Volume 6 - CH 4
CHAPTER 4Â
IN THE LAND OF DESTINYÂ
So everything was set. After giving my final instructions to Veldora, I waited for an envoy to direct me to the Council site. I didnât know where it was, so Iâd be going along with Ramirisâwho, by the way, also didnât know.Â
I asked why, and she had replied, âBecause someone always comes to take me there!â Which made sense, I suppose, in its own way. The way she always got lost, wherever she went, I guess itâs just a given that she had a guide. If someone doesnât really feel like memorizing a route, they never will, no matter how many times they repeat it.Â
Either way, I figured someone would be teleporting in to guide us, so I decided to wait for that.Â
It was almost an hour before midnight when I was contactedânot by an envoy, but by Benimaru.Â
âWhatâs up? Some kind of problem?âÂ
I was expecting the worst, but Benimaru instead had a request for me. Battle had just begun with the enemy, and we already had a full gauge of their capacity.Â
The gifts Benimaru earned from my awakening had upgraded his class to Oni. This was a type of spiritual life-form, along the lines of the dryadsâBenimaru, in other words, had reached the same lofty heights as Treyni. Shuna, Soei, and Hakuro were all Onis as well, which put them about as high up on that ladder as you can go.Â
This was wonderful, but the issue was the skill Benimaru obtained. The unique skill Born Leader was geared toward granting enhanced control over his powers, as befitting the naturally aggressive Benimaru. No matter how much of it he unleashed, he could keep himself from rampaging out of control. Its secret lay in Compute Prediction, which could fully read the flow of power in his body and prevent bursts of waste.Â
It was also useful in battles between large armies, not just in duels. He could sense the flow of power among his forces, reading his chances for victory like a prophet. If things were looking bad for his side, he could instantly send orders to his forces and change his strategy. It was almost like cheating. In a battlefield, the correct conveyance of information meant everything, and this allowed him to command his full army without a single miscommunication.Â
Right now, the combined forces of thirty thousand were under Benimaruâs command, and he could move them as smoothly and easily as his own limbs. These thirty thousand elites were no also-ran army, thatâs for sure.Â
Whatâs more, the Born Leader skill also came with the Inspire Forces effect, adding bonuses to the forces he led that boosted their power by some 30 percent or more. That meant the entire army was nearly a third stronger. We werenât losing out in troop numbers; we had better-quality fighters⊠We werenât disadvantaged in any way. If we could get that bonus, too, then hell, all the better.Â
And with all of that, Benimaru could see from the start that victory was ours. Once he did, he had a bright idea for a new strategy.Â
(âŠSo thatâs why I wish to attack the main enemy force. Soeiâs ready to go as well, and so I thought that, if Claymanâs castle is indeed beyond that cloud, we might as well lay waste to it, too.)Â
That Benimaru. Brimming with confidence.Â
(Isnât that dangerous? Youâve only barely begun fighting. We donât know how thisâll turn out yetâŠ)Â
(Weâre fine. I am stationed over here. It would be Soei and Hakuro striking the castleâŠ)Â
(Wait, my brother!!)Â
Shuna had interrupted our Thought Communication as she was preparing some tea. Um, this was supposed to be a secure line? She broke in there a little too easily for my tastes.Â
(Er, hello, Shuna. What did you want?)Â
I could hear Benimaruâs voice jump several octaves.Â
(Donât ask me what I want, my brother! The demon lord Clayman is dangerous! He has the power to bend peopleâs minds! If Soei or Hakuro fell victim to thatâŠ)Â
(No, theyâd be perfectly fine againstâ)Â
(You canât!! If you insist on sending them in, then Iâll join them!)Â
Whoa, whoa. Shunaâs usually a lot more chill than this. Whatâs gotten into her?Â
Benimaru and Shuna continued to argue as I sat there in shock. As my friend in my previous life put it, thereâs no way a man can ever win against his younger sister. Benimaru was no longer brimming with confidence at all. The all-out assault from Shuna sent him reeling.Â
The next thing I knew, Shuna was beaming at me. âAll right, Sir Rimuru! Give me your orders to move out!âÂ
Um, how do I respond to thatâŠ?Â
I didnât want to send Shuna anywhere lethal, but she did have a point. No matter how unlikely, Iâd never want Soei to be thought controlled. I wanted to keep them from doing anything dangerous, but taking a castle to rob the enemy of an escape point was a classic strategy. With Clayman gone for the Walpurgis Council, now would be the perfect opportunity.Â
Still⊠I mean, as long as I made sure Clayman didnât get away, weâre good, right? And itâs not like I wanted to kill every single one of the magic-born working for him.Â
(âŠYou have nothing to worry about, Sir Rimuru,) Soei chimed in. (I promise I will keep Lady Shuna safe.)Â
(And with me around,) Hakuro added, (it will be no problem to at least peek into the enemyâs stronghold. They might be holding Lord Carillon there. I feel we need to investigate.)Â
My Thought Communication was getting worryingly busy. Shuna mustâve recruited them both to convince me. It was rare for her to act so selfishly, so I could understand why they wanted her to have her way this time. The fact Carillon was last seen being taken in the direction of Claymanâs castle also intrigued me.Â
âI am terribly angered by all this, Sir Rimuru. It is hard for me to contain my feelings. What Clayman has done is unforgivable!âÂ
Dahh⊠Yeah, I get that. I know Iâm not the only one who felt a little helpless against him, back there. And I can see how Shuna would resent being left waiting around on the home front.Â
(All right. Iâll let Shuna join in. But Soei and Hakuro, I want her safety to be job one for you. And if their HQ has more defenders than you predicted, put safety first and just bring back intelligence for me. Even if you discover Carillon, donât reach out to him unless youâre sure itâs safe. Got it?)Â
(Thank you for accepting her request.)Â
(I will be fine,) Shuna replied. (I can simply teleport out if something happens.)Â
(Indeed.) Hakuro laughed. (If anyone might be taking their sweet time in there, I imagine it would be me.)Â
(All of us have resistances to spirit-based attacks,) pointed out Soei, (so I imagine we will not waste much time. And with Lady Shuna there, there is nothing to be concerned about. If we do discover Lord Carillon, we will think over matters then.)Â
That put my mind at ease a little. Certainly, with Shunaâs unique skill Parser, sheâd be able to identify any attacks aimed for her mindâand with Spatial Motion also in her arsenal, I didnât see that much to worry about. She didnât have that much magical energy to tap, but the skills in her quiver were excellent.Â
Soei was right about Carillon as well. He might not be there at all, so there was no point harping on the issue.Â
(All right. You have my permission, then, but always make sure youâre on top of the situation over there. Just in case, Iâll have you begin operations at midnight, just after the Walpurgis Council begins.)Â
(((Yes sir!)))Â
So now I had a three-member team attempting to infiltrate Claymanâs base of operations.Â
It was just before midnight now, so I decided to take a moment to ask Veldora about the demon lords. âI have no interest in such little gnats,â he began (of course), but he still had a fair amount to say about them allâexcept for Leon, who ascended to the role after he was sealed away.Â
Given his penchant for violent rages across the countryside, Veldora had fought against a demon lord or two in his time. Around two thousand years ago, he attacked and destroyed a city of vampires, which naturally earned him the anger of legions of those creaturesâa chase he apparently loved. One of them, a female vampire, was particularly beautiful (and beautifully dressed) and boasted strength beyond all her peers. When the dust finally settled, her cadre of vampires disappeared from the scene, and Veldora didnât know what had happened to them.Â
âWhat was her nameâŠ? I believe it was Lu, erm, Lurus? Or Milus? Regardless, I never treated her that seriously, but she was a rather challenging plaything for me, so I would be wary around her. She canât take a joke, do you see?âÂ
I think that was more Veldoraâs fault than hers. Anyone would be a little pissed off after their homeland was burned to embers. Of course, that was millennia ago; maybe sheâs mellowed.Â
âOoh,â interjected Ramiris from adjacent to me, âdidja know that guy Valentineâs a demon lord now, too?âÂ
This Valentine had apparently taken over the original oneâs role about 1,500 years ago. I can only hope timeâs healed wounds between these vampires and Veldora.Â
Daggrull, the demon lord giant, was another keen rival of the dragonâs. They had tussled several times, with no clear victor ever being crowned, and if Veldora bothered to remember his name, he mustâve been a pretty mean match. This guy had the powerâor the guts, at leastâto take on a dragon type. Probably a standout among the demon lords. Better watch for him.Â
Our conversation moved on to the topic of demons. Veldora had apparently dispatched several groups of demons in his timeâa practice he found fun, since even if you incinerated them, they always resurrected to an even stronger form over time. A bunch of great playmates for him, really.Â
Not even he had fought the lord of these demons, however. This king held his domain in a castle on the frozen tundra of the northern continent, a place so frigid that he never bothered to make the trip.Â
âIt is far too cold up there! Whatâs the need for me to pay a visit? Kwah-ha-ha-ha-ha!âÂ
That sounded pretty evasive to me, but he refused to give up any more details. No need to think about that now, though. It would be going pretty far out of his way to storm the place.Â
âYes, well, Guy isnât any pushover,â Ramiris observed. âMe, him, and Milim are the oldest demon lords youâll ever find!âÂ
Thatâs doesnât mean much coming from Ramiris. Suddenly Guy sounds like nothing special at all. But ah well. Iâll back-burner this guy.Â
So how many demon lords does that leave remaining? I had already met Milim, Ramiris, and Carillon; we had just discussed Valentine, Daggrull, and Guy. There was Frey, the one who Phobio said had dealt the decisive blow to Carillon. There was Leon to think about, along with my current target, Clayman. So one moreâŠÂ
âMm? I couldnât say.â The allegedly sage Veldora was useless.Â
âOh, you must mean Deeno!â Ramiris cried. âHeâs even more of a goof-off demon lord than I am!âÂ
I suppose he and Ramiris were two peas in a pod, then.Â
âWe are not!âÂ
Iâll just ignore that.Â
So thatâs ten, some of whom had a bone to pick with Veldora. Iâd need to keep that in mind as we discussed matters. Many seemed far more capable of defending themselves than I thought. Using this wimp Ramiris as a baseline could land me in deep troubleâmaybe it was better to assume Milim was par for the course with them. Even after my evolution, I was leery about my chances of beating her in battle. We had sparred a few times, but she wasnât being at all serious about it. I needed more data. In sparring mode, I could totally take her on now, but I couldnât be cocky until I knew what she was more fully capable of.Â
I still couldnât believe that Milim de facto approved of rubbing me out. Thereâs got to be something behind that. Sheâs not the type to backstab her friends or be mind controlled like that, and there was never gonna be any negotiating with her. There had to be some reasonâa reason of her devising, too.Â
âŠWell, no point dwelling on it. Iâll figure it out when I see her.Â
As we talked, I felt a wrinkle in space erupt out of nowhere. Here comes our ride, I thought as this huge, bombastic, ominous-looking gate appeared. Pretty fancy. Me, I usually just kind of ripped a hole in time and space, so maybe I could learn from this. Once I had a concrete image in mind, itâd be easier for me to whip up a gate like this next time and teleport through it.Â
Regardless, the door opened, revealing a green-haired woman in a dark-red maidâs outfit. She bowed her head toward Ramiris. âI have come to take you, Lady Ramiris. And is this your guest? Iâll be happy to guide you together.âÂ
Then she stood by the gate and lowered her eyes, eliminating her presence as much as possible. A well-trained pro at the servant biz, it felt like.Â
But something concerned me. She was exuding just as much overpowering force as Diablo at his best. She was a demon, a high-level one. Regular demons could only climb so high up the latter. No matter how long-lived they were, an Arch Demon was about the most they could hope for. Anything beyond that required a certain triggerâŠwhich, in the case of Diablo, was me naming him. This let him break out of the base demon framework entirely, evolving him from an Arch Demon to a so-called Demon Peer.Â
âHeh-heh-heh-heh-heh. I have no interest in strength,â he had said at the time, âbut now I see there is always something higher to strive for. Perhaps I should try to make more of an effort at this?âÂ
He had âno interestâ in strength, but he had a hell of a lot of interest in fighting. As he put it, he had been too content with himself before, since becoming too strong would squeeze all the fun out of battle. Was he kidding with me? Because if he wasnât, thatâs just scary.Â
And now I had this other Demon Peer here, this maid. Or more like a maiden messenger from the underworld, I suppose. With the kind of anime and manga I consumed way back when, a maid was more a type of battle unit than anythingâand with her being a Demon Peer and all, she was clearly one deadly woman.Â
âOh, hey! Havenât seen you in an age, Mizeri! Howâs Guy doing?âÂ
Ramiris clearly wasnât afraid of her. In some ways, it made her even scarier.Â
ââŠIt is not upon me to worry about the condition of my masterâŠâÂ
âAh. Havenât changed a bit, have you? Well, thatâs fine.âÂ
She fluttered her way into the gate, the rest of us following behind. We had to hurry, or else weâd get shut out. If I wasted any more time here steeling my resolve and wound up missing my ride there, I donât know how Iâd ever explain that to Benimaru and the rest.Â
So this maid Mizeri works for the demon lord Guy? The lord of the demons, and one of the oldest demon lords to boot. If he recruited Demon Peers as doormen, that said a lot about his power. Probably shouldnât try riling him, thenâŠunless the times called for it.Â
But having someone as strong as Mizeri do this kind of low-end work? Talk about arrogance. Here I thought the demon lords were all I had to worry about. So much for that. Maybe I shouldâve taken Diablo along after all, even if he and Shion wouldâve gone out of control with each otherâŠÂ
Well, itâs too late for second-guessing. Time to put up or shut up. The worldâs rulers are waiting for me beyondâbut I didnât feel scared. Thatâs because I was one of them. One of the strongest in the world. If anything, I felt cool as a cucumber as I crossed the door.Â
Benimaru grinned broadly as he surveyed the battle unfolding below him.Â
It was all going according to plan. The enemy had been lured, like clockwork, right into the traps Geld setâwhich could have been predicted, given how lightly they had treated the Tempest side.Â
âSir Rimuru was right,â he said to himself, pitying his foes. âIf theyâve set the table this kindly for us, it would almost be more difficult to lose.âÂ
They could pull this off thanks to the perfect control he had over his armies, but Benimaru didnât think it that impressive of a feat. As he said, they had caught Claymanâs forces comically off guardâthey expected their numbers to overwhelm Tempest, after all. They had pursued the fleet-footed beastman fighters that had posed as refugees, and now they were completely cornered.Â
Alvis flew up to the point in the air Benimaru chose to watch events from. âIt appears to be decided,â she observed, quietly flapping her wings so as not to break Benimaruâs train of thought. âBy this point, I see no way for the enemy to recover itself.âÂ
âAh, Lady Alvis.â He turned his crimson eyes to her. âEnough of that blather. We havenât won anything yet.âÂ
âPlease, Sir Benimaru, Alvis is fineâŠâÂ
âYou are not subordinate to me,â he coldly refused.Â
âNo, perhaps I am not, but we beastmen have given up our command to you for the moment.âÂ
Benimaru nodded his understanding. âVery well. For this battle, at least, I will appoint you as my aide.âÂ
âI appreciate it, Sir Benimaru.âÂ
Nowâin name, at leastâBenimaru had command of this combined force. With the supervisor of all Eurazaniaâs armies officially declaring herself below him, Benimaru was now officially supreme leader of the entire show. There was no defying the supreme leader; in the world of monsters, the strongest called the shots.Â
ââŠBut despite appointing you my aide, Iâm not sure there is much left to do, is there? I am keeping a steady watch on matters, but victory is imminent.âÂ
âI agree with you. However, I do sense the presence of several strong members on their side.âÂ
âTrue,â the unwavering Benimaru replied. âOnce the outcome is set in stone, I will send Geldâs troops their way.âÂ
âHold on,â Sufia interjected. âI want to join in on that!âÂ
âYeah,â Phobio added. âI donât want you hoarding all the action, Commander. This is the land of beastmenâour land. If we leave it all to you, Lord Carillonâll chew us out for it.âÂ
âHeâs right! If youâve left us to ensure everyone is safe, you could at least let us handle this battle.âÂ
âSir Benimaru,â said Alvis, âI leave command of the armies to you. Please allow us to target and defeat the ringleader of the enemy force!âÂ
All three bowed their heads to him. Benimaru greeted this with a clicking of the tongue.Â
âSo thatâs why you made me commander?âÂ
âOh, how do you mean?â Alvis replied, playing dumb.Â
ââŠVery well. I was planning to have you join the fight anyway. However, if you feel you are about to lose, retreat at once. With some of their fighters, arrogance could be your downfall.âÂ
He had a point. Several members of Claymanâs force remained question marks. Depending on who was paired with whom, things could become dicey in the battle ahead.Â
But, Benimaru thought as he boldly smiled to himself, Iâm always here. As long as I can detect when weâre in danger, we will not lose.Â
Each of the Lycanthropeers already had their targeted prey in mind, sharpening their claws and letting their proud animal instincts run wild in pursuit of these loathsome interlopers.Â
The trap would go off in another few minutes.Â
ââŠI wanted to ask you something else,â Alvis said as she waited. âWhat will we do with those caught in our trap?âÂ
âKill them all, is what I would like to sayâŠâ Benimaru thought for a moment. âBut I would like to leave judgment on that to you beastmen.âÂ
âMeaning?âÂ
âTake anyone willing to cooperate with us prisoner. Sir Rimuru is a generous leader, despite appearances. He is not a great proponent of genocide, although heâll gladly carry it out if they take any of our lives.âÂ
ââŠI see. In that case, let us decide how to deal with the prisoners later.âÂ
âCertainly. That is fine. I imagine Sir Rimuru probably pictures them as a potential source of labor.âÂ
ââŠOh?âÂ
âYou are going to rebuild your capital, arenât you?â Benimaru casually asked. âThe more able workers, the better.âÂ
âYouâll do that much for us?!âÂ
Alvis, along with her two cohorts, was shocked. Rimuru not only took victory almost as a given; he already had the script written for what came next.Â
Where does that confidence come from?! Weâre fighting the closest companions to the cunning, deceitful Clayman, and yetâŠÂ
The biggest surprise of all, though, was fighting this on the assumption that theyâd take prisoners. In this world, it was far easier for most people to kill in battle rather than capture. You would never find a commander whoâd care whether a force was partially surrendering before doing them all in with ranged magic. The idea of using prisoners as a labor force had never occurred to anyone before.Â
This shook the Three Lycanthropeers to the core. It meant that the magic-born working under Rimuru never even considered the possibility of defeat. They went into this fight backed by an absolute confidence in their victory.Â
âWell,â Benimaru added with a laugh, âassuming our strategy goes to plan.â It only terrified the beastmen more.Â
And then the battle began.Â
(Everything to plan, Soka.)Â
(Understood, Sir Benimaru.)Â
With that short exchange, the Clayman force experienced its first casualties. They were about a hundred magic-born, led by a named one of some renown, but they all died at once, their magical cores plucked out by Soka when she appeared out of nowhere. The four team members working under him were already busy taking down the other squad captains of Claymanâs army, only striking those targets they were absolutely sure they could defeat. That was Benimaruâs order, and they followed it to the letter.Â
The result: The enemyâs chain of command was pulverized. Orders from above were no longer making it to the foot soldiers.Â
âThis is a trap! The beastmen have surrounded us!âÂ
âThatâs crazy! How could theyâ?âÂ
âRetreat! We have to regroup our forces!âÂ
By the time they noticed, it was too late. Unlike a human army, monsters tended to over-rely on their own strength and bravery; a leader to guide their instincts was indispensable. Without them, Claymanâs army was doomed to fall to pieces.Â
(Geld, you may begin.)Â
(Yes sir!)Â
His orders given, Geld called out the signal.Â
âStart it now!âÂ
âââRahhh!!âââÂ
The next moment, the ground caved in, swallowing up the enemy forces. Tempestians gifted in controlling the earth had unleashed their magic. This natural-looking stretch of land was actually pockmarked with pit traps, an illusion created by their skills.Â
Only monsters with the power of flight could escape, and even those were quickly picked off by avian beastmen and Gabilâs Team Hiryu. The ones who were caught found themselves in a cavernous underground hollow, the soil liquefied beneath. They were unhurt but buried up to their waists, unable to move.Â
These were monsters, of course; some used magic or skills to wriggle out of this mousetrap, falling over their weaker companions to reach solid ground again. But the plan accounted for this, too. It helped thin out the crowd. The stronger ones among the force were killed without any chance to resist; the weaker, seeing this, had their hearts crushed. The survivors would know all too well where they stood strength-wise, likely losing their will to fight. The pit trap was set up entirely to procure pliable prisoners, willing to follow orders.Â
Ten or so minutes after the plan was launched, the battle was already far too one-sided to offer any hope for a turnaround.Â
âThis⊠This many?âÂ
Benimaru had a birdâs-eye view of over ten thousand Clayman soldiers, cut off and plunged into the pitfalls. Geldâs Yellow Numbers were patrolling the edges, surrounding all the holes at regular intervals and taking out the magic-born who managed to claw their way up. The enemy forces were outnumbered, and any unexpected shows of strength were handled with Tempestâs superior numbers and equipment. Even the most powerful magic-born could be taken out by a handful of beastmen or Team Kurenai. Most of Claymanâs force had marched into what appeared be a flat field; the remaining several thousand were holed up in the rear, but they werenât enough to change anything.Â
âWe won,â Benimaru matter-of-factly whispered.Â
âTruly, an amazing show,â marveled Alvis.Â
âHeh. We were bound to win. That was why we couldnât afford to let our guard down. I have my own work to do now. Alvis, Lycanthropeers, you are free to do as you like. Take the heads of the enemy leaders!âÂ
âThatâs what Iâve been waiting for, man! Iâll be back!âÂ
âNow we can finally have some fun! I can smell the bastard who defied me before. Think Iâll go after him first!âÂ
âI suppose I will join them, too. The rest is up to you, Sir Benimaru.âÂ
The commander nodded, face pointed straight ahead.Â
âGo!âÂ
âââYes sir!!âââÂ
With that, the three warriors sprang into action.Â
Sufia tore across the sky, faster than wings could take her. This was Skywalk at work, an Art only a small handful of magical creatures could wield, but Sufia used it like second nature.Â
She was headed for a small group at the very far end of the battlefield, unarmed and looking out of place. They were priests, led by Middray of the Dragon Faithful. She didnât know them, but Sufiaâs animal instincts told her that these were the strongest forces the enemy boasted.Â
As she sped forth, she heard the voice of Gabil, commander of the skies. He, and the hundred members of Team Hiryu, were following her.Â
âGah-ha-ha-ha! Let me give you a hand, Lady Sufia!âÂ
âAh, Gabil.â She smiled a beautiful, heroic smile. âSorry, but you might be left with the short end of the stick here.âÂ
âWah-ha-ha! Not a problem for me. Weâve taken care of most of the aerial forces, and I wouldnât want to take any more work from the flying beastmen. Where are the enemies that lie between us and victory?âÂ
âHa! Victory is ours, yes, but I think we have to put down the people in the back, just in case things go haywire on us.âÂ
âRight. I hear you loud and clear! You get that, men?!âÂ
âUnderstood, General!âÂ
âAs long as you donât screw up, either, General!âÂ
Gabil snarled at his dragonewts. Their exchanges usually went something like this. Sufia chuckled at it a bit before focusing her lethal energies on the target ahead.Â
Middray had set up camp in a safe spot toward the rearâŠalthough it wasnât a âcampâ so much as a completely different location, a medic facility built by the supply team. He hadnât asked for this battle, but being so belittled by the force all this time made him feel too embarrassed to face Milim again.Â
Lady Milim will surely deride me for this, tooâŠÂ
The thought concerned him enough that he demanded to be stationed on the front lines. That request was turned down by Yamza, who certainly didnât do it out of concern for Middrayâs safetyâhe just didnât want anyone else horning in on his upcoming glory.Â
Still, victory was all but guaranteed today. Their force was three times the size of the enemyâs, which was not at all a coherent fighting unit. They were being forced to retreat while guarding a large crowd of refugees, rendering them incapable of any counterattack.Â
