DanMachi LN Volume 2
DanMachi LN Volume 2
DanMachi LN Volume 2
WEAKLING’S GRIN
Bell Cranell
Level One
Strength: E-403 Defense: H-199 Utility: E-412 Agility: D-521 Magic: I-0
No way…
She couldn’t believe her eyes; her jaw dropped slightly in shock.
With the exception of Magic, he was definitely strong enough to keep up with monsters on the
seventh level. Eina tended to judge adventurers by their defensive ability, so Bell’s low “Defense”
grade made her a bit nervous. However, his hit-and-run combat style fit very well with his ability
levels, so she came to the conclusion that he dodged most attacks anyway.
The fact that his “Agility” was already at grade D made her a little nauseous.
I can’t believe it…
Eina lightly coughed in her throat. It was the sound of her concept of “common sense” being
broken; a cold chill worked its way up her spine. Working at the Guild and advising many
adventurers, Eina knew just how abnormal Bell’s growth rate was.
His growth was more than through the roof. It was otherworldly.
—A Skill?
The possibility popped up in the back of her mind.
Maybe he has a Skill that explains the unusual growth, she thought to herself with a twinge. The
only way to check…was to go back on her promise.
If it’s just a quick look…
Her eyes glanced below Bell’s abilities and took in the hieroglyphs.
Where Bell’s Magic and Skills were listed.
She had already come this far. It was too late to look away now. Wanting to know what was inside
a treasure box after peeking through the lid must be a trait of demi-humans.
Her curiosity was piqued; she looked at all his Skill slot.
…Ahh, nope.
She couldn’t understand what was written.
The amount of complex characters was too much for her to make heads or tails of it.
It could be that his goddess, the overprotective Hestia, might have put an extra layer of protection
over his status so that others couldn’t read it even if they had a chance. Eina didn’t have a full
understanding of hieroglyphs’ size and stroke order, and she didn’t realize that Hestia’s “protection”
was actually just her own bad handwriting.
Eina had newfound respect for Hestia and her strategy for keeping Bell’s status a secret.
“Um…Ms. Eina? Are you finished yet?”
“A…ah! Yes!”
Eina’s ears jumped as Bell’s still-embarrassed voice reached them and she noticed the situation.
Eina laughed out of her own embarrassment as she looked away from Bell’s status and bowed a few
times in apology.
It’s true…she groaned to herself.
There was no way she could withhold permission to enter the seventh level with a status like that.
As long as he was careful, he should be able to go there safely, even alone.
—However, she did have one other problem with him going that far down.
“…”
“W-what is it?”
Fully dressed, Bell heard his voice waver as Eina’s eyes traveled his body from head to toe. Her
gaze was overwhelming.
But it didn’t look like she doubted Bell’s ability or strength.
She wasn’t looking at his body; she was looking at the poor excuse for armor that was covering it.
“Bell.”
“Y-yes?”
“Do you have any plans tomorrow?”
“…Huh?”
“It’s been a while since I’ve been out shopping like this.”
“Really? I’m surprised that people can leave someone like you alone…especially guys.”
“Hee-hee, you’re good, Bell. But it’s true. I’ve been busy at work ever since I started at the
Guild.”
The sky is a bright, clear blue.
Perfect for a date…is not what I’m trying to say, but the weather is very calming. I follow Ms.
Eina southward on North Main, a cooling breeze at my back.
The main streets are always busy at this time of day. It’s difficult to get anywhere. Employees of
stores both large and small stand outside trying to bring in customers. I could swear the ground shakes
when a dwarf yells out his store’s special deals.
A few of them call out to Eina (apparently mistaking me for a manservant) but she just waves them
off with a friendly grin. One animal-person clerk looks really happy when she flashes him a smile.
“Um, can I ask where we’re going today? If we keep going this way, we’ll end up at the
Dungeon…”
“Would you be angry if I said ‘Not knowing is part of the fun’? Okay, I’ll tell you.”
Orario has eight main streets all extending out from the core. There’s one that goes north, one that
goes northeast, east, southeast, south, southwest, west, and northwest. If you think about it from a
bird’s-eye view, there are four thick lines intersecting in the middle of the city.
The Dungeon is right where they all come together.
But on ground level, the main streets all meet at Central Park. It’s right in front of us now. In the
center of the park is an overwhelmingly large building. It blocks more and more of my view of
southern Orario as I wait for Eina’s answer.
“Our destination is…the Dungeon.”
“Whaaaaaaa?”
“The tower above the Dungeon—Babel, to be more specific.”
Babel Tower functions as a lid over the Dungeon itself. It’s that big building casting a massive
shadow over western Orario right now.
Being a “lid,” Babel is used to monitor and control the Dungeon entrance.
Managed by the Guild, it’s a building that adventurers see very often.
“Babel…Isn’t it just a public facility and a…shower room for adventurers?”
“You really are clueless, aren’t you? But you’ve only been an adventurer for a few weeks, so I
guess it can’t be helped. Right, then, you’re gonna get some useful information today.”
I remember all too well her Spartan style of “summarizing” useful information about the Dungeon,
and to be honest, that look in her eyes is scaring me.
Praying that it won’t get as intense as that time, I brace myself for the incoming lecture.
“Just like you said, there are shower rooms for adventurers as well as public facilities inside the
tower under the Guild’s control. Did you know there are a cafeteria, hospital, and even an Exchange
in Babel?”
“Huh? I thought that the Exchanges at the Guild’s main office and branches were the only ones.”
“Nope, there is one here, too. But it is a little understaffed, so I hear the lines get a bit ridiculous.
Anyway, one more thing. The Guild rents out open space to shops and merchants, and that’s where we
are going today.”
Okay, now I get it. The reason we’ve come this far is that we’re going to visit one of the equipment
shops in Babel Tower.
“Babel was built right on top of the Dungeon, so naturally all the shops there cater to adventurers.
Many of them are run by mercantile Familias that specialize. I imagine you’ve heard of Hephaistos
Familia?”
“Y-yes.”
My heart jumps. My hand grabs the knife currently tucked into the back of my armor.
“How much do you know about Hephaistos Familia, Bell?”
“Well, um, I know that that Familia makes very high-quality weapons and equipment that all
adventurers want…”
“Yep, that’s absolutely right. As it happens, we are going to a shop run by Hephaistos Familia
today.”
“Wh-whaaaat?”
It’s the loudest I’ve yelped all day. Eina looks at me like a kid who just pulled a prank and I was
her victim.
I hurry up to her, hoping for some kind of explanation. But she just steps to the side and reveals a
wide-open space at the base of Babel Tower behind her.
“We’re here…”
Central Park.
It makes a perfect circle with the massive white tower in the center. With trees planted all over the
place and fountains built into the ground, it really does feel like a park.
Back on North Main, all sorts of people mingle together as they go about their business. But most
people in Central Park are carrying big swords and long spears—they’re adventurers. The truly scary
thing is that even though there are enough adventurers here to make my eyes spin, Central Park doesn’t
feel full at all.
“Eina, what is going on? Do I look like an adventurer who could buy anything from Hephaistos
Familia?!”
“Not knowing is part of the fun! You’ll see when we get there.”
“I’ve been sweating bullets since we met up this morning! I can’t take much more of this!”
She looks right at my strained face and crying eyes but is utterly unmoved by them. She won’t even
slow down.
“Here we go! Man up and stop complaining!”
My face turns red and my mind is blank as Eina grabs my hand and pulls me into the tower.
Her thin hands are soft and warm—the complete opposite of mine. Hands get rough when you
work in the field every day. My head swims; I can’t grab onto any of my thoughts.
As we weave through the crowd, I can’t help but feel like all the male adventurers about to go into
the Dungeon are looking at me like they want to murder me…
I take a deep breath and look up at the tower to calm down.
“Ms. E-Eina, m-m-my hand…Please let go. I’m begging you…!”
“Since we’re about to pay one of the top forging Familias a visit, it would be a good idea to know
a little about the smiths themselves, right? Bell, do you know about ‘Advanced Abilities’?”
I guess she’s going to ignore my bumbling request. I’m a man, but I can’t even get her to listen. I
feel like I’m dying here.
I do my best to shrink behind her, shaking.
“No…I don’t.”
“A blessed person receives an Advanced Ability by choice when their level goes up. They’re
usually more specialized than basic abilities.”
Eina simplifies it by explaining that an Advanced Ability is like a reward for your level going
up…a “rank up” present of sorts.
“The kinds of Advanced Abilities available for someone to choose are predetermined, but one
option is called ‘Forge.’”
Burst Ability and Forge. I’ve never heard these words before.
According to Eina, Forge is necessary to become a smith in today’s world. Also, apparently more
than half of Hephaistos Familia’s smiths have it.
To put it another way, more than half of them are level two or above. That’s a very strong group.
“Smiths have been around since ancient times, of course. Most of their works are antiques now,
but there are some that can still be used. But blessed smiths with the Forge ability can add special
properties to the items they create.”
“Special properties…?”
“An ability unique to that individual weapon. You know how adventurers can get skills on top of
their statuses? Smiths with the Forge ability can give skills to weapons. For example, blessed smiths
can make a sword that will never break or will always be sharp. If they were just shaping metal, they
couldn’t do that, right?”
Very true, I nod in agreement.
“There are also weapons that produce something very similar to magic—like shooting flames
when swung, things like that.”
“Huh?!”
“I thought this was common knowledge…Anyway, weapons that can produce magic-like effects
are referred to as ‘magic blades.’ Only a few smiths can make them.”
I swallow audibly. What this all means is that if I can get my hands on one of these magic swords, I
would have the power to take on experienced swordsmen.
“A quick warning—‘magic blades’ have a limit. Once they have used up all their energy, they
break. And they’re not as powerful as spell-based magic from a magic user.”
Eina adds that they’re both disposable and extremely expensive, a smirk on her face.
I guess that means that most adventurers don’t use magic swords. I’m sure that it’s not due to lack
of popularity. But taking a weapon that will break into the Dungeon, where anything can happen,
wouldn’t make me feel safe. Yeah, I bet that’s why most people resist the urge to get one.
Well, that and the price tag.
“Um, Eina. Are there Advanced Abilities other than Forge?” As an adventurer, I have to ask. I’ll
be going down that path someday. I will rank up!
“Well, many adventurers gain abilities called Heavy Guard or Magic Control. Other than that,
there is also an ability called Enigma.”
“Enigma…?”
“Yes, now how do I explain this…It allows someone to perform a special trick—a miracle, if you
will. A ‘Divine Art’ might be a good way to put it. Do you know about the Philosopher’s Stone,
Bell?”
No, of course I don’t. I shake my head side to side.
“This happened a long, long time ago, but a member of a Familia with the Enigma ability
succeeded in making an item called the Philosopher’s Stone. The stone grants the user eternal life.”
“…I don’t know why, but my jaw won’t close.”
“Hee-hee, I know, right? But there is more to this story…You see, the maker took the
Philosopher’s Stone to the god of the Familia…The god took the stone in his hand and smashed it to
pieces on the floor in front of him…the source of eternal life.”
“…………”
“According to the story, the god looked at the maker’s shell of a face after that and laughed so hard
he pulled a muscle in his stomach.”
This is the cruelest myth I have ever heard.
When I say myth, I’m talking about a story about the gods that has a completely appalling ending.
I’m so lucky to have met Hestia first…
“The Philosopher’s Stone was created by accident, and all attempts to recreate it failed. No one
after the maker mastered the Enigma skill, so his Philosopher’s Stone became a legendary item.”
“Mastered…? So these abilities need experience to grow, like a status?”
“Not quite. The abilities do have an S to I grade, but raising the level doesn’t require experience
like a status. It takes much more to raise the grade, and is very difficult. It’s nothing like raising a
basic Ability.”
That sounds really hard…but I don’t actually say what I’m thinking.
I’m still a ways away from experiencing this myself, but I can imagine.
We arrive at the front gate of Babel Tower during our conversation. “Gate” might not be the best
word because the ground floor of the tower has many arches all the way around the circumference, to
allow any number of adventurers to enter from any direction at any time. Passing through the nearest
arch, a pale blue and white lobby opens up in front of us.
The entrance to the Dungeon is right below our feet.
“From here…?”
“We go up. The shops in Babel start at the fourth floor.”
The first floor of the tower is, as I said, a massive lobby. The community center is on the second.
We climb up to the third, Eina pulling me by my hand to the middle of another lobby. I catch a glimpse
of the Exchange out of the corner of my eye. But I can’t see any stairs.
There are several wide, circular pedestals on the floor of the lobby. Eina leads me up onto one of
them. A clear tube of something clear rises up around us. I swear it looks like glass…
Eina reaches for some kind of control panel. The instant she touches it, the pedestal leaves the
floor and begins floating in midair.
It goes up and up…no, it’s growing upward!
“?!”
“A-ha-ha, I was the same way the first time.”
It seems the pedestal and the glass are parts of a floor-transport device…Most likely this is
another magic-stone device.
That means that there must be a large number of magic stones beneath the pedestal, and their
energy is being converted into lift. Eina takes a look at my surprised face and explains that the magic
stones needed to be changed out after a certain amount of time. This thing doesn’t just work forever, it
turns out.
In no time at all we reach the fourth floor of Babel.
“The shop I have in mind is a few more floors up, but as long as we’re here, let’s take a look
around. You want to see the top-of-the-line equipment too, right, Bell?”
The entire floor is filled with weapon and armor shops. I’ll admit I get excited looking at all the
sharp, shiny things. I nod to Eina as we step off the pedestal.
There is only one sign on the whole floor: Ἥφαιστος. Don’t tell me…all the shops here are part of
Hephaistos Familia…?”
“I see you noticed the logo. Actually, all the shops from the fourth floor up to the eighth floor are
owned by Hephaistos Familia.”
…The entire floor…Just how powerful is Hephaistos Familia?!
By the way, they also have a shop close to my home with the goddess on Northwest Main.
The short sword in the window…is worth 8 million vals. That’s enough to buy several houses.
Stepping up to the display window of the closest shop, a crimson sword enshrined there catches
my eye. I go up to take a look at the price…
…Thirty million vals?!
All the blood leaves my face. I lift my hand to my forehead, trying to steady myself. I can tell that
next to me, Eina is giggling to herself.
I have a Hephaistos-made knife on me right now; it was a gift from my goddess. She told me it was
the only one in the world…How much did it cost?!
“Welcome to our store! Can I help you find anything today?”
The store clerk must have seen me staring and drooling at the sight of the crimson sword. She
comes up to greet us in a bright, cheerful voice.
The girl is short, but she looks extremely professional, with a very well-rehearsed smile glued
onto her glowing face. Twin black ponytails bouncing around her head make her look very cute
indeed.
She wears a deep red apron-style uniform, which is being pushed up by breasts much too big for
her body type, jiggling with her every movement…
“…Um…Goddess? What are you doing?”
“……”
Her smile instantly freezes.
So this is why. I thought she’d been more tired than usual recently. She’s been working here…!
“Why are you here?! You don’t need two part-time jobs! Didn’t I just say that we can start saving
money because I’m going deeper into the dungeon?!”
“Listen closely, Bell. You are going to forget that you saw me here and quietly leave right now…!
It’s too soon for you to be here!”
“It’s too soon for you, too! Aren’t you getting thirty vals an hour at your other job?!”
“Don’t make fun of my career in potato snacks!”
“Forget about that! Come on, let’s go home. You’re a goddess! You can’t be seen like this, it’s
embarrassing! Are you trying to become a laughingstock?”
“Let go of me, Bell! Let go now!! Even gods have to throw away their pride when times get
tough!”
“And when are times ever tough for gods?! Just please, listen to what I’m saying!”
I grab her right arm with both of my hands, turn, and try my best to pull her out of there.
Why in the world is my goddess being so stubborn…?!
I can feel Eina’s wide-eyed gaze on my back, but now is no time to worry about that.
“Hey! New girl! Stop playing around! Back to work!!”
“Yes, sir!”
“Huh?”
