The moon was hidden by the clouds, making it feel very dark.
Amid that darkness, there were eight people, Aisha, Roroa, Naden, Halbert, Kaede, Ruby, Julius, and I, standing near a watch fire lit on one of the city walls.
Illuminated by the swaying red flames, I handed a letter I had written to Aisha. âSend this to Hakuya in Parnam Castle.â
âUnderstood.â
Aisha accepted the letter, tied it to the messenger kui she had brought with her, and sent it off. The messenger kui flew south through the dark sky,
âA letter?â Julius asked, to which I nodded.
âA letter to the prime minister we left back at the castle, informing him of our situation and the lay of the land here. If there are tens of thousands of lizardmen beyond the Dabicon, weâre still going to want to take some measures against them even once the reinforcements arrive. Iâm sure Hakuya will come up with a plan thatâs appropriate to our situation and pass it to Ludwin, the commander-in-chief of the reinforcements.â
âI see...â Julius nodded his head. âWeâll be leaving all the planning to the Black-robed Prime Minister then.â
âDo I detect spite? Because Iâm leaving everything up to someone else?â
âYouâre overthinking it. Iâm still impressed.â Julius smiled wryly, and then let out a little sigh. âIn the former principality, the opinion of the ruling prince was absolute. The prince led without hesitation, and his retainers followed without comment, whether his decisions were right or not. That may...be what created the gap between us and you. I feel, as late as this may be, that I understand why my father lost now.â
âBig Brother...â Roroa gave him a look of concern.
âFor me...I never found myself thinkinâ the old you was all that troublesome an opponent.â
âBold words...â
âBut I wouldnât wanna end up fightinâ the new you. Ya seem way tougher than before.â And Roroa grinned. It felt like the ice was melting between them.
Considering their past strife, it was hard to tell whether they could fully accept one another, but it seemed they wouldnât hate each other without cause from now on.
Looking at the two of them, I could feel my guilt for taking Roroaâs family away from her lighten just a little.
Thatâs why...no matter what happens, I must defend this country.
I put a hand on Nadenâs shoulder. âWell, shall we get going, Naden?â
âOkay.â Naden nodded and then, with a single breath, turned into her massive ryuu form.
As I mounted Naden, Aisha rushed over with a worried look on her face. âIâm worried about letting you two go out alone after all, sire! I should go with you...â
âLike I explained before, mobility and enemy detection are the important factors for what weâre about to do. Itâs more efficient to have just me and Naden. If we take a bodyguard, weâll stand out too much. Weâll get in and out quickly, so donât worry.â
âYou say that, but...I canât help it.â
Aisha still had a worried look on her face, so I gave her a grin. âWe all have to do what we can to get through this situation. Iâm pushing my retainers hard, so I must do what I can myself too. Itâs okay. If something goes wrong, Iâm sure Hal and the rest will come for us.â
Hal thumped his chest proudly. âYeah. If you get in a jam, weâll go pull you out of it. Right, Ruby?â
âRight. Naden, you make sure you protect your husband properly too.â
âIâll do it without you telling me to.â Naden nodded in her ryuu form.
I patted her on the back and said, âOkay, letâs go, Naden!â
âRoger that!â
Naden and I lifted off from the castle wall and danced into the night sky.
Naden rose to a height no winged monster could reach and hovered there. The way the wingless Naden swam through the sky was very quiet, and her black color worked together with that fact to let her blend into the darkness of night.
I didnât feel cold because I was protected by Nadenâs magical power, but the sound of the wind rushing by my ears was loud, making it readily apparent to me I was in a very high place.
Naden turned her long neck to look at me. âSouma.â
âI know. Iâm searching now.â
I covered my ears so as not to be distracted by the sound of the wind, and then focused.
I was using my ability, Living Poltergeists, to control six wooden mice, and had them searching the ground. Down at ground level, the chimera-like monsters were eating the corpses of the lizardmen that had been fried to a crisp after being bombed by the wyvern cavalry.
In a scene that made them look like hungry ghosts, I could hear the groaning of monsters and the biting sounds of them feasting greedily on corpses. The sickening images flowed into my head, triggering an instinctive gag reflex, but I somehow managed to force it down and continue the search.
I searched the ground carefully from a height where we couldnât be caught by surprise monster attacks.
Of everyone who had come on this expedition, Naden and I were the only pair that could pull this off. I was always delegating the tasks I couldnât handle to the people who could. So, whenever there was something I could do, I had to be proactive about doing it, or I wouldnât be setting a proper example for my retainers.
This isnât the time to be creeped out. I must hurry and find it.