Itâs more dishonorable, if anything, to attack an opposing force like thisâŠÂ
Such was the thought in Middrayâs mind in the days leading up to this clash. Things, however, did not quite work out that way.Â
âWe might be in trouble, Father. The battleâs all but lost, isnât it?âÂ
âMm⊠They are weak, Hermes, too weak. I had no idea the demon lord Claymanâs soldiers were this incapableâŠâÂ
âThey arenât, Father! The enemy just had the superior strategy!âÂ
âWhat? Donât be stupid. We should have the power to force our way right through any of their silly tricks! If thatâs the weak excuse you have for this, Iâm disappointed in you, Hermes!âÂ
âLook, if this was just a one-on-one duel, thatâs one matter, but in mass combat like this, the quality of your armyâs command is what decides the day! That, and how well you can catch the enemy unawares. Today, that was the opposing side. They hid their war power until the last moment and even sprang a trap on us.âÂ
âPfft. I can see that much!âÂ
Middray was never one to use his head very much. Hermes had a habit of bringing up all these meddlesome, annoying topics with him, just because he happened to be a little smarter, and he never liked that much. Now, however, even Middray could see that there was nothing he could retort with. The scene presented to him was all the evidence Hermes needed.Â
âBut, Father MiddrayââÂ
âI know. The fighters headed our way⊠Theyâre powerful. As much as I hate to say it, we are standing in the midst of a battlefield. If theyâre coming for us, I say we come for them!âÂ
âSo it goes, does it? Very well, thenâŠâÂ
Hermes reluctantly agreed as Middray next to him began to burn with a desire to fight.Â
Here, in the rear of Claymanâs forces, was fought the most intense and ferocious of the dayâs conflicts.Â
Landing on solid ground, Phobio silently ran forward. Discovering a group hiding in the shadows behind the battlefield, he stopped right in front of them.Â
There stood a man wearing a mask of anger and a girl wearing a mask of tears. This strange duo was Footman, the Angry Jester, and Teare, the Teardrop Jester; both members of the Moderate Jesters and both here observing the battle by Claymanâs request.Â
âHey,â Phobio quietly said, holding back his rage. âI owe you one from last time.âÂ
Footmanâs eyes twinkled ominously beneath his mask. âOh-ho? Well, well, if it isnât Sir Phobio!âÂ
âSir Phobio,â Teare said in a chiding, singsong voice as she traipsed around him. âThe beastman who could never quite become a demon lord! Sir Phobio, the one who lost to Milim! Thank you so much for helping us out then!âÂ
âHeh. Glad you still remember me. Itâd be a shame if I killed you when you had no idea why you deserved it!âÂ
âOoooh? Whatâre you angry about?âÂ
âHow odd. What could this fool be so livid for? Those raging emotions are so delectable, but thereâs no reason for us to die here.âÂ
âOh, not at all, not at all!âÂ
âShut up! Maybe I was a fool for letting you trick me, but a fool like me doesnât need a reason to ask for a little payback from you guys!âÂ
Phobio broke out his sharp claws. Teare and Footman were unmoved.Â
âHmm? You want to go with us? You shouldnât push yourself like that. Youâre too weak for that!âÂ
âHohhh-hoh-hoh-hoh! None of that, Teare. Sir Phobio here is trying to make us laugh with this little joke of his.âÂ
Neither could successfully rile up Phobio. More than anything, he regretted letting his short temper steer him straight to failure in the past. So, once the greetings were over, he quickly stepped forward and instantly closed the gap between them.Â
âNghâŠ!!âÂ
âTch!âÂ
Realizing their mind games had no effect against him, Footman and Teare changed their approach. Things began to move quickly. The air twisted around them, opening a portal through which a man with the head of a wild boar appeared.Â
âLong time no see, Footman. Remember me?âÂ
âHoh? Hmmmmm? Ah, the orc general? My, look at how impressive youâve become!âÂ
Footman attempted to sound playful with the sarcastic taunt, but the expression on his face indicated he was in trouble.Â
Despite appearances, Footman was a coolheaded, calculating typeâa trait Geld was fully aware of. The jester was with the forces that laid waste to the ogre village that Benimaru and the others called home, and Geld knew his powers were difficult to ignore. Footman was on a different level from other magic-born, as far as Geld was concerned.Â
Plus, there was Teare. Footmanâs peer in many ways. The extent of her powers was an unknown, but she wasnât one to be underestimated. Phobio might have been the Black Leopard Fang of the Beast Masterâs Warrior Alliance, but even with his strength, taking on Footman and Teare by himself would spell trouble.Â
The beastman let the rage bubble within. Heh-heh⊠Well done, Sir Benimaru. Not a disagreeable piece of prey at all!Â
The commander, overseeing the battle from the skies, had ordered Geld to assist Phobio. He wondered why at first, seeing as it meant Geld would abandon his command post, but now he saw that Benimaru was right. The rest of the battle had already been decided, to the point that even Geldâs aides could handle it well enough. Only the top leaders among the magic-born under Rimuruâs command could handle two Moderate Jesters like this.Â
âAllow us to assist, Sir Phobio.âÂ
âAh, Geld. Thank you!âÂ
Phobio wasnât turning him down. Even here, he could sense the difference in combat ability between him and this pair. To him, the best path to victory was worth choosing more than his own pride.Â
So began a smaller battle between two duos, in the shadow of a small hill away from the battlefield.Â
The reports Yamza received from this battlefield bewildered him. The overwhelming advantage he thought he had was just an enemy trap all along.Â
He didnât want to consider the thought of defeat. It would obviously enrage Clayman. He had to find a way to turn this around, to snatch victory from the jaws of defeatâbut he doubted he had the man power left to achieve it. He still had enough of his wits to realize that, and now he had to think of other forces he might be able to stir into action.Â
The five fingers, Claymanâs inner circle of associates, was led by the middle finger, Yamza, the strongest magic-born out of them all. Only Adalmann, the pointer finger, and Nine-Head, the thumb, could compare with him.Â
Adalmann, head of the defense forces in Claymanâs castle, began life as a wight, a deathly spirit who resided in the Great Forest of Jura. He was a well-known bishop during his living years, but that meant nothing now. Claymanâs accursed magic had greatly boosted his power as a monster, transforming him into a wight king that ruled over the undead. The holy force he wielded when he was alive had transformed into impure demonic power that he used to curse the living.Â
But despite his vast strength, Adalmann had one weaknessâhis lack of intellect. The only thing he could do was follow his orders to destroy any intruders; thatâs why he wasnât involved in this war.Â
Nine-Head, meanwhile, was a fox spirit, an extreme rarity in her field. She was still young, just three hundred years old, and only three of her tails had grown out. Her magicule energy, however, was already well past Yamzaâs, up to the level of Clayman himself. She was with him now at the Walpurgis Council, serving as his bodyguard, so Yamza couldnât tap her for backup, either.Â
Itâll have to be Adalmann, thenâŠÂ
The problem was how to call him over. Actually, no, it wasnât a problem. It would be simple to have him show up right this instant. Yamza would have to then gather up his surviving troops, flee back into Milimâs domain, meet with him there, and go back on the offensive. Thatâs the best approach, he thought. Walpurgis Councils had lasted upward of a month in the pastâif all went well, he could wrap this whole thing up before Clayman came back. It wouldnât exactly be simple to make Adalmann move, but it wasnât impossible.Â
Either way, if he stood down and accepted defeat right now, it was clear Yamza would be purged. Lord Clayman is a vicious man. He would do away with me in no timeâI am sure of it⊠And even if I were lucky enough to survive, I donât want to turn into a soulless puppet. As much as it vexes me, I must admit defeat hereâbut I will reign victorious in the end!Â
Yamza turned his gaze toward the battlefieldâand there, he witnessed a sight that made him doubt his eyes.Â
In the front was a bewitchingly beautiful woman, her hair a mix of blond and black. She held a golden staff and was boldly racing across the land, as if no one was around her at all.Â
Protecting her was a group of Carillonâs finest, the Beast Masterâs Warrior Alliance. They numbered only a few dozen, but almost no one could defy them in combat, each one bearing the strength of a thousand. There was Zol, an elephant beastman; Talos, a bear beastman⊠They couldnât beat the Three Lycanthropeers, but they were all stout fighters, worthy of serving under the great Beast Master.Â
They were also accompanied by a group in crimson garb, using searing flame spells to burn away the supplemental forces kept in the rear. They meant little to Yamza, but there was no doubting they were ranked above the magic-born around them.Â
Things had suddenly become very bad for him.Â
The unbelievable visitors deepened Yamzaâs gloom.Â
âIt canât be⊠Why are the Three Lycanthropeers here?! Have they abandoned their troops and come to provide reinforcements themselves? But how could thatâŠ?âÂ
He could hear the trusted magic-born around him shouting. Agitation was in the air.Â
âTheyâre pointing their greatest force toward our main army?! What are the lookouts doing?!âÂ
âAllow me to interrupt, sir! We canât make contact with our lookouts. Someone has killed them all!âÂ
âWhat?!âÂ
The enemy was moving so fast, they were completely behind on dealing with them. By the time Yamza noticed that, they were already lethally late. The realization made the blood drain from his head. There would be no regrouping nowâeven escape would be fiendishly difficult.Â
No. No, no, no, no, no!! I may not even be able to escape here with my life!Â
Yamza began to panic. If this was one-on-one, he might be able to deal with that, but he wasnât self-absorbed enough to think he stood a chance against a squadron like this.Â
âBuy me some time! I will return to our homeland and bring Adalmann back here. He can summon the dead to restore our forces!âÂ
It was just a pretext. He already knew all was lost, and he had decided to run away, as fast as possible. Luckily, he had only volunteered his fealty to Clayman, so his behavior was not restricted the way it was with the other four fingers. Following him any farther would be suicide, and that made it easy for Yamza to sever all ties.Â
âYes sir!âÂ
âWe can give you three hours, sir!âÂ
His men each gave him stern, resolved looks that did nothing to move his heart. All he could think about was how stupid they were. The next moment, he chanted a teleportation spell. But something was off.Â
âItâsâŠnot working? Is this aâŠSpatial Blockade?!âÂ
Yes. He was already too late. The moment Yamza and his men saw Alvis, Alvisâs gaze landed on them as well, thanks to the power of her skill Snake Eyes. It was an extra skill, one that applied a large variety of ailmentsâparalysis, poison, insanity, and so forthâand worked on anyone caught in her line of vision. A tremendously useful skill, the only way to escape it was by either successfully resisting it or simply weathering it out.Â
And Alvis had another card up her sleeveâthe unique skill Oppressor. This spatial skill gave her the effects of Mind Accelerate, Spatial Control, and Spatial Motion, letting her impede enemy movement and give her allies superior positioning.Â
A single motion from her was enough to neutralize all the masses surrounding Yamza. The more weakhearted of them were instantly driven mad; the stronger ones were still paralyzed long enough for the poison to kill them off. Some had even been turned to stone. Less than a hundred managed to emerge unscathed. Before they could put up any resistance, the unworthy had been denied even the right to stand before Alvis.Â
Her Spatial Control had snuffed out Yamzaâs magic, having the power to both obstruct spells and fix their spatial coordinates in place to prevent them from affecting the air around the caster at all. No magical escape from this area was possible nowââthis areaâ being the range of Alvisâs vision. The entire battlefield was now in her total control. Such was the power of the Golden Snakehorn.Â
Realizing escape was impossible, Yamza gritted his teeth.Â
He still had a last resort. But it was a forbidden one, one that heâd prefer not to use. Beyond that, the only path to survival involved winning this.Â
ââŠSo be it. Letâs show them what weâve got.âÂ
âAh, Sir Yamza!âÂ
âSir Yamza at his finest could overwhelm even the Three Lycanthropeers!âÂ
âLet me join you, sir! Our fighting will surely please Sir Clayman!âÂ
His men were elated for the fight. Yamza found it boundlessly foolish. The demon lord Clayman sought only two things: victory and profit. He would never accept this performanceâwasteful attrition, followed up by total defeat.Â
The only thing he believes in is pure, unadulterated powerâŠÂ
No matter how faithful Yamza was to him, Clayman never saw him as one of his own. He was just a useful pawn, a talented minion; that was as far as the lordâs affection went. The Ice Blade had been a gift, yes, but it was simply provided in an effort to strengthen him. It was all for Claymanâs sake.Â
Still, Yamza provided him with respect and reverence, and the gifts he received in return helped. They both had a common interest. But Yamza had no intention of offering his life to Clayman.Â
âŠAbout time to head out. I have to survive this and bounce back!Â
This failure would force him to go into hiding for a while. But a Special-A talent like him, a giant among high-level magic-born, would no doubt be picked up by another demon lord before long, he thought.Â
(I like this,) he Thought Communicated to Alvis. (One of the greatest magic-born under the Beast Masterâs command, part of the valorous Three Lycanthropeers. Are you willing to duel with me?)Â
It was a risky bet. He wanted to defeat Alvis, the strongest figure in the group, and crush the enemyâs will to fight. Perhaps that would be enough to change the scriptâand even if it didnât end well, he thought it could give him a chance to escape.Â
(Very well, Sir Yamzaâhead of the five fingers beneath the demon lord Clayman. I will show you how far out of your element you are!)Â
This, Alvis thought, would prove once and for all where Clayman and Lord Carillon stood with each other. She promptly transported herself before him with Spatial Motion, and in an instant, Claymanâs surviving servants swarmed over her.Â
It was not what one would normally call a strategy. Beastmen are mostly simple folk, easily provoked, and this cowardly approach took full advantage of that. If they can exhaust Alvis, even a little bit, thatâll make it easier for Yamza to winâsuch was the reasoning behind this kamikaze strike.Â
âYou think those tricks will work?!â Alvis shouted as she turned up the intensity on her Snake Eyes. To Yamza, though, they had already done more than enough. That single instant, when Alvis used her power, was the exact thing Yamza needed for his assured victory.Â
ââŠGot you!!âÂ
In a flash, he was upon her, slashing his sword at her exposed back. And just before the tip of his blade reached her bodyâÂ
âNuh-uh! Backstabbing someone like thatâs not manly at all!âÂ
Someone had leaped straight out from Alvisâs shadow, babbling to himself as he deflected Yamzaâs sword.Â
âDehh! Whoâre you?!âÂ
âIâm Gobta! We were hiding out just in case this happened!âÂ
As he explained that, more and more figures popped out from the shadow. They were, of course, the Unified, four-legged goblin riders, tapping their physical agility to attack the magic-born that were still moving.Â
âAnd you didnât tell me?â Alvis said. âI was wondering why something didnât feel quite right.âÂ
She had actually noticed them all along. That was why she was unafraid to go plunging in like this.Â
âHeh-heh! Benimaru ordered us to,â Gobta casually replied as he fired off a Case Cannon bolt at Yamza. He could tell the moment he crossed blades with him that this wasnât a battle for him to win. So while the commander was distracted by his short sword, he thought now would be his best chance. Gobtaâs definition of fair and square differed a bit from the normâit was something he asked of his foes but never followed himself.Â
Still, Yamza managed to deflect the blast with his sword.Â
âOut of my way, weakling!âÂ
He pointed the tip of his blade at Gobta and cast a spell, sending an Icicle Lance hurtling his way. Gobta simply used his dagger to fire an Icicle Lance of his ownânot to fire back, but because he had planned for this follow-up strike from the start. It wound up saving Gobtaâs life, as the two magic bolts met in the air and dissipated.Â
âThat⊠That had as much force as this magic sword?! And without casting? Cheeky little weakling, are weâŠ?âÂ
Now Yamza recognized Gobta as his foeâbut Gobta had already pretty well exhausted his arsenal. Uh-oh. I couldnât follow that counter of his at all. That ice just happened to save me, but if he stabs me with that thing, Iâm a goner. Probably oughtta start runninâ, huh?Â
Fortunately, the goblin riders had already made their contribution to this fight. No one would complain if they retreated now. Gobta made up his mind.Â
âAll right, letâs pullââÂ
But just as he began to make the order, Yamzaâs sword sailed right past his nose.Â
âPyah?!âÂ
In another stroke of luck, he had taken a timid step back just in the nick of time. It made Yamza almost lose his nerve. This little sneak made it past my attack three times? Three in a row couldnât be any coincidence, as he saw itâthat supersonic swipe he just made proved that the hobgoblin before him was no also-ran.Â
âHeh-heh-heh⊠Oh, how the Lycanthropeers have fallen! Sneaking their minions into a one-on-one duel!âÂ
The boast, made with wide-open, bloodshot eyes, was part of Yamzaâs strategy. By his estimation, dealing with both a Lycanthropeer and this mystery intruder at once was dangerous.Â
Gobta seized the opportunity. Woo-hoo! That means I donât have to fight this crazy-dangerous magic-born, right?Â
He suppressed his joy just long enough to declare âAll right, Iâll serve as an observer for this duel, then!â Yep. Definitely an observer. With all his tactics exhausted, that beat just standing there and getting in the way. Rimuru could accept defeat, but he could never accept his people getting killed in action. Gobta wasnât stupid enough to volunteer to be war casualty number one for Tempest.Â
âOh, you can have him if you want,â Alvis playfully said.Â
âIf I take your prey,â Gobta wittily replied, âwouldnât that hurt your honor as a beastman, maâam? I donât need it that bad, so go ahead and fight all you want! Sorry I got in the way!âÂ
Alvis accepted the inane excuse without a word. If anything, it was the luckiest thing to happen to Gobta all day. He had dodged a bullet with this total unknown before him. Alvis had no intention of letting anyone else score this kill anyway, and he had wriggled out of a battle against a foe that completely outclassed him.Â
Whew. Thatâs the end of my work!Â
At the very far end of the rear guard, the group of priests led by Middray was clashing with Gabilâs Team Hiryu.Â
Of course, only a few were standing by now. Nearly two hundred fighters on both sides were lying on the ground. But Middray was unhurt, his white robes free of dirt and grime, and it was clear he was still going strong.Â
âWaaah-ha-ha-ha! Not too shabby, you guys. I see you are the descendants of dragons!âÂ
Middray flashed a contented smile, surveying the fallen and pretending the panting and exhausted Sufia in front of him didnât exist.Â
âDonât you ignore me!âÂ
Sufia, half Transformed into her beast form, had used her vastly strengthened physical skills to attack Middray. But the head priest, perhaps sensing this, had simply leaned over to one side, preventing her from landing a lethal blow. The effort had left her wide open.Â
âHyah!âÂ
Taking the clawed arm extended out to him, he tripped up Sufiaâs legs, picked up her body, and sharply slammed her against the ground. The judo-like throw was unique to the Dragon Faithful.Â
âI wasnât ignoring you at all,â Middray happily explained. âI donât have much opportunity to use this against monsters, so this is rather fun for me. Itâs been ages since I had a foe so worthy of that throw.âÂ
This was more than Sufia was willing to bear.Â
âD-dammit! You, you made meâŠâÂ
She was being treated like a plaything, her face red with humiliation. But she had to admit it. Middray, this man standing before her, was more powerful than she ever imagined. Now he was surveying the landscape once again, waiting for her to stand up and ignoring her until that happened.Â
Curse him, heâs treating me like a second-class fighter! And how could my Self-Regeneration fail me like thisâŠ?Â
It was true. Sufiaâs skill was not healing any damage, because her physical body hadnât sustained any wounds. She was exhausted simply because her stamina was tapping out on her, and the force of each slam added to the burden. He was wounding her internally, where the damage wouldnât be visible.Â
But Sufia stood up anyway. As the Snowy Tigerclaw, she could not let this affront continue to stand.Â
âImagine, a bastard like you serving Clayman. I thought Yamza was the best around here, but I suppose my instincts were correct all along.âÂ
âYamza? Ah yes, sir. Yamza. He is rather capable, Iâll admit, but not enough to serve as a playmate for me. I may not look it, but Iâve sparred with Lady Milim on regular occasions, you see.âÂ
âMilim⊠The demon lord Milim?! So youâre the Dragon Faithful?!âÂ
No wonder, Sufia thought. They seemed so different in disposition from the rest of Claymanâs troops. They seemed to enjoy fighting for the sake of fighting, not at all concerned with actually killing their enemies. And compared to the other magic-born, they were all overwhelmingly strongâand enjoying every minute of it.Â
âOoh? Say, that dragonewt just felled Hermes! Wah-ha-ha-ha-ha, that was quite a performance!âÂ
Hermes was tangling with Gabil, and Gabil had just knocked him down with his spear.Â
âF-Father, stop laughing and help me, please!âÂ
âYou lost, fool! Just sit there and think about what you couldâve done better!âÂ
He laughed at his associate, lying there on his back and pleading for assistance. He could tell that Hermes wasnât as bad off as he claimed and that Gabil had no intention of taking his life.Â
âAll right. Counting me, that leaves three remaining. You command a truly wonderful set of fighters, given how evenly we are matched. It proves youâve honed your bodies and your minds, instead of relying on skills.âÂ
âI suppose I should appreciate the compliment. My name is Gabil. And you are with Lady MilimâŠ?âÂ
âIndeed! I am Middray of the Dragon Faithful.âÂ
âAnd I am Sufia. Sufia of the Three Lycanthropeers! I have no ear to lend to the servants of Clayman, but if you worship Lady Milim, that is another story.âÂ
âMm. Lady Sufia, is it? I will make sure to remember that. So whatâll it be now? I could take on the both of you at once, if you like?âÂ
Middray calmly folded his arms, implying that he liked his chances.Â
âCan I ask you a question before that?âÂ
âMm? What is it?âÂ
âI⊠I just mean, how can a mere human be so strong? Or are the Dragon Faithful human at all? Something seems strange about you.âÂ
Middray nodded at this, his curiosity piqued. âWhat do you mean by human?â he asked. âThatâs the crux of it. If you are inquiring about our species, however, the answer is simple. We are dragonewts, like Sir Gabil over there.âÂ
âWhat?! The same as us?âÂ
âYes, precisely. The difference is that instead of evolving from lizardmen, we are the descendants of dragons that âhumanizedâ themselves and mated with the human race. But in essence,â he closed with a smile, âwe are the same.âÂ
âAh⊠And come to think of it, my sister Soka turned wholly human in appearance.âÂ
âYes. But almost none of us can bring ourselves back to our original shape. The priests you see strewn around us donât have any skills like Dragon Change or Dragon Body. There is hardly any difference between them and human beings.âÂ
Middray turned his eyes toward Sufia.Â
âBut that power is still handed down. Our worship of the dragon does not allow us to forget the blood within us. Any more questions, Lady Sufia?âÂ
âNo. Human, monster, it doesnât matter. I just wanted to know if your skills were the result of a weak human building himself up to perfection. You say you are little different from humans, and if so, I must pay respect to your efforts.âÂ
âWah-ha-ha-ha-ha! You think the same way I do. One may be born with strength, or one may acquire it. Magic-born are so weak because they rely too much on the strength theyâve always had. Thatâs why they compare their strengths based on magicule capacity and so on. True strength canât be seen with the eye. The level of your skills is the only solid, trustworthy index there is.âÂ
Sufia was born strong. She had more fighting skill than most monsters, through no special effort of her own. Her massive well of energy, and the surging aura it created, made even magic-born go out of their way to avoid her. Her battle senses made full use of this, and her instincts alone had brought her to where she was. Now, Middrayâs words made her realize how little time she had spent polishing her Arts, her learned skills.Â
âSo you mean I can become stronger?âÂ
âWah-ha-ha-ha-ha! Precisely. There is no such thing as an experience that can win over being in actual battle. Here, come at me! Iâd be happy to spar with you.âÂ
He remained where he stood, arms crossed and standing high.Â
âLady Sufia and me at the same time?â a dubious Gabil asked. âAre you sure you arenât being a little too conceited?âÂ
Middray just grinned at him. âHmph! I could take you on without even using my arms, little man!âÂ
Gabil wasnât about to take that sitting down.Â
âLady SufiaâŠâÂ
âWeâll tackle him together. We have to admit it. Heâs a strong one!âÂ
The battle between Alvis and Yamza was about to reach its raging climax.Â
The two were evenly matched, but Yamza had finally used his ace in the hole.Â