Boing! The goddess twists out of my grip and bounds away.
I watch her twin ponytails dance behind her for a moment before she disappears into the back of
the shop.
“Goddess…”
“W-well, just as interesting a goddess as ever, I see?” Eina doesn’t know how to respond to my
pitiful voice, and she forces a smile.
I feel a bit dejected, but I then remember I’m not alone today. I force myself to look up.
…I’ll forget this trouble with my goddess, for now.
“Sorry you had to see that…”
“It’s all right. Shall we go upstairs?”
I nod lightly a few times as the still-awkwardly-smiling Eina leads me back to the pedestal.
We board the “elevator” (as the magical lift turns out to be called) and arrive on an upper floor
soon after.
“This is us.”
“We’re here…”
Eina pushes open the glass to reveal another level inundated with shops just like the fourth floor.
Swords, spears, axes, war hammers, blades, bows and arrows, shields, armor, and many other
pieces of equipment are on display at all the shops on this wide floor. The only difference is that there
are more customers—more adventurers—here.
That thought makes me flinch for a moment.
“You’re thinking that you don’t have a place shopping at Hephaistos Familia’s shops, aren’t you,
Bell?”
I’m not in the best mood, and I shoot her a look saying it’s a little late for that now. But then I nod
and agree with her.
Eina looks down on me like queen over a servant, grinning.
“Actually, that’s not completely true. But, seeing is believing! Follow me.”
Eina guides me into the nearest shop—a spear shop by the looks of it.
Leading me to the very back wall of the shop, she stops in front of a spear rack. All of the combat-
ready spears stand on end, blades facing the ceiling.
Just as I start thinking Here we go again, my eyes catch the price tag: 12,000 vals.
“H-huh…?”
I might be able to afford this…
“Hee-hee, surprised, aren’t you?”
“W-well, yes, but why?”
This price is unbelievable. Shocking, even. Eina sounded like she was awfully pleased when she
asked if I was surprised, too.
I’m still staring at the spears, though.
“What sets Hephaistos Familia apart from other smiths is that they have even their most
inexperienced members make items and sell them in their shops.”
“Is that…okay? I mean, compared to the masters…”
“Of course, those weapons are not sold next to ones made by master smiths. But the new smiths get
valuable business experience and they can sell their work directly to adventurers. It’s a real plus for
the younger smiths to get feedback—both the good and the really harsh. It all helps motivate them to
make better and better weapons.”
I’m a bit surprised, but then again it makes perfect sense. Rather than being restricted to
experimenting or practicing, getting comments and criticism from people in the real world would be a
lot more motivating.
“It’s good for the stores, too. They can sell these weapons to very low-level adventurers and get
more customers.”
So they can bring in newbies along with the all-stars. Once the newbies get stronger, they can
afford better weapons from the same shop. Eina says it’s like a pyramid.
The shops draw in as many of the new adventurers as they can to build as many relationships as
possible. When the adventurers level up, they become regulars of that shop and buy high-level
weapons.
That’s what’s special about Orario. The large population of adventurers brings out all kinds of
benefits and possibilities.
“The most important thing here is that new adventurers and new smiths form bonds early in their
careers. Doesn’t matter if it’s weak or strong.”
What do you mean by that? I ask with my eyes.
“New smiths are discovered by new adventurers through the items the smith makes. If an
adventurer remembers the smith’s name, they might have a client. Very talented—but unpolished—
smiths can be hidden in the rough of the business, just waiting for an adventurer with an eye for
quality to find them. They might not become close friends, but adventurers who have used their items
in combat, felt their armor on their skin, will give the most valuable feedback.”
…Makes sense when she puts it like that.
At the very least, I feel that way about my dagger and light-armor provisions from the Guild.
“Smiths can bring out special properties in the items they make if they are forging them for
someone in particular, especially if there is a strong bond between the smith and the adventurer…Or
at least they claim.”
Eina lightly sticks out her tongue. I freeze in place.
Never in my wildest dreams would I ever have imagined Eina doing something so…childish.
“Kind of got sidetracked a little bit there, but what I’m saying is that there are items made by
Hephaistos Familia that are in your price range. How much do you have on you right now, Bell?”
“Um, should be right about ten thousand vals.”
“I wonder if we’ll be able to find you a full set of new armor. Like I said before, there are
diamonds in the rough made by raw ore smiths. We just need to dig them up! Let’s go!!”
Eina seems more excited than I am. It’s all I can do to force a smile now that I’ve come to my
senses a bit.
She leads me to a shop that has a sign outside equipped with armor and a shield. Eina suggests,
with a peppy smile on her face, that we split up to cover more ground. So I set foot inside without her.
The view from my first step inside the establishment is that it’s like nothing I’ve ever seen before.
Just look at these! Were they really all made by lower-level smiths? Everything looks amazing!
Looking into the forest of armor is the highlight of the day so far.
Pure white mannequin chests wear many different shapes and kinds of armor. It doesn’t matter that
the head and arms are missing, the chest looks very dignified. A few full-bodied mannequins are
equipped with the works. I can clearly see myself wearing those armored plates in battle.
Shield and battle helmets on shelves line the walls. Some look impenetrable, some are simply
gorgeous—there’s something for everyone.
Male and female customers fill the shop, all looking for a piece of armor that suits them. It looks
like you can try on the armor, too.
I think…I’m starting to get a little excited…! What do I do now?…Huh?
As I take in the sights and sounds, my eyes are drawn to a spot at the back of the shop.
It’s the most ordinary-looking corner of the store. There’s a box filled with equipment pieces just
sitting there.
Are they…armor pieces?
The rest of the store’s stock is equipped on the mannequins, so are these junk boxes? They’re just
lying here like a pile of trash. Wait, there is another box next to it, and a few more after that. I guess
these must be the items that the Familia deemed not worth putting on display.
I’m sure they wouldn’t sell them if they were faulty, but maybe there are some imperfections or
something like that.
“Ah, yep, they’re for sale…”
There is a price tag on the bottom of each box: 5,700 vals, 6,800 vals, 3,900 vals…All the prices
are written in red ink by different people, but all of them are quite cheap.
The full set of armor that I saw toward the front of the store is 15,000 vals, and my current light
armor from the Guild is 5,000…Yep, I’ve probably got the right idea. These are in my price range.
Then again, Eina would say that this is something that’s going to save my life, so I shouldn’t be
stingy.
“…?”
I suddenly stop in front of a box in the middle of the row.
This armor—its spirit is calling to me from within the line of boxes.
Silver. Rather than having a reddish tint or darker black hues, this one shines like pure white
metal.
No flashy colors or fancy decorations, it looks like it just finished cooling from the forge. It’s
tugging at my heartstrings.
I bend down to get a closer look; it’s light armor.
There are knee guards and a small breastplate designed to fit snugly against the chest. Under those
pieces I find wrist and elbow guards, along with a plate that covers the lower back. It’s built to
protect the bare minimum of the body to allow for maximum mobility. Kind of a patchwork armor.
Lifting up the breastplate, I discover it’s very light—much lighter than my provision armor from
the Guild. Just hitting it a few times doesn’t tell me much, but I think it’s sturdier than my Guild armor,
too. At least it feels like it.
It’s just my size…This is almost scary.
I think I’m in love.
It might be because this is the first one I’ve picked up.
But suddenly all I can see is myself wearing this armor.
I hold the breastplate up to the light for a closer look. Flipping it around, there it is: the maker’s
signature is on the inside. “Welf Krozzo.”
Looks like this wasn’t worthy of the “Ἥφαιστος” name.
Welf Krozzo…
I’ll remember that.
My brain snatches the name from the armor like a hawk snatches a fish out of water. It’s a smith’s
name I’ll be looking for from here on out.
Eina told me about the bond between adventurers and smiths. So this is what it feels like.
I’m already set on this light armor. I want to buy it, right now.
Let’s just look and see how much it is…Gasp! 9,900 vals!
That’s almost all of my money…
“Hey-y, Bell! I found something really good! A protector and leather armor! They’re a little
expensive, but it would be a good idea to get at least one of…Oh? Did you find something?”
Eina has returned. She bends down over me, an unimpressed look on her face.
Maybe she doesn’t like it because it’s being sold in a box, as though that’s somehow proof of its
poor quality.
“…Are you getting that?”
“Yes. I’m buying this.”
“Haaa…You really have a thing for light armor, don’t you? Just when I found some good things for
you, too…”
“I’m sorry.”
Eina sees my shoulders shrink, as I didn’t have anything else I could say. She forces a smile and
waves it off. “Don’t worry about it. You are the one who’s going to wear it. I do want you to think
about your safety a bit more…but if you’ve decided to buy this, that’s good enough for me.”
“…Thank you.”
I stand back up again and pick up the box.
After making my way to the counter and paying for it, I only have 100 vals left…
Today has gotten very expensive.
“Huh…?”
Eina’s gone. I turn around with my new armor in a box strapped to my back, looking for her.
Just when I start to wonder where she could’ve gone, I find her. She’d been standing right behind
me, a sparkling smile on her face. Maybe she’d just come out of the shop?
“Bell, here.”
“…What?”
She leisurely hands me a long, narrow vambrace.
It fits just over the wrist and extends up the arm to the elbow. I can tell from the outer shell it’s
designed to be used like a shield. The armor is the same color as Eina’s eyes, emerald green.
“I-is this…?”
“It’s a present from me, so please use it, okay?”
“Whaa? N-no, I can’t accept this! I’m giving it back!”
“Whaaat? Are you saying you can’t accept a girl’s present?”
“N-no, it’s not that…I just feel so pathetic!” With sweat pouring down my face, I just blurt out how
I really feel. No matter how much older she is than me, getting a present from a girl like this…It feels
like I’ve done something wrong.
Eina flashes a big smile as my shoulders start melting again.
“I want you to have it. Not for me, for you.”
“Wha…?”
“The truth is, adventurers never really know when they’ll die. Even ones who are really strong just
disappear as if by the whim of a god. I’ve known many who didn’t come back.”
“……”
“…I’d like you not to be one of them, Bell. O-ho, I guess this present is for me, after all.”
Eina laughs a bit to herself but never takes her eyes off me.
Those tranquil eyes.
“Is that bad?” she asks.
I look at the floor.
My reddening face is hidden by my hair.
I don’t have what it takes to refuse her gift after that.
“…And Bell, you said that you loved me.”
My face is beet-red now. My neck jerks my head up and I meet her eyes with my own.
Looks like she’s blushing quite a bit, too.
“That was, well…I was just so happy that you were encouraging me…!”
“I was happy too, that you said you loved me. I realize you didn’t mean it ‘that’ way.”
Both of us are blushing up a storm.
“It’s not just because of that, but I want to give you strength. You’ve been working so hard, and I
want to help you. Will you accept it, please?”
Sniff. My nose is starting to run.
I wipe it with my sleeve, nodding.
“Thank you…very much……”
“You’re welcome.”
I can feel gentle warmth flowing from the emerald protector on my arm.
“Silence!”
“Draw.”
[Bell Cranell]
Familia: Hestia Familia
Race: Human
Job: Adventurer
Dungeon Range: Level Seven
Weapons: Divine Knife
Dagger
Income: 18,900 vals
[Status]
Level One
Strength: D-591 Defense: G-233 Utility: C-607 Agility: B-702 Magic: I-0
Magic:
[]
Skill:
Realis Phrase
• Rapid Growth
• Continued Desire Results in Continued Growth
• Stronger Desire Results in Stronger Growth
• Equipment:
“Green Vambrace”
• Value of 7,700 vals
• A gift from Eina. Has the emerald-green color of her eyes.
• Serves the same purpose as a shield. While not as strong as a pure shield, it’s much lighter.
• It has a long, thin compartment that can fit small weapons including knives, daggers, and short swords.
Interlude
CRY OUT, GODDESS
The sky’s hue shifted from deep red to blue-black as night fell.
Western Orario. West Main was alive with groups of townspeople and adventurers back from the
Dungeon, all letting off steam after yet another day.
“I…I made it again…”
Hestia stumbled along on tired feet among the crowd walking down Main Street. Babel Tower
loomed behind her as she made her escape and trudged toward home on wobbly legs.
She had completed her shift at Hephaistos Familia’s Babel Tower Branch Store and was headed
for her room.
“That Hephaistos…Can’t she cut me a little slack…?!”
While it might have been nothing more than the repayment of a loan, this had still been the most
stressful time in Hestia’s life. She was used to an almost lazy lifestyle up until now, and her current
situation bordered on torture.
Whether it was her goddess “friend” Hephaistos’s lectures or the children who worked alongside
her showing no respect, she couldn’t catch a break. In fact, they seemed to go out of their way to give
her extra work. It was to the point that she wanted to scream on a daily basis.
She was getting a glimpse at just how serious Hephaistos was about fixing Hestia’s habit of
relying on others.
“Ahhhh, I wanna see Bell…!”
Worn out from consecutive days of hard labor, thoughts of her own “child” popped into the
exhausted Hestia’s mind.
Until just a few days ago, she couldn’t wait to warmly welcome Bell back from the Dungeon every
day, often leaving her part-time job early to do just that. Now their roles were reversed.
She wanted nothing more than to jump into his arms as he walked through the front door. Knowing
that wasn’t going to happen, she dragged her tired limbs toward home.
“—Eh?”
Hestia was brought out of her own thoughts when a flash of white hair like a rabbit caught her eye.
She noticed a very familiar shape in the middle of all sorts of races of people crammed into the
street in front of her.
—It was Bell!
Her round eyes lit up the second she realized it was him.
Bell had to be on his way home from the Dungeon. He was still wearing his new armor. Since his
back was to her, he must have been on his way back to the room.
Hestia got her energy back like a fish returned to water, and was about to run to his side—and
then…
“?!”
Thanks to the crowds, she hadn’t seen the person walking right next to him, but now whoever it
was came into view.
The person was shorter than Hestia and wore a robe that was too big with a backpack. It was
impossible to tell the person’s gender or any other detail from the back, but it was a girl. Hestia knew.
The mystery girl probably had an aura that made all men want to protect her. What’s more, she had
a firm grip on a hand being held out to her.
Hestia could see the side of Bell’s face as he looked down at the girl and she looked up at him. He
was smiling happily.
Boom! It was like a ton of bricks fell on Hestia’s head.
She was already at her physical and mental limits, so this was the final blow. Bell, her last oasis,
was holding hands and laughing with some girl who wasn’t her. The heavens had come crashing down
to earth, leaving Hestia with a wound too deep to measure.
Missing out on a chance to observe Bell with the supporter he had talked to her about, Hestia
turned her back to them and took off running. This misunderstanding weighed heavily on her heart.
“Aaa-oooouuuuuch…!!”
A throbbing headache greeted her the moment she opened her eyes.
Letting out a moan of agony, she stared up at the ceiling from the bed. She recognized it as her own
and knew she was at home. The clock on the wall said it was already morning.
It was the morning after her night drinking with Miach, and she had one heck of a hangover.
“A-are you okay, Goddess?”
Bell was right next to the bed.
A glass of water in his hand, he looked at the goddess with worry in his eyes.
“I…I’m sorry, Bell. I’m sorry you have to see me like this…”
“It’s okay, I don’t mind…Um, yesterday, Miach came here and talked with me. So it’s true, then?”
“…Yeah, looks like I drank too much.”
Bell held out the glass of water for her. Hestia drank it still lying on the bed, a grimace on her face.
The night before, Miach had arrived at the old church and told him, “She’s very…tired. Let her lay
down, even if for just a little while.” He left after leaving behind these meaningful words.
I can’t remember a thing…
All of her memories of the previous night were gone. She had no idea what she had done or what
she had said to Miach. After hearing what Miach had told Bell, she couldn’t help but feel a little
anxious.
Memories of Miach’s silent but sad smile made her feel like she had caused quite a few problems
yesterday.
“…Bell, are you sure it’s okay for you to be here, not the Dungeon?”
“I couldn’t leave you like this, so I took today off.”
