Before long, Mira pulled into view of the source of the distress
signal. There were four people and no monsters present, which was
immediately a bit worrying. She dove as steeply as seemed safe to get
a clearer view and hopefully figure out what was going on.
A Vulpin woman in light armor was the only one of the four the witch was absolutely sure she didn't recognize. She was holding her arms out, seemingly generating a translucent green dome of magic stuff in front of her—a shield, in fact, which was busy absorbing a volley of bolts from a crossbow in the hands of a purple-feathered avian woman wearing a lighter version of the town guard's uniform. The other two people were Rast and his partner, Pirr, and he seemed to be on the defensive, backing away from her strikes while evidently restraining a trained reflex to counter them.
A Vulpin woman in light armor was the only one of the four the witch was absolutely sure she didn't recognize. She was holding her arms out, seemingly generating a translucent green dome of magic stuff in front of her—a shield, in fact, which was busy absorbing a volley of bolts from a crossbow in the hands of a purple-feathered avian woman wearing a lighter version of the town guard's uniform. The other two people were Rast and his partner, Pirr, and he seemed to be on the defensive, backing away from her strikes while evidently restraining a trained reflex to counter them.
As they pulled up between the two pairs, Rast happened to catch sight
of the broom. "Mira!" This got the attention of the Vulpin
woman, who turned her head to see them and seemed immediately
distressed by the witch—enough so to distract her from keeping the
shield up. Nora raised one hand as she jumped in that direction off
of the broom, raising some rock in the way of the avian's next few
bolts.
"Oof—gods it's good to see you," Rast said.
"Little help?" Mira moved in, blocking one of Pirr's
strikes with her scythe, hooking the blade around her spear's shaft
and yanking it to one side to send her stumbling off balance. Both
she and the avian seemed extremely slow to acknowledge their presence
at all.
"Why are you fighting?"
"Wish I knew! Kayriel 'ere saw somethin', went all silent and
landed, then just stared around at everyone for a minute. Then she
an' Pirr started rambling and shoutin' and then attacked."
Nora came closer, using the bracelet in her left hand to shock the
avian—Kayriel—with enough electricity to stun her momentarily but
hopefully not injure. "Are you hurt?" she asked the
stranger.
"..No." The Vulpin was looking right past her at Mira.
"Does Kyzerath employ witches and warlocks now?"
"Nope, just me!" Mira replied cheerfully. "D'you
know what's going on here?" Once she had her balance, Pirr
seemed to have paused her attack to stare at the witch.
"I don't, although it's...familiar," she half-mumbled the
last word. "Their eyes are..wrong."
"Eyes?"
"Eyes?"
Mira glanced more closely at Rast's partner. There was indeed
something unusual with her eyes. At first it was—sort of like TV
static, or the visual effect that appeared in Aria's dreamspace
before it got filled with other people's dreams. But it was more than
that; there seemed to be something too deep inside for it to possibly
fit inside her skull. It was a nauseatingly rapidly warping
and twisting of colors that ultimately resulted in the TV snow-like
appearance on the surface. "..Yep, thaat's pretty
weird."
"EMPTY!" Pirr suddenly screeched, advancing on the witch spearheard-first. While she wasn't strictly expecting this, Mira still had enough time to move aside, grab the spear in both hands and several shadow-tentacles and yank it out of Pirr's hand. This didn't deter the guard, as she went for the witch's throat with her hands and had to be shoved away hard, onto her back, by her scythe's handle.
"EMPTY!" Pirr suddenly screeched, advancing on the witch spearheard-first. While she wasn't strictly expecting this, Mira still had enough time to move aside, grab the spear in both hands and several shadow-tentacles and yank it out of Pirr's hand. This didn't deter the guard, as she went for the witch's throat with her hands and had to be shoved away hard, onto her back, by her scythe's handle.
Kayriel had also recovered by now and advanced exclusively on the
weaver, spewing a series of words too rapidly to fully parse. Some
highlights included 'abomination incapable of receiving the gift' and
'purge from this world'. Nora just backed away, drawing more
electricity and using it to knock the avian down again.
"How did just seeing something drive 'em mad?" Rast
said.
The stranger was mumbling, "..seen it before, but.."
Pirr was getting back to her feet again, looking enraged and ranting
about the same way Kayriel was. "Yeah okay, I know what we'll
do," Mira said.