âHa-ha-ha! Well performed, Lycanthropeer! Your ability to keep up with me is astounding. But now, my victory is assured!!âÂ
âWhat?âÂ
âPfft! Did you think this magic sword was my only secret weapon? Yes, you may be strongâstrong enough to hold me back. I will freely admit that. However! What if there were two of me?âÂ
With that shouted question, he unleashed the magic inside the bracelet on his left wrist. This was a Doppelganger Bracelet, an incredibly valuable Artifact capable of producing a perfect copy of the wearer, right down to their clothing and equipment. Now Alvis had to fend off two Yamzas at the same timeâand if one was an even fight for her, she would have to be at a severe disadvantage.Â
âWell? If you capitulate to me now, I could be convinced to spare youââÂ
âSo what?âÂ
ââŠWhat did you say?âÂ
âYou think that parlor trick will outclass me? You really are nothing more than a lackey of Claymanâs. Quite the would-be finisher, there.âÂ
Alvis didnât give an inch, openly ridiculing her foe.Â
âThen die!âÂ
And even before Yamza could scream that at her, Alvis played her own final card.Â
Now the top half of her body was a beautiful woman, the bottom half that of a large, black snake. This was Alvisâs true, Animalized form, and now she was ready to use its full force.Â
Unlike Phobio and Sufia with their focus on close-quarters fighting, Alvis was usually thought to be a long-range specialist, lobbing her magic attacks from afar. In truth, however, she was a dyed-in-the-wool fighter, masterful at short range in the way anyone serving the Beast Master needed to be.Â
Her fighting style, however, ventured from the beaten path. Alvis brought her staff up to her foreheadâand in the next instant, it disappeared, as she grew a golden horn from above her eyes. Finally free, her aura surged outward from her, greatly amplifying her power. This was her second Transformation and her most secret of abilities.Â
She stood there, her entire body protected by dragon scales. The whole space around them belonged to her, her aura producing streaks of lightning in the air.Â
âWha?!â Gobta spat out, sensing danger. There was no way Alvis could remain coolheaded enough to tell friend from foe like that.Â
âYou said your name was Gobta? You have my permission to move out immediately.âÂ
âOhhh, you donât need to tell me twice, maâam! Riders, retreat!âÂ
One shout from him was all it took to make the goblin riders flee the scene. The surviving magic-born took the opportunity to quickly surround Alvis.Â
âYou fool! You intend to take us on alone?âÂ
It was nothing for her to worry about.Â
âIs that how little you think of me? Ah-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha! Die, you mob of idiots!!âÂ
By the time Yamza saw it unfolding, it was already too late. One magic-born before him fell to the ground, spewing blood. One turned to stone and shattered against the earth. One had his body literally rot away on the spot, until nothing but a pile of dust remained. His army was being killed, struck by ailments by one degree or another, and Yamza had no way to stop it.Â
âYoouuuuuu!!âÂ
Alvis was, in the end, best suited for close-quarters combat. The Golden Snakehornâs lone horn on her forehead became a symbol of the death that permeated the atmosphereâand then Yamza realized that his defeat was total.Â
âSurrender, and I will take you prisoner and guarantee you your life.âÂ
Her offer was the only method of survival he had. A quick stare with her Snake Eyes had completely shattered his Doppelgangerâs body. It even had the power to destroy equipment, apparently, leaving Yamzaâs partner to fade away before battle even began.Â
âŠMy limbs are starting to go numb. I wonât be able to defend myself before long⊠What kind of sheer strength do these Lycanthropeers enjoy?!Â
It was bad luck that Yamza had to be paired with the strongest of that trio. He chose the wrong woman to pick a fight with, and he had no idea. Alvis rarely had the chance to fully exercise her power, since she was often picked to serve a commanding role. As a result, she was seen as the de facto manager of the Lycanthropeers, not as a formidable warrior in her own right.Â
That was Yamzaâs appraisal as well, and he had totally underrated her.Â
The war was won. But it was not over. Clayman was a sly demon lord, one who would never forgive betrayal among his own armies. And just when Yamza prepared to nod his agreement to Alvisâs offer:Â
(âYou know I would never permit that, yes?)Â
It was Claymanâs voice, booming within Yamzaâs mind. âUh?â he instinctively grunted. Then his body began moving, beyond his own control.Â
âS-stop! Stop that! Please, Sir Clayman, stop this at once!âÂ
A hand took a bluish-purple orb out from his pocket, then brought it to his mouth.Â
âMmghh!!âÂ
He locked his jaw as tightly as he could, trying to scramble away from it. It was a pointless act of resistance, and it didnât last long. Struck by Claymanâs Marionette takeover, Yamzaâs body was no longer his own to control.Â
ââŠWhat are you doing?â a suspicious Alvis asked. But by the time she did, Yamza was busy swallowing the orb in his handâa section from Charybdisâs body.Â
âHah? Harbhh, nnhhh⊠Graghaghaaaahhh!!âÂ
âWhat onâ?!âÂ
Alvis tensed up, confusedâas long, thin tendrils shot out from his body toward the dead lying around him, taking in the corpses. He ballooned in size, turning into a vast, grotesque ball of flesh. Uncontrollable magical energy flowed within the Alvis-dominated air, forming a hurricane-class blizzard.Â
The creature before her consumed, expanded, and burst. Having no monster core of its own, it was a self-destructing being, rampaging across the land before meeting its demise. But its temporary power was every bit as strong as Yamzaâsâand the nature of it was deadly. Its insatiable desire to eat everything in its path was just the same as well.Â
This was the âforbiddenâ tactic Yamza was reluctant to use, the intricate trap Clayman had laid. Charybdis had now appeared once more.Â
Alvisâs face tightened as she threw her full force into an attack. It didnât work. No regular strike would ever pierce this constantly expanding Charybdis. Its Ultraspeed Regeneration took in the corpses around it, rapidly reforming it into a temporary body for itself.Â
âNgh! This monsterâŠ!âÂ
All Alvis could do was gnash her teeth, her Snake Eyes and lightning having no effect. This monster was disaster-class, on a level far, far above her. Even the strongest of the Three Lycanthropeers could do little about it by herself. The only saving grace was that this was a distance away from the main battlefield; there was time before this could start to affect her allies but only until Charybdis could finish creating its body.Â
Desperation flew in like a violent storm. The worst part was how this monster wasnât satisfied enough using Yamza as its substitute coreâit had taken in his Ice Blade as well, sucking up all the heat around it and making the local temperature plummet. The monster was destroying all in its path, turning its aura into an Ice Blizzard, pummeling the area with icy snow and intense wind. That was scary enough, but what Alvis feared even more was the moment when it released all the heat energy it had taken in.Â
Those who can teleport out might be fine, but everyone elseâŠÂ
âŠwould die.Â
âI hate this! May all the gods curse that bastard Clayman!!âÂ
Letting her true nature take hold, Alvis screamed as she continually attackedâagain and again, no time in between to breathe. It was all in vain. Even if she scarred Charybdisâs exterior, any damage to the monster itself was light. It just healed itself too quickly.Â
âDammit! Iâve just got to get everyone out that I canââÂ
Even through the desperation, Alvis tried to take the best measures she could. To her, this meant trying to relay a plea to Benimaru to retreat everyone from the battlefield.Â
In the end, however, this never happened. It didnât need to.Â
âYouâre ignoring orders, Alvis. I told you to get out if you faced a battle you cannot win.âÂ
There, with no previous warning, Benimaru himself appeared.Â
ââŠSir Benimaru?!âÂ
âOh, Charybdis, eh? My offense did little against it last time, but how about now?âÂ
He gave her a defiant smile.Â
âSir Benimaru, this monster is just tooââÂ
âI know. Itâs perfect for testing my current powers.âÂ
Benimaru raised his right hand and grasped itâboth Charybdis and his own strength. The fight was over in an instant. His feet planted on the ground, his sword, covered in jet-black flames, slashed the monsterâs flesh, although it did not fully slice through its freshly constructed body. But something was different from before. Unlike with Alvisâs efforts, the Self-Regeneration never started. Dark flames were dancing across the gash, rapidly engulfing its entire body.Â
âTch. Not quite there yet. We have no time to play with here, so Iâll sadly have to end this.âÂ
He turned back toward Alvis, leaning his sword against his shoulder, seemingly unconcerned with Charybdis.Â
âMy apologies. I was hoping we could spar once it had achieved its complete form, butâŠâÂ
The gigantic beast had not taken to the air yet, but its body was already nearly the length of half a football field. Now, however, it had been fully encased in a black dome.Â
âAway with you,â he whispered, and then a percussive boom! shook the land.Â
It was Hellflare, his wide-range razing attack, this time far more powerful than ever before.Â
Benimaruâs Dominate Flame gave him a full grasp of the flow of magical energy, stabbing right through Charybdisâs Magic Interference and rendering its body into ash. It proved to the world that Benimaruâs control over magicules completely overpowered this monsterâs.Â
âYouâre kidding me!âÂ
Alvisâs surprise was understandable. If his attacks worked on Charybdis, it meant Benimaruâs magic force surpassed the monsterâs. This meant that Benimaru himself was disaster class, on the same level as Alvisâs master, the demon lord Carillon.Â
âI have some business to take care of, Alvis. Effective immediately, I hereby appoint you as my aide to command our entire force.âÂ
ââŠYes, Sir Benimaru.âÂ
She undid her Transformation to kneel down and take the post. She had more than a few questions for Benimaru, but now was not the time for them. Calming her frenzied mind, she meekly accepted her orders.Â
Charybdis was an unprecedented, unexpected threat, but when faced with that irresistible force, it fell without a momentâs delay.Â
âHoh, hoh-hoh-hoh⊠This is quite a surprise. I was expecting Yamza to turn tail and flee. But imagine, dispatching Charybdis that easilyâŠâÂ
âMm-hmm! I kind of have an affinity for it, but not even we could pull off a kill like that.âÂ
âClaymanâs forces are destroyed. The missionâs a failureâthe losses immense. He should have just sat there and played nice, the way our fellow jester told him to.âÂ
âYes, yes. Well, Laplace warned him. Clayman canât blame anyone for it but himself.âÂ
Footman and Teare exchanged looks as they spoke. Before them was a heavily wounded Phobio, kept on his feet by the attending Geld.Â
âWeâll need to brief him about this, so Iâm afraid playtime is over.âÂ
Footman himself was unhurt. Teare wasnât, but she was still healthy enough to fight. Judging by their injuries, Geld and Phobio appeared to have lost the day.Â
âYou think you can leave?â Phobio groaned, staggering as he tried to keep himself up. âI knew you guys were bad news. If we can keep you here, Alvis and Sufia will show up before long. Plus, weâve got Sir Benimaru. Itâll be the end for you.âÂ
He was scarred from head to toe, but his wounds had already closed up. The speed at which they healed was mind-boggling, going well beyond the Self-Regeneration most beastmen had and almost reaching the realm of Ultraspeed Regeneration. Phobio had inherited that skill to some extent after the previous Charybdis swallowed him up.Â
âJust give it up already, kitty!â Teare shouted as she gave Phobio a punch that sent him reeling. It didnât leave Phobio down for long. In a few moments, he was back on his feet.Â
Teare was the quicker of the two, but she could never quite land a lethal blow. Phobio, on the other hand, was slowly but surely damaging Teareâs body. He might have appeared defeated at first glance, but the longer the fight lasted, the more likely it was that itâd end otherwise.Â
Footman, meanwhile, was rolled up like a meatball, bounding around at hyper-speed and trying to run Geld down. Geld used his great shield to deflect his trajectory, swinging his Meat Cleaver to try to smash him up. His attempts were blocked by Footmanâs thickened skin, preventing him from dealing decisive damage.Â
On offense and defense, it was safe to call them perfectly evenâbut only because Footman hadnât begun seriously fighting yet. And now, with Charybdis defeated, Footmanâs recess time was over.Â
âMgh?!âÂ
Geld, realizing this, positioned himself in front of Phobio.Â
âWhat is it, Geld?âÂ
Before he could answer, Footman began raining attacks on the both of them. These were balls of magic, each one enormous and stuffed with energyâa simple attack but one with enough force to alter the landscape around them. One of the magic orbs was enough to shatter Geldâs shield and even smash up the armor covering his body. It damaged Phobio in the process, and he no doubt had Ultraspeed Regeneration to thank for still being alive.Â
(Hooooooh-hoh-hoh-hoh! We werenât tasked with taking care of you two, so weâll extend you the honor of letting you go.)Â
(I hope youâre grateful! If we were serious about this, neither of you would be in this world any longer!)Â
Neither Geld nor Phobio could stand up any longer to contest them. When the dust from the explosions finally settled, Footman and Teare were gone.Â
ââŠThis was a total defeat,â Geld groused. âI thought I had some strength, but I suppose thereâs always someone better than you.âÂ
âNo, Geld. If you hadnât been here, Iâd probably be dead right now. Sorry to drag you downâŠâÂ
âNot at all. We may have lost the battle, but weâre still alive. As long as we win next time, weâre good.âÂ
âYeah. Yeah, youâre right!âÂ
Phobio was not a weak beastman. Footman and Teare were just too strong. Strong enough that you could even call them demon lords. Perhaps Geld had more magical energy at his fingertips, but without the ability to use it shrewdly, that power meant nothing. Geld focused entirely on defense against Footman, but even he knew that heâd never win in a serious fight opposite him. For now, though, that was fine.Â
(Sir Benimaru, the jesters have fled.)Â
(I saw,) came the Thought Communication reply. (They might think theyâre letting us live. How naĂŻve of them.)Â
Benimaruâs orders for Geld were to discover what the enemy was capable of and keep Phobio safe. I couldnât just sit there and watch things unfold, he thought, but not killing me was a bad mistake. Sir Benimaru has recorded how that battle worked outâand then Rimuru will analyze it and break open the secret to their strength.Â
Thus, this was a defeat with some benefits to them. Mission accomplished. And if he canât win now, he can close the gap with his future training. He had hoped to settle the score with these guys for using and abusing him, but Geld simply didnât have what it took.Â
But next time, Iâm winning, he silently resolved.Â
(Iâll go back to my command, then.)Â
(Please do. Thereâs one more dangerous element on the field right now, so Iâd better tackle that.)Â
Sir Benimaru sure has it tough, Geld thought as he closed the link. This battlefield was full of dangerous elements, and since they had to deal with them all at once, he was forced to divvy up his armyâs assets and scatter them around. Benimaru intended to sort these conflicts by priority and step in himself to handle any rescues needed, but one misstep along the line could lead to serious danger. He seemed to be handling his post well, however. One would think heâd focus on finding and killing Footman first, but he successfully managed to put overall victory above his own vendettas.Â
This isnât some general with a thirst for blood, I suppose. Compared to when we fought him, the growth heâs shown has been amazingâŠÂ
It made Geld trust in Benimaru all the more.Â
It was several minutes into the battleâminutes that, to Gabil and Sufia, felt like hours. But it ended unceremoniously.Â
âMgh?!âÂ
âWhat onâŠ?!âÂ
âHuffâŠhuff⊠WhatâŠwhat is the matterâŠ?âÂ
After the second or third repetition, Sufia had learned how to roll with Middrayâs throws, helping recover her energy. Gabil, meanwhile, had flung his spear wildly around at this attack he wasnât used to, completely exhausting him. Middray, dealing with them both, appeared completely unhindered by fatigueâcompared to sparring with Milim, this wouldnât even make him break a sweat.Â
And Middray was the first to notice it.Â
âAll forces, use your healing magics!â he shouted, the casual ease disappearing from his face. âStand up! Stand up and rouse everyone around here!âÂ
âThis is bad, Father Middray,â Hermes said, apparently feeling much better now. âThis guy⊠The reading Iâm getting is huge.âÂ
âI know that! This is Charybdis, the beast Lady Milim dispatched just the other day. Or is it its remains?âÂ
âYeah⊠It looks unstable to me. I imagine itâll disintegrate before the day is throughâŠâÂ
âBut this is a battlefield. If things go wrong, it could rapidly evolve. Better not to give a monster like that the food it craves.âÂ
The fallen priests around him cast healing spells to revive both themselves and Team Hiryu under Gabilâs command.Â
âCharybdis?â Sufia asked. âThe monster that used Phobio as a core to revive itself with?! I thought Lady Milim had already destroyed it!âÂ
âYes,â Gabil added, realizing this current match was over. âIf it was Charybdis, Lady Milim definitely killed itâŠâÂ
âCalm down. Itâs not the real thing; just a fragment of its force. I think it used Yamza as its replacement coreâŠâÂ
Middray was using Dragonâs Glance to analyze the innards of the creature. It was not as strong as Milimâs own Dragonâs Eye, but it still provided him with ample enough vision and analysis skills.Â
Hermes, meanwhile, was surveying the area for any other potential threats. âLooks like youâre right, sir. That ass Yamza was trying to kill us, but his soulâs already been consumed. With how he is now, weâll just have to keep damage to a minimum and wait for him to fall apart,â he coldly concluded.Â
âDid you hear that? Keep your weapons at the ready, people. And donât get greedy! If buying time is all we need, that wonât be a tall order.âÂ
âLet us help you out,â Gabil added, in sync with Middray as if they were old friends. âWe are more used to high-altitude flight since last time. If we can catch those scale attacks before they strike, they cannot hurt us.âÂ
Even a crazed, twisting beast like Charybdis had a tendency to chase after anything moving. A flying target, Gabil reasoned, would make the perfect lure. Sufia was also thinking unusually lucidly, trying to execute on what she could do here.Â
âRight,â Middray began, âIâll aid in the retreat so it canât feed off any of our ground forces andââÂ
But before he could finish, things took an abrupt turn as Benimaru all but vaporized Charybdis.Â
âWhatâŠonâŠ?! He just pulled off the most unbelievable thing!âÂ
ââŠWho is that guy? A demon lord? Unless youâre Lady Milim, how could some regular magic-born do that? He has to be some kind of monsterâŠâÂ
Only Middray and Hermes had an accurate bead on the situation. Sufia and Gabil saw it at the same time but couldnât parse what just happened. All they could see was that the evil aura of Charybdis had been snuffed in an instant.Â
âHey, whatâs going on? Tell me!âÂ
âYes. We seek an explanation as well.âÂ
âYeah, um, Iâd want to explain,â Hermes said, âbutâŠâÂ
âI donât think we need to,â Middray finished.Â
Before either of them could, the air in front of them twisted and warped, revealing a magic-born with hair as red as roaring flames. It was Benimaru, sword rested on his shoulder, and he was here to take on Middray, the last threat on the battlefield.Â
âWell,â he said with a sneer, âI see youâve been entertaining my friends?â Then he realized something wasnât quite right about this picture. There was evidence of combat around him, but there were no injuriesâand by the looks of things, no hard feelings on either side.Â
âSir Benimaru, wait! These are Lady Milimâs fighters, the priests of the Dragon Faithful!âÂ
âWhat? Lady Milimâs?! In that caseâŠâÂ
âYes! They healed our wounds with magic!âÂ
ââŠI see. It seems Iâve jumped to conclusions. You seemed like such a threat in this theater, I couldnât help but be alarmed.âÂ
âWah-ha-ha-ha-ha! You didnât jump to conclusions at all. We were actually fighting, yes. And we did perform some healing, but that was to prepare for what we thought was an oncoming disaster. Now I suppose all that wasnât necessary.âÂ
ââŠAh. So what now? Are you taking us on?âÂ
âWell, what should we doâŠ?âÂ
âBecause personally speaking, I would prefer not to engage in combat with Lady Milimâs forces.âÂ
âNo, I suppose not. I can understand wanting to try it, but there is no quarrel between us. I would simply want to compare our powers.âÂ
âYes⊠I can see that.âÂ
The two gave each other knowing grins.Â
âWhoooa!â Hermes interjected. âNot good, Father!âÂ
âYes, Sir Benimaru! If you hurt one of the Dragon Faithful, thereâs no telling what kind of calamity that would bring upon us!âÂ
âYou heard her, Father Middray! Sir Rimuru is Lady Milimâs friend. It would all end in tragedy, I am sure of it!âÂ
Sufia silently resented Hermes and Gabil for stepping in.Â
âFair enough,â Benimaru said. âBesides, if I donât come at him trying to kill him, I expect itâll result in nothing but defeat for meâand I donât like engaging in losing battles.âÂ
âWah-ha-ha-ha-ha! Quite so. And Iâm not sure even I could withstand a blow like the one that buried Charybdis!âÂ
Middray might have laughed the concept off, but he had a suspicion that he could win the battle before Benimaru had a chance to bust that out. That would result in a life-and-death duel, however, going well beyond the boundaries of a friendly sparring session. A battlefield was the wrong place for this, and it no longer meant anything anyway.Â
Thus ended the battle in the former kingdom of Orbic, while the unified forces enjoyed a near-total victory. But this wasnât the only battlefield.Â
At the stroke of midnight, Shuna, Soei, and Hakuro sprang into action. They quickly discovered Claymanâs headquarters within the wetlands covered by the mysterious mist and began to stealthily make their way there.Â
Beyond these wetlands were several murky swamps, gas bubbling out from the surface. This was what created the cloud of mist, making things seem eerier than they already were. The moment they waded in, visibility plummeted to nearly nothing.Â
âUh-oh. This mist is blocking our Magic Sense.âÂ
âIt is,â confirmed Soei. âThat was why we called off our investigation. With this poor visibility, anyone inside would have to rely on their own five senses to âseeâ around them. Thatâs what the enemy must use to keep track of what goes on in here.âÂ
âMm, I see. So we face a brutal disadvantage.âÂ
âIndeed, Sir Hakuro. You and I can use Covert Agent to hide our presences, but Lady ShunaâŠâÂ
âI should be fine.âÂ
It was true. Hakuro could use his Haze concealing skill to all but disappear to the external observer, as could Soei. You could be standing right next to them and never realize it. Shuna, despite not having this exact Art, could still perfectly heal herself.Â
âHmm⊠A combination of illusory and mystical magic? It doesnât work like Haze, but it has the same effect. Well done, Lady Shuna.âÂ
Hakuro was rightâthis approach was Shunaâs original creation. While she wasnât quite as gifted at it as Rimuru, her Creator unique skill allowed her to conjure up her own magic spells without a recipe.Â
âThen we should be fine,â Soei said. âBut I want you all to remember that Thought Communication wonât work in this fog. Visibility is low, it is hard to stay in contact, and we all need to proceed carefully and cautiously. AlsoâŠâÂ
Even with Soeiâs Replications, Thought Communicationâbased conversation would be impossible. Instead, he provided a length of Sticky Steel Thread around each of their wrists for emergency contacts. Focusing on this thread would allow them to maintain at least a modicum of communication, but if the string broke, that would be the end of the contact. Using it required a great deal of caution.Â
Shuna and Hakuro nodded and wrapped it around their wrists. They were ready now. âLetâs get going,â Shuna said, and the three ran off.Â
Then, after several minutes of walking, Shuna stopped.Â
ââŠOh no,â she whispered. âWe seem to have fallen into a trap.âÂ
âA trap?âÂ
âI can feel my senses going haywire on me, yes, but I donât feel any enemies around theâ What?!âÂ
Before he could finish speaking, Soei felt multiple presences nearby appear from out of nowhere, virtually surrounding them.Â
âHow onâŠ? Where were so many of these enemies hiding, such that we couldnât notice them?âÂ
âNo, Hakuro! They werenât hiding. We were lured right to them!âÂ
âAh⊠This fog. The cloudâs doing more than confusing our sense of direction. Itâs concealing the enemy and inviting us right to the middle of their circleâŠâÂ
âI see. That explains the odd feeling I had just now.âÂ
âYouâre right. The mist is triggering Spatial Interference to lure intruders from any direction to a specific placeââÂ
Before Shuna finished explaining this, one of the presences appeared. Soei and Hakuro steeled themselves toward it, keeping a watchful eye out for the still-unseen monsters in the mist, as Shuna closed her mouth and focused on itâa skeleton dressed in a vestment of pure white.Â
âSuch massive magical force,â she whispered, beads of sweat on her forehead. For a moment, she thought it might have been Clayman himself, although she banished the thought quickly. It was past midnight; the demon lord should be over at the Walpurgis Council. Perhaps it was one of Claymanâs five fingers, thenâbut the figure before them exuded pure presence, beyond that of the Lycanthropeers and approaching demon lord level. The power of this magic-born was overwhelming; it was a wonder that it was subservient to anyone else.Â
She recalled what Mjurran told her about Claymanâs most senior leadersâand that one of them was geared strictly toward defending their base.Â
ââŠYou must be Adalmann, then. The ruler of this landâthe wight king with power over countless undeadâŠâÂ