Bell softened his eyebrows and smiled as he explained he’d already come back from informing his
supporter.
While Hestia was a little embarrassed by everything Bell was doing for her, inside she was
overjoyed. She could spend an entire day alone with him. In that instant, she decided to take the day
off as well.
The consequences, aka the wrath of the goddess of the forge, she’d worry about later.
“Goddess, can you try to eat this?”
“…Might be too hard. Bell, could you help?”
“Um, sure. I’ll do my best.”
Bell put a chunk of apple onto a spoon and raised it to her lips. Hestia propped her body up on her
elbows and watched him with glee. She clamped her mouth down around the spoon, a look of pure
delight on her face.
Normally, doing this kind of thing would be very awkward because it was just one step below
nursing. However, Bell did it with a smile. It made Hestia happier and happier to see Bell hide his
embarrassment and show this level of devotion to her.
“Ou…ohhh…My head…”
“G-Goddess?”
After what was one of the worst bits of acting in history, Hestia grabbed her head and “fell” onto
Bell’s chest. Bell was now holding her in his arms.
She could feel the unease in Bell’s eyes, but that just made her want to bury her face even deeper
into his torso. He smelled like a gentle forest. She pressed her luck even further by embracing him
and giving a tight squeeze.
And so began a short, awkward tug-of-war between the elated goddess and the ever-squirming
Bell.
“Hmm…So then, last night you went out to eat with that supporter?”
“Yes. Something very good happened yesterday…”
It was already the middle of the afternoon. Still lying in bed, Hestia was deep in conversation with
Bell. Her hangover was almost gone.
While she was relieved to hear this, just thinking about how they were holding hands like that gave
her some doubts…But most of all, her heart was uneasy when she updated his status. His growth was
just as fast as ever. That meant his thoughts were still focused on Aiz Wallenstein, that blond-haired,
golden-eyed girl. He was deeply mistaken about the reciprocity of his feelings.
But for now, she put aside all of her feeling about the kenki—the sword princess—and focused on
getting to the bottom of this supporter situation. She wanted to know everything about what Bell
thought of her.
Even though she had yet to meet this supporter girl, Hestia was starting to get seriously jealous.
“It’s so great, isn’t it? It must have been really fun to eat delicious food, just you and your
supporter. I wish I could have been there…”
Sprinkling her words with irony, Hestia turned away from Bell, shuddering her shoulders and
clearing her throat. But that performance didn’t match Bell’s reaction.
He sat there for a moment, body shivering slightly. He finally made up his mind and opened his
mouth to speak.
“Well then, um, shall we go? The two of us, and, you know, eat at a high-class restaurant…”
“…Eh?”
“How about an…extravagant dinner?”
Hestia was in a pinch, watching Bell doing his best not to blush next to her.
She couldn’t believe her ears.
“T-the truth is…I got a lot of money from the Dungeon yesterday…! And I, um, wanted to say thank
you, so I…!”
Hestia didn’t hear another word.
She was too busy replaying Bell’s invitation over and over in her head.
Is this possibly…a d-d-d-d-d-date???
And from Bell directly? Dinner?! Hestia’s thoughts were going a mile a minute.
She was ecstatic.
“Once you’re feeling better, Goddess, let’s go sometime soon.”
“Let’s go today!”
“Uh?”
“Today!”
Hestia threw off her bedclothes and sprang to her feet.
Bell sat there in shock.
“G-Goddess…your body needs to rest…”
“I’m better!”
She wasn’t lying. The excitement and nervousness that come with a date, with Bell no less, had
filled her body with energy. Bell sat, stunned, in his chair next to the bed as Hestia flew around the
room getting ready for the evening.
—Wait a second.
Hestia stopped in her tracks and lifted her collar from her chest up to her nose, drawing in a big
whiff.
It smelled horrible, like alcohol. It wasn’t the way any self-respecting goddess wanted to smell,
and she was covered in it.
Her eyes shot open.
“Bell, six o’clock!”
“Y-yes?”
“Southwest Main at six! I’ll meet you at Amour Square!”
Bell broke out in a cold sweat as he watched Hestia go out the door, carrying only a small bag
with her.
If any of the children of the mortal world had set foot in this spot, they would have fainted from
blood loss owing to the nosebleeds it would inspire.
Here goddesses, under the cover of cloudy steam, revealed every inch of their beautiful bodies
without a second thought, naked as the day they were born. Light glistened off their clear skin; toned
arms and legs shined through the mist.
This place was the very definition of heaven that all men dream about at least once.
“Haah…This feels amazing!”
A relaxed smile grew on Hestia’s face as she sank shoulder deep into the hot water, causing small
waves to caress her body.
The Divine Bathhouse. It was a pure bathing facility where only gods might enter—just as the
name would suggest.
There was one main, wide “pool” surrounded by smaller tubs of many sizes. Large trees and
natural rocks were interspersed around and among the tubs, making the whole place feel like an
isolated oasis. Constructed completely out of stone, intricate designs carved into the walls and pillars
made the bathhouse even more majestic.
The Divine Bathhouse was built and maintained for the gods and goddesses living in Orario by the
Guild. Money was collected from each of the Familias, a tribute to the gods, to make this place a
reality.
Of course the male and female gods had their own baths, but due to the lack of male gods using the
facility, the “Divine Bathhouse” usually referred to the goddesses’ side. Ever since one perverted old
god had gained entrance to the goddesses’ bath at some point (he had since become legendary), the
Guild upped security to the point that a single mouse couldn’t find a way in.
Hestia had joined the other goddesses, completely vulnerable without a thread of coverage, in the
hot water. Her glistening skin turning pink from the heat, she let out a deep, relaxed breath as the
water flowed over her.
“Can it be? Hestia? This is quite a surprise, seeing you here.”
“Ahh…Oh, Demeter, it’s been a long time!”
Hestia greeted the goddess she knew with the first thing that came to mind, her face as slack as it
could be.
The goddess named Demeter hid her lusciously curvy body with one thin towel as she took a seat
next to Hestia.
“Ooo-h? Your bosom is as big as ever, I see.”
“Look who’s talking!”
Hestia slapped the wrist of the hand reaching toward her chest.
The shock from the hit shook Demeter’s impressive breasts, sending large ripples out through the
surface of the water.
“So what’s the occasion? Today is your first time here, I presume?”
“Umm…”
Hestia pulled her face together as she turned toward the other goddess, who happened to be
adjusting her fluffy, honey-colored hair.
It costs money to enter the Divine Bathhouse, so Hestia had avoided coming here at all. However,
now that she had plans for a romantic night with Bell, she decided to use what little savings she had
to bathe here.
It was that important to her not only to get rid of the smell of alcohol, but to refresh her body and
mind as well.
Everything had to be perfect tonight.
“I have plans to meet someone for dinner after this. Thought I’d go all out.”
“…Could you possibly mean with a gentleman?”
“What would you say if it was?”
Hestia shot an irritated glance at the look of shock on her friend’s face.
As a small waterfall on the other side of the pool made a merry little sound, Demeter’s eyes lit up
like a child’s.
“Well, I’ll be! Who would have guessed, Hestia with a gentleman! Goodness! Hey, everyone—!”
“Wh-what are you doing?”
Hestia lost her calm at seeing Demeter get a little too excited.
The goddess’s voice echoed around the chamber, and other bathers started to gather to find out
what was going on. After Demeter told them the news, they too joined her in hysterical frenzy.
“Hestia and a man?!”
“What’s happened?!”
“Hestia, the girl who had no interest in men whatsoever back in the heavens, she’s—!”
“The Hestia who spent all year cooped up in her room, that Hestia?”
“Baby-face Loli-girl Hestia!”
“What is going on?!”
“Spill everything, now!”
In a blink of an eye, all the bathing goddesses swarmed around Hestia.
Completely ignoring the rules and manners of the Divine Bathhouse, some of the goddesses jumped
into the pool, others pushed and shoved their way past the others’ peach-colored skin to get a closer
look at the girl.
“What’s the big deal? Is it that strange that I have a date?”
“It’s not that, Hestia, my dear. You’ve rejected all invitations from men up until now, yes?”
“You’re one of the top three virgin goddesses, alongside Athena and Artemis!”
“To be frank, we want to know what kind of man brought down your impenetrable fortress.”
Hestia shrank away from Demeter and all the other goddesses piling on questions with a cynical
look in her eyes.
She tried to tell them that there were no worthwhile gods trying to woo her, but she soon realized
that none of the goddesses would settle for a run-of-the-mill answer.
In situations like this, the entertainment-seeking nature of deities completely took over.
“…He’s a member of my Familia, a human.”
A chorus of “Ooohh!” and “Whaaa?” rose from the ring of deities. Even before the echoes of their
voices died out, the goddesses started giving opinions like “I knew it!” and asking questions like “Is
he taking advantage of your urge to protect him?”
“Are you sure he’s not playing you? It would be horrible if you fell for a bad man…”
“What do you take me for? I’m a goddess! I know how to read people.”
“The children can hide nothing from us goddesses; we see everything.”
“Okay, so what made you fall for that child?”
“His personality, I guess.”
Now that she thought about it, there was no one thing that drew her to him. She answered the
question quietly to herself under her breath, that if there was one thing, it was his pure honesty.
The goddesses kept up their relentless chatter after that, and Hestia was getting tired of it. So she
decided it was time to get out. Besides, it was good timing for her to finish getting ready.
Escaping from the ring of goddesses, she stood up. Water droplets remained on her slender limbs
and body, reflecting light that shone down from a skylight over the bath. Her normally tied jet-black
hair hung wet and loose behind her, shining gorgeously in the light.
Hestia closed her eyes and stood there for a moment.
It was a scene an artist would have painted: a glistening young goddess standing in a pool, bathed
in sunlight and surrounded by others looking on in delight.
“Hey, Hestia. What’s your favorite part about him?”
One of the goddesses raised her hand to get in one last question.
Hestia looked back over her shoulder and gently smiled.
“His…everything.”
Amour Square was located one block from Southwest Main. It was a straight shot down a side street.
The area itself was paved with stones of many colors and was surrounded by a green border of
various plants and flowers. All this came together to produce a gorgeous atmosphere. As the sun sank
in the west, magic-stone lamps came to life around the square, illuminating it under the darkening sky.
It was just before six o’clock. Surrounded by couples walking hand in hand, Bell tried to make
himself as small as possible as he waited in front of a statue of a goddess in the middle of Amour
Square.
“Bell!”
“Ah…!”
Hestia spotted Bell and walked up to him.
At first, Bell was relieved to hear a familiar voice. But when he looked up at the owner of the
voice, he did a double take.
Hestia had changed her hairstyle. Her usual twin ponytails were let down, and her glossy black
hair flowed freely down her back. The young fairy had grown up, and she took Bell’s breath away.
The ribbons with bells that she normally used to tie her hair up were wrapped around her wrists
like bracelets. She wore the best clothing she owned. Hestia had pulled out all the stops.
Hestia held her breath for a moment, standing in front of Bell. Her cheeks turning a bright shade of
pink, she worked up the courage to ask him a question.
“W-well, what do you think? I’m trying out a new look, so…”
“…Ah, yes, you look great! Very, very great! How should I put this? You look much more refined
than usual, Goddess! You’re…um…p-pretty!”
Bell’s face turned red as he stumbled over his words, trying to praise the goddess.
He was doing his best to show respect to the head of his Familia, but there was a great deal of
shyness in his voice. At this moment, Bell was captivated by Hestia.
Hestia may have looked calm on the outside, but inside she was pumping her fist with a big
“Yessss!”
“I meant to get here earlier—sorry, Bell. Did you wait?”
“N-no, I just got here a moment ago.”
They looked away from each other, fiddling with their own clothes.
This was beginning to feel so much like a real date that Hestia’s cheeks were starting to go numb.
No matter what happened from this point on, nothing could bring down Hestia’s high spirits.
“Well then, Bell, you’d better be a good escort for me tonight!”
“I-I will!”
Then he smiled and extended his hand. Hestia was about to take it—then it happened.
They rounded the corner of the square like a pack of wolves.
“There they are!”
“Hestia’s here!”
“So then…that guy next to her is…!”
It was the goddesses from the bath. All of the insanely beautiful girls’ and women’s eyes sparkled
with the same fervor as they charged en masse.
Bell froze at the onslaught of deities. Hestia stood next to him, her eyes as wide as they would go.
“Awww! He’s so cute!”
“So he’s Hestia’s type!”
“M-mmpph!”
The swarm pushed Hestia out of the way and swallowed Bell in one swift motion.
Arms from all directions pulled Bell into their owners’ breasts, each goddess embracing him one
by one.
Oxygen was hard to come by, trapped in the heavenly cage from hell. Bell’s face was burning red
in a matter of seconds as he struggled to come up for air.
“Nah…Hnnnnn…Hahhhh?!”
“Sorry, Hestia! We wanted to know who it was so badly we couldn’t help it. So we followed
you…My, my, my! He really does look like a rabbit!”
“Nnn—hnnnn—!”
“B-BEEELLLL—!”
Echoes of Hestia’s scream bounced around the square.
Bell’s life was hanging by a thread. He had fallen into the valley that was Demeter’s massive
cleavage. None of the other goddesses even came close to her overwhelming chest canyon. Every
time Demeter stroked Bell’s white hair, pressure built up within Hestia. Veins in her head were
bulging to the point that blood should have been shooting out her eyes.
The spearhead of the goddesses’ desire for entertainment had struck her personal life, and it was
mercilessly trampling everything in its path.
Just when Hestia was about to hit her breaking point—
Clothing disheveled, face beet red and hair going in all directions, Bell popped out of the group
through a small opening.
“God…dess…”
“B-Bell! Are you all right?!”
“…I can die happy…!”
Whack! Hestia buried the tip of her shoe in Bell’s shin.
“Sorry…!”
“Accepted. Now, time to get out of here!”
Pulling a one-legged Bell out of the swarm by force, Hestia started their escape.
It took a moment for the goddesses to realize their prize was gone; their moment of surprise was
the opening that Bell and Hestia needed to get out of Amour Square.
The two of them took off at full speed through the city, keeping an eye out for the pursuit of the
relentless deities.
“Ahhh! Why are they always like this?! Goddesses have no self-control, really!”
“Ha-haaaa…”
Bell grimaced next to a frustrated and yelling Hestia.
The two of them had finally shaken their pursuers in an old bell tower just off West Main. Made of
brick, the now silent tower stood by itself with the original—but broken—bell still hanging overhead.
They hid themselves inside the tower until the goddesses passed by, allowing Bell and Hestia to
finally relax for a moment.
“It’s already the middle of the night…Aww, and tonight was supposed to be our date, too.”
“D-date?”
There wasn’t much time left before midnight. Hestia let out a long sigh as she fumbled with her
hair, which had gotten tangled from running around so much.
The day had come to a lamentable end, and she stewed in it for a moment.
“Oh…! Goddess, take a look at that!”
“……?”
Bell enthusiastically pointed outside to get Hestia’s attention.
What unfolded before her as she turned around was the city itself, lit up by magic-stone lamps like
stars in the night sky.
More lamps than she could count shone with dazzling colors on every building of Orario.
In the center of it all, a massive white tower pierced the darkness to reach well into the black sky.
Hestia lost herself for a moment in the beautiful view from the top of the old bell tower. She didn’t
say a word as she looked over at Bell sitting beside her. She could see the entire city’s reflection in
his shimmering eyes.
Bell felt Hestia’s eyes and turned to meet them. Seeing this amazing view side by side with Hestia
made him feel warm inside. Harnessing its power, he opened his mouth to speak.
“Um, Goddess…Let’s go again sometime. For sure.”
“Bell…”
“Until then, I’ll work as hard as I can to save money. We can eat delicious food, have delicious
drinks, and then let’s come here.”
“……”
“We found this amazing view today…so let’s come here again, together.”
He continued, telling her that the day had not been wasted.
And that he was glad to share this moment with her.
Bell was trying to keep Hestia’s spirits up. It wasn’t just for show, either; he really felt that way.