The witch planted the base of her scythe on the ground and rapidly
chanted, focusing demonic energy through it. Then, as the elf started
to come toward her again, she stuck out her hand toward her and a
stream of shadowy black magic hit her, enveloping her body briefly
before seeming to be absorbed, with the result that she collapsed
onto the ground, eyes closed. She immediately began chanting the same
spell again, tracking Kayriel's position as she shot some bolts
Nora's way and had them blocked by more raised dirt, and sent a cloud
of black magic into her to put her lights out, too.
"...Phew."
The Vulpin woman took a moment to look between the two unconscious
guards, then to Mira. "Not that I don't appreciate the rescue,
but—what was that, exactly?"
"Basic sleeping curse I just whipped up," the witch said, putting her weapon away, "I made it a bit stronger by giving it a keyword that'll wake them up right away if they hear it, but an average mage should still be able to dispel it. Oh, no need to worry about saying that word accidentally though—it's like over ten syllables long. And, possibly made up. Soo, who're you, now?"
"Basic sleeping curse I just whipped up," the witch said, putting her weapon away, "I made it a bit stronger by giving it a keyword that'll wake them up right away if they hear it, but an average mage should still be able to dispel it. Oh, no need to worry about saying that word accidentally though—it's like over ten syllables long. And, possibly made up. Soo, who're you, now?"
"Uh, this's Hyacinth, a guard from one of our neighborin'
towns," Rast said. "We were just escortin' her back.
S'pposed to be an easy job, just take a safe route with me an' Pirr,
and Kayriel to scout."
"I'm beginning to think whatever threat we are facing has a
grudge against me personally," Hyacinth said. "So..you are
a witch, then?"
"Never said I wasn't! Name's Mira, and this is Nora." She turned toward the sound of running. "Oh! Aaand that'll be the rest of our party, Aria and Lupa," she swept her arm out toward them.
"Never said I wasn't! Name's Mira, and this is Nora." She turned toward the sound of running. "Oh! Aaand that'll be the rest of our party, Aria and Lupa," she swept her arm out toward them.
After lunch, the caravan reassembled, the soldiers rotating out
duties: Those who had driven the horses before now flanked the
caravan with the prince and the adventurers, while others who'd been
on their feet took over that task. Rayna stayed near the front of the
group, and Zack remained on the opposite side from the prince.
An hour or so down the road, they came to a fork and paused.
Peregrine came up next to the illusionist. "What do you 'see'?"
he said.
"Hmmn. This way will take a bit longer, but there's a lower
chance we'll get attacked on it," she said, pointing. "Buut..."
She mentally communicated the time and probabilities through
Katherine to some of the others, especially Lynn.
"Is the difference in the risk worth it?" the prince said,
while the archer got back to Rayna with an answer to this very
question.
The fox-girl crossed her arms, easily making it look like she was
thinking about it for a moment herself. "The difference in
probability isn't very big, and the time difference is a couple of
hours. So, I don't think so. Also, they're both over fifty percent—I
don't think we're getting through without dealing with something else
either way."
He nodded. "On your advice, then, I propose we take the shorter
road." Then he turned toward the rest of the caravan. "—Unless
there are any objections to that?"
"Sooner we get to safety the better, sire," one of the soldiers spoke up.
"Sooner we get to safety the better, sire," one of the soldiers spoke up.
Katherine nodded. "Our group agrees, too."
As
they started off again, Lynn asked: You can't see exactly
what will attack us, can you? I mean, a hundred percent chance
of more weak goblins is way better than a fifty percent chance
of another fire giant or something...
Sadly,
I don't get that much detail. To put it in DND terms, though, the
'challenge rating' looks about the same either way.
There better not be a fire giant on our
route, Clera said, in a rare interjection. We very much lack
the tools to deal with one.
"Aww, we missed the whole fight? Waait.." The shifter
looked around.
"No monsters to begin with," Mira said, coming closer.
"Something made these two instantly crazy." She gestured
toward Pirr and Kayriel.
"Oof, a high-level confusion spell or something?"
"Oof, a high-level confusion spell or something?"
"Worse, it's infectious, maybe transferred by sight. But some
people are immune, or at least resisted it, I guess?"
Hyacinth did not look reassured by this conversation. "Do
you..deal with things of this nature often?"
"Oh, nah, we just..you know..." Aria predictably struggled to come up with a good excuse.
"Sometimes we'll think up theoretical types of spells or effects we might need to deal with," Mira said, "and make plans for, just in case. I mean, mental magic is rare but not unheard of, right?"
"Oh, nah, we just..you know..." Aria predictably struggled to come up with a good excuse.
"Sometimes we'll think up theoretical types of spells or effects we might need to deal with," Mira said, "and make plans for, just in case. I mean, mental magic is rare but not unheard of, right?"