Hakuro had just used Heavengaze to reach the same conclusion. But this figure was more ominous than how Mjurran described it, its force far more massive. The guardian of this wetland was a wight king on the level of a demon lord.Â
Soei accepted Shuna and Hakuroâs appraisal, finding no reason to doubt it. Then, quietly, he sharpened his bladelike mind. No matter who the enemy is, he will kill himâthat was his credo.Â
But just as Soei was about to move, the wight king spoke.Â
âIndeed, I am Adalmann. I have been ordered to protect this land by the great demon lord Clayman. Lowly intruders like you may do nothing but humbly submit your lives to me. Do it, and I will kill you without pain.âÂ
This was the command of a kingly figure, not the words of a foe who saw Shuna and her companions as equals. Considering the massive, overwhelming amount of Adalmannâs magic energy, anything else would almost seem improper.Â
Now, all around the area, a legion of over ten thousand undead were writhing, as if attracted to the seemingly inexhaustible supply of magicules. Cracking, wrenching sounds filled the air as they moved to encircle the trio.Â
âWe are fully surrounded,â Shuna breathlessly reported. âThis mist is working alongside a directional barrier to prevent teleportation outside. All our means of communication are blocked. The only way to get out of here is to defeat this Adalmann foe.âÂ
âThen we must strike their leader at once.âÂ
âNo disagreement here. A blow from me can even kill the dead.âÂ
Hakuro and Soei had no interest in following Adalmannâs advice. As Shuna explained the situation, they both went on the attack. But Adalmann simply laughed in their faces.Â
âHeh-heh-heh⊠You appear not to know your place. I generously provided you mercy, and yet, you remain foolish to the end. You will regret refusing that offer shortly.âÂ
He breezily swung an arm. The next moment, the most surprising thing happenedâthe white blade of Hakuro, instantly zooming within range of Adalmann, was blocked by the knight who had appeared in front of him.Â
Hakuro stepped back in shock, failing to believe that this killer blow could be parried. This was a death knight, ranked A-minus in the Guild system, but from that clash, Hakuro could sense something was off. It was a powerful monster, yes, but no garden-variety death knight could ever block a slash from him.Â
âYou are no normal adversary. Very well. Let me give you my full attention.âÂ
He had an accurate bead on this death knight and the threat it carried for him. Its strength relied not on physical toughness but on the built-up level of its skillsâwhich meant Heavengaze would tell him nothing about it. So he used his own physical might to confront it.Â
ââŠâŠâÂ
The death knight was silent; the corpse serving as the shell of its body was incapable of speech. But there was a blistering blue flame in its sunken eyes. The light of consciousness was in there, the pride of a former human being, and it told Hakuro that his challenge was accepted.Â
Even after abandoning life, this death knight was a proud, noble warrior. The difference in magical energy between the two was negligible, as was their physical muscle. It marked the beginning of a clash between built-up skills, one that quickly made sparks fly.Â
Before Soei, meanwhile, was Adalmann himself, an enormous shadow from out of nowhere blocking all attempts to attack him.Â
âDeh!â Soei glared at the towering shade. âNo⊠A dragon zombie?âÂ
âNo, Soei!â Shuna could see it more fully, through the muck. âNothing that weak! Its magicules outnumber yours; it stands at the peak of the undeadâitâs a death dragon!âÂ
Soeiâs face tensed upon hearing this. He could manage this solo, but fighting this foe while guarding Shuna was a different story. The usually reliable Hakuro was too busy with the death knight. He had to dispatch this death dragon as soon as possible, or else Shuna would be overrun by the thousands of undead lumbering their way in from all sides. Now, Soei realized, was no time to hold back.Â
âThen, die! Mystic Thread Strike!âÂ
Without delay, Soei dealt out the most powerful attack he could, a killer move that fricasseed the enemy with thousands of branching strings of Sticky Steel Thread, each granted the Insta-Kill effect from his Shadow Striker unique skill. They created a virtual garden of beautiful, bloody blooms, like a kaleidoscope. Even a half-spiritual life-form like an undead would be snuffed out by this spiritual body-slicing moveâor so it should have.Â
âNo! Itâs regenerating?!âÂ
Soei could feel himself begin to sweat. The sixty-foot-long beastâs body was ripped apart, seemingly ending the battle. But then, as if nothing was amiss, the death dragonâs body reassembled itself. It went so fast, even faster than Ultraspeed Regeneration, that it seemed like nothing less than immortality.Â
âThen let me destroy you, soul and allâŠâÂ
âSoei,â Shuna shouted out as he steeled himself, âcalm down! You know how to analyze your foeâs strengths. You should know that you canât beat a death dragon!âÂ
âButâŠâÂ
âThat dragonâs soul is within the magic-born Adalmann,â she quietly declared. âDonât worry about me; just work on keeping that dragon where it is. Iâll defeat Adalmann!âÂ
âThatâs too dangerous!âÂ
âNo, Soei. Listen to me. Iâm angry.âÂ
A cold smile stretched across Shunaâs face to dispel Soeiâs worries. They shined a piercing light, exhibiting her raging emotions. The sight made Soei clam up, unable to speak.Â
As the former princess of the ogre tribe, Shunaâs words had the power to make others do her biddingâand now, that power was stronger than even the otherworlder Kirara Mizutaniâs Bewilder unique skill. Besides, Shuna wasnât some precious cargo that required constant protection. Soei knew that. So there was only one answer.Â
âYes, Lady Shuna. Best of luck.âÂ
She contentedly smiled. âYou too, Soei. That dragonâs all yours.âÂ
Soei nodded back, giving Shuna his full trust, then threw himself back into his own fight.Â
Shuna, left alone, didnât waver at all as she confronted Adalmann. The wight king rewarded this by glaring at her.Â
âHoh? And what do you intend to do, little girl? What could you do without anyone to defend you? How are you going to engage ten thousand foes at once?âÂ
There was an odd sort of joy in Adalmannâs voice. He was enjoying this, in fact. The demon lord Claymanâs orders were absolute, but Adalmann was still afforded his own sense of free will, although his activities were limited in every other way. The only thing he was allowed full rein to do was wipe out intruders.Â
Claymanâs other minions derided him for having so much power but so little brains to back that upâand it was only because he was not allowed to leave this land or do anything on his own volition. And it was perhaps the way that he wasnât even allowed to provide excuses to them that made people fail to realize it.Â
Adalmann was less a magic-born and more a weapon, a base-defense mechanism bound to this land. His soul remained unbound, but his behavior was now automatic, following the orders input into him. He spoke of his loyalty to Clayman, but that was just an act. He had been preset to pay his formal respects to the owner of this device.Â
In his heart of hearts, Adalmann wanted to be released from these bonds. That was why he enjoyed talking with Shuna. The defense mechanisms worked automatically; he had no authority to alter them in any way. The chats he had with intruders were his only hobby to speak of, the only thing no one else could interfere with. The demon lord Kazalim, creator of this structure, offered him that much mercy. Or maybe not. But Adalmann wanted to think so. That gesture, after all, was what had allowed him to live all this time, a thousand years or so, without succumbing to insanity.Â
Even if it was just a measure to keep this system running longer, I have to thank him for that, at least.Â
And he meant it. That was why he never spared any effort to hammer down intruders, regardless of what he thought about it. But at least he prayed, as he imagined an army of ten thousand undead preying upon Shuna, that it could be done painlessly.Â
But then her voice rang out sharply once more.Â
âNo need to worry about me. Alignment Field!!âÂ
At that instant, the area within a three-hundred-foot radius of Shuna became holy ground, where nothing of evil alignment could tread. It was another original product of Shunaâs mind, using her experience to Analyze the Anti-Magic Area and Holy Field, then Fuse them together. This barrier obstructed all magicules, but it could also be set to block fire, wind, or any one of the other four major elements, making it a shockingly formidable defensive spell.Â
âNow we wonât be distracted. If I defeat you, that will destroy the defense system with you at its core, right?âÂ
ââŠHmm. Impressive. And youâve seen through my secret as well. What is your name, girl?âÂ
Shuna was absolutely right. If Adalmann died, the whole base-defense system would crumble. It was structured to bind Adalmannâs soul down, using it to circulate the large amounts of magicules it required. That would no doubt free the death dragon serving himâas well as the death knight, Alberto, who was once Adalmannâs friend and confidant. Shuna had seen all that at a glance, and Adalmann offered her his honest respect for that. Respect and the ever-so-slight hope that she might be able to release him from this pain.Â
âMy name is Shuna.âÂ
âShuna⊠Lady Shuna. Then let us settle this for good. If you can defeat me, I will follow your wishes.âÂ
âMy, thank you for the polite request. However, all I seek is the destruction of the demon lord Clayman. If you stay out of my way, I could leave you alone to live on this land, perhaps?âÂ
âHeh-heh-heh. Iâm not sure thatâs possible, Iâm afraid.âÂ
âNo? I thought you might be capable of conquering the ties that bind you, but perhaps I was wrong. Oh, well. In that case,â she said without a momentâs hesitation, âI will kill you as I intended to.âÂ
If I could conquer them, thought Adalmann, I would have done it eons ago. Kazalim is a man to be feared, a foe no one can hold a candle to. The nickname Curse Lord is not just bravado. And she makes it all sound so easyâŠÂ
âThen the time for talk is over,â he declared, still having no ill will toward her. âTry to resist me with everything youâve got!âÂ
âŠâŠâŠÂ
âŠâŠÂ
âŠÂ
Adalmann was born a prince in one of the small nations under the jurisdiction of the Holy Empire of Lubelius. These lands were all too weak to have their own standing militaries, instead relying on the Temple Knights sent from the Churchâs central headquarters. In exchange, they were required to adopt Luminism as the state religion and provide money and qualified personnel for their knight corps.Â
The Western Holy Church of the time didnât enjoy the influence they wielded now; this was before the advent of their Crusader groups. Practitioners who showed talent could be granted the name of âacolyte,â a nonhereditary title, but that was it. In the midst of that, Adalmann was an exceptional performerâand with his elder brother taking over the country and quickly giving birth to an heir, he was free to devote himself deeply to spreading the faith, joining the Churchâs missionary corps and quickly making a name for himself.Â
He was devout to the faith, constantly fascinated by the divine works of Luminus. Never once did he doubt the existence of this lone, true, powerful goddess. That devotion eventually led him to learn the âdivine miraclesâ of the Churchâs archbishop class, making him the greatest master of holy magic in his era.Â
In time, he advanced to the rank of cardinal, the loftiest in the Western Holy Church. In the Lubelius noble hierarchy, he was no one particularly special. But he redoubled his efforts, extending his interests to magic beyond the holy spells he was familiar with. He would hold long discussions about magic with Gadora, one of his best friends at the time, as he incessantly polished his skills. The effort eventually paid offâhe became an Enlightened, transcending the bounds of humanity itself.Â
An Enlightened was a person who retained their human form but on the inside was a demi-spiritual being, similar to a higher-level elemental. Their powers were leaps and bounds above those of a regular human, and they were often seen as defenders of the human cause. This power quickly put Adalmann in a position of immense central authority.Â
Time passed. Adalmannâs intensive study continued. And eventually, he took the next step forward, to the highest peak of mankindâa Sage. As he did, he was greeted with wondrous news: He would be called to the Inner Cloister, at the top of the Churchâs holy mountain.Â
The offer filled him with joy.Â
Finally, an audience with Luminus herself!Â
He always believed that Luminus was real, an unwavering belief that served as the source for all his faith. So he promptly set off for the holy mount, not believing for a moment that it would lead to tragedy. That belief, sadly, would ultimately betray him.Â
âŠâŠâŠÂ
âŠâŠÂ
âŠÂ
The intense magical battle continued.Â
âMelt all and wear it awayâAcid Shell!âÂ
The aspectual spell Adalmann had just cast conjured balls of liquid in the air, each capable of melting flesh to the bone. They rained down upon Shuna.Â
She didnât miss a beat.Â
âFlame Wall.âÂ
The barrier of fire deflected and vaporized all the magic-infused droplets. Between accelerating her mind to a thousand times normal, possessing superior Analyze and Assess skills, and changing the rules with Cast Cancel and Control Laws, Shunaâs unique skill Parser was made for a clash of magic like this. From the moment Adalmann began constructing a spell, she had a way to deal with it.Â
âThen how about this? Malicious dead, accept this sacrificeâCurse Bind!!âÂ
This was necromancy, an offshoot of elemental magic that took advantage of the negative energies from ghouls and the undead. Curse Bind was a particularly nasty one, summoning zombies that latched on to anything livingâhuman or magic-bornâand drained away their life energy.Â
Even that wasnât enough.Â
âHoly Bell.âÂ
Shunaâs refreshingly clear voice reached Adalmannâs ears, and right after came the tolling of bells he was once well used to hearing. That was all it took to send the grudgeful zombies to the afterlife.Â
ââŠIt canât be! Why? Why is a monster wielding elemental magic?!âÂ
Adalmannâs eyes shot open at the divine miracle playing out before him. The magic was deployed all too beautifully, reminding him of his youthful days spent studying.Â
This was holy magic in the air, something a monster girl should never be able to weave. The unbelievable sight made him scream without thinking.Â
Shuna smiled as she decided to answer Adalmannâs question, even though she had no obligation to. âDo you find it strange? Perhaps you need a little more imagination. Holy magic is not the exclusive domain of humans; it will work with anyone who believes in the power of miracles, based on the strength of their belief.âÂ
Conventional wisdom in this world stated that holy magic worked by forging a pact with an elemental spirit. This was both right and wrong. The fact that magic-born could cast healing spells indicated that âholyâ magic was possible for them without any pact with a holy being. Most humans, and even monsters, didnât understand that.Â
The sole condition for acquiring holy magic was having faithâbelieving in miracles, to put it another way. Good, or evil, didnât factor into it; the strength of oneâs emotions was directly converted into power. That was how this family of magic worked. (This was also the reason why the Dragon Faithful that worshipped Milim could access holy magic.)Â
Hearing this terse explanation was staggering to Adalmann. IâI was wrong the whole time? I was betrayed. I lost my faith in the goddess Luminus. I thought I would never be able to wield holy magic againâŠÂ
Luminus betrayed Adalmannâor to be precise, he had been trapped by the supreme leaders of Luminism. He still didnât know why. Perhaps they feared his rise in power; perhaps it was another reason. All he knew was that Luminus, his goddess, offered him no helping hand.Â
Itâs almost comical, in a way. The Seven Days Clergy tricked me into setting off to quell a large army of undead attacking our people⊠I never couldâve guessed it was a trap. And thanks to that Gadora conducting magical experiments on me, Iâve been revived as this twisted, reviled figureâŠÂ
Unaware that he was being led to his grave, he waltzed right into the far edge of the Great Forest of Jura, where he still dwelled today. He was awaited by a legion of undead, led by a dragon zombie. He was accompanied by Alberto, acolyte and his closest friend, along with four knights and an expeditionary force that loved him, and they fought with all their might. It wasnât enough.Â
Adalmann fell to the groundâand died once. But then Reincarnation, a Mysterious Art placed upon him by his other friend Gadora, activated and resurrected his soulâa soul that had already been poisoned by the miasma across the land, the malice of the dead around him. He was reborn not as a man but as a wight, transformed into a skeleton. The metamorphosis had caught the attention of the demon lord Kazalim, and now here he was today.Â
âThus, if you are incapable of handling holy magic, then I am positive you are incapable of beating me.âÂ
Shunaâs words hit home like a knockout punch, reminding Adalmann that he was still in battle. âWh-why?â he instinctively asked. âWhy did you think I was a master of holy magic?âÂ
âBecause of how you look,â came the cold reply. âThat white vestment, which only high-level bishops and above are permitted to wear. You were worthy of such fine robes, and yet, you whine and carry on about being unable to conquer such a basic bind like this. I hardly needed to examine you closely to see that you wore that robe simply out of blind attachment to your former holy magic.âÂ
She had him pegged the entire time. He could hear it in her voice.Â
âNnnhh⊠I have let you spout far too much nonsense!!âÂ
Adalmann flew into a rageânot at Shuna but at himself. Seeing his true heart now, something he couldnât notice until it was pointed out to him, made him both exasperated and enraged at his own spinelessness. But he could also feel an inexplicably refreshing comfort in his heart, like the fog of a thousand years had finally lifted from him. He let his raging emotions drive him to cast another spell.Â
âI offer this prayer to my god. I seek your divine powers. May my request reach your ears safelyââÂ
Yes. I simply lacked the resolve. Having my beloved friends turn into undead, I couldnât let myself die and leave them behind⊠I wasnât good enough. Necromancy and aspectual magic cannot cleanse the undead. Who could say how many times I wished I could tap into holy magicâŠÂ
Those âfriendsâ were one reason why Adalmann was bound to this area. He couldnât abandon the fine men and women who died here but lived on as accursed zombies. And that intent was the bond that tied them to this land. Finally, just now, Adalmann realized the mistake he had made.Â
So he connected together a complex seal with the bones that were his hands and boldly declared his prayer to the lands above. It was an incantation, as shown by the complicated geometrical shapes that appeared in the air before him.Â
This girl, Shuna⊠I have no grudge against her. If anything, I owe her a great debt for opening my eyes. But suicide is forbidden to me. I apologize, but I will need to have you join meâÂ
That apology came from the heart.Â
The checks placed upon him by Kazalim ranged far and wide, holding Adalmann downâbut if he was caught up in the fallout from an attack on the enemy, that was hardly his fault. He planned to destroy himself, taking Shuna along him, for only then could he free the people who unwittingly joined him.Â
A layered circle of magic spread out, covering Shuna and Adalmann.Â
ââand render all to dust! Disintegration!!âÂ
âI was waiting for that! Overdrive!!âÂ
Just before Adalmann could complete his spell, Shuna used Parser for a Control Laws rewrite. The results wrested control of the local spiritual elements away from Adalmann, driving them haywire.Â
âWh-whatâŠ? You have less than a tenth of my magical energy! How could you possibly overwrite my magic?!âÂ
Magicules and spiritual particles were controlled by magical force. Having his magic overwritten could only mean that Adalmannâs force was overpowered by Shunaâs. To him, Shuna looked hopelessly outclassed, but now, at long last, Adalmann realized he was wrong on that score as well.Â
âImpressive. Let me reward you by releasing you from this land!âÂ
The wight was swallowed up by a flood of light, unable to hear Shunaâs words to the end. She had used magic on him, realizing that someone like Adalmannâat least her equal in terms of holy magicâcould collect the energy required to purify the local area. She wasnât expecting him to break out the most powerful of all holy spells, but luckily for her, she knew how that one worked. That was what made it so easy to overwrite.Â
The light now permeated the land, enveloping not just Adalmann but all the other undeadâcleansing them.Â
Hakuro and Soei ran up to Shuna.Â
âI tell you, I wanted to end this sooner, but that death knight was far more capable than I estimated. You saved my life there, Lady Shuna.âÂ
With the land fully cleansed, the death knight reverted all the way down to a lowly skeletal fighter and fell to the ground. Following Adalmannâs will, it had lost any further desire to fight. The sight was enough to make Hakuro realize the battle was over. He regretted losing such a challenging opponent, but protecting Shuna took priority over everything else, and she required his attention right now.Â
âNo, Hakuro, you were a great help to me. You too, Soei, distracting that death dragonâs attention and buying me so much time. If it had fallen out of our control, I doubt we could have won.âÂ
âIt shames me that I could not defeat it.âÂ
As Soei implied, the death dragon was a powerful foe, capable of healing light damage instantly and boasting an aura that infected the mind of anyone who touched it. It took someone like him, capable of controlling multiple Replications at once, to emerge from that unscathed. If anything, he deserved praise for holding out so long against a foe that shut down his decisive weapon.Â
The death dragon, too, vanished upon Adalmannâs defeat, unable to maintain its existence after the magicule supply that powered it was shut off. Soei didnât much like how it ended, but anything you can walk away from is a victory.Â
A victory, yes, but one with regrets. The three looked at one another and sighed.Â
âStill,â muttered Shuna, âif Adalmann had engaged me seriously from the beginning, none of us would be alive, would we? I think I let my anger drive me to be a little too reckless.âÂ
Adalmann never let up on her at all during the fight, but he also never attempted anything underhanded to snare her. If he really intended to kill them all, he couldâve done so in many other ways. Shuna could see that, and it filled her with regret.Â
âQuite true,â Hakuro commented. âPerhaps our new strengths have made us grow a tad conceited.âÂ
âCertainly. It is just as Sir Rimuru fretted about. There is no telling what may happen in battle. I should have gathered more intelligence.âÂ
In the end, however, a win was a win. Claymanâs domain had lost its main line of defense. But that didnât end things. The trio had a job to doâseize Claymanâs castle and fully neutralize the threat inside.Â
Noncombatants comprised the majority of the people remaining in the castle, none of whom signed any oath of loyalty to Clayman. The more quick-witted among them, or those who took the employment simply for moneyâs sake, surrendered without a hint of resistance. There were also many who were restrained in the castle by mental or spiritual bonds, but a combination of persuasion and magical de-cursing on Shunaâs part allowed them to capture the entire castle in short order.Â
With the occupants neutralized, it was time to start searching. They had already confirmed that the demon lord Carillon wasnât being held here, but they wanted to seek out anything they might be able to use against Clayman.Â
As they did, a figure approached them.Â
ââŠPlease, one moment.âÂ
âMm? Youâre still alive? Did you need me to finish you off?âÂ
âWait, Hakuro. He has no will to fight left.âÂ
It was Adalmann, and Shuna had to calmly keep Hakuro from drawing his sword. The wight fell to his knees, accompanied by a single skeletal fighter.Â
âPlease, allow me to call you Lady Shuna. Thanks to your magic, all of us have been released from the bonds that tied us here. Perhaps it was fate that kept us alive without being cleansed. I have a request that I hope you will let me propose.âÂ
ââŠWhat is that?â a quizzical Shuna asked, fearing this would be yet more trouble for them.Â
âThank you for hearing me out. I was hoping I would be able to meet the figure that you have devoted your faith to, Lady Shuna. When I lost my faith, I also lost the chance to ever reach the heights of my power ever again. My faith in my goddess Luminus is deadâand I need to find a new god for myself.âÂ
ââââŠâŠâââ The three each gave Adalmann incredulous looks.Â
âI⊠Well, we have a great respect for Sir Rimuru, yes, but we donât worship him,â Shuna stammered in reply.Â
âSir Rimuru, you say?â Adalmann was unfazed, still eager to sell himself. âTruly a wonderful name, one fully worthy of describing the glories of my new god. We may merely be a pair of fragile undead, but I believe we may be able to offer you assistance. Lady Shuna, would it be possible to arrange an audience with this Sir Rimuru?âÂ
Shuna wanted to remind Adalmann of the difference between blindly, unconditionally worshipping someone and treating them with respect while dealing with your problems by yourself. But she didnât. It seemed like too much to get into. Instead, she conjured up a mental image of Rimuru, the boingy slime she knew.Â
Well, why not? Once he sees Sir Rimuru in the flesh, that might be enough to make him give up.Â
Adalmann seemed to be the type who got the wrong impression of people easily. It would take time to persuade him to think otherwise, so Shuna figured itâd be expeditious for everyone involved if she just nodded and said yes.Â
Once the dust settled, Shuna was in command of Adalmann and the several thousand undead that âsurvivedâ the battle (or whatever it was that undead did). Claymanâs castle was now fully conquered.
