: Fanatic (100+ FP/day with bonuses)]
[Blessing: Fertile Growth]
[Effect: Health +20%, recovery +30%, lifespan +15 years]
[Strategic note: Krug is irreplaceable. This is not an investment. This is risk mitigation.]
Thirty FP. Done.
Vark next. The Ironscale Enforcer drilled six hours a day and came back to the hearth with new bruises every evening. Recovery speed +30% meant less downtime between sessions. A military commander who healed faster trained harder, and a military commander who trained harder produced better soldiers.
Thirty FP.
He stopped at five blessings. A hundred and fifty FP spent. The remaining budget was 1,097 — more than enough for what came next.
[MIRACLE: GENESIS BLOOM]
[Cost: 400 FP]
[Effect: All crops, resources, and biological growth within territory regenerate at 3x rate for 30 days.]
[Cooldown: 90 days]
He’d done the math three times. At current consumption rates, the tribe burned through roughly 60% of their daily food production. The remaining 40% went to stockpile — smoked fish, dried insects, preserved root-mash. Tripling the regeneration rate for thirty days would turn that 40% surplus into a 220% surplus. Thirty days of that meant enough stored food for four months. Enough construction materials for a second ring of palisade. Enough insect protein to wean the hatchlings off supplemental feeding entirely.
Four hundred FP for four months of food security.
He pressed the button.
[GENESIS BLOOM — ACTIVATED]
[Duration: 30 days]
[Territory-wide effect: Active]
[Cooldown begins: Day 86]
The interface pulsed green. A warm, spreading glow radiated outward from the center of his territory map — a wave of accelerated growth rippling across the swamp like a stone dropped into a pond. He watched the vegetation markers update in real time: reed density increasing, fungal colonies expanding, insect population curves arcing upward.
Remaining FP: 847.
Enough for emergencies. Enough for the things he couldn’t predict.
He closed the blessing queue. Filed the population projections. Set a reminder to reassess blessing targets in seven days, after the first clutch data came in.
*Production first. Protection second. Everything else is a luxury.*
He pulled up the map and went back to watching his territory grow.
***
Runt smelled it before he saw it.
The scout woke in the grey pre-dawn — the hour when the swamp was coldest and the mist sat on the water like a second lake. He was lying in his usual spot, the narrow shelf of packed earth between the inner palisade and the drainage ditch, the place where nobody walked and nobody looked and the shadows were deep enough to sleep in without being disturbed.
He breathed in.
The air was different.
Not bad-different. Not the sour, boggy stink that meant the water table had shifted, or the acrid sweetness that meant something had died upstream. This was — Runt searched for the word, failed, and settled for the feeling instead — *thick*. The air was thick the way broth was thick. Full of something. Nutrients. Life. A density that hadn’t been there when he’d closed his eyes.
He sat up. Blinked.
The reeds around the camp were taller.
Not slightly taller. Not *maybe I’m imagining it* taller. The reeds that had been shin-height along the drainage ditch were now past his knee. The moss on the palisade logs — a thin, patchy green when he’d checked the walls yesterday evening — was now a carpet, dense and soft, climbing the wood like it had been growing for a month instead of a night.
Runt activated his thermal vision. Involuntary — the Nightstalker passive triggered by the spike in ambient energy, the same way it had triggered during the rank-up. Through his heat-sensitive eyes, the territory blazed.
Everything was warm. Not fire-warm — *alive*-warm. The reeds, the moss, the water, the insects, the soil itself. The entire territory was glowing with a low, steady biological heat, as though someone had turned up the thermostat on the ecosystem and every living thing in range was responding.
He ran.
Krug was already at the hearth. The High Priest stood with his staff planted, the red gem casting its usual pulse of light across the prayer circle. But Krug wasn’t praying. He was staring at the lake.
The lake was green.
Not the murky, silted green of stagnant swamp water. A living green — algae blooming across the surface in real time, the colonies expanding in visible waves, each wave leaving behind a thicker, richer layer of organic material. The fish were surfacing. Dozens of them, drawn upward by the sudden explosion of microorganisms, their silver bodies flickering through the green like sparks in a forge.
"Krug." Runt stopped beside him. "You see this?"
Krug nodded. His left hand — the one with the Handler’s mark — was pressed against his chest. Not in pain. In recognition.
"The blessing," Krug said. "I felt it land. Last night, while I was sleeping. Like a hand pressing down on my heart and then — releasing. Like something was fixed that I didn’t know was broken."
The ache was gone. The low, persistent soreness in his knees — the accumulated damage from weeks of kneeling on stone during prayer — had vanished. Not faded. Vanished. As if the tissue had repaired itself overnight, the cartilage rebuilt, the inflammation erased.
He flexed his fingers. His grip felt stronger. His vision felt sharper. The morning fog that usually clung to the edges of his perception — the sluggishness of a cold-blooded body waking in cool air — was absent. He was alert in a way that felt new.
"Others too?" Runt asked.
Krug listened. Through the bond — the prayer network that connected him to every believer’s faith signature — he could feel the tribe stirring. Waking. And waking *differently*. The mothers were up first, their signatures brighter than usual, the faint warmth of the eggs they carried pulsing with stronger rhythm. Vark was already drilling, despite the early hour — his recovery from yesterday’s bruises apparently complete.