"...I, suppose so." She looked to the man Lupa was
carrying. "Who's..?"
"Hi, this one's Lupa!" the wolf-girl answered
helpfully.
"We don't actually know who that guy is," Aria said. "He's still unconscious from the spider venom."
"Spider—dire spiders?"
"We don't actually know who that guy is," Aria said. "He's still unconscious from the spider venom."
"Spider—dire spiders?"
"I presume so," the witch replied. "We went into the
forest looking for monstrous lizards, but the spiders already
ate them all, so we killed those instead."
"With four people? How?"
"Well, we had the element of surprise, and Nora can throw fire around," Mira said; the weaver just sheepishly looked away.
"Yeah, and Lupa here could win a weight-lifting championship with her pinkie finger!" Aria said.
"Well, we had the element of surprise, and Nora can throw fire around," Mira said; the weaver just sheepishly looked away.
"Yeah, and Lupa here could win a weight-lifting championship with her pinkie finger!" Aria said.
".....Including the queen."
"If that's the big one, sure! Aria killed it." The shifter waved cheerfully, giving the kind of innocent grin that can still be terrifying under the right circumstances.
Hyacinth stared at this for a second, and looked back and forth
between the group again before continuing: "Did you get rid of
the eggs?"
"We uh, didn't see any eggs," Aria admitted.
"We uh, didn't see any eggs," Aria admitted.
"They lay 'em in their prey, and hang 'em up on webs," Rast
said.
"We...have no experience or knowledge fighting, sp-spiders,"
Nora spoke up. "So, we were..unaware of this detail."
"That sounds like a job for more than four people anyway," Mira said.
"Yep," the wolf-man agreed. "Guard oughta be able to take care of it if all the adults're dead."
"Soo anyway, do you still want an escort the rest of the way to your town?" the witch said. "I could prolly just fly you there on my broom or something..."
"That sounds like a job for more than four people anyway," Mira said.
"Yep," the wolf-man agreed. "Guard oughta be able to take care of it if all the adults're dead."
"Soo anyway, do you still want an escort the rest of the way to your town?" the witch said. "I could prolly just fly you there on my broom or something..."
Hyacinth exhaled audibly, not seeming thrilled with this idea. "No,
I believe it would be best to report this to Captain Ezra first, and
send a message to my town explaining the change of situation.
Depending on the strength of your...curse, and the nature of whatever
magic is affecting them, they should be seen to as quickly as
possible."
"Fair enough," the witch said. "Well, I can get one of these guys..I guess Pirr? Rast, can you take Kay for a while?" She figured that avians, having hollow bones, might be lighter to carry.
"Sure," he said.
"Fair enough," the witch said. "Well, I can get one of these guys..I guess Pirr? Rast, can you take Kay for a while?" She figured that avians, having hollow bones, might be lighter to carry.
"Sure," he said.
If there was one bad thing about being instantly teleported to the
caravan's position, it was that it gave the group of adventurers no
opportunity to scout possible routes for the caravan to take to town
on the way out to it. The direction they were approaching from was
nowhere near the way any of them remembered using, with most of them
having foregone wider, more vulnerable roads which carts like these
could use in favor of smaller, shorter paths that were easier to find
hiding places on, or else rough but open terrain that made it easy to
spot trouble from far off. In short, none of them could've known that
the shorter route Rayna suggested would cut through some fairly
thick, low-visibility woods.
By the time the trees began to close around them, it had been long
enough since the fork for turning around to feel absolutely
foolish—besides which, the other route could be just as bad or
worse. So instead, everyone tightened their formations and continued
forward with as much haste as their caution would allow. Anyway,
there was still enough light from the gap the wide path made
between the trees for even the humans to see reasonably well.
Zack stopped, putting out a hand to signal a halt. Something's
coming. Up in the trees, both sides of us. The psion passed this
message to everyone, hearing the movement herself now that the noise
of the caravan had stopped.
Just
feels like 'animal' minds—some kind of beast-type monsters, I
guess.
Senses?
Rayna asked while everyone drew weapons and pulled back to the sides
of the carts, facing outward.
...Sight, sound, smell...heat? Like how a snake 'feels' for things.
...Sight, sound, smell...heat? Like how a snake 'feels' for things.
No
experience fooling that one, I'm afraid. I'll try to put everyone off
to one side a bit to at least try to throw off their aim.
The sound Zack had first picked up over the trees cut out just to
either side of the caravan, and then there were a few seconds of
complete, tense silence. After that, something bright green and
taller than a man pounced downward in a blur toward the knight. He
struck Enceladus up-forward and succeeded in impaling it through the
glowing blade: a gigantic lizard with a narrow, almost snakelike
head, big claws on its four feet, hind legs long enough to use for
both bipedal and quadrupedal movement, and a pattern of green and
brown to its scales that had made it impossible to pick out from the
trees above.