A carefree smile lit up Bell’s face and struck a chord with Hestia. She slowly closed her eyes,
butterflies dancing in her stomach.
That innocent, stupidly honest smile made her even more attracted to the boy, right then and there.
She felt love in the memories she’d made that day, and in Bell’s promise of tomorrow.
“I’m looking forward to it, Bell.”
“Yes.”
She smiled back at him with a grin wide enough to split her face in half.
The two of them looked back outside at the beautiful city and enjoyed what was left of their time
alone.
Hestia had succeeded in getting closer to him. The feeling made her blush and let her mind be at
ease.
I was going to ask him about that supporter tonight, but…I just don’t feel like it anymore.
Now wasn’t the time for anything so uncouth, she thought to herself, and took in the view once
again.
Feeling the warmth of the boy next to her, she closed her eyes and smiled.
The bells on the hair ribbons she’d tied around her wrists rung faintly, shaking in the cool breeze
that flowed through the tower, caressing them both under the old bell.
Chapter 3
MAGIC, MAGIC THAT SUMMONS A LAP
“Ah-choo!”
Syr let out a cute little sneeze.
She blushed behind her hands, covering her mouth. All of the staff in the bar around her stopped
what they were doing to look her way. Syr’s face got even redder, and she looked at the floor.
“Syr, have you caught a cold?”
“N-no. I’m fine. Nothing to worry about.”
Syr forced a smile through her rosy cheeks in response to the elf Lyu’s question.
Syr’s blue-gray hair was tied into its usual style, a bun with a ponytail in the middle. Her ponytail
shook as she waved her hands, trying to convince the elf she was okay.
“Maybe someone’s talking about you?”
“The answer’s obvious! Mya-ha-ha, it’s that adventurer boy, meow!”
“You’re going to make me angry, Chloe.”
Syr hung her shoulders, glaring at the catgirl who wore a very feline grin on her face.
The girl named Chloe did nothing in response, simply staring back with that same smile.
Moreover, she was moving one of the bar’s tables and playfully whipping her tail back and forth
under her skirt.
Syr let out a heavy sigh.
“But that adventurer didn’t come in last night!”
“Even though he always returns the empty basket after eating Syr’s lovey-dovey lunch, meow!”
“Syr even opened early and looked for him, meow!”
“I didn’t go looking for him!”
All of the staff was setting up tables to prepare for the day, but they took turns teasing the human
girl from all sides. Syr yelled at them from the middle of the bar, but the girls showed no signs of
learning their lesson. They continued circling her like cockroaches, the same grin on their faces.
“Do not worry, Syr. Mr. Cranell is not the type of man who would neglect your feelings for him.
I’m positive he was just late coming out of the Dungeon and didn’t have time last night.”
“If that’s supposed to make me feel better, Lyu…No, never mind, I give up.”
The elf watched in confusion as Syr got frustrated. “It’s just a misunderstanding,” said Syr, but the
always serious Lyu didn’t seem to understand.
Syr had been making lunch for Bell every day since she first gave him her own lunch. She didn’t
really know why, but everyone around her had come to this conclusion.
Bell usually returned the basket at night after eating the lunch in the Dungeon. However, he hadn’t
shown up the previous night. And now this morning she was getting teased by her coworkers.
“You don’t think he bit the dust, do you, meow?”
“You shouldn’t say that, Ahnya. You’re being imprudent. That adventurer would never leave Syr
behind!”
“I’m tired of this…”
“Syr, hold yourself together. I’m sure Mr. Cranell is fine.”
“No, Lyu, that’s not what I meant…”
“What Lyu said, meow! That boy’s too strong to die! If he did, my heart will be torn apart…”
Suddenly all the girls started talking at once.
“No way…” “Chloe, too…?” and other phrases of disbelief were muttered in every corner of the
bar.
A very frustrated and confused Syr turned left and right saying, “Eh? What?”
“He is irreplaceable, meow! You couldn’t find another like him anywhere.”
“Chloe…? What are you saying?”
The catgirl looked to the sky as she spoke. Now Syr really had no clue.
The catgirl took her eyes off the ceiling and planted them firmly on Syr.
“Syr, I need to make a confession…”
“A-and that is…?”
“I…sure do like his tight li’l bod! His booty turns meow on…!”
“……”
“When I think about the ripe fruit inside his thin pants…mya-ha-ha! Ah, all the dirty things I would
do…! I want—Oww! Ouch—!”
“……”
“A…wait—Oww, s-sorry! I give up! Uncle!”
All the other employees stopped what they were doing and rushed to stop Syr.
The Benevolent Mistress had been filled with an unusual amount of noise this morning.
“Oi! You dim-witted lasses! Quit playin’! Back t’ workin’!”
The owner Mia’s voice boomed from the backroom door as she looked over the girls’ lack of
progress.
The “dim-witted lasses” jumped in surprise before hurriedly returning to their duties. “Of all
the…” the dwarf woman started to say as she shrugged her shoulders.
“……Hmm? Syr, what’s that?”
“Huh?”
Syr’s human coworker pointed behind her, and she spun around to look.
It was at the counter, right where Syr had prepared a special place for Bell the first time he’d
visited The Benevolent Mistress.
On the chair where Bell had sat that night was a book.
“What’s this…?”
“Someone dropped it?” “What’s that, meow?” “Something wrong, meow?”
Syr picked up the book with both hands, her coworkers peering over her shoulders to get a look
for themselves.
“I’m not clever enough to read, meow.” “Me too, meow.”
“Yes, I know, so shut up.”
“Why I oughta—”
“Syr, what is it?”
“There’s a book here…It’s not one of ours. Maybe a customer left it behind?”
“Ohh…? It wasn’t there last night…”
“Right, right! Runoa’s mistake, mistake, meow! If it’s not a customer’s book, what would that
mean, meow? Somebody snuck into the bar and left it there, meow? The idea’s so full of holes, me
feels sick…”
“As always, the idiot with useless knowledge, meow…”
“What?! I’ll cut you!”
Ignoring the commotion behind them, Lyu and Syr took a closer look at the book. Completely white
and very thick, it smelled like old paper.
It was lined with many undecipherable figures and patterns. There was no title.
“…Wait a moment. This—”
Lyu realized something, but before she could get it into words, Mama Mia’s roar of anger filled the
room.
“How many times ya gonna make me say somethin’?! Words not good enough for ya?! Time for this
dwarfess t’ beat some discipline into y’all!”
Everyone froze with fear.
“W-wait, Mama, meow! We found something suspicious, meow!”
“This! This here!”
“Syr, hurry up and show her already!”
“Huh? Somethin’ suspicious?”
Ushered on by peer pressure, Syr gave an “Um, okay…” and stepped a few paces forward, the rest
of the girls behind her. Syr’s blue-gray hair shaking, she showed a very serious-looking Mia the book
in her hands.
“Mama Mia, it looks like someone left this book behind by accident. What should we do about it?”
“…Whaaa?”
The entire staff watched with bated breath as Mia thoroughly looked over both Syr and the book
with a deep scowl on her face.
…?
Lyu couldn’t understand why Mia would have that look on her face. It was because the dwarfess
had once been an adventurer herself and could still run with the best of them. But Lyu had never seen
Mia wear this expression before.
As the elf tried to make sense of it all, Mia’s sharp eyes hadn’t left the book. She then gave
instructions to Syr in a voice so gruff it was more suitable for a battlefield than a peaceful café.
“…Put it somewhere it can be seen. If the owner’s not an idiot, they’ll realize it’s gone and come
lookin’ for it.”
“Yes, understood.”
After Syr lowered her head in a polite bow, the staff scattered.
The fear of this new kind of anger in Mama Mia’s eyes drove them to work harder than ever.
Lyu stopped for a moment when she happened to see two of her coworkers having a friendly chat,
but sighed and got back to work by herself.
“…ll…ell—”
I hear a voice.
My mind comes out of the darkness as a pretty voice echoes in my ears.
Light shines itchily into the darkness.
“Bell!”
The next moment, my eyes are open.
“Ah…G-Goddess?”
“Yes, Bell, it’s me. What’s wrong with you, falling asleep at the table? There are much better
places to sleep.”
I rub my eyes until the goddess’s face comes into focus next to me. Raising my head, I take a look
around.
I’m at home, in the hidden room under the old church. The time is…seven at night. It’s already
evening.
Even before I finish scanning the room, the goddess starts asking for details.
“Were you reading a book? Ah-hah! Maybe I just happened to walk in as your drowsiness finally
got the best of you—not used to reading, eh?”
“Um…ah, yes……I think so?”
…I fell asleep?
The white book I borrowed from Syr is still wide open on the table.
Apparently I was out cold and used it as a pillow.
I finished it…?
I hold down my temples. My head feels odd, like it’s been spun in all directions.
There are some very strange memories in the back of my mind. They feel unreal, like daydreams.
Was I talking with someone? Did they ask me something? Or are all these memories just leftovers
from a dream?
It’s no use. I can’t figure it out…
“Hee-hee, so cute. I’m usually really tired after work, but thanks to your playfulness, I feel like my
usual self!”
“P-playfulness…?”
“Hee-hee! Now, let’s eat some dinner.”
With those words, my ears turn red and my head drops. But the goddess is smiling as she goes to
her closet.
I step outside the front door for a moment, waiting until the goddess pokes her childish face out the
door and says “All done!” before I join her in the kitchen. I feel bad that I was the first one home and
haven’t prepared anything at all. On the other hand, the goddess’s cheeks are a rosy pink; she must be
happy to be working next to me. That makes me smile, too.
“Bell, what were you doing with that thick book? You don’t seem like the type of person who
would buy something like that.”
“Kind of sad that you put it like that…but yes. I borrowed it from a friend of mine.”
“Ah, can I see it when you’re done? I haven’t seen many books that are that old. Got a bit of an itch
to read it, you know.”
“You really love books, don’t you?”
After cleaning up after a modest dinner, we take turns in the shower before deciding to update my
status. It’s been growing faster these days.
The goddess must have finally gotten used to her job working for Hephaistos Familia; she has
enough time and energy to do this now.
I take off my shirt and lay facedown on the bed while the goddess pricks her finger on a needle to
draw out ikoru—the power in her blood.
“Huh…hmmm?…Tsk!”
“G-Goddess…Is my status still growing like before?”
“…Yep, no change at all. Full speed ahead, no other way to put it.”
Her voice sounds a bit scary, so I have to muster up some courage to ask her. Sure enough, a very
moody response came from behind my head.
She’s still angry…No, she’s angry again.
She seems to get angry every time she updates my status recently…
“Yes, that’s right, you’re a stubborn one. I know, I know, your feelings don’t exactly change
overnight.”
I have no idea how to respond to those irritated whispers.
There’s nothing I can do to clear the air but keep my mouth shut and hope the storm blows through
on its own.
Suddenly, two sharp pinches drill into my back. It feels like I’m being pricked with a needle.
Hey, wait a second—it hurts!
“Goddess! That hurts! You’re doing that on purpose?!”
“Hmmm?”
“What are you hmmm-ing for?!”
My pleas and tearful eyes don’t have any effect on her. And as though she were saying “No
backtalk,” she sticks the needle into the back of my head. Direct hit.
Unable to fight back, I can only wipe my tears on the pillow, completely defenseless.
I’ll make sure she doesn’t sleep well tonight…
“…Well, with the exception of your Defense, all of your basic stats are almost an S rank, so of
course your growth is slowing down a little bit.”
“…Ah, I see.”
“Still, this isn’t normal…”
The maximum rank for all basic stats in a status is S. As each stat gets closer to the top, it takes
more experience to improve. As a result, growth slows way down. I’ve heard in some cases, an
adventurer could slay hundreds of monsters and not go up a single point.
Now in my case, the fact that my growth has slowed down might be due to this growth barrier, but
the fact I’m still growing at all must mean that I’m still going strong.
But as the goddess said, there could be too much of a good thing.
“………”
“…Goddess?”
Seems strange that both her hands and her mouth aren’t moving.
Even after calling out to her, she just sits there silently until…
“……Magic.”
“Eh?”
“Magic has appeared in your status.”
That was the last thing I was expecting to hear.
“Whaaaaaa?!”
“Eeek!”
Astonishment wells up inside me.
I rear my back up like a startled horse.
As a result, the goddess, who was sitting on my lower back, flies off the bed and onto the floor—
headfirst with a loud thunk, no less.
Wait, crap!!
“G-Goddess!! I’m so sorry! Are you hurt?”
“Didn’t think you’d be getting revenge like that…You’re something else, Bell.”
She’s at the foot of the bed, stuck halfway through a somersault cut tragically short. Her eyes are
shiny with tears, her body shaking ever so slightly.
And…her boobs are hitting her chin…?! No, focus, you idiot!
I reach out to help her, doing my best to keep my eyes off her cleavage, my hands trembling with
fear. Soon after that, the whole of Hestia Familiar is doing dogeza—the submissive pose on all fours
with forehead on the ground, apologizing like mad.
It is quite some time before I see the details of my new status.
Bell Cranell
Level One
Strength: B-701 -> B-737 Defense: G-287 -> F-355Utility: B-715 -> B-749 Agility: B-799 -> A-817 Magic: I-0
Magic:
(Firebolt)
• Swift-Strike Magic
Skills:
()
“…!!”
I really have to fight the urge to scream at the top of my lungs.
I hold the paper the goddess wrote my status on, my jaws clenched and my hands shaking.
My eyes sparkle with pure joy. Even though I can’t see my mouth, I know I’m smiling from ear to
ear.
“I can’t believe Magic appeared…Could it be related to that Skill…? I can’t tell.”
The goddess mumbles something, her eyebrows down as she holds her chin like she’s deep in
thought. Completely different from my reaction.
She keeps looking at my back and then my face and back again, but I don’t care.
“G-Goddess…Magic, I have Magic! I’ve become a magic user…!”
“Yes, I see that. Congratulations, Bell.”
I’m happy, plain and simple.
Joy rushes through my body. I feel like I’m on fire.
At the same time, I can feel tears welling up in my eyes. This is a dream come true. My whole
body is shaking in excitement.
I crumple up the paper in my hand and squat down to the floor. I get the feeling that the goddess is
beside me, grimacing.
I’m happy—so, so happy! I can finally use magic!
Not just any magic, that Magic! The same one that the heroes used as a trump card in the tales of
adventure, that one!
“I hate to throw water on your blaze of joy, but we need to talk about your Magic. There’s
something that’s bugging me.”
“Yes, Goddess!”
I stand back up and yell my response.
I really need to calm down. I tell myself that over and over as I take some deep breaths and try to
make my tense body relax.
“Are you listening? This is just a summary, but Magic requires the user to speak an incantation for
it to work. You already knew this much, right?”
I answer her question with a quick nod.
Every type of magic has many different attributes that can be manipulated by the user through a
spell that is spoken aloud by the caster.
The incantation creates a launchpad for the magic so that when the spell is complete, it goes in the
desired direction. Think of it this way: The longer the launchpad takes to create—the longer the
incantation—the bigger and more powerful the magic will be.
On the other hand, the shorter the spell, the smaller the launchpad, therefore the weaker the magic
will be. On the plus side, a shorter incantation can be said quickly. It’s convenient because it can be
conjured almost instantly.
“Then I’ll get to my point. My friends have told me that when a person learns Magic, it shows up
in their status. Said person learns their incantation by looking at their status. It’s the trigger.”
“Really? But there’s no spell written on the status sheet you gave me…”
“Yes, that’s right. Don’t start thinking that I forgot to write it down, got that?”
“Firebolt” is written in my Magic slot, but there’s nothing here that looks like an incantation.
Without one, I won’t be able to trigger my magic at all.
Just as my neck starts leaning to the side, the goddess tells me her theory.
“This is just my hunch, a complete guess. Judging by what was written in your status…your magic
might not need an incantation to be triggered, Bell.”
I freeze. Willing my body to move, I unfold the status sheet in my hand and take another look at it.