And the hatchlings.
Krug looked toward the nursery area — the sheltered hollow behind the forge where the eleven young ones slept in a communal pile. Three of them were standing. The oldest clutch — Krug judged them at roughly eight weeks in lizardman development. Yesterday, they’d been the size of human toddlers, their speech limited to two-word fragments, their coordination unsteady.
Today, the tallest one was a head taller than yesterday. His arms were longer. His tail had thickened. And when he opened his mouth, the words that came out stopped Krug mid-step.
"Krug. When do we start learning?"
Full sentence. Subject, verb, object. Grammatically correct, spoken with the careful precision of a mind testing new equipment.
Krug stared.
Eight-week-old hatchlings didn’t speak in full sentences. They didn’t ask abstract questions about future activities. They barely understood the concept of *learning* as something distinct from imitating the adults around them.
He looked at the sky. At the space where the Voice lived.
What did you do to them?
The hearth fire pulsed gold. No answer. No explanation. Just the warmth. Just the steady, radiating certainty that the god above them had pressed a button and the world had changed in ways they wouldn’t fully understand for months.
Runt tugged his arm. "We have another problem."
"Problem?"
"The killzone." Runt pointed toward the palisade gate — the clear-cut strip of ground between the walls and the treeline that Vark had insisted on maintaining. The field of fire. The murder zone where attackers would be exposed and defenders would have clean shots.
The reeds had grown back overnight. Not all of it — but enough. The strip that had been bare earth yesterday was now spotted with knee-high shoots, their growth so aggressive that they’d cracked through the packed soil.
"Vark’s going to lose his mind," Runt said.
Despite everything — the strangeness, the impossibility, the feeling that the laws of nature had been politely asked to take the morning off — Krug almost smiled.
"We’ll cut it back."
A good problem. The kind of problem you only had when things were growing faster than you could manage.
***
Night.
Zephyr floated in the interface. The Genesis Bloom data from day one was better than projected — resource regeneration at 3.1x instead of the listed 3x, probably a synergy bonus with the Cradle passive. The food surplus projection had jumped. The material stockpile estimates were ahead of schedule.
Good numbers. Clean numbers. The kind that made the part of him that was still a competitive gamer want to screenshot the graphs and post them to a leaderboard.
He was reviewing the hatchling maturation data — the growth spike was real, accelerated beyond even his optimistic projections — when the alert fired.
[DIVINE SENSE — PROXIMITY ALERT]
[Movement detected: South-southeast, extreme range]
[Distance: ~4.2 km from territory boundary]
[Classification: UNKNOWN]
Zephyr’s attention snapped to the map.
The expanded divine sense painted the territory in warm, detailed gold — every tree, every current, every heartbeat. Beyond the boundary, the world faded into the grey of incomplete data, the fog of war thinning but never fully lifting. Shapes became suggestions. Signatures became echoes.
At the edge of that grey, seven signatures moved.
He focused. Pulled every scrap of resolution from his upgraded sensor range. The signatures sharpened — slightly. Enough to read the basics.
Bipedal. Upright locomotion. Sizes varied — three large, two medium, two small. They moved in a loose cluster, not a formation. No discipline. No spacing. Not military.
One of the seven was barely registering. Its signature flickered — strong, then weak, then strong again, the unmistakable rhythm of a body fighting to stay alive. Injured. Badly.
They were heading north. Toward his territory. Not directly — their path wandered, corrected, wandered again. The movement of people who were navigating by landmarks they couldn’t quite find. Lost, or close to it.
Not Frogmen. Frogmen moved in columns — tight, regimented, every soldier three paces behind the next. And they approached from the south, from the Spawn Pools. These signatures were coming from the southeast, from the deep swamp-forest that Zephyr hadn’t mapped. Unclaimed territory. Wilderness.
Not animals. Animals didn’t carry their injured. Animals didn’t navigate. Animals didn’t move in mixed-size groups with the staggered pace of a party protecting its slowest member.
People.
Who are you?
He ran the options. Refugees — possible. Lost travelers — possible. A scouting party from a third faction he hadn’t identified — possible. A trap — always possible. 𝙧𝙚𝙚𝔀𝒆𝓫𝓷𝙤𝓿𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝙤𝓶
He tagged the signatures on his map. Set the alert to ping him if they changed direction, stopped moving, or entered his territory boundary. At their current speed, they’d reach the edge of his claimed land by mid-morning.
He did not send Runt to intercept. He did not alert Vark. He did not wake Krug.
Information first. Identification second. Decision third.
That was the order. That had always been the order. In Theos Online, the gods who sent scouts to investigate every blip on the radar were the gods who lost scouts. The ones who waited — who let the data come to them, who watched and measured and *understood* before they acted — were the ones who survived long enough to matter.
Seven signatures. One dying.
Moving north.
Zephyr watched them in the dark, seven faint lights at the edge of a map that was growing larger every day, and filed the encounter under the only category that mattered.
Unknown.
He’d know more by morning.







