The offshore storms
finally calmed down. The heroes and royal soldiers all prepared to leave the
islands.
The activation
event was going to continue for a few more days, but we had leveled all that we
could, and we’d accumulated more drop items than we knew what to do with. So
there was no reason to stay.
But I didn’t want
to end up stuck on a ship with Itsuki and his friends, so I had the schedule
changed to make sure we weren’t going to be traveling together.
Besides, I was just
going to use a teleport skill to get back to the castle once we got in range.
I’d told the queen
my plan, and she decided to travel with us.
The other heroes
were also going to return to the castle.
And we were all
going to start training to prepare for the next wave.
Before all that
started though, I decided to check out the shield I’d unlocked from the last
wave’s boss monster.
Whale Shield conditions
met!
Whale Skin Shield
conditions met!
Whale Meat Shield
conditions met!
Whalebone Shield
conditions met!
Whale Eye Shield
conditions met!
Whale Magic Core Shield
conditions met!
. . . and others.
When you broke down
an animal and got a shield from each of its parts, you ended up with a long
list of things like this.
When I figured out
how to use the power-up system, I realized that most of the information
concerning the individual shields wasn’t important. Lately, I just checked them
for their equip effects and stat boosts, then ignored the rest.
Out of all the new
shields, the only interesting things were:
Whale Shield 0/50 C:
abilities locked: equip bonus: skill “dritte shield,”: mastery level 0
Whale Magic Core Shield
0/45 C: abilities locked: equip bonus: skill “bubble shield,” naval combat 2:
mastery level 0
Whale Horn Shield 0/60
C: abilities locked: equip bonus: undersea battle ability 3: mastery level 0
Dritte? I looked up
what that was, and apparently it was a skill that could be linked with air
strike shield to form the third skill in a chain.
I tried using
bubble shield, but all it did was make sound like it was leaking air—nothing
more than that happened.
I wondered if it
was meant for use underwater. Maybe you could make a stream of air bubbles with
it?
So I went ahead and
tried it underwater. It was actually a skill that made a bubble that allowed
you to breath under the surface.
But you couldn’t
use it forever. If you used it once, you would have to go to the surface before
it would become available again.
It would be useful
if we had to fight underwater again. But I was hoping it wouldn’t come to that.
We’d just finished an undersea battle a few days ago.
The other heroes
had also tested out the new weapons they’d unlocked during their time on the
islands. I hoped that their parties understood that the real training hadn’t
started yet.
The queen and I
left on the earliest ship and teleported to the castle as soon as we were
within range. So we were the first ones to arrive.
“Oh no!”
Once we stepped out
of the portal, Filo shouted.
“What is it?”
“The carriage...”
“The other soldiers
will be bringing it back with them on the ship. Do not worry,” said the queen.
“Oh gooood!”
“We never ended up
using it on the islands though.”
Filo had been
taking exceptional care of the carriage. She worked on it every day. But the
carriage was made of metal, so I’d been worried about it rusting in the sea
breeze.
Why did she insist
on bringing that carriage everywhere, even to places where we couldn’t use it?
Besides, if we were
going to be getting around by teleportation from now on, the carriage was only
going to be a burden.
Come to think of
it, that’s probably why I never saw the other heroes using carriages at all.
“Very well then, I
will see to it that skilled warriors are sent.”
“Thanks.”
The queen had
already agreed to send soldiers to assist Fitoria in the wave that she had
agreed to handle on our behalf.
Thanks to Fitoria,
we would finally have some spare time to collect our thoughts and come up with
a plan.
The next wave would
fall on Melromarc in about two and a half weeks. We needed to find a way to
make the other heroes more powerful before that happened.
The other heroes
would be teleporting into the castle pretty soon. I wanted to figure out what
to do with Rishia before I had to deal with them.
“Why don’t we begin
by looking over the materials I had prepared for you before your departure for
Cal Mira?” the queen asked.
She was talking
about materials she had previously agreed to stockpile for me.
“Good idea. That’s
a good a place as any to start.”
We made our way to
the stuffy, dusty castle warehouse. Had this been an old RPG, it was the sort
of place where you would find really excellent equipment.
I looked over each
of the articles in the room.
I’d visited the
room once, before the wave in Cal Mira, but I hadn’t had time to look over
everything in detail.
Yup, sure enough,
there was a lot of equipment set aside for us. All of the castle knights stored
their equipment here too.
It looked like
there was plenty of generic equipment, but finding something really good might
prove difficult.
“When I had these
things collected, I still didn’t have a clear understanding of what you wanted,
Mr. Iwatani. So I apologize, but aside from the things you specifically
requested, the rest is a bit generic.”
“No problem.”
I found a magic
silver sword in the clutter, but it turned out that the Karma Rabbit Sword had
a higher attack stat.
I’d have to do
something about that sword though. I decided to visit the weapon shop and see
if the old guy there could do anything for us.
“Thank you for your
understanding. I did, however, gather all the materials you requested.”
We moved on to
another warehouse that was filled with different materials.
The queen appeared
at my side and passed me a sheet of parchment that seemed to have an inventory
written on it.
“This is an inventory
of the assembled materials. If there is anything else you would like us to
prepare for you, I will call for the blacksmith.”
“Thank you for all
your help.”
Materials...
“Can I take some of
this stuff?”
“Of course.”
I walked around the
room absorbing various things into my shield and unlocking new shields. Many of
the new shields indicated that their growth trees still needed to be unlocked,
but I did end up with quite a lot of new things to work with.
I couldn’t unlock
all of the new options before the next wave came though.
“Oh, and you don’t
need to call for the blacksmith. I have someone in mind that I’d like to work
with, so I’ll go visit him myself.”
“Very well, if that
is what you wish.”
Honestly, aside
from the old guy at the weapon shop, I couldn’t think of anyone else that
worked with equipment. He’d done so much to help us already that I felt I owed
him the business.
And besides, I
trusted his work.
It was probably
high time I paid him a visit anyway. We needed to get Raphtalia and Filo’s new
equipment worked on.
“Rishia, we’re
going to our favorite weapon shop. You should come with us.”
“Oh, okay.”
“But . . . um . . .
Are you really going to wear that kigurumi all the time?”
“Hm?”
She tilted her head
as if I’d confused her. She probably thought I had some kind of fetish.
If I weren’t
careful with my words, she’d probably freak out on me. I decided not to bother
with it for now.
“It’s been about a
week since we last saw the old guy, isn’t that right, Mr. Naofumi?”
“Yeah, I guess so.
And just like we promised him last time, we’re going to get our equipment from
him. I can’t wait to see what sort of awesome stuff he will whip up for us.”
Most of the
materials we had accumulated during our time in the islands would be arriving
with the ships. But we had managed to bring a lot with us too, so I’d like to
see what the old guy thought he could make from them.
Considering how
many ores and different materials the queen had set aside for us, it wasn’t
like we had to risk running out of anything. I hoped he would come up with
something good. If he did, it would be a big help in the coming battles.
And besides, I was
hoping he could come up with some armor that had better stats and effects than
that kigurumi.
“Hey there, kid!”
“Can’t you come up with
another thing to say when I come in here?”
“Oh stop that. You
know I say it with affection.”
I felt like he was
telling the truth. I felt like he meant it.
“How was the
activation event in Cal Mira? I heard there was a wave or something.”
“We leveled up
quite a bit. We probably gained over 30 levels in a day or two.”
“Wow!”
The old guy seemed
really surprised. Had I said something strange?
Raphtalia didn’t
seem to understand why he was so surprised either.
“You kids must have
really pushed yourselves.”
“Not at all.
Monster hunting in the islands was easy, especially with the activation event
happening. What’s so strange about that?”
“Well, I heard that
it would help you level up, but I don’t think I’ve ever heard of anyone
leveling that much so soon after the class up ceremony. I’ve only heard of one
guy that leveled anywhere near that. He hunted monsters all day long for the
entire duration of the event, and he only gained 25 levels.”
And we’d leveled 30
or so in a couple days? I wasn’t sure what to make of that, but it seemed
impressive.
“Well, we did level
pretty efficiently, but I don’t know how to explain it. Maybe it has something
to do with the legendary weapons?”
“Maybe. The girls
here probably don’t know either, since they’ve only ever battled as your party
members.”
“True.”
So it probably did
have something to do with the legendary weapons.
There was no way
for us to look into it now, because we didn’t know anyone else that had leveled
as much as we had.
I suppose the only
thing we could do was ask the queen if she had any idea. I’d have to remember
to bring it up with her.
“So? What brings
you in here today? Is it about what we discussed last time?”
“Sure is. We got
our hands on a lot of new materials on the islands, and the queen set aside a
lot of materials for us here in Melromarc. I was hoping you’d be able to make
us something impressive from them.”
I passed him the
inventory parchment the queen had given me.
I had no idea what
he was going to need, but I was sure that we would have enough of whatever it
was.
“I’d like for you
to make something out of the stuff you think would best suit us in battle.”
“Got it. But I have
to say this list has some pretty rare stuff on it. I think I can make some
really good things for you. How much money are we talking?”
“The crown is going
to cover the bill.”
“Sounds like things
are really looking up for you these days.”
He was right, at
least concerning our equipment, materials, money, and social standing. All in
all, things were going pretty well.
But we still had to
battle the waves. Which meant we didn’t have all the time in the world to sit
around chatting.
I still had a
couple of topics I wanted to touch on.
“By the way...”
I looked over to
Raphtalia.
Then I set the two
new pieces of equipment, the Karma Rabbit Sword and the Karma Dog Claws, on the
counter. I also showed the old guy the kigurumi and the materials we’d picked
up on the islands.
“Can you do
anything with this stuff?”
“You sure do have a
lot of things to work with, kid. By the way, is that girl with you? The one in
the sleeping bag?”
“Feh?”
“Yeah, that’s
Rishia. She looks weird, but there’s a human underneath that thing.”
“Mr. Naofumi, I
don’t think you should say things like that.”
“Why not? She
doesn’t want to take that thing off, so I have to explain it.”
She said she liked
it because it hid her face, but I was starting to suspect she just had some
kind of fetish.
“Well, that might
be, but you really have brought me some strange weapons this time, haven’t you?
Anyway, it looks like it might be just what she needs.”
The old guy
regarded the Karma Rabbit Sword carefully before he answered.
The thing has a
couple of issues that I would like to have addressed, but I couldn’t argue with
its attack stat.
Raphtalia had
become very strong recently. If she were to swing a magic silver sword with all
her might, she would probably break it.
I wanted to hear
what the old guy thought about it so I could decide whether it was worth
working on or if we should just toss it out. We could melt it down for
materials, too.
“The problem is
that it doesn’t have a blood clean coating on it. Is there any way that you
could apply one?”
“Normally, it’s a
process that you have to include in the production of the item. I can do it,
but it might affect the overall quality of the piece. Do you want me to try?”
“Yeah.”
“Well, of course, I
could do that, but it might be more interesting to try and make something new
out of it.”
Was he saying he
wanted to stick it onto my barbarian armor or something?
Come to think of
it, that might be pretty interesting too.
“Thanks for all the
projects, kid.”
“No problem. While
you’re at it though, what kind of a weapon do you think would be best for
Rishia here?”
“Hm? Do you think
you could take off the kigurumi and show me your hands?”
“Rishia.”
“I . . . I like to
use swords.”
“I’d really rather
put you behind us as support.”
“I can do either!”
“I appreciate your
enthusiasm, but why don’t you let him take a look?”
“Okay.”
Rishia slowly
slipped out of the kigurumi, then bowed awkwardly to the old guy before holding
out her hands.
“Well, isn’t she
pretty? Lucky you, eh kid?”
“Lucky? I’m not
like Motoyasu, so I don’t think anything of it.”
“Well, he’s as dull
as ever, isn’t he? You’ve really got your work cut out for you.”
“I know.”
The old guy and
Raphtalia nodded to one another as if they were in on a secret together.
“She looks like she
might do well with a rapier. If you want to put her behind you as support, she
should probably have something with magic protection.
“Could you choose
one for us?”
“Wait a second.
There’s no reason she couldn’t use a bow or a spear. She doesn’t seem like she
has a lot of upper body strength though, so I’m not sure those are the best
choices.”
“Feh... I don’t
want to use a bow!”
“You don’t want to
be like Itsuki?”
“It’s not that. I’m
afraid I might accidentally shoot one of you in the back!”
“Oh, right.”
I guess I hadn’t
thought about accidentally being shot by one of my own teammates.
But as far as I
knew, Itsuki had never shot anyone on accident. I guess that meant he was
pretty skilled. Maybe.
“Anyway, what’s
your schedule looking like? How much time do I have to work on this stuff?”
“The next wave will
be here in a little over two weeks. Anything you can do before then would be
great.”
“Got it, but ...”
He held up the
Pekkul Kigurumi.
“What do you want
to do about this? Should I take it apart? Who made this thing anyway?”
“I know, I know.
The thing has great equip effects, but it sure does look stupid, doesn’t it? We
got it as a drop item from a monster. It’s kind of hard to explain. Legendary
weapons can make these things from the materials monsters leave behind.”
That was a fair
question. We could say that a monster dropped it, but then he would just want
to know what a monster was doing with something like that.
This was the sort
of thing that reminded me of what a strange world I’d been summoned to. Of
course it was strange, so how could I have been expected to know something like
that?
Actually, what was
strange was that the other heroes had known about it.
Think about it. How
could monsters like rabbits and porcupines drop items that were bigger than
they were?
“You do make some
weird stuff. I can see that it really does have great equip effects.”
“Can you somehow
move the effects onto another piece of equipment?”
“That’s tough. I
can try a couple of things, but I wouldn’t hold my breath. I will probably need
to make some fine adjustments, so when I get into that job I’ll ask you about
the specifics.”
“Great. If you can
use the barbarian armor to power this other stuff up, I’ll leave it here.”
“That works. I’ll
try and make something for the girl here, but that will be one of the last
things that I do.”
He pointed to
Raphtalia. I wondered what he was going to make.
“What is it?”
“Don’t worry about
it.”
I had a weird
feeling about this. Call it a premonition.
I couldn’t shake
the feeling that this new equipment was going to end up looking really odd.
“It’s so exciting!
I hope we get something good!”
The kigurumi fan
behind me was getting really excited.
I was getting that
weird feeling again. If someone as dour and quiet as Rishia was getting
excited, it struck me as a major red flag. If we ended up with something
ridiculous, I’d have Rishia wear it.
“Alright then,
we’ll be on our way. Thanks for all your help. If you need anything in the
meantime, just show this paper to the castle guards and tell them I sent
you—they’ll let you in.”
“Got it, kid. Just
wait till you see what I put together for you.”
“Thanks. See you.”
We left the weapon
shop.
We had just
returned to the castle when I saw someone I recognized climbing down from a
carriage.
“Ah, Shield Hero. I
beg your pardon for all the trouble the last time we met.”
It was Nice Guy,
the nobleman who’d gone out of his way to help us when we’d been running from
the law with a bounty on our heads.
I think the queen
had said that he was sick and convalescing out in the countryside.
Standing next to
him was a well-dressed child. The child had dog-like ears.
“Raphtalia!”
“Keel!”
That’s right. His
name was Keel, and he was from Raphtalia’s village.
We’d found him in
the basement of that evil nobleman’s mansion. It was the same nobleman that had
tortured Raphtalia.
“Were you safe
after all of that, Raphtalia? Did anything bad happen to you?”
“I’ve been fine.
Nothing bad! And no one is chasing us anymore.”
“That’s good!”
Keel looked at me.
“You’re not pushing
her too hard, are you?”
“...”
“Why don’t you
answer him?!”
“I was just
thinking it over. Maybe I have been pushing you too hard.”
“Mr. Naofumi,
you’re the one that is overdoing it! Keel, don’t you worry about me. I’ve never
been seriously injured or anything!”
“You did end up
getting cursed once.”
“Mr. Naofumi! Be
quiet!”
“Isn’t he your
childhood friend? It’s rude to lie to your friends.”
“Ahahaha! The
Shield Hero is always surrounded my such interesting people!”
Nice Guy was
laughing.
Did I say something
funny?
“So what are you
doing here?”
“Well, I’m finally
back on my feet, so I decided to come pay you a visit.”
“I’m glad you’re
feeling better.”
Were we supposed to
take Keel off his hands, since he was Raphtalia’s friend?
Raphtalia noticed
that I was looking a Keel, and guessing what I was thinking, she fell into deep
thought.
“What should we do
Raphtalia?”
“What do you mean?”
“About this kid,
are we just supposed to leave him with this nobleman forever?”
I looked over at
Nice Guy. He smiled and rubbed Keel’s head.
“I don’t have a
problem with it. It’s up to him.”
Well, that was nice
of him. But I’m sure Raphtalia had something to say about it. Keel probably had
an idea of what he wanted, too.
“Raphtalia! You’re
fighting against the waves, aren’t you?!”
“Yes. I’m fighting
them with the Shield Hero: Mr. Naofumi. Just a couple of days ago we were
fighting a wave in a place called Cal Mira.
“Wow! That’s so
cool! I want to be strong enough to fight the waves too!”
I liked the kid’s
spirit.
“But ...”
Raphtalia looked
upset.
“Raphtalia?”
“I ...”
“You don’t like
that idea?”
Raphtalia responded
by giving me a troubled look.
“Big sis, what’s
wrong?”
Filo and Keel both
cocked their heads in confusion.
I understood what
she was feeling.
She was probably
thinking that she didn’t want Keel to be put in harm’s way again. Just when he
was safe, he was about to jump back in the line of danger.
Raphtalia looked at
me like she was asking me for something. I understood.
“If you join in on
our training exercises, I’m sure you’ll get stronger. You just have to make an
effort.”
“Mr. Naofumi ...”
“There’s nothing
bad that can come of being stronger than you are.”
Raphtalia’s village
had been decimated when the first wave came. Hordes of monsters poured over the
town, and slave traders hunted down all the survivors.
Had the survivors
been stronger, they might have gotten out of it with less casualties and
tragedy.
“Raphtalia, you
don’t want me to fight, do you?”
“...”
Raphtalia looked at
him but said nothing. She was thinking.
“It’s not that I
don’t want you to fight. But it’s harder than you think. Are you sure you’re
prepared for it?”
“Of course I am! I
. . . I want to be strong enough to help protect other people!”
“Sounds like we
have our answer, doesn’t it? If you try and control someone that has already
made up their minds, you’ll only make them miserable. We can help him get
strong enough to protect himself.”
Raphtalia said
nothing, but she nodded.
That settled it. I
decided to invite him into my party.
We didn’t have
enough people anyway. If there were people we could trust, it made sense to
team up with them and help them get stronger.
He was Raphtalia’s
childhood friend. There was no way he would betray our trust.
“Alright then, Mr.
Naofumi. Can we take care of Keel for now?”
“Yeah. Of course.”
“He’s from the same
village that Ms. Raphtalia is from. Isn’t that right?”
Rishia stepped
forward and introduced herself to Keel.
“Whoa! What’s with
this person’s outfit? It’s weird!”
“Feh?”
I guess he’d just
noticed her standing there.
“Very well then,
Shield Hero, I’ll leave this . . . boy in your care.”
Nice Guy smiled at
Keel and then left to go meet with the queen.
“Let’s all get
acquainted.”
“I’m Fiiiilo! We
met before!”
Before I could even
finish talking, Filo jumped forward and introduced herself.
Why couldn’t she
ever wait?
“My name is Rishia
Ivyred. Very nice to meet you.”
“You’re the only one
left, Mr. Naofumi. Please introduce yourself to Keel.”
“Sure. My name is
Naofumi Iwatani. I’m the Shield Hero. Battle might be tough, but step forward
and don’t be afraid. I’ll protect you.”
When I finished
talking, Keel decisively nodded and stepped forward.
“My name is Keel.
I’m very happy to meet you all!”
Keel was nearly as
tall as Raphtalia.
They were from the
same village. That meant that he probably looked younger than he really was.
I suddenly realized
that he was the first male party member I’d ever had. I hoped that we would get
along.
Raphtalia, Filo,
and Rishia sometimes had conversations that I didn’t really feel like I could
participate in.
“Alright then,
let’s get started. Rishia, Keel, what do you think?”
“About what?”
“What do you mean?”
“Just how strong do
you two want to be?”
Raphtalia looked me
over as though she was trying to find a dark undertone to my question.
Her instincts were
sharp. These two probably would be freaked out by what I had to say.
“I want to be the
strongest there is! Obviously!”
“Feh?! Yes,
exactly!”
They both seemed to
really mean it too. Good.
Then there was only
one thing to do. I said it plainly as can be: “Then both of you need to become
my slaves.”
“Fehhhh!”
“Wh . . . What the
hell? You were lying about being the Shield Hero, weren’t you?!”
Rishia’s gasp was
still echoing throughout the castle courtyard. Keel was glaring angrily at
Raphtalia and I. Then Rishia took off running as if she were a startled rabbit.
They certainly were
spurred to action at the strangest times.
“Don’t let them
escape with their lives!” I shouted.
“Why would you say
that?”
“I knew it!”
“Keel! Calm down! I
know that Mr. Naofumi can seem a little rough around the edges, but trust me.
There’s a reason for all this!”
“What kind of
reason could there be?”
Hm? I suppose I was
causing more confusion than necessary.
“Okay!”
Filo turned into
her filolial form and chased after Rishia.
Keel was stunned.
That’s right. He’d never seen her transform before.
“That was a joke!
Filo! Just bring her back normally! Don’t claw her!”
“Or peck at her!
Rishia wouldn’t survive your attacks!”
Whoops. I should
control myself better. I had almost gotten Rishia killed.
Filo wrapped her
wings around Rishia and pulled her back to me.
But Rishia was
writhing wildly.
“Let me go! I’m
going back to my village! I’m going back to my mom and dad! Master
Itsukiiiiii!”
“It was just a
joke.”
“About turning me
into your slave?”
“No, that part was
true.”
“But why?”
“How do you get
stronger? You raise your level by defeating monsters, right? The heroes have a
special ability called maturation adjustment that can make your growth more
efficient. That’s one of the reasons that Raphtalia is so powerful.”
“R . . . Really?
Raphtalia, are you really that powerful?”
“Well, yes.”
Raphtalia quickly
shuffled around to stand behind Keel.
She moved so
quickly that Keel didn’t have a chance to react. By the time he noticed she’d
moved, she was already behind him.
“Wow!”
“The only
characters my shield can help grow faster are slaves and monsters.”
In addition to the
maturation adjustment skill, I also had a skill called ability adjustment. That
would help them master new abilities faster.
If I could get
those two to accept the conditions, then they would level up a lot faster than
they would have otherwise.
“Whether you want
to do it or not is up to you. But if you don’t become a slave, you won’t level
up nearly as quickly.”
“But ...”
“Think about it.
What do you need to do to get stronger? Be greedy about it. Think about what
you can do to get what you want. I’m only offering you the option.”
“...”
Both Rishia and
Keel fell into deep thought. It was their lives, so they needed to make up
their minds for themselves.
But I could give
them a little push.
“Well, Rishia is
already at level 68. If you’ve already leveled that much, then it might not be
as effective for you. Still, it would make you stronger than it would if you
didn’t become a slave.”
It was the sort of
skill that worked best the earlier you started to use it. It snowballed over
time.
It really was like
a game.
Characters that had
high levels at the beginning either died or betrayed you. Either that or they
basically never leveled up more.
That described
L’Arc pretty well. But no—I couldn’t let myself fall into that trap. This
wasn’t a game.