At the same time, more such lizards came out on both sides, one of them narrowly missing its effort to bite through the prince's shoulder before quickly skittering back into the trees, easily avoiding his effort at a counter-swing. The one that came for Katherine was not so lucky, a telekinetically-thrown knife landing in its back and shocking it, stunning it enough for another to swoop around its head and catch it across the throat. Lynn also made a successful dodge, though the arrows she sent after her attacker missed.
At the same time, more such lizards came out on both sides, one of them narrowly missing its effort to bite through the prince's shoulder before quickly skittering back into the trees, easily avoiding his effort at a counter-swing. The one that came for Katherine was not so lucky, a telekinetically-thrown knife landing in its back and shocking it, stunning it enough for another to swoop around its head and catch it across the throat. Lynn also made a successful dodge, though the arrows she sent after her attacker missed.
One of the giant scaly monsters, however, did make its mark,
biting down on the right arm of one of the soldiers—Karl, who had
been standing right next to Clera. It stayed on him for a couple of
seconds, long enough for the winged girl to cast a spell which
wreathed it in flame when it tried to run away, hurting it badly
enough for it to fall down dead halfway to the trees. Karl also
collapsed, crying out, and the Empath was kneeling over him almost
before he hit the ground.
Any
idea of their numbers? Peregrine
asked, trying his best to distinguish between the remaining lizards
and the wind going through the treetops.
Four
now, the psion reported. One
didn't attack. Zack pointed his
blade to the ground and kicked the lizard off of it, going over next
to the Empath and raising his shield to protect her and her patient.
"GaaAAah..!"
Karl writhed violently. Clera made a silent request for a knife, and
raised her hand to take one Katherine sent over the caravan to her in
response. She cut across the wound from the lizard's bite, trying to
bleed out as much of the poison as possible, and then dropped the
blade, keeping a firm grip with the other hand on his arm despite the
rest of her shaking.
Fast-acting
neurotoxin. I can pull off the effect to keep it from killing him,
but I can't process the poison for him.
You
should maybe get inside for this one,
Katherine advised, coming next to the prince and raising several
daggers out in front of them to deter an attack. He hesitated
briefly, but complied—not necessarily knowing what a 'neurotoxin'
was but understanding the danger of a fast-acting poison all the
same. The rest of the soldiers—who her message had been equally
directed toward—each turned and clambered into the nearest cart,
not wanting to share Karl's fate.
Lynn
used visual information from Rayna—showing the actual location of
the monsters—to track one and shoot it with an electrified arrow
when it tensed to pounce. The electricity arced across to another,
dropping both of them to the ground and giving her and the catgirl
easy targets to finish off. Zack met another pounce with his shield,
bashing the lizard's face to stun it and slashing into its side
before it could recover enough to attempt to flee.
That
leaves the one that hasn't attacked, I guess?
Lynn thought, looking around. Where is it?
Other
side of us, the catgirl replied.
And running away, but it doesn't read as 'scared'. Not a
good sign.
Around half of the distance back to town, the three unconscious
people were set down and everyone took a brief break. "You
holding up okay?" Mira asked Rast, who seemed to be panting
fairly hard.
"Oughta...ffh..make it fine, once I catch my breath."
"..I can carry her the rest of the way," Hyacinth said. "So long as she doesn't wake and start trying to kill me again."
"Oughta...ffh..make it fine, once I catch my breath."
"..I can carry her the rest of the way," Hyacinth said. "So long as she doesn't wake and start trying to kill me again."
"If she does, it'll be way tougher without this~," Aria
said, waving Kayriel's crossbow before stowing it back in her
inventory.
"Do you...need a break?" Nora asked the witch.
"Hmmn, I'd appreciate it, if you don't mind." The weaver nodded, switching to her stronger wolf form.
"Hmmn, I'd appreciate it, if you don't mind." The weaver nodded, switching to her stronger wolf form.
"Are you...both shifters?" Hyacinth asked—having already
seen Aria change shape during their trip.
"Nah, Nora's an elf," Aria said, with a big, trolling grin.
"Haestra's g-gift allows me to t-take certain, b-beastfolk-like
forms," the weaver said. "Each with c-certain advantages.
Th-this one emphasizes strength."
"I've not heard of her power being able to do that before,"
Hyacinth said. "This must be a particularly advanced technique."
She sounded impressed, not skeptical.