IN THE LAND OF DESTINYÂ
So everything was set. After giving my final instructions to Veldora, I waited for an envoy to direct me to the Council site. I didnât know where it was, so Iâd be going along with Ramirisâwho, by the way, also didnât know.Â
I asked why, and she had replied, âBecause someone always comes to take me there!â Which made sense, I suppose, in its own way. The way she always got lost, wherever she went, I guess itâs just a given that she had a guide. If someone doesnât really feel like memorizing a route, they never will, no matter how many times they repeat it.Â
Either way, I figured someone would be teleporting in to guide us, so I decided to wait for that.Â
It was almost an hour before midnight when I was contactedânot by an envoy, but by Benimaru.Â
âWhatâs up? Some kind of problem?âÂ
I was expecting the worst, but Benimaru instead had a request for me. Battle had just begun with the enemy, and we already had a full gauge of their capacity.Â
The gifts Benimaru earned from my awakening had upgraded his class to Oni. This was a type of spiritual life-form, along the lines of the dryadsâBenimaru, in other words, had reached the same lofty heights as Treyni. Shuna, Soei, and Hakuro were all Onis as well, which put them about as high up on that ladder as you can go.Â
This was wonderful, but the issue was the skill Benimaru obtained. The unique skill Born Leader was geared toward granting enhanced control over his powers, as befitting the naturally aggressive Benimaru. No matter how much of it he unleashed, he could keep himself from rampaging out of control. Its secret lay in Compute Prediction, which could fully read the flow of power in his body and prevent bursts of waste.Â
It was also useful in battles between large armies, not just in duels. He could sense the flow of power among his forces, reading his chances for victory like a prophet. If things were looking bad for his side, he could instantly send orders to his forces and change his strategy. It was almost like cheating. In a battlefield, the correct conveyance of information meant everything, and this allowed him to command his full army without a single miscommunication.Â
Right now, the combined forces of thirty thousand were under Benimaruâs command, and he could move them as smoothly and easily as his own limbs. These thirty thousand elites were no also-ran army, thatâs for sure.Â
Whatâs more, the Born Leader skill also came with the Inspire Forces effect, adding bonuses to the forces he led that boosted their power by some 30 percent or more. That meant the entire army was nearly a third stronger. We werenât losing out in troop numbers; we had better-quality fighters⊠We werenât disadvantaged in any way. If we could get that bonus, too, then hell, all the better.Â
And with all of that, Benimaru could see from the start that victory was ours. Once he did, he had a bright idea for a new strategy.Â
(âŠSo thatâs why I wish to attack the main enemy force. Soeiâs ready to go as well, and so I thought that, if Claymanâs castle is indeed beyond that cloud, we might as well lay waste to it, too.)Â
That Benimaru. Brimming with confidence.Â
(Isnât that dangerous? Youâve only barely begun fighting. We donât know how thisâll turn out yetâŠ)Â
(Weâre fine. I am stationed over here. It would be Soei and Hakuro striking the castleâŠ)Â
(Wait, my brother!!)Â
Shuna had interrupted our Thought Communication as she was preparing some tea. Um, this was supposed to be a secure line? She broke in there a little too easily for my tastes.Â
(Er, hello, Shuna. What did you want?)Â
I could hear Benimaruâs voice jump several octaves.Â
(Donât ask me what I want, my brother! The demon lord Clayman is dangerous! He has the power to bend peopleâs minds! If Soei or Hakuro fell victim to thatâŠ)Â
(No, theyâd be perfectly fine againstâ)Â
(You canât!! If you insist on sending them in, then Iâll join them!)Â
Whoa, whoa. Shunaâs usually a lot more chill than this. Whatâs gotten into her?Â
Benimaru and Shuna continued to argue as I sat there in shock. As my friend in my previous life put it, thereâs no way a man can ever win against his younger sister. Benimaru was no longer brimming with confidence at all. The all-out assault from Shuna sent him reeling.Â
The next thing I knew, Shuna was beaming at me. âAll right, Sir Rimuru! Give me your orders to move out!âÂ
Um, how do I respond to thatâŠ?Â
I didnât want to send Shuna anywhere lethal, but she did have a point. No matter how unlikely, Iâd never want Soei to be thought controlled. I wanted to keep them from doing anything dangerous, but taking a castle to rob the enemy of an escape point was a classic strategy. With Clayman gone for the Walpurgis Council, now would be the perfect opportunity.Â
Still⊠I mean, as long as I made sure Clayman didnât get away, weâre good, right? And itâs not like I wanted to kill every single one of the magic-born working for him.Â
(âŠYou have nothing to worry about, Sir Rimuru,) Soei chimed in. (I promise I will keep Lady Shuna safe.)Â
(And with me around,) Hakuro added, (it will be no problem to at least peek into the enemyâs stronghold. They might be holding Lord Carillon there. I feel we need to investigate.)Â
My Thought Communication was getting worryingly busy. Shuna mustâve recruited them both to convince me. It was rare for her to act so selfishly, so I could understand why they wanted her to have her way this time. The fact Carillon was last seen being taken in the direction of Claymanâs castle also intrigued me.Â
âI am terribly angered by all this, Sir Rimuru. It is hard for me to contain my feelings. What Clayman has done is unforgivable!âÂ
Dahh⊠Yeah, I get that. I know Iâm not the only one who felt a little helpless against him, back there. And I can see how Shuna would resent being left waiting around on the home front.Â
(All right. Iâll let Shuna join in. But Soei and Hakuro, I want her safety to be job one for you. And if their HQ has more defenders than you predicted, put safety first and just bring back intelligence for me. Even if you discover Carillon, donât reach out to him unless youâre sure itâs safe. Got it?)Â
(Thank you for accepting her request.)Â
(I will be fine,) Shuna replied. (I can simply teleport out if something happens.)Â
(Indeed.) Hakuro laughed. (If anyone might be taking their sweet time in there, I imagine it would be me.)Â
(All of us have resistances to spirit-based attacks,) pointed out Soei, (so I imagine we will not waste much time. And with Lady Shuna there, there is nothing to be concerned about. If we do discover Lord Carillon, we will think over matters then.)Â
That put my mind at ease a little. Certainly, with Shunaâs unique skill Parser, sheâd be able to identify any attacks aimed for her mindâand with Spatial Motion also in her arsenal, I didnât see that much to worry about. She didnât have that much magical energy to tap, but the skills in her quiver were excellent.Â
Soei was right about Carillon as well. He might not be there at all, so there was no point harping on the issue.Â
(All right. You have my permission, then, but always make sure youâre on top of the situation over there. Just in case, Iâll have you begin operations at midnight, just after the Walpurgis Council begins.)Â
(((Yes sir!)))Â
So now I had a three-member team attempting to infiltrate Claymanâs base of operations.Â
It was just before midnight now, so I decided to take a moment to ask Veldora about the demon lords. âI have no interest in such little gnats,â he began (of course), but he still had a fair amount to say about them allâexcept for Leon, who ascended to the role after he was sealed away.Â
Given his penchant for violent rages across the countryside, Veldora had fought against a demon lord or two in his time. Around two thousand years ago, he attacked and destroyed a city of vampires, which naturally earned him the anger of legions of those creaturesâa chase he apparently loved. One of them, a female vampire, was particularly beautiful (and beautifully dressed) and boasted strength beyond all her peers. When the dust finally settled, her cadre of vampires disappeared from the scene, and Veldora didnât know what had happened to them.Â
âWhat was her nameâŠ? I believe it was Lu, erm, Lurus? Or Milus? Regardless, I never treated her that seriously, but she was a rather challenging plaything for me, so I would be wary around her. She canât take a joke, do you see?âÂ
I think that was more Veldoraâs fault than hers. Anyone would be a little pissed off after their homeland was burned to embers. Of course, that was millennia ago; maybe sheâs mellowed.Â
âOoh,â interjected Ramiris from adjacent to me, âdidja know that guy Valentineâs a demon lord now, too?âÂ
This Valentine had apparently taken over the original oneâs role about 1,500 years ago. I can only hope timeâs healed wounds between these vampires and Veldora.Â
Daggrull, the demon lord giant, was another keen rival of the dragonâs. They had tussled several times, with no clear victor ever being crowned, and if Veldora bothered to remember his name, he mustâve been a pretty mean match. This guy had the powerâor the guts, at leastâto take on a dragon type. Probably a standout among the demon lords. Better watch for him.Â
Our conversation moved on to the topic of demons. Veldora had apparently dispatched several groups of demons in his timeâa practice he found fun, since even if you incinerated them, they always resurrected to an even stronger form over time. A bunch of great playmates for him, really.Â
Not even he had fought the lord of these demons, however. This king held his domain in a castle on the frozen tundra of the northern continent, a place so frigid that he never bothered to make the trip.Â
âIt is far too cold up there! Whatâs the need for me to pay a visit? Kwah-ha-ha-ha-ha!âÂ
That sounded pretty evasive to me, but he refused to give up any more details. No need to think about that now, though. It would be going pretty far out of his way to storm the place.Â
âYes, well, Guy isnât any pushover,â Ramiris observed. âMe, him, and Milim are the oldest demon lords youâll ever find!âÂ
Thatâs doesnât mean much coming from Ramiris. Suddenly Guy sounds like nothing special at all. But ah well. Iâll back-burner this guy.Â
So how many demon lords does that leave remaining? I had already met Milim, Ramiris, and Carillon; we had just discussed Valentine, Daggrull, and Guy. There was Frey, the one who Phobio said had dealt the decisive blow to Carillon. There was Leon to think about, along with my current target, Clayman. So one moreâŠÂ
âMm? I couldnât say.â The allegedly sage Veldora was useless.Â
âOh, you must mean Deeno!â Ramiris cried. âHeâs even more of a goof-off demon lord than I am!âÂ
I suppose he and Ramiris were two peas in a pod, then.Â
âWe are not!âÂ
Iâll just ignore that.Â
So thatâs ten, some of whom had a bone to pick with Veldora. Iâd need to keep that in mind as we discussed matters. Many seemed far more capable of defending themselves than I thought. Using this wimp Ramiris as a baseline could land me in deep troubleâmaybe it was better to assume Milim was par for the course with them. Even after my evolution, I was leery about my chances of beating her in battle. We had sparred a few times, but she wasnât being at all serious about it. I needed more data. In sparring mode, I could totally take her on now, but I couldnât be cocky until I knew what she was more fully capable of.Â
I still couldnât believe that Milim de facto approved of rubbing me out. Thereâs got to be something behind that. Sheâs not the type to backstab her friends or be mind controlled like that, and there was never gonna be any negotiating with her. There had to be some reasonâa reason of her devising, too.Â
âŠWell, no point dwelling on it. Iâll figure it out when I see her.Â
As we talked, I felt a wrinkle in space erupt out of nowhere. Here comes our ride, I thought as this huge, bombastic, ominous-looking gate appeared. Pretty fancy. Me, I usually just kind of ripped a hole in time and space, so maybe I could learn from this. Once I had a concrete image in mind, itâd be easier for me to whip up a gate like this next time and teleport through it.Â
Regardless, the door opened, revealing a green-haired woman in a dark-red maidâs outfit. She bowed her head toward Ramiris. âI have come to take you, Lady Ramiris. And is this your guest? Iâll be happy to guide you together.âÂ
Then she stood by the gate and lowered her eyes, eliminating her presence as much as possible. A well-trained pro at the servant biz, it felt like.Â
But something concerned me. She was exuding just as much overpowering force as Diablo at his best. She was a demon, a high-level one. Regular demons could only climb so high up the latter. No matter how long-lived they were, an Arch Demon was about the most they could hope for. Anything beyond that required a certain triggerâŠwhich, in the case of Diablo, was me naming him. This let him break out of the base demon framework entirely, evolving him from an Arch Demon to a so-called Demon Peer.Â
âHeh-heh-heh-heh-heh. I have no interest in strength,â he had said at the time, âbut now I see there is always something higher to strive for. Perhaps I should try to make more of an effort at this?âÂ
He had âno interestâ in strength, but he had a hell of a lot of interest in fighting. As he put it, he had been too content with himself before, since becoming too strong would squeeze all the fun out of battle. Was he kidding with me? Because if he wasnât, thatâs just scary.Â
And now I had this other Demon Peer here, this maid. Or more like a maiden messenger from the underworld, I suppose. With the kind of anime and manga I consumed way back when, a maid was more a type of battle unit than anythingâand with her being a Demon Peer and all, she was clearly one deadly woman.Â
âOh, hey! Havenât seen you in an age, Mizeri! Howâs Guy doing?âÂ
Ramiris clearly wasnât afraid of her. In some ways, it made her even scarier.Â
ââŠIt is not upon me to worry about the condition of my masterâŠâÂ
âAh. Havenât changed a bit, have you? Well, thatâs fine.âÂ
She fluttered her way into the gate, the rest of us following behind. We had to hurry, or else weâd get shut out. If I wasted any more time here steeling my resolve and wound up missing my ride there, I donât know how Iâd ever explain that to Benimaru and the rest.Â
So this maid Mizeri works for the demon lord Guy? The lord of the demons, and one of the oldest demon lords to boot. If he recruited Demon Peers as doormen, that said a lot about his power. Probably shouldnât try riling him, thenâŠunless the times called for it.Â
But having someone as strong as Mizeri do this kind of low-end work? Talk about arrogance. Here I thought the demon lords were all I had to worry about. So much for that. Maybe I shouldâve taken Diablo along after all, even if he and Shion wouldâve gone out of control with each otherâŠÂ
Well, itâs too late for second-guessing. Time to put up or shut up. The worldâs rulers are waiting for me beyondâbut I didnât feel scared. Thatâs because I was one of them. One of the strongest in the world. If anything, I felt cool as a cucumber as I crossed the door.Â
Benimaru grinned broadly as he surveyed the battle unfolding below him.Â
It was all going according to plan. The enemy had been lured, like clockwork, right into the traps Geld setâwhich could have been predicted, given how lightly they had treated the Tempest side.Â
âSir Rimuru was right,â he said to himself, pitying his foes. âIf theyâve set the table this kindly for us, it would almost be more difficult to lose.âÂ
They could pull this off thanks to the perfect control he had over his armies, but Benimaru didnât think it that impressive of a feat. As he said, they had caught Claymanâs forces comically off guardâthey expected their numbers to overwhelm Tempest, after all. They had pursued the fleet-footed beastman fighters that had posed as refugees, and now they were completely cornered.Â
Alvis flew up to the point in the air Benimaru chose to watch events from. âIt appears to be decided,â she observed, quietly flapping her wings so as not to break Benimaruâs train of thought. âBy this point, I see no way for the enemy to recover itself.âÂ
âAh, Lady Alvis.â He turned his crimson eyes to her. âEnough of that blather. We havenât won anything yet.âÂ
âPlease, Sir Benimaru, Alvis is fineâŠâÂ
âYou are not subordinate to me,â he coldly refused.Â
âNo, perhaps I am not, but we beastmen have given up our command to you for the moment.âÂ
Benimaru nodded his understanding. âVery well. For this battle, at least, I will appoint you as my aide.âÂ
âI appreciate it, Sir Benimaru.âÂ
Nowâin name, at leastâBenimaru had command of this combined force. With the supervisor of all Eurazaniaâs armies officially declaring herself below him, Benimaru was now officially supreme leader of the entire show. There was no defying the supreme leader; in the world of monsters, the strongest called the shots.Â
ââŠBut despite appointing you my aide, Iâm not sure there is much left to do, is there? I am keeping a steady watch on matters, but victory is imminent.âÂ
âI agree with you. However, I do sense the presence of several strong members on their side.âÂ
âTrue,â the unwavering Benimaru replied. âOnce the outcome is set in stone, I will send Geldâs troops their way.âÂ
âHold on,â Sufia interjected. âI want to join in on that!âÂ
âYeah,â Phobio added. âI donât want you hoarding all the action, Commander. This is the land of beastmenâour land. If we leave it all to you, Lord Carillonâll chew us out for it.âÂ
âHeâs right! If youâve left us to ensure everyone is safe, you could at least let us handle this battle.âÂ
âSir Benimaru,â said Alvis, âI leave command of the armies to you. Please allow us to target and defeat the ringleader of the enemy force!âÂ
All three bowed their heads to him. Benimaru greeted this with a clicking of the tongue.Â
âSo thatâs why you made me commander?âÂ
âOh, how do you mean?â Alvis replied, playing dumb.Â
ââŠVery well. I was planning to have you join the fight anyway. However, if you feel you are about to lose, retreat at once. With some of their fighters, arrogance could be your downfall.âÂ
He had a point. Several members of Claymanâs force remained question marks. Depending on who was paired with whom, things could become dicey in the battle ahead.Â
But, Benimaru thought as he boldly smiled to himself, Iâm always here. As long as I can detect when weâre in danger, we will not lose.Â
Each of the Lycanthropeers already had their targeted prey in mind, sharpening their claws and letting their proud animal instincts run wild in pursuit of these loathsome interlopers.Â
The trap would go off in another few minutes.Â
ââŠI wanted to ask you something else,â Alvis said as she waited. âWhat will we do with those caught in our trap?âÂ
âKill them all, is what I would like to sayâŠâ Benimaru thought for a moment. âBut I would like to leave judgment on that to you beastmen.âÂ
âMeaning?âÂ
âTake anyone willing to cooperate with us prisoner. Sir Rimuru is a generous leader, despite appearances. He is not a great proponent of genocide, although heâll gladly carry it out if they take any of our lives.âÂ
ââŠI see. In that case, let us decide how to deal with the prisoners later.âÂ
âCertainly. That is fine. I imagine Sir Rimuru probably pictures them as a potential source of labor.âÂ
ââŠOh?âÂ
âYou are going to rebuild your capital, arenât you?â Benimaru casually asked. âThe more able workers, the better.âÂ
âYouâll do that much for us?!âÂ
Alvis, along with her two cohorts, was shocked. Rimuru not only took victory almost as a given; he already had the script written for what came next.Â
Where does that confidence come from?! Weâre fighting the closest companions to the cunning, deceitful Clayman, and yetâŠÂ
The biggest surprise of all, though, was fighting this on the assumption that theyâd take prisoners. In this world, it was far easier for most people to kill in battle rather than capture. You would never find a commander whoâd care whether a force was partially surrendering before doing them all in with ranged magic. The idea of using prisoners as a labor force had never occurred to anyone before.Â
This shook the Three Lycanthropeers to the core. It meant that the magic-born working under Rimuru never even considered the possibility of defeat. They went into this fight backed by an absolute confidence in their victory.Â
âWell,â Benimaru added with a laugh, âassuming our strategy goes to plan.â It only terrified the beastmen more.Â
And then the battle began.Â
(Everything to plan, Soka.)Â
(Understood, Sir Benimaru.)Â
With that short exchange, the Clayman force experienced its first casualties. They were about a hundred magic-born, led by a named one of some renown, but they all died at once, their magical cores plucked out by Soka when she appeared out of nowhere. The four team members working under him were already busy taking down the other squad captains of Claymanâs army, only striking those targets they were absolutely sure they could defeat. That was Benimaruâs order, and they followed it to the letter.Â
The result: The enemyâs chain of command was pulverized. Orders from above were no longer making it to the foot soldiers.Â
âThis is a trap! The beastmen have surrounded us!âÂ
âThatâs crazy! How could theyâ?âÂ
âRetreat! We have to regroup our forces!âÂ
By the time they noticed, it was too late. Unlike a human army, monsters tended to over-rely on their own strength and bravery; a leader to guide their instincts was indispensable. Without them, Claymanâs army was doomed to fall to pieces.Â
(Geld, you may begin.)Â
(Yes sir!)Â
His orders given, Geld called out the signal.Â
âStart it now!âÂ
âââRahhh!!âââÂ
The next moment, the ground caved in, swallowing up the enemy forces. Tempestians gifted in controlling the earth had unleashed their magic. This natural-looking stretch of land was actually pockmarked with pit traps, an illusion created by their skills.Â
Only monsters with the power of flight could escape, and even those were quickly picked off by avian beastmen and Gabilâs Team Hiryu. The ones who were caught found themselves in a cavernous underground hollow, the soil liquefied beneath. They were unhurt but buried up to their waists, unable to move.Â
These were monsters, of course; some used magic or skills to wriggle out of this mousetrap, falling over their weaker companions to reach solid ground again. But the plan accounted for this, too. It helped thin out the crowd. The stronger ones among the force were killed without any chance to resist; the weaker, seeing this, had their hearts crushed. The survivors would know all too well where they stood strength-wise, likely losing their will to fight. The pit trap was set up entirely to procure pliable prisoners, willing to follow orders.Â
Ten or so minutes after the plan was launched, the battle was already far too one-sided to offer any hope for a turnaround.Â
âThis⊠This many?âÂ
Benimaru had a birdâs-eye view of over ten thousand Clayman soldiers, cut off and plunged into the pitfalls. Geldâs Yellow Numbers were patrolling the edges, surrounding all the holes at regular intervals and taking out the magic-born who managed to claw their way up. The enemy forces were outnumbered, and any unexpected shows of strength were handled with Tempestâs superior numbers and equipment. Even the most powerful magic-born could be taken out by a handful of beastmen or Team Kurenai. Most of Claymanâs force had marched into what appeared be a flat field; the remaining several thousand were holed up in the rear, but they werenât enough to change anything.Â
âWe won,â Benimaru matter-of-factly whispered.Â
âTruly, an amazing show,â marveled Alvis.Â
âHeh. We were bound to win. That was why we couldnât afford to let our guard down. I have my own work to do now. Alvis, Lycanthropeers, you are free to do as you like. Take the heads of the enemy leaders!âÂ
âThatâs what Iâve been waiting for, man! Iâll be back!âÂ
âNow we can finally have some fun! I can smell the bastard who defied me before. Think Iâll go after him first!âÂ
âI suppose I will join them, too. The rest is up to you, Sir Benimaru.âÂ
The commander nodded, face pointed straight ahead.Â
âGo!âÂ
âââYes sir!!âââÂ
With that, the three warriors sprang into action.Â
Sufia tore across the sky, faster than wings could take her. This was Skywalk at work, an Art only a small handful of magical creatures could wield, but Sufia used it like second nature.Â
She was headed for a small group at the very far end of the battlefield, unarmed and looking out of place. They were priests, led by Middray of the Dragon Faithful. She didnât know them, but Sufiaâs animal instincts told her that these were the strongest forces the enemy boasted.Â
As she sped forth, she heard the voice of Gabil, commander of the skies. He, and the hundred members of Team Hiryu, were following her.Â
âGah-ha-ha-ha! Let me give you a hand, Lady Sufia!âÂ
âAh, Gabil.â She smiled a beautiful, heroic smile. âSorry, but you might be left with the short end of the stick here.âÂ
âWah-ha-ha! Not a problem for me. Weâve taken care of most of the aerial forces, and I wouldnât want to take any more work from the flying beastmen. Where are the enemies that lie between us and victory?âÂ
âHa! Victory is ours, yes, but I think we have to put down the people in the back, just in case things go haywire on us.âÂ
âRight. I hear you loud and clear! You get that, men?!âÂ
âUnderstood, General!âÂ
âAs long as you donât screw up, either, General!âÂ
Gabil snarled at his dragonewts. Their exchanges usually went something like this. Sufia chuckled at it a bit before focusing her lethal energies on the target ahead.Â
Middray had set up camp in a safe spot toward the rearâŠalthough it wasnât a âcampâ so much as a completely different location, a medic facility built by the supply team. He hadnât asked for this battle, but being so belittled by the force all this time made him feel too embarrassed to face Milim again.Â
Lady Milim will surely deride me for this, tooâŠÂ
The thought concerned him enough that he demanded to be stationed on the front lines. That request was turned down by Yamza, who certainly didnât do it out of concern for Middrayâs safetyâhe just didnât want anyone else horning in on his upcoming glory.Â
Still, victory was all but guaranteed today. Their force was three times the size of the enemyâs, which was not at all a coherent fighting unit. They were being forced to retreat while guarding a large crowd of refugees, rendering them incapable of any counterattack.Â