“Or we could reset
your level. But the next wave will be here soon and I want you to be powerful
enough to fight in it. So if we were going to do a reset, we should probably
wait until after the wave.
The rest of us were
in the 70s, so if we were to reset her levels and continue leveling from that
point on, the gap between us would only get worse.
“Oh . . . Alright.”
“But if you become
my slave then don’t run! I mean it’s not like I’m going to keep you in chains
or... Hey, are you listening?!”
The second I
started talking about slaves, Rishia snapped her head left and right, looking
for a way to escape. She was driving me nuts.
“Are you listening?
I’m telling you that you won’t be forced to do anything you don’t want to do!”
“Fehhh!”
“Rishia, please
listen to me. I’m telling you how to get stronger. What do you want to do?”
Her eyes were
wandering around the courtyard, but she was thinking about the offer.
Fair enough. Not
many people I know would be first in line to volunteer for slavery.
But Raphtalia had.
“I will technically
hold the reins. But I promise that I won’t force you do to anything against
your will.”
“He really is a
good person. Although he can be a little selfish from time to time, he won’t
ever hurt you. You can trust me.”
“Raphtalia...”
“Master, you never
tie me up or nothing!”
Raphtalia and Filo
had both chimed in, but to Rishia and Keel it probably just sounded like they
were brainwashed.
“I’m not going to
force you. You don’t have to do it if you don’t want to. I’m just telling you
the best way to move forward. Keel, I’ll tell you the same thing. All I’m doing
is giving you the option. It’s up to you whether or not you want to take it.”
“Yeah. I want to be
stronger! If it would make me stronger, I’d sell my soul to the devil. If it
would help me bring them back.”
“You think I’m the
devil?”
“He just pretends
to be mean! He’s actually very nice!”
Keel didn’t answer
Raphtalia or me.
Did that mean he
thought I was the devil?!
Rishia held her
hand over her heart. She was wearing the kigurumi, so I couldn’t really make
out her expression, but she spoke as though she had made up her mind.
“I’ve decided.
Please, make me your slave!”
“Are you sure?”
I hadn’t expected
her to decide so quickly. Judging from what I knew about her personality, I’d
expected some vague foot shuffling for a while.
But it looked like
once she’d made up her mind, she threw herself into it completely. I liked
that.
“Yes! I want to be
strong!”
“Alright then.
Let’s go see the queen and get this matter settled.”
And so we left the
courtyard and went to go visit the queen.
“Ugh . . . Uh...”
The slave sealing
ceremony went off without a hitch.
Both Rishia and
Keel ended up with powerful slave seals on their chests.
Keel had already
been a slave though, so first we had to have the original seal removed. I’m
sure he didn’t like being freed only to immediately become a slave again.
The queen had
applied the same sort of seal that she had used on Bitch. It was the sort that
was invisible unless it was activated by something.
A list of actions I
could prohibit appeared before me in the air.
I unchecked all of
the options. Or I tried to. I couldn’t uncheck them all!
Apparently I had to
leave at least one thing checked or the spell wouldn’t work. So I picked a
minor condition and finished the process.
It was a simple
thing. They were not permitted to lie to me.
I didn’t want to
think about it, but there was always the possibility that one of them might try
to betray me.
What if Rishia was
actually a spy sent by Itsuki?
Granted, the very
fact that she had agreed to be my slave made that pretty unlikely.
Huff. Huff.
“Are you okay?”
“Yes. I’m fine.”
“I’m good. That was
nothing!”
“Yeah? Good.”
I felt a little
guilty, but there was no use dwelling on it. I opened up Rishia and Keel’s
status screens.
I decided to check
Keel’s stats first.
He was at a pretty
low level. I couldn’t be sure how he would mature. But from the looks of it his
agility rating was very high. He was a demi-human with dog-like features, after
all. Maybe it was wise to assume that speed was his specialty.
I looked as
Rishia’s stats next.
“. . . !”
“What is it?”
“It’s nothing.
Don’t worry about it.”
I had gasped
without thinking.
I didn’t know how
to explain it. Compared to Raphtalia, Filo, and I, her stats were unbelievably
low.
She was at level
68, but her stats were barely any higher than Keel’s. Now I understood why
Itsuki wanted to get her out of his party.
But I wasn’t going
to abandon her like that. Figuring out how to make a weak person stronger was
my specialty.
Maybe those were
the kind of stats that normal people had in this world?
If there was
anything of interest about her, it’s that all her stats looked to be roughly
equal. There was nothing in particular you could point to as a weakness.
But the stats
themselves were all very low. It was exactly what you would expect from a
jack-of-all-trades.
Was she really
level 68? If she was, then I really had my work cut out for me.
“Mr. Iwatani.”
The queen was
talking to me. A knight I didn’t recognize was standing by her side.
“What?”
“I am in the
process of calling for an experienced combat advisor. But when it comes to
sword fighting, this person is easily one of the best in the kingdom. If you would
find her of use...”
“Why don’t you call
for ALL of the best?”
“Mr. Naofumi, you
don’t need to be so crass.”
“Sounds good to
me.”
What would be the
best use of our time though? I’d have to make the most of what time we had.
“Hey Keel, you’re
the lowest level member here. Filo’s going to take you out leveling.”
We needed to bring
him up to fighting level if he was going to get any use out of the training.
To do that we’d
have to power level—at least that’s what it was called in the online games I
used to play. A weaker character would go level with a high-level, fast
character, and then they would level up very quickly. At the very least, we had
to get him ready to class up.
“I’m supposed to
help him?”
“Yeah. Take him out
leveling. Just make sure you’re back before dark.”
“Okay!”
With a puff of
smoke, she transformed into her filolial form, then picked up Keel and placed
him onto her back.
“Huh? But . . .
Raphtalia?!”
Before he could
finish his sentence Filo used her wings to hold him in place and took off
running.
“AAAHHHHHHHH!”
“Oh! Keel!”
“Don’t worry about
them. Filo’s strong—they’ll be fine.”
It was important
that they started with the fundamentals. That was the only way to make the most
of the following training. And besides, focusing on the fundamentals would
probably be good for higher-level characters, too.
“Rishia, once the
next wave has come and gone, you’ll be doing the same thing as Keel. So look
forward to it.”
“Fehhh!”
She never calmed
down, did she?
Oh well. I guess
there was no getting around it. Even Raphtalia got a little freaked out when
she had to ride Filo.
They needed to
think of it as a trial on the path to strength. There was just no getting
around it.
“The Shield Hero’s
companions are boisterous, aren’t they?”
The knight standing
with the queen removed her helmet. She looked like the typical strong, female
knight character than you ran into in RPGs. She was very beautiful also, like
Raphtalia.
She had long
strawberry-blonde hair. She must have kept it tied up when she wore her helmet.
Had she dressed like a man, she could have passed for a prince.
“Please introduce
yourself,” said the queen.
The knight took a
step forward, saluted, and spoke loudly and clearly.
“My name is Eclair
Seaetto. I am honored to assist in the Shield Hero’s training exercises.”
“Seaetto? I don’t
think we’ve met before, but...”
I felt like I’d
heard that name somewhere.
“Mr. Naofumi.
Seaetto is the name of the territory my village was in.”
“That’s right. Nice
Guy had mentioned that.”
Did that mean this
woman was part of the nobility that had ruled over Raphtalia’s region?
But I’d heard that
the nobility there had been killed.
“This woman is the
daughter of the nobleman who once governed the land that Raphtalia’s village
was a part of.”
Heh. I liked her
choice of knights.
I’d heard that the
noble family that had ruled there was exceptionally talented. Raphtalia had
mentioned that losing them in the wave had been another major tragedy for her
people.
“Okay. What has she
been doing this whole time?”
“When my father
died in the first wave, a portion of our knights and soldiers tried to take
advantage of the ensuing chaos by hunting down survivors and selling them off
as slaves. I have been hunting those cowards down and ensuring their
imprisonment.”
Well, well. I never
expected to find someone so upstanding in such a rotten country. I appreciated
that she had taken that upon herself, both as the Shield Hero and as
Raphtalia’s friend.
“It is just as she
has said. They have been imprisoned in the castle dungeons. She finished her
work while you were in the islands. So I have selected her to assist in the
training of the other heroes.
I guess the church
and Trash had still been in power before we left, so if she had tried to hunt
down the slavers at that point they might have had her killed off.
There was only one
problem. Was she any good?
That was the most
important thing. There was no reason to receive instruction from anyone who
wasn’t at least as strong as Raphtalia.
“Is she any good?”
“Very. She was the
winner of the last national fencing tourney.”
“Are there others
as good as she?”
“Not ones that
haven’t been imprisoned, killed, or demoted.”
So there was no one
else in the kingdom that was good enough to train us further.
She seemed like an
upstanding person, but...
“You can hate me if
you like. I realize I was unable to defend your lands after my father’s death.”
“I would never.
That was not your fault. Please, don’t bow to me.”
The introductions
just kept on going.
This Eclair woman
was talking to Raphtalia as if she had nothing to worry about.
“If that is how you
feel. I am happy that I can do anything in the service of our people. Thank you
for the opportunity to help, Ms. Raphtalia.”
“Please, just call
me Raphtalia.”
“Understood. Now
then, Raphtalia, I do not know how worthy I am to be teaching you anything at
all, but I will do my best to show you the things I know.”
So this Eclair
person was going to be teaching Raphtalia what she knew about sword fighting.
“I should probably
participate in the training too, huh?”
“I do not know if I
have anything to teach you, Master Shield Hero, but I will certainly do all
that I can to assist.”
She was so proper!
I could tell she was one of those overly serious types.
“Thank you for your
time. I will be returning to my duties now. Please let me know if there is
anything you need from me.”
The queen turned
and left us alone with Eclair.
“So what should we
do? Do you want to start training right away?”
I felt like they
were going to make us run laps, or whatever counted for combat training in
Melromarc.
“We must begin by
evaluating your current skill level.”
“You’re not going
to make us run laps, are you?”
“I am confident
that you are far beyond that level of training. I would like to start with
actual battle operations.”
I wondered if I
should tell her that I wasn’t a track star or anything like that.
The only work we’d
really done was that I taught Raphtalia how to hold her sword and we did some
pull ups. And I only did that when we’d had free time.
And as for myself,
all I’d really done was sit around making medicines and accessories.
Oh! I had made
dinner a few times, too.
That made me
nervous. We hadn’t really done any physical training at all. All the exercise
we had gotten had just been from fighting monsters.
“Honestly, we
haven’t done much. All the skill that we do have really just comes from my
shield’s abilities. Raphtalia is the only one that has actually done some
work.”
“Mr. Naofumi, don’t
be so crude.”
“Really? Well then,
shall we start with a run around the interior courtyard?”
I didn’t really
want to run, but Eclair was probably right.
We should go for a
run. At the very least it would loosen us up a bit.
Eclair took the
lead, and we ran a few laps around the castle training grounds.
We ran at a pretty
good clip, but the stat boosts I had from my shield kept me from tiring.
I was sort of
annoyed by it the whole time. Running behind Eclair.
She was kind of
slow.
“Do you mind if we
speed up a little bit?”
“I’m sorry if my
pace was holding you back. Please, run at whatever speed you like. I’ll adjust
my pace to match yours.”
“Hear that,
Raphtalia?”
So we picked up our
pace a little. It still wasn’t giving Raphtalia or I any trouble.
“Fehhh...”
But Rishia had run
out of stamina and had started walking. It was probably because of that
kigurumi she was wearing.
Then just when we
had been running for a while...
“Just a moment
please, Master Shield Hero.”
Eclair called for
us to stop. It sounded like she was getting tired out.
Rishia had run out
of steam a while back, but I was doing just fine, so I’d picked her up and
continued running.
“I think you are
plenty fit for the training to continue. Shall we move on?”
“Really?”
“Your advanced
level is no doubt an advantage, but from what I’ve seen you are more than ready
to move on.”
Had the levels we’d
gained in Cal Mira really helped us that much?
I didn’t get tired
no matter how much I ran. And I could carry Rishia easily—she was so light!
I felt like I could
have easily kept running with heavier baggage. Actually, I hadn’t even really
been running, just walking quickly.
The game-like
system of powering up had really changed the meaning of physical training.
Of course, I was
glad that it was easy, but I still felt that if we made light of the training
fundamentals, we would end up regretting it.
I wanted to raise
my reaction time, and I wanted to get some good physical workouts in to help me
move better in battle.
If I could improve
my speed and strength, that would give me a better chance of dodging L’Arc and
Glass’s attacks.
But Eclair was
huffing and puffing, clearly out of breath. Maybe she was still recovering?
“Then let us move
on to battle tactics properly.”
Eclair took
Raphtalia aside and started showing her the minutiae of sword handling, from
how to hold the sword and regard your opponent to how to set her footing.
Thinking back on
it, the only instruction she had ever really gotten was a perfunctory lesson at
the weapon shop. Everything since that time she’d had to teach herself. She’d
managed to handle herself with magic and luck, but she had once had a difficult
time taking down a particularly powerful bandit we ran into. She was sure to
benefit from instruction by a real swordsman.
“Now then, may I
ask Ms. Rishia to act as Raphtalia’s opponent?”
“That makes me a
little nervous, but go ahead and do as she says.”
Rishia’s stats were
so low that I was worried on her behalf. But I’m sure she would be fine.
Raphtalia was given
a wooden training sword. She set her feet to stand against Rishia.
Rishia was still
wearing that kigurumi. It made for a ridiculous-looking scene.
“Here I go!”
“Um . . . Okay!”
Raphtalia dropped
her weight low and struck at Rishia just as Eclair had instructed her to.
“Fehhh!”
That’s all she’d
done, but suddenly Rishia was flying through the air.
Oh jeez. I’d known
she was weak and all, but she couldn’t even block an attack? I was hoping she’d
be able to handle some melee work, but that wasn’t looking like an option.
What were we going
to do about her?
“Huh? What?!”
Raphtalia was
stunned. She kept looking from the wooden sword in her hand to Rishia and back
again.
“Do us a favor and
hold back a little.”
“I did! But she
still went flying.”
Oh boy. I couldn’t
let her get hurt, so I ran over and caught her out of the air before she
crashed into the ground.
“Fehhh...”
“Hm. It may be
harder to train Raphtalia and Ms. Rishia together than I had expected, Master
Shield Hero.”
I was ready to
throw in the towel and keep her out of melee entirely. She was so talentless
there was really no hope.
But another part of
me didn’t want to admit defeat so easily.
What was talent
anyway? What she lacked in talent she could make up for with effort.
“Maybe so.”
How were we going
to train her? Maybe I was the only person that she could handle facing off
against, considering the fact that I was basically incapable of attacking or
doing damage.
But there was still
a problem. I wouldn’t get anything out of it!
“What would you
like to do, Master Shield Hero?”
“I’ll focus on
defending myself against your attacks.”
“Understood. Shall
I come at you full-force?”
“I don’t know how
strong you are, but if you think you can get through my defenses, give it your
best shot.”
“Understood.”
Eclair readied her
sword and turned to face me.
“Hya!”
Huh? She was really
fast! There was nothing unessential in her movements. She thrust at me, her
body shooting forward like a coiled spring. I was only able to respond just in
time.
The point of her
blade clattered against my shield.
“You were able to
parry my thrust, just what I would expect from a true hero. Let us see how you
do with this!”
She shot forward
again, delivering thrust after thrust very quickly.
It was hard to keep
up. It was like she was attacking with more than one sword at once.
Still, I was able
to block the thrusts. But it was exhausting. I wasn’t sure I felt like it was a
good skill to use in training. What if my shield had a counter attack skill?
That could have caused real problems, so I stuck to mostly trying to dodge the
thrusts.
Still, there were
times when her attacks connected through an ingenious move on her behalf. She
hit my shoulder and arm once or twice.
So these are the
kind of attacks a skilled swordsman could deliver?
I was pretty sure
that my stats were higher than hers, but I still hadn’t been able to completely
cover myself from her attacks.
“You really are
good with that thing.”
If Raphtalia could
learn to use a sword like Eclair, she’d probably be a lot stronger than she was
now.
During the last
battle, Raphtalia hadn’t been able to defeat a powered-up Glass. But if she
learned to fight like this, then she could probably do the job of the all the
other heroes combined. We might even stand a chance.
“As for you, Master
Shield Hero, it seems to me that you are already advanced beyond the point
where my instruction will be of any use.”
“It’s only because
of how high my stats have become. Don’t worry about it. Though that reminds me.
. .”
“Yes?”
“Is there any way
to imbue those sword attacks with additional effects? I mean, can you have
magical sword attacks or anything like that?”
“It is possible to
apply such effects. Try to block this one.”
The female knight
laid her hand on the tip of her blade and chanted a spell. When she finished,
she readied herself and thrust at me again.
When she did, the
blade was immediately engulfed in glowing energy that expanded to form the
shape of a wide lance.
She was fast!
I readied my
shield, and the lance energy blade glanced off of it, shooting over my head.
From what I could
tell, it didn’t seem powerful enough to hurt me, even if the attack had
connected. That was only because of my special defense rating though. I bet it
would really do a number against a monster, or against Glass.
“I see. That was
pretty impressive.”
“It is called the
‘applied sword technique.’”
“Another question.
Could you use that to make your attacks turn into defense rating attacks or
into attacks that ignore the enemy’s defenses all together?”
Eclair rubbed her
chin and thought for a minute.
“Not in the school
I’ve been trained in. But I have heard rumors to that effect.”
That’s right.
Normal humans in this world didn’t have access to the same sort of skills that
the heroes did.
But I could tell
from the way she was fighting that they DID have access to attacks that could
be just as effective.
It was probably
similar to what Raphtalia had done with her magic and the magic sword.
I think she’d
called it “illusion sword.”
It was an attack
that turned her invisible long enough to sneak around behind the enemy for a
thrust at their backside.
Aside from that,
Raphtalia had probably done something similar without intending to. I’d seen
her sword glow in the same way that Eclair’s just had.
So Raphtalia would
be able to make attacks like that when she was done training with Eclair—
awesome.
“Do you mean to say
that you’ve seen an attack like that before?”
“Yeah. One of the
enemies that we fought in the last wave used it. As you can tell, I am the
Shield Hero. Which means that I’m very weak against attacks that can break
through my defenses. So I’m trying to find a way to get around those defense
rating and defense ignoring attacks.”
“I see. I do not
know if I will be of much use to you in that regard. I do not believe that I
have much to teach you at all, Master Shield Hero.”
Eclair nodded
slowly to herself, looking a little wistful.
“Don’t worry about
it. I’m a weird case. I can’t even attack on my own. But I hope that you’ll
help teach the other heroes a thing or two.”
“Your judgment is
impeccable. I agree with you.”
She was so proper!
I didn’t like to be
so polite. It made me feel like she didn’t know who she was actually talking
to.
Anyway, at least
I’d gotten to see her real skill level.
If Raphtalia could
learn from her, we’d be in better shape than we were now.
“Fehhh...”
As for Rishia, we
couldn’t start with anything advanced. She could barely run around the
courtyard.
For her level, she
was very weak. She was probably too weak to even participate in the training
exercises.
She did have the
drive to work at it, but did she have the necessary stamina?
“Okay, well, until
the other combat advisors arrive, I’ll be working with Rishia on the basics.”
“Understood! I will
also assist Madam Rishia with the fundamentals of sword use!”
“Fehh...”
“Stop with that
weak sigh. You’re trying to toughen up, aren’t you?”
“Feh... Yes!”
She did seem
committed at least.
We spent the rest
of the day training on the castle training grounds.
Just before evening
fell, Filo came trotting back with Keel.
“We’re baaaack!”
“How was it?”
“After all the
running, it looked like the sun was going to set. So we had to come back! I
guess we didn’t get to fight very many monsters!”
Keel was limp and
exhausted where he lay on her back. I checked his stats.
Level 14. That
seemed like good progress to me.
“I feel sick.”
“Keep it up. You’re
getting stronger.”
“Did Raphtalia have
this hard of a time?”
Raphtalia had
gotten really sick after riding in the carriage for a day. She was out for a
while after that.
So in that regard,
yes, she’d had a hard time. But to be fair, she’d never gone out fighting
monsters on Filo’s back.
“She never tried
leveling from Filo’s back.”
“What? Then why do
I have to do it?”
I had sent them out
as an experiment, but it looks like Filo’s version of boot camp was pretty
tough.
I couldn’t wait to
see how quickly Keel leveled up.
“Ugh. I’m hungry.”
Keel’s stomach was
growling loudly.
Demi-humans’ bodies
matured with their level, not their ages.
“Keel, how was it?”
Raphtalia finished
her training with Eclair and came running over to see him.
“Filo, you can’t
push him too hard.”
“Huh?”
Filo had no concept
of what people’s limits were, regarding anything.
“Anyway, why don’t
we all have dinner? Tomorrow is going to be another busy day.”
“Good point.
According to Eclair, we’ll be studying magic in addition to sword skills, so I
think it will be another full day. The other soldiers say they have things to
teach us before we go to sleep, too.”
“Fehh... I’m better
at studying than training anyway.”
“Right. Got it.”
We finished the
dinner that had been prepared for us. Keel and Filo ate like pigs.
And that was the
end of our first day of training.
Compared to the
leveling that we’d done on the islands, this felt more like we were living
together as a team. It was like summer camp.
Personally, I never
really hung out with people outside of school, so I’d only seen things like
that in anime and manga.
“Hey, that reminds
me. Haven’t the other heroes shown up yet? What’s taking them so long?”
I asked the queen,
and she answered.
Apparently, they
had all gone their separate ways immediately after arriving and were all doing
their own things.
From what the queen
said, it sounded like they were all still in Melromarc. But no one had heard
from them directly.
Hadn’t they promised
to participate in the training?
I guess it didn’t
matter if they skipped out on the first day, considering we hadn’t really
established a system yet. But we needed to start training seriously the next
day.
I wondered if we
were really going to be able to get them to join in.
The next morning.
“Shield Hero, the
queen would like to meet with you.”
I was still asleep
in the castle chamber when someone knocked on the door and delivered the
message.
“Erm...”
I stumbled over to
the door, opened it, and thanked the soldier standing there.
“Good morning.”
“Morning. What does
the queen want this early in the morning?”
Raphtalia was
already awake, and she had changed into clothes that would allow her to move
easily during the training exercises.
Rishia had fallen
out of bed and was still asleep on the floor where she had fallen.
I guess that was
one advantage of sleeping in the kigurumi. It was a bit like pajamas after all.
Keel was lying on
top of Rishia and snoring loudly. I guess he had fallen out of bed too.
“What are you
doing, Raphtalia?
“I agreed to meet
Eclair for early morning drills.”
“Did you? What
about Rishia?”
“Rishia too.
Rishia! Wake up please! You too, Keel.”
“Fehhh...”
“Uh, Raphtalia, I’m
still sleepy!”
Raphtalia walked
over and shook Rishia’s shoulder until she suddenly woke up.
Something about the
way she was collapsed there looked unsavory.
“Better start
getting ready. Our morning drills will be starting soon.”
“Fehh... Good
morning!”
“Morning. Look, I have
to go meet with the queen now. I’ll meet up with you later, so just go ahead
and get started without me.”
I was afraid that
there might be a problem on the horizon. Rishia might end up meeting Itsuki on
the training grounds.
That could be a
real pain if it didn’t go well.
“Raphtalia, look
after Rishia for me, okay?”
I waved my hand to
call her over, then whispered in her ear.
“If Itsuki shows
up, do your best to keep Rishia separate from him. I don’t want things to get
out of hand.”