Sure enough, there is no incantation. The only description given is the words “Swift-Strike
Magic.”
…I think the goddess’s hunch is spot-on. Heck, I can’t think of anything else those words could
mean.
“I don’t know how powerful it will be, but it has zero conjuring time…‘Swift-Strike Magic.’ I
don’t think I’m wrong.”
“So, then, this Fireb—Gholg!”
Both of the goddess’s soft hands cover my mouth.
She’s standing on her tiptoes, eyes locked on mine.
“I would advise not saying its name willy-nilly.”
“Muhegeh?”
“I don’t know what the trigger is, but it might conjure just by you saying ‘Firebolt.’”
Ffffft. My face is turning blue. I still have no clue what this magic can do, but if I release it here by
accident, I might blow our home to smithereens.
“Understand?” the goddess asks. I nod and she takes her hands down.
“The bottom line is that this is all a guess. We won’t know for sure until you try it out…Use it in
the Dungeon tomorrow. Then you will know for sure how your magic works.”
“Eh? Tomorrow…?”
“Don’t tell me you want to go now? You just took a shower, right? Your magic isn’t about to
disappear!”
“Ah, yes…you’re right.”
The goddess chuckles at me as I slowly nod in acceptance.
It’s already late. The goddess is very tired from work, hiding a yawn with her hand and everything,
so we decide to go straight to bed.
After brushing her teeth, the goddess jumps into bed before turning out the light.
I too feel a little sleepy and lay down on the sofa…
Sorry, Goddess.
…for a moment.
My eyes are wide open. Who could actually sleep at a time like this?
I jump up from the sofa. Listening to her breathing and being careful not to wake her, I grab my
backpack, already prepped, and leave the room.
Throwing on my armor at all speed, I set my pack on the church stairwell before heading out.
I want to use it right now!
The moon and stars are shining brightly over Main Street. Light spilling out of shops’ and bars’
windows light up their patrons’ faces. The drunken, noisy voices of demi-humans have a very nice
rhythm; my feet tap right along with it as I pass by.
Orario still hasn’t gone to sleep. And neither have I.
The white tower grows in front of me as I get closer. I lift the gear on the front gate with a grin on
my face.
Once I’m into the first floor of Babel, I head straight down.
I reach the Dungeon entrance hole cover in the basement floor. Through the big hole I go, then
down the spiral staircase as if I were on wheels. It’s still not fast enough for me, so I put my hand on
the railing halfway down and jump up and over the side into the middle of the hole.
I tear through the air and land with a solid thud. The impact feels so good it makes my eyes water,
and my feet shake with excitement.
I’m now officially on level one of the Dungeon.
“……!!”
Crunch. I come to a halt.
It’s a wide hallway. A short, fat green shadow has popped up in the middle of my line of sight.
A goblin.
This looks good…
The enemy’s size, the distance between us—everything looks good.
I swallow all the spit in my mouth and wipe my sweaty palms on my inner shirt.
It sees me. Yelling at the top of its lungs, it slams its feet against the ground as it charges right at
me.
I clench my right fist before thrusting my arm straight out and spread my fingers in front of the
oncoming monster.
“……”
My heart pounds away in my ears.
I focus all of my built-up nerves, anxiety, and excitement into my right shoulder.
Short breath.
Raising my eyebrows as high as they would go, I release a roar of my own:
“FIREBOLT!!”
A scarlet light floods my vision a moment later.
“?!”
Scarlet lightning flashes through the hallway.
No, not quite. Electric flames.
The bolts carve sharp, random lines through the air before piercing the goblin.
That’s all that I can see.
An explosive flash of light blinds me the instant the electric flame reaches the goblin’s body.
An orange flower blooms.
“…ah.”
The goblin stands there for a moment, covered in burns, its body smoking. Its eyes go white as it
flops onto the floor. The last utterance of the monster echoes through the hallway.
“…No way.”
It works. It really works.
My magic works.
I pull my arm down and take a long, hard look at the palm of my right hand in stunned silence. All
those times I’ve tried that pose while working in the fields, and now it’s here.
It’s the hand I see every day. Nothing’s changed.
But now it works.
Magic came from this hand.
“…H…haa-haa-haa!”
I know it works, but I’m not satisfied yet.
My entire body is sizzling. I close the open hand in front of my face into a tight fist.
Yes…!
Real results. Real progress.
This is something that I can see with my own eyes, not just my status on a sheet of paper. I’m
finally getting closer to Miss Wallenstein—I can feel it!
Firebolt. Electric flame.
Conjured in an instant, it strikes at the speed of light with the power of fire.
Fire magic faster than anyone.
Magic just for me.
“ !”
A new wave of joy envelops me.
I accidentally bite my lip while fist pumping over and over again. It hurts. I don’t care.
I’m in the zone, my face flush with excitement.
My eyes haven’t sparkled this much since the moment I registered for the Guild. Pure, naïve
glimmering.
The emotion and excitement go straight to my head.
I sprint into the Dungeon, looking for my next target.
“FIREBOLT!”
“Gyuaaaaaaa!!!!”
I find a monster, then thrust out my arm.
“FIREBOLLLTTTT!!!”
“Ebbbsshhiiii!”
I feel like a small child, running around yelling as loud as he can.
“FFFIIIRRREEEBBBOOOLLLTTT!!!!!!”
“BGYAAAAAAAAA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”
Explosion on sight.
“FIREBOLT!” “FIREBOLT!” “FIREBOLT!” “FIREBOLT!” “FIREBOLT!” “FIREBOLT!”
“FIREBOLT!” “FIREBOLT!” “FIREBOLT!” “FIREBOLTTT!!!!”
“GYAAHH!!!”
“Whoops. I’m on the fifth level…”
I’ve gone too far in. I laugh to myself, looking around the room with a very satisfied smile.
The fact that the pale blue walls have turned light green is all the proof I need.
I was having too much fun, I reflect to myself as I make a quick U-turn.
’Bout time to go home, I say to myself, humming a tune when…
“—Whuh?”
Something feels…off.
Heartbeat in my ears, I can hear it.
“Uh……?”
It happens quickly.
I’ve never drunk alcohol before, but this must be what a drunk person feels like.
My legs are unsteady. I’m not even sure they’re touching the ground.
My vision spins. I glimpse the rapidly approaching floor, and pass out right then and there.
“……?”
“What’s wrong, Aiz?”
Two adventurers entered the fifth-level floor.
However, they didn’t come from above. They arrived from below.
Standing firm without a scratch on them, Aiz and Reveria had spent three days climbing up from
the Lower Fortress, level thirty-seven. Even though they’d been fighting off monsters for the past
forty-six hours straight on their journey to the surface, neither of them looked all that tired.
Now their journey’s end was right in front of them, but Aiz, who was walking a few paces in front
of Reveria, stopped in her tracks.
The elf looked at Aiz’s long blond hair as she asked what was wrong.
“A person is on the ground.”
“Done in by a monster?”
Sure enough, alone in the middle of the room was the body of an adventurer.
He lay facedown on the dungeon floor, like he had tripped and not gotten back on his feet. The two
girls approached him.
“No visible wounds, healing and detox appear to be unnecessary…Looks like a classic case of
Mind Down.”
Reveria continued her diagnosis in a matter-of-fact tone, saying that he’d probably used magic
without thinking about the consequences.
Using magic was not free. It required energy. Magic uses mental energy, the opposite of physical
strength, to activate. Of course, just as the body has its limit, the mind can only take so much.
Reveria was amazed that this boy had been able to keep using magic to the point of losing
consciousness.
Meanwhile, Aiz crouched down over the adventurer with her hands on her knees, staring at his
white hair.
“This boy…”
“What’s that? Do you know him, Aiz?”
“Not really. We’ve never spoken directly…He’s, um, the boy I told you about. The Minotaur…”
“…I see. He’s the boy that idiot insulted.”
She had heard many things about this boy, Bell, from Aiz. First, he was the coward who was
chased around by the Minotaur. He’d also run out of a bar they’d been drinking at after he was
slandered by Bete.
Even though Reveria had warned their party member and defended the boy, she hadn’t realized that
he had actually been there. She regretted not stopping the conversation sooner. She knew they had hurt
him.
Even worse, Aiz had been dragged into the middle of that exchange.
“Reveria, I want to compensate this boy.”
“…There are other ways of saying that.”
Reveria let out a long sigh in response to Aiz’s choice of words. Aiz looked up at her with
pleading, sparkling eyes and blinked two, three times.
Realizing that Aiz didn’t understand, Reveria gave up and decided not to say anything.
“Well, helping someone at a time like this is common courtesy…”
Aiz nodded twice, her clothing swishing with her head. Reveria leaned forward for a closer look
at Bell.
Seeing that the boy showed no signs of waking up anytime soon, Reveria shifted her gaze onto Aiz.
“…Aiz, do for this boy exactly what I’m about to tell you. If you’re going to compensate him, that
should be enough.”
“What?”
Reveria gave her a look to convey her real message.
“…Is it okay just to do that?”
“I’m not certain. But you will protect this spot. You don’t have to do anything above and beyond
that. Besides, any man would be happy because it’s you.”
“I don’t…understand.”
You don’t have to understand, Reveria chuckled to herself.
The elf looked down at Aiz for a moment, like a mother watching her child grow up, before
returning her expression to its usual refined, dignified state.
Her face back to normal, Reveria stood up.
“I’m returning to the surface. I’ll just get in your way if I stay here. You two have to be alone to
understand each other.”
“Yes, thank you, Reveria.”
The elf nodded with an affirmative “Ah” before leaving them behind.
She wasn’t the least bit worried about monsters attacking them.
As far as guardians went, the boy had the best one on the planet to protect him.
“Hnngh…guhhh…?!”
“…Bell, what are you doing?”
I’m lying facedown on the sofa, holding a cushion against the back of my head with both hands.
The goddess seems to think that me hiding my face with my butt in the air is funny, but I don’t have any
snappy comebacks in me at the moment.
I ran away from Miss Wallenstein.
I have absolutely no clue what chain of events led to it, but I know that all of it was real. I know
that my head was in the lap of the girl of my dreams, and I know that I ran away from her at full speed
like some crazy idiot.
Gaah…Someone, please kill me…
“Don’t tell me, you wet the sofa?”
“No, Goddess, no…”
Normally I’d be all about getting back at her for saying that, but all that comes out is a pitiful
voice.
After I ran away from Miss Wallenstein in an explosion of shame and confusion, I think I wandered
around for a while, but I have no idea where I went. By the time I realized where I was, it was almost
morning and I was staggering up to the front door at home and falling to my knees.
“I don’t know the details, but you’re a really sensitive boy…”
No, Goddess, not sensitive. I’m heartbroken…
I manage to peel my shaky body from the sofa, my ears still bright red. I even make it to the table
for breakfast with the goddess.
I just want to stay in the room and wallow all day, but I know I can’t. Just for today, I need to
forget about Miss Wallenstein…Yeah, like hell I can do that.
Will the day come when I can thank her properly and express my gratitude?
“Oh, yes. Bell, show me the book you were reading yesterday. I’ve got nothing to do this morning.”
“Ah, sure. Go ahead.”
Her shift must start in the afternoon today. She’s still working at the street stand in addition to her
part-time job at Hephaistos Familia’s Babel Tower Branch Store…I wonder if she can physically
keep this up.
I hold out the book, thick as an encyclopedia, that I borrowed from Syr, to the goddess.
“Hmm…the more I look at it, the book seems stranger and stranger…yes?”
She opens the cover and glances through the first few pages. Strangely, she stops moving.
But not completely. Her eyes start spinning. It’s almost like someone had come to collect a debt
she didn’t know about and was looking at the paperwork.
Huh…? What’s going on…?
“…Isn’t this a grimoire?”
“G-grimoire?”
I repeat the word. I’ve never heard it before.
I don’t have a good feeling about it, though. I break out in a cold sweat.
“So, um, what’s that…?”
“To put it simply, it’s a book that forces the reader to learn magic.”
It feels like all the sweat glands in my body have opened at the same time.
“I don’t think you know about Advanced Abilities, but they’re special skills like Magic Control or
Enigma. This book could only be made by someone who has mastered both.”
—I know what you’re talking about, Goddess.
Someone with two Advanced Abilities…In other words, a member of a Familia who has reached
at least level three. An average smith could never make something like this. It would have to be
someone much, much stronger.
It has to be the masterwork of someone on the level of a legendary individual known as “the
Philosopher.”
My body turns to stone, a broken smile on my lips.
“So this is how you learned magic…So Bell, just how exactly did this grimoire end up here in the
first place?”
“I borrowed it from a friend…She said it was left behind by someone else…”
“……”
“What’s it worth…?”
“At least as much as Hephaistos Familia’s highest-quality weapons, or possibly even more…”
Crack! My stone body breaks, right down the middle.
“By the way, it can only be used once. Once someone acquires magic from it, a grimoire becomes
nothing more than trash. A big paperweight.”
I’m dead.
Acquiring magic through external intervention was said to be miraculous, and I used a book
containing precisely such a miracle. Not only that, I basically stole it, and now it’s worthless.
Millions of vals down the drain, and all because of me…
A heavy silence falls over our home.
I’m in despair. There is no way to undo what I’ve done.
The goddess stares at the floor, her face as emotionless as a mask. She suddenly turns to the table,
grabs a chair, and walks over to me, her feet tapping lightly on the floor. She climbs up onto the seat,
thumps both hands down onto my shoulders, and starts talking down to me from her high vantage
point.
“Listen to me, Bell. You met the book’s owner by accident. And you returned the book to him
before reading it. So the book was never here. Even if there was a mistake, the grimoire had been
used before you had it…That’s how this happened.”
“Goddess, that’s wrong!”
Why is she trying to pull a fast one?!
“Bell, Gekai is not all sunshine and flowers; there are many dark, dark things. I’ve seen them with
my own eyes. Being thrown out of home, being so poor that even buying potato puffs was impossible
and starving, being forced to live under ruins…carrying an enormous debt. The world is full of
injustices.”
“Wasn’t all of that your fault?!”
And what was that last thing you said there?!
What are you hiding, Goddess?!
“A-anyway, I’m going to go and explain everything to the person who lent me this book!”
“Bell, don’t! You don’t have to be that upstanding! This world is even more unpredictable than the
gods themselves!”
“Please don’t try to sound wise at a time like this! Even if we tried to hide it, the truth will come
out! It’s just a matter of time!”
The die has already been cast! Syr will ask me if I read the book, for sure. Even if I lied to her,
everything would come out when the real owner came back for it! Done! Over! Out!
At this point, the only option is to explain everything and assume the dogeza position.
Grabbing the book and blowing past the goddess’s attempts to stop me, I hold the book under my
arm and kick the door open.
I set down the ex-grimoire when I get home and equip my armor to get ready for a day in the
Dungeon.
I give the goddess a basic explanation of what happened at the bar before heading out. A very calm
voice says, “Have a nice day” as I open the door to go outside.
Now that I think about it, didn’t I use my last potion…?
I’m jogging down West Main when I suddenly remember my item situation. I used my last potion
three days ago. The item holster on my left leg is completely empty.
They’ve helped me out before…Maybe I should swing by their shop first?
I decide to stop by a store I haven’t been to in a while on my way to the Dungeon.
The shop is located off of West Main, but I have to go through a few backstreets to get there.
Basically, it’s a house that was built in a dark, damp place. But there’s a sign with the Miach
Familia’s emblem, a completely healthy human body, above the front door.
“Ex-cuse me, good morn-ing…”
I open the wooden double doors a crack and peek inside. My eyes look up and down the rows of
shelves, trying to find an animal-person girl in the dim shop. She hears my voice and turns her half-
closed eyes my way.
“Morning, Bell. Long time, no see…”
With her slow voice and drowsy-looking eyes, you’d think she’d just woken up, but that’s just how
she is. The girl’s taste in clothing is also a little strange. Her tail is sticking through her skirt, and her
left sleeve comes down to her elbow, but her right sleeve goes to her wrist. She has a glove on her
right hand only. She looks to be about the same age as Eina, maybe a little younger. She stops what
she’s doing and walks to the back of the shop and behind a counter.