Itâs more dishonorable, if anything, to attack an opposing force like thisâŠÂ
Such was the thought in Middrayâs mind in the days leading up to this clash. Things, however, did not quite work out that way.Â
âWe might be in trouble, Father. The battleâs all but lost, isnât it?âÂ
âMm⊠They are weak, Hermes, too weak. I had no idea the demon lord Claymanâs soldiers were this incapableâŠâÂ
âThey arenât, Father! The enemy just had the superior strategy!âÂ
âWhat? Donât be stupid. We should have the power to force our way right through any of their silly tricks! If thatâs the weak excuse you have for this, Iâm disappointed in you, Hermes!âÂ
âLook, if this was just a one-on-one duel, thatâs one matter, but in mass combat like this, the quality of your armyâs command is what decides the day! That, and how well you can catch the enemy unawares. Today, that was the opposing side. They hid their war power until the last moment and even sprang a trap on us.âÂ
âPfft. I can see that much!âÂ
Middray was never one to use his head very much. Hermes had a habit of bringing up all these meddlesome, annoying topics with him, just because he happened to be a little smarter, and he never liked that much. Now, however, even Middray could see that there was nothing he could retort with. The scene presented to him was all the evidence Hermes needed.Â
âBut, Father MiddrayââÂ
âI know. The fighters headed our way⊠Theyâre powerful. As much as I hate to say it, we are standing in the midst of a battlefield. If theyâre coming for us, I say we come for them!âÂ
âSo it goes, does it? Very well, thenâŠâÂ
Hermes reluctantly agreed as Middray next to him began to burn with a desire to fight.Â
Here, in the rear of Claymanâs forces, was fought the most intense and ferocious of the dayâs conflicts.Â
Landing on solid ground, Phobio silently ran forward. Discovering a group hiding in the shadows behind the battlefield, he stopped right in front of them.Â
There stood a man wearing a mask of anger and a girl wearing a mask of tears. This strange duo was Footman, the Angry Jester, and Teare, the Teardrop Jester; both members of the Moderate Jesters and both here observing the battle by Claymanâs request.Â
âHey,â Phobio quietly said, holding back his rage. âI owe you one from last time.âÂ
Footmanâs eyes twinkled ominously beneath his mask. âOh-ho? Well, well, if it isnât Sir Phobio!âÂ
âSir Phobio,â Teare said in a chiding, singsong voice as she traipsed around him. âThe beastman who could never quite become a demon lord! Sir Phobio, the one who lost to Milim! Thank you so much for helping us out then!âÂ
âHeh. Glad you still remember me. Itâd be a shame if I killed you when you had no idea why you deserved it!âÂ
âOoooh? Whatâre you angry about?âÂ
âHow odd. What could this fool be so livid for? Those raging emotions are so delectable, but thereâs no reason for us to die here.âÂ
âOh, not at all, not at all!âÂ
âShut up! Maybe I was a fool for letting you trick me, but a fool like me doesnât need a reason to ask for a little payback from you guys!âÂ
Phobio broke out his sharp claws. Teare and Footman were unmoved.Â
âHmm? You want to go with us? You shouldnât push yourself like that. Youâre too weak for that!âÂ
âHohhh-hoh-hoh-hoh! None of that, Teare. Sir Phobio here is trying to make us laugh with this little joke of his.âÂ
Neither could successfully rile up Phobio. More than anything, he regretted letting his short temper steer him straight to failure in the past. So, once the greetings were over, he quickly stepped forward and instantly closed the gap between them.Â
âNghâŠ!!âÂ
âTch!âÂ
Realizing their mind games had no effect against him, Footman and Teare changed their approach. Things began to move quickly. The air twisted around them, opening a portal through which a man with the head of a wild boar appeared.Â
âLong time no see, Footman. Remember me?âÂ
âHoh? Hmmmmm? Ah, the orc general? My, look at how impressive youâve become!âÂ
Footman attempted to sound playful with the sarcastic taunt, but the expression on his face indicated he was in trouble.Â
Despite appearances, Footman was a coolheaded, calculating typeâa trait Geld was fully aware of. The jester was with the forces that laid waste to the ogre village that Benimaru and the others called home, and Geld knew his powers were difficult to ignore. Footman was on a different level from other magic-born, as far as Geld was concerned.Â
Plus, there was Teare. Footmanâs peer in many ways. The extent of her powers was an unknown, but she wasnât one to be underestimated. Phobio might have been the Black Leopard Fang of the Beast Masterâs Warrior Alliance, but even with his strength, taking on Footman and Teare by himself would spell trouble.Â
The beastman let the rage bubble within. Heh-heh⊠Well done, Sir Benimaru. Not a disagreeable piece of prey at all!Â
The commander, overseeing the battle from the skies, had ordered Geld to assist Phobio. He wondered why at first, seeing as it meant Geld would abandon his command post, but now he saw that Benimaru was right. The rest of the battle had already been decided, to the point that even Geldâs aides could handle it well enough. Only the top leaders among the magic-born under Rimuruâs command could handle two Moderate Jesters like this.Â
âAllow us to assist, Sir Phobio.âÂ
âAh, Geld. Thank you!âÂ
Phobio wasnât turning him down. Even here, he could sense the difference in combat ability between him and this pair. To him, the best path to victory was worth choosing more than his own pride.Â
So began a smaller battle between two duos, in the shadow of a small hill away from the battlefield.Â
The reports Yamza received from this battlefield bewildered him. The overwhelming advantage he thought he had was just an enemy trap all along.Â
He didnât want to consider the thought of defeat. It would obviously enrage Clayman. He had to find a way to turn this around, to snatch victory from the jaws of defeatâbut he doubted he had the man power left to achieve it. He still had enough of his wits to realize that, and now he had to think of other forces he might be able to stir into action.Â
The five fingers, Claymanâs inner circle of associates, was led by the middle finger, Yamza, the strongest magic-born out of them all. Only Adalmann, the pointer finger, and Nine-Head, the thumb, could compare with him.Â
Adalmann, head of the defense forces in Claymanâs castle, began life as a wight, a deathly spirit who resided in the Great Forest of Jura. He was a well-known bishop during his living years, but that meant nothing now. Claymanâs accursed magic had greatly boosted his power as a monster, transforming him into a wight king that ruled over the undead. The holy force he wielded when he was alive had transformed into impure demonic power that he used to curse the living.Â
But despite his vast strength, Adalmann had one weaknessâhis lack of intellect. The only thing he could do was follow his orders to destroy any intruders; thatâs why he wasnât involved in this war.Â
Nine-Head, meanwhile, was a fox spirit, an extreme rarity in her field. She was still young, just three hundred years old, and only three of her tails had grown out. Her magicule energy, however, was already well past Yamzaâs, up to the level of Clayman himself. She was with him now at the Walpurgis Council, serving as his bodyguard, so Yamza couldnât tap her for backup, either.Â
Itâll have to be Adalmann, thenâŠÂ
The problem was how to call him over. Actually, no, it wasnât a problem. It would be simple to have him show up right this instant. Yamza would have to then gather up his surviving troops, flee back into Milimâs domain, meet with him there, and go back on the offensive. Thatâs the best approach, he thought. Walpurgis Councils had lasted upward of a month in the pastâif all went well, he could wrap this whole thing up before Clayman came back. It wouldnât exactly be simple to make Adalmann move, but it wasnât impossible.Â
Either way, if he stood down and accepted defeat right now, it was clear Yamza would be purged. Lord Clayman is a vicious man. He would do away with me in no timeâI am sure of it⊠And even if I were lucky enough to survive, I donât want to turn into a soulless puppet. As much as it vexes me, I must admit defeat hereâbut I will reign victorious in the end!Â
Yamza turned his gaze toward the battlefieldâand there, he witnessed a sight that made him doubt his eyes.Â
In the front was a bewitchingly beautiful woman, her hair a mix of blond and black. She held a golden staff and was boldly racing across the land, as if no one was around her at all.Â
Protecting her was a group of Carillonâs finest, the Beast Masterâs Warrior Alliance. They numbered only a few dozen, but almost no one could defy them in combat, each one bearing the strength of a thousand. There was Zol, an elephant beastman; Talos, a bear beastman⊠They couldnât beat the Three Lycanthropeers, but they were all stout fighters, worthy of serving under the great Beast Master.Â
They were also accompanied by a group in crimson garb, using searing flame spells to burn away the supplemental forces kept in the rear. They meant little to Yamza, but there was no doubting they were ranked above the magic-born around them.Â
Things had suddenly become very bad for him.Â
The unbelievable visitors deepened Yamzaâs gloom.Â
âIt canât be⊠Why are the Three Lycanthropeers here?! Have they abandoned their troops and come to provide reinforcements themselves? But how could thatâŠ?âÂ
He could hear the trusted magic-born around him shouting. Agitation was in the air.Â
âTheyâre pointing their greatest force toward our main army?! What are the lookouts doing?!âÂ
âAllow me to interrupt, sir! We canât make contact with our lookouts. Someone has killed them all!âÂ
âWhat?!âÂ
The enemy was moving so fast, they were completely behind on dealing with them. By the time Yamza noticed that, they were already lethally late. The realization made the blood drain from his head. There would be no regrouping nowâeven escape would be fiendishly difficult.Â
No. No, no, no, no, no!! I may not even be able to escape here with my life!Â
Yamza began to panic. If this was one-on-one, he might be able to deal with that, but he wasnât self-absorbed enough to think he stood a chance against a squadron like this.Â
âBuy me some time! I will return to our homeland and bring Adalmann back here. He can summon the dead to restore our forces!âÂ
It was just a pretext. He already knew all was lost, and he had decided to run away, as fast as possible. Luckily, he had only volunteered his fealty to Clayman, so his behavior was not restricted the way it was with the other four fingers. Following him any farther would be suicide, and that made it easy for Yamza to sever all ties.Â
âYes sir!âÂ
âWe can give you three hours, sir!âÂ
His men each gave him stern, resolved looks that did nothing to move his heart. All he could think about was how stupid they were. The next moment, he chanted a teleportation spell. But something was off.Â
âItâsâŠnot working? Is this aâŠSpatial Blockade?!âÂ
Yes. He was already too late. The moment Yamza and his men saw Alvis, Alvisâs gaze landed on them as well, thanks to the power of her skill Snake Eyes. It was an extra skill, one that applied a large variety of ailmentsâparalysis, poison, insanity, and so forthâand worked on anyone caught in her line of vision. A tremendously useful skill, the only way to escape it was by either successfully resisting it or simply weathering it out.Â
And Alvis had another card up her sleeveâthe unique skill Oppressor. This spatial skill gave her the effects of Mind Accelerate, Spatial Control, and Spatial Motion, letting her impede enemy movement and give her allies superior positioning.Â
A single motion from her was enough to neutralize all the masses surrounding Yamza. The more weakhearted of them were instantly driven mad; the stronger ones were still paralyzed long enough for the poison to kill them off. Some had even been turned to stone. Less than a hundred managed to emerge unscathed. Before they could put up any resistance, the unworthy had been denied even the right to stand before Alvis.Â
Her Spatial Control had snuffed out Yamzaâs magic, having the power to both obstruct spells and fix their spatial coordinates in place to prevent them from affecting the air around the caster at all. No magical escape from this area was possible nowââthis areaâ being the range of Alvisâs vision. The entire battlefield was now in her total control. Such was the power of the Golden Snakehorn.Â
Realizing escape was impossible, Yamza gritted his teeth.Â
He still had a last resort. But it was a forbidden one, one that heâd prefer not to use. Beyond that, the only path to survival involved winning this.Â
ââŠSo be it. Letâs show them what weâve got.âÂ
âAh, Sir Yamza!âÂ
âSir Yamza at his finest could overwhelm even the Three Lycanthropeers!âÂ
âLet me join you, sir! Our fighting will surely please Sir Clayman!âÂ
His men were elated for the fight. Yamza found it boundlessly foolish. The demon lord Clayman sought only two things: victory and profit. He would never accept this performanceâwasteful attrition, followed up by total defeat.Â
The only thing he believes in is pure, unadulterated powerâŠÂ
No matter how faithful Yamza was to him, Clayman never saw him as one of his own. He was just a useful pawn, a talented minion; that was as far as the lordâs affection went. The Ice Blade had been a gift, yes, but it was simply provided in an effort to strengthen him. It was all for Claymanâs sake.Â
Still, Yamza provided him with respect and reverence, and the gifts he received in return helped. They both had a common interest. But Yamza had no intention of offering his life to Clayman.Â
âŠAbout time to head out. I have to survive this and bounce back!Â
This failure would force him to go into hiding for a while. But a Special-A talent like him, a giant among high-level magic-born, would no doubt be picked up by another demon lord before long, he thought.Â
(I like this,) he Thought Communicated to Alvis. (One of the greatest magic-born under the Beast Masterâs command, part of the valorous Three Lycanthropeers. Are you willing to duel with me?)Â
It was a risky bet. He wanted to defeat Alvis, the strongest figure in the group, and crush the enemyâs will to fight. Perhaps that would be enough to change the scriptâand even if it didnât end well, he thought it could give him a chance to escape.Â
(Very well, Sir Yamzaâhead of the five fingers beneath the demon lord Clayman. I will show you how far out of your element you are!)Â
This, Alvis thought, would prove once and for all where Clayman and Lord Carillon stood with each other. She promptly transported herself before him with Spatial Motion, and in an instant, Claymanâs surviving servants swarmed over her.Â
It was not what one would normally call a strategy. Beastmen are mostly simple folk, easily provoked, and this cowardly approach took full advantage of that. If they can exhaust Alvis, even a little bit, thatâll make it easier for Yamza to winâsuch was the reasoning behind this kamikaze strike.Â
âYou think those tricks will work?!â Alvis shouted as she turned up the intensity on her Snake Eyes. To Yamza, though, they had already done more than enough. That single instant, when Alvis used her power, was the exact thing Yamza needed for his assured victory.Â
ââŠGot you!!âÂ
In a flash, he was upon her, slashing his sword at her exposed back. And just before the tip of his blade reached her bodyâÂ
âNuh-uh! Backstabbing someone like thatâs not manly at all!âÂ
Someone had leaped straight out from Alvisâs shadow, babbling to himself as he deflected Yamzaâs sword.Â
âDehh! Whoâre you?!âÂ
âIâm Gobta! We were hiding out just in case this happened!âÂ
As he explained that, more and more figures popped out from the shadow. They were, of course, the Unified, four-legged goblin riders, tapping their physical agility to attack the magic-born that were still moving.Â
âAnd you didnât tell me?â Alvis said. âI was wondering why something didnât feel quite right.âÂ
She had actually noticed them all along. That was why she was unafraid to go plunging in like this.Â
âHeh-heh! Benimaru ordered us to,â Gobta casually replied as he fired off a Case Cannon bolt at Yamza. He could tell the moment he crossed blades with him that this wasnât a battle for him to win. So while the commander was distracted by his short sword, he thought now would be his best chance. Gobtaâs definition of fair and square differed a bit from the normâit was something he asked of his foes but never followed himself.Â
Still, Yamza managed to deflect the blast with his sword.Â
âOut of my way, weakling!âÂ
He pointed the tip of his blade at Gobta and cast a spell, sending an Icicle Lance hurtling his way. Gobta simply used his dagger to fire an Icicle Lance of his ownânot to fire back, but because he had planned for this follow-up strike from the start. It wound up saving Gobtaâs life, as the two magic bolts met in the air and dissipated.Â
âThat⊠That had as much force as this magic sword?! And without casting? Cheeky little weakling, are weâŠ?âÂ
Now Yamza recognized Gobta as his foeâbut Gobta had already pretty well exhausted his arsenal. Uh-oh. I couldnât follow that counter of his at all. That ice just happened to save me, but if he stabs me with that thing, Iâm a goner. Probably oughtta start runninâ, huh?Â
Fortunately, the goblin riders had already made their contribution to this fight. No one would complain if they retreated now. Gobta made up his mind.Â
âAll right, letâs pullââÂ
But just as he began to make the order, Yamzaâs sword sailed right past his nose.Â
âPyah?!âÂ
In another stroke of luck, he had taken a timid step back just in the nick of time. It made Yamza almost lose his nerve. This little sneak made it past my attack three times? Three in a row couldnât be any coincidence, as he saw itâthat supersonic swipe he just made proved that the hobgoblin before him was no also-ran.Â
âHeh-heh-heh⊠Oh, how the Lycanthropeers have fallen! Sneaking their minions into a one-on-one duel!âÂ
The boast, made with wide-open, bloodshot eyes, was part of Yamzaâs strategy. By his estimation, dealing with both a Lycanthropeer and this mystery intruder at once was dangerous.Â
Gobta seized the opportunity. Woo-hoo! That means I donât have to fight this crazy-dangerous magic-born, right?Â
He suppressed his joy just long enough to declare âAll right, Iâll serve as an observer for this duel, then!â Yep. Definitely an observer. With all his tactics exhausted, that beat just standing there and getting in the way. Rimuru could accept defeat, but he could never accept his people getting killed in action. Gobta wasnât stupid enough to volunteer to be war casualty number one for Tempest.Â
âOh, you can have him if you want,â Alvis playfully said.Â
âIf I take your prey,â Gobta wittily replied, âwouldnât that hurt your honor as a beastman, maâam? I donât need it that bad, so go ahead and fight all you want! Sorry I got in the way!âÂ
Alvis accepted the inane excuse without a word. If anything, it was the luckiest thing to happen to Gobta all day. He had dodged a bullet with this total unknown before him. Alvis had no intention of letting anyone else score this kill anyway, and he had wriggled out of a battle against a foe that completely outclassed him.Â
Whew. Thatâs the end of my work!Â
At the very far end of the rear guard, the group of priests led by Middray was clashing with Gabilâs Team Hiryu.Â
Of course, only a few were standing by now. Nearly two hundred fighters on both sides were lying on the ground. But Middray was unhurt, his white robes free of dirt and grime, and it was clear he was still going strong.Â
âWaaah-ha-ha-ha! Not too shabby, you guys. I see you are the descendants of dragons!âÂ
Middray flashed a contented smile, surveying the fallen and pretending the panting and exhausted Sufia in front of him didnât exist.Â
âDonât you ignore me!âÂ
Sufia, half Transformed into her beast form, had used her vastly strengthened physical skills to attack Middray. But the head priest, perhaps sensing this, had simply leaned over to one side, preventing her from landing a lethal blow. The effort had left her wide open.Â
âHyah!âÂ
Taking the clawed arm extended out to him, he tripped up Sufiaâs legs, picked up her body, and sharply slammed her against the ground. The judo-like throw was unique to the Dragon Faithful.Â
âI wasnât ignoring you at all,â Middray happily explained. âI donât have much opportunity to use this against monsters, so this is rather fun for me. Itâs been ages since I had a foe so worthy of that throw.âÂ
This was more than Sufia was willing to bear.Â
âD-dammit! You, you made meâŠâÂ
She was being treated like a plaything, her face red with humiliation. But she had to admit it. Middray, this man standing before her, was more powerful than she ever imagined. Now he was surveying the landscape once again, waiting for her to stand up and ignoring her until that happened.Â
Curse him, heâs treating me like a second-class fighter! And how could my Self-Regeneration fail me like thisâŠ?Â
It was true. Sufiaâs skill was not healing any damage, because her physical body hadnât sustained any wounds. She was exhausted simply because her stamina was tapping out on her, and the force of each slam added to the burden. He was wounding her internally, where the damage wouldnât be visible.Â
But Sufia stood up anyway. As the Snowy Tigerclaw, she could not let this affront continue to stand.Â
âImagine, a bastard like you serving Clayman. I thought Yamza was the best around here, but I suppose my instincts were correct all along.âÂ
âYamza? Ah yes, sir. Yamza. He is rather capable, Iâll admit, but not enough to serve as a playmate for me. I may not look it, but Iâve sparred with Lady Milim on regular occasions, you see.âÂ
âMilim⊠The demon lord Milim?! So youâre the Dragon Faithful?!âÂ
No wonder, Sufia thought. They seemed so different in disposition from the rest of Claymanâs troops. They seemed to enjoy fighting for the sake of fighting, not at all concerned with actually killing their enemies. And compared to the other magic-born, they were all overwhelmingly strongâand enjoying every minute of it.Â
âOoh? Say, that dragonewt just felled Hermes! Wah-ha-ha-ha-ha, that was quite a performance!âÂ
Hermes was tangling with Gabil, and Gabil had just knocked him down with his spear.Â
âF-Father, stop laughing and help me, please!âÂ
âYou lost, fool! Just sit there and think about what you couldâve done better!âÂ
He laughed at his associate, lying there on his back and pleading for assistance. He could tell that Hermes wasnât as bad off as he claimed and that Gabil had no intention of taking his life.Â
âAll right. Counting me, that leaves three remaining. You command a truly wonderful set of fighters, given how evenly we are matched. It proves youâve honed your bodies and your minds, instead of relying on skills.âÂ
âI suppose I should appreciate the compliment. My name is Gabil. And you are with Lady MilimâŠ?âÂ
âIndeed! I am Middray of the Dragon Faithful.âÂ
âAnd I am Sufia. Sufia of the Three Lycanthropeers! I have no ear to lend to the servants of Clayman, but if you worship Lady Milim, that is another story.âÂ
âMm. Lady Sufia, is it? I will make sure to remember that. So whatâll it be now? I could take on the both of you at once, if you like?âÂ
Middray calmly folded his arms, implying that he liked his chances.Â
âCan I ask you a question before that?âÂ
âMm? What is it?âÂ
âI⊠I just mean, how can a mere human be so strong? Or are the Dragon Faithful human at all? Something seems strange about you.âÂ
Middray nodded at this, his curiosity piqued. âWhat do you mean by human?â he asked. âThatâs the crux of it. If you are inquiring about our species, however, the answer is simple. We are dragonewts, like Sir Gabil over there.âÂ
âWhat?! The same as us?âÂ
âYes, precisely. The difference is that instead of evolving from lizardmen, we are the descendants of dragons that âhumanizedâ themselves and mated with the human race. But in essence,â he closed with a smile, âwe are the same.âÂ
âAh⊠And come to think of it, my sister Soka turned wholly human in appearance.âÂ
âYes. But almost none of us can bring ourselves back to our original shape. The priests you see strewn around us donât have any skills like Dragon Change or Dragon Body. There is hardly any difference between them and human beings.âÂ
Middray turned his eyes toward Sufia.Â
âBut that power is still handed down. Our worship of the dragon does not allow us to forget the blood within us. Any more questions, Lady Sufia?âÂ
âNo. Human, monster, it doesnât matter. I just wanted to know if your skills were the result of a weak human building himself up to perfection. You say you are little different from humans, and if so, I must pay respect to your efforts.âÂ
âWah-ha-ha-ha-ha! You think the same way I do. One may be born with strength, or one may acquire it. Magic-born are so weak because they rely too much on the strength theyâve always had. Thatâs why they compare their strengths based on magicule capacity and so on. True strength canât be seen with the eye. The level of your skills is the only solid, trustworthy index there is.âÂ
Sufia was born strong. She had more fighting skill than most monsters, through no special effort of her own. Her massive well of energy, and the surging aura it created, made even magic-born go out of their way to avoid her. Her battle senses made full use of this, and her instincts alone had brought her to where she was. Now, Middrayâs words made her realize how little time she had spent polishing her Arts, her learned skills.Â
âSo you mean I can become stronger?âÂ
âWah-ha-ha-ha-ha! Precisely. There is no such thing as an experience that can win over being in actual battle. Here, come at me! Iâd be happy to spar with you.âÂ
He remained where he stood, arms crossed and standing high.Â
âLady Sufia and me at the same time?â a dubious Gabil asked. âAre you sure you arenât being a little too conceited?âÂ
Middray just grinned at him. âHmph! I could take you on without even using my arms, little man!âÂ
Gabil wasnât about to take that sitting down.Â
âLady SufiaâŠâÂ
âWeâll tackle him together. We have to admit it. Heâs a strong one!âÂ
The battle between Alvis and Yamza was about to reach its raging climax.Â
The two were evenly matched, but Yamza had finally used his ace in the hole.Â