“Understood. Let’s
get going then, shall we?”
“Okay.”
“I’m tired.”
I left them all to
their preparations and went to go see the queen.
“What do you need
so early in the morning?”
I’d arrived in the
throne room. The queen had been waiting for me.
“Thank you for
coming. You will recall that yesterday I said I would be looking for other
combat advisors to assist in the training exercises.”
Had she been up all
night working on it?
She looked like she
hadn’t gotten any rest.
“Yeah...”
“I sent
correspondence to a number of individuals, and one of them has decided to
participate.”
“Oh yeah? Who?”
“This warrior is
well advanced in age, having fought in a war for Melromarc long ago. I believe
that if you train with this fighter you’ll find it a great contribution to your
efforts.”
Who knew there were
still such powerful fighters around?
I had never heard
of anyone like that. I naturally imagined she was talking about some kind of
mountain-dwelling ascetic.
Was this person
going to come down from the mountains to teach me secret martial arts? I’d
heard stories like that before.
It’s true that I
didn’t want to depend on my levels and ignore fundamental battle skills.
“The fighting style
you’ll be taught is known as the ‘Hengen Muso Style.’”
What kind of name
was that? It sounded like some kind of old action manga.
I must have
scrunched my face up in confusion, as the queen quickly offered an explanation.
“There is a famous
legend about this combat style. They say that it was once able to solve a
problem that, theoretically, was only able to be solved by a true hero.”
“Oh yeah?”
“According to the
legend, this style commands a power commensurate with that of the seven star
heroes. This person is the very last practitioner.”
“And what has this
person been doing the whole time? Relaxing?”
“I do not know.
There are many mysteries surrounding the style.”
I guess this world
had its fair share of esoteric martial arts. It really was like some old action
manga.
“And you’re sure
about this?”
“Yes. I saw it in
action once when I was very young.”
I wasn’t sure I
could really buy into all this.
It all sounded like
hearsay to me. I’d have to see a demonstration of these skills with my own eyes
to believe it.
“Actually, it seems
the warrior had been training on one of the outlying islands in Cal Mira,
unable to return to the main island in time to offer us assistance during the
last wave, and so asked when the next wave would arrive. I informed the warrior
of our current efforts.”
“Okay?”
“Had this person
been there to help, the battle may have turned out differently.”
She was really
talking this guy up. Could he really be that good?
I looked around the
throne room.
“Where are the
other heroes?”
“Mr. Amaki has left
to hunt monsters, Mr. Kawasumi is still asleep, and Mr. Kitamura has gone to
take his morning bath.”
They obviously
weren’t taking this seriously.
“Mr. Amaki said he
would be back before noon.”
“Am I the only one
you called for?!”
“I am terribly
sorry. I sent for the others but received no response.”
Just thinking about
them was giving me a headache. If I was going to be dragged out of bed so
early, at least make it worth my while!
I guess Raphtalia
and the others were getting up too. I would have had to wake up anyway.
“So when is this
warrior going to show up?”
“The warrior was on
a ship that arrived at the harbor last night. I expect the fighter to arrive at
the castle just after noon.”
That would mean he
was either on the ship I’d been on or had been on the ship with the other
heroes.
Could there really
have been someone that impressive in the crowd? I would have to wait and see if
he was all that the queen said he was.
I was thinking it
all over when the door to the throne room creaked open. A soldier came running
in with a report.
“The combat advisor
has arrived!”
“Well, that was fast.”
“Yes, sir! It seems
the combat advisor traveled through the night to get here!”
The soldier saluted
and bowed.
“Where is this
combat advisor?”
“Actually. …”
Noticing that the
queen and I had cocked our heads in confusion, the solider explained where the
combat advisor had gone.
“Well, well! This
girl is one in a million!”
“Fehhhhhh!”
I went to see the
new combat advisor and hung my head when I found him.
He was waiting at
the training grounds.
But why was there
an old lady rubbing Rishia’s soldiers?
I recognized her
face. When I had been traveling around and peddling my wares, I’d given her
medicine. She’d been very sick in a village that was in the midst of a deadly
epidemic.
Shortly after that,
a wave had come—we’d first run into Glass during that wave—and she had fought
with us in the town square. She’d definitely managed to hold her own against
the wave of monsters.
I’d been calling
her old lady—I meant it affectionately.
The old lady’s son
was decked out in some fancy-looking armor.
The old lady was
wearing some Chinese-looking martial arts style uniform.
Was that supposed
to mean that she was the Hengen Muso Style
practitioner? The new combat advisor?
“Holy saint! It’s
been a while!”
“I’ll just ask
right up front. Are you the new combat advisor?”
“Yes, I am.”
I probably sounded
rude questioning her like that.
I had already
figured it out, but I guess there was a part of me that hadn’t really accepted
it.
“After you saved my
life, good saint, I dedicated that life to helping this world.”
“Right, yes, I can
tell. What are you doing to Rishia?”
“Don’t you know?
Within this girl a very unordinary power sleeps. I believe she has the
potential to be the heir to my school of martial arts.”
“Fehhh! Naofumi!
Save meeeee!”
I ignored Rishia’s
shout. Could it really be true? Could Rishia really have a talent for martial
arts?”
“So if you’re a
combat advisor, what level are you at? I think you said before it was the same
as your age?”
“Yes, but after
that I recovered my commitment to my craft and was able to level further. I am
now at level 95.”
Level 95! That was
really high!
“I had planned to
reach out to you, holy saint, once I reached the leveling limit of 100. But if
my services may be of use now, I will happily offer them.”
The leveling limit
was 100?
If we were in the
upper 70s, then we were almost maxed out.
That must be why we
needed to start focusing on technique.
“Oh, so the max
level is 100?”
“Well,
yes—normally. However, I’ve heard legends of another class up ceremony that may
allow further leveling.”
She could take care
of training Rishia then. That would be a big help.
Because when you
really think about it, I didn’t know very much about how things worked in this
world, so how was I supposed to help my party learn anything?
“What about the four
holy heroes?”
“They don’t share
that limitation.”
So it sounded like
the legendary heroes could level past 100 if they wanted to.
But for everyone
else, leveling past 100 would mean finding out how to perform a legendary class
up ceremony. And that knowledge had apparently been lost long ago.
“Where’s
Raphtalia?”
“She’s just over
there.”
An exhausted Eclair
pointed across the courtyard.
Raphtalia was
sitting on the ground, looking pretty tired herself.
I wonder what
happened. I suppose it was easy enough to guess.
“Are you okay?”
“Y . . . Yes, but
that old woman really had her way with me. She said she needed to check to see
if I was who she thought I was.”
“She’s supposed to
be really powerful.”
She was at a higher
level than Raphtalia was. I didn’t know what her stats were though.
“Every time I tried
to move, she was on me in a flash, holding me back. Nothing I did could throw
her off.”
“That’s really
something.”
Was she using judo
holds or something? Not that I knew anything about that sort of thing.
Back in my own
world I was just your everyday otaku. I guess I’d seen some martial arts in
anime, but that was the extent of my knowledge about them.
Regardless, if she
was able to restrain Raphtalia, then she must have really known what she was
doing.
“I’m sure you are
already aware of this, holy saint, but status magic and its effects are simply
tools to help lead their user to victory. But they cannot ensure victory. One’s
true strength, experience, and training all affect the outcome of battle.”
“Sure.”
It didn’t matter
how much power you had if you didn’t have the skills or the training to know
how to put it to use.
Actually, if you
didn’t know what you were doing, really high stats might end up getting you
hurt.
With all the
fighting I’d done since I got there, I had come to understand at least that
much.
I’d run into plenty
of people that, judging from their stats, should have been powerful warriors.
But they just didn’t know what they were doing. I guess the other three heroes
were a good example of that kind of person.
There were many
measures of strength that couldn’t be summed up by a person’s level. I’d just
realized the leveling limitation for normal people. If we were almost at that
limit, then we needed to think of other ways to improve our battle prospects.
“What sort of
weapon do you fight with?”
“The Hengen Muso
Style does not require the use of weapons.”
“What?”
“Any item that the
user comes across can be turned into a weapon—that is the true strength and
advantage offered by the style. All enemies fall in its wake.”
I had seen her
fighting off monsters with a hoe. What sort of martial art didn’t choose a
weapon to specialize in?
“Now then, holy
saint, shall I demonstrate the extent of my abilities in a sparring match with
you?”
“I’ll be your
sparring partner, sure. But how are you going to come at me? You know I can’t
attack, right?”
“Then I will only
use a tree branch as a weapon. You will be fine, holy saint, if you can
withstand even one of my attacks. If you withstand the attack, then you can
send me away from here.”
The old lady broke
a branch from a nearby tree and set her footing to fight me.
Just to be safe I
decided to change to my highest defense rated shield, the Soul Eater Shield.
“Here I come.”
In a flash she was
right up against me.
She was so fast!
She moved even more quickly than Eclair had the day before.
She didn’t move as
well as Glass did, but she was moving at least as well as L’Arc.
But it wasn’t so
fast that I couldn't respond in time.
Before the tip of
her branch could connect with my shield, I held it out further away from my
body.
That was something
I’d learned to do. It would lessen the power of her attack.
“Excellent. I would
expect no less from you, holy saint. You know your way around a battle. But how
will you fair against this?”
There was a loud
clang, and even though she was only using a small branch, my shield shook and
vibrated violently in my hand.
“?!”
The vibration shot
up through my arm and over my body.
When it reached my
torso, I felt as though I’d been kicked in the ribs.
“Ugh...”
Wh . . . What was
that? Wait, I’d experienced something like that before. But it had hurt much
worse this time.
“This is the first
form of the Hengen Muso Style. It’s called ‘point.’ It was originally developed
for use against opponents in stiff armor with high defenses. It seemed to be an
appropriate form to use with you, holy saint.”
I concentrated on a
healing spell.
“Zw . . . Zweite
Heal.”
It was hard to
believe she’d generated that much power from a stick. It must have been an
attack that was based on the opponent’s defense rating.
That was the exact
type of attack I feared.
Had he ever managed
to use it properly, Itsuki’s eagle piercing shot probably had a similar effect.
I’d been able to
grab that skill of his out of the air, rendering it useless. I couldn’t do
anything to prevent the old lady’s attack though.
“And yet I’m sure
that you know there is simple way to counter this attack, don’t you, holy
saint?”
“Is there?”
“Yes, there is. I’d
very much like to show you.”
“Please do.”
She’d convinced me.
She was a powerful fighter.
If we’d been forced
into a real battle, we could still probably defeat her, but as a battle advisor
I couldn’t have asked for more.
If she wanted to
help us, there was no reason to turn her down. In fact, she was about to teach
me how to handle the exact attack that had been bothering me the most.
If Raphtalia and
the others could learn to fight like that, we'd have a definite advantage.
“So how do I stop
an attack like that?”
“That attack works
by sending energy at the enemy’s interior. It uses the enemy’s rigidity and
strength against them.”
“Hm...”
I imagined
something like a ceramic jug. If you put a hard bead inside and shook it, it
was probably something similar to the effect she was describing.
It was probably
wrong in theory though.
If you shook the
jug really hard, it might eventually break. But that only worked because the
jug was completely hollow—I was not hollow. If the attack worked like the
ceramic jug and the bead, that would really screw up my insides.
“The simplest way
to repel this sort of attack is to purposefully create a softness and then to
use that softness to reject the destructive force.”
“I think I get it.”
So basically, I had
to release the energy before it could start to run wild.
If that jug was
more like a piggy bank, then before the coins inside could be shaken around,
you had to make a slot for the coins to escape from.
But I wasn’t living
in a manga. If I could really do something like that, then this really was a
fantasy world.
Granted, I had been
summoned to another world with a magical shield. I’d been making magical
barriers out of thin air. It was probably time to get used to living in a
fantasy world.
“I understand in
theory, but I don’t know how I would go about actually doing it.”
It didn’t seem like
the sort of thing that you could just will into being.
This old lady
really knew her stuff.
“Alright, you’ve
convinced me. Please become our combat advisor.”
“Thank you very
much. Then I will focus my efforts on you and the girls here.”
“Good. Just so you
know, this woman here, Eclair, is also going to be working with us on
swordsmanship. Please teach us all you can.”
I pointed Eclair
out, and she saluted the old lady.
“I never would have
dreamed I might receive instruction from a master of the legendary Hengen Muso
Style. Please include me in your teachings. It would be a great honor.”
“Ha, ha, ha! My
training is tough work. I hope you can keep up.”
“I will certainly
do my best.”
“You’re supposed to
be the teacher here, aren’t you?”
Why was Eclair
acting like she was showing up for lessons too? She should be focusing on
teaching Raphtalia to use her sword.
And Keel . . . Keel
was clearly intimidated by all the strangers. His tail was curled between his
legs.
He really was like
a dog.
“You want to get
stronger, don’t you? I’ll go through the whole thing with you, so buck up and
let’s get to it.”
It was a good
chance to teach him the basics.
We couldn’t level
past 100, but we could still get stronger if we learned how to fight.
I needed Raphtalia
to get stronger than she was, and even Rishia seemed like she sincerely wanted
to get stronger.
“Then the training
is about to get tough!”
“Yes. Understood.”
“Fehhh...”
“The other heroes
have yet to arrive.”
I took the
opportunity to explain to the old lady just what sort of a situation we were
facing.
I told her that
while I wanted her to teach Rishia as much as she could, I also wanted to keep
Rishia separated from the Bow Hero.
The old lady waited
until I was finished talking before agreeing. She didn’t ask any obnoxious
questions about it.
“That reminds me,
where’s Filo? I wanted her to take Keel out leveling after we finished
breakfast.”
He’d probably throw
up if he had to go for another ride on Filo’s back.
When he heard me
ask about Filo, Keel looked startled and ran behind Raphtalia, shaking in fear.
I guess he really didn’t like the idea.
“I think she might
be with Melty.”
“Good thinking.
Okay, I’m going to go get Filo and have her take Keel out.”
“No! Shield guy!
Anything but that!”
Damn, Keel was
getting too familiar for my liking.
“You won’t get any
stronger if you give up now.”
“You mean I have to
make myself sick or I won’t get stronger . . . oh no...”
“Not exactly.”
“Keel, you’re not
leveled up enough to make use of the training we’re doing here. You have to go
level up first.”
Considering how
much he’d leveled yesterday, it probably wouldn’t take very long.
The only way for a
lower-level character to get stronger was to start leveling.
Even if he didn’t
level enough in time to participate in the training, we could always just teach
him the things that we’d learned later.
“When Filo gets
back, you need to go out with her. But you can work with us here until then,
okay?”
“Okay!”
Keel nodded.
We spent the rest
of the time until breakfast was ready, learning the basics of the old lady and
Eclair’s techniques.
It started off with
a lecture from the old lady.
“The Hengen Muso
Style was first developed so that weak fighters could hold their own against
enemies far superior to them in strength.”
Apparently, the
style relied on the user’s manipulation of life energy, or something like that.
It was the sort of concept you came across in older manga from time to time.
Now we would have to learn how to use that energy ourselves.
“Energy, hm...”
Was it something
different from SP? Probably.
“For example, the
Shield Hero’s abilities are enhanced because he is given energy from his
legendary weapon.”
“Does that mean
that I can’t practice it?”
“Of course not. It
does mean that you are unlikely to have much success manipulating your own
energy. However, if you learn the techniques of the Hengen Muso Style, then you
will be able to apply those techniques to your skills.”
“Huh? What’s that
supposed to mean?
“The shield hero
may be able to increase the power of his special skills. Or at least there is a
legend among practitioners of the Hengen Muso Style to that effect.”
It sounded like
there was another power-up system separate from the legendary weapon’s skill
system.
I guess that meant
I might be able to make air strike shield even more powerful than it was
already.
“I see.”
So there was a
reason for me to participate in the practice, but I wouldn’t benefit from it as
much as Raphtalia and the others.
“The most important
aspect of this is that the techniques that make up the Hengen Muso Style can
easily be applied to other martial arts.”
“Is that the reason
that you don’t specialize in any particular weapon?”
“Yes. The trade-off
is that you will have to study your weapon of choice separately. Once you have
grasped the fundamentals, you can practice applying them to your preferred
fighting style.”
So what she was
basically trying to say was that while there are some attacks that are specific
to her style, if you want to use a weapon to carry out her techniques, you will
have to find a way to apply the energy manipulation skills of her style to your
chosen martial art.
Did that mean that
other martial arts would necessarily have better and stronger attacks?
I tried to think of
it in terms of magic and skills.
A skill would be
equivalent to the Hengen Muso Style techniques, while magic would be like
another martial art.
It would be like if
Raphtalia was chanting a spell like First Hiding, and I was going to use air
strike shield.
When we did that,
we had the chance to perform a combo skill called hiding shield, which produced
an invisible shield.
Or when Filo used
Zweite Tornado and I used air strike shield.
Then we would have
the chance to use a combo skill that literally blew the enemy away: tornado
shield.
In both situations,
air strike shield did something and was important.
But it could be
used with different types of attacks to produce different combo skills.
I think that the
system she was suggesting worked the same way.
I don’t think her
style was like a formal school or art but more like a flexible concept that
could be applied to any fighting style.
So the beginner
user would learn to use Hengen Muso Style techniques, then go on to specialize
in a particular martial art as a mid-level user, and finally advanced users
would learn how to combine the two to make their attacks even more effective.
“Those are the
basics. Now, learning to actually perform these skills is another story.”
“You mentioned that
Rishia had a particular aptitude for it. What makes you say that?”
“Good question!
That girl has an innate skill for energy manipulation!”
“Rishia does?”
“Fehhh!”
The old lady had
reached out and touched Rishia’s arm, which caused Rishia to scream.
“She learns very
quickly. Surface! She will understand the system. Depths! She will master those
techniques. That is my plan.”
“Surface? Depths?”
“It is a way to
express the different capacities we all have. On the surface, anyone can grasp
the concepts. But to master them requires a depth of understanding and innate
talent.”
So without talent,
there wasn’t much point to it all? With an understanding of the surface
concepts, anyone could be stronger than they were. But to really implement them
would be more difficult.
“Do Raphtalia and I
have a talent for it?”
“It is difficult
for me to judge in your case, because you are a hero. Raphtalia, on the other
hand, has the potential for discipleship.”
It was hard to
figure out what she wanted to say. I was starting to get a little irritated by
it.
But what I knew for
sure was that, after suffering from the attack she’d used against me, I had
something to learn from her.
At the very least,
if I could learn to defend against defense rating and defense ignoring attacks,
I would stand a better chance of surviving my next encounter with L’Arc and
Glass.
“Anyway, breakfast
is almost ready. Hey, old lady, could I get you to explain all this to the
other heroes too?”
“Naturally, that
was my intention.”
“Any idea what we
are going to need to practice these techniques?”
“To truly
understand and master them, some time spent alone training in the mountains is
necessary. For a naturally talented individual, a month or so of asceticism
should be sufficient.
A month? The next
wave would he here in two weeks, so that wasn’t going to work. And that was for
someone with a natural talent?”
“What about for a
normal person? How long would they need to really learn it?”
“Ten years or so.”
Well, that wasn’t
going to work! We couldn’t afford to spend years just learning the basics.
We had other things
we had to do. I guess we could go to the mountains and wait for the wave to
come, but there was too much else to do.
We could continue
the training after the wave had come and gone.
“Got it. Heroes
have a pretty convenient means of travel available to them, so I guess we could
think about a mountain hermitage. We’ll keep that option on the table.”
We left the
training grounds and went to eat breakfast.
“Is that really
what you’re thinking?”
After we finished
breakfast, the old lady began to tell us more about her fighting style. She had
started acting as our combat advisor in earnest.
Just as we were
about start the training for the day, the other three heroes all decided not to
participate.
We were in the
castle courtyard when they decided to leave. Raphtalia, Eclair, the queen, and
I all called for them to stop.
Rishia had agreed
to study in the castle library until the old lady called for her.
That was the plan
we came up with to keep her from running into Itsuki.
Filo had already
left to take Keel leveling. Keel shouted something to me as they ran out
through the castle gate, but I couldn’t make out what he was trying to say.
“We are already
leveled up, and we already know how to hold our own in a battle. We don’t have
enough time to spend training with you.”
Ren told us why
they were leaving. Motoyasu stood next to him, spinning his spear in circles.
“Yeah. Is that
really how you think we should spend our time? I’d rather try and find a better
weapon.”
I guess that meant
he thought his weakness was his weapon’s fault?
As for Ren, the way
he’d phrased his refusal made it sound like he had something else in mind.
“There’s a problem
with your reasoning, too.”
“Oh yeah? And
what’s that, Motoyasu?”
“Only boxers can
use energy attacks. I’m a spear fighter, so it wouldn’t do me any good anyway.”
“What are you
talking about? You mean monks, right? The class that can’t use weapons?”
“You mean ascetics!
It’s not that they can’t use weapons. It’s that they don’t specialize in any of
them.”
Okay, it was time
to explain a few things to these morons.
Games often had job
systems that divided up players by the weapons, equipment, and abilities they
were able to use.
I guess they were
trying to say that their jobs, by which they probably meant the legendary
weapon they were assigned, weren’t able to learn the skills that the old lady
was teaching.
But what they were
really doing was admitting that I was right.
They had all given
different answers, but all of their answers admitted that the concept of energy
that could be manipulated in battle existed.
That meant that
these energy skills really were possible.
Like all the
trouble we’d gone through trying to figure out how to power-up a weapon, it was
probably safe to assume that all of their explanations held a kernel of truth.
“We’re heroes,
aren’t we? Don’t you think the rules might be different for us?”
“No way. It’s not
like we can just do whatever we want. What would the point of these weapons be
if we could?”
“Yeah. Maybe one of
the seven star heroes could learn it. Like the Claw Hero, or the Gauntlet
Hero.”
I had to admit that
they might have been right.
It’s not like I
could just decide to learn the skills that were available to Motoyasu as the
Spear Hero. That wouldn’t make sense.
That would be like
Motoyasu yelling “shooting star sword!” Would you expect his spear to turn
itself into a sword?
And yet the old
lady had said that the skills she taught didn’t rely on any particular weapon.
She’d said they could be applied to any school of martial arts.
They needed to stop
thinking of this world as though it operated by the same rules that the games
they were familiar with did.
We had an
opportunity to learn a new and powerful attack style here. Why not jump at the
chance?
I didn’t know ahead
of time whether or not it would work, but I decided it was worth it to try.
“It appears that
the other three heroes reason differently than the Shield Hero, does it not?”
Eclair regarded the
three heroes with confusion.
“Who the hell are
you?”
Ren was glaring at
Eclair. He did not look pleased.
It was his fault
though. Didn’t he realize that he’d been defeated in one wave after the other?
He probably still
thought that the only reason I was successful was because I was cheating.
“Me? I have nothing
to do with this Hengen Muso Style. My name is Eclair Seaetto, and I have been
summoned to provide instruction in the sword arts.”
“Sword arts? Heh!”
“What’s so funny?”
His little chuckle
had hit a nerve. Eclair took a step toward him.
“Your little tricks
aren’t going to make w
eak people any
stronger. They should focus on leveling.”
“Hm... It seems
that the Sword Hero has confidence in his swordplay. I wonder if I may bother
you for a lesson?”
“Eclair, calm
down.”
“Forgive me, Shield
Hero. But I also have confidence in my swordplay. If I have been condescended
to, I must stand up for myself.”
Oh jeez. I had a
regular samurai on my team. She must have been the sort of person that couldn’t
tolerate having their skills brought into question.