While I struggled with my task, Naden looked at me with concern. âYou okay? You shouldnât push yourself too hard...â
âIâm fine... Found it!â I immediately gave the order to Naden. âGo about 200 meters in the direction of three oâclock.â
âYou got it.â Naden swam through the air as directed until she reached that point. Then, after careful confirmation, I gave Naden the signal to go.
âOkay, do it just like we discussed before.â
âRoger that! Hold on tight!â
With that, Naden dove headlong toward the surface.
âUrgh...â
It felt like plunging down the highest drop on a roller coaster. Nadenâs magic was supposed to be cutting the force of the wind considerably, but I still felt like it was going to throw me backward. I should have been used to flying through the sky on Nadenâs back by now, but this sudden dive was really scary.
The ground was rushing up toward us. I could clearly see the eyes of the mass of monsters on the ground twinkling as they caught the light of the moon shining through gaps in the clouds.
Before those eyes could turn toward me, I gave the order. âNow, do it! Naden!â
âUnahhhhh!â
The white mane Naden had in her ryuu form stood on end and purple static crackled from her two whip-like whiskers. Then...
Roarrrrrrrrr!
Naden bellowed and unleashed a massive bolt of lightning toward the ground.
The sudden flash of light was blinding, and the massive boom that followed echoed in my stomach. Nadenâs unrestrained strike fried the monsters in the spot she hit to a crisp, which paralyzed or made the monsters twitch uncontrollably over a wider radius.
Naden set down near the area sheâd hit. âOkay, Souma. Be quick.â
âI know.â
I readied the crossbow I had brought, firing toward my target. The bolt fired flew straight, stabbing into the little monster that was my target.
âWell done,â Naden said, sounding impressed. âThatâs not bad, hitting it on the first try.â
âMy personal martial arts trainer has whipped the basics into me, and the crossbow was what he said I excelled most at,â I admitted. âThough he was angry that Iâm no better than a rank and file soldier at basically everything else.â
âIf itâs just a matter of shooting, even a child can do it after all,â she said.
Yeah... Pathetic as it felt to admit it, she was right. I wasnât much better than an amateur with a sword, and even though it was shooting all the same, I couldnât hit a target with a regular bow and arrow.
If there was anything else I got compliments on...itâd have to be swimming. I was even better at swimming than Owen was, but winning against a man who was over sixty wasnât much to brag about. Even if Owen was super frustrated by it.
With things starting to feel kind of awkward, I grabbed the string tied around my waist. This string was silk, which was being used as a stand-in for rubber. It was strong, flexible, and not prone to tearing, and on the other side of the string was tied to the bolt I had just fired.
As I pulled on the string, the little monster it had stabbed into was dragged along the ground. I couldnât feel the monster moving, or the bolt pulling free... Good.
With that confirmed, I placed my hands down on Nadenâs back and said, âOkay. Letâs go home, Naden. No need to overstay our welcome.â
âRoger that!â
Before the monsters could gather around, Naden danced up into the sky.
With the dead body of a monster dangling beneath us, we headed straight back to where our companions were waiting.
When Naden returned to human form and set down on the wall with me, Roroa and Aisha rushed over.
âWelcome back, Darlinâ. Howâd it go?â
âThank goodness youâre both all right,â Aisha said with relief. âYouâre not hurt anywhere, are you?â
âWeâre fine. Neither of us are hurt anywhere, and things went well.â I patted them both lightly on the head.
Naden, watching jealously, extended her own head in my direction, so I gave her hair a good mussing too.
âNice work out there, Naden. That was quite the thunderclap.â
âHeheh, of course it was.â Naden puffed up her chest with pride.
While we were bonding, Julius and Hal and all the rest looked on in exasperation.
Julius tapped Roroa on the shoulder to ask her to back away, then stood in front of me to say, âIâm sorry to interrupt, but Iâd like to confirm what you caught.â
â...Right.â I threw the monster hanging from the string tied around my waist underneath the watch fire.
It was only a little larger than a dog, with a wide, scale-covered body that looked like the drawings of a tsuchinoko I had seen back in my old world. There were pigeon-like wings on its back, and its head was flat, but there was no questioning it was a snake. If I were to describe it, Iâd have called it a winged tsuchinoko.
I looked around to everyone, then spoke.
âThis is likely the monster Madam Jeanne said she ate.â
Before dawn, inside the tower near the castle...
This place was dimly lit by the sun in the middle of the day, and was almost entirely dark by night, but now there was a roaring bonfire lit on the stone floor, lighting the cell where the lizardman was held in sunset colors.