âHa-ha-ha! Well performed, Lycanthropeer! Your ability to keep up with me is astounding. But now, my victory is assured!!âÂ
âWhat?âÂ
âPfft! Did you think this magic sword was my only secret weapon? Yes, you may be strongâstrong enough to hold me back. I will freely admit that. However! What if there were two of me?âÂ
With that shouted question, he unleashed the magic inside the bracelet on his left wrist. This was a Doppelganger Bracelet, an incredibly valuable Artifact capable of producing a perfect copy of the wearer, right down to their clothing and equipment. Now Alvis had to fend off two Yamzas at the same timeâand if one was an even fight for her, she would have to be at a severe disadvantage.Â
âWell? If you capitulate to me now, I could be convinced to spare youââÂ
âSo what?âÂ
ââŠWhat did you say?âÂ
âYou think that parlor trick will outclass me? You really are nothing more than a lackey of Claymanâs. Quite the would-be finisher, there.âÂ
Alvis didnât give an inch, openly ridiculing her foe.Â
âThen die!âÂ
And even before Yamza could scream that at her, Alvis played her own final card.Â
Now the top half of her body was a beautiful woman, the bottom half that of a large, black snake. This was Alvisâs true, Animalized form, and now she was ready to use its full force.Â
Unlike Phobio and Sufia with their focus on close-quarters fighting, Alvis was usually thought to be a long-range specialist, lobbing her magic attacks from afar. In truth, however, she was a dyed-in-the-wool fighter, masterful at short range in the way anyone serving the Beast Master needed to be.Â
Her fighting style, however, ventured from the beaten path. Alvis brought her staff up to her foreheadâand in the next instant, it disappeared, as she grew a golden horn from above her eyes. Finally free, her aura surged outward from her, greatly amplifying her power. This was her second Transformation and her most secret of abilities.Â
She stood there, her entire body protected by dragon scales. The whole space around them belonged to her, her aura producing streaks of lightning in the air.Â
âWha?!â Gobta spat out, sensing danger. There was no way Alvis could remain coolheaded enough to tell friend from foe like that.Â
âYou said your name was Gobta? You have my permission to move out immediately.âÂ
âOhhh, you donât need to tell me twice, maâam! Riders, retreat!âÂ
One shout from him was all it took to make the goblin riders flee the scene. The surviving magic-born took the opportunity to quickly surround Alvis.Â
âYou fool! You intend to take us on alone?âÂ
It was nothing for her to worry about.Â
âIs that how little you think of me? Ah-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha! Die, you mob of idiots!!âÂ
By the time Yamza saw it unfolding, it was already too late. One magic-born before him fell to the ground, spewing blood. One turned to stone and shattered against the earth. One had his body literally rot away on the spot, until nothing but a pile of dust remained. His army was being killed, struck by ailments by one degree or another, and Yamza had no way to stop it.Â
âYoouuuuuu!!âÂ
Alvis was, in the end, best suited for close-quarters combat. The Golden Snakehornâs lone horn on her forehead became a symbol of the death that permeated the atmosphereâand then Yamza realized that his defeat was total.Â
âSurrender, and I will take you prisoner and guarantee you your life.âÂ
Her offer was the only method of survival he had. A quick stare with her Snake Eyes had completely shattered his Doppelgangerâs body. It even had the power to destroy equipment, apparently, leaving Yamzaâs partner to fade away before battle even began.Â
âŠMy limbs are starting to go numb. I wonât be able to defend myself before long⊠What kind of sheer strength do these Lycanthropeers enjoy?!Â
It was bad luck that Yamza had to be paired with the strongest of that trio. He chose the wrong woman to pick a fight with, and he had no idea. Alvis rarely had the chance to fully exercise her power, since she was often picked to serve a commanding role. As a result, she was seen as the de facto manager of the Lycanthropeers, not as a formidable warrior in her own right.Â
That was Yamzaâs appraisal as well, and he had totally underrated her.Â
The war was won. But it was not over. Clayman was a sly demon lord, one who would never forgive betrayal among his own armies. And just when Yamza prepared to nod his agreement to Alvisâs offer:Â
(âYou know I would never permit that, yes?)Â
It was Claymanâs voice, booming within Yamzaâs mind. âUh?â he instinctively grunted. Then his body began moving, beyond his own control.Â
âS-stop! Stop that! Please, Sir Clayman, stop this at once!âÂ
A hand took a bluish-purple orb out from his pocket, then brought it to his mouth.Â
âMmghh!!âÂ
He locked his jaw as tightly as he could, trying to scramble away from it. It was a pointless act of resistance, and it didnât last long. Struck by Claymanâs Marionette takeover, Yamzaâs body was no longer his own to control.Â
ââŠWhat are you doing?â a suspicious Alvis asked. But by the time she did, Yamza was busy swallowing the orb in his handâa section from Charybdisâs body.Â
âHah? Harbhh, nnhhh⊠Graghaghaaaahhh!!âÂ
âWhat onâ?!âÂ
Alvis tensed up, confusedâas long, thin tendrils shot out from his body toward the dead lying around him, taking in the corpses. He ballooned in size, turning into a vast, grotesque ball of flesh. Uncontrollable magical energy flowed within the Alvis-dominated air, forming a hurricane-class blizzard.Â
The creature before her consumed, expanded, and burst. Having no monster core of its own, it was a self-destructing being, rampaging across the land before meeting its demise. But its temporary power was every bit as strong as Yamzaâsâand the nature of it was deadly. Its insatiable desire to eat everything in its path was just the same as well.Â
This was the âforbiddenâ tactic Yamza was reluctant to use, the intricate trap Clayman had laid. Charybdis had now appeared once more.Â
Alvisâs face tightened as she threw her full force into an attack. It didnât work. No regular strike would ever pierce this constantly expanding Charybdis. Its Ultraspeed Regeneration took in the corpses around it, rapidly reforming it into a temporary body for itself.Â
âNgh! This monsterâŠ!âÂ
All Alvis could do was gnash her teeth, her Snake Eyes and lightning having no effect. This monster was disaster-class, on a level far, far above her. Even the strongest of the Three Lycanthropeers could do little about it by herself. The only saving grace was that this was a distance away from the main battlefield; there was time before this could start to affect her allies but only until Charybdis could finish creating its body.Â
Desperation flew in like a violent storm. The worst part was how this monster wasnât satisfied enough using Yamza as its substitute coreâit had taken in his Ice Blade as well, sucking up all the heat around it and making the local temperature plummet. The monster was destroying all in its path, turning its aura into an Ice Blizzard, pummeling the area with icy snow and intense wind. That was scary enough, but what Alvis feared even more was the moment when it released all the heat energy it had taken in.Â
Those who can teleport out might be fine, but everyone elseâŠÂ
âŠwould die.Â
âI hate this! May all the gods curse that bastard Clayman!!âÂ
Letting her true nature take hold, Alvis screamed as she continually attackedâagain and again, no time in between to breathe. It was all in vain. Even if she scarred Charybdisâs exterior, any damage to the monster itself was light. It just healed itself too quickly.Â
âDammit! Iâve just got to get everyone out that I canââÂ
Even through the desperation, Alvis tried to take the best measures she could. To her, this meant trying to relay a plea to Benimaru to retreat everyone from the battlefield.Â
In the end, however, this never happened. It didnât need to.Â
âYouâre ignoring orders, Alvis. I told you to get out if you faced a battle you cannot win.âÂ
There, with no previous warning, Benimaru himself appeared.Â
ââŠSir Benimaru?!âÂ
âOh, Charybdis, eh? My offense did little against it last time, but how about now?âÂ
He gave her a defiant smile.Â
âSir Benimaru, this monster is just tooââÂ
âI know. Itâs perfect for testing my current powers.âÂ
Benimaru raised his right hand and grasped itâboth Charybdis and his own strength. The fight was over in an instant. His feet planted on the ground, his sword, covered in jet-black flames, slashed the monsterâs flesh, although it did not fully slice through its freshly constructed body. But something was different from before. Unlike with Alvisâs efforts, the Self-Regeneration never started. Dark flames were dancing across the gash, rapidly engulfing its entire body.Â
âTch. Not quite there yet. We have no time to play with here, so Iâll sadly have to end this.âÂ
He turned back toward Alvis, leaning his sword against his shoulder, seemingly unconcerned with Charybdis.Â
âMy apologies. I was hoping we could spar once it had achieved its complete form, butâŠâÂ
The gigantic beast had not taken to the air yet, but its body was already nearly the length of half a football field. Now, however, it had been fully encased in a black dome.Â
âAway with you,â he whispered, and then a percussive boom! shook the land.Â
It was Hellflare, his wide-range razing attack, this time far more powerful than ever before.Â
Benimaruâs Dominate Flame gave him a full grasp of the flow of magical energy, stabbing right through Charybdisâs Magic Interference and rendering its body into ash. It proved to the world that Benimaruâs control over magicules completely overpowered this monsterâs.Â
âYouâre kidding me!âÂ
Alvisâs surprise was understandable. If his attacks worked on Charybdis, it meant Benimaruâs magic force surpassed the monsterâs. This meant that Benimaru himself was disaster class, on the same level as Alvisâs master, the demon lord Carillon.Â
âI have some business to take care of, Alvis. Effective immediately, I hereby appoint you as my aide to command our entire force.âÂ
ââŠYes, Sir Benimaru.âÂ
She undid her Transformation to kneel down and take the post. She had more than a few questions for Benimaru, but now was not the time for them. Calming her frenzied mind, she meekly accepted her orders.Â
Charybdis was an unprecedented, unexpected threat, but when faced with that irresistible force, it fell without a momentâs delay.Â
âHoh, hoh-hoh-hoh⊠This is quite a surprise. I was expecting Yamza to turn tail and flee. But imagine, dispatching Charybdis that easilyâŠâÂ
âMm-hmm! I kind of have an affinity for it, but not even we could pull off a kill like that.âÂ
âClaymanâs forces are destroyed. The missionâs a failureâthe losses immense. He should have just sat there and played nice, the way our fellow jester told him to.âÂ
âYes, yes. Well, Laplace warned him. Clayman canât blame anyone for it but himself.âÂ
Footman and Teare exchanged looks as they spoke. Before them was a heavily wounded Phobio, kept on his feet by the attending Geld.Â
âWeâll need to brief him about this, so Iâm afraid playtime is over.âÂ
Footman himself was unhurt. Teare wasnât, but she was still healthy enough to fight. Judging by their injuries, Geld and Phobio appeared to have lost the day.Â
âYou think you can leave?â Phobio groaned, staggering as he tried to keep himself up. âI knew you guys were bad news. If we can keep you here, Alvis and Sufia will show up before long. Plus, weâve got Sir Benimaru. Itâll be the end for you.âÂ
He was scarred from head to toe, but his wounds had already closed up. The speed at which they healed was mind-boggling, going well beyond the Self-Regeneration most beastmen had and almost reaching the realm of Ultraspeed Regeneration. Phobio had inherited that skill to some extent after the previous Charybdis swallowed him up.Â
âJust give it up already, kitty!â Teare shouted as she gave Phobio a punch that sent him reeling. It didnât leave Phobio down for long. In a few moments, he was back on his feet.Â
Teare was the quicker of the two, but she could never quite land a lethal blow. Phobio, on the other hand, was slowly but surely damaging Teareâs body. He might have appeared defeated at first glance, but the longer the fight lasted, the more likely it was that itâd end otherwise.Â
Footman, meanwhile, was rolled up like a meatball, bounding around at hyper-speed and trying to run Geld down. Geld used his great shield to deflect his trajectory, swinging his Meat Cleaver to try to smash him up. His attempts were blocked by Footmanâs thickened skin, preventing him from dealing decisive damage.Â
On offense and defense, it was safe to call them perfectly evenâbut only because Footman hadnât begun seriously fighting yet. And now, with Charybdis defeated, Footmanâs recess time was over.Â
âMgh?!âÂ
Geld, realizing this, positioned himself in front of Phobio.Â
âWhat is it, Geld?âÂ
Before he could answer, Footman began raining attacks on the both of them. These were balls of magic, each one enormous and stuffed with energyâa simple attack but one with enough force to alter the landscape around them. One of the magic orbs was enough to shatter Geldâs shield and even smash up the armor covering his body. It damaged Phobio in the process, and he no doubt had Ultraspeed Regeneration to thank for still being alive.Â
(Hooooooh-hoh-hoh-hoh! We werenât tasked with taking care of you two, so weâll extend you the honor of letting you go.)Â
(I hope youâre grateful! If we were serious about this, neither of you would be in this world any longer!)Â
Neither Geld nor Phobio could stand up any longer to contest them. When the dust from the explosions finally settled, Footman and Teare were gone.Â
ââŠThis was a total defeat,â Geld groused. âI thought I had some strength, but I suppose thereâs always someone better than you.âÂ
âNo, Geld. If you hadnât been here, Iâd probably be dead right now. Sorry to drag you downâŠâÂ
âNot at all. We may have lost the battle, but weâre still alive. As long as we win next time, weâre good.âÂ
âYeah. Yeah, youâre right!âÂ
Phobio was not a weak beastman. Footman and Teare were just too strong. Strong enough that you could even call them demon lords. Perhaps Geld had more magical energy at his fingertips, but without the ability to use it shrewdly, that power meant nothing. Geld focused entirely on defense against Footman, but even he knew that heâd never win in a serious fight opposite him. For now, though, that was fine.Â
(Sir Benimaru, the jesters have fled.)Â
(I saw,) came the Thought Communication reply. (They might think theyâre letting us live. How naĂŻve of them.)Â
Benimaruâs orders for Geld were to discover what the enemy was capable of and keep Phobio safe. I couldnât just sit there and watch things unfold, he thought, but not killing me was a bad mistake. Sir Benimaru has recorded how that battle worked outâand then Rimuru will analyze it and break open the secret to their strength.Â
Thus, this was a defeat with some benefits to them. Mission accomplished. And if he canât win now, he can close the gap with his future training. He had hoped to settle the score with these guys for using and abusing him, but Geld simply didnât have what it took.Â
But next time, Iâm winning, he silently resolved.Â
(Iâll go back to my command, then.)Â
(Please do. Thereâs one more dangerous element on the field right now, so Iâd better tackle that.)Â
Sir Benimaru sure has it tough, Geld thought as he closed the link. This battlefield was full of dangerous elements, and since they had to deal with them all at once, he was forced to divvy up his armyâs assets and scatter them around. Benimaru intended to sort these conflicts by priority and step in himself to handle any rescues needed, but one misstep along the line could lead to serious danger. He seemed to be handling his post well, however. One would think heâd focus on finding and killing Footman first, but he successfully managed to put overall victory above his own vendettas.Â
This isnât some general with a thirst for blood, I suppose. Compared to when we fought him, the growth heâs shown has been amazingâŠÂ
It made Geld trust in Benimaru all the more.Â
It was several minutes into the battleâminutes that, to Gabil and Sufia, felt like hours. But it ended unceremoniously.Â
âMgh?!âÂ
âWhat onâŠ?!âÂ
âHuffâŠhuff⊠WhatâŠwhat is the matterâŠ?âÂ
After the second or third repetition, Sufia had learned how to roll with Middrayâs throws, helping recover her energy. Gabil, meanwhile, had flung his spear wildly around at this attack he wasnât used to, completely exhausting him. Middray, dealing with them both, appeared completely unhindered by fatigueâcompared to sparring with Milim, this wouldnât even make him break a sweat.Â
And Middray was the first to notice it.Â
âAll forces, use your healing magics!â he shouted, the casual ease disappearing from his face. âStand up! Stand up and rouse everyone around here!âÂ
âThis is bad, Father Middray,â Hermes said, apparently feeling much better now. âThis guy⊠The reading Iâm getting is huge.âÂ
âI know that! This is Charybdis, the beast Lady Milim dispatched just the other day. Or is it its remains?âÂ
âYeah⊠It looks unstable to me. I imagine itâll disintegrate before the day is throughâŠâÂ
âBut this is a battlefield. If things go wrong, it could rapidly evolve. Better not to give a monster like that the food it craves.âÂ
The fallen priests around him cast healing spells to revive both themselves and Team Hiryu under Gabilâs command.Â
âCharybdis?â Sufia asked. âThe monster that used Phobio as a core to revive itself with?! I thought Lady Milim had already destroyed it!âÂ
âYes,â Gabil added, realizing this current match was over. âIf it was Charybdis, Lady Milim definitely killed itâŠâÂ
âCalm down. Itâs not the real thing; just a fragment of its force. I think it used Yamza as its replacement coreâŠâÂ
Middray was using Dragonâs Glance to analyze the innards of the creature. It was not as strong as Milimâs own Dragonâs Eye, but it still provided him with ample enough vision and analysis skills.Â
Hermes, meanwhile, was surveying the area for any other potential threats. âLooks like youâre right, sir. That ass Yamza was trying to kill us, but his soulâs already been consumed. With how he is now, weâll just have to keep damage to a minimum and wait for him to fall apart,â he coldly concluded.Â
âDid you hear that? Keep your weapons at the ready, people. And donât get greedy! If buying time is all we need, that wonât be a tall order.âÂ
âLet us help you out,â Gabil added, in sync with Middray as if they were old friends. âWe are more used to high-altitude flight since last time. If we can catch those scale attacks before they strike, they cannot hurt us.âÂ
Even a crazed, twisting beast like Charybdis had a tendency to chase after anything moving. A flying target, Gabil reasoned, would make the perfect lure. Sufia was also thinking unusually lucidly, trying to execute on what she could do here.Â
âRight,â Middray began, âIâll aid in the retreat so it canât feed off any of our ground forces andââÂ
But before he could finish, things took an abrupt turn as Benimaru all but vaporized Charybdis.Â
âWhatâŠonâŠ?! He just pulled off the most unbelievable thing!âÂ
ââŠWho is that guy? A demon lord? Unless youâre Lady Milim, how could some regular magic-born do that? He has to be some kind of monsterâŠâÂ
Only Middray and Hermes had an accurate bead on the situation. Sufia and Gabil saw it at the same time but couldnât parse what just happened. All they could see was that the evil aura of Charybdis had been snuffed in an instant.Â
âHey, whatâs going on? Tell me!âÂ
âYes. We seek an explanation as well.âÂ
âYeah, um, Iâd want to explain,â Hermes said, âbutâŠâÂ
âI donât think we need to,â Middray finished.Â
Before either of them could, the air in front of them twisted and warped, revealing a magic-born with hair as red as roaring flames. It was Benimaru, sword rested on his shoulder, and he was here to take on Middray, the last threat on the battlefield.Â
âWell,â he said with a sneer, âI see youâve been entertaining my friends?â Then he realized something wasnât quite right about this picture. There was evidence of combat around him, but there were no injuriesâand by the looks of things, no hard feelings on either side.Â
âSir Benimaru, wait! These are Lady Milimâs fighters, the priests of the Dragon Faithful!âÂ
âWhat? Lady Milimâs?! In that caseâŠâÂ
âYes! They healed our wounds with magic!âÂ
ââŠI see. It seems Iâve jumped to conclusions. You seemed like such a threat in this theater, I couldnât help but be alarmed.âÂ
âWah-ha-ha-ha-ha! You didnât jump to conclusions at all. We were actually fighting, yes. And we did perform some healing, but that was to prepare for what we thought was an oncoming disaster. Now I suppose all that wasnât necessary.âÂ
ââŠAh. So what now? Are you taking us on?âÂ
âWell, what should we doâŠ?âÂ
âBecause personally speaking, I would prefer not to engage in combat with Lady Milimâs forces.âÂ
âNo, I suppose not. I can understand wanting to try it, but there is no quarrel between us. I would simply want to compare our powers.âÂ
âYes⊠I can see that.âÂ
The two gave each other knowing grins.Â
âWhoooa!â Hermes interjected. âNot good, Father!âÂ
âYes, Sir Benimaru! If you hurt one of the Dragon Faithful, thereâs no telling what kind of calamity that would bring upon us!âÂ
âYou heard her, Father Middray! Sir Rimuru is Lady Milimâs friend. It would all end in tragedy, I am sure of it!âÂ
Sufia silently resented Hermes and Gabil for stepping in.Â
âFair enough,â Benimaru said. âBesides, if I donât come at him trying to kill him, I expect itâll result in nothing but defeat for meâand I donât like engaging in losing battles.âÂ
âWah-ha-ha-ha-ha! Quite so. And Iâm not sure even I could withstand a blow like the one that buried Charybdis!âÂ
Middray might have laughed the concept off, but he had a suspicion that he could win the battle before Benimaru had a chance to bust that out. That would result in a life-and-death duel, however, going well beyond the boundaries of a friendly sparring session. A battlefield was the wrong place for this, and it no longer meant anything anyway.Â
Thus ended the battle in the former kingdom of Orbic, while the unified forces enjoyed a near-total victory. But this wasnât the only battlefield.Â
At the stroke of midnight, Shuna, Soei, and Hakuro sprang into action. They quickly discovered Claymanâs headquarters within the wetlands covered by the mysterious mist and began to stealthily make their way there.Â
Beyond these wetlands were several murky swamps, gas bubbling out from the surface. This was what created the cloud of mist, making things seem eerier than they already were. The moment they waded in, visibility plummeted to nearly nothing.Â
âUh-oh. This mist is blocking our Magic Sense.âÂ
âIt is,â confirmed Soei. âThat was why we called off our investigation. With this poor visibility, anyone inside would have to rely on their own five senses to âseeâ around them. Thatâs what the enemy must use to keep track of what goes on in here.âÂ
âMm, I see. So we face a brutal disadvantage.âÂ
âIndeed, Sir Hakuro. You and I can use Covert Agent to hide our presences, but Lady ShunaâŠâÂ
âI should be fine.âÂ
It was true. Hakuro could use his Haze concealing skill to all but disappear to the external observer, as could Soei. You could be standing right next to them and never realize it. Shuna, despite not having this exact Art, could still perfectly heal herself.Â
âHmm⊠A combination of illusory and mystical magic? It doesnât work like Haze, but it has the same effect. Well done, Lady Shuna.âÂ
Hakuro was rightâthis approach was Shunaâs original creation. While she wasnât quite as gifted at it as Rimuru, her Creator unique skill allowed her to conjure up her own magic spells without a recipe.Â
âThen we should be fine,â Soei said. âBut I want you all to remember that Thought Communication wonât work in this fog. Visibility is low, it is hard to stay in contact, and we all need to proceed carefully and cautiously. AlsoâŠâÂ
Even with Soeiâs Replications, Thought Communicationâbased conversation would be impossible. Instead, he provided a length of Sticky Steel Thread around each of their wrists for emergency contacts. Focusing on this thread would allow them to maintain at least a modicum of communication, but if the string broke, that would be the end of the contact. Using it required a great deal of caution.Â
Shuna and Hakuro nodded and wrapped it around their wrists. They were ready now. âLetâs get going,â Shuna said, and the three ran off.Â
Then, after several minutes of walking, Shuna stopped.Â
ââŠOh no,â she whispered. âWe seem to have fallen into a trap.âÂ
âA trap?âÂ
âI can feel my senses going haywire on me, yes, but I donât feel any enemies around theâ What?!âÂ
Before he could finish speaking, Soei felt multiple presences nearby appear from out of nowhere, virtually surrounding them.Â
âHow onâŠ? Where were so many of these enemies hiding, such that we couldnât notice them?âÂ
âNo, Hakuro! They werenât hiding. We were lured right to them!âÂ
âAh⊠This fog. The cloudâs doing more than confusing our sense of direction. Itâs concealing the enemy and inviting us right to the middle of their circleâŠâÂ
âI see. That explains the odd feeling I had just now.âÂ
âYouâre right. The mist is triggering Spatial Interference to lure intruders from any direction to a specific placeââÂ
Before Shuna finished explaining this, one of the presences appeared. Soei and Hakuro steeled themselves toward it, keeping a watchful eye out for the still-unseen monsters in the mist, as Shuna closed her mouth and focused on itâa skeleton dressed in a vestment of pure white.Â
âSuch massive magical force,â she whispered, beads of sweat on her forehead. For a moment, she thought it might have been Clayman himself, although she banished the thought quickly. It was past midnight; the demon lord should be over at the Walpurgis Council. Perhaps it was one of Claymanâs five fingers, thenâbut the figure before them exuded pure presence, beyond that of the Lycanthropeers and approaching demon lord level. The power of this magic-born was overwhelming; it was a wonder that it was subservient to anyone else.Â
She recalled what Mjurran told her about Claymanâs most senior leadersâand that one of them was geared strictly toward defending their base.Â
ââŠYou must be Adalmann, then. The ruler of this landâthe wight king with power over countless undeadâŠâÂ