“Sorry to come in this early. Are you busy?”
“No worries. No one will come in after you leave anyway, Bell…So, what’re you going to buy
today?”
She reaches under the counter and pulls up a closed case before setting it on the counter between
us.
The wide case holds many tubes filled with various colorful liquids lined up in a row.
“By the way, is Lord Miach around? I would like to speak with him if it’s all right.”
“Lord Miach is on a personal errand and won’t be back until tonight. I’m alone today…”
My eyes were scanning the tubes when I asked her, and that was her answer.
The shop is run by Miach and belongs to Miach Familia; it also doubles as the Familia’s home.
The girl I’m talking to is Nahza, Miach Familia’s only member.
She pulls out a very expensive-looking potion from the case and holds it out to me.
“Say, Bell, what do you think? Isn’t it about time to try a high potion…?”
“Uh, n-no, it’s still too soon for me.”
I dodge her proposal with a nervous smile. The high potion she’s holding is worth tens of
thousands of vals. This kind of conversation is almost a daily thing for us because we both belong to
dirt-poor Familias. If there is a way to make or save a few vals, we’ll find it.
That being said, I’m usually on the losing side when trying to barter with Nahza…
“Bell, you haven’t paid us a visit in a long time…”
“…?!”
“Lord Miach was very lonely. His stomach was growling…’cause he was starving.”
Ever since I hired Lilly, I haven’t been to this shop. She’ll prepare any item I ask for, so I haven’t
needed to go anywhere else to buy potions. Nahza’s words stab at my conscience; I’m breaking out in
a cold sweat.
This is bad! At this rate I’ll end up buying something I don’t need…
“Ah! I just remembered! Something strange happened to me in the Dungeon yesterday.”
Desperate to change the topic, I bring up how I passed out in the Dungeon after using magic. Nahza
listens to my story before letting out an affirmative “Ah!”
“That’s Mind Down. It happens all the time to adventurers who’ve just learned magic but get
carried away…”
“Mind Down…?”
“Magic requires mental energy to work. If you use too much, you go out like a light.
“So that’s why…” Nahza continues as she rustles through a box under the counter, “…you need a
mind-restoring potion to avoid that. This one was just brewed the other day…”
“Uh, but…that potion is really expensive…”
“No worries. I’ll give you a discount, being a regular and all…Eight thousand and seven hundred
vals.”
I step back for a moment to think it over.
“All right…”
The dog ears on top of Nahza’s head twitch happily when she hears my response, and she quickly
bends over to pick up two more tubes.
“If you’re willing to buy this for eighty-seven-hundred vals, I’ll throw in these two potions for an
even nine thousand…Sound good?”
Her suggestion makes my eyes go wide and my head spin. Is that really a good deal?
Miach Familia’s cheapest potions are 500 vals apiece. Considering that, Nahza’s offer is really
good. But spending 9,000 vals in one go…that’s almost painful. Then again, this item will let me use
more magic, so it’s very tempting.
The first rule of going on adventures is to prepare for anything and everything.
“No one knows what will happen in the Dungeon. It’d be a good idea to be thorough…”
With those words she’s just sealed the deal.
I may be a bit of a coward, but if I have to choose between money and the safety of my party, I’ll
choose the latter.
“Okay. I’ll accept your offer.”
“Thanks, Bell. I love you…”
I feel a fire burning in my cheeks at her sudden words. Finishing the transaction, I take the items
from the lazily smiling Nahza with her half-lidded eyes, and immediately feel the need to get the heck
out of here.
Nahza waves good-bye as I make a break for the wooden doors and leave the shop.
“You’re too easy, Bell…”
…I thought I heard something before the doors closed behind me, but no—it’s just my imagination.
My imagination, I tell you!
I leave the item shop and go down West Main—a street that I’ve traveled many times in the past
few hours—toward the Dungeon.
A ton of fully equipped adventurers have already gathered in large, circular Central Park under a
bright and clear blue sky.
Wonder if she’s here yet…
I look around, hoping to find Lilly in the park. It’s our meeting point, but I can’t find a dog girl that
looks like her.
Just as I was thinking this isn’t like her, I happen to catch a glimpse of something strange on my
way toward Babel Tower.
It’s in a part of Central Park, under the shade of a tree with large leaves. Lilly is standing with
three adventurers, sunlight dancing on their faces as the leaves sway in a soft breeze. It looks very
comfortable.
However, the three large men are surrounding Lilly. They have their chests puffed out, looking
down on her and saying something while Lilly frantically shakes her head from side to side. No one
looks all that happy.
—Could they be members of Soma Familia?
As soon as the thought crosses my mind, I immediately go in their direction.
“…enough…hand…over!”
“Already…gone…Really…!!”
It sounds like they’re having a heated argument.
I hide behind a tree in their blind spot and prepare to jump in at a moment’s notice.
“Hey!”
“!”
But then, out of the blue—
Someone grabs my shoulder as if they’re trying to get in my way. I spin out of it in a surprised
reflex and turn to face the grabber.
It’s a male adventurer. A human with black hair, excellent physique, and a longsword strapped to
his back.
…Wait a second, isn’t he…?
“Heh, yer that kid from before…Don’t matter, got a question for ya: Ya working with that runt over
there?”
That voice, that tone…No doubt about it. He’s the man I met in the alleyway a while ago.
“Oi! Haven’t got all day! Did ya hire that supporter or not?”
“…That girl is not the prum you were chasing in the alley that day.”
I can tell he’s pissed off just by looking at his eyes, but I still give him that answer. Part of it might
just have been a reflex.
It’s hard to tell because she’s wearing an oversized robe and has a deep hood over her face, but
Lilly isn’t a prum. She’s a Chienthrope, a dog person.
I just want to say, “Don’t get the wrong idea…” The man curves his lips into a sneer.
“Moron…is what I wanna call ya, but what ya think is yer own business. Ya wanna play the fool,
be my guest.”
Sounds like he’s giving me an angry lecture, but there’s something in the tone of his voice that
bothers me.
It’s like he’s saying I’m being tricked.
But I’m not just going to take him at his word…
I squint my eyes in suspicion, and the man makes a jeering smile back at me.
“But that don’t matter; yer gonna help me…We’re gonna snatch her.”
“Wha…”
“Not askin’ ya to do it for free. I’ll pay ya a bit up front and a share of what we get out of the runt.”
This guy sounds serious. I’m so shocked by his sudden proposal that words leave me.
“All ya have to do is go into the Dungeon like usual. After that, find an excuse to leave her alone
and I’ll do the rest. Piece of cake, ain’t it?”
The man’s mouth opens wide as he laughs with all his might.
I don’t like that laugh at all. It reeks of a malice I’ve never heard before.
Even as a chill of nervousness sweeps through my body, I clench my fist.
“Why are you saying things like that…?”
“Huh? What’s with the backtalk, kid? This is where ya nod ‘yes’ like a good boy. Think of all the
money yer gonna get from this. Hell of a sweet deal.
“Ha-ha!” The man lets out another round of ridiculing laughter. “Use yer brain, boy! That’s just a
supporter—the runt carries the bags! Yer no worse off if that useless piece of trash were gone, now
are ya? Wring her dry while ya can and ditch the rest.”
I’m way past my boiling point.
This is different from the back alley. I don’t have room to be scared—a fierce rage is taking
control of my body.
“Not a chance in hell…!”
“Friggin’ brat…!”
The man’s face contorts into a gruesome visage. My forehead tightens as power flows into all of
my muscles.
A fierce energy surrounds us. The leaves on the branch above us shake, almost as if in fear of
what’s going on below.
We stare each other down for a minute or two until he turns on his heal with a loud “Tsk” and
walks away.
I watch him go, the mask of fury still on my face.
“…Mr. Bell?”
“!”
A voice from behind me.
I turn around, almost as if drawn in by it, to find a dumbfounded Lilly standing there, looking up at
me.
The flames of rage that had been burning inside me cool. I return to my normal self.
“L-Lilly? How long have you been there?”
“Lilly just got here…What were you talking about with that honorable adventurer?”
“Ahem…Nothing much, he was just trying to pick a fight…”
I manage to come up with something. I can’t exactly tell the person in front of me that he was trying
to set up a trap for her.
Lilly can tell I’m not calm. She stares at me with her mouth closed. Her expression seems a little
dark.
“Oh! You seemed to be tangled up in something a minute ago. Is everything okay, Lilly?”
“So you saw that…Please don’t worry. As you can see, Lilly is fine.”
She holds out her arms and does a small twirl before looking up at me with a big smile.
No bruises or tears on her robe. It looks like nothing happened. That’s a relief.
“Lilly, who were those—”
“Just like what happened to Mr. Bell, they were picking a fight with Lilly. Maybe Mr. Bell and
Lilly look weak?”
She jumped in before I could finish.
Smiling her usual bright smile and telling more jokes, she didn’t let me get another word in. I don’t
think she wants to talk about what really happened.
“All right, let’s go, Mr. Bell! Since Lilly hasn’t worked in two days, Lilly’s counting on your
efforts today, Mr. Bell!”
She passes right by my side, heading toward Babel Tower. Her bangs sticking out of her hood
shake as she turns back around for a second. I catch a glimpse of her chestnut-colored eyes—they’re
perfectly normal. It’s like nothing happened at all.
I decide to let it go and not say anything else. I close my mouth and follow her.
I can’t tell what her face looks like now because she’s in front of me. But I think about it as we
weave through the crowded and noisy street on our way to the Dungeon.
“…Looks like the time is right.”
The sun set, the moon came out, and then the sky brightened as the sun rose once again, heralding a
new day.
I’m usually still at home at this hour, but today I’ve come to Babel Tower.
While Lilly and I were in the Dungeon yesterday, I couldn’t get the words of the man who’d tried
to capture Lilly out of my head. I’d been on edge, and I could tell it was making Lilly uneasy.
I didn’t want to worry her, so I didn’t tell her the details, but I could still tell she was worried—
she’d kept stealing glances at me with a nervous, desolate expression as I looked out for anything
unusual.
“……”
I invited her out here so early to try and protect her from this mess. So here I am, just staring at the
blue sky. I have nothing to do until Lilly arrives, so my mind wanders off into a conversation I had
with the goddess last night.
Once I got home from the Dungeon, I told her everything I knew about Lilly and her situation.
My plan was to have her live with us under the church until I was sure the danger had passed—
once I had explained everything to the goddess, anyway.
“Bell, is this supporter worthy of your trust?”
“Huh?”
She listened quietly to every word, and then she slowly asked that question.
At first, I didn’t realize what she was saying. Then it hit me and I stood up, leaning over the table
to say something in Lilly’s defense. But when I opened my mouth to speak, the tranquil look in the
goddess’s eyes sent me for a loop and I fell silent.
“Just from what you have told me, something about this girl smells fishy. Like the day you lost my
knife…Oh, I’m not accusing her of anything, so don’t give me that look…I just can’t help but think she
was somehow involved because the two of you worked together that day.”
A very sudden meeting, separated from her own Familia for mysterious reasons, targeted by
adventurers…The goddess repeated my main points back to me, cutting out all the unnecessary filler.
There was nothing I could say in response. I pitifully sank my shoulders.
“Sorry to put it all like that. But I’ve never met this girl, so I only have what you tell me to go on.
You have interacted with her, so your decision might be the best. I won’t be very pleased with it,
though.”
She continued by saying she was more worried about me. Then her aura changed, and she acted
rather high and mighty as she quietly asked more questions about Lilly.
“Do you think this girl is hiding something from you? Something that adventurer suspects—no,
knows she’s guilty of?”
She said that I should know this, too. Her words shot through my heart like arrows.
I might have been trying to avoid thinking about that possibility.
Lilly had done many things for me as a supporter, including saving my life from a monster. Was that
making me turn a blind eye?
I just kind of sat there for a while, looking at the goddess as I went through my memories of Lilly.
Everything. I was trying to find the moments when Lilly had shown me a piece of her true feelings.
“Goddess, I…”
“Mr. Bell?”
“!”
My thoughts cut off.
The voice calling my name makes me focus and return to the present.
“Ah!…L-Lilly, morning.”
My response is a little slow, and I lightly shake my head to get the final remnants of last night out
of my mind.
Seeing that, Lilly’s face shifts to a smile, her eyes hidden behind her bangs as usual.
“Good morning, Mr. Bell. Lilly didn’t think that you would arrive so soon—Lilly couldn’t believe
her eyes.”
“Ah-ha-ha, you’re right. You’re always here before me no matter the time, Lilly.”
At least it looks like nothing has happened to her. That’s a relief.
Just as I thought, that adventurer wouldn’t dare put a finger on Lilly aboveground.
Adventurers who cause problems get put on the Guild’s blacklist. Life in Orario is extremely
difficult for them. For starters, if they have their registration revoked, the Exchange will no longer pay
them for magic stones and drop items, instead unceremoniously taking them away. Not long after that,
they’d be kicked out of their Familia—which was tantamount to being abandoned by their god.
They could even be punished and put in jail if their violation was severe enough.
These laws would make the blacklisted adventurers a kind of outlaw, but the Guild has no choice
but to take a firm stance against them. You could say that they are keeping criminal activities under
control.
So, that’s why if anyone is going to cause a problem, they’ll do it in the Dungeon. With no
witnesses, the attacker could say that they were defending themselves or they thought the victim was a
monster and attacked by accident. Their escape routes are limitless.
“Mr. Bell.”
“Ah, sorry. What is it?”
“Shall we go to the tenth level today?”
“Um…”
I look down at Lilly, her smiling face hidden under hair and hood, almost in shock.
“It’s very sudden, don’t you think…?”
“Mr. Bell, did you really think that Lilly wouldn’t notice? Mr. Bell has more than enough power to
do well on the tenth level, right?”
“……”
The “power” she is talking about must be my status.
It’s true that many of my basic stats, especially my Agility, were already in the A and B ranges. The
Guild has declared that the lowest level that Level One adventurers are allowed to enter is the twelfth
level.
The reason that I don’t go down there now is the fact that I’m solo. Plus, the layout and difficulty of
the Dungeon get especially hostile below level ten.
You could say the Dungeon starts baring its fangs. In any case, having an average status grade of G
on the seventh level and an average grade of A on the twelfth couldn’t be more different.
Actually, I’ve already entered and returned safely from the ninth-level floor. At this rate, I should
be able to go into the eleventh level, even solo. Lilly must have decided it was a good time for me to
try the tenth.
Honestly, I feel like I can do it. I might be a little overconfident in my abilities, but I can see
myself thriving there.
Even still, there is another more depressing reason that I don’t want to set foot on that floor.
They come out on the tenth level.
Large-category monsters. There are none of them down to level nine.
……Just like that Minotaur.
“…But I almost died on the seventh level the other day. Are you sure someone like that is ready for
the tenth level…?”
“That’s true, but because Mr. Bell has that experience of failure due to overconfidence, the Mr.
Bell of today won’t have that problem, right? Lilly believes Mr. Bell has more credentials of being an
adventurer now because of it.”
“……”
“Don’t forget that Mr. Bell now has magic. That magic is strong. The new Mr. Bell has no
weaknesses.”
I showed her the Firebolt magic yesterday.
It wasn’t much of a presentation—I wanted to see how much my Magic had improved from getting
my status updated the night before. That, and I wanted to get used to using the magic, so it was good
timing. Lilly had been very impressed.
Since I’m solo, being able to use Swift-Strike Magic is very valuable to me.
“Lilly has been as far down as the eleventh level with other adventurers, so you can take Lilly’s
word. Mr. Bell will have an easy time on level ten. Lilly’s guarantee.”
Even before I had magic, Eina gave me permission to enter the lower tenth (as well as a stern
warning). So when I think about it like that, just as Lilly said, now that I have magic, the tenth level
shouldn’t be a problem.
To advance or to stay put.
“…The truth is, Lilly has to gather a large amount of money in the next few days.”