“If you want a
lesson, I’ll give you one. You’ll regret it though.”
Ren adjusted his
grip on the hilt of his sword while his teammates looked on, concerned.
Motoyasu and his
team were watching too. Bitch looked thrilled.
Itsuki and his team
looked on but yawned. I guess they weren’t so swept up in it.
If they didn’t want
to be here, I wished they would just hurry up and leave. I didn’t want
Raphtalia and the others losing the motivation they had.
“The knight, Eclair
of Melromarc, will have a sparring match with Mr. Amaki, the Sword Hero. Is
that your desire?”
The queen stepped
forward and announced. Even if she hadn’t, they looked like they were about to
start fighting anyway.
I hoped there were
rules in place. No one could afford to sustain a heavy injury at this point.
“Very well. The
duel shall end when one of you has the opportunity to deliver a final blow. The
opportunity for the final blow is the deciding factor. So do not make the final
attack and do not use more force than necessary.”
“Fine.”
“You truly are a
merciful queen.”
Ren drew his sword
and adjusted his stance. Eclair did the same.
“Oh, can I add
another rule?”
“What?”
“Eclair is unable
to use the type of skills that heroes have access to, so those should be
forbidden. Also, I don’t know if Eclair can use magic or not, but let’s keep
magic out of the duel. This is only to test your skill with the sword, after
all. Okay?”
That was the only
way the duel could serve as a test of their swordsmanship.
It was also a good
chance to see how good Ren was, without using any “tricks” or skills.
“Fine.”
“But we can use
other techniques, right?”
Ren nodded.
I guess that meant
that he knew about the ways that other people, ones without access to skills,
could fight.
“Fine.”
“Very well then...”
the queen said, raising her folding fan into the air.
“Begin!”
The moment she
dropped the fan, Eclair and Ren rushed each other, their swords clanging.
“Hya!”
“Kya!”
After they were
locked in place for a moment, they both jumped back a step before rushing
forward again.
Ren was faster. He
swiped at Eclair a few times a second.
But Eclair could
read the movements of his broadsword easily, and she kept out of the way of his
blade without trouble. When she found an opening, she thrust at it.
Ren jumped to the
side, avoiding the point of her blade, but he had to jump around so
dramatically that it was affecting his footing.
At first he kept
his feet planted, like in kendo. But now he was jumping around to avoid her
thrusts.
“You’re better than
I thought.”
“This is all I’ve
done with my life. Now, Sword Hero, come at me!”
“You asked for it!
Time to get serious.”
He rushed at her,
swinging his sword heavily, then followed up with a quick V-shaped slice.
I don’t know much
about sword fighting, but I think it was some sort of reverse cut.
From where I was
standing, it looked like children pretending to sword fight. One attack didn’t
seem to lead into the next.
Eclair used the
broadside of her blade to parry his attacks, then brought the blade around
horizontally, to swipe at his face.
“?!”
Ren was clearly
surprised, though he was able to get out of the way without ruining his form.
But he left himself
open. Eclair saw the opening and sliced down at him, moving the blade overhead.
Ren saw it coming
and jumped backwards to avoid it.
“Ha!”
He recovered his
footing and charged her.
Eclair rooted her
feet to the ground and thrust forward. Ren had to pivot around the blade to
avoid its point, and in doing so he exposed his backside. Noticing his mistake,
he immediately jumped away.
What kind of a move
was that? It didn’t look very cool. Eclair watched him try to recover,
apparently rendered speechless by what she was seeing.
From what I could
tell, Ren was slowly being put on the defense.
“Ha! I’m impressed
that you were able to avoid my attack!”
“What? Excuse me,
but Sword Hero, did you dodge my last thrust like that on purpose? Is that how
you handle a sword in the world you are from? I’ve never seen anything like
it.”
Eclair seemed to be
genuinely disappointed in him.
I thought it looked
pretty ridiculous too. Why would he show his back and then jump away? Anyone
could have just attacked his back.
The two of them
kept talking to each other as they traded attacks and blocks.
It looked like
Eclair was slowly pushing him back.
She had mostly
stopped cutting and parrying. Most of her movements now were thrusts.
Ren had to spend
most of his time dodging, jumping to the left and right. It kind of looked like
he was just doing whatever he could to keep his distance from her.
“Ha!”
Ren, suddenly
decisive, jumped back and kept his distance.
What was that huge
back step supposed to mean?
“Not so fast!”
Ren had jumped back
to get some distance, but Eclair dashed forward and was right up against him in
a heartbeat.
Her sword was
ready, and she thrust at his chest. He was wide open.
“No way! Air strike
bash!”
“Damn!”
Ren’s sword
suddenly flashed a bright light, and Eclair’s sword was knocked from her hand.
“Well. You got me
to use a skill. You must really know what you are doing.”
“That means you
lost, right?
I know it was just
a training drill, but I stepped forward and made sure Ren knew he’d lost.
He could try and be
cool if he wanted to, but the rules were the rules.
“I just let her
win.”
“Oh yeah? It looked
to me like you knew you couldn’t win on your swordsmanship alone, so you
cheated.”
Eclair said
nothing. She looked irritated that Ren had stooped so low.
“The rule against
skills was just something you randomly said.”
“If that’s true,
then you would have been alright with Eclair using magic in the middle of your
duel, right?”
Obviously he’d
known he was going to lose the fight, so he decided to forfeit by breaking a
rule. That was the less humiliating way to lose.
Then he said that
he admitted she was a strong fighter because he’d had to use a skill.
Didn’t he realize
that was the least cool way he could have handled the situation?
“There are no rules
in a real battle!”
“Oh, right. Yeah.
Got it. Okay.”
Even Motoyasu and
Itsuki looked annoyed by Ren’s behavior.
“You’re at a really
low level, so anytime I use just a fraction of my real
power, this is what happens. You need to be stronger if you want to fight me
for real.”
“Sword Hero, is
that all you wish to say?”
Eclair was
trembling. She must have been really angry.
I understood how
she felt. She’d spent her life working on her swordsmanship. Of course she
would be irritated if someone condescended to her on those terms.
“What?”
“At first I’d
thought you were using a style from another world, but in the end, anyone could
see you were being dominated. To be honest, I don’t believe you have anything
to teach me about swordsmanship at all.”
“You only think
that because you’re so green. Go train for a while and come back.”
“Really, Ren? I
think you might be the green one here.”
Ren looked very
irritated by what I said. He glared at me.
“I once fought a
top player in Brave Star Online. Granted, he was a top player in a different
game, but I still beat him! And you call me green?”
“What are you
talking about?”
“You said the same
thing once, Naofumi. You managed one of the most powerful guilds in an online
game once!”
He was right. I had
told him about that.
It was when I was
trying to convince them that I knew what I was talking about when we were
planning a battle formation to take on a coming wave.
“Well, this is just
like that. My skills with the sword are first-rate.”
“All I said was
that I have experience managing teams. Don’t you think that’s a little
different from claiming practical battle experience?”
He seemed to be
very proud that he’d once defeated a random player in an online game, but that
type of victory was obviously no good for anyone when we were talking about
battle skills in the real world.
I was a good
example of that too.
Back in my world, I
had managed one of the top guilds in a popular online game.
But now I was in
another world all together. According to Ren’s theory, I was in Brave Star
Online. Even if I knew what the rules were, I could win a battle just by
wanting to.
Granted, that
didn’t mean I was necessarily going to lose. But it was a different world. Some
of the things I’d learned elsewhere might not be applicable.
So even if I had
skills from another game, it didn’t mean that I was going to be able to put
them to use here.
And that’s exactly
what had happened. I’d been stuck with a shield instead of a weapon. That meant
that the way I fought in this world had to be completely different from
anything I’d already learned.
In a situation like
that, who would expect me to just walk on up and win battles?
Even if you knew
the controls, the rules were different. A top player in one game might not even
be average in another game.
“It’s the same
thing to me.”
“No, it’s not. If
there are any differences between what you’ve learned and the reality you’re in
now, then you’ll lose. Trust me. I know all about it. Did I ever say what I
knew from my guild was definitely going to be applicable here?”
“Meh.”
“Meh? I don’t think
so. You seem to be pretty satisfied with your victory, but do you think you
could win if you stuck to the rules?”
Ren crossed his
arms and looked away.
Why was he so
haughty? He could only win a battle when it was set up to guarantee him
victory!
That confidence of
his was full of holes. It would come crumbling down someday.
“What’s the point
in being proud of yourself for winning a game you’re already better at anyway?”
“Yeah! I actually
agree with Naofumi this time! You’re proud of yourself for beating someone who
was good at a different game?”
“I actually agree
with him also. It looks like you think highly of yourself for winning when
you’ve forced your opponent to play an RPG they are unfamiliar with.”
Even Motoyasu and
Itsuki agreed with me. Ren seemed irritated by their outbursts.
“You’re only saying
that because you don’t understand what VR is really like!”
“You’re right. I
don’t. But look at how upset you are about it. That makes me think that maybe
in your world, this person you beat in Brave Star Online was a top player in a
game that wasn’t VR.”
I felt like I was
starting to understand what was going on here.
He was thrilled
with himself because he’d won a battle against a famous player. That could only
mean one thing.
When he saw
Motoyasu and Itsuki’s reaction, Ren seemed to understand that he was starting
to look pretty bad. He pointed his sword at Eclair and shouted.
“Whatever! You’re
weak!”
“You . . . !”
Eclair was about to
scream, but the queen stepped between them and shot Eclair a menacing look.
“Do not disgrace
the Seaetto name. Calm down.”
“Forgive me.”
“Please understand
that we have requested your assistance in our training efforts and that this
training is of the upmost importance. You are the country’s combat advisor, and
in doing so you must help us prepare for the coming wave. I believe we
discussed the necessity of teamwork during the meeting.”
The queen was very
forceful in telling Eclair to stand down.
But if we didn’t
find someone to make the other heroes understand their own weakness, then it
was looking like they weren’t going to participate in the training that we had
planned.
“Of course. I
understand.”
Our immediate goal
was to make the other heroes stronger. We had to do whatever we could to make
an environment that would contribute to that goal.
The other heroes
and their parties were standing around looking very satisfied with themselves.
I hope they didn’t think that they were going to get out of this.
We needed to start
working together.
And so we decided
to listen to the advice of the old lady about Hengen Muso Style and leave to go
begin our ascetic training.
“If we have to be
mountain hermits, where are we supposed to go?”
“There is a place
in the mountains where you can train, in private, to work with energy. It is a
few days’ walk from here, or one day by horse or filolial. Now then, hero, it
is time we departed.”
We collected our
belongings and left for the mountains.
The castle guards
had prepared filolials to take us there. And so we made our way deeper and deeper
into the mountains.
We made it to the
training spot deep in the mountains. When night fell we would be using
teleportation to move, so we didn’t bother to set up a place to sleep.
There were wild
dragons roaming about the nearby wilderness. We ran into them from time to
time.
With all the heroes
together they weren’t too much for us to handle. I took the lead and held the
monsters back, while the others dispatched them.
They were dragons,
but they were nowhere near as large as the dragon zombie that we had fought a
while back. These ones were only about two meters tall. That larger one we
found was probably around three meters tall.
The other heroes
were weak, sure, but they weren’t so underpowered that they couldn’t defeat a
dragon here or there.
Finally, we reached
the spot we’d been looking for. It was a shallow mountain pool complete with a
waterfall.
It was late in the
afternoon, and evening would be on us soon.
“This is the place
for you to train with energy. Everyone, please take a deep breath and assume a
meditation position.”
Meditation? She
clearly didn’t understand the kind of people we were working with here.
Motoyasu clearly
didn’t care. He climbed up onto a large boulder and crossed his legs.
They’d been
complaining the whole way, so I wasn’t feeling very optimistic about our
prospects.
“God, what a PAIN!”
I could hear Bitch
whining off in the distance.
A shadow appeared
and whispered something in her ear. She made an irritated face before walking
over and sitting down next to Motoyasu.
The other parties
all did the same thing. They complained a little bit before finally sitting
down.
“Mr. Naofumi.”
“Hm...”
Raphtalia did the
same. She sat down, closed her eyes, and began to breathe deeply.
I followed her
lead. I sat down and tried to concentrate.
We were supposed to
focus, but what exactly were we supposed to feel when we were sitting down?
Besides, I wasn’t
really sure what “energy” even was.
I guessed that it
was different from magic. Eclair had left trails through the air with her sword
though, so I guess that this energy stuff was something like that?
I felt like it
would be easier to understand how to manipulate energy if I could figure out
what it was.
Only heroes had SP.
Was it something else?
For heroes,
soul-healing water would restore SP. But for normal people, soul-healing water
just helped them concentrate or could bring people back to normal if they had
been knocked unconscious.
That made me wonder
if this “energy” they were talking about really referred to SP.
Although, come to
think of it, I didn’t really know what SP was either. Did it stand for “soul
points”?
That actually gave
me an idea.
I wondered if it
felt anything like how it had felt when I first learned how to use magic.
The first time that
happened, I had touched a fragment that the accessory dealer had given me. When
I did, I was suddenly able to feel the magic power inside of me. Now, whenever
I imbued an object with magic, it felt a bit like I was moving another arm that
I’d never known I had before.
It felt similar
whenever I used magic in battle.
I wonder. If I were
to approach energy the same way, maybe I could learn to control it the same way
as I learned to control SP.
I decided to try
using my SP the same way that I had learned to use magic.
I sat there and
spent about 30 minutes trying to manipulate it, but then...
“Good! That is
enough meditation for today!”
The old lady
clapped her hands loudly, signaling the end of the session.
“This all seems
completely useless to me.”
Motoyasu didn’t
waste any time getting to his complaints.
I guess you could
either choose to see it as a waste of time or as an opportunity to reconnect
with yourself.
Ren and Itsuki
probably agreed with him, judging from how grumpy they looked.
“Now then, I
suggest we move on to sparring work. Is there a hero who would be so kind as to
act as my partner?”
The old lady
crossed her arms. The other heroes probably thought she was just a little old
lady.
The three of them
kept looking around, trying to see which one would have to agree to work with
her.
Sigh... I assumed
it would come down to me. I stepped forward.
“I will.”
“Very well, holy
saint. Let us begin.”
“Sure.”
I held my shield
forward to defend myself.
The old lady held a
stick in her right hand and held her left hand behind her back.
“Hmmm...”
She dropped her
weight low and then, in an instant, appeared right in front of me.
I knew she would be
coming though. She was fast, but I was ready to stop her attack because I’d
expected it.
I caught her attack
with my shield.
My real concern was
that her attacks were defense rating attacks.
My shield
reverberated in my hand. The vibrations moved up my arm and spread out to my
chest.
She’d said that I
needed to create a softness to let the energy out, right?
I focused my magic
power in my chest and tried to guide whatever she had put into me back out of
my body.
Ugh, it was harder
than I’d thought it would be. I kept focusing though and was able to move the
thing into my shoulders.
“Excellent work,
holy saint. How about this?”
She came thrusting
at me with the stick.
I could tell from
the feeling I got when blocking her attacks that each thrust was a defense
rating attack.
Ugh, I couldn’t
keep up.
“Argh!”
I suddenly felt as
though I’d been kicked in the stomach. She’d knocked the wind out of me. I
doubled over and held my stomach in pain.
I hadn’t been able
to stop her.
And I was sure she
was holding back. Had she really tried to hurt me, I don’t think I would have
been able to stop her first attack.
“You’ve got the right
idea, but your execution is incorrect.”
“What do you mean?”
“You think you can
do it with magic power, but you are wrong. You need something else as well. You
must learn to manipulate your life force.”
Didn’t she realize
that I was using magic power because I had no idea what she meant by life
force?
The only way I was
going to figure it out was by relying on the sensations I’d learned about my
magic power, even if this “energy” she spoke of was something else.
The old lady went
on to spar with each of the remaining heroes.
None of them were
able to defend against her attacks. They all fell at her first strike.
Finally, after
coming all the way out into the mountains and sparring with her, the other
heroes finally understood how powerful she was.
And yet they just
stood around complaining that they’d lost.
Why did they all
have such a bad attitude?
They liked leveling
up, didn’t they? Why couldn’t they apply that attitude to training?
“The holy saint
Shield Hero fights differently than the other heroes here today. Today’s goal
is to destroy these boulders using only your energy. Like this.”
The old lady
touched her fingertip to a nearby boulder.
It reacted like a
piece of soft tofu. Her finger slipped right in, and a massive crack appeared
in the stone around it.
“This is performed
without using any of the special powers available to you heroes. You can
clearly see what I’ve done, so I would like you all to do the same.”
What she’d done was
amazing, but how were we supposed to do the same thing? Was she planning to
continue asking the impossible of us?
The other heroes
all walked over to boulders and started touching their fingertips to the
stones. They complained about it the whole time.
“What about me?”
“As the holy saint
is incapable of attacks, I suggest you use this time to meditate on your life
force. You must learn to feel it.”
“Oh, okay.”
I was the only one
that had to return to meditation.
I looked over at
Raphtalia, who was working a boulder with her fingertip. For a second, I was
jealous. I wanted to try alongside her.
Apparently, I was
the odd man out.
I sat down to
meditate, only to find all sorts of ideas running through my mind.
What was energy? It
wasn’t magic or SP?
Well, if
soul-healing water restores SP, then maybe I’d be able to feel something when I
drank it. That something might be energy.
I decided to ask
the old lady.
“Hey.”
“What is it?”
I got up from my
meditating and tossed her a bottle of soul-healing water.
“Tell me something.
Does this energy that you keep talking about respond to that? If I drink it,
will it help me feel this energy?”
“This is
soul-healing water, isn’t it? The holy saint certainly does possess some rare
items. Unfortunately, no. This is not related.”
“Oh...”
I guess it was safe
to assume that “energy” didn’t have anything to do with SP then.
“However,
soul-healing and magic water may have the effect of circulating your energy.”
Maybe I was getting
closer after all. I just didn’t really understand what it was yet.
But I couldn’t
ignore the possibility that one of the other heroes might have known about it.
I had to think.
There must be shortcut through all this training. If there was, I needed to
find it.
“It’s only been a
single short day. For such a short amount of time you heroes seem to be on the
way to grasping the fundamentals.”
The old lady
whispered to herself as she watched the other heroes and their parties
practicing on the rocks.
I didn’t know what
she meant. I didn’t feel like I was any closer to understanding anything.
All I’d learned was
that if I stirred up my magic power, it had somewhat similar effects to what
would happen had I learned to use energy. That was it.
We ended up
training until nightfall.
When the sun went
down, we teleported back to the castle and were finally free to do what we
wanted.
“Man, I’m really
tired.”
“I know. That was
more taxing than I’d expected it would be.”
I was far more
tired after the training in the mountains than I had been after the previous
day’s work with Eclair.
The thought of
going through all that again with Rishia and the old lady was depressing.
“Raphtalia, are you
going to spar with Eclair?”
“Yes. She says that
she has a lot of things to show me.”
There was no time
to relax. But there was no getting around it—there was only so much time until
the next wave, and we had to do what we could.
“I think I’ll make
up some nutritional drinks. I’ll go swing by the apothecary in town. Raphtalia,
you go ahead and start your training with Eclair.”
“Understood. The
castle wizards offered to teach us what they can about magic once dinner is
over. If anything comes up, let us know.”
It really was
starting to feel like we were rushing to get everything in before the wave
came.
There was training,
sparring, and studying to do. We need to level, and to raise money too, but
there just wasn’t enough time.
I wonder if that
was why Melty’s level had been so low?
Thinking back on it
now, Melty was very powerful, considering how low her level had been.
I decided to save
those thoughts for my walk. I had to use the limited time I had to stop by the
weapon shop and the apothecary.
Unfortunately, the
old guy at the weapon shop hadn’t finished any of the projects he was working
on for us.
Granted, it had
only been a day, so it wasn’t surprising. I moved on to the apothecary.
“What is it?”
Just like last
time, the grumpy-looking-but-actually-kind man at the counter greeted me
gruffly.
“I was hoping you
could show me how to make an effective nutritional drink to combat exhaustion.”
“Oh yeah?” he said,
sounding uninterested before calmly telling me about the most effective
medicinal herbs. Then I had an idea.
If anyone knew
about items and the way they affected people, it was this guy. So maybe he knew
something about herbs that affected the “energy” that the old lady kept talking
about.
“Do you know
anything about a weird medicine that acts kind of like soul-healing water or
magic water?”
“What exactly are
you looking for?”
“I’m trying to
experiment with this. . . thing that doesn’t show up in your status menu. I’ve
got reason to believe that it is somewhat excited by soul-healing or magic
water. Any idea what I mean?”
That’s it. It
wasn’t exactly a shortcut, but maybe there was a tool out there that would help
me figure it out. Like that fragment the accessory dealer had shown me that got
me in touch with my magic power.
Come to think of
it, I’d gotten completely accustomed to magic use in a relatively short amount
of time. That wasn’t something I’d been able to do when I first arrived in this
world.
“Hm... Well, it was
a long time ago, but I think that my teacher’s teacher had a recipe that sounds
like it might fit the bill. Wait a minute.”
The man vanished
into the back storeroom for a few minutes and returned carrying an old book.
The pages were
tattered and worn. It seemed like there were holes here and there in the
fragile pages.
“Here it is.”
“Life-force water?”
It wasn’t a
life-restoring medicine; it was a medicine that gave the user more vital
energy.
It wasn’t very good
at helping its user heal their wounds directly. It was used to help the body
heal itself better. Apparently, it was difficult to
combine with other medicines and so never gained much distribution in the
marketplace.
Maybe it was like
soul-healing water. If anyone who wasn’t a hero drank it, it was just a
medicine that would help them concentrate.
“To make it, you
need soul-healing water and magic water. They need to be filtered and then run
through a centrifuge. Then you must collect the resultant liquid.”
That was not the
sort of process that I had been expecting to hear. To centrifuge the liquid,
you needed to have a magic stone, the sort of thing that we had needed to have
Filo’s clothes made.
“The medicine can
be made from the by-products resulting from the production of very strong
soul-healing water and magic water. Both of those medicines are quite rare in
and of themselves, so you can imagine how few people use this life-force
water.”
I nodded at his
explanation.
So it was like
collecting the sakekasu from sake production. You
could only get that by squeezing the sake liquid from the mash.
It wasn’t something
that put you at a loss to produce. It was just very rare because the original
materials were rare.
Come to think of it
though, I didn’t know what sort of materials you needed to try and make a vial
of strong soul-healing or magic water.
When I say “strong”
medicine, I don’t necessarily mean super concentrated; I mean super effective.
If you made medicine too concentrated there was a chance that it could act as a
poison on the user. That was probably why this recipe never found any wide use.
And if it only
helped wounds to heal, there would be little incentive to make it in a world
where healing magic was commonplace. The simplest potions available were very
effective at healing wounds anyway.
Maybe you’d need a
stronger potion if your arm had been blown off, but the book also clearly
stated that the medicine was unlikely to cure such a grievous injury.
Basically it was a
medicine that was very difficult to make with dubious efficacy.
But it might have
been just what I was looking for.
“If you already
have soul-healing and magic water, can you make it? I think the magic shop down
the street has a magic stone that could to the centrifuging for us. She’ll let
you borrow it.”
“Huh? Yeah, I could
probably make it in an afternoon. But you don’t really want it, do you?”
“I do, and I have
the materials.”
My shield had given
me advanced compounding abilities that had enabled me to make the soul-healing
and magic water. I passed them to the man behind the counter.