Hakuro had just used Heavengaze to reach the same conclusion. But this figure was more ominous than how Mjurran described it, its force far more massive. The guardian of this wetland was a wight king on the level of a demon lord.Â
Soei accepted Shuna and Hakuroâs appraisal, finding no reason to doubt it. Then, quietly, he sharpened his bladelike mind. No matter who the enemy is, he will kill himâthat was his credo.Â
But just as Soei was about to move, the wight king spoke.Â
âIndeed, I am Adalmann. I have been ordered to protect this land by the great demon lord Clayman. Lowly intruders like you may do nothing but humbly submit your lives to me. Do it, and I will kill you without pain.âÂ
This was the command of a kingly figure, not the words of a foe who saw Shuna and her companions as equals. Considering the massive, overwhelming amount of Adalmannâs magic energy, anything else would almost seem improper.Â
Now, all around the area, a legion of over ten thousand undead were writhing, as if attracted to the seemingly inexhaustible supply of magicules. Cracking, wrenching sounds filled the air as they moved to encircle the trio.Â
âWe are fully surrounded,â Shuna breathlessly reported. âThis mist is working alongside a directional barrier to prevent teleportation outside. All our means of communication are blocked. The only way to get out of here is to defeat this Adalmann foe.âÂ
âThen we must strike their leader at once.âÂ
âNo disagreement here. A blow from me can even kill the dead.âÂ
Hakuro and Soei had no interest in following Adalmannâs advice. As Shuna explained the situation, they both went on the attack. But Adalmann simply laughed in their faces.Â
âHeh-heh-heh⊠You appear not to know your place. I generously provided you mercy, and yet, you remain foolish to the end. You will regret refusing that offer shortly.âÂ
He breezily swung an arm. The next moment, the most surprising thing happenedâthe white blade of Hakuro, instantly zooming within range of Adalmann, was blocked by the knight who had appeared in front of him.Â
Hakuro stepped back in shock, failing to believe that this killer blow could be parried. This was a death knight, ranked A-minus in the Guild system, but from that clash, Hakuro could sense something was off. It was a powerful monster, yes, but no garden-variety death knight could ever block a slash from him.Â
âYou are no normal adversary. Very well. Let me give you my full attention.âÂ
He had an accurate bead on this death knight and the threat it carried for him. Its strength relied not on physical toughness but on the built-up level of its skillsâwhich meant Heavengaze would tell him nothing about it. So he used his own physical might to confront it.Â
ââŠâŠâÂ
The death knight was silent; the corpse serving as the shell of its body was incapable of speech. But there was a blistering blue flame in its sunken eyes. The light of consciousness was in there, the pride of a former human being, and it told Hakuro that his challenge was accepted.Â
Even after abandoning life, this death knight was a proud, noble warrior. The difference in magical energy between the two was negligible, as was their physical muscle. It marked the beginning of a clash between built-up skills, one that quickly made sparks fly.Â
Before Soei, meanwhile, was Adalmann himself, an enormous shadow from out of nowhere blocking all attempts to attack him.Â
âDeh!â Soei glared at the towering shade. âNo⊠A dragon zombie?âÂ
âNo, Soei!â Shuna could see it more fully, through the muck. âNothing that weak! Its magicules outnumber yours; it stands at the peak of the undeadâitâs a death dragon!âÂ
Soeiâs face tensed upon hearing this. He could manage this solo, but fighting this foe while guarding Shuna was a different story. The usually reliable Hakuro was too busy with the death knight. He had to dispatch this death dragon as soon as possible, or else Shuna would be overrun by the thousands of undead lumbering their way in from all sides. Now, Soei realized, was no time to hold back.Â
âThen, die! Mystic Thread Strike!âÂ
Without delay, Soei dealt out the most powerful attack he could, a killer move that fricasseed the enemy with thousands of branching strings of Sticky Steel Thread, each granted the Insta-Kill effect from his Shadow Striker unique skill. They created a virtual garden of beautiful, bloody blooms, like a kaleidoscope. Even a half-spiritual life-form like an undead would be snuffed out by this spiritual body-slicing moveâor so it should have.Â
âNo! Itâs regenerating?!âÂ
Soei could feel himself begin to sweat. The sixty-foot-long beastâs body was ripped apart, seemingly ending the battle. But then, as if nothing was amiss, the death dragonâs body reassembled itself. It went so fast, even faster than Ultraspeed Regeneration, that it seemed like nothing less than immortality.Â
âThen let me destroy you, soul and allâŠâÂ
âSoei,â Shuna shouted out as he steeled himself, âcalm down! You know how to analyze your foeâs strengths. You should know that you canât beat a death dragon!âÂ
âButâŠâÂ
âThat dragonâs soul is within the magic-born Adalmann,â she quietly declared. âDonât worry about me; just work on keeping that dragon where it is. Iâll defeat Adalmann!âÂ
âThatâs too dangerous!âÂ
âNo, Soei. Listen to me. Iâm angry.âÂ
A cold smile stretched across Shunaâs face to dispel Soeiâs worries. They shined a piercing light, exhibiting her raging emotions. The sight made Soei clam up, unable to speak.Â
As the former princess of the ogre tribe, Shunaâs words had the power to make others do her biddingâand now, that power was stronger than even the otherworlder Kirara Mizutaniâs Bewilder unique skill. Besides, Shuna wasnât some precious cargo that required constant protection. Soei knew that. So there was only one answer.Â
âYes, Lady Shuna. Best of luck.âÂ
She contentedly smiled. âYou too, Soei. That dragonâs all yours.âÂ
Soei nodded back, giving Shuna his full trust, then threw himself back into his own fight.Â
Shuna, left alone, didnât waver at all as she confronted Adalmann. The wight king rewarded this by glaring at her.Â
âHoh? And what do you intend to do, little girl? What could you do without anyone to defend you? How are you going to engage ten thousand foes at once?âÂ
There was an odd sort of joy in Adalmannâs voice. He was enjoying this, in fact. The demon lord Claymanâs orders were absolute, but Adalmann was still afforded his own sense of free will, although his activities were limited in every other way. The only thing he was allowed full rein to do was wipe out intruders.Â
Claymanâs other minions derided him for having so much power but so little brains to back that upâand it was only because he was not allowed to leave this land or do anything on his own volition. And it was perhaps the way that he wasnât even allowed to provide excuses to them that made people fail to realize it.Â
Adalmann was less a magic-born and more a weapon, a base-defense mechanism bound to this land. His soul remained unbound, but his behavior was now automatic, following the orders input into him. He spoke of his loyalty to Clayman, but that was just an act. He had been preset to pay his formal respects to the owner of this device.Â
In his heart of hearts, Adalmann wanted to be released from these bonds. That was why he enjoyed talking with Shuna. The defense mechanisms worked automatically; he had no authority to alter them in any way. The chats he had with intruders were his only hobby to speak of, the only thing no one else could interfere with. The demon lord Kazalim, creator of this structure, offered him that much mercy. Or maybe not. But Adalmann wanted to think so. That gesture, after all, was what had allowed him to live all this time, a thousand years or so, without succumbing to insanity.Â
Even if it was just a measure to keep this system running longer, I have to thank him for that, at least.Â
And he meant it. That was why he never spared any effort to hammer down intruders, regardless of what he thought about it. But at least he prayed, as he imagined an army of ten thousand undead preying upon Shuna, that it could be done painlessly.Â
But then her voice rang out sharply once more.Â
âNo need to worry about me. Alignment Field!!âÂ
At that instant, the area within a three-hundred-foot radius of Shuna became holy ground, where nothing of evil alignment could tread. It was another original product of Shunaâs mind, using her experience to Analyze the Anti-Magic Area and Holy Field, then Fuse them together. This barrier obstructed all magicules, but it could also be set to block fire, wind, or any one of the other four major elements, making it a shockingly formidable defensive spell.Â
âNow we wonât be distracted. If I defeat you, that will destroy the defense system with you at its core, right?âÂ
ââŠHmm. Impressive. And youâve seen through my secret as well. What is your name, girl?âÂ
Shuna was absolutely right. If Adalmann died, the whole base-defense system would crumble. It was structured to bind Adalmannâs soul down, using it to circulate the large amounts of magicules it required. That would no doubt free the death dragon serving himâas well as the death knight, Alberto, who was once Adalmannâs friend and confidant. Shuna had seen all that at a glance, and Adalmann offered her his honest respect for that. Respect and the ever-so-slight hope that she might be able to release him from this pain.Â
âMy name is Shuna.âÂ
âShuna⊠Lady Shuna. Then let us settle this for good. If you can defeat me, I will follow your wishes.âÂ
âMy, thank you for the polite request. However, all I seek is the destruction of the demon lord Clayman. If you stay out of my way, I could leave you alone to live on this land, perhaps?âÂ
âHeh-heh-heh. Iâm not sure thatâs possible, Iâm afraid.âÂ
âNo? I thought you might be capable of conquering the ties that bind you, but perhaps I was wrong. Oh, well. In that case,â she said without a momentâs hesitation, âI will kill you as I intended to.âÂ
If I could conquer them, thought Adalmann, I would have done it eons ago. Kazalim is a man to be feared, a foe no one can hold a candle to. The nickname Curse Lord is not just bravado. And she makes it all sound so easyâŠÂ
âThen the time for talk is over,â he declared, still having no ill will toward her. âTry to resist me with everything youâve got!âÂ
âŠâŠâŠÂ
âŠâŠÂ
âŠÂ
Adalmann was born a prince in one of the small nations under the jurisdiction of the Holy Empire of Lubelius. These lands were all too weak to have their own standing militaries, instead relying on the Temple Knights sent from the Churchâs central headquarters. In exchange, they were required to adopt Luminism as the state religion and provide money and qualified personnel for their knight corps.Â
The Western Holy Church of the time didnât enjoy the influence they wielded now; this was before the advent of their Crusader groups. Practitioners who showed talent could be granted the name of âacolyte,â a nonhereditary title, but that was it. In the midst of that, Adalmann was an exceptional performerâand with his elder brother taking over the country and quickly giving birth to an heir, he was free to devote himself deeply to spreading the faith, joining the Churchâs missionary corps and quickly making a name for himself.Â
He was devout to the faith, constantly fascinated by the divine works of Luminus. Never once did he doubt the existence of this lone, true, powerful goddess. That devotion eventually led him to learn the âdivine miraclesâ of the Churchâs archbishop class, making him the greatest master of holy magic in his era.Â
In time, he advanced to the rank of cardinal, the loftiest in the Western Holy Church. In the Lubelius noble hierarchy, he was no one particularly special. But he redoubled his efforts, extending his interests to magic beyond the holy spells he was familiar with. He would hold long discussions about magic with Gadora, one of his best friends at the time, as he incessantly polished his skills. The effort eventually paid offâhe became an Enlightened, transcending the bounds of humanity itself.Â
An Enlightened was a person who retained their human form but on the inside was a demi-spiritual being, similar to a higher-level elemental. Their powers were leaps and bounds above those of a regular human, and they were often seen as defenders of the human cause. This power quickly put Adalmann in a position of immense central authority.Â
Time passed. Adalmannâs intensive study continued. And eventually, he took the next step forward, to the highest peak of mankindâa Sage. As he did, he was greeted with wondrous news: He would be called to the Inner Cloister, at the top of the Churchâs holy mountain.Â
The offer filled him with joy.Â
Finally, an audience with Luminus herself!Â
He always believed that Luminus was real, an unwavering belief that served as the source for all his faith. So he promptly set off for the holy mount, not believing for a moment that it would lead to tragedy. That belief, sadly, would ultimately betray him.Â
âŠâŠâŠÂ
âŠâŠÂ
âŠÂ
The intense magical battle continued.Â
âMelt all and wear it awayâAcid Shell!âÂ
The aspectual spell Adalmann had just cast conjured balls of liquid in the air, each capable of melting flesh to the bone. They rained down upon Shuna.Â
She didnât miss a beat.Â
âFlame Wall.âÂ
The barrier of fire deflected and vaporized all the magic-infused droplets. Between accelerating her mind to a thousand times normal, possessing superior Analyze and Assess skills, and changing the rules with Cast Cancel and Control Laws, Shunaâs unique skill Parser was made for a clash of magic like this. From the moment Adalmann began constructing a spell, she had a way to deal with it.Â
âThen how about this? Malicious dead, accept this sacrificeâCurse Bind!!âÂ
This was necromancy, an offshoot of elemental magic that took advantage of the negative energies from ghouls and the undead. Curse Bind was a particularly nasty one, summoning zombies that latched on to anything livingâhuman or magic-bornâand drained away their life energy.Â
Even that wasnât enough.Â
âHoly Bell.âÂ
Shunaâs refreshingly clear voice reached Adalmannâs ears, and right after came the tolling of bells he was once well used to hearing. That was all it took to send the grudgeful zombies to the afterlife.Â
ââŠIt canât be! Why? Why is a monster wielding elemental magic?!âÂ
Adalmannâs eyes shot open at the divine miracle playing out before him. The magic was deployed all too beautifully, reminding him of his youthful days spent studying.Â
This was holy magic in the air, something a monster girl should never be able to weave. The unbelievable sight made him scream without thinking.Â
Shuna smiled as she decided to answer Adalmannâs question, even though she had no obligation to. âDo you find it strange? Perhaps you need a little more imagination. Holy magic is not the exclusive domain of humans; it will work with anyone who believes in the power of miracles, based on the strength of their belief.âÂ
Conventional wisdom in this world stated that holy magic worked by forging a pact with an elemental spirit. This was both right and wrong. The fact that magic-born could cast healing spells indicated that âholyâ magic was possible for them without any pact with a holy being. Most humans, and even monsters, didnât understand that.Â
The sole condition for acquiring holy magic was having faithâbelieving in miracles, to put it another way. Good, or evil, didnât factor into it; the strength of oneâs emotions was directly converted into power. That was how this family of magic worked. (This was also the reason why the Dragon Faithful that worshipped Milim could access holy magic.)Â
Hearing this terse explanation was staggering to Adalmann. IâI was wrong the whole time? I was betrayed. I lost my faith in the goddess Luminus. I thought I would never be able to wield holy magic againâŠÂ
Luminus betrayed Adalmannâor to be precise, he had been trapped by the supreme leaders of Luminism. He still didnât know why. Perhaps they feared his rise in power; perhaps it was another reason. All he knew was that Luminus, his goddess, offered him no helping hand.Â
Itâs almost comical, in a way. The Seven Days Clergy tricked me into setting off to quell a large army of undead attacking our people⊠I never couldâve guessed it was a trap. And thanks to that Gadora conducting magical experiments on me, Iâve been revived as this twisted, reviled figureâŠÂ
Unaware that he was being led to his grave, he waltzed right into the far edge of the Great Forest of Jura, where he still dwelled today. He was awaited by a legion of undead, led by a dragon zombie. He was accompanied by Alberto, acolyte and his closest friend, along with four knights and an expeditionary force that loved him, and they fought with all their might. It wasnât enough.Â
Adalmann fell to the groundâand died once. But then Reincarnation, a Mysterious Art placed upon him by his other friend Gadora, activated and resurrected his soulâa soul that had already been poisoned by the miasma across the land, the malice of the dead around him. He was reborn not as a man but as a wight, transformed into a skeleton. The metamorphosis had caught the attention of the demon lord Kazalim, and now here he was today.Â
âThus, if you are incapable of handling holy magic, then I am positive you are incapable of beating me.âÂ
Shunaâs words hit home like a knockout punch, reminding Adalmann that he was still in battle. âWh-why?â he instinctively asked. âWhy did you think I was a master of holy magic?âÂ
âBecause of how you look,â came the cold reply. âThat white vestment, which only high-level bishops and above are permitted to wear. You were worthy of such fine robes, and yet, you whine and carry on about being unable to conquer such a basic bind like this. I hardly needed to examine you closely to see that you wore that robe simply out of blind attachment to your former holy magic.âÂ
She had him pegged the entire time. He could hear it in her voice.Â
âNnnhh⊠I have let you spout far too much nonsense!!âÂ
Adalmann flew into a rageânot at Shuna but at himself. Seeing his true heart now, something he couldnât notice until it was pointed out to him, made him both exasperated and enraged at his own spinelessness. But he could also feel an inexplicably refreshing comfort in his heart, like the fog of a thousand years had finally lifted from him. He let his raging emotions drive him to cast another spell.Â
âI offer this prayer to my god. I seek your divine powers. May my request reach your ears safelyââÂ
Yes. I simply lacked the resolve. Having my beloved friends turn into undead, I couldnât let myself die and leave them behind⊠I wasnât good enough. Necromancy and aspectual magic cannot cleanse the undead. Who could say how many times I wished I could tap into holy magicâŠÂ
Those âfriendsâ were one reason why Adalmann was bound to this area. He couldnât abandon the fine men and women who died here but lived on as accursed zombies. And that intent was the bond that tied them to this land. Finally, just now, Adalmann realized the mistake he had made.Â
So he connected together a complex seal with the bones that were his hands and boldly declared his prayer to the lands above. It was an incantation, as shown by the complicated geometrical shapes that appeared in the air before him.Â
This girl, Shuna⊠I have no grudge against her. If anything, I owe her a great debt for opening my eyes. But suicide is forbidden to me. I apologize, but I will need to have you join meâÂ
That apology came from the heart.Â
The checks placed upon him by Kazalim ranged far and wide, holding Adalmann downâbut if he was caught up in the fallout from an attack on the enemy, that was hardly his fault. He planned to destroy himself, taking Shuna along him, for only then could he free the people who unwittingly joined him.Â
A layered circle of magic spread out, covering Shuna and Adalmann.Â
ââand render all to dust! Disintegration!!âÂ
âI was waiting for that! Overdrive!!âÂ
Just before Adalmann could complete his spell, Shuna used Parser for a Control Laws rewrite. The results wrested control of the local spiritual elements away from Adalmann, driving them haywire.Â
âWh-whatâŠ? You have less than a tenth of my magical energy! How could you possibly overwrite my magic?!âÂ
Magicules and spiritual particles were controlled by magical force. Having his magic overwritten could only mean that Adalmannâs force was overpowered by Shunaâs. To him, Shuna looked hopelessly outclassed, but now, at long last, Adalmann realized he was wrong on that score as well.Â
âImpressive. Let me reward you by releasing you from this land!âÂ
The wight was swallowed up by a flood of light, unable to hear Shunaâs words to the end. She had used magic on him, realizing that someone like Adalmannâat least her equal in terms of holy magicâcould collect the energy required to purify the local area. She wasnât expecting him to break out the most powerful of all holy spells, but luckily for her, she knew how that one worked. That was what made it so easy to overwrite.Â
The light now permeated the land, enveloping not just Adalmann but all the other undeadâcleansing them.Â
Hakuro and Soei ran up to Shuna.Â
âI tell you, I wanted to end this sooner, but that death knight was far more capable than I estimated. You saved my life there, Lady Shuna.âÂ
With the land fully cleansed, the death knight reverted all the way down to a lowly skeletal fighter and fell to the ground. Following Adalmannâs will, it had lost any further desire to fight. The sight was enough to make Hakuro realize the battle was over. He regretted losing such a challenging opponent, but protecting Shuna took priority over everything else, and she required his attention right now.Â
âNo, Hakuro, you were a great help to me. You too, Soei, distracting that death dragonâs attention and buying me so much time. If it had fallen out of our control, I doubt we could have won.âÂ
âIt shames me that I could not defeat it.âÂ
As Soei implied, the death dragon was a powerful foe, capable of healing light damage instantly and boasting an aura that infected the mind of anyone who touched it. It took someone like him, capable of controlling multiple Replications at once, to emerge from that unscathed. If anything, he deserved praise for holding out so long against a foe that shut down his decisive weapon.Â
The death dragon, too, vanished upon Adalmannâs defeat, unable to maintain its existence after the magicule supply that powered it was shut off. Soei didnât much like how it ended, but anything you can walk away from is a victory.Â
A victory, yes, but one with regrets. The three looked at one another and sighed.Â
âStill,â muttered Shuna, âif Adalmann had engaged me seriously from the beginning, none of us would be alive, would we? I think I let my anger drive me to be a little too reckless.âÂ
Adalmann never let up on her at all during the fight, but he also never attempted anything underhanded to snare her. If he really intended to kill them all, he couldâve done so in many other ways. Shuna could see that, and it filled her with regret.Â
âQuite true,â Hakuro commented. âPerhaps our new strengths have made us grow a tad conceited.âÂ
âCertainly. It is just as Sir Rimuru fretted about. There is no telling what may happen in battle. I should have gathered more intelligence.âÂ
In the end, however, a win was a win. Claymanâs domain had lost its main line of defense. But that didnât end things. The trio had a job to doâseize Claymanâs castle and fully neutralize the threat inside.Â
Noncombatants comprised the majority of the people remaining in the castle, none of whom signed any oath of loyalty to Clayman. The more quick-witted among them, or those who took the employment simply for moneyâs sake, surrendered without a hint of resistance. There were also many who were restrained in the castle by mental or spiritual bonds, but a combination of persuasion and magical de-cursing on Shunaâs part allowed them to capture the entire castle in short order.Â
With the occupants neutralized, it was time to start searching. They had already confirmed that the demon lord Carillon wasnât being held here, but they wanted to seek out anything they might be able to use against Clayman.Â
As they did, a figure approached them.Â
ââŠPlease, one moment.âÂ
âMm? Youâre still alive? Did you need me to finish you off?âÂ
âWait, Hakuro. He has no will to fight left.âÂ
It was Adalmann, and Shuna had to calmly keep Hakuro from drawing his sword. The wight fell to his knees, accompanied by a single skeletal fighter.Â
âPlease, allow me to call you Lady Shuna. Thanks to your magic, all of us have been released from the bonds that tied us here. Perhaps it was fate that kept us alive without being cleansed. I have a request that I hope you will let me propose.âÂ
ââŠWhat is that?â a quizzical Shuna asked, fearing this would be yet more trouble for them.Â
âThank you for hearing me out. I was hoping I would be able to meet the figure that you have devoted your faith to, Lady Shuna. When I lost my faith, I also lost the chance to ever reach the heights of my power ever again. My faith in my goddess Luminus is deadâand I need to find a new god for myself.âÂ
ââââŠâŠâââ The three each gave Adalmann incredulous looks.Â
âI⊠Well, we have a great respect for Sir Rimuru, yes, but we donât worship him,â Shuna stammered in reply.Â
âSir Rimuru, you say?â Adalmann was unfazed, still eager to sell himself. âTruly a wonderful name, one fully worthy of describing the glories of my new god. We may merely be a pair of fragile undead, but I believe we may be able to offer you assistance. Lady Shuna, would it be possible to arrange an audience with this Sir Rimuru?âÂ
Shuna wanted to remind Adalmann of the difference between blindly, unconditionally worshipping someone and treating them with respect while dealing with your problems by yourself. But she didnât. It seemed like too much to get into. Instead, she conjured up a mental image of Rimuru, the boingy slime she knew.Â
Well, why not? Once he sees Sir Rimuru in the flesh, that might be enough to make him give up.Â
Adalmann seemed to be the type who got the wrong impression of people easily. It would take time to persuade him to think otherwise, so Shuna figured itâd be expeditious for everyone involved if she just nodded and said yes.Â
Once the dust settled, Shuna was in command of Adalmann and the several thousand undead that âsurvivedâ the battle (or whatever it was that undead did). Claymanâs castle was now fully conquered.