Nora nodded. "Its p-prerequisites are also..c-complicated."
The mage then looked at Lupa; in fact she'd been stealing glances the
wolf-girl's way for a fair bit of the trip.
"Hii~! This one is fine," she said.
"Right. What...manner of magic are you using?" Hyacinth said. "That is—I can see that your physical capabilities are being enhanced, but I cannot make sense of the source of most of the energy. Your aura looks almost like some sort of inward spiral, but it isn't actually drawing anything in?"
"Right. What...manner of magic are you using?" Hyacinth said. "That is—I can see that your physical capabilities are being enhanced, but I cannot make sense of the source of most of the energy. Your aura looks almost like some sort of inward spiral, but it isn't actually drawing anything in?"
"Lupa is a personified dire wolf," Mira said. "We were
just as surprised that could happen as anyone else. An expert
in chaos magic said she's somehow drawing it in—which is probably
that 'funnel' you're seeing—and converting it into normal magic for
her own use."
"I see...chaotic magic is notoriously difficult to
detect. Perhaps I could meet this expert before I depart again."
"The important thing is that this one is super strong!"
Lupa helpfully informed her, flexing an arm. "If anything
attacks, this one can protect all!"
"...Yes....good to know."
Hey, I just binged this whole series, and I really enjoyed it. I have some questions, but feel free to ignore me if they're too spoilery.
ReplyDelete-The first chapter was posted in 2013. Were the characters isekai'd in 2013, or do you keep it ambiguous and the Earth is, like, "20XX"?
-Bimorpheus said something along the lines of, time on Earth on moves only for them when the gods observe it. Does that mean that it is still 2013 or whatever on Earth?
-The gods claimed to have a reason to make the current party all women. However, there was still gender-bending in the first party. If I remember correctly, the first party didn't have pre-established backgrounds. Was there a reason for Ezra to swap genders, or was it arbitrary?
-What kind of fantasy worlds inspire you? Any games or movies you took inspiration from? Any isekai stuff in particular?
-In the earlier installments, there was more "video-gamey-ness", like defeated enemies fading away and dropping loot-boxes. Is there a canon explanation for it, or is it just early installment weirdness?
Like I said, I really enjoyed it, and I'm eager for more!
I'm glad you're enjoying the series. I hope I can find the time/inspiration to get the next part finished soon. Let's see what I can answer...
Delete1. I'm just thinking of when they were taken as "generic modern day" with no specified year entirely out of not wanting to worry about introducing any anachronisms with references anyone might make to any piece of media. If I were to finish the story and then go back and edit it, I could plausible decide on a single year then, but even then I think I'd want "their earth" to drift from our earth's timeline a little bit at this point to keep things consistent.
2. Yes, the gist of it is that it's "currently" the same exact time that the last of them was taken, although the whole point is that time between different worlds is weirdly fluid and the entire idea of simultaneity gets kind of wonky in the first place. But one important detail is that you can not use this wonkiness to actually go back in time anywhere.
3. It's not a large spoiler, I think, to say that the original group kind of had a certain god assigned to 'reincarnate' each person (not a one to one pairing, but for each person one particular god assumed the most responsibility), and Ezra got Aphera, who was also the biggest advocate for turning everyone in the later group female. I admit this is a semi-retcon made around the time I decided what was even going on with the original party because I needed an excuse for what had already "happened", though.
4. I get a lot of inspiration from video games these days, to be honest. As books go, I always liked the Pern books (although that's technically sci-fi), Piers "Xanthony", some classic stuff like LoTR and Narnia although there are some tedious sections in the former here and there. For games, I play a -lot- of JRPGs, the "metroidvania" brand of castlevania, action games and so on. I've also followed a lot of webcomics for many years; Yosh and Twokinds come to mind off the top of my head. There actually isn't much in the way of isekai works that I've watched myself or have more than a passing familiarity with; I'm not even sure I'd heard the term when I first started writing this. The vague idea I started with was that this was some kind of VR scenario, which I gradually changed my mind about as I "got to know" the world and characters better. I'd say the end result is still straddling the line of being a LitRPG instead, although I doubt that's unheard of in isekai stuff.
5. I'd probably remove some of the blatant "this is definitely a video game" signals like disappearing enemies on a re-edit of the whole series, as that came from me not yet being sure what was "really" going on. If I'm pressed to explain it in canon as-is, I'd have to make the excuse that the gods were responsible for some of that in an initial effort to convince the "players" it was a game so they'd be more incentivized to "play", but even this kind of a flimsy excuse and possibly a mischaracterization of the world's deities themselves.