“Your payment will
be the leftover soul-healing and magic water. Will you do it for me?”
The process itself
shouldn’t have been very difficult. All he had to do was filter the liquids and
give them a spin.
I would use the
extra materials I had to give it a shot myself back at the castle. But I
couldn’t make very much of it, which would make experimenting difficult.
“Sure, but that
payment won’t cover it all.”
The guy knew how to
run a business.
I found out later
that he was actually an old friend of the accessory dealer I'd met on my
travels, the one that taught me how to make accessories.
The dealer
recognized the taste of one of my medicines and immediately realized where I
had learned to craft it.
“So that’s how I
made this life-force water stuff.”
It was evening of
the following day. We spent the day training, though I, once again, didn’t feel
as though I had got much out of it. So when we returned to the castle I stopped
by the apothecary to pick up the medicine, then I took it out to where
Raphtalia and the others were training in the courtyard.
Just like the
previous day, Raphtalia and the others trained with the heroes during the day,
only to continue training Rishia and studying magic in the evening.
There were a couple
of breaks throughout the day, but all in all it was a very tough schedule.
Still, the evening
training was pretty simple. Rishia mostly just sparred with me or the old lady.
Filo and Keel were
out leveling on their own.
Keel had already
reached level 25, so I was feeling pretty good about that.
But he was having
severe growing pains and could barely move by the end of the day. He collapsed
on Filo’s back while she transported him back to the castle and then fell
asleep in his room.
“I’ve never heard
of this kind of medicine!”
The old lad looked
fascinated by the bottle I’d given her.
“Yeah, well, I
still haven’t really figured out exactly what this ‘energy’ you talk about is.
But I think there’s a chance that this medicine might replenish whatever it is.
Maybe.
“Hrm... Well, there
are no shortcuts through training, but I can’t really deny giving it a try.
Rishia has great potential, but she can’t go with us to the mountains to
practice energy manipulation. Why don’t we try it?”
“Fehhh...”
Rishia let out a
weak little whine. She must have been afraid to act as our guinea pig.
“It’s fine. I
already tested it to see if it was poisonous. It’s not.”
Granted, I did have
a poison-resistance ability, but I hadn’t felt anything odd when I sampled the
medicine.
I let the shield
absorb a portion of it, along with the soul-healing and magic waters, and while
they did unlock an ability related to compounding, it didn’t look like it was
going to be particularly useful.
I’ll go ahead and
tell you what shield they unlocked
The magic water
unlocked the Ether Shield. The soul-healing water unlocked the Spirit Shield.
And the life-force water unlocked the Aura Shield.
Aside from the Aura
Shield, they both came with equip effects that restore magic or SP (strong).
Those effects apparently naturally refilled those energy sources when they ran
low.
But something about
that got me thinking.
I guess that could
be said about all the shields that I had unlocked up until that point, but when
I decided to believe in what the other heroes had said about the way to
power-up the shields, new options made themselves available, and those options
made the extent of possible power-ups clear.
I had to wonder if
believing in the energy that the old lady talked about would create a new
power-up option, or some other kind of change, in the Aura Shield.
“I didn’t know
there were items like that.”
Eclair looked at
the bottle of medicine I’d brought and nodded to herself.
“I just found out
about it myself. How’s the training going?”
“Well, Raphtalia
gets the hang of things very quickly. Her progress is astounding. I think she
will wield a power in the coming battles unlike anything you have seen so far.
I cannot wait to see it.”
“That’s great, but
back to the medicine. Rishia is supposed to have an innate talent for this kind
of thing, so I was hoping I could get her to try it out.”
I could have drunk
it myself, but I wasn’t confident that I would be able to notice the subtle
changes it might cause.
The old lady was
pretty confident in Rishia’s ability to master energy manipulation. So if I was
looking for some sort of effect I’d probably have better luck if I let Rishia
try it out first.
“I see. Very well
then, disciple Rishia! Please take a portion of the holy saint’s medicine, then
spar with him.”
“Okay...”
She was nearly
twitching she was so nervous.
She took the
medicine from me with a shaky hand, then raised the shaking bottle to her lips
before closing her eyes, chasing away her fear and drinking the medicine.
“Oh, um . . . It’s
not bitter at all! It’s actually kind of sweet.”
“Well, it is made
from soul-healing and magic water, after all.”
Magic water tasted
like soda, soul-healing water had a chemical taste to it, and life-force water
tasted like a sports drink. They all had a pretty artificial taste though. I’d
heard you could mix them with fruit juice and it wouldn’t affect the efficacy
of the medicine.
“Well? Disciple
Rishia, do you feel any different?”
The old lady was
very excited.
“Yeah, do you feel
anything?”
“I’d expect no less
of a holy saint. That medicine really does seem to have filled her with
energy.”
“What? Huh?”
Rishia kept looking
at me, then the old lady. She wasn’t relaxed at all.
“So? Do you feel
different?”
“Um . . . well...”
I guess she
couldn’t really tell. I shouldn’t have gotten my hopes up. We were fine without
it anyway.
I started to give
up, when...
“I feel, um . . .
warm? And my mind feels clear!”
Rishia explained as
if it were the most normal thing in the world.
Really? I hadn’t
felt anything like that when I tasted it.
“But now I feel
like I’m slowly cooling down.”
“Disciple! Focus on
keeping that warmth within your body!”
“Fehhh!”
Rishia was startled
by the old lady’s sudden outburst. She hesitantly placed her hands over her
stomach.
Was THAT how she
was going to keep the energy in?
“Holy saint, it
seems she is having trouble keeping the energy still. If she is going to learn
how the energy feels, she must spar with it now.”
“Got it.”
I readied my shield
for our sparring match.
Rishia’s stats were
really low though. So before we started fighting, I cast Zweite Aura on her.
That should have
raised her stats enough to help her move and focus. It was a special spell that
only heroes could use, and it raised all of the target’s stats.
“Zweite Aura!”
The spell reached
Rishia, and once it took effect, she looked even more confused.
“I feel even warmer
now! Here I go!”
“What the?! Holy
saint!”
The old lady called
out just as Rishia started running at me.
“What? The match
has already started!”
“It seems that the
spell you have just cast has stimulated her energy!”
What?! Then I
realized something. Another word for “energy” is “aura!”
Right—that’s why
the life-force water had unlocked the Aura Shield!
I hadn’t thought
anything of it at the time, bur Rishia’s reaction confirmed the connection.
“What?”
Rishia was dashing
straight at me, and I could tell she was moving much faster than she had
before.
The stat boost that
she’d gotten from Zweite Aura couldn’t possibly have been high enough to
explain the difference.
Rishia herself
looked surprised. She looked like she couldn’t control it, like she couldn’t
stop herself from barreling ahead.
“Fehhh! My body
won’t stop!”
I wished she would
stop crying about it.
She came at me with
a stick, but I got a hold of her wrist before she could hit me with it and
slipped behind her.
Careful not to hurt
her in the hold, I forced her down.
But I was in for a
shock. She was stronger than she had been before!
Her elbow crashed
into my ribs.
And it really hurt!
What did it mean? My defense was so much higher than her attack ability that
she shouldn’t have been able to hurt me at all!
But my side was
throbbing where she’d hit me.
“Stop fighting
back!”
“Fehhh... I . . . I
can’t!”
Was she being
overpowered somehow? It looked like whatever she was feeling was too intense to
manage.
For another five
minutes, Rishia seemed to be at the mercy of her rampaging body.
Finally, whatever
it was wore off, and she sat down on the ground and stared at her hands.
“I . . . I can’t
believe I have so much power.”
“So? Do you think
you learned to feel it?”
“Fehh...”
I guess not yet. Oh
well. If it were that easy, then everyone would know how to use it.
“I have to say,
when Ms. Rishia ran to attack the Shield Hero, her speed was really something
to behold.”
“You’re right. It
really was.”
Eclair and
Raphtalia both agreed.
I agreed too. If a
bottle of life-force water and a stat-boosting spell could have such a dramatic
effect, then we must have been dealing with something powerful.
“There’s more. She
got in some effective attacks against me without even trying. When she hit me
with her elbow, it really hurt.”
“Fehh! I’m so
sorry!”
“I’m not mad, so
don’t worry about it. I hope you learn how to control that energy, whatever it
is.”
There was a limit
to how much life-force water we could make, and it wouldn’t do us any good to
use it awakening a power that we couldn’t even control. I checked her stats and
there didn’t seem to be any change.
Was it just some
sort of technical power-up?
“Ok, Raphtalia. You
try it next.”
“Alright.”
If the training
progressed faster by combining it with the medicine, then that was enough
reason to use it.
I went ahead and
cast support magic on Raphtalia, just as I had done with Rishia. Then we began
to spar.
But unlike Rishia,
Raphtalia didn’t seem to be as dramatically affected by the water as I had
hoped.
Maybe she had come
a little faster? Just a tiny bit? It was very hard to tell regardless, which
meant that it probably wasn’t worth it.
“If we can use that
medicine in her training, then perhaps disciple Rishia will be able to grasp
the fundamentals of energy manipulations faster than I had expected.”
“Yes! I will do my
best to meet your expectations!”
She certainly was
calculating. Oh well. If she ended up stronger than she was, that was all I
cared about.
I had to admit
though, by taking the medicine and then training, it kind of looked like
steroid abuse to me. If the life-force water turned out to be addictive, I’d
have to cut her off.
“Naofumi! I’m . . .
I’m going to try my best!”
Rishia was
optimistic about devoting herself to her training. Seeing her like that made me
feel like I needed to do my best as well.
The next day I
brought the medicine to the other heroes and had them drink it.
It hadn’t had much
of an effect on Raphtalia or I, so I wasn’t sure if it would do anything to the
other heroes.
I had them all try
drinking it, but as expected, it didn’t seem to do very much.
Apparently none of
them were having much luck sticking their fingers into rocks either.
The next day, the
other heroes began to sabotage the training.
On the fourth day
of training, Ren didn’t show up.
I went looking for
him, and when I found him he made his irritation clear, saying that if we had
enough time to waste on impossible things, we should spend it looking for
stronger weapons. It sounded like an excuse to me.
That same day, at
around noontime, Motoyasu and Bitch used a portal to escape from the training
session.
It wasn’t long
before I notice that Itsuki had snuck off too.
The queen had
already sent orders out to the borders, so they couldn’t leave the country. And
the guilds had been notified to send them back to the castle. So all they did
was go back to their rooms.
In all that had
happened, a week had passed, leaving us with only one more week until the wave
came.
Then one day I saw
the other heroes running through a gate that led to the outer fringes of the
castle town. I yelled for them to stop and got them to agree to, at the very
least, assist the rest of us.
They agreed to go
back to the castle training grounds to help Eclair, the old lady, Raphtalia,
Filo, Keel, and Rishia in their practice.
But right from the
start it was clear that there was a problem. I didn’t want them to ruin the
training for everyone else, so I had to ask them to leave the field.
“Why are you
bothering us?!”
“That’s what I’d
like to ask you. Why don’t you take this seriously?
“Because there’s no
point to any of it!”
“If you’re going to
accept our help, don’t you think you need to do what’s asked of you? All we can
do right now is practice and train!”
Did they think that
fighting monsters and leveling up was all they had to do?
Did Itsuki just
want to go on quests and pretend to be a secret champion of justice?
“Look, if you want
weapons just ask the castle blacksmith to make them for you. As for your
levels, they’re high enough.”
They only wanted
new weapons because they wanted to entertain the notion that their weakness was
because of those weapons. I felt like I was going to lose my mind if they kept
talking about levels.
No matter how much
I set things up for them and taught them how to power-up, they didn’t listen.
Any time they ran into something they didn’t like they complained about it.
They never thought of how we could work together.
At one point they
gave up on trying to break the boulders like the old lady had said. Instead
they went out into the woods and hunted dragons. They called it training, but all
they were really doing was playing with skills they already knew how to
use—things that they thought made them look cool.
When I tried to
stop them, they looked really pissed too.
To tell the truth
though, my role in all this hadn’t changed since the beginning. I was a
shielder, and that wasn’t going to change.
But that was fine.
The problem was that they didn’t plan their attacks with me, so we didn’t
cooperate as a team. They were only capable of thinking of their own parties.
I thought that
maybe they would try and justify it as a means to accrue a stockpile of good
materials, but we already had stockpiles of the materials they were getting.
“The blacksmiths in
this country aren’t very good,” Ren said, clearly relying on whatever he had
learned in the game he had played.
By extension, it
meant that he was speaking ill of the old guy at the weapon shop, which kind of
irked me.
It didn’t really
matter what he said now, but I felt like I wanted him to admit it.
“You know that,
because of the game that you played? Have you ever actually used one of the
Melromarc blacksmiths?”
“...”
I’d been right, but
it didn’t make me feel any better.
Lately he had taken
this stance every time we spoke. He didn’t even listen to what I was saying.
It was like our relationship
got a little bit worse every time we met.
Motoyasu and Itsuki
nodded along with my line of questioning, but Ren wasn’t ready to admit to his
delusions.
“I don’t have the
materials that are needed to make the weapons I want yet!”
And in the end, all
three of them used the same excuse. They didn’t want to let the blacksmiths
from Melromarc make their weapons.
I had already given
all my projects to the old guy at the weapon shop, so I wasn’t using the castle
blacksmiths either. But by all accounts they were supposed to be very skilled
craftsmen.
“What are you so
dissatisfied with?”
“Dissatisfied?
Fine, I’ll tell you! I can’t stand the idea of training with a cheater!”
Motoyasu jabbed his
finger at me and shouted.
“You like watching
us try and do impossible things? You like seeing us look stupid? You coward!”
Ren and Motoyasu
nodded their agreement with Itsuki’s complaint. They were all glaring at me
now.
“I think you hold a
grudge against us for not believing you when you were framed, so now you’re
trying to punish us. You just want to watch us suffer!”
They were really
starting to get on my nerves.
Ren’s party members
were looking around like they could hardly believe what they were hearing, but
Motoyasu, Bitch, and the others, including Itsuki and his pompous crew, were
staring at me like I was criminal. They pointed at me accusingly.
They’d all used
their game knowledge and techniques to level up and gain their power, but when
another person out-performed them they called him a cheater? Is that how it
worked?
As far as they were
concerned, they were special, but any other special person was a cheater. What
a bunch of children!
And besides, even
if I were cheating, what did it matter? As long as we
defeated our enemies, what was the problem?
And hey—the enemies
were at least as powerful as I was. Did that mean that they were cheating, too?
“I cannot stand
behind a country that would support a cheating coward! I’m tired of this place!
We’re going to do whatever we want from now on!”
Ren yelled, scowling,
and turned to leave. Motoyasu agreed with him.
“Naofumi, you’ve
been serving yourself selfishly ever since we defeated the high priest. I can’t
continue to support that.”
Self-serving? The
hypocrisy was nearly unbearable!
What was it they
couldn’t support? They just didn’t want to put forth the effort necessary to
get stronger.
“To tell the truth,
I also cannot stand behind Naofumi or this country’s plan any longer.”
“Exactly! Well
said, Master Itsuki! Let us depart for a new land, where we can further the
cause of justice without obstruction!”
Armor shouted his
agreement with an obnoxious smile before following Itsuki away.
“I agree. Everyone,
the day will come when you will need me. Until then, let us go our separate
ways.”
What was that all
about? Did he think it made him sound cool? He just sounded like a sore loser
to me.
Besides, they’d
already admitted that I was more powerful than they were, so why did they think
I was going to depend on them?
I couldn’t picture
that ever happening.
But I couldn’t hold
myself back any longer. I had to say something.
“Ren, you’re so
smug I can’t stand it. You haven’t thought about how to cooperate with anyone,
not even your own party. If you keep acting like this, you’re going to end up
dead.”
That much had been
made perfectly clear in the time since he’d introduced his party to us. I’d
watched the way he behaved in battles since then.
Judging from what I
knew about games, Ren was the sort of player that would let weaker members of
his party die.
“Motoyasu, are you
just here to get a harem going? When you find yourself up against a powerful
enemy, your harem won’t do you any good.”
Whenever he had a
spare minute, he used it to chase after girls.
He was a hero, so
there was a certain amount of strength he could rely on to keep people close.
But when the time came to face an enemy stronger than he was, did he think the
girls were going to stick with him?
“And you, Itsuki.
What do you think justice is? Is it refusing to make an effort so that you can
keep patting yourself on the back? Justice without power is worthless, but
power without justice is simply violence. Be more objective about what you’ve
decided justice is. You’re no better than Motoyasu.”
When he came face
to face with an enemy he couldn’t overpower, his place at the top of the party
hierarchy wasn’t going to last.
I could only
imagine what his crazy party members would do then.
None of them bother
to listen to what I had to say. They all took their parties with them and
turned to leave the castle grounds.
“Now I see.”
The queen came
over. She covered her mouth with her folding fan and nodded.
“Mr. Kitamura, I’m
sure you are aware of this, but my daughter, Bitch, has a large outstanding
debt to the kingdom. Therefore, I cannot allow you to simply leave.”
“Kyaaaaaaa!”
Bitch tried to run
but tripped and fell. Motoyasu ran to her side.
“How dare you!”
Motoyasu leveled
his spear at the queen.
Damn. Had we really
reached the point of no return?
“To those of you
traveling with Mr. Kawasumi, your families will be saddened by the news of your
deaths. Are you prepared for that?”
“Coward.”
Itsuki and his
party grit their teeth and glared at the queen.
Then Itsuki readied
his bow and turned to face me.
“Do you think we
will give in to your threats?”
The queen ignored
them both and turned to address Ren.
“I have informed
the Melromarc border guards that they are not to let the heroes pass. I have
also informed the guilds that they are not to issue any jobs or quests to the
heroes. Knowing that, do you still plan on leaving?”
She was telling
them that they would have nowhere to go.
If they left now,
only death was waiting for them. It was probably safe to assume that any other
country that had a connection with Melromarc wouldn’t admit them either.
If they wanted to
be free to go and do what they wanted, they would have to find a place far, far
removed from Melromarc, both geographically and diplomatically.
Ren wrapped his
fingers around the hilt of his sword. He looked ready to explode.
The queen sighed deeply,
relaxed, and then raised her face to speak.
“Very well. If you
will agree to do two simple things for me, then I will revoke the orders I have
issued and you will be free to travel as you wish.”
It was a
compromise, a concession, and an effort to calm their nerves—a delay.
It was so many
things at once that I didn’t know what to call it.
She was right that
they were all too close to their limit, too dissatisfied to listen to what
anyone had to say.
So how do you
persuade people like that? All you can do is leave them alone and let them cool
off.
The other three
heroes all thought that they’d lost the last battle because their weapons
weren’t good enough and their levels weren’t high enough.
So the best way to
get what you wanted from them was to give them the breathing room they wanted.
Give them a measure of freedom and then offer your assistance when they hit a
wall. She wanted to give them freedom so that she’d eventually be able to rein
them in. What else could she do?
I was at the end of
my rope, too.
Day after day I
taught them how to get stronger and provided them with the means to do it, and
day after day they refused to listen. I couldn’t stand it anymore.
They would have to
learn the hard way. They’d have to get themselves in deep trouble before they
would understand.
I’d rather avoid
that. If they ended up dying or unable to fight, then all of this would be for
nothing.
“What?”
Motoyasu barked. He
helped Bitch to her feet.
“For the last few
days reports of a mysterious monsters have come in from many different
countries.”
“Mysterious
monsters?”
“Yes. I do not have
dependable reports on the details, so I cannot tell you much more than that.
They are monsters that no one has seen before.”
And they were
showing up all over the world?
What did it mean?
And was that a problem that really required the intervention of the heroes?
How could they show
up in so many different places?
“My two requests
are as follows: one, the eradication of these monsters, and two, participation
in the wave next week. If you agree to follow through on both of these
conditions, then I will guarantee your freedom.”
“What about
Bitch?!”
“Mr. Kitamura, that
is another matter. She has a heavy debt to repay. Still, I will permit her to
travel with you.”
“That’s ridiculous!”
Motoyasu was very
upset. But didn’t he realize that the country couldn’t just let a criminal go
free without any repercussions?
“Bitch, please
understand. You have committed serious crimes and also have incurred a massive
amount of debt to the kingdom. Those issues cannot simply be wished away.”
“Mama, why do you
want me to suffer?!”
“You have no doubt
heard that a lion will push its child into a bottomless ravine. If you wish to
follow in my footsteps, you must find your own way out.”
Bitch stopped her fake
crying and glared at her mother.
She really hadn’t
repented of her actions at all. How could anyone sympathize with her? Only the
most miserable group of heroes could.
“Heroes! Do we
really want this mother of mine on the—”
“If you finish that
sentence, I will revoke my offer. Is that what you really want?”
If I didn’t step in
here, things might get even worse.
“Even if you killed
the queen, would that solve any of our problems? Would it help us survive the
next wave?”
I stepped between
them and glared at the heroes.
Then I raised my
right hand and spoke softly, but with evident provocation.
“Aren’t you trying
to leave the country because you say you don’t have time to waste on this
training? And now you want to waste time on something awful like killing the
queen?”
I already knew from
our time in the islands that they couldn’t defeat me in battle.
Granted, I wouldn’t
be able to damage them either, but I could certainly stand there, deflect their
attacks, and hold them off. If they were focused on trying to get through my
defenses, the castle soldiers could pick them off one by one.
But that’s not what
I wanted to happen, obviously.
All I was doing was
putting the negotiation skills I’d learned through peddling to the test.
The most important
things were to give the customer what they wanted and not take advantage of
them.
The queen was going
to give them what they wanted—freedom—in exchange for having certain conditions
met.
But they weren’t
listening and they were about to threaten her. To keep that from happening, I
had to step in with a threat.
They were so upset
and on edge that if I didn’t put the brakes on, they were going to explode and
do something foolish.
To think it had
only taken a week of training for them to get this upset. Just how impatient
were these guys?
Bitch hadn’t come
around though. She was staring at me with hatred burning in her eyes.
I kept wondering if
there wasn’t a better way, if I’d made a mistake by stepping in. But there was
no point in worrying about it. They wouldn't listen to anything I said anyway.
“Fine. We just need
to agree to those two conditions, right?”
“Ha! Oh well. But
this is the last time we help you!”
“Yes, exactly. When
those jobs are finished, we’ll be on our way.”
Understanding that
there was no clean way out of the fight they’d picked, the heroes put their
weapons away.
The queen must have
been nervous. She relaxed, and the tension drained from her shoulders.
“Very well then, I
will distribute instructions for you all. Please go to the indicated countries.
If you run into any trouble, don’t hesitate to contact me.”
A shadow appeared
at the queen’s side and handed a scroll to each of the heroes.
“Also, please make
sure to return to the castle at the end of each day.”
“Want to make sure
we don’t run away?”
“Whatever.”
“Oh well.”
The three of them
all nodded nonchalantly and left.
“So? Do I need to
do the same thing?”
“Yes. I would very
much appreciate your cooperation, Mr. Iwatani.”
“Okay.”
The shadow passed
me a scroll. I opened it and began to read.
It mentioned a
village in the southwest. Was that where the bioplants had gotten out of
control? The scroll indicated that the mysterious monsters had appeared there.
There was no
indication of a reward. I guess if the whole country was trying to solve the
problem then they couldn’t guarantee one.
“What about our
training?”
“Put it on hold for
the time being. This matter must be addressed.”
“Fine.”
Honestly, Rishia
had been improving a bit, but Raphtalia and I weren’t progressing very quickly.
We’d only gained a
rather vague understanding of our energy. At the very least, I had learned to
feel a certain something down within the depths of my being.