“Wait a minute, is that…!”
“Lilly can’t say the details, but it involves Lilly’s Familia…”
As if she were guiding my thoughts, she hits me with her real motivation.
I can’t help but remember her being surrounded by those three adventurers.
My mind goes off on its own, and my neck starts to twitch.
“Can you blame Lilly for being selfish, Mr. Bell?”
Lilly bows down in front of me, looking up at my face.
If this is really about her contract with her Familia, then my interference—basically shouldering
the load to help her gather the “large amount of money”—would work against her. It would depend on
who was there at the time, but if it were discovered that someone from another Familia helped her
gather the money, they would have some hard feelings toward said Familia. It might be humiliating.
I don’t have any way of knowing if Lilly’s claims are true. I doubt she’d tell me honestly if I asked
her.
I know I wouldn’t if I were in her position.
I make up my mind and clench my right fist.
“All right. Let’s go to the tenth level.”
A large smile blooms on Lilly face when I say that. She bows over and over again, saying, “Thank
you, thank you, thank you!!” I scrunch my eyebrows down and force a smile.
“Should we leave right away? Or should we buy some more items inside Babel, just in case?”
“Lilly bought extra items yesterday. Lilly has a suggestion, though: why don’t you try this?”
“This is…”
Lilly set her backpack down on the pavement as she spoke. She pulls out the ink-black sheath of a
short sword.
The Divine Knife is about twenty celch long, so I would guess this weapon is about fifty, just by
looking at it.
A shortsword—no, a baselard?
The simple round sheath is flush against the blade’s hilt, perfectly hiding the blade within. It’s a
very simple design for a sword.
“So, why?”
“Don’t feel bad, Mr. Bell, but this was part of the preparation. Mr. Bell’s current weapons don’t
have enough reach to fight against larger monsters. Also, Lilly has been thinking for a while that Mr.
Bell needs more range.”
“So you’re…giving it to me? I don’t feel right, not paying you for it…”
“Mr. Bell has accepted Lilly’s selfishness; this is a thank-you gift. Please accept it.”
“…Well, if you’re going to put it like that…”
I draw the blade of the baselard she’s given me.
The silver blade is thin on both sides. It’s very light, and not that much bigger than my dagger, so
for someone like me who has never used a sword, it might be pretty useful…
“I wonder if it suits me. I’ve never used something like this before…”
“How about testing it on the way to the tenth level? The monsters down to the seventh level would
be perfect for practice. If Lilly’s eyes aren’t playing tricks on her, Mr. Bell would do very well using
a shortsword.”
Lilly’s been with many parties and seen many fighting styles; I can trust her on this. She’s been
with me a while now; she knows what she’s talking about.
There is no reason to doubt her; I’ll take her word for it.
“Ah…I don’t have a belt for a sword…”
All I can do is hang it from my waist. I was a little slow to realize that the sheath would get in my
way.
“Mr. Bell, Mr. Bell.”
“?”
“If Lilly remembers correctly, Mr. Bell’s protector can hold weapons about that size, right?”
Ah, forgot about that. I even told her that myself.
I take the Divine Knife out of the protector for a moment to see if the baselard will fit inside. Yep,
no problem.
“You have an amazing memory, Lilly. I completely forgot.”
“Hee-hee, Lilly only just remembered now, too.”
Lilly puts her hands behind her head and shyly turns away for a moment.
I can’t help but laugh as I watch her, but soon I realize I have another problem: Where do I put the
Divine Knife?
“……”
Suddenly, I hear the goddess’s words from last night in my head:
—Is this supporter worthy of your trust?
It’s almost like the Divine Knife in my hand speaks to me, as the goddess’s voice asks me the same
question for a third time.
“…”
I quietly close my eyes, asking for forgiveness.
When I open them up again, I slip the knife into my leg holster.
It has slots big enough for potion tubes; the knife and its sheath fit securely.
“…”
Lilly watches me silently, giving a light nod.
“Well then, shall we go?”
Lilly raises her head at my invitation. Bobbing her head slightly, she smiles and says, “Yes.”
“A Guild inspector will come today. Even if you make a mistake, don’t do anything stupid, newbie.”
“Yes, sir!”
Hestia returned to her post after the half-dwarf store manager finished his lecture.
Hestia had learned much about how to work with store employees who didn’t treat her as the
goddess she was. Her twin black ponytails swished lightly from side to side as she set to work.
Her main job was to interact with customers, so she was the one to greet the Guild inspector.
When the inspector arrived, she looked like a half-elf Hestia had seen somewhere before.
“Ah, aren’t you…”
“I have come here on behalf of the Guild. My name is Eina Tulle. I am here to conduct an
inspection, as scheduled.”
Eina greeted her very professionally. Hestia thought about it for a moment but dismissed it as
common sense and led her into the shop.
Keeping her visit completely by the book, after introducing herself to the store manager, Eina
pulled out a piece of parchment and a pen before walking around the shop.
“Goddess Hestia.”
“Eh?”
“I would like to speak with you. Do you have a moment?”
While looking over weapon racks and the magic-stone air-conditioning, Eina made her way to
Hestia’s side. She spoke in a low voice and never made eye contact. Hestia was a bit surprised at
first, but then took a quick look around before casually filling her role as guide and leading Eina into
a corner.
“I’m surprised you’d approach me like that. You plan for everything, don’t you, Ms. Adviser.”
“Sorry to trouble you.”
The two of them continued their conversation while pretending to work, never looking at each
other.
In response to Eina’s “Do you have a moment,” Hestia shook a weapons rack to cover her as she
nodded yes.
“I have information concerning the supporter employed by Mr. Bell Cranell.”
Hestia’s hands stopped as a shiver ran up her spine, making her shoulders twitch. She turned to
face Eina.
“I’m going to tell you about the Familia she belongs to, so please listen well.”
The more Eina told her about what she’d learned last night at Loki Familia, the tenser Hestia’s
expression became.
Even though the possibility of her being under the influence of Soma was rather low, the supporter
working with Bell might have had another motive—like depriving him of all his possessions—when
she’d approached him.
Eina said that she would encourage Bell to break off all interaction with said supporter before
something serious happened.
“Goddess Hestia, can I ask you to convince him for me?”
Eina looked down at the goddess with her emerald-green eyes.
Hestia looked back at her, speechless.
Since leaving Bell behind, Lilly had stayed on one clear path straight to the upper levels. She cleared
the tenth level and ninth level with no trouble at all before arriving on the eighth-level floor.
Lilly knew every twist and turn of the Dungeon down to the eleventh level like the back of her
hand.
Her method for relieving adventurers of their valuables was, like she had just done to Bell, to
create a diversion and make her move during the ensuing commotion before making her escape—
before the mark even noticed she was gone.
However, if they caught up to her, it was all for naught. The only way she had to avoid this was to
memorize the dungeon maps sold at the Guild.
Even if she encountered monsters, she had become an expert at leading said monsters to other
adventurers and letting them take care of it. In fact, that was about all she did.
Once she got to the surface, all she had to do was return to her normal self and sell off the goods.
There was no way any of her victims could catch up at that point.
Alone, she could do nothing. But with a bit of planning and a vicious mind-set, Lilly had tricked
many adventurers.
Her reason for stealing from adventurers? To put it simply, revenge.
She decided that she’d take back what was once hers from the people who had tormented her all of
her life. She had repeatedly bared her fangs at members of Soma Familia.
She felt no remorse for her actions; it was her right as the victim.
All adventurers were adventurers. That had always been her reasoning, and that was never going
to change.
…Everything so far had been the same, until she felt cruel looking away from one boy’s face.
Now that it’s mine, Lilly almost has enough money…
She had no interest in Soma. Actually, quite the opposite—she hated it. A piece of her had a
grudge against it as well.
Even just the smell of it might make her fall under its spell again, make her go crazy like an animal.
Therefore, this money was going toward her salvation.
Someday, she was going to trade a large sum of money for her release from Soma Familia.
The point was, Lilly was a possession of the god Soma. She tried to get the Guild involved, but
they didn’t have the resources to help her and did nothing. The only thing she could do was convince
Soma to let her go by offering an extraordinarily large amount of money in exchange for her freedom.
She made up her mind; she would get her freedom with her own two hands.
“Hmmm!”
Lilly came to a halt as she stepped into some tall grass.
An eighth-level goblin was walking around in front of the only exit from this room, directly in front
of her.
There were no signs of other adventurers. The goblin blocked her path. Even if she tried to sneak
around it, she couldn’t go forward.
Doubling back and taking another route would take far too long.
While Bell surely had his hands full with the onslaught of monsters heading his direction and
wouldn’t be able to pursue her at top speed, there were other dangers in the Dungeon. Time was of
the essence, so Lilly decided to break through.
“Lilly’s not built for this kind of roughhousing, yeah?” said Lilly under her breath as she rolled up
the right sleeve of her cream-colored robe.
She pulled out a small handheld bow gun.
The magic sword would be wasted on a goblin!
Stepping forward with her right leg, she leveled the bow gun at the monster.
Prums in general were known for having amazing eyesight. Lilly’s round chestnut eyes zeroed in on
the goblin, lining it up dead center. The monster finally noticed her as well.
“Bah—ffftt!”
A golden arrow shot out of the bow gun with frightening speed.
The arrow carved through the air and bore straight into the goblin’s right eye.
“GiGYAAAAAAA!!!!!!”
“Excuse me!”
The goblin screamed out in pain, clutching its eye as Lilly used the opportunity to scurry by the
monster and to the exit.
Lilly could fight, too, as long as she had a strategy. However, she had to rely completely on
weapons and items. Slaying a single monster did not justify the amount of money required to take it
down, not by a long shot.
Lilly only fought against monsters in self-defense.
“Lilly’s jealous of Mr. Bell. He could do everything by himself!”
Starting with her magic, Cinder Ella, Lilly’s strengths were not suited for combat. Lilly was very
weak physically.
She gained her magic shortly after swearing revenge against adventurers, and hoped that it would
transform her into something stronger than her weak self. She was extremely depressed when she
learned the truth about it.
However, she soon learned how to use it in a different way to exact revenge. She pushed her magic
to its limits and figured out what it could really do.
As proof of its power, her magic allowed her to consistently steal many items, using the same
strategy on many adventurers.
Lilly had become powerful enough to laugh at the weakling she once was.
And…seventh level!
She made her way up the staircase jutting out of the wall, to the next floor up.
Lilly kept her speed up as she raced past the light green dungeon walls.
After this floor, the rest is a piece of cake.
In terms of the monsters, the seventh level was the last mountain she needed to climb. It was too
early to lose focus.
After this floor, she could handle everything on her own. Her lips started to curve into a smile as
she bolted into the next room.
“Ain’t this a surprise. I’ve hit the jackpot.”
“Eh?”
It happened when she came out of a small corridor and into a room.
A leg appeared from the side and caught Lilly’s short body just under her knee.
Her balance gone, Lilly fell face-first onto the dungeon floor.
Wha…what was that…?
Dazed and confused, she put her hand into the dirt to push herself up. That’s when a long shadow
fell over her.
She was yanked up before she could turn around; half a second later a boot was slammed into her
nose.
“Gyhaaa?!”
“I’d better be gettin’ an apology, ya piece-of-shit prum!”
A powerful fist nailed her left cheek. A river of blood flowed from her nose.
Just as her eyes were beginning to focus, she took another kick to the chest. Her oversized
backpack dislodged from her shoulders, rolling backward like a snowball.
The next hit wasn’t far behind—the heel of a boot bore into the small of her back.
“—hhhh?!”
Her body bounced off the floor like a ball, bouncing once, twice.
Lilly was swept up in a whirlpool of pain as her body finally came to a halt.
“Ah…! Gahaahaa…!!”
“Ha! Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!! That’s a good look for ya! Plastered in blood and dirt!”
With the world spinning around her, Lilly finally caught a glimpse of the voice’s owner.
It was a human adventurer. The same one who’d been talking to Bell yesterday. Her former
employer.
The man’s jaw was pointing at the ceiling as he looked down on her with a sneer.
“Thought it was about time for ya to throw away that kid. I wet up a net for ya. Been dyin’ to say
hello!”
“A…net?”
“The Dungeon is huge. Waitin’ for ya by myself woulda been as borin’ as lookin’ for a needle in a
haystack. Got myself some partners, increased my chances.”
The Dungeon itself was extremely large; the floors below level five were wider than Central Park.
Despite its size, there were only three or four ways to get this far down.
The man had stationed his partners at each of the pathways and waited for her arrival.
Of the four, Lilly had chosen the route that the man was watching.
“Couldn’t believe my eyes when I saw that white-haired kid running around with a runt…Don’t
tell me, the kid had something that made yer eyes go all a-twitter? Are ya dense?”
“…!”
“But I don’t care ’bout that. Before I tear you limb from limb as a thank-you for stealing my sword,
think I’ll make you play along…!”
He declared with a sadistic twinge in his eyes that he would take everything from her.
Lilly did her best to cup her still-bleeding nose as the man ripped off her robe, causing everything
inside to fall to the ground. She was now wearing only her underclothes, unable to do anything to
resist him.
“Magic stones, a gold watch…Hey, hey! You had a magic sword?! Haaa-ha-ha-ha-ha! So ya stole
this, too, eh?”
The man was overjoyed by his discovery.
His mood improved greater still when he saw a knife with a glossy shine.
Spinning the crimson knife in one hand, a dark smile grew on his lips.
“Hee-hee-hee-hee…All right, I’ll let you off the hook, ya piece-of-shit prum. After gettin’ a
present like this from ya, I’ll show ya a bit of mercy. Nice guy, ain’t I?…Hyaa!”
“Ahgg…!”
Two swift kicks to the stomach and Lilly was reeling in pain.
This is bad, this is bad, this is bad. Lilly’s heart raced inside her small chest, her brain in all-out
panic mode.
She knew at that moment that if she didn’t get away now, she would meet a miserable fate at the
hands of this man’s brutality.
Just as she took in a deep breath, another man’s voice came from somewhere distant.
“You certainly went all out, Master Gedo.”
A new person was coming toward them.
“…?!”
Looking in the direction of the new voice, Lilly saw someone she recognized.
He was one of the adventurers who’d tried to get money out of her the other day. Just one of the
many members of Soma Familia who had tried to do the same thing many times before.
Then it came to her. The man’s partners were members of Soma Familia. Most likely, after talking
with Bell, he had seen them arguing with her and decided to ask them for assistance.
“Get this, Kanu. The runt had a magic sword! Just as ya thought, looks like she’s been stealin’ all
over the place. Ha-ha-ha-ha!”
“…Is that so?”
An adult male animal person, the one called Kanu, narrowed his cloudy, dark eyes at the happy
man, the adventurer called Gedo. But Gedo was in such a good mood that he didn’t notice.
“Master Gedo, I have a suggestion…”
“What’s that? Hand it over? Hey, now, I caught the prum, I should have first dibs on—”
“That’s not quite it. Not just the magic sword, but everything you took from her. I suggest you leave
it all on the ground.”
“Huh?” Gedo looked at his partner with a confused smile. Before he could ask any questions,
however, Kanu pulled something out from behind him and threw it. It landed just in front of Lilly.
“KEEEEI!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!” Lilly screamed. “K-killer ant…?!”
It was only the top half, making it easier to carry. The bloody mess was still oozing purple liquid
from many gashes all over its body; it had likely been slain only a few minutes ago. No, not slain. Its
mouth was still moving; an arm twitched in agony.
“You might have thought at first that all of us were hunting together. There’s a chance that Master
Gedo, who has conquered many floors, is stronger than we are. So the three of us put our heads
together and came up with this plan here.”
Plop, plop. Two more barely alive killer-ant bodies landed close to them.
Two more adventurers had arrived in the room from separate entrances, both of them working with
Kanu. The three masses of dying ant let out cries that united to create eerie echoes throughout the
room, like a curse from another world.
Both Gedo’s and Lilly’s faces turned pale.
