Leaving the village, Mr. Fische waited for me.\n
Proceed through the woods with Mr. Fischeâs guidance.
To your fatherâs words, Mr. Fische answers.
Mr. Ginal, too, looks strangely into the woods around him.
âThe impression you get from the woods is that the atmosphere has changed.â
Everyone nods at Mr. Ginalâs words.
From what Iâve seen, nothingâs changed.
Even though, the impression I received from the forest was so different that I thought it was different.
âWe went out into the woods and realized it, too. I just donât feel bad about it, and Iâm stuck talking about seeing how it goes.â
As Mr Fische put it, it has changed but I do not find it particularly offensive.
I just think itâs changed.
Thatâs a strange thing too, so I tilt my neck looking at the woods.
As they are distracted around them, they notice that the bag that is lowering from their shoulders is moving very thinly.
âUm, is it okay to let the Siers out? Where are the other adventurers and vigilantes?
âTheyâve already returned to the village, so itâs okay to let them out.â
To Mr. Fischeâs words, stop and open the bag.
It was Ciel who popped up.
As soon as I got to where I was, I looked around.
âThatâs cool. Are you more disappointed in your body than you saw in the book?
Mr. Fische laughs happily when he sees Ciel, who has become Adandala.
The next thing I know, Sol came out of the bag, and finally Sola and Flem came out of the bag at the same time.
âYouâre fine. So letâs goâŚâŚ Whoa, Phishe!
Mr. Ginal slaps Mr. Fische from behind, who was looking at Ciel and nicoting him.
âAh, bad. Over here.â
Walking for a while, I see a stone about my back.
Near the stone, I saw Mr. Garritt sitting in a fallen tree.\n
âYou tried everything.â
Mr. Fische laughs bitterly at your fatherâs words.
There were a lot of tools rolling around Mr. Garritt at the end of his gaze.
The number of magic items you have prepared to break the stone is over 10, even if you have just looked at them.
The stone seems stiff like that.
âYou kept me waiting.â
âIâm fine. It hasnât changed since.â
Mr. Fische raises his hand to Mr. Garritt.
Mr. Garritt rose from the fallen tree where he was sitting.
Gilmouth approaches the stone.
Then the letters of the magic formations, in which the stones are fluttered and lightly engraved, glow one strong after the other.
To Mr. Garrittâs voice, Gilmouth steps back one step all the way.
âPeepee! Peepee! Peppa!â
I turn my gaze in surprise at Solâs slightly lower ringing.
At the end of his gaze, Sol stares at the stone.
When Iâm surprised at how it looks, I jump just big enough to go towards the stone.
âWhat! Sol, itâs dangerous!
Your father rushes to stop Sol in my voice, but Sol jumped on the stone with that momentum.
The moment Sol rides, thereâs a big crack in the stone.
The moment there was a crack in the stone, Mr. Garritt glanced at Sol.
Mr. Fische, too, is flattered. \nâPep!â
When Sol jumps on the stone over and over again, every time a crack enters the stone.
As the crack enters from top to bottom of the stone, the light of the strong glowing letters is gradually lost.
âIt looks so easy to breakâŚâ
To Mr. Ginalâs words, Mr. Fische and Mr. Garritt shake their heads beside each other.
He said, âNo matter what you really used, it didnât break.â
âWell, it looks so easy when you see that one⌠Ah, the hammer? Oh, how?
âOh, because I have tentaclesâ
To your fatherâs casual words, Mr. Ginal and the others raise their voices of surprise.
I donât care about that, I wield the hammer with my tentacles and I crush more and more stones Sol.
Mr. Ginal laughs at your fatherâs words.
âIt didnât crack with that hammer, did it?
Mr. Garritt asks Mr. Fische to make sure.
âOh, I didnât crack it at all⌠youâre crackedâ
Ginal replies to your fatherâs question with a bitter smile.
âThatâs a rare magic item. It has been quite helpful so far. I was able to break things that were pretty hard and magical. Are you sure it didnât crack?
Mr. Fische nods at Mr. Ginalâs words.
âNot at all with me. Why would Sol crack it if he used it?
âMore than that, does Sol know what that stone is?
Tilt your neck to Mr. Gilmouthâs words.
Sure, you wouldnât think to break it so much if you didnât know.
\nBut if I had known, Sol would have definitely told me.
âThank you, Sol. Itâs okay now.â
If Sol hadnât broken it, what would have happened?
Your father strokes me with a bumpy body.
âDruid, is there anything you can tell us?
Mr. Ginal looks at your father.
Mr. Ginal nods and speaks to Mr. Gilmouth and the others.
Apparently, weâre going to go check on whatâs going on with the stones outside of here.
After a while, Mr. Ginal, with four tree branches, came here.
âJust keep one short, pleaseâ
Your father makes sure that Mr. Ginal leaves, and then grips only one of the branches of a tree with four short to invisible.
When Mr. Ginal chooses each branch of the tree, he opens his hand.
âYay. Good to see you.â
Looks like Mr. Ginal pulled a short branch and waves at the other three.
âI wanted to play with Ciel!
There is a bitter smile in Mr. Fischeâs words.
âHeh heh, there you goâ
âMake sure you check the stones.â
Mr. Garritt and his men walked into the woods opposite the direction they had come to when they sighed.
âWhen you calm down, keep me back in the village. The captainâs house⌠no. Meet me at my house.â
Mr. Gilmouth walked out as soon as he gave his father the keys to the house.