When I was very
tired I tried drinking the life-force water and was able to sense a little of
the warmth that Rishia had talked about.
I’d learned to
respond to the old lady’s defense rating attacks somewhat. Though the real
fruits of the training still seemed far away and out of reach.
“What about Eclair
and the old lady?”
“I would like them
to accompany you.”
“Right. Then I’m
going to start preparing to leave.”
I swear. Ever since
we’d gotten back from Cal Mira it had just been trial after trial, and we’d
ended up with little to show for it.
I hoped we could
finish this new mission without much trouble, but who knew what was waiting for
us?
Then the next wave
would come and we might have to face Glass again.
I wasn’t sure if
we’d be able to count on the other heroes when that battle came, but whatever
did end up happening, we had to put an end to all this.
Anyway, before we
left I decided to review what we’d gotten out of the training.
Surprisingly, after
the class up ceremony we discovered that Raphtalia was able to use magic aside
from her illusion magic. In the last week she’d been learning new spells at an
unbelievable rate. She was like a sponge soaking up water.
But of course she
wasn’t able to learn any of the more advanced magic, considering she’d only had
two or three days to work on it.
She’d said that,
with the help of the royal wizards, she thought it wouldn’t be too long before
she was able to master the Trifa class of spells.
So there was that
to look forward to.
Filo had been
taking Keel leveling during the day and then playing with Melty in the
evenings. Melty said that she helped Filo to study.
She’d said that
Filo was surprisingly good at studying and that she might have a future as a
scholar—totally ridiculous if you ask me.
She participated in
the energy training from time to time. The old lady said that Filo could
naturally manipulate energy.
She said that it
was common for monsters to be able to do so.
I asked her how she
did it. She said that she “just kinda squeezed herself until it was all ready.”
Not even Melty could figure out what she was talking about.
Thanks to the
life-force water, Rishia had apparently learned to identify the energy inside
of her. Or so she said.
She had made the
most dramatic progress out of any of us that week.
Her slow,
deliberate movements had become smoother and more immediate.
However, perhaps
because of that hesitant, unsure personality of hers, she said she didn’t feel
like she really understood how to control it.
Keel had been
leveling quickly, and as you might expect, he had grown quite a bit in that
time. Having said that, it would be a while until he grew to Raphtalia’s level.
He was at level 34.
But he didn’t know how to handle himself in battle, so I had him training with
Eclair.
“Almost ready to
leave?”
“Wait!”
We’d finished
preparing the carriage for departure. I was waiting for Raphtalia and Filo to
arrive.
We were looking for
mysterious monsters. I had no idea what that could mean, or what to expect.
“Excuse me, sir.”
“Huh?”
Someone called to
me. I turned to see who it was.
Someone was
standing there in deep, heavy robes. They looked to be a little shorter than I.
“You . . . you
possess the shield of the holy weapons, do you not?”
The person pulled
back their hood and I saw her face. I had grown accustomed to pretty girls like
Raphtalia and Rishia, but this woman was one of the most beautiful people I’d
ever seen. It was the sort of face you couldn’t look away from.
It was almost
bewitching, in the way Bitch and the queen could be.
I wondered how old
she was. Maybe she was in her mid-20s, maybe a little younger.
The queen looked
much younger than she really was, so it was hard for me to judge the true age
of people.
Even Rishia looked
like she was in middle school, though apparently she was actually 17.
Her hair was brown,
although it was a lighter shade of brown than Raphtalia’s.
She wore it up in a
Chinese-style chignon.
Her breasts were
very large—large enough that you could see the shape of her body through the
heavy robes she wore.
I could see her
hands. It was clear that her skin was tight and smooth. I assumed that she had
long legs.
She had long, sharp
eyes that lent a very eastern look to her. I’ll just go ahead and say it: she
had a fox-like air about her.
That kind of woman
wasn’t really my type. I sort of assumed they were out to use you, like Bitch.
“I don’t know how
holy it is, but I am the Shield Hero. What do you want?”
I had to think of
something to say. I’d been standing there silently.
If she started
sauntering over to me suggestively, I’d have to cut this short and get some
distance.
But she didn’t do
that. She acted as though she didn’t understand how beautiful she was when she,
without being seductive at all, humbly clasped my hand and bowed to me. She
seemed to be in trouble.
“Please, I beg you.
You must destroy me.”
“What?”
She hadn’t explained
herself, and I had no idea what she was talking about.
And besides, I was
the Shield Hero. If I couldn’t attack, how did she expect me to destroy her?
All my forms of attack put me at risk.
“As I am now, I
cannot complete my task. So . . . So I beg one who possesses a holy weapon to
help me!”
As she was talking,
the jewel in the center of my shield suddenly flashed.
What? What was
going on?
“What do you ...”
What was she
getting at? I couldn’t understand what she was trying to say.
But if the shield was
responding to her, then I had to assume that there was something to what she
was saying.
“I . . . I’m up
there. Please stop me.”
She pointed to the
sky.
“If I don’t know
what you are talking about, how am I supposed to help you?”
“Mr. Naofumi!”
“Sorry we took so
long!”
I turned to see
Raphtalia and the others coming my way. I waved to them.
“You’re so slow!”
“Please. If you
don’t, there will be much unnecessary death. I...”
“You have to tell
me what’s going on or I can’t help you—” I said, turning. But then I caught my
breath.
The woman had
vanished.
Had she run away
because Raphtalia and the others had shown up?
That couldn’t be,
there hadn’t been enough time. It was like she had teleported or something.
“Did you guys see
that woman just now?”
“Huh?”
“Filo, you saw her,
right?”
“Um... ?”
“Rishia?”
“No?”
They all looked at
each other, confused.
Filo tottered over
and sniffed the ground all around me.
“Um...”
What had just
happened?
Whatever. I don’t
know what kind of magic she had used, but we didn’t have enough time to
entertain everyone that stopped by.
She was probably a
monster, or a ghost, or something creepy like that.
There were undead
type monsters in this world. Maybe she had just been one of those out in
midday, trying to scare me.
I filed the
mysterious woman that asked me to destroy her away in the back of my mind for
the time being. There were more important things that needed my attention.
“Alright then,
let’s get going.”
And so we were on
the road again to search for the mysterious monsters.
Before we set to
work on what we’d been tasked with, I decided to stop by the weapon shop to see
what sort of progress the old guy was making.
I asked Eclair and
the old lady to wait for me in the carriage. The old lady’s son kept watch
outside.
“Oh hey, kid.”
“How are things
looking?”
“Good, good. You
know your bird friend came over to play the other day with a friend of hers.”
That must have been
Melty.
She was the
princess! And she was first in line for the throne, considering how unfit to
rule Bitch was.
Besides, if he’d
ever seen the wanted posters they’d put up about us, he should have recognized
the girl.
I was surprised
that, after all she’d been through, Melty would sneak out playing with Filo.
She must have been feeling a lot better.
“That’s great. I
don’t care about it though.”
“I know, I know.
But it has to do with why you came. Look.”
He vanished into
the back room before reappearing with weapons.
The first was
Raphtalia’s sword.
It looked a lot
like the Karma Rabbit Sword. Except, while that sword had been all black, the
blade of this one was white.
“That thing had
some fierce power in it, didn’t it? I used the black rabbit materials you
brought me to level this thing up, but it ended up turning white.”
“Huh...”
“And I went ahead
and applied a blood clean ‘rinse’ to it as well. It’s not quite as good as the
‘coating,’ but it will definitely help keep the blade in good condition.”
A blood clean
rinse? I guess that was a weaker version of the coating.
“It feels better
than it used to, Mr. Naofumi.”
“It’s sharper too.
And there are better equip effects. I have to say, I think this job went pretty
well.”
“I’m very
impressed, sir.”
“I did most of the
same stuff to the little bird-lass’s claws, and those came out well too. Are
these from a black dog?”
“Yeeeeah!”
Filo’s claws had
turned white, just like Raphtalia’s sword.
I wonder what it
meant? Had the curse been broken? I slowly regarded the two new weapons.
Usauni Sword: quality:
high: imbued effects: agility up, magic up, swordsmanship up, blood clean rinse
Inult Claw: quality:
high: imbued effects: agility up, magic up, claw skill up, blood clean rinse
The negative
effects had been removed, leaving the weapons with only good effects. That
looked pretty impressive to me.
In games, I
remember always having a pretty hard time removing negative equip effects from
equipment.
If this world was
anything like the games I’d played, then these weapons must have been a lot of
work.
I’d run into the
issue when working on accessories in the past. Whenever I finished a piece and
found that it had a negative equip effect, I was always upset that they seemed
impossible to remove.
“Nice job.”
“No sweat.”
If they were easier
to use than they had been, then that was something to look forward to. And come
to think of it, they had official names too, which was different from what we
got when the old guy had worked on improving my barbarian armor.
Usauni. Inult.
Those were the names of the legendary monsters of Cal Mira.
The Pekkul Kigurumi
was in that category too, but I have to say that the boss monsters of the
islands certainly dropped strange pieces of equipment.
“Is that your
sword?”
Keel was looking at
the sword in her hands when he asked.
“Yes.”
“Hey, who’s that? I’ve
never seen you around these parts. You one of the kid’s new pals?”
“Yeah. I’m Keel! I
grew up with Raphtalia. Nice to meet ya!”
“Sure is!”
Keel and the old
guy greeted one another warmly.
“So what are you
going to do about the new guy’s weapon?”
“I don’t know yet.
What do you think? He’s started to work on swordplay a little.”
“This kid? Hm... I
would think claws, or maybe jamadhars?”
“Should we go with
that?”
“I can’t say for
sure.”
“Well, why don’t we
come back to it later then. For now he can just stick with a sword.”
“Sure.”
“Listen kid, of
course I’ll sell you whatever you want. But I have to say that the sword he’s
already using is pretty damn good.”
That’s right, we’d
grabbed a sword for him out of the castle storeroom.
It wasn’t anything
very expensive, but it was probably perfect for him at his current level.
“That’s what I like
about you, old man: your honesty.”
“I just thought it
would be a shame to waste a good weapon on someone that can’t use it.”
It was that kind of
behavior—that honesty of his—that kept customers coming back to his shop.
I might be biased
because of how much we had worked together, but he certainly seemed more
talented than the castle blacksmiths. I wouldn’t hesitate to say so.
“The only thing I’m
having trouble with is that kigurumi you left with me.”
He sighed, sounding
disappointed. Then he rummaged in the back room before reappearing with what
used to be the Pekkul Kigurumi.
“Hey now, why would
you keep it as a kigurumi if you were going to improve it?”
He was carrying
something that looked like a kigurumi, but it was all white.
“I was hoping to do
something about it, too. But then when the bird girl and her friend came by the
other night, I figured it all out. It was a lot of work, you know.”
“I’ve got a bad
feeling about this. Don’t you dare unfold that thing.”
“What is it?”
“Rishia!”
Rishia hadn’t heard
me. She unfolded the kigurumi to reveal . . .
“Hey, old man. What
the hell were you thinking?”
“I know, I know.
But I couldn’t help it!”
The old guy hid his
face behind his hands.
That’s right, the
old Pekkul Kigurumi was now a filolial kigurumi.
And no matter how
you looked at it, it was obvious that it was based on Filo. It was shaped like
Filo when she was in her filolial queen form.
So I decided to
call it the Filo Kigurumi.
Filo Kigurumi: defense
up, agility up (large), collision resistance (small), wind resistance (large),
shadow resistance (small), HP recovery (weak), magic up (medium): automatic
restoration ability, traction ability up, carrying capacity up, size
adjustment, type change/type change unavailable when monster equipped
The old guy and I
both turned our eyes away from the kigurumi.
“Wow! Is it Filo?”
“It’s a perfect
copy.”
“It looks just like
you, Filo!”
“What a lovely
kigurumi.”
“Hey! I didn’t tell
you to put that on!”
Rishia had already
started to change into it.
“What do you think?
Kweh Kweh!”
Now there was a
filolial queen version of Filo standing next to Filo in human form. Granted,
the kigurumi was smaller than her actual filolial queen form.
It was a depressing
sight.
I hesitated and
then decided to look at Rishia’s stats.
They were high!
They were high because of the shield’s adjustment effect!
They had risen to
be one-third of Raphtalia’s stats! Before now, her stats were like Keel’s when
he was in the single digit levels. I was amazed.
To think that a
piece of equipment could have such an effect, the type change must have made
the monster maturation adjustment effect apply as well.
Well, I couldn’t
argue with the effects, so I guess she could wear it for the time being.
“Yeah, it looks
really stupid, but I guess it will have to do. Keel, you want one too?”
“What?!”
Keel looked at me.
His eyes were filled with terror.
We still had the
Pekkul Kigurumi that Rishia wasn’t using.
The effects were
pretty good, so I was just thinking that it might work for Keel.
“No way! I hate
that thing!”
“Heeeey!”
“Keel, please
choose your words carefully. You’ll hurt Rishia’s feelings.”
Raphtalia chastised
him. But Rishia didn’t seem to be upset at all.
And there I was,
expecting a weak “fehhh” from her.
Whatever. If Rishia
liked it then she could wear it. No harm, no foul.
“That’s the thing.
It’s horrible to look at, but the effects are pretty great. If you want to get
stronger—beggars can’t be choosers.”
“Master!
Reeeeealy?”
Filo was going to
throw a fit. I didn’t care.
“Well, that’s what
I’ve got for you now. I’ll get to work on the lass’s armor next.”
“What about me?”
“If you leave your
armor, I’ll work on it. But I can’t promise you that it will be ready in time.”
“Right. Well, we’re
on our way out of town right now, so we’ll have to do it later.”
“Sure thing. I was
thinking of making a little small sword for the kigurumi girl over there, but I
haven’t had the time.”
“Oh, well, we still
have some time before the wave. Think you can make it before then?”
“I can try.”
I was still
powering up my shield, so I would just have to depend on that. The armor could
wait.
“Okay then, see you
later. Thanks for everything.”
“By the way,
kid...”
“What?”
“I can make
shields, too.”
That was a good
point. I could always have him make me shields that I didn’t have the materials
to unlock yet.
I could unlock
shields by absorbing materials into it, but then I would lose the materials. If
they were rare, then that might be a waste of good resources. If the old guy
made me a shield, I could copy it using the weapon copy system.
I decided to see
what he could do with the materials from the next wave boss.
“If I find anything
good, I’ll bring it over and you can try your hand at it. See you then.”
“I’ll be here,
kid.”
We left the weapon
shop, climbed into the carriage, and went on our way.
Eclair was very
impressed by Raphtalia’s new sword. She let out a yelp when she saw it.
The carriage was
pretty full—and noisy.
But I kind of liked
it that way.
“So where are we
off to, Shield Hero?” asked Keel.
“We’re off to find
this mysterious monster that is causing trouble all over the country. It
shouldn’t be very strong, so this should be good experience for you.”
“Yeah!”
Keel tightened his
grip on the sword hilt at his waist. He was ready for battle.
I looked him in the
eyes and thumped my shield with my knuckles.
“I’m glad you’re
excited, but don’t go rushing into trouble, okay?”
“I know that!”
“A long time ago, I
said the same thing to Raphtalia, but she didn’t listen. You’re a lot like how
she was then. That’s why I’m telling you this.”
“Really?
Raphtalia?”
He looked over at
her to confirm. She nodded.
“It’s true. I
nearly got myself killed. So please be careful, Keel.”
“Oh . . . Okay.”
I directed the
carriage to the village in the southwest.
Filo was a fast
runner, so it only took us a day and a half.
We arrived at the
village to find it mostly overgrown.
“This was my
fault.”
“You don’t
think...”
We cut back the
shrubs as we made our way through the overgrowth.
Keel was shocked
when he found out that I was the reason the village was so overgrown.
I’d given the
villagers an improved version of the bioplant seed. But had it sent them back
to square one?
If so, then I
couldn’t complain about Motoyasu. Was this because of the mysterious monsters?
Was it really my fault?”
I was thinking it
over when we came across a group of adventurers. I could hear them talking.
“You know the
monsters around here have great materials.”
“Is that so?”
“Why don’t you
believe me? Anyway we should probably head somewhere with stronger monsters.”
“But won’t it take
a while to level up that way? I don’t think we have the time to waste.”
“It will be
alright. We’ll help you, so just keep working until the next wave.”
“Okay...”
So the other
adventurers on the path were also leveling up for the wave.
The adventurers
we’d met up until then hadn’t seemed to know much about the waves.
That, I think, was
the other heroes’ fault for not using support troops.
Granted, the queen
had mentioned that she would put out word to the adventurer guilds in Melromarc
to try and recruit volunteers to help in the battles to come. Maybe these
adventurers were part of that effort.
“Hm?”
Filo was looking
around for the adventurers.
“What is it?”
“I, um . . . I
think that was the scythe guy and the see-through person. Oh! And the sparkly
girl, too!”
She had an odd way
of putting things, but the only people I could think of that met that
description were . . . L’Arc, Glass, and Therese?!
What were they
doing in this world again?
But how did they .
. . Whatever. If this was going to be a fight, then we needed to hurry and
finish it.
“Are you sure?”
“Um... no. Maybe
just someone similar?”
She seemed to have
found something.
“What?”
I jumped down from
the carriage and tried to look through the overgrowth.
Hey, I thought I
caught sight of someone’s backside.
It wasn’t them. The
hair color and clothes weren’t right.
From what I could
tell the person who looked like Glass from the back had red hair parted over
her neck. And she was wearing armor, not a kimono.
“Was it them?”
“No—not at all.”
Well, I hadn’t seen
their faces, but it certainly wasn’t Glass.
“Really?
She chirped,
cocking her head in confusion. She had me freaked out for a second there.
I guess she could
have changed her hair color as a disguise, but I didn’t feel that sense of
pressure I had when Glass showed up. It couldn’t have been her.
“Where are all the
monsters?”
Filo whispered to
herself while looking around.
“Huh.”
I hoped they hadn’t
grown more powerful or virulent since I’d last been in the area.
What if the
mysterious monsters we were looking for had actually come from the bioplant?
Then we would be in real trouble.
“Isn’t it weird how
quiet it is?”
“Isn’t it a good
thing?”
Suddenly the bushes
around us rustled, and someone who looked like a villager stepped out onto the
path.
“Oh, Shield Hero!”
I thought about
running away for a second.
If all this
overgrowth was my fault, then it would be too awkward to face him.
“Thanks to you,
Shield Hero, we’ve been working in peace.”
“What?”
I looked around at
the state of the jungle.
“But look at this
place!”
“Yes, it’s nearly
ready for harvest.”
“It looks like an
overgrown jungle to me.”
“We planted the
seeds that you gave us and have been able to vastly expand our farming
projects. We work on a scale like never before.”
He pointed a finger
skyward.
There were large,
red, tomato-like fruits hanging from the trees.
“The main problem
is that we can really only harvest a lot of the same fruit. We’ve become famous
for it though.”
“Well, that was
fast.”
Only two months or
so had passed since I was last there. They must have really been working hard.
“So you haven’t run
into any problems with these plants?”
“Not at all.”
“So . . .
everything is good?”
The villager seemed
to wince.
There used to be an
alchemist in the area. He had originally made the bioplant.
He—or it could have
been a she—probably would have loved to have seen the huge fruits that now
surrounded us.
Honestly, it wasn’t
very picturesque, if you ask me.
“May I ask what
brings you this way?”
“I’ve heard reports
of mysterious monsters appearing in the area.”
“Really! Well, it’s
excellent that you have come. We’ve been worried!”
“Mind telling me
what’s going on?”
The villager began
to explain, but then...
Grumble.
“I’m huuuuungry!”
“Me too.”
Filo’s stomach
grumbled loudly as she stood there staring at the red fruits.
I remembered how
she had gobbled up a lot of those fruits the last time we came through.
“Go ahead.”
The villagers
pointed to one of the fruits and indicated that Filo and Keel could eat it if
they wanted.
“Yay!”
They both joyfully
started eating a fruit. We all followed suit.
It tasted like a mix
between a tomato and an orange.
I guess it was
alright. I wouldn’t say that I loved it.
But Raphtalia and
Eclair were both scarfing the fruit down and enjoying it. Was I different
because I was from another world?
Lunch must have
been over, because a bunch of villagers came over from the direction of the
village. When they went by, they gave us some cooked dishes to eat.
“Thanks for
everything.”
“Not at all!”
“But be careful.”
I tried to signal
that those fruits could cause trouble like they had before.
“How did you make
these, Shield Hero? They’re amazing.”
Eclair was stunned
by how delicious the fruit was.
“It’s like we’re in
a picture book.”
Rishia gasped as
she surveyed the bioplant. I actually was in a world
that I’d found in a book though.
“How wonderful,
holy saint.”
The old lady seemed
to be enjoying the fruits too. Anyway, we all finished eating and went to the
village to find out what was going on.
“So what’s all this
about mysterious monsters?”
“Well, we haven’t
seen any yet today, but lately adventurers and some people from a nearby
village have run into them and ended up hurt. Some have even died. Please, help
us be rid of them.”
The villager
brought over what appeared to be a corpse of a monster that they had saved.
What was it? I turned
my head to the side—I’d never seen it before.
It was like a
one-eyed bat, but it had a shell of some kind on its back.
It was one of the
strangest monsters I’d ever seen.
And it only had one
eye! I know I was in another world, but I don’t think I’d seen anything like
that yet.
“Maybe it was some
rich person’s pet or something?”
The nobility was in
the habit of keeping strange monsters around.
“What could it be?”
Raphtalia examined
the body.
Eclair stood next
to her, deep in thought.
“Have any of you
ever seen one?”
“No, not in
person.”
“I’ve fought a lot
of monsters in my day, but I don’t think I’ve ever seen one like that.
Certainly not in this country.”
“In this country?
You mean you’ve seen one somewhere else?”
“In Faubrey I once
saw a one-eyed balloon type monster called a winged float ball. But this is
different.”
She indicated its
bat-like body.
“What is it?”
Rishia was looking
at the body too. She was wearing the kigurumi, which sort of sucked all the
tension and seriousness out of the room.
“Do you have any
idea of what it could be?
“I, um . . . I feel
like I’ve seen it before, but I can’t remember where.”
“You sure do know a
lot. Take the time to think about where you’ve seen it.”
Rishia rubbed her
chin and thought about it.
“This isn’t the
only one, is it? There are more?”
“Yes, there seem to
be many of them. But they appear suddenly and at random, which makes it very
hard to fight them off.”
“Do you mind if I
let my shield absorb it? We might learn something about it.”
“Not at all.”
They agreed, so I
absorbed the body into my shield.
——’s familiar (bat
type) shield conditions met
What did that mean?
It didn’t say what the monster was!
But it seemed to be
a familiar, which meant that it belonged to a witch or something, right? Did
that mean someone owned it, or made it? Or that it was a part of a larger
creature?
“Apparently it’s a
familiar of some kind.”
“A familiar? Does
that mean that it has a master?”
“I guess so. Now we
just need to find out who or what that is.”
I was curious about
what the other heroes had discovered on their missions, but we had to focus on
what we’d been charged with first.
I was trying to
figure out the next step when a scream pierced the quiet room.
“Monsters!”
I ran outside and
looked to see who was screaming.
There was a cloud
of the bat-like monsters, probably 30 of them, flying in our direction.
And then their eyes
started to glow before shooting heat beams at the fleeing villagers.
“Kyaaaa!”
“Ahhhh!”
What?! The monsters
seemed to be aiming for the weakest villagers!
