Infinite Farmer

Chapter 39 - 38: Gnawing Ambusher



The river being adjacent to the farm was nice, in that the soil was good and moist without being overly wet, and more water was just a scoop of his bag away. But it also represented a sort of risk, given that the river might flood at any time. As soon as Tulland had placed all the seeds in his initial planting, he got to work shoveling dirt from deeper in the forest, hefting it over to the opposite side of his staked farm area into a huge pile for flood resistance.

It took the better part of the day to do, but by the end of the day, Tulland had built something like a berm around the two sides of the farm that would protect it when the river flooded. The wonder of stats meant that the berm was almost as high as his shoulder, representing the better part of a few big craters he had dug out of forest floor unlucky enough to be conveniently adjacent to the project.

He wasn't sure it would absolutely hold when the flooding came, but he had it packed down as firmly as he could and hoped it would prove to be enough. To increase the chances further, the entire wall was studded with briar seeds, planted without fertilizer and little hope of growing well. But they had a different advantage. Numbers. If there was one thing there was no shortage of in his pack, it was briar seeds. He had hundreds of the seeds without their fruit flesh, tucked away in their own little sack waiting for whatever use he could find for them.

Tulland had also been busy with his magic, taking any spare power he had and applying it to the plants, regeneration cycle after regeneration cycle. The recent increases to his stats were really showing their worth now. Every time his magic pool regenerated and was applied to the work, he was able to see an actually visible bump in the growth of the briars, and over time, even a noticeable growth in the usually much slower-growing trees. It was gratifying, especially as he watched the root structures of the briars take hold in his berm like a kind of organic, creeping glue that added structural integrity to the protective barrier. By the time he had reached a point of diminishing returns so small any more applications of magic power would be truly useless, he had a good foot and a half of briars. And an idea.

Command Plant, right? It has to do more than I'm using it for. I've had two ideas for ways it could be useful and both have worked, but I've hardly tried to stretch the limits. And if I could… it could be big.

Dropping his shovel into the back of his pack, Tulland sat on the dirt, closed his eyes, and focused. He basically understood what he wanted from the briars, but figuring out enough ways to communicate it to them that he wouldn't be misunderstood or ignored was a job in and of itself.

He imagined the briars stretching out, growing past the length they were ever intended to be. Of stretching towards the sun, of reaching prey that would have evaded them before. Of spending whatever they had to in terms of their normal strength and thickness to be in all ways longer, taller, and farther-reaching.

Tulland wasn't sure if they heard him, but after spending twenty minutes on the task and seeing no difference, he figured they either had or he was doomed to fail, no matter how much effort he put towards the task. Turning towards the high, eroded bank at the forest end of his farm, he moved on to the task of giving himself enough shelter to survive whatever the next wave of terror was that this forest had planned for him.

As much as he had pumped power into the berm, it wasn't as if he had ignored his farm entirely. In reality, the majority of his power had still gone to the farm proper, and the back edge of the area was studded with good, strong, and soon-to-be adult briars ready for use. Just on the other side of an intentionally thick patch of the vines, he carved away at the soil, carefully removing just enough dirt to make a Tulland-sized tunnel beneath the forest floor. Luckily, the dirt was packed hard and dense past the first several inches of digging, and it would be stable in everything minus a mighty shaking of the earth.

Of course, that's a possibility here. But it's only one risk out of dozens. I'll take that bet.

Tulland dug until he had a few feet of shelter, then curved the tunnel around to make an exit coming out of the same wall several feet away. If someone was to attack him while he was in there, he didn't want to have no way of escape at all. And having both outlets to his sleeping-place in his controlled, briar-covered farm was a relief.

Not that it was enough. Before going to sleep, Tulland decided to throw a few handfuls of briars out over the ground on top of the tunnel, hoping to hold it together just that much better with roots. Hitting them with a quick burst of Enhance Plant, he crawled into his tunnel, set his remaining body-vines on guard mode at his foot and head, and settled down for a long-overdue and much-needed sleep.

Waking up in The Infinite had, until now, been a mostly uninteresting thing. But on this floor, there was an actual day-night cycle. Tulland had arrived in a sort of near-night light condition and relied on a pretty bright moonlight to see far enough to find his new farm plot. But now, it was a bright, cheery atmosphere.

Almost too bright. What the hell?

Even deep in his tunnel, it was bright enough that opening his eyes was a bit shocking. As Tulland shimmied out of the darkness to the light, it got endlessly worse. His garden was doing well, even shockingly so, but part of the reason why was that no amount of forest canopy cover could have possibly cut the vast amount of light coming from the sky. It was like the place had doubled up on suns, even though only one shone in the sky, as per the usual way of things.

Worse, the temperature was going absolutely crazy. It was early morning, at least judging by how long Tulland thought he had slept. But it was already hotter than it had ever been on Ouros save the very deepest parts of the sunny season. And the leaves of the two trees above, as well as most other trees in the area, were closing, giving little relief from the sun's rays. Tulland opened his System's connection again.

If this is going to get worse, I'd better be ready. Right?

Why would I care? Do as you will.

Smiling at the return of the System he knew and distrusted, Tulland started taking a look at his vines, finding something truly shocking had happened. Whatever he was trying to do with his intent had either worked, or had prompted The Infinite to take pity on him. Either way, he was staring down some very, very long vines.

Lunger Briars (Long, Inferior)

Due to an infusion of intent during the growing process, these briars have nearly transformed into a different kind of plant. What before was already an absurdly ropey, vine-ish plant that could barely be called a briar, is now almost entirely dissimilar from anything bearing that name. What you have now is more like a flexible version of a thorned flower stem, stretched out almost to absurdity.

In trade for their absurd length, these briars are worse at almost everything else. They are weaker, less durable, and less able to stand up to a variety of stresses. They will fail in soil that your standard briars would thrive in, and are so non-resistant to attack that they are almost as fragile as non-system plants on most worlds.

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