There were five people around the fire: Aisha, Roroa, Julius, Tomoe, and me. That was because if there were too many, the lizardman might get agitated.
âOkay... Letâs do this,â I said.
I pulled out the plump, winged snake monster (henceforth called a flying tsuchinoko for the sake of brevity). There was a metal spit running from the already dead flying tsuchinokoâs mouth to a hole near the point where its tail was attached (was that hole for defecating, maybe?), and the metal spit had a handle on the end of it. This was a tool for spinning the meat over the top of the fire as it cooked.
The spitted flying tsuchinoko was rested on two Y-shaped metal racks on either side of the fire. When I started turning the handle, the flying tsuchinoko spun over the fire that was cooking it.
Nothing special had been done to the flying tsuchinoko. It wasnât plucked or descaled, and no spices were added; it was just put over the flame and cooked. This wasnât for us to eat, it was purely to teach the lizardman to cook monster meat and eat it, so this was good enough.
The continued exposure to flame made the feathers burn off, and fat dripped off its plump torso. The dripping fat made the fire burn stronger, so we cautiously added water to control it.
The savory smell of cooking meat gradually filled the room.
âYouâre good at that...â Julius remarked as he watched me cook the monster. âMaybe you would make a better cook than a king.â
âHahaha... I canât deny that.â
âNo, no, Darlinâ. Arenât ya supposed to be denyinâ that?â Roroa said in exasperation.
No matter what job he suggested, Iâd probably be better suited to it than being a king, but...well, Iâd just have to focus on cooking this monster for now.
I called Tomoe over and whispered to her. âWell? Is the lizardman watching us?â
âY-Yes, Big Brother. Mr. Lizardman canât look away,â Tomoe responded, also in a whisper.
It was top secret that Tomoe could converse with monsters and demons, so I didnât want Julius finding out.
Then, somewhat timidly, Tomoe looked at the lizardman. âUntil just a little while ago, it only saw us as food. But ever since the smell of fried meat filled the air, itâs been only looking at the cooked monster. Iâm hearing, âI want to eat that meat.ââ
Clang!
As if to support Tomoeâs earlier opinion, the lizardmen grabbed onto the bars, thrusting its pointed mouth through the gap between them.
âEeek!â Startled by the sound of the lizardman throwing itself against the metal bars, Tomoe ran and hid behind Aisha.
Looks like weâve got it nice and interested...
The meat was gradually cooking. The fat dripping into the fire made a hissing noise, and despite the appearance of the creature (one fat snake), it was starting to look pretty tasty.
âOops... Excuse me.â Aisha wiped her mouth with the back of her hand.
This had to be torture for the ever-hungry dark elf to watch. If we had more food, Iâd fix her a midnight snack...
âWell...Iâd say that about does it,â I said.
I looked at the monster meat from below to judge if it was cooked enough. This was my first time cooking flying tsuchinoko after all, so I didnât know how it tasted best, but I figured it was well done enough. I removed the flying tsuchinoko from the fire and held it up.
âCooked and ready to serve!â
âWhy are you so weirdly energetic?â Julius asked with exasperation.
âNah, it just felt like a good formulaic thing to say...â
âHuh?â Julius looked at me as if he didnât get it. It was a natural reaction.
I got back on track, put the still-sizzling flying tsuchinoko on a big plate, and removed the spit. That was the fried flying tsuchinoko, ready to eat.
âNow, letâs do a taste test!â I laid the plate with the meat on it on the floor, then used a piece of wood with another horizontal piece of wood on the end to push it in.
When it realized the meat was coming closer, the lizardman stuck its arms out through the bars and waved them wildly. Eventually, when the big plate got close enough, the lizardman snatched up the roasted flying tsuchinoko and crunched right into it.
...Yes, not just bit, crunched. It didnât care one bit about the bones as it ripped the meat and tore it apart.
âItâs so wild that itâs creepy...â
It did not look like a pleasant way to eat. I could feel my appetite, which had been stirred up by the smell of cooking meat, rapidly decline. Looking around, everyone else was wincing too. Only Aisha looked jealous.
I called Tomoe over and asked her in a whisper again, âTomoe, how is the lizardman?â
âItâs overjoyed. Its hunger has been at least slightly sated...â
âI see... I guess this lizardman has learned the taste of monster meat now.â
Even in my old world, once an animal learned the taste of human flesh, it would begin to attack us. This lizardman now knew the taste of monster meat, so it ought to try attacking monsters.
I told Julius, âThis is the first stage of the plan complete. Letâs move on to the second stage.â
âNext is the main event, I suppose?â Julius asked.