The adventurers
that happened to be in town had their hands full just trying to protect
themselves.
I ran over to the
injured villagers and used a skill.
“Air strike
shield!”
The shield appeared
in midair to block a heat beam.
“Everyone! Get on
the offense!”
“Okay!”
“Okaaay!”
“Understood.”
“Fehhh!”
“On it!”
All the people who
were traveling with me ran to attack the monsters.
They were hard to
attack because they were flying and very fast. It was very hard to get a hit
in.
“Filo!”
“Whaat?”
“Use your wind
magic! We have to get them down here to do any physical attacks.”
Raphtalia was doing
her best to fight the bats one by one. There were too many people that needed
my protection, so I couldn’t help her.
“Get everyone
together in one place! That’s the only way I’ll be able to protect them!”
“You hear the
Shield Hero! Everyone get together!”
“Okay!”
The terrified
villagers all huddled together in one spot.
The monsters took
notice and looked like they were about to attack. Perfect—that was the chance
that we were waiting for.
“Air strike shield!
Second shield! Dritte shield!”
Three shields
appeared to protect the group.
“And then...”
I quickly added the
group of villagers to my party as support troops.
“What’s this?”
“Just accept it!
That’s the only way I can protect you.”
The leader of the
villagers nodded and accepted the invitation.
Yes!
“Shooting star
shield!”
A protective force
field about two meters in diameter appeared around the group, protecting them
further.
The only problem
with that skill was that it wouldn’t let any non-party members pass through it.
Which meant that if
I wanted to protect someone with it, they had to be part of my party, at the
very least they needed to be registered as support troops.
And after all the
leveling up I’d done, the force field would block pretty much everything except
for very strong attacks.
I protected the
villagers from the monster’s heat beams as Filo prepared to cast her spell.
“Zweite Tornado!”
Filo’s magic ripped
through the air and the turbulence affected the way the mysterious monsters
were able to fly.
“Hyaa!”
“Ryaaaa!”
“Take that!”
Taking advantage of
the turbulence, Raphtalia, Eclair, and the old lady jumped to attack the
monsters.
Rishia and Keel
stood there unsure of what they should do.
But at least Keel
made an effort. He ran for the weakened monsters and slashed at them with his
sword.
“Fehhhh!”
“Stop whining! We
need you! Pretend you’re with Itsuki and help us fight these things!”
“Ok . . . Okay!”
She ran forward,
swinging her sword.
She hadn’t dropped
her center of gravity though. She’d done better back at the training grounds.
“Ahh!”
But her attack
landed. The mystery monster fell to the ground, splashed open.
She dived forward
to deliver a final blow, but in her excitement she forgot to account for the
shell. Her sword hit it directly.
She was like one of
those students who can get good grades, but when it comes time to take a test,
they freeze up.
If she would only
loosen up that anxiety of hers, she could probably be really useful, even if
her stats were low.
“Hit the eye!”
“Okay!”
She did as I said
and finally killed the monster.
Watching her flail
about didn’t exactly fill me with confidence.
Judging from the
way the monsters moved, their speed, their attack power, and the way that they
held their own against Keel, I guessed that they were around level 35. That was
kind of strong.
Raphtalia, Filo,
and the old lady were able to defeat them with a single hit, but Eclair and
Rishia had to stab them in the eye a few times to take one down. Eclair had
special attacks. When she used those she could kill the monsters with only one
hit. Keel definitely was not strong enough. He could only manage to defeat
monsters that were already weakened.
“I’m doing my
best!”
Rishia was putting
her weight behind her strikes. She must have been preparing to use one of the
special attacks she’d pulled off once or twice during training.
“Hya!”
There was a sharp,
piercing sound as she pushed her sword through a monster’s eye. The blade came
out the back and stuck through the monster’s shell.
To put it in gamer
terms, she’d scored a critical hit.
I was impressed.
She was doing pretty well.
“Whew.”
“Did we get them
all?”
“I think so.”
I quickly looked
around the village.
There didn’t seem
to have been any damage to the buildings. It was like the monsters had only
been interested in targeting the people.
I guess that meant
that there was someone out there intentionally targeting the villagers. During
the waves the monsters would normally destroy buildings and structures too. So
these were behaving differently.
I walked off in the
direction that the monsters had seemed to come from.
“?”
Just a little ways
down the road, I found the corpse of a monster that normally lived in the area.
“Hey, these
monsters seem to be attacking things besides humans.”
That made me think
that maybe this was territorial behavior.
“Well, they weren’t
all that powerful on their own. Everyone but Keel, go take a look around and
see what you can find. If you see anything strange let me know. Villagers, take
care of the wounded.”
“Yes!”
“Roger!”
And that was the
end of our first battle with the mystery monsters.
Raphtalia and the
others were investigating as best they could, but I didn’t think we were going
to find whoever was controlling the monsters.
Our best chance was
Filo and her sense of smell, but she hadn’t found anything.
The sun fell low in
the sky and the village began to get dark.
The villagers
hadn’t been able to sleep through the night for the last few days.
“Is there anything
else you can tell me about what those things might be?”
“Unfortunately
not.”
“We’ve kept a
lookout and gone searching for them before, but we’ve never found anything of
interest.”
So the villagers
weren’t going to be much help.
I considered going
back to the castle with the information we had. But I didn’t think it was safe
to leave the villagers alone without protection.
It was possible to
defend against the monsters, but how were we supposed to attack them? We were
missing something.
“Except...”
“What? Do you know
something?”
“The monsters
always fly in from the east.”
The east...
The mysterious
woman that I saw before we left the castle had said something about coming from
the east, too. Could they have been related?
“I’m going to the
castle to share the information we’ve gathered. Raphtalia, you and the others
stay behind to protect the village.”
“Understood.”
“Okaaay! Hey,
master?”
“What?”
“Those monsters
have killed a bunch of other monsters!”
That’s right. Filo
had mentioned it on the way into the village. We hadn’t run into any wild
monsters on the road.
She was right.
There were way less monsters around than I would have expected.
Raphtalia reported
that they had found a lot of monster corpses while they were investigating the
area.
“Right, got it.
Okay, I’ll be back.”
I had to go share
what we’d learned with the other heroes. After watching the sun go down, I
opened a portal and teleported back to the castle.
“So those are the
monsters we found.”
When I got back to
the castle, the queen called for all the heroes to come together.
Just as I expected,
the other heroes had also come across monsters with strange shells on their
backs.
“How could they be
appearing over such a wide area?” the queen asked, after hearing all of our
explanations.
The queen knit her
eyebrows and fell to thinking.
After a minute, she
spoke again.
“If the same thing
is happening in so many different places at once, it must be safe to assume that
something unprecedented and strange is afoot.”
“Like the waves?”
“Perhaps. And
yet...”
The monsters were
not behaving the way that the monsters did during the waves. And besides, we
still had another six days until the wave came.
Sure, the waves
were strange. But even at that, these monsters really took the cake.
“Have you three
figured anything out?”
I asked the other
heroes.
They all looked as
though they had been thinking about something.
But...
“Nope.”
“Nothing.”
“That’s right. I
haven’t figured anything out.”
They answered
calmly and carefree. It was like our earlier argument had never happened.
Something was up.
“I couldn’t figure
out what kind of master the familiars serve. Know anything from your games?”
The other heroes
based everything they knew about the world from the games they had played.
“No idea.”
“I can’t think of
anything.”
“Sadly, no.”
They all answered
lightly, as though they weren’t concerned. Come to think of it, they answered
very quickly, too, even though they’d been stressed and ready to snap the last
time we’d been together.
They nodded to each
other. What was going on?
“You . . . Are you
sure you really don’t know anything?”
My intuition was
telling me that something was up. They were hiding something.
“I said we don’t know
anything!”
Ren had been so
cool and collected just a second before, but he leaned forward and yelled at me
before turning his back.
What was that
about? He’d just made himself look even more suspicious.
“Naofumi, what
makes you think you’re the leader of the heroes? Back off already—we said we
don’t know anything.”
“Maybe you should
learn to trust people.”
Each of them
spouted an obnoxious phrase and turned their backs to me.
Did they think I
was trying to act like their leader? Ha!
I just wanted to know
why they were acting so weird! I should have expected as much from them.
They were still
pissed from before, so they were basically refusing to talk to me.
“Anyway, we need to
protect the areas we’ve been assigned. So if the report is finished, I’ll be on
my way!”
Ren shouted.
Motoyasu and Itsuki agreed. Then they all left the room.
Through a window, I
saw them open portals and teleport away.
Well, that was
weird. Something was going on, I could tell.
“Queen.”
“I understand. I
will send shadows after them to see if we can learn anything else.”
If she overdid it,
we might end up in deep trouble.
I didn’t know if we
could still depend on the other heroes, but all we could do for the time being
was to try and figure out the reason for their strange behavior.
“A familiar...”
“Similar reports
are coming in from our neighboring countries.”
The queen opened a
map and indicated all the places that the monsters had been spotted.
The range was
larger than the entire country of Melromarc.
It looked like they
were all over the known world.
And then...
“They’re moving
from east to west?”
“It appears so.”
The sightings were
organized by date, and it seemed like the monsters were moving.
Which reminded
me...
“Before we left for
the village, a strange woman approached me.”
“Really?”
I told the queen
about the woman that had asked for me to defeat her.
She had mentioned
the east. Then she had vanished. I’d thought that maybe it had been a
hallucination, but it was starting to seem like something else.
“It sounds like
there might be a connection. But what was this talk of holy weapons? Was she
referring to the four holy heroes?”
“That was my guess.
Maybe it’s an older mode of address?”
“But why would she
ask you to destroy her? Regardless, I will look into it.”
“Thanks.”
My report was
finished, so I teleported back to the village where Raphtalia and the others
were waiting.
“I’m back.”
“Oh, Mr. Naofumi!”
The second
Raphtalia caught sight of me she ran at me full speed. She seemed very anxious.
“What’s wrong?”
“It’s Keel!”
“What?!
Raphtalia took me
by the hand and led me to the village clinic.
Keel lay on a bed,
writhing in pain as a nurse applied a salve to a huge burn on his back.
“Oh . . . Mr.
Shield.”
“Are you okay?!”
“Y . . . Yeah. It
really hurts, but I’m not going to die or anything.”
I helped the nurse
cast healing magic on his back. Then she went on to apply more ointments.
“What happened?!”
“I saw one of the
monsters flying by. I thought that if there was only one, maybe I could handle
it...”
“That was foolish!
What if you had been killed?!”
Raphtalia’s eyes
were brimming with tears.
Eclair and the old
lady, overcome with concern, were also angry with him.
“I know, I know! I
won’t do it again!”
The wound was
deeper than I would have thought. What was wrong?
What now? It looked
like there was something buried under his skin.
Symptoms like that
meant...
“Keel, did the
monster do anything to you?”
“Huh? It shot me
with its heat beam. Then I fell over and the monster came and landed on my
back. Raphtalia and the others showed up and saved me right after that.”
Damn! This wasn’t
good!
That explained why
there were so many monsters. The mystery was unraveling before my eyes.
“This might hurt,
but you have to bear with me!”
“What are you going
to do!?”
I took some
medicine out of my pocket, popped the lid off, and dumped it over his wounds.
“Kyaaaaaaaaa!”
Keel screamed in
pain.
But that wasn’t the
problem! If we didn’t do something, his life was in danger.
There was a
cracking sound, and something like a tortoise shell began to rise to the
surface from under his skin.
“Huff . . .
Huff...”
“Mr. Naofumi?
What’s going on?”
“This is what has
been causing all the trouble in the village.”
The minute I said
it, Raphtalia understood what I meant.
The southwestern
village was taken over by the crazed bioplant. Then the bioplant planted its
seeds into some nearby humans and grew to the point where it was able to
control them.
That’s right. The
mystery monsters had just planted its eggs into Keel’s back.
“Ugh.”
“He was taking so
long to heal that I figured something else was going on.”
But this had all
happened so quickly. We were dealing with something very dangerous.
“Master!”
Filo suddenly
screamed. She’d been on lookout outside.
“What?!”
“I just saw one of
those monsters come out of a different monster’s body! I saw it!”
What?! So the
monster’s numbers kept growing because they were reproducing in the bodies of
the monsters and people they killed.
“Hurry! Get all of
the dead monsters together in one place! We need to burn them!”
There was no
guarantee that it was going to work. But if we didn’t get all those bodies
burned, we were going to be in real trouble—that much was certain.
“Keel, are you
okay?”
“Of course I am!
But I...”
Keel tried to climb
out of bed, but he collapsed again immediately.
“I can’t...”
“Just focus on
getting better for now. You’re not going to be able to help us in that state
anyway.”
“But I want to
fight with everyone!”
“You’re not in any
condition for battle. Just make sure you are rested up and ready to help us
when the wave comes!”
“Ugh.”
Frustrated at his
inability to help, Keel buried his face in his pillow and whined.
Raphtalia stroked
his healing back.
“Master!”
“What now!?”
“It’s a different
monster! Not like the other ones!”
“Dammit! They don’t
let up!”
I ran outside to
see what Filo was talking about.
Raphtalia and
Eclair and the old lady came with me.
“Fehhh...”
Rishia had been on
watch with Filo, and she was tottering there, terrified, before the monster as
it emerged from the dark of night.
I followed her
gaze.
It was about two
and a half meters tall—about as tall as Filo in her filolial queen form. It
looked like a yeti, and its entire body was covered in fur. Its back was
covered with a tortoise-like shell.
——’s familiar (yeti
form)
Damn! I still
couldn’t see the name!
The yeti with the
shell on its back raised a heavy fist into the air and came running for us.
It was clearly
trying to attack the weak villagers.
“Everyone run!”
“Okay!”
Everyone nodded
their agreement and started running.
I stopped the
massive fist when the beast swung at us. When I stopped it in its tracks, the
others rushed in and killed it.
It wasn’t a tough
fight at all, but the experience we got from it was on par with what we got in
Cal Mira during the activation event.
“Eclair, old lady,
what level do you think a normal adventurer would need to be at to fight and
defeat a monster like this?”
“Um . . . I would
guess around level 45.”
“Even if they were
a talented fighter, they would probably need to be around that.”
Level 45. And that
was assuming they were particularly skilled.
So to be safe, a
normal person would need to be at level 55.
That meant that
anyone that hadn’t been approved to go through the class up ceremony wouldn’t
survive an encounter with a monster like this.
Sure, it’s not like
these monsters were all over the place. The villagers hadn’t seen them before.
But they existed.
“Fehhh...”
Rishia, quaking
with fear, examined the dead monster. What was she looking for?
“Um...”
She appeared to
want to tell me something.
If I looked worried
as I listened, it would only scare her.
So I made a face
like nothing was wrong.
“What is it,
Rishia?”
“This monster. I
think I’ve seen it before. I think I saw a picture of it in a book I once read.”
“What?!”
“Ahhhh!”
I’d tried not to
scare her, but she was who she was.
I had to calm her
down—she was still easier to deal with than the other heroes.
“Sorry. So? What
kind of book?”
“Fehhh... I’m . . .
sorry. I can’t remember!”
I was a little annoyed
with her whimpering, but at least she was sharing information with us.
If she could help
us solve the mystery, then she was proving how useful she could be.
She was bookish as
hell, but still hadn’t been much use in battle.
“Well, what kind of
book was it? I’m sure you can remember if you think about it. When you
remember, come tell me. That will be our ticket to beating this thing.”
“Okay!”
It was best if we
took turns keeping watch over the village through the night.
The real problem
was that the monsters were all over the country. So even if we protected this
village. . . But no—there was no point in thinking that way. It was better to
protect them than to leave them.
I’d go report to
the queen first thing in the morning. There was the matter of the other heroes
to attend to as well.
But the heroes
never returned to the castle to give their reports.
“Those idiots!”
It was our third
night in the village.
The other heroes
had come on the second night to deliver their report.
The report from the
shadows that had been trailing them came on noon of the third day. The shadow
reported that the heroes had left the lands they had been sent to secure.
I had been out
investigating during the day, so I didn’t hear the report until I got back in
the evening.
Keel had been moved
to the castle clinic and was recovering quickly.
Rishia thought that
she was going to figure out what book she had seen the monsters in and was
studying in the castle library.
The mystery
monsters were growing rapidly in number, moving to the west, and attacking
everything in sight.
The bat-like
monsters weren’t so powerful on their own, so the country was doing its best to
manage them. As for the yeti-like monsters, there weren’t as many of them, but
they were too powerful for normal humans to handle.
We used the
adventurer guilds to recruit adventurers that could help us fight them off.
Anyway, about the
other heroes, I’d thought they were hiding something, and I’d been right.
They had attacked
the Melromarc border and broken through.
“We have reports of
what they said as they stormed the border, which went as follows: ‘we have to
get through to stop the monsters! Why are you in our way?!’”
I turned that over
in my head for a minute and then I realized what it meant. They really had
known something about the mystery monsters.
The report said
that they had also said things like, “We aren’t breaking our promise to the
queen,” and, “This is necessary to carry out the job we’ve been tasked with.”
“What do you want
to do? Should we go after them?”
“Yes, but if we go
after them now, we may suffer for it.”
“How so?”
“I’ve heard that
they are using filolials and flying dragons—pressing on and on without rest.”
What were they
after?
Filo was the fasted
form of transportation I had access to. Filo was very fast, much faster than
normal horses or filolials.
But Filo was a
living thing, not a car. She had to rest from time to time.
And if the heroes
were really using flying dragons, then we would really be in trouble. They
didn’t even have to worry about the terrain.
If they used
dragons and filolials, then that probably meant they were going places that
Filo couldn’t get to on her own.
If we wanted to
match their speed, then we could keep switching to new animals when one of them
got tired. We could match their speed that way, but they had a head start, so
we wouldn’t catch up with them.
Maybe if we kept
Filo on running shifts we could catch up—she was really fast.
Still, we didn’t
know where the heroes were going.
Even if through
some miracle we were able to catch up with them, we still didn’t have a way to
stop them.
If we tried to
force them to stop it would only cause more animosity, and we only had four
days until the waves came.
Come to think of
it, what would we do if the wave came in the middle of our chase?
Maybe they are
going to a wave in another country? But aren’t the heroes supposed to come back
to Melromarc for the wave?
Regardless, we had
to prepare for the wave here. It was our only real option.
Judging by the
direction they were last seen traveling in...
The queen pointed
to a spot on a map. It was a country very far to the east of Melromarc.
Again, the east.
That pretty much made it clear. The answer to the mystery lay to the east.
“Based on their
speed, it’s safe to assume they will arrive three days from now.”
“That only leaves
them one extra day before the wave comes. What do you think they are up to?”
“I only know that
we should stay on our toes. And yet these monsters, could they be . . . ?”
If only we could
teleport there. But we couldn’t.
We were only able
to teleport to places we had already visited and registered.
Huh?
“I just thought of
a way to catch up with them. Hold on a minute.”
I met up with
Raphtalia and the others and found Filo.
“What is it,
master?”
“I want to speak
with Fitoria.”
“Kay!”
Raphtalia, Eclair,
and the old lady were confused.
“She says, ‘what?’”
I unrolled a map on
over a table and indicated where the heroes were headed.
“You have a
teleporting ability. Can you teleport us to this spot? The other heroes are
heading there. We have to catch up with them and figure out what they are up
to.”
Filo’s cowlick
started twitching.
“Uh-huh. Yup. Mkay.
She says that area is outside of her jurisdiction, so she can’t take us there.”
“Huh? Wait a
second. Does she know what the other heroes are up to?”
“Yeah. She says she
actually wants to help, but that if the heroes are really on such bad terms
with each other that it would be better for the world if you just gave up.”
Could it be what
Fitoria had mentioned before? That after a number of the waves passed there
would come a time when all the life in the world would be threatened? Was she
saying that the time had come?
She’d said, “You
can save the people or you can save the world. If the other heroes really can’t
get along with you, and they want to abandon their purpose, then you need to
survive. Then you can choose to save the world. It will entail great sacrifice,
but you will be able to fulfill your purpose.”
Was now the time
she’d been talking about?
“Is she saying that
if all goes well, it could be the end of the waves?”
“Is she saying this
is it . . . ?”
“Mr. Naofumi.
You’re not talking to Filo, are you? What are you talking to Fitoria about?”
“Something that we
talked about in private once. She said that there would come a time when all
life would need to be sacrificed to save the world.”
“Are the heroes
trying to save the world?”
Eclair leaned
forward and asked me. She found it hard to believe.
“Regardless, we
don’t know what’s happening with these monsters. But it sounds like whatever
the heroes are up to might have something to do with ending the waves for
good.”
“Will it be
alright?”
“I don’t know, it
makes me nervous. We have our hands full trying to protect the country. And
yet...”
I turned back to
Filo’s cowlick.
“We can’t give up.
We’re going after them.”
“She says, ‘Good
luck then! I’ll be watching from afar.’”
The queen of the
filolials didn’t seem to care a lick about humans. She wouldn’t even tell us
where they were going.
Maybe she had
realized that she’d done all she could for heroes like us.
I guess I couldn’t
disagree with that.
The situation was
looking dire, but the heroes that were supposed to save everyone were fighting
each other.
If I was Fitoria,
I’d have been disappointed too.
But I bet she was
really waiting for us.
Waiting for us to
learn to fight for the sake of everyone. But she wasn’t going to do it for us.
Maybe that’s what she meant.
We all went to go
meet with the queen. I explained the situation.
“I see. Well, now
we know what the heroes are after, don’t we?”
“What is waiting
for them there?”
Rishia came running
into the throne room and shouted at me.
Her face was pale.
Like the queen, it
looked like Rishia had figured something out.
“Feh!”
“What is it?”
“Fehhh... Right . .
. I . . . Um...”
“What is it?”
“When I heard where
Master Itsuki was headed to, I remembered where I’d seen those monsters.”
“Where?”
“Yes. I saw them in
one of the ancient legends about the heroes. Those monsters were the
familiars—the servants—of the Spirit Tortoise.”
“I believe she is
correct.”
“Spirit what?”
Come to think of
it, there was a legend in my world about a Spirit Tortoise too. It was a
mysterious monster.
The four benevolent
animals showed up in games sometimes, but the tortoise was one of the more
minor ones.
They were four
symbolic animals that protected the different cardinal directions.
They were similar
to the four symbols, the azure dragon, vermillion bird, white tiger, and black
turtle. The four benevolent animals somewhat paralleled the four symbols and
were made up of the kirin, phoenix, Spirit Tortoise, and dragon.
They were the same
kind of creatures, so a lot of people confused them for one another, but they
were different.
The Spirit Tortoise
was a giant turtle that wore Mount Penglai on its back.
But the black
turtle of the four symbols was different; it has a snake for a tail and stood
on long legs. It was the protector of the northern direction.
Mount Penglai was a
famous mountain for ascetic training in the east, so a beast that wore it on
its back wasn’t necessary the protector of the north.
“So? The monsters
that are flying around Melromarc are the servants of the Spirit Tortoise?”
“Perhaps...”
That didn’t sound
good. I was probably going to have to step in.
“Hm...”
The Spirit Tortoise
in my world was a protective spirit that had something to do with floods or
something.
I think it was also
believed to issue prophecies about the future.
“So there is a
giant monster behind all this?”
The other heroes
were rushing there without waiting for us because they wanted to feel like they
were getting ahead of me.
I didn’t want to
think about what kind of ideas they had.
They probably just
thought that they would get their hands on some good equipment by defeating the
Spirit Tortoise.
If everything went
well, they would get good equipment and they’d put an end to the newest threat
to the world.