Killer ants released a special pheromone when they were close to death. It was a call for help, and
other killer ants would answer.
The three balls of still-breathing ant flesh had been releasing the pheromone for some time. The
room had become a ticking time bomb.
“Are you serious?!!” Gedo said.
There were three ants in that state calling for help. Just how many of their friends would answer?
The expressions on Kanu’s and his allies’ faces were surprisingly calm and unchanging, even
during Gedo’s screaming.
Only Lilly correctly understood the adventurer’s irrational obsession with money, having been
under the influence of Soma herself.
“You don’t want to become their prey while you’re fighting with us, now do you, Master?”
“Hyee?!”
Five killer ants poked their heads into the room entrance behind Gedo.
This room had four entrances. Kanu and his cronies were standing in front of three of them; the last
one now had killer ants in the way. Gedo gritted his teeth, shaking in a mixture of fear and anger. His
pale face hardened as he threw everything he’d taken from Lilly to the ground.
“Damn! Damn you all!!!”
Kanu grinned as he stepped aside to allow the man to pass. Gedo took one last look around the
room before running past him.
Not a moment later, a barbaric roar erupted from the corridor, followed by the sound of a sword
clang. After that, silence.
A shell-shocked Lilly had no way to see what happened; there was a wall of giant ants between
her and the exit.
“Gii…!!”
“?!”
A killer ant stepped in front of Lilly as the room was flooded with the monsters.
Her injured body wouldn’t move like she wanted it to, and she couldn’t get out of the way of the
monster’s incoming claws.
Blood suddenly sprayed into the air.
The injured killer ant fell to the floor.
“Are you okay, Erde?”
“Mister…Kanu…”
Kanu looked down on the girl, his mouth nothing more than an upward rip in his face and a purple
blood–splattered sword resting on his shoulder.
“I came for you, to save you. We are in the same Familia, after all.”
Lilly bit her lip and clenched her fists as the man in front of her spoke like some kind of hero.
His partners were holding the killer ants back, for now.
“That’s right, we all came for you, Erde. In this desperate situation, we didn’t abandon you, see?”
“…Yes.”
“…You know what I’m saying, yeah?”
He wrapped his arm behind Lilly’s shoulder as he spoke. His tone sounded as though he were
acting in a play rather than facing death.
His eyes might have been looking at Lilly’s quivering body, but in reality he didn’t see her.
All he could see was money—to be more specific, the Soma that the money would get him.
Kanu’s expression was calm and collected, but on the inside he was overwhelmed with anxiety.
“Hey, speed it up! We can’t hold them!” said one crony.
“I know!” Kanu looked to Lilly. “You, yesterday you said you had no money. Drop the act. If you
try to pull something like that again…”
“Okay! Okay-okay-okay…!”
Seeing the direness of her situation, Lilly nodded with a defeated look on her face.
She had no time to be angry, so Lilly grabbed a small key that was hidden as part of a necklace and
held it out to him.
“The hell is this?”
“A key to a gnome rental storage unit in Orario’s eastern ward…”
“Talking about a safepoint? To think you kept large amounts of vals in a box that small…”
“Gnome jewels are in there…”
“Ah…now I gotcha…”
The jewels and minerals that gnomes collected were highly valuable. Their worth rarely changed
so there was always a buyer. Lilly had exchanged most of her ill-gotten gains from coins into gnome
jewels at the Gnome Trader because carrying large amounts of money would look suspicious if she
were caught.
Another dark grin graced Kanu’s lips as he nodded and grabbed the collar of Lilly’s shirt. With a
big wad of fabric in his hand, he pulled Lilly to her feet and then up off the floor, placing her level
with his eyes.
“Mr. Kanu…what are you…?”
“We’re in quite the pinch, you know. Look around. We’re being surrounded.”
At least twenty killer ants had made an almost complete ring around them. There was only one exit
that was still open for escape.
Lilly futilely kicked her legs as she hung in the animal man’s grasp, but it was like trying to swim
in the air.
Kanu, five o’clock shadow and all, made one last big smile.
“Buy us some time.”
“?!”
“We’ll make our escape while you draw them away, Erde. That exit over there isn’t blocked yet,
so we can take a few of them while you act as a decoy.”
Terror filled Lilly’s eyes as she looked back at him.
Chancing a look to the side, she saw Kanu’s partners had the same savage smile on their faces.
“Without money, you’re useless. At least do your job to help us one last time, supporter.”
“FIREBOOOOOOLT!!!”
An explosion of flames.
“…Huh?”
A scarlet inferno engulfed the room.
“LILLYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”
A voice calling out to her cut through the swarm of monsters.
Echoes of explosion after explosion of fire filled the room. The startled killer ants all tried to turn
and face this sudden attack from behind but ran into one another as they moved.
Flashes of fire reflected off Lilly’s eyes as they came closer, carving a path through the massive
ants. The moment Lilly clearly saw lightning flames…The wall of monsters collapsed and a white-
haired boy jumped through.
“OUT OF MY WAYYYY!!!”
“GIGAA?!”
The boy, Bell, dove toward Lilly, wielding both his dagger and the shortsword as he tore through
the mass of killer ants.
The killer ant standing over the girl froze for a moment before its head was separated from its
body in a flash.
“Lilly! You’re okay, yes?! Do you know who I am?”
At first, Lilly didn’t recognize the boy embracing her.
His ruby-red eyes were shaking as he held her. The fingers around her shoulder were clamped
down so tight that it hurt.
Bell quickly took out a potion and raised it to her lips.
Lilly’s blank eyes looked as if she already had one foot in the grave. But her mouth opened just
enough to allow the blue liquid to roll down her throat.
Koff! Koff! A moment later, a cute little cough escaped her lungs.
“…Mr. Bell?”
“Yes, it’s me! You’re okay, right?”
Bell’s voice cracked as he spoke, tears gushing from his eyes—like Lilly’s were, a moment ago—
and a smile on his face.
Heat filled Lilly’s body, which had been cold until now, as she was pulled into a strong and
somewhat painful hug.
Seeing that Lilly was all right, Bell immediately looked up from her.
The sharp claws of the surviving monsters were closing in.
Lilly’s hand moved on its own underneath her shirt, where she had hidden a jet-black knife up until
now. She pulled it up and held it out to Bell.
Bell grinned from ear to ear as he took the Hestia Knife from her.
“Wait for a minute, just like usual.”
Saying those words, Bell stood up.
Angry, clicking sounds reverberated around the room. Many spots on the floor were burning from
Bell’s magic, smoke rising into the air.
There was no greater feeling of isolation that this.
No less than thirty monsters had Bell and Lilly surrounded. Even more were coming from the exits,
born from the walls.
All of them looked as though they could charge at any second. And yet, Bell wasn’t afraid.
The Bell of a few days ago would have faltered in the face of this many enemies for sure. Even
now, Bell could never contend with this many monsters at once.
However, now Bell had magic.
“Here I come…!”
He withdrew a vial filled with yellowish liquid from his leg holster.
Bell now knew about the limits of the Mind Down and had purchased this 8,700-val trump card to
be ready to face death.
“Magic Potion.” Medicine that healed the mind.
Popping the cap off the vial with his thumb, Bell downed it all in one gulp.
“…—RIGHT!!!!”
“Hh!!”
Another one of the ants stepped forward, and Bell raised his right arm.
“FIREBOLT—!!!!”
The killer ant was blasted backward the moment electric flames erupted from Bell’s palm.
That was the signal. All the ants charged at once. Bell started yelling over and over at the
oncoming onslaught.
Rapid-fire explosions of flame and electricity blanketed them all.
Every time Bell shouted, a new jet of electrical inferno shot forward, illuminating the room.
Every time his scarlet lightning was released, at least one killer ant was rent asunder. Some of his
lucky shots slew two of the beasts at once.
The army of killer ants took Bell’s assault head-on, giving no ground.
Magic was turning the tide of battle against overwhelming numbers.
“HAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!”
Bell reached for his weapons once a good portion of the killer ants had fallen.
Gripping the Hestia Knife in one hand and his dagger in the other, he charged headlong into the
mass of wounded killer ants.
Lilly watched on in silence as flashes of purple light were followed by a severed head or torso
flying into the air.
“……”
She sat quietly in stunned silence, watching the scene unfold before her eyes.
Whenever she caught a glimpse of his white hair, another killer ant was sliced down in a surge of
purple liquid.
He was fast, sharp, and strong.
Before she knew it, Bell was the only one standing. There had been so many killer ants just a few
minutes ago; now they were all motionless on the dungeon floor.
Bell returned both blades to their sheaths with a look of relief on his face. He took one last look
around the room before returning to Lilly’s side.
“How…did you get here?” she asked.
“Well, orcs kept coming in after you left, but I think another adventurer came, probably. I couldn’t
see clearly because of the fog, but all the monsters between the exit and me suddenly weren’t there
anymore…”
That was how Bell had managed to do the impossible and cover that much ground to come straight
here.
Bell forced a smile, scratching the back of his head as though what he did was no big deal.
However, something inside Lilly snapped when she saw that.
“…Why?”
“Eh? Did you say something, Lilly?”
“Why did you do it?”
The floodgates were open; Lilly’s mouth started moving on its own.
There was something else she should be saying right now, but other words were spilling out.
“Why did you save Lilly? Why didn’t you just abandon Lilly?”
“…What?”
“There’s no way you couldn’t have realized by now Lilly was fooling you! Does Mr. Bell think
Lilly wanted to surprise him by taking that knife, or something stupid like that?!”
The confused look on Bell’s face only served to make Lilly’s voice even more heated.
Lilly’s sudden rage burned through the last wall of self-restraint.
“What are you, Mr. Bell? An idiot? A buffoon?! An airheaded moron beyond all hope of
recovery?!”
“Moron……?! Wait, Lilly, calm down…?!”
“Impossible!! Mr. Bell doesn’t notice anything?! Lilly took money for herself at the Exchange! Mr.
Bell’s and Lilly’s shares should have been fifty-fifty, but it was closer to forty-sixty! There were
times Lilly got greedy and made it thirty-seventy! Lilly charged you more than double the price of
items when Lilly prepared them! Twelve of them! Lilly doesn’t know how many times Lilly was
shocked by your lack of knowledge about items, or how careless you are with equipment!!”
Bell’s mouth twitched as all this information suddenly came to light.
Lilly would not stop. A little voice in the back of her head was frantically saying “Stop!” but it
was no use. She kept on confessing to everything.
“Do you understand now?! Lilly is a bad, bad person! A thief! Lilly’s a piece-of-shit prum who
lied to you over and over! Lilly’s not worthy to be your supporter!”
“U-um…”
“Even still…even still, Mr. Bell saved Lilly?!”
“Y-yes.”
“WHY?!”
Lilly was gasping for breath as she looked at Bell.
She had no clue what she was hoping to hear.
But her heart was beating a mile a minute, faster than it should be even now.
A little frightened by Lilly’s barrage, Bell opened his mouth to speak almost as a reflex and said
these words:
“B-because you’re a girl.”
—HUH?? Lilly’s entire body felt like it was on fire.
Her fists clenched; her shoulders rose to her ears in anger.
Her emotions were boiling over, and she had no idea why.
She couldn’t understand this explosion of discontent.
“ID-IOT!! Mr. Bell is an IDIOT!!! Saying something like that again, it’s the same as before?!
Would Mr. Bell save ANY woman just because?! Lilly can’t believe this!! You’re horrible!!
Playboy!! Pervert!! Enemy of all women!!!!”
For some reason, tears leaked out of Lilly’s eyes during her rant.
She was in no position to be saying any of it, but she unloaded all of her discontent on the boy
standing in front of her.
Discontent? About what?
He saved her; just what did she have to be discontented about?
What was this flame in her chest—no, her whole body—trying to say?
She didn’t have any idea.
Bell withstood the latest tirade, Lilly once again panting for breath.
Relaxing his shoulders and smiling, Bell leaned forward and placed his hand gently on the cheek
of the dog-earless Lilly.
“—”
Chestnut eyes went as wide as they could go.
“I saved you because you’re you, Lilly. I didn’t want you to disappear.”
“Fuu, ehh……!”
“There’s nothing else to it. Why would I need a better reason to save Lilly?”
Her tear ducts gave out.
A waterfall of tears gushed from her eyes, flowing down her face in all directions.
Lilly couldn’t hold back any longer and cried out.
“Hic…waaaaaah!”
“Lilly, if you’re in trouble, come talk to me. I’m an idiot, so I won’t know unless you tell me.”
“Hic…! Waaahhh…”
“I’ll help you, you can count on it.”
Lilly dove into his chest and hung on tight.
His metallic armor got in the way, but she didn’t care. She embraced him with all her might, her
hands around his back.
She could feel the palms of Bell’s warm hands gently stroking her head and back over and over
again.
She knew. She noticed.
Bell had thought of her when he rushed to this room.
His light clothes were trashed, torn to shreds.
The pale skin showing through the holes was covered in cuts and bruises.
Lilly knew that he had taken on hordes of monsters to come to her side.
She wanted to call out to him, to say something to acknowledge what Bell had done.
Lilly wanted him to accept the one thing she hated most: Lilly.
“Sorry…so, so sorry…!”
“…It’s okay.”
The sound of Lilly’s cries echoed far and wide.
The scene of a giant ant massacre filled one corner of the Dungeon. Slowly but surely, their magic
stones broken one by one, the slain killer ants turned to ash amid smoke rising from still-burning
embers strewn about the room.
The ashes slowly fell off the crying girl’s face, along with her tears.
The human kept the small prum girl in a tight embrace, the same calm smile on his face.
—Behind her, a lost needle rabbit hopped around the prairie field on the tenth-level floor of the
Dungeon.
LITTLE • BARISTA
• MADE BY GOIBNIU FAMILIA. DESIGNED FOR SHORTER RACES LIKE PRUMS.
• HAS POWER BEYOND ITS SIZE. THE AMMO IS LIGHT, WITH LITTLE TO NO RECOIL. HOWEVER,
RANGE IS LIMITED.
• DIFFERENT ARROWS CAN PROVIDE MORE POWER AND RANGE. SOLD SEPARATELY.
Afterword
This is the second book in the series. Thank you for picking it up. This is Fujino Omori.
While this story has a fantasy world–type feel, I was very conscious of building the story like a
video game. My greatest challenge was figuring out how to incorporate an experience-point system,
the most basic role-playing game element, into the story in a way that readers could accept without
any misunderstandings. I spent many long hours trying to solve this problem.
This book casts the spotlight on baggage-carrying “supporters,” a job that came to mind while
working on the first problem.
Since there are no “magic pockets” that adventurers can put as much as they want into, how are
they going to take all their loot out of the Dungeon? Could they fight at full strength while lugging
around large bags? If not, then who would carry the load? This is how the “supporter” role came to
be.
As you have read, being a supporter is not a glamorous job by any means. Their position is so low
that they have to be content to sip muddy water. It’s not surprising that the heroine of this story, and
others like her, wasn’t satisfied and went astray. Yes, for sure.
However, not just in terms of this story, but I think life itself is easier when someone is there to
help shoulder the load. It’s only when we have people there to help us that we can face new
challenges.
I don’t want to be thought of as someone who got too caught up in the moment and forgot to express
gratitude to those who helped me along the way. Writing this book reminded me of that fact.
So I would like to take this opportunity to do just that.
First, to my editor who supported me again and again. To Mr. Suzuhito Yasuda, who overcame a
very difficult schedule to provide amazing artwork. And to everyone who put their heart and soul into
making this book a reality, thank you from the bottom of my heart.
Thanks to overwhelming support from readers, a third book is now in the works. I’m working as
hard as I can to get it on the shelves as soon as possible. Thank you all for your continued support.
That’s all for now.
Fujino Omori
Thank you for buying this ebook, published by Yen On.
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Copyright
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used
fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
This English edition is published by arrangement with SB Creative Corp., Tokyo, in care of Tuttle-Mori Agency, Inc., Tokyo.
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ISBN 978-0-316-34018-2
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