They probably
thought everyone would love them and praise them night and day.
“But ancient heroes
sealed the tortoise away and took the secrets of the sealing process with them
to their graves.”
“The other three
heroes think that they know what to do about it, just because of the games
they’ve played.”
If they really did
know about the seal from the games, then maybe they knew how to undo the seal,
even though that knowledge had been lost in this world.
Come to think of
it, Itsuki had said something that made sense in hindsight. He’d said that I
wasn’t going to be able to be high and mighty for much longer.
When he’d said it,
I thought he was just whining. But now it all made sense.
If all three of
them were heading for the same place, that meant that the enemy could probably
be defeated by people around level 80 or so. Either that or they already knew
what to do.
So that’s what
their game knowledge had gotten them. I wished they would calm down.
I felt like I was
going to have to give them a piece of my mind.
“But there are
already so many servant monsters. Could the seal already be broken?”
“Maybe.”
And if it was, it
wasn’t the heroes that had done it.
“Let’s get prepared
for battle, just in case.”
If what Fitoria
said was true, then the waves might end if we just did nothing and let all this
run its course. But there was no way to tell what that would lead to.
She’d said there
would be sacrifices. But only Fitoria knew what that really meant.
And besides, I
couldn’t just sit back and do nothing.
“We’re going after
the heroes.”
“Understood. Thanks
to your cooperation, we have discovered the cause of all this. I have asked the
guilds for assistance. I hope that they will prove useful.”
“I’m really getting
tired of the other heroes’ behavior.”
“I understand. I
will try to buy you some time to intercept the heroes in the country where the
Spirit Tortoise is sealed.”
That would help. We
had to find a way to make up for their head start.
But how were we
going to deal with the wave in Melromarc?
Hopefully our
training would pay dividends when the time came.
Plus Eclair and the
old lady were helping us now. So we were in a better position than we had been.
We left the throne
room, teleported back to the southwest village, and hitched Filo up to a
carriage. Then we departed.
We were about to
enter the fray of the real battle, the battle that would determine the fate of
the world and the waves.
We crossed the
border into the neighboring country at dawn on the fourth day.
Filo had run all
through the night. We had just reached the closest border. There was still so far
to go.
Eclair and Rishia
had both gotten terribly motion sick during the night.
“Sh . . . Shield
Hero, please . . . stop the . . . urp!”
“Fehhhh. Burp!”
“If we stop, we
won’t catch up to them.”
They’d been saying
stop all through the night. And they had already thrown up everything they had
eaten. They were still trying to throw up.
Filo was starting
to tire out.
“Guess we don’t
have a choice. Let’s rest.”
“Whew! I’m
tiiiiired!”
I stopped the
carriage and Filo immediately began to snore.
She must have
really pushed herself.
We met some shadows
on the road and asked them where the heroes had gone.
We weren’t even in
the right country yet.
They were going to
arrive at their destination with only one day to spare before the wave came.
Which meant that we
probably weren’t going to make it in time.
We stayed on the
road though and when there were only two days before the wave...
Suddenly, the air
was filled with the sound of shattering glass. A shockwave rocked the carriage
so strongly it made me dizzy.
It sounded like the
beginning of a wave, but it was somehow different.
“What was that?!”
“What?”
I surveyed the
area.
For a second I
thought we’d been teleported, like what happened when the waves came. But a
look outside the carriage proved otherwise.
“What’s going on?”
“I don’t know yet.
Filo, could that . . . could that have been the seal breaking?”
Had the heroes
arrived?
A window appeared
in my field of view that contained the countdown clock for the wave.
It had stopped
ticking but indicated that there were still two days left.
Then, next to it,
another icon appeared. It was a blue hourglass with the number “7.”
“There’s another
hourglass, and it says seven. I don’t know what it means.”
I opened the help
menu to see if there was any new information.
But there wasn’t.
I realized that
this might be a chance to escape from my duties as the Shield Hero. But if I
did, if I ran away, how many people would suffer? How guilty would I feel?
“What should we
do?”
“We have to find
the heroes.”
I didn’t know what
was happening, but we couldn’t sit back and do nothing.
“Can we use a
portal?”
I used portal
shield to check.
Apparently we
could.
But I still had no
idea what was happening.
Something must have
happened in the eastern country.
What had the heroes
done?
We all got back in
the carriage and spent another day on the road.
We passed through a
town on the way, and a shadow appeared to stop us.
“Shield Hero, you
must return to Melromarc.”
This shadow spoke
normally.
The shadow I’d
spoken with before had an idiosyncratic way of speaking.
But he looked just
like the other ones.
“What happened?”
“You see...”
It was the start of
everything, of Fitoria’s suspicions, of all I’d been thinking about, and of the
other heroes’ belligerence. Everything was coming to a head, and what happened
next would shake the world to its foundations.
“The Spirit
Tortoise is moving towards heavily-populated areas. The queen has requested
your return to Melromarc.”
“What?”
If it was powerful
enough that it needed to be sealed away, then it couldn’t be good that it was
moving into a populated area. Not good at all.
“What have you
heard from the shadows tailing the heroes?”
“We haven’t heard
anything from them recently.”
“Hm. Okay, we’ll
head back.”
I used portal
shield to return to the castle, then went to meet with the queen in the throne
room.
“This had to happen
right after we hit the road, didn’t it?”
“My apologies.”
“So what have you
heard about the other heroes?”
I assumed they had
reached their destination and used their game knowledge to go and break the
seal on the monster.
“It seems the
monster was already on the move by the time they arrived. In the midst of all
this chaos, they continue to chase after the monster.”
“And?”
She hesitated. That
meant I wouldn’t like what she was going to say.
“We haven’t heard
anything since.”
Idiots. They
thought they knew everything . They had to go and
attack it.
Well, at least they
hadn’t broken the seal themselves.
I bet they would
have done so, thinking they were more than powerful enough to defeat whatever
monster came out.
The queen looked
pale. I guess her daughter was with Motoyasu—of course she would be worried.
“Master Itsuki!”
Rishia ran off to
save him, though she had no idea where she was going.
“Filo, go get
Rishia.”
“Okaaay!”
Filo took off
running after the fleeing Rishia.
“Let me go! I have
to save Master Itsuki!”
I wondered if it
would make Itsuki happy to see her like this.
“Calm down.”
“Fehhh!”
“Stop whimpering!”
“Feh?”
“We don’t know what
sort of monster we are dealing with, but we also don't know that the other
heroes have died. Don’t lose hope.”
“B . . . But...”
“They always seem
to make it out of these things fine. So just calm down.”
It was true. They’d
lost to Glass, were knocked out by the high priest, and knocked out by one of
L’Arc’s attacks. But they were still alive.
That was three
major battles they’d survived. Maybe they had survived this one, too.
I bet they were all
passed out at the tortoise’s feet. Maybe.
I had to give them
the benefit of the doubt and hope for the best.
“Oh, okay! I hope
Master Itsuki is alright.”
Rishia sighed, as
if in prayer. She was so simple, as fragile as a block of tofu in some ways,
but with a spirit like hardened steel.
She was a strange
girl—that much was sure.
“I guess we better
go see what we can do about this turtle.”
“Call it a rescue
mission. We must keep the damage under control—we cannot afford necessary loss
of life.”
Two days later.
I rode out with a
group of knights the queen selected, and we formed a coalition army with a
neighboring country.
I would be
attempting to hold the front line.
As we were setting
everything up, we began to get news of the Spirit Tortoise’s advance.
Already five
cities, three forts, and two castles had fallen. Many, many people had died.
The tortoise itself
was gigantic. It was surrounded by flocks of servant monsters.
It sounded like the
tortoise was knocking everyone down, and its servants were finishing off any
survivors. The reports suggested that the monster was purposefully targeting
human life.
“Do you think the
heroes are still alive?”
“I’m sure of it.”
“How can you be
sure?”
“The Church of the
Four Holy Heroes in Faubrey has a device that can confirm the status of the heroes.
I had them look into it, just in case, and received an answer that they were
still alive.”
That was good news.
Rishia looked relieved.
If we could find
some way to defeat the Spirit Tortoise, then there might still be hope for
them.
The worst situation
would be if the other heroes died and I had to find some way to defeat the
monster on my own. Even if I won, Fitoria would come hunt me down and kill me.
“Where are the
seven star heroes?”
“I’ve sent for
them, but it may take them a few days to get here.”
We could wait for
them, but a lot of people would die in the meantime.
And we didn’t know
if they were going to be powerful enough to even help us.
I didn’t know if I
was powerful enough to defeat it either.
If we did nothing,
it would be the end of the waves, but we couldn’t just let it rampage and kill
everyone.
We had to fight
back.
Was Fitoria even
telling the truth? If we let the Spirit Tortoise do what it pleased, would the
waves actually stop coming?
“We have to fight
back. What can we expect from these soldiers?”
“Our neighboring
country has supplied us with knights, soldiers, and adventurers to fill out the
army. But another country has already launched an offensive, and they were
unsuccessful.”
“They attacked
before the heroes got there?”
“The Spirit
Tortoise had already entered their lands. Their cities were in danger.”
“Right.”
It might have been
reckless, but they hadn’t had a choice.
I understood how
they must have felt.
“So I’m the only
hero we can count on.”
I really wasn’t
fond of heroics.
Wasn’t it foolish
for a single hero to go up against a monster that was so destructive,
especially if that hero was a shielder and incapable of attacking? Was I being
foolish? Regardless, the first step was to go see the monster in person.
“There it is.”
The queen pointed
from the rattling window of the carriage.
I squinted at the
horizon—I couldn’t believe my eyes.
“I think I can see
a mountain on the horizon. It seems to be moving.”
THAT was what I had
to fight against?
It was so far away
that I couldn’t really make it out. But it was like when a giant, mountain-like
dragon appears in the game where you hunt monsters. Only it was bigger.
It made me think of
those ancient myths where people thought the entire world was supported on the
back of a tortoise.
Its shell was like
a mountain and it looked like there was a ruined city on its back.
So that was the
Spirit Tortoise.
“Queen, in the
legend of the heroes, when they fought the Spirit Tortoise, how did they defeat
it?”
“They were able to get
inside the shell through cracks in the mountain range on its back. Then they
attacked and sealed its heart, to seal the whole monster away.”
So the way to stop
it was from inside. But it was so large! Stopping it looked impossible. While
we tried to get inside of it, it would decimate the army.
“Do you have a
plan?”
“A basic one. It
appears to target human life, so we are evacuating all the towns, villages, and
forts in its path. We will attempt to lure it into an area where it will be
easy to attack.”
“I’m sure there’s
more to your plan, right?”
“Yes. Just like in
the legend, the heroes will find a way inside of its body, then attack its
heart.”
What was I supposed
to do? Use the Shield of Wrath and then iron maiden and blood sacrifice?
I had just gotten
rid of the curse from the last time. But if the enemy was as powerful as it
appeared, then I suppose I didn’t have a choice.
“Won’t there be a
lot of casualties?”
The beast would
probably rampage the whole time we were inside of it.
Which meant a lot of
people would die before we took it down.
“Yes.”
“Let me go! I won’t
fight! Shield! Send the Shieeeeeeld!”
“...”
Trash was writhing
in the seat next to the queen.
She grabbed his
chin and used ice magic to create a frozen mask over his mouth.
Things weren’t
looking good.
“I understand that.
But we do not know of any other way to defeat the monster.”
Trash had put me on
edge.
What was he there
for? He was supposed to be a military general of some kind, but what good would
his experience be against an enemy like this?
“No, it won’t
work.”
“What do you mean?”
“Obviously your
husband will be no help. I mean, we can’t allow the monster to continue its
rampage. Too many people will die.”
If we didn’t know
what the Spirit Tortoise’s attacks were like, we couldn’t come up with a
strategy to defeat it.
We had to find out
how the fallen cities had lost their battles. We needed to know exactly what
had happened.
“I will call the
army leaders together for a meeting.”
“Good.”
I told Raphtalia
and the others to wait for me at camp. Then I went to the assigned meeting
place for the coalition army.
“Oh! Shield Hero!”
“You must save the
world!”
“Please help us.
That thing destroyed my country.”
The assembled
military commanders looked ragged and pale. The situation was looking
desperate. If I ran away now, they’d be left without options.
“First we must come
up with a plan for how to fight that giant.”
The queen addressed
the room. Trash was nowhere to be seen.
Had he come he
would have just been in the way.
“Right. What are
the heroes supposed to do against a threat like that?”
I was a hero
myself, but I had to ask.
In the past, I’d
managed to defeat a very large monster myself: the Inter-Dimensional Whale.
But this thing was
much larger than that. I had no idea what to do or where to start.
“Let’s start at the
beginning. Does anyone know how to seal the monster away?”
“Yes. We held an
investigation and discovered the method.”
“And is it a type
of magic that we can use?”
“Well...”
The queen fell
silent. I guess not then.
So no easy solution
was going to fall into our laps.
“Oh!”
“But the coalition
army wizards can cast it if they all work together.”
“So we need to
weaken the Spirit Tortoise so that the wizards can seal it away?”
“Yes.”
There was a map on
the table. I looked at it to see what city was closest to the tortoise’s
current location.
It was very close.
If we didn’t do something, the city would be in danger.
“Have you evacuated
the city?”
“Not completely.
Not yet.”
“Damn. So we need
to find a way to buy some time.”
I didn’t know how
we were supposed to fight the thing, but it was looking like we didn’t have a
choice.
The earth was
shaking beneath our feet as it walked.
Had we been any
closer, it probably would have felt like an earthquake. What were we supposed
to do?
And the monster
seemed to have a clear goal. We needed to get that city evacuated.
“How advanced are
the evacuations?”
“They will not be
able to finish before the Spirit Tortoise arrives.”
There would be
casualties. A lot of them.
Sacrifice for the
fate of the world. If I ran away, I’d survive the waves with only a ruined
name.
But I had to help.
I had to do what I could.
It wasn’t for
justice or anything like that. It was for the people who believed in me, for
Raphtalia...
I had fallen silent.
The queen took the opportunity to explain what she knew about the Spirit
Tortoise.
“But that . . . Can
it be?”
“You speak the
truth?”
“Yes. If the Spirit
Tortoise rampages over the land, it will put an end to the waves.”
“Who could believe
that? Where did you hear such unfounded absurdity?”
“But what is
better? A destroyed world or a world with survivors that can carry on our
civilization?”
It was hard to call
that optimistic.
Did we force people
to die and save the world? Or did we save the people and destroy the world?
Weren’t there any better options?
I looked through
the flap of the tent at Filo, who was resting outside.
Fitoria could have
taken the beast down.
But there was no
point in thinking about it. She’d given up on the heroes.
The other heroes
were still alive, but there was no guarantee that we could all get along.
But if they had
lost, if they came to understand that they really were weak, then maybe they
would be more willing to listen to what I’d been trying to tell them. With any
luck, Fitoria would change her mind, too.
“What do you
think?”
“What is Faubrey
doing?!”
“That country is
always slow to enter the fray. They only take steps after the problem is
already there!”
“We must wait here
with the Shield Hero for the arrival of the seven star heroes!”
“But how many
cities and forts will we lose while we wait for them?”
“That’s easy for
you to say. Your country hasn’t taken any damage yet! We have to defeat the
beast as soon as possible!”
“For the sake of
the world?”
“The Sword, Spear,
and Bow Heroes have already gone missing!”
The tent was in an
uproar.
What was I supposed
to say to make them feel better? The heroes had already lost a lot of respect.
There would be
resistance to what I said, no matter what it was. I had to be prepared for
that.
If the other heroes
were still alive, then I was going to have to clean up this mess.
To tell the truth,
it didn’t matter how many of these people died. They had never been decent to
me.
But I had promised
to fight for the people who believed in me.
Raphtalia believed
that I would fight to save the world, that I would fight to limit the
casualties. She was like a daughter. I wanted her to be proud of me.
If this was the
only way to save the world, then what good was a world like that?
Fitoria knew it.
“We have to defeat
it and save everyone we can.”
If this is how
things were going to be, then I couldn’t act the way that I had up until now.
I had to play the
role. I had to be the Shield Hero that saves the world, the champion of justice.
Even if I didn’t
really believe in it.
I had to do it for
those that believed in me.
“The only reason we
are in this situation in the first place is because the heroes are so
undependable! Look, only one of them is here! Where are the other three?!”
“The other three
are currently unaccounted for.”
“See! It’s all just
empty talk! What is the Shield Hero supposed to do for us anyway? He can’t even
attack!”
“Then you tell me:
what is a hero?”
“W . . . Well...”
Everyone fell
silent, unsure of how to answer.
“A hero has
strength and uses it for justice. A hero is brave.”
The queen
understood what I was saying and supplied the answer.
Perfect. If she
understood, I’d carry on.
“Heroism is a
matter of the heart. It is the hero that doesn’t give up in the face of
despair. Heroes fight to protect the people!”
What was I saying?
The words sounded
strange in my mouth. I felt a chill.
I was not the sort
of person I was pretending to be.
But everyone likes
that kind of thing, don’t they?
Justice,
protection, and willpower and so on...
“If all of you in
this room together do not have enough strength, then I will lend you mine. I
will be your shield.”
“Shield Hero...”
Some of the
generals appeared moved and speechless.
I spoke as loudly
as I could. People outside the tent had probably heard me, too.
“Shield Hero.
Please forgive my earlier grievances.”
“Not a problem. The
nobility’s. . . Everyone’s complaints about the heroes are fair. I accept your
anger and frustration.”
I held my hand up
and spoke to the whole tent.
“But for now,
please, lend me your strength! We must work together! We must defeat the
beast!”
“Yes!”
A general ran
forward and grabbed my hand. He shook it and nodded.
Piece of cake.
That got rid of the
problems that we’d face after the Spirit Tortoise fell. And it got the whole
army into a fighting mood.
Now we just needed
to make a plan to defeat the monster. I would just have to play the part of the
hero of justice, like I’d announced.
“Back to the matter
at hand. Everyone, don’t give into despair. We must think of a way—any way— to
reduce the casualties. Even one person saved is a success.”
The queen was
regarding me strangely.
Anyone that had
known me before would immediately know that I was faking all this.
She nodded and the
meeting was back on.
“We will implement
the strategy once the preparations are complete.”
The meeting ended.
I left the tent to see Raphtalia stalking over to me, sighing deeply.
“Mr. Naofumi, what
did you do this time?”
I’d spoken as
loudly as possible, hoping that people outside the tent would have heard me,
too.
But judging by her
sigh, she must not have heard what I’d said.
“Nothing. It’s just
like when I taught that charlatan in Cal Mira a thing or two.”
“Well, I don’t know
what you mean. But okay.”
“Sis! Master said
that all the people in the world...”
“Shut up, Filo.”
If Raphtalia hadn’t
heard me, then that was just fine.
She would just
worry anyway.
Hm? Rishia was
gazing up at me with sparkles in her eyes. What was that all about?
“I was very moved!
I’m scared, but I’ll do my best!”
I guess Rishia had
heard me, too.
Then why hadn’t
Raphtalia been able to hear me?
Apparently she had
been off fetching water.
By the time she
came back the tent was in an uproar like I’d caused a fuss.
Up until now, every
time she found me in a situation like that, I’d pissed someone off. So it was
only natural she’d think the same thing had happened.
“I was quite moved
by it as well. The Shield Hero has a dirty mouth, but he sure can give a speech
when one needs to be made.”
That was Eclair.
She was
unbelievably serious and severe, so I’d assumed that she thought little of me
this whole time.
“What are you
talking about? Hurry up and tell me.”
“The Shield Hero...
”
“Don’t tell her. I
was only bluffing.”
“Bluffing?”
“If I’d run away
from the responsibility, the heroes would have lost face. So I just lined up
some pretty lies for them.”
“Mr. Naofumi, what
did you say?”
Raphtalia was
sighing again.
But Eclair was
speechless.
“I just say what I
have to say to get what I need from a situation.”
“Even if you act
like you’re proud of...”
“I was moved! Take
it back!”
Eclair was acting
offended by the whole thing now. I didn’t care.
“I’ve been framed
and oppressed. I’ve been lied to. I learned not to take people at their word
without proof. You have to learn that bluffing can be important.”
“Ms. Eclair, Mr.
Naofumi has a harsh way of speaking, but he always acts fairly. So please
believe him.”
“Hrm . . . If
Raphtalia says so.”
Eclair calmed down
when Raphtalia talked to her. It made me feel a little strange.
Was I jealous? I
was normally the one that Raphtalia had to talk sense into.
“Yes, sometimes one
must bend the truth,” the old lady said, nodding. “I know of a seven star hero
who once did the very same thing.”
The old lady knew one
of the seven star heroes?
“If only the other
heroes would awaken to their true calling.”
Who was she talking
about?
Whatever. I’m sure
we’d meet this hero friend of hers someday.
“Alright, I’ll tell
you what we decided in the meeting.”
“Okay.”
“We attack the
Spirit Tortoise, and I take the lead. The coalition army will follow behind us,
casting powerful magic to support us.”
“Just like how
we’ve battled the waves?”
“Isn’t that the
simplest way? The thing looks really big, but first we have to see how it
fights—that will help us buy some time. There is a town in its path that hasn’t
been evacuated yet.”
“Then I guess we
don’t have a choice.”
“Okaaaay!”
“Understood. But
Mr. Naofumi, are you going to be okay?”
“The servant
monsters can’t hurt me. Now, I just need to find out if I can withstand an
attack from the Spirit Tortoise.”
I could always
switch to the Shield of Wrath and use it to block the monster’s attack.
But could I control
my emotions? I’d have to rely on Raphtalia and Filo to help me there.
“Rishia, get it
together.”
“Okay! I’ll do my
best!”
Young girls in love
just say whatever they want.
“That reminds me.
You need to stop whimpering about everything.”
“Fehh...”
“That. That little
whimper of yours is going to make trouble for you. It’s annoying.”
“Fehh?!”
“Are you trying to
piss me off? If you would toughen up a bit you’d be stronger. That whimper is a
good place to start.”
“I’ll try.”
If she couldn’t
stop whimpering, she’d never really grow. All growth started from inside.
Raphtalia had been like
that in the beginning. She was proof that change was possible.
“Rishia, depending
on how the battle goes, I may need you to act as the queen’s messenger.”
“Bu . . . But...”
“I know. But that
kigurumi has given you a speed boost, and we still need to see how you handle
yourself in battle.”
She didn’t look
like she could hold her own in a battle with heroes.
But I couldn’t have
her getting scared and running away either.
Even in that game
where the monsters are the size of mountains, you couldn’t defeat the monsters
by getting scared and running from them.
First we had to see
her fight.
“Understood. We
will update our strategy depending on the way the battle goes.”
“You’re in charge
of the support troops. In a worst case scenario, we retreat and wait for the
seven star heroes.”
“Understood. Mr.
Iwatani, you are a source of morale for the troops. You must return from this
fight.”
“Got it. Filo, run
at that big thing.”
“Okaay!”
“Raphtalia, it’s
just like we always do.”
“Understood.”
“Rishia, just focus
on yourself. If things get messy, leave the front line and assist the queen.”
“O . . . Okay.”
“Eclair. You know
how to handle yourself, so you’ll be fine. Just fight like you did when you
dueled Ren.”
“Understood. But
why do you mention Ren?”
“Old lady. I don’t
have to tell you anything. Just do what you want.”
“Roger!”
I gave everyone
their orders and we started our preparations.
“Here we gooooo!”
Filo took off
running and our battle with the Spirit Tortoise began in